Congratulations, Who Are You Again?

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Congratulations, Who Are You Again? Page 25

by Harrison Scott Key

“I will be dead very soon if they don’t bring me my food.”

  The food arrived. We had a bottle of wine. She took a migraine pill.

  During dinner, we received many congratulatory texts of kindness and love, and read messages aloud to one another for an hour and smiled until our eyes hurt. Later, we walked to the hotel and tiptoed into the quiet hotel room, everyone deep in their own dreams. Lauren checked to see if everyone was breathing, and I placed the hundred-pound plaque in my bag, secretly hoping TSA officials might ask to inspect it.

  We turned off the light, exhausted.

  “Where’s the check?” Lauren said in the dark.

  “In my shoe,” I said.

  The sad truth was that the prize money would barely cover the Wi-Fi charges at the Marriott. We both knew this. But it had been worth it.

  We become who we become for reasons we cannot always know, because of what we saw our mothers love, or our fathers hate, and because of what we need deep down inside the places that others don’t know about, such as respect, or security, or adoration. What I needed, I guess, was the freedom to drink before noon and wander the house in my underwear, and I needed at least one other human who believed all the naked wandering might yield fruit, and that human was on the other side of the bed, probably trying not to think about plane crashes and heart attacks and all the skeletons in the water we were going to fly over in the morning.

  She is hilarious and hurting and mean and made of iron and mercy, this woman who had plenty of reasons to walk away, or run. She often left the room, occasionally slammed doors, stood on the threshold in storms as if she wanted the wind to sweep her away for all time, but she stayed, and held my hand through the birth of this terrible beautiful fantasy that has constituted my life’s work. How do you say thank you? How do you say thank you to all the people in your life who carried you here, who handed you along in your search for meaning and purpose? You are flanked by love at every turn. There is no way around it.

  Nobody tells you that these revelations are the currency of human life, that if you’re lucky, you’ll feel like an idiot, perpetually, eternally, realizing every day new blessings that surround you, have surrounded you for years, if you’d have only looked, new mercies every morning, which had been there all along.

  “Night, night,” Lauren said.

  “Night, night,” I said.

  She reached out for me in the dark, as I reached for her.

  Postlude to an American Dream

  Do something worth talking about and become famous. Make it look normal.

  —WRITTEN ON A NOTECARD FOUND BY AUTHOR MIKE SACKS INSIDE A COPY OF Comedy Fillers BY ROBERT ORBEN (1961)

  SPRING NOW, A WHOLE NEW YEAR

  WILL YOU SPEAK AT CAREER DAY?” STARGOAT ASKED.

  “Okay,” I said. “But I will embarrass you. You know this.”

  “The teacher wants you to inspire us,” she said.

  “Do I inspire you?”

  She looked out the window. “I guess,” she said.

  On the day of my presentation, I made the short walk to the Habersham School, where my wife works and my children learn. The school, or most of it, lives inside Gould Cottage, a wide Tudor manse that lay across a sward of Savannah green like a great old goose that had spread its wings and lain down to rest. Gould had once, long ago, served as the Savannah Female Orphan Asylum, though now it served as an asylum for children with parents.

  I like school buildings, always have. With a teacher for a mom, you spend a lot of time in them, on weekends, in summers, when buildings are empty and dark and clean, trembling with memory and promise, awaiting the trample and din of dreamers. Gould was not empty on this day, but humming, alive. They buzzed me in and I made my way to the modest assembly room, where I evaded notice and sat in back. About fifty or sixty students, some as young as five, including all three of my incredible daughters, stared toward the front with vague enthusiasm as the speakers made their pitches. I was up against a nurse, a dentist, and a golf pro.

  For most of human history, these children’s career options would have been much simpler, back when you did whatever your parents did, which was usually to die of typhoid. If your father was an evil overlord, you became an evil overlord. If your mother was a subjugated washerwoman, then maybe, with hard work, you became a subjugated washerwoman-slash-leech-gatherer. But today, thanks to the Magna Carta, penicillin, and LinkedIn, there exist many kinds of subjugation to aspire to. Plagues no longer plague. Today, we are plagued with dreams.

  I watched the others, before it was my turn.

