The American Friend

I think it was genetics. I think it was luck. I think it was attitude that got me through a lot of it. I believe in miracles. It’s a miracle that I’m still here.
The late Dennis Hopper interviewed by Alex Simon.

Addendum: Paul Thomas writes about Hopper, Easy Rider and Terry Southern, and I agree with every word. Southern wrote Easy Rider and never got the credit he deserved. His champion drinking habits doubtless had more than a little to do with it but overall, yes, that is the way of Hollywood. Southern once said that all you had to do to write a novel was write a page a day, then at the end of a year, send it in. Pity the editor.

The Universal

There is no-one at the stadium at the French Open. Fuck, I'll go. Really - the seats are four-fifths empty. Men's singles, 4th round, there are more pigeons than people. Including the green seats. The green seats must be worth extra, right? Was Gwen Stefani busy?

I know nothing about sports. I like boxing - it takes way more guts than spear-tackling - and I can understand tennis, finally. Which means the third act of the movie of Strangers on a Train makes more sense to me now than it did when I first saw it, but that's it. Oh, and running. Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner was a great book. But yes, hitting people and Russian girls collapsing in emotion, that's about my range. Fuck that team shit.

Long, long weekend. Getting longer.

Abl wz i

An early example of celebrity tweeting from Adam Zamoyski's Rites of Peace: The Fall of Napoleon & The Congress of Vienna:
On 15 July [1815], fearing capture by French forces loyal to the Bourbons, [Napoleon] went aboard the Bellerophon... the idea of holding him on the British mainland appeared less attractive soon after the Bellerophon dropped anchor in Plymouth Sound. Thousands sailed or rowed out to catch a glimpse of the fallen ogre, and local boatmen made fortunes towing visitors from as far afield as London round the man-of-war. Napoleon would observe them through his eyeglass and raise his hat to the ladies, to their intense delight. Tired of being hailed and asked what he was doing when he was not on deck, the crew took to hanging out a board on which they would chalk 'At Breakfast', 'In Cabin with Captain', 'Writing with his Officers' and so on.

That new familiar feeling

Whitcoulls have launched the Kobo ebook reader and software platform in NZ. The tech has been reviewed in Engadget:
Kobo... doesn't plan on making a big splash in the actual e-reader market, since it's primarily about building branded software and delivering branded e-book stores for others, including manufacturers.., and booksellers...

As far as software and capabilities, the device is utterly barebones, but at least it keeps its aesthetics throughout, and everything seems responsive and intuitive. There's no 3G onboard (you sync your e-pub titles with a desktop app over USB), no specific word on storage (our guess is in the 1GB to 4GB range), and there don't seem to be any other activities available to reading books.
As an author I have many questions and so turned (clicked) to the Whitcoulls site FAQ. And got:

Why do I not feel optimistic?

DRM free copies of your favourite New Zealand novels now available at secondhand bookstores throughout the country, at less than $12-17.

Update: Apparently Kobo books don't reside on your hard / flash drive but rather stay "in the cloud." Fail. Have no interest in paying a cell phone company's wireless data fees every time I want to read. iPod Kobo app = gone.

And this is the punchline: Paul Reynolds

It's been said that no man in his last hours ever wished he'd spent more time at the office but Paul Reynolds might have been the exception. He had been through a lot but being a Scot he put it into labour. Watching him work so hard was difficult for his loved ones but engaged in a task he was as happy as a sandboy. He liked complex problems, the big picture and silly little distractions. He was always willing to suffer fools because he believed in giving people second chances. He'd been given a few himself: picked himself up, dusted himself off, got to work. I always admired that about him.

I met Paul when he was reading for publishers, writing reviews, living on the slope in Parnell. He read my first (unpublished) novel and recommended my second; as a broadcaster, he gave me my first good review. When I first connected to the internet in 1994(? - squealing modem, etc) he was, ridiculously, the first person to email me. (He contacted me - I had no idea how to work the thing.) We met for coffee in Vulcan Lane and talked about novels and drinking and London and music. Since then we've had a lot of coffees and dinners and conversations, and I worked with him for a time, and I did a lot of happy listening. Paul liked to tell long, rambling stories daisy-chained together one after the other and then, just at the point where they were about to go off completely, reel them back by in saying, '...And this is the punchline.' Because of all the places he'd been to in the meantime, the punchline was never as good.

