Saturday, May 24, 2025

About Mike ... Continued


It was grocery day, a Saturday, and Mike and I (at least – was John there? Did he get his own digest?) were with Pop shopping at Baenziger’s. We were at the magazine rack next to the little checkout where they bought cigarettes, and for some reason Pop agreed to buy us each a Mystery Comics Digest. Once again, I put my money on the wrong horse, and chose the Boris Karloff Tales of Mystery #2 (well, it had exciting looking reptilian monsters on it), while Mike chose the Ripley title.

I   recall Uncle Remus Stories had one [a storied map], though we only saw the book one night when (I think) one of Mike’s friends loaned it to him and he barely let us touch it.

Looking back, I would have to say there were two features [in Walt Disney Comics Digest #6, bought when he was in 1st Grade] that may have particularly influenced Mike. One was a “Walt Disney Animal Autobiography”, with a realistically drawn exploration of whales and their lives. Another was “Lotor Takes a Trip” (not a comic strip but a simple short story with a few illustrations), about a raccoon that escapes from the zoo and with the help of a young boy is returned to the wild, where he learns to live in freedom.  

For another thing, I was used to having a family support group, to running in a pack with my brothers, to being a follower rather than an independent unit of my own. True, Mike was in the Second Grade right next to me, but once class started, he might as well have been on the moon. I was on my own. And my teacher was an unknown quantity. I was used to hearing about Mike’s First Grade teacher, Mrs. Bilnitzer, but she had been moved to another class.

I think this is the earliest photo we have of Mike on file; it is labelled Mike, 1 year old. He would have been 63 years old today. As a tribute I post this story [By the Lake] that he published in the 1982 Persona when he was in college.

The reason I cleaned out the old shed was to have a personal space to hang out, away from my brothers. But one, at least, wasn't having it. "Shoddy construction" my eye. Mike broke that lock [on my diary] trying to pick it, apparently wanting to see what "mighty secrets" I might be keeping. I couldn't lock the diary anymore, but I saw that any attempt at privacy was futile anyway. It took me a while to forgive him. 

Dear Mike, 

It has now been ten hours since you have gone and already I miss you.  All of my life you have been there, almost never more than half an hour away, and now every minute carries you farther and farther away.  I look at my books placed in your shelves & am reminded of you, I type this letter on your typewriter and am reminded of you; every now and then something will occupy my attention, but then I think of you with a start and feel guilty for having forgotten for a moment.  

I have noticed something strange. Things do not have a past until they are gone.  I mean they have a past, but they are not in it.  It is awful feeling so torn, but I don't feel any despair.  I know from the past that things I think are gone forever turn up where least expected.  I hope you will turn up soon. [written when he left for Oregon; found in his papers ten years and more after his passing.]

Memory tells me that I was often annoyed by Mom and Pop and Mike, though it fills me now with rue. I would give almost anything to be annoyed by them again, if only for a little while. 

Little Rascal, by Sterling North, a cut down version of his larger book Rascal: A Memoir of a Better Era (1963). That better era was during WWI and the Spanish flu. As I said, it was a family book, shared among us kids, but I think Mike had the largest interest in it. I don’t remember ever reading it myself. Needless to say, at the end Rascal, a raccoon, has to be released into the wild. Mike also had a copy of The Yearling (by Marjorie Kinning Rawlings) years later. I think Nomads of the North (James Oliver Curwood/Disney) was his too.

I remember the first time I saw [Cyrano de Bergerac], back when I was in high school. Our creative writing teacher knew that it was coming on that weekend and suggested that Mike and I take the opportunity to see it. We did, not knowing exactly what to expect, but determined to give it a try.

Saturday afternoon came and we settled down to watch. Unfortunately, Pop (whose idea of a proper movie was a good Western) had settled down in his recliner and was determined to be a film critic for his idealistic sons, perhaps all the more so because we had hinted that he might want to do something else as it was probably not his cup of tea.

When in the first scene of the movie the slimy, posing actor Montfleury came on stage and began to declaim, Pop's scorn was loud and palpable. I think he thought it was all going to be like that. Mike and I tried to get him to settle down so we could hear the movie and give it a fair chance. He was having none of it.

Then Jose Ferrer came on as Cyrano and voiced Pop's exact opinions about Montfleury.  That took him by surprise, I think. And then? "Fencing, fighting, torture, revenge, giants, monsters, chases, escapes, true love, miracles!" By the time the film was over, even Pop had to admit it was not the exercise in sissiness he thought it was going to be; in fact I think he even begrudgingly liked it.

As a joke, Mike persuaded Mom to send off for a copy of [Baked Beans for Breakfast] a Scholastic book from Weekly Reader (I think it was a bonus free book) as a burn on my bean-hate. I mean I’m sure Mom didn’t see it as a joke, but Mike knew how it would affect me. It came, and I was duly disgusted.

When I got my first computer, the on-again-off-again transcribing of 'Elf and Bear' was one of the many scattered projects I attempted. When I lost that file when my computer crashed, I was too despondent to try again right away, but by 2005, with Mike's help, I finally had a complete edited version of the book. And then Mike passed away, and the world was again turned on its head.

The Hot-Blooded Dinosaurs was Mike's book, although I did read it with interest. For a while it was more or less 'in the family'. Dinosaurs were always a hot topic for us boys, and this intriguing new theory (which has now come to be more or less accepted) was the newest wrinkle in an old topic.

What Mike’s lunch box was I have no clear memory. I thought it might be Peter Pan, and when I looked it up, I did feel a definite ‘vibe’. It seemed familiar to John as well. As Mike had no sentimental attachment to it, it did not particularly live in memory or reminiscences.