  Everybody had visual aids. The pro had his irons and woods. The dentist had her giant toothbrush. The children were very excitable. The class clowns were easy to spot, performing maneuvers with the enormous dental tool as it was passed to them, brushing their hair with it, their underarms and such. That would have been me, a lifetime ago, or yesterday. I could respect this behavior. Sometimes, comedy’s all you got.

  The nurse, she was good with people, you could tell. “Nursing is my calling,” she said. “Helping others brings me so much joy.”

  The dentist, this was not her first rodeo. Following the revelation of the novelty toothbrush, she revealed a pair of non-chattering teeth, which had an almost ecstatic effect on the children. She then concluded with what I felt were unfair remarks on the dangers of candy.

  They called me up last.

  “My name is Dr. Harrison Scott Key,” I said, “and I am bad at almost everything.”

  The children laughed. So far, so good.

  “Does anybody know what I’m a doctor of?” I asked.

  Approximately every hand shot up.

  “Yes, you,” I said, to an eager young lady up front.

  “I want to be a dolphin,” she said.

  “Fun,” I said.

  “My cat has three legs,” a little boy next to her explained.

  “Amazing,” I said. “Does anybody know what I am a doctor of? It has little to do with sea mammals and cats, I am afraid.”

  “You’re a doctor of nothing!” came a voice from the bobbing mass of heads. It was Beetle, hiding somewhere in the middle. Children really are full of darkness.

  “Who thinks this delinquent child is right?” I said. “Who thinks I’m a doctor of nothing?”

  All of them, apparently. The monsters continued to laugh madly. Some of the children laughed so hard their bones could no longer hold them upright, and they slid to the floor. Two boys appeared to be filled by the Holy Spirit and danced up and down the aisle.

  The teachers performed a little ritual designed to quiet the children, while I observed, greatly pleased that I had caused so much human exhilaration.

  Finally, the room grew quiet again. The teachers knew their work.

  “Well, that little girl is right,” I said. “A doctor of nothing is exactly what I am.”

  I told them how books and stories did feel like nothing, sometimes. They start as invisible things, in the imagination, and they take on materiality in the figure of a book, and then they go into someone else’s imagination, turning invisible once more.

  “Who wants to be a writer?” I said.

  There, sitting near the last row, Stargoat raised her hand, tentatively, smiling. I smiled back, gave my girl a wink.

  “A dream is very much like a book,” I said. “It is an invisible thing in your heart, that nobody can see, except you. Sometimes not even you can see it.”

  “Like nothing,” I said. “Light as air. Insubstantial as a cloud.”

  The room was quiet now. Many were leaning forward. They believed.

  I turned on my PowerPoint, and I showed them funny pictures, of my family, of a squirrel reading my book, of a deer hanging from my childhood swing set, and explained how this puzzling and incongruous image shaped my life and made me the freak I am, and how if they are blessed, they will one day learn how they became the freaks they will one day be. I showed them the Thurber Prize, grandiloquent and glinting in the light, and t
hey oohed and aahed, and I showed them my Most Hideous Boy trophy, and they laughed violently, pleased to know that a man so freakish had made something of himself.

  “Are you really famous?” a boy asked.

  “No,” I said. “But I was on TV once.”

  “Cool!” he said.

  I did not say that it was a local program and that the other guest on the show that day was a lady discussing the artificial insemination of bees.

  “I was made to feel more important than I am, for a time,” I said, and I told them how my modest notoriety, fleeting as it was, resulted in many extraordinary episodes. For example, I was asked to judge important contests, mostly regarding pie.

  “And I won’t lie, it was awesome,” I said. “You sit there and they bring the pie to you. It’s actually pretty easy if you focus and don’t scream at people too much.”

  I looked out at all their eager faces, this roomful of little yearning machines, designed to love and want and work, and felt heaven heave with holy breath, that we are, all of us, made to dream. I could see in their faces the burning desire to know, to learn the nature of their destinies and seize them, to discover the truth: Did I bring candy for them, or no?

  I told them what I came to tell them, which is that I am no hero. I have not discovered vaccines. I am not airlifting refugees from tyrannical governments here. All I am is a writer whose American dream came true, and to me, that is remarkable. It is more than remarkable. It is a wonder, a most happy miracle. It could happen to them, too, if they believed, and drove themselves to the very precipice of talent and sanity, such that they, too, may one day find themselves living in a home with more ceiling fans than one could possibly fathom.

