Catching Up
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008Sorry I’ve been remiss in writing in this blog but I’ve been busy on the road touring for the paperback of Sissy. First of all, I want to thank all of you out there who keep discovering the book - especially now that it’s out in paperback - and writing me here on the blog to let me know how it has touched you. If I haven’t written back to all of you, please know how much your messages mean to me. I am humbled and touched and thrilled each time you take the time to write to me here. It means the world to me. More than you can know.
Let’s see .. where to start …
A few weeks ago I began the tour by going down to Ft. Lauderdale to participate in the Literary Feast, a weekend event that is a fundraising drive for the Broward County Library. First, however, I had agreed to interview Robert De Niro for an upcoming story in Travel+Leisure about his new hotel in Tribeca called The Greenwich. Our schedules were so crowded we each could only meet for an hour or so on the day I was headed to the airport to fly down to Ft. Lauderdale. So I showed up at the hotel - which was still in that last throes of construction and being decorated - with my suitcases in tow as if I were checking into the place. De Niro could not have been nicer or more open. I’d always wanted to interview him so wasn’t going to turn the assignment down and was determined to make it work - even if it meant writing the story in airports and hotel rooms on my paperback book tour. I gave him a copy of the paperback and he said, “I can’t promise you I’ll read it, but I’ll give it to Grace, my wife. She’s from Mississippi you know.” I didn’t know. “All my in-laws are from around Jackson. I think she’s mentioned this book to me already. This is really sweet of of you.” De Niro himself was rather sweet. Nothing like his screen image of the overly macho guy. His father was a famous abstract expressionist painter - Robert De Niro, Sr. - who met his mother, Virginia Admiral, who was also a painter - while they were studying with Hans Hoffman in Provincetown in the early 1940s. De Niro was their only child. In fact, Robert De Niro, Sr., divorced Admiral soon after their son was born and became quite open about his bisexuality, becoming the lover of the poet and gay rights pioneer, Robert Duncan. De Niro, as a boy, grew up hanging out in his father’s loft in Greenwich Village surrounded by his father’s friends Anais Nin and Henry Miller and Jackson Pollock and Tennesee Williams. Artitsry is a part of De Niro’s DNA. And the hotel is beautiful
I had a great time once I got to Ft. Lauderdale. I was one of about 20 writers invited to particpate in the weekend. In fact, I was late arriving because of my De Niro interview so missed the welcoming cocktail party at the penthouse of some rich local entrepreneur. But I ran into Christopher Rice who was starting out the tour for his new book, Blind Fall, at the front door of our hotel on his way out for the evening with friends. I had just read a rave review in the New York Times on the flight down of his mother’s new book about Jesus and was the first to tell him the good news. Made me feel good - putting a smile on his face. He obviously loves his mom a lot. Of course, Chris is a bit of a diva - a loveable one, but a diva nonetheless, I guess being the son of Anne Rice, divadom, like artistry, is a part of his own DNA - and he didn’t like the hotel and yacht club where the festival had put us so he checked out the next day to check into the St. Regis Hotel right next to Ft. Lauderdale’s gay beach. If you want to see how sexy Chris is looking these days, check out his interview on Towleroadtv.com.
The next morning - Friday - I got up early and met with a class of honor students at a local high school. I gave out a few awards for a short story writing contest and talked to the class and read from my book. Instead of opening up the floor for questions, I decided to ask them all questions. When we began to discuss how difficult it is to be different as a teenager, one young boy - beautiful, soft spoken, soft in many ways - raised his hand and began to confide how he poured his own difference into his artwork. Two boys in the back of the class began to laugh at him. As their laughter reached him, I saw the bit of pain the sound engendered flicker in his eyes. I did not look away from him but kept him talking about himself, commented on his bravery, until the laughter quieted. But does such laughter ever really quiet. In the laughter of those boys in the back of that class I heard the echo of the laughter that I’d heard so often behind my own back when I was a teenager trying to celebrate my own difference in my own brand of art. Sometimes artistry is not to be found in our DNA but in our defiance.
That night there was a big cocktail party at the Broward County Library and we writers were placed in a circle facing outward at our tables in order to sign the books that the cocktail partygoers bought. We then were assigned to one rich person each in order to be a guest at their homes at the dinners that their guests had paid to attend - hence, the name Literary Feast. We were asked to sit at one table of guests during the first course. A second table during the main course. And a third table during desert. I then did a reading from Mississippi Sissy in my host’s media room. It was an exhausting but fun evening. Felt a bit like a performing monkey but that’s what book tours are about sometimes.
The next day we were asked to on panels at a local college as part of the literary festival. I sat on a memoir one with the wondeful Lucinda Franks, who has written a remarkable memoir about discovering family secrets, My Father’s Secret War, and Terri Cheney, a lovely woman who has written about her bipolar condition in Manic. We were a good threesome. Our stories and personalities blended well.
After the panel I flew back to New York to prepare for the next week of travel down south for another leg of the tour. I signed books at the University of Southern Mississippi and the next day at the Georgia Tech Barnes and Noble. After those two events I headed to Charleston - my first visit to that amazingly beautiful city. I kept wondering if I could live there. Though I certainly responded to its architecture, friends of mine who know it better than I do told me that the population tends to be a bit more stuffy than I could endure. But there was nothing stuffy about my reading on Pawleys Island, about 90 minutes outside of Charleston.
Pawleys is a barrier island and one of the most scenic places I’ve ever been. I spoke and read at a luncheon series called Moveable Feast which was sponsored by the wonderfully laconic Tom Warner, of Litchfield Books, and the Sea View Inn. The inn hasn’t changed a bit since it opened in the 1937. There are no telephones and televisions in the rooms. And there is a vast back portch overlooking the ocean, a porch filled with comfortable rockers. The lunch was sold out and we sold out my books there as well. The audience was almost completely women of a certain age who crowded into the quaint dining hall of the inn. They laughed uproariously at all the right parts. Teared up. And were completely silent and moved by the end. The applause was sustained and heartfelt. At the end of the lunch - one of my favorite appearances I’ve had on either the hardback or paperback tour - one of the women came up to hug my neck and said, “Honey, I was afraid to come to this one because I thought it was going to be too gay. But you’re just about the best writer we’ve had here. Cokie Roberts is coming to speak to us in a couple of weeks and she’s going to have to be damn good to top you.” And then she tried to fix me up with a gay nephew of hers who lives in New Jersey.
I’m going back to the Sea View Inn at some point to not watch television and not talk on the phone. And hug me some more necks.
Next up: The Tennessee Williams Literary Festival in New Orleans ….

