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Authors: Lewis Nordan

Tags: #Historical, #Humour

Wolf Whistle (27 page)

BOOK: Wolf Whistle
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Then, when the applause had died down, somebody—the director, the stage manager, I'm not sure who—told me to get ready, it was my turn, they were getting ready to announce me.

I heard my name called, and so, in fear, walked out onto the stage, in front of those cameras, beneath all those shocking lights, suspicious that
my message about growing up white in the South was about to fall flat.

Once I was out there, I discovered one further intimidating detail. The interviewer and every member of this large television audience were black.

My whiteness dimmed the lights. My silly message about Sugar Mecklin's white-bread tragedy seemed altogether fatuous.

In any case, as part of the talk-show format, the audience was invited to ask questions from microphones placed throughout the studio. In my giddy state, I found myself giving a completely unexpected answer to one of the questions. Unexpected to me, I mean.

A woman stood at the microphone in the audience and said, “What will your next book be about?”

I said, confidently, “It will deal with the death of Emmett Till.”

What? It would deal with what? Who said that?

I added, “Emmett Till was a black child who was murdered near my hometown when I was a boy. The trial of his murderers became a landmark in the civil rights movement.” Words to that effect, anyway.

The remainder of the half hour was taken up with questions and answers related to the unexpected announcement of this work-in-progress.

An anonymous white boy

A year later—in 1993—
Wolf Whistle,
the book I described on that television show, went to press. It is the book I seem to have been preparing to write for a long time, and yet until the words came out of my mouth I had had no conscious intention of writing such a book.

There is, however, a detail in
Music of the Swamp
that might have predicted it. Two children in a boat see the feet and legs of a dead body sticking up from the water in a drift of brush beyond the Roebuck Lake spillway.

The narrator reports the body to be that of an old man who had
“spells.” I knew it was not. Though I had not given a thought to any future book I might write, I knew when I wrote the chapter that this dead person was none other than Emmett Till, floating upside down at the end of a barbed wire tether that was tied at one end to a hundred-pound gin fan and at the other, around the child's neck.

The description of the feet and legs of the body, poking up out of the water and the barbed wire and the gin fan, and even the phrase “a drift of brush,” survive in my memory from a newspaper article of thirty-six years before. Those helpless feet and legs, upside down, almost comic, have haunted me all my life.

Something else has haunted me as well, an invisibility, the anonymous white boy in the boat, checking his hooks for catfish, when he found the body of Emmett Till. Still, I wonder who he was, what became of him, how his life was changed.

The unreality of fiction

The novel that I wrote,
Wolf Whistle,
is pure invention, because when I began my memory of the events surrounding the murder and the trial was very limited. Mainly I remembered the news article about the body in the drift of bursh, and that the child was killed as a result of wolf whistling at a white woman.

The big blank spots in my memory were something of a blessing during the writing of the book. With no memory of the identity of the persons actually involved, I was free to set the novel in my already-invented fictional geography and population of Arrow Catcher, Mississippi. I used some characters that I'd invented earlier and I made up new characters as they were needed.

I already knew most of the white people in my story, residents of my earlier books, and their relatives. The more I wrote, the more I invented, including a population of vaguely magical animals. A flock of buzzards,
each vulture named after a former governor of the state of Mississippi; a tamed hellhound (whatever that is!) that lives behind a bootleg whiskey store; a one-handed monkey named after the president of the Confederacy; a parrot who cannot speak but can only make a noise like a cash register; all these things, and more, drove the story into that fictional realm where my work lives most comfortably.

The point of view of the novel is comprehensive, including not only major and minor characters, black and white, male and female, dead and alive, but even the buzzards on their telephone poles and pigeons in the rafters. It is a serious story, about death and grief and broken hearts, and in which credibility is a key, but it exists on a plane, sometimes comic, even burlesque, just askew of the “real,” historical universe. That is my intention and my point: to render the natural world as itself and, at the same time, as unearthly.