  The little baby of my dream was born and was nurtured and kept alive by the love of my family and the immeasurable kindnesses of friends and strangers and the favor of almighty God, and it grew big and strong and made this beautiful life possible, such that I can now open my inbox to find a festival itinerary that reads, “3:30 p.m.—I’ll pick you up at the Hampton Inn and take you to the site of the pie contest.”

  “Who likes cakes and pies?” I asked.

  Most of the children raised their hands.

  “And who likes candy?” I said.

  All the children raised their hands, almost touched the ceiling.

  I reached into my backpack and pulled forth the largest sack of lollipops to be found in coastal Georgia, and I lifted it high, like the head of my enemy, and the crowd went wild.

  Appendix A

  BOOKSTORES, FESTIVALS, AND RELATED TOUR PERFORMANCES THAT WERE FUN AND ALMOST KILLED ME

  2015 AJC Decatur Book Festival, Decatur, Georgia

  2016 Georgia OBGyn Society Annual Meeting, Sea Island, Georgia

  2016 Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Discovery Show, Savannah, Georgia

  A Capella Books, Atlanta, Georgia

  Alabama Booksmith, Birmingham, Alabama

  Austin Peay State University, Clarksville, Tennessee

  Association of Writers & Writing Programs Conference 2016, Los Angeles, California

  Baylor School, Chattanooga, Tennessee

  Belhaven University, Jackson, Mississippi

  Blue Bicycle Books, Charleston, South Carolina

  BookPeople, Austin, Texas

  Booksellers of Laurelwood, Memphis, Tennessee

  Château de Lacoste, SCAD Lacoste, Lacoste, France

  Country Bookshop, Southern Pines, North Carolina

  Douglas Anderson School of the Arts, Jacksonville, Florida

  E. Shaver Books, Savannah, Georgia

  Fall for the Book Festival, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia

  Faulkner House Books, New Orleans, Louisiana

  Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home, Savannah, Georgia

  Flyleaf Books, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

  Fountain Bookstore, Richmond, Virginia

  Glen Workshop, Santa Fe, New Mexico

  Golden Nugget Biloxi Hotel & Casino, Biloxi, Mississippi

  Hub City Bookshop, Spartanburg, South Carolina

  Ivy Hall, SCAD Atlanta, Atlanta, Georgia

  Jackson Preparatory School, Jackson, Mississippi

  Lemuria Books, Jackson, Mississippi

  Literary Death Match, Nashville, Tennessee

  Literary Guild of St. Simons Island, St. Simons Island, Georgia

  Louisiana Book Festival, Baton Rouge, Louisiana

  M. Judson Booksellers, Greenville, South Carolina

  Malaprop’s Bookstore/Cafe, Asheville, North Carolina

  Marshes of Glynn Libraries, Brunswick, Georgia

  McIntyre’s Books, Pittsboro, North Carolina

  Mid-South Book Festival, Memphis, Tennessee

  Mills University Studies High School, Little Rock, Arkansas

  Millsaps College, Jackson, Mississippi

  Mississippi School for the Arts, Brookhaven, Mississippi

  Neshoba County Fair, Philadelphia, Mississippi

  Nightbird Books, Fayetteville, Arkansas

  Octavia Books, New Orleans, Louisiana

  Ole Miss (University of Mississippi), Oxford, Mississippi

  Oxford American, Little Rock, Arkansas

  Page & Palette, Fairhope, Alabama

  Park Road Books, Charlotte, North Carolina

  Parnassus, Nashville, Tennessee

  Pomegranate Books, Wilmington, North Carolina

  Purple Crow Books, Hillsborough, North Carolina

  Quail Ridge Books, Raleigh, North Carolina

  River Hills Club, Jackson, Mississippi

  St. Andrew’s Society, Savannah, Georgia

  St. Johns County Public Library System, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

