Sunday, October 14, 2012
IT WAS THE BEST OF TIMES... IT WAS (MOSTLY) THE WORST OF TIMES...
Hi
folks,
Sorry
I haven’t posted in a bit, but I’ve been out of it since Bouchercon and have
gotten dozens and dozens of emails since and thought it might make more sense
if I just told you guys what’s been going on.
First,
I’ve been through a week of what feels like a Dickens' or Russian novel, but I’m
emerging fairly well.
For
starters, I went to Bouchercon last week, anticipating a magical time. Well… as
it turned out, it wasn’t. It’s kind of forced me to face my own mortality.
I
arrived on Thursday, checked into the airport Marriott which is about 15 miles
away from the convention center at the Renaissance Marriott. Jumped back in my
rental and headed for the convention. This trip was a really big deal for me.
It represented an opportunity to reconnect with mystery/suspense/thriller/noir
writers I’m friends with and meet new writers whom I’ve admired from afar. My
wife and I kind of mortgaged our Christmas and other things to pay for it and I
planned to make some hay! Maybe even hook up with a publisher or three to look
at some of my work. You know—what us writer-types do when we go to professional
conferences. We saw it as an investment in our future.
What
do they say? Man plans… and God laughs?
True
that.
I
got to the hotel and that’s when the troubles began. MapQuest didn’t alert me
that navigating downtown Cleveland is a nightmare. I finally got to a downtown Marriott and parked a block away at their underground garage. I have fairly
severe COPD and it about wore me out to hike from the garage to the hotel… only
to run into old friend Hallie Ephron who told me the convention was at another Marriott—the Renaissance—which happened to be two blocks further away. For you
young whippersnappers, that’s a piece of cake, but it took me the good part of
half an hour to hike it, having to stop several times to catch my breath and
hold a mirror up to see if my breath still showed…
Finally,
I made it to the host hotel and went directly to…
The
Bar.
Where
else? It’s where the action of writer’s conferences is always at. First, I had
to register, which entailed a walk of what seemed half a mile down the hall to
the opposite end. Finally, that done, I hiked back to the bar and ordered some
meds… a Jack and water. Instantly revived!
Where
I was soon embroiled in conversation with a writer who wanted to lecture me
about The Differences Between Plot-Based and Character-Based Fiction. Precisely
why I always go to the bar and don’t attend a lot of panels which are often
about things like: The Differences Between Plot-Based and… you get it. After I
extricated myself from this guy, I started to see old friends and was
introduced to new ones and everything was cool again. Made friends with the
bartenders who were great. This one bartender even bought me a drink. That’s
when you know you’ve arrived.
Spent
a largely pleasurable evening chatting with other writers. Don’t ask me their
names. I have to check my own nametag to remember my own. My wife usually goes
with me to serve as my memory, due to my Halfzeimer’s. Well, I remember some—Eric
Beetner, my old friend Jed Ayres, Johnny Shaw (whose new book I just finished and
it was one of the best reads I’ve had in a long while), Tom Pluck, Josh Stallings,
Christa Faust, Dominic Martell and a bunch of other terrific writers. As the
cartoon guy says, the whole evening was “Happy, happy, joy, joy.”
Finally
left to go to the parking garage three blocks away and got discombobulated
(lost, homey), and it took over an hour to find my car. Wondering what the city
of Cleveland had done to their oxygen supply. Finally made it back to my motel,
after encountering a detour on the way and eventually figuring out how to find
my digs.
Got
up the next day (Friday) and headed back to the convention center. Good day.
Met lots of cool writers, saw old friends, generally had a great time. Ate some
fried calamari. Some of the best I’ve ever eaten. I’ll come back to that in a
bit…
That
evening was our Noir @ the Bar reading at the Wonderbar. It was only two blocks
away but I couldn’t walk it so some really nice folks—Lee Thompson and Sabrina
Ogden were kind enough to go with me and share a cab. You know, humor the old
dude… I think a guy I desperately wanted to meet as I’m a huge admirer of his
work was there—Duane Swierczynsky—but if he was,
alas, I didn’t get to meet him. The reading went well even though the mics were
terrible. I had a guy come up to me afterward and introduce himself as a
publisher and he bought four of my books (thank you!) and we’d kind of made
plans to meet up the next day but as it turned out that was not to be. Sir, if
you happen to read this, please give me a shout!