When I was back in town last year I stayed at his apartment, minded the cat and attempted to work the mind numbingly complex PC / web TV set up he'd basically strung together for the sole purpose of streaming The Archers. There was also whiskey in the cabinet, he noted, and the Bourne trilogy on DVD, and would I please help myself to both. What I liked about Paul was that he was a fan of Derrida and Patrick O'Brian. On one birthday when I clumsily gifted him a John le Carré title which he already had in his bookcase he replied without irony, 'One can never have too many.' He was always giving me things to read and ideas I never would have thought of. His opinion meant more to me than almost anyone's.

I knew things had not been good over for him over the last while and I was braced for bad news. Now it's here it's only just sinking in. Now I don't know who I'll turn to next time when I have an irrational complaint and need someone to say agreeably, 'Well, this is true.' People die and things change but sometimes you wish they didn't, or at least that they would hold back and the world would stop turning just for a while. But that would mean that there was no longer work to be done. Paul was clever and funny and moody and brisk, and he left early. He had things to do.

Bedside reading

The LaPorte Dreamworks bio is straightforward but good. About 40 pages of chapter notes and quote attributions because the author has written about Disney and Michael Ovitz and David Geffen. More and more I find myself admiring works not so much for what they are but what they had to get through - the lawyering over the book must have been incredible. Significantly it has no photos, I assume because the subjects wouldn't grant permission. So, well done, Ms LaPorte, and adios.

The Booth novel will be a George Clooney movie soon; I can see why. J.D. Salinger - he's pretty good.

Summer has finally hit London and the city is pale and reeling. It's all 1940s dresses and aviator shades and Doc Martens up north - and the women are dressing up, as well. The Enforcer was on late. Refrigerator moment this morning with the ms: realised something, scribbled two new pages but can't face typing them up. Too much time in front of the screen. Sunday, maybe. Tres fatigue and every time I get up to speed there's some shit message from the old country to bring me right back down. So off drinking, then. And no, not warm beer, and I don't know anything much about wine - I'm vin de table and voddy right down the line. My mother once said (= yelled) that you can't have champagne tastes on a beer income, and both the statement and its rhythm stuck.

Mystery Machine

Tres fatigue, bad news all round and all that. A random dip into articles I bookmarked this week:

This just in from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm:
New research shows a possible explanation for the link between mental health and creativity. By studying receptors in the brain, researchers at Karolinska Institutet have managed to show that the dopamine system in healthy, highly creative people is similar in some respects to that seen in people with schizophrenia.
Any author could have told you.

The painting that used to hang in Michael Crichton's bedroom sold for US$29million. It's a Jasper Johns; what I like about this story is that a writer got to own it. Here's Crichton talking to Janet Berliner:
Starting around the early Eighties, I began to realize that people’s perceptions of me were very different from how I perceived myself. There was this sense that I was a kind of stainless steel, high-tech person, who would be really interested in lecturing on the subject of robots, or something. I found myself saying to people that I didn’t have those interests, and that caused a lot of surprise. I began to feel that what had happened, because I had so much early attention for books like The Andromeda Strain – which I really feel were misunderstood, though they were very popular–perceptions of me were of some twenty-six-year-old techie whiz kid. Meanwhile, the experiences of my life had gone in another direction, had been going in that direction for many, many years.
It's a good interview about writing, public- and self-perception.

As a teen I very much admired the blurry work of photographer Anton Corbijn. He's since graduated (or regressed) to the moving image: his interesting blog for his new project The American is here:
Wish it was raining, makes it so much easier to go into the darkness of the edit suite. I'm going to look at the ending of the film and make sure it is understood by more people. No way i'm going to let you in on the actual ending so you will have to wait and see. Or wait longer and go and see the sequel, in 3D of course.
I killed my Twitter account yonks ago but the positive, funny tweets of director David Lynch make me happy.
NY Magazine has a feature on dining with Bill Murray:
If you are a lady, he will stand up when you take your seat and remain standing until you pull your chair in. He will do this for every female at his table. You soon will start making an effort to sit down and stand up faster.
A recent survey of British consumers found that:
Two-thirds want hard copies of photographs and music, 75 per cent want their films to come with packaging, and 90 per cent want their books to stay as books... And it's not just the oldies. Almost 40 per cent of 16-34 age groups still buy CDs and DVDs alongside digital formats.
Scooby Doo (above) was created by Hanna Barbera artist Iwao Takamoto. During World War II the American-born Takamoto was interned in the Manzanar camp in California. After 1945 he went on to work for Disney; at Hanna Barbera he created Scooby, Muttley, Astro and Penelope Pitstop. There's a lesson in there somewhere. A detailed interview with the funny man is here.

World: turning. Things not so good.