4/15/2018: Got up, wrote a little more 'Unbelievable', up to the part where Mike and I drive away from the Writer's Roundtable. It is odd; I think in a part of my mind, it is always There and Then, whenever I think about the past, as if it were a place that can always be revisited and might be redeemed.

In seeking for a new project, I revived the idea of the first strand, which I had dubbed 'The American Fantasy.' I wrote a first chapter, and my older brother Mike joined me as coach and advisor. Before we could get very far, however, he passed away and I again became bogged down in gloom and inertia. And there it stood for some time.

[In I, Claudius] I saw my brother Mike’s gloomy nature in Tiberias (George Baker), the second Emperor.

[For Halloween] that year I was a pirate, the brittle plastic mask, held on by a rubber elastic string, gripped a knife in its teeth. John (who must have been four or five) was a black cat, and Mike was a devil, if not THE Devil. His mask haunted the spare room closet for quite a while afterwards, probably contributing to the Legend of the Little Hoofer in years to come.

True, family photos from those days are rather scarce on the ground, but there are quite a few of Mike (as firstborn child).

A little planter/pencil holder like this was presented to Mom and Pop around the time of Mike's birth. For years it was a constant presence, either in the kitchen window or on the mirror shelves over the TV. It reads "Congratulations on Your New Little Tax Exemption.”

John called me; he reminded me that yesterday was the 13th anniversary of Mike's passing, and today was the 20th of Mom's. Now I understand all the butterflies. The anniversary of Mike's and Mom's passing is often marked by vast clouds of butterflies (and sometimes dragonflies). Perhaps it's just that time of year, but natural coincidences are often signs, too.

I have now finished Fathers & Sons, a very interesting book; Basarov and his fate remind me a bit of Mike. Poor Basarov!

I decided to finally order the Solzhenitsyn book for a variety of reasons. For one, Mike had always been interested in him since high school, realizing that he was a force in Russian literature, which was one of his areas of special attraction. I remember seeing his copy of The Gulag Archipelago and wondering what it was like. 

Mike supplied me with The Fellowship of the Ring and The Return of the King but could not get The Two Towers until a week later.

And, of course, this was mainly the time that I read The Hobbit, and The Tolkien Reader, and Mike brought me The Lord of the Rings trilogy from high school.

The Seventies was truly the age of cryptozoology, of UFO encounters, of demons and cults. With old certainties being questioned, old uncertainties began to gain more credence - or credulity. Mike, who always had an interest in the sea and ichthyology anyway (Jaws was already big at the time and the mystery and fear of the sea particularly potent) bought this very intriguing mag [about sea monsters] that was of deep interest to us all. 

I may have written (at least parenthetically) about my brother Mike’s obsession with marine biology, no doubt sparked by the impact of the movie Jaws. He came to have an interesting knowledge of the varieties of sharks, their habits and habitats. This extended peripherally to other denizens of the sea, and it seemed for a while that he might pursue the career of a marine biologist. But his growing vocation as a writer kind of pushed that out of the way.

But there was, briefly, in high school, a strange overlap, an idea that he toyed with for a while. This was to be a combination of whales and Watership Down, with a dash of Rudyard Kipling’s The White Seal: a story about a pod of cetaceans (mostly right whales, I think) fleeing the depredations of mankind and seeking a safer sea to swim in. They would encounter dangers and other sea life, from giant squid to orcas. I seem to remember they were joined by a grampus, or something, who envied their ability to dive deep and dreamed of being able to do that himself. A bit of a sub-plot of tragedy and self-sacrifice brewing there.

Anyway, I don’t think he ever wrote anything on it, though he thought and planned and discussed it with us, to the extent of maybe making up sort of whale words to sprinkle in their conversations, like Lapine in Watership Down. He soon abandoned the idea as too fanciful, however, and buckled down to more realistic writing. It would possibly embarrass him now to have it revealed as a step of his writing development, but I rather treasure the anecdote as part of his more juvenile stage, when the fantasy of Beast Fable still held a toehold in his mind.

 We might hold a meeting of the Black Cat Club behind the closed door of the bathroom, with Mike as President enthroned on the toilet while the rest of us lined up on the edge of the tub.

It was also here [our Half Price Books] that we brothers could indulge our growing interests, Mike his Hemingway and Faulkner, John his Bradbury and horror fiction.

[The ornament’s] 'silk' is unraveling a bit and it lost its original little loop to attach the hook. That has been replaced with a yarn bookmark that belonged to Mike, one of his own sentimental Christmas presents, attached with a pushpin.

When I tell any scurrilous tales about my family (I might point to several stories about Mike) it is because I love them for being so them, even when annoying. 

It was the early Eighties, and my first year in college. I had entered a Creative Writing class with Mike, my older brother, and he was far more dedicated than I was.

I remember that at first, I was a pretty enthusiastic vocalist until my tuneless braying moved my brother Mike (who sat next to me) to rebuke me into virtual muteness. I do not blame him (although I totally do) for my continued stunted musical development.

The volume we had when we were kids was 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, and that contributed to my older brother Mike's burgeoning ichthyology craze.

The other day, when Susan and I were discussing threatened suicide, and I said it's just something we all did to a greater or lesser degree, Susan said "He's a Babel, and we Babels just hate ourselves." It suddenly struck me, not as a surprising truth of course, but because it must be more than 20 years since I've heard her refer to herself as a Babel. It got me thinking about us and our perception of ourselves as People with a Special Destiny. It reminded me, or made clear to me, that we always have considered ourselves as not like other people. Even our ambitions were unusual: if Mike was to be a writer, he had to be a writer unlike all others; Kenny an actor not on the beaten path; even Susan wants the bourgeois lifestyle with a depth and a difference.

I've started transcribing Mike's work on his early novel, A Stranger and Alone.

JANUARY 13, 1981: Mike found (and rescued) a pregnant Siamese cat. 


 

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