From the reading, we went back to the Renaissance
and that’s when things began to go hinky. A boatload of us were gathered in the
lobby just off the bar and things began hitting me. I remember asking someone
if they could find me a room I could crash in that night as I didn’t think I
could make it back to my hotel. I’d begun breaking out into cold sweats and
feeling faint. I didn’t want to come across as a wuss, so I just slouched down
in a chair and eventually passed out (not from drinking, from illness). I woke
up at 3 ayem and the place was deserted. I honestly thought I might be dying.
Not to be melodramatic, but that’s the way I felt. I didn’t see any way around
it, so forced myself up and down to the parking garage and found my car and
drove back to my hotel. Somehow…
Woke up at six ayem and turned over and my stomach
began cramping big-time and I began the first of about eight ralphings.
Calimari. Felt like I was dying. Food poisoning, I assumed. There was no way I
could return to the convention. I called and asked for a late checkout and then
spent two hours between the porcelain goddess and packing and finally piled in
my car and began the three-and-a-half hour drive back to Ft. Wayne. Pure hell
all the way.
Got there, found out I’d had a hemorrhoid burst and
about a cup of blood lost. Went to bed and got up the next morning and there
was more bright red blood. Either a second ‘roid or the last gasps of the first
one. Mary took me to the ER and we got there at 11:30 and they took a bunch of
tests as they thought maybe it wasn’t food poisoning but gallbladder—in fact, I’d
emailed novelist John Gilstrap to tell him why I’d left so abruptly and he
suggested it might not be food poisoning but gallbladder—John, looks like you
might be right—awaiting test results. Sat in the ER room until 7:30 that night
and they finally released us. They talked about doing something called a “hemorrhoidectomy”
and then decided against it for the time being. Ended up the next several days
traipsing from doctor’s offices to hospitals to labs, et al. Tested for pancreas,
lumbar (another story), gall bladder and other things. Oh, forgot—on the way
home from Cleveland got a severe sore throat and cough and mentioned it at the
ER but there was so many other things they forgot it. Gave me a breathing
treatment for my COPD and put me on two different inhalers and all kinds of
other crap. Two days later, went to RediMed as I was coughing nonstop and they
diagnosed acute bronchitis and possible pneumonia and gave me meds for that.
And then, just as life was looking kind of gray… it went positively black. Mary
took our only car in as the idiot light went on and the news was that the
engine’s shot. They said all we could do is drive it till it dropped—nothing could
be done. So, that’s where we are with the car. If it goes we don’t have money
for a new engine or for a new used car, so just hope our shoe leather holds up.
That brings us to yesterday. My strength and energy
were starting to return which was good as I had an engagement to speak to the
Indiana Romance Writers in Indy. Rented a car, drove down, and had a really
good visit with those delightful folks. Felt re-energized.
Anyway, that was my week, right out of Dickens or Tolstoy.
Not looking for sympathy—well, maybe a little—but it’s just easier to post this
here than to reply to all the individual emails that have been coming in. I
appreciate each and every one of those, btw—it’s just going to be impossible to
reply to them quickly so hope y’all understand. And I wanted those folks at
Bouchercon who I was going to meet with know why I wasn’t able to.
The good news? And, yes there is some. My students
in both my online creative writing class and the Skype class I co-teach with
Jenny Milchman for the New York Writer’s Workshop. Every single one of them has
been extremely understanding and gracious. They’ve allowed me an extra week to
get it together and they’ll never know how much I appreciate that. It means the
world to me and I won’t forget.
Anyway, the one thing I’ve learned in my journey is
that life is cyclic. It’s not up forever and it’s not down forever. I’m pretty
sure something really cool and good is going to happen soon. I mean… I’m not just
whistling past the graveyard here am I?