  Savannah Bar Association, Savannah, Georgia

  Savannah Book Festival, Savannah, Georgia

  Savannah Rotary Club, Savannah, Georgia

  SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah, Georgia

  SCADshow, Atlanta, Georgia

  SCBook Festival, Columbia, South Carolina

  Seersucker Live, Savannah, Georgia

  South on Main, Little Rock, Arkansas

  Southern Festival of Books, Nashville, Tennessee

  Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois

  Southern Lit Alliance, Chattanooga, Tennessee

  Square Books, Oxford, Mississippi

  Tampa Bay Times Festival of Reading, St. Petersburg, Florida

  Texas Book Festival, Austin, Texas

  Thacker Mountain Radio Hour, Oxford, Mississippi

  The Book Lady Bookstore, Savannah, Georgia

  The Florida Heritage Book Festival, St. Augustine, Florida

  The Habersham School, Savannah, Georgia

  The home of Emily and Guy McClain, Jackson, Mississippi

  The home of Emily and Toff Murray, New Orleans, Louisiana

  The Shoe Burnin’ Show, Columbia, South Carolina

  The Shoe Burnin’ Show, Savannah, Georgia

  The Wild Detectives, Dallas, Texas

  Thurber House, Columbus, Ohio

  Turning Pages Books & More, Natchez, Mississippi

  Turnrow Book Co., Greenwood, Mississippi

  University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee

  Virginia Festival of the Book, Charlottesville, Virginia

  Walker Percy Weekend, St. Francisville, Louisiana

  WORD, Brooklyn, New York

  Words and Music Festival: A Literary Feast in New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana

  Word of South: A Festival of Literature & Music, Tallahassee, Florida

  Writing in Place Conference, Spartanburg, South Carolina

  Appendix B

  PEOPLE WHO GAVE ME A CLEAN PLACE TO SLEEP DURING THE TOUR OR HELPED ME IN OTHER VERY SPECIFIC AND OCCASIONALLY INEFFABLE WAYS AND DID NOT USUALLY CHARGE A FEE

  April Cheek and Mark Blanton

  Ariel Felton

  Austin Bolen

  Beth Ann Fennelly and Tommy Franklin

  Brian Floyd

  Brian Perr
y

  Calvert Morgan

  Carol Ann Fitzgerald

  Cathy Doty

  Chia Chong and Amy Zurcher

  Chris Offutt

  Cille Norman

  Curtis Wilke

  Daniel Pritchett

  Davey Kim

  David Rush

  Dayton Castleman

  Deborah Grosvenor

  Eliza Borné and the staff of the Oxford American

  Emily and Guy McClain

  Emily and Toff Murray

  Eric Svenson

  Gebre Menfes Kidus

  George Dawes Green

  George Hodgman

  Greg Thompson

  Gregory Henry

  Gregory Wolfe

  Hannah Hayes

  Hilary Chandler

  Hill Honeck and Family

  James Lough

  Jamie Quatro

  Jan and John Remington

  Jay Jennings

  Jeannie Stock

  Jessica and Jason Miller

  Jill and Joel Bell

  Jim Dees

  Jim Tyler Anderson

  Joe Birbiglia

  John Hanners

  John Maxwell

  John T. Edge

  Joni Saxon-Gusti

  Karin Wolf Wilson

  Katherine Sandoz

  Kelly Pickerill

  Laura Brown

  Lee Griffith

  Lisa and Clint “Bird” Striplin

  Marc Smirnoff

  Melanie Black

  Mike Sacks

  Nate Henderson

  Neil White

  Paula and Glenn Wallace

  Richard Grant

  Rod Dreher

  Roy Blount Jr.

  Sarah and Michael Spencer

  Scott Spivey

  Shari Smith and the Shoe Burnin’ Show

  Shelby and Hudson Segrest

  Tanya Key Mansfield

  Teresa and Jeremy Roberts

  The Finn McCool Fellowship

  Tim Taylor

  Virginia Morell

  Wanda Jewell and the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance

  Wynn Kenyon

  Appendix C

  FURTHER READING AND WATCHING ON THE NATURE OF WORK, ART, AMBITION, FAME, SUCCESS, FAMILY, LOVE, AND/OR THE GLORIES AND PERILS OF THE AMERICAN DREAM

  A Cool Million by Nathanael West (novel)

  Act One by Moss Hart (memoir)

  Advertisements for Myself by Norman Mailer (memoir)

 

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