The reality of Emmett Till

In one area, however, I discovered myself unwilling to allow the universe of my story to wobble on its axis, let alone to spin away from it. I found myself sticking tight to the few memories I held of Emmett Till. Other inventions came easily, but my mind would not let go of the historical Emmett.

As I worked with the material, other memories came to me. In addition to his upside down body in the brush pile, I remembered his age, fourteen, a year younger than I was when he died. I remembered that he had gone into the store, where he supposedly whistled at the white woman, to buy bubble gum. I remembered that he was from Chicago, that his father was dead, that he had been visiting a great-uncle and aunt, that the uncle's name was Mose.

In the early drafts of the novel, I kept all the remembered details—including Emmett's real name, Mose's real name, and much more. Even
those private things that I made up about the family are grounded solidly in “real world” possibilities—I'm thinking especially of the love-making scene between the boy's uncle and aunt—where there is no room for caricature or anything unearthly.

Eventually, my editor asked me about this impulse to preserve Emmett Till intact, as real. Why was invention so bountiful, so extravagant in fact, in all the rest of the novel, and so skimpy when it came to the character that represented Emmett Till?

To tell the truth, the question scared me a little. Generally my thinking does not run to the abstract—I mean, I work by instinct and intuition, from which I create geographies and characters, and in the process seldom ask myself questions of “aesthetics.”

Having been asked, though, I wondered. Was it merely reverence for the dead? Was it a streak of sentimentality? Was it some Faulknerian something-or-another, blood-guilt, that made everyone in my story, except Emmett, fair game for irony and satire and caricature?

At first I thought so, frankly. It is true that I revere the memory of Emmett Till. His death marked not only a turning point in civil rights but, in a very personal way, in my own life as well. And though I usually run away and hide from comparisons with Faulkner and his old-fashioned ideas about blood-guilt, my racial identification with the murderers of Emmett Till still troubles me.

But even as I acknowledge some culpability, I know that there is an aesthetic issue that supersedes these considerations.

This book, like every honest book, demands a moral center—and also an emotional, psychological, detail-based center—firm ground on which a reader may stand in complete confidence that it will not move. Especially this is true in a book like
Wolf Whistle,
where the ground of reality is so unstable, so likely to shift away from conventional expectations of reality.

Emmett (Bobo, in the fiction) and his family are the moral, emotional, psychological, life-affirming core of this novel, which a reader may trust to be permanent, and around which all the rest of the world may go mad. The aesthetic need to maintain this solid ground was manifested in my early reluctance to change even the smallest details of my memory of the real event, including Emmett's name. Not until the last draft of the book did Emmett become Bobo—and he became Bobo in the novel only because that was the nickname by which, in real life, Emmett Till was known.

Just before I appeared on that television show in Atlanta last year, I chose a necktie from my suitcase and knotted it so tight around my neck that my face turned blue. My hair I plastered into place with great globs of a product called Mega Gel. (The tube advises, Extreme Hold for Design and Control.) My shoes were shined. My beard was trimmed. I shaved the tops of my ears. I plucked my nose hairs. My belt was pulled to the last hole. My breath said Scope! at long distances. Mega Gel had the idea: extreme hold for control.

Never mind the details, and don't imagine that I am asking for sympathy, but only believe that one week before this television interview, my own personal life had fallen into chaos. Everything was haywire, helter-skelter, inside out. Unlike Mega Gel, I had lost all control, and could discern no design in the scheme of things.

Looking back now I understand a few things better. All my cosmetics and my strict adherence to a self-imposed dress code were attempts to gain control of a world flying off its axis. When that anonymous woman at the microphone asked me about my next book, I reached down to the core of myself for something substantial to answer her with.

What I found there was Emmett Till. As soon as I spoke his name, I
knew that I had found a buried chunk of my self's permanent foundation, the granite cornerstone of something formative and durable and true.