Thanks for all of your well-wishes and thoughts.
Here’s something remarkable. Stuff like this shows a person the true value of
friends. A good friend of mine—Bob (I won’t embarrass you by giving your last
name, Bob) has far worse things going on in his life than I do—his beloved wife
is dying right now and may even be gone at this moment)—Bob has truly serious
things on his plate, and yet, he took the time out to call me and voice his
support for me. Now… who does that? Only a truly selfless person. Thanks, Bob.
People like Bob keep reminding me of that great philosopher Red Green and what
he always says:
Keep your stick on the ice. I’m pulling for ya. We’re
all in this together.
Yes we are.
Blue skies,
Les
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21 comments:
Les, mate! What a shit time. It's a good job you're a writer and you can use all of that stuff. Take it easy!
Sorry all that hit you at once, Les. Hope you're feeling better soon. You're in my thoughts, partner.
Thanks, Paul and Heath. It's all just material... I felt kind of bad that I was unable to get to the computer and communicate with folks who were sending me emails and thought they might just think I was being rude.
Thanks, Paul and Heath. It's all just material... I felt kind of bad that I was unable to get to the computer and communicate with folks who were sending me emails and thought they might just think I was being rude.
So glad for the post. Man, those are definitely the "times that try men's souls". However, life is like that and your ship is coming into port right now. I can't wait to hear about the good things it has in store for you.
What a run of lousy luck, Les. Sorry to hear about it. (Sympathy. Check.)
Gotta say, though, your clear honest voice makes reading hard luck a pleasure. Just finishing JUST LIKE THAT, and love how you pour it onto the page.
Hope that car holds out longer than you expect and your next trip to the doctor is to hear "all clear".
Les- what can I say? You are my mentor, but more importantly- you are my friend. I love you, brother. Now I wish I had gone so you wouldn't be alone. Hang in there. We need some whiskey- you and rum for me. I will call you soon. The Bitch blew my mind- AGAIN. Rock on and my love to Mary
I'm so sorry you had to go through that kind of trouble, Les, but I'm also glad you pulled through. Been thinking of you. Wish you well, and take good care of yourself. Mean it.
Thanks so much, Dawn, Rob, Sarah and Veronica!
Les, I hope you're health continues to improve. I know those shows take a lot of a person, at any age. I remember last year I was doing great the first three days, but the last day I was just broke down, and sick and stressed traveling home.
Also hope your connections made will be fruitful, maybe a book deal on the horizon and a newer car.
Thanks, Ron! A book deal would take care of a lot of ills! One can dream...
Having just gotten over a 6 week bout of pneumonia, and having moderate COPD, you do *not* sound like a wuss at all to me, but like a brave warrior trying to meet up with his tribe in the middle of a shit storm. Nothing sucks worse than being alone and sick on the road. Glad you are better and here's to feeling better tomorrow than you do today.
Thanks, Arielle! It does suck when you can't walk half a block, doesn't it! Especially when you look hale and hearty... I'm just trying to make contact with those folks who steal organs and see if they can glom onto a lung or two for me...
Aw, Les, what a total bummer. Hope your feeling a bit better now or at least are on the way to being on the mend. Take care of yourself!
Thanks, Sally. I feel better now, especially since I got the cover of my novel, THE RAPIST. That lifted my spirits immensely! (It's always about the books, the writing.)
I send my prayers your way, Les. After your post, I decided to stop feeling sorry for myself and put a big smile of gratefullness on my face. You are a good example of how to roll with the punches. Best wishes with your health and with your writing. The convention may have been more successful than you think.
Wow, Les. What a week! So glad you're feeling better, and will continue to send positive vibes your way. Love reading your blog... you're a true inspiration!
Thanks, Margaret and Ronni. And, thanks for joining the blog, Ronni--I appreciate it!
Hi Les, So sorry you have not been well and glad you are on the mend. Just started reading Bitch and wow! I am loving it. A masterclass in building tension and suspense. Thank you for the gift. My husband will be reading it next. Juliet
Thanks, Julie--just glad you liked it!
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