Monday, February 16, 2026

My Dad has Published Almost as many Novels as J.D. Salinger

 My Dad has Published Almost as many Novels as J.D. Salinger

    Unless there have been posthumous novels published since his death in 2010. Need to check.

    Jerome, or Jerry, Salinger, author extraordinaire. Born in 1924, later to publish the Catcher in the Rye. The youth's misinterpretation of a Robert Burns poem, from maybe 1860.

    J.D. wished to harken to a time of more innocence, before "phony" (and terrible adulthood) would catch him and toss him over the cliff. Perhaps he died many times inside, so much that he was broken into many parts that people have a hard time understanding, putting together. His son, Matthew, loved and cherished him. His daughter Margaret, not so much.

    Salinger lived to be 91. My dad is now 88. Given up on his novels, we are assured, like the thought or beginning of two men trying to extricate themselves from southern Algeria, or somewhere deep down in the Sahara. Paul Bowles managed this book, or at least the Algerian vast landscape, decades ago, likely unbeknownst to my father, but a bit bewitching to me. I will not read it, yet, having seen a film version, reading some summaries and critiques. Disturbing and sad, is what we learn. Books in Algeria! Perhaps for me yet? We never know.

    Should fiction be terrifying and sad, like that created by Cormac McCarthy or Richard Mathison?

    Enough of that fiction, there is plenty of real pathos and tragedy for that!

    My dad published two novels with the august octogenarian Mary Campbell in the 2000 teens. Around 2012 or 2013? Perhaps before. We will check.

    Letters to Lucretia and Forgotten Memory. At least one got looks at or consideration by Morgan Freeman, or his folks, possibly adapted to him. That was cool. His books may not move much. Nothing like Salinger.

    Not to be compared to Salinger, who seems to have altered human history with his literature. And his life. My dad?  Much smaller circles of influence. But my father was not a determined writer since his teenage years in the 1950s. Salinger was very intent on writing since he was 17, in the early 1940s.

    I wanted to be a writer since the 1980s, in my teenage years.

    No novels from me, or at least none published.

    My father helped write and publish a non-fiction book in the 1970s. About genealogy, or family history. He has written a number of letters, or mini-memoirs, and other small stories or remembrances.

    A little like me. I have written or composes some poems. A bit like my daughter. The oldest.

    She may trump us men. Who knows?

    May any of us compare to the late, great J.D. Salinger. We are not traumatized by battles and death, burnt flesh and awful carnage and violence.

    But we may have some important things to share, write, and impart.

U.S. Combat Veterans

 U.S. Combat Veterans

    I spoke to a Marine combat veteran who fought in Vietnam today. He fought fifty plus years ago; I spoke with him this afternoon. It is an honor and a privilege. He was hurt in Vietnam back around 1968, where things were hard. He knew guys who were killed. He himself was fortunate to only be injured, not maimed for life.

    He is a real guy; I have known him since either 2007 or 2008. He has some hard memories and feelings from those times. He went to the cemeteries of our guys at Normandy...

    Salinger fought and suffered with his colleagues at Utah Beach, but before that, I think notably, in the sands of that replica place in England. Too many young and battered and buried bodies, on both sides of the Channel. Thanks a lot, Adolph, and the twisters of social Darwinism!

    Terrible, the Third Reich.

    Any, Happy U.S. Presidents' Day.

    Chester Arthur lives forever. For what, we cannot remember.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Journeying with You - A Poem

 Journeying with You

    I tried to think back.

    Warm and happy memories.

    There were times not perfect,

    I have been less than stellar for periods.

    But steady?

    We hope! I hope I can leave you with those hopes


    Too much hope? Not enough? We cannot have everything, certainly not me.

    But having you has certainly been enough for me.

    
    There are are others who go farther, who provide with more, who are even less selfish.

    I am not a lot of all those things.

    Maybe enough.


    We went to Mexico. 

    Cabo San Lucas, Los Barriles, La Paz, in the southern Baja.

    Then La Bufadora, Ensenada, San Felipe in the north.

    Again by the Sea of Cortez, the Gulf of California. With a little one.


    They looked over our car outside of Ojos Negros. Mexican security, as it were.

    Mazatlan, Obregon, Guasave...

    The Mexican Riviera.


    Points on maps, you and me, and a baby.

    But wait! Before that, while pregnant, there was Acapulco,

    La Ciudad de Mexico, Tenochtitlan and Teotihuacan.

    Finally, Zihuatenejo. Romantic moments on the beach.

    Guitars and some moonlight, I think.


    Add another child, we went to places like Ciudad Juarez, after Arizona and New Mexico.

    Sleeping in the RV,  camping in western Texas.

    We went to a few places.

    Journeys. Not perfect, not opulent and bougie,

    Close and nice.



    Flew to Indiana, drove to Chicago or Asheville in the Appalachians, or Tennessee.

    The Outer Banks of North Carolina.

    We went to Boston, and New York, Manhattan, the New Jersey side with that tall lady...

    Cape Cod, some Vermont. 

    
    Places, journeys, remembered and forgotten.

    New Orleans, Mississippi, the Carolinas.


    Smoky Mountains. Like the Sierra Nevadas or Yosemite of yesteryear.


    Chile for six months.

    We did okay. We lived a few dreams.

    Did we not?


     As we aged and raised more children, we went to new places:

    The Turks and Caicos

    The Bahamas

    Canada

    Mexico, briefly.

    With our children, the apples of our eyes.

    We went to mountains and beaches, plains and lakes and rivers.

    Time would pass, years added on.

    You and I went to Iceland.

    We took most of the kids to Peru.

    We went places, and sometimes we were apart.


    I could hear your voice from far away; you were close by.

    In my heart and mind.

    Across the miles.

    In all, we have spent about 8 months away from the United States in seven foreign lands.

    States? Dozens, including Alaska and Hawai'i.

    
    We go on sentimental and emotional journeys.

    Sunday morning interlude: I meant to write and publish this poem

    yesterday, Saturday.

    I am composing it still, 

    While you go walking.

    Snow is still melting,

    Slowlier (not a word!) than ever.


    The ice of mid-Fedruary,

    After observing the sun, scrutinizing the moon...


    Its heights, its ranges, its seas of just moon dust or rocks

    Distracted again, by heavenly bodies.


    We do not wish ...

    I lost my thought.

    This is about you and me.


    Not all the distractions.

    Ahh, death!


    There you are.

    Existence! The afterlife.

    Not looking forward to bodiless entrapments...

    
    Where has the journeys of this Valentine's poem gone?


    Ugh, not the intended romantic Valentine's I had thought of!

    Saturday morning, the 14th, all light and gay.

    Happy, passionate, full of life.


    Today, somber and gray. With some hope. Just enough, or not sufficient?

    
    Either way, we are on our journeys.

      I thank you, and love you, eternally, for all the journeys,

    Remembered and forgotten.


    Eternally.


    Whatever that means.


    A poem, not perfect or perfected, like the journey of you and me.


    I love you now.