A few times over the years Emmett Till had surfaced, as he did briefly and anonymously in
Music of the Swamp.
And, in a way, he took me back to an even earlier, formative time, when I myself was a fatherless child, as Emmett had been, unaware of my loss and my grief. On that television program, Emmett emerged suddenly as the unshakable ground of
me,
where I could stand to watch in safety the rags and tags of my personal life flying away in the whirlwind, in confidence that they would all return or that what did not return could be lived without.

In
Wolf Whistle,
Emmett, Bobo, holds the same position as he held in my heart. He is the fixed center, in the midst of other lives that have been turned inside out. In the directionless fictional histories of the characters of
Wolf Whistle,
there are hints of what happened in my own history, and perhaps in the history of all human beings—death, heartbreak, betrayal, lost love, and lost hope.

Emmett, though, is
terra firma.
He is the reality, he is the rock. Everyone else in the book flies with the whirlwind, except, in the end, maybe the school teacher, Alice, whose life Emmett touched, as he touched mine, without either Alice or me ever meeting him.

An Interview with the Author

How did you become a writer?

I earned my Ph.D. wanting to be a Shakespeare scholar. But the truth is I wasn't any good at it. I didn't have the kind of analytical mind necessary to illuminate a text. And attempts to publish in the field were torture for me.

It was because I couldn't get an academic job, even with a doctorate, that I became a writer.

I did work part-time jobs during that time and one job was as a night watchman for a company that made fishing rods—Shakespeare of Arkansas. So at least I was still working in my field.

During that time I was part of a writing program for a year. After that I was teaching myself to write fiction, and I'd go through my pages and draw a red circle around every image. If I didn't have enough red circles, I considered the page incomplete, and I would go back and fill it up with images of things to see, taste, touch, and smell in every paragraph.

The process has become intuitive for me, and it's one I use with my students. Once we've looked at the structure of a story to determine exactly what it's about, I lead them sentence by sentence through each paragraph and ask them to reimagine every one, as I do in my own writing. I'm teaching them to paint, to draw, and also to find the right musical notes.

Your writing has been described as somewhat surreal, reminiscent of Thurber. How would you describe your vision as a writer?

In all my years of school I had never quite understood what people meant by a writer's vision. Then one day it dawned on me what my own fictional vision is. It's a magical landscape just askew of the real, historical
universe. That world, that created planet, doesn't quite square with the world I live in.

I
was
fascinated by Thurber's cartoons as a kid, though I couldn't always figure out what they meant. I've always had a kind of cartoonish vision. My world has been one where I would see things as clearly as anyone else did, but when I reported them people would say, “That's not the way it really was. You've made their heads too big, you've made them outlandish in some ways.”

Some time later, still just a kid, I read Thurber's
University Days.
The totally real and believable silliness of his people fascinated me. In some sense, every story I write is a retelling of “The Night the Bed Fell.”

That outlandish quality might also be called grotesque, similar in ways to the characters of other Southern writers such as Flannery O'Connor. Why do you think Southern writing is peopled with such bizarre characters?

I think a lot of storytelling, Southern or otherwise, is about remarkable events. Death, disease and disfigurement, dwarfism and shrunken mummies, are not necessarily more common in one place than in another, but in places with a strong oral tradition these extraordinary phenomena naturally draw a lot of attention.

My theory about the grotesque in my own work, and in storytelling generally, is that it's a way of saying, “This is more remarkable than anything you've seen today; this is even more remarkable than your own crazy family!”

Another more arcane theory about Southern storytelling is that the South, defeated in the Civil War and occupied by outsiders, became separate and defensive. I wouldn't want to imply that slavery didn't also cause a psychological separateness, but I believe there's something inherent in being Southern that derives from the aftermath of the war. We still have the lingering attitude: “This is how bad it was, and this is how
we laugh at it.” I think the grotesque has an element of humor in it, and humor is a way of dealing with pain. It's a method of managing anger.

BOOK: Wolf Whistle
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