About Lori Berhon

Lori Berhon is a New-York based novelist and playwright. Her work is distinguished for its intelligence and for the vivid humanity of even her most impossible characters. She is actually taller, slimmer and far more elegant than she appears to be.

Commonplace

Last month, I made a quick post on my Sparks page about what I call “covetable copy” —a piece of writing I wish I’d written.  I wanted to put up another one, so I started leafing through my little notebook with the red brocade cover. It’s probably Chinese.  This one is old but I think you can still get them downtown at Pearl River. The pages have pale reddish lines, and some have a small sketch of a bird or flower in one corner. The paper is so thin that some inks bleed right through, making it necessary to leave the reverse side untouched.

This is one of many blank books I’ve bought or been given over the decades. They’ve been anything from the size of a deck of playing cards to 8×10″ schools notebook, with pages stitched, sewn or spiral bound. The covers have been hard and soft, made of anything from banana leaves to recycled roofing tin. I’ve actually used most of these. Before there was even my ur-device (my original Palm Pilot of beloved memory), I used to carry one in my bag at all times in case inspiration struck. Each of my plays and all my early book ideas had a notebook carefully matched to it. There was always something momentous about finding the perfect book and writing the title on the first page, in my neatest hand; a kind of blessing on the project. I’ve never been much for journals, but many of these notebooks turned into what can best be described as commonplace books. They hold random notes: lists of things to do or see; topics to research; skeletal maps of how to get from vacation hotels to sites of interest; sketches of motifs from ancient pottery or the shape of a sleeve; nearly-lost memories.

The little red book is a commonplace book with nothing but quotes. As well as “covetable copy,” I’ve saved quotes that I find inspirational and a couple of verses I didn’t want to forget. Some have been transcribed in an attempt at calligraphy, or in other deviations from my usual hand or ink, with the intent of adding another layer of meaning. The sight of purple faux-copperplate or round print in rainbow pencil lead can raise as many memories as the words themselves.

Today I noticed this:

“Novels are against randomness. They’re against the idea that nothing happens.” Jayne Anne Phillips, in a 2000 interview in Mirabella magazine

Sometimes the thoughts triggered by flipping through notes you’ve kept for years and years are surprising. For example, I very much like what Ms. Phillips says here. Her words make me think, and then nod my head in pleased agreement. But when I paused on this page today, what jumped out at me were the words “Mirabella magazine.”

My memories spiralled back to the 90’s, when former Vogue editor-in-chief Grace Mirabella created a glossy monthly publication for smart women. Smart. Mirabella had beauty and brains, combining fashion coverage with high-quality writing. It wasn’t only about style, it had style. And it had confidence. Not since I was an eleven-year-old reading Seventeen had I been so excited at the arrival of each new copy of a magazine. I loved reading it, and I aspired to someday being interviewed for it. When it died, after several years of being torn apart and eventually sold, I’d renewed my subscription so far forward that it still had three years left to run. The publishers informed me, with no option for protest (though I made a number of attempts) that they would “fulfill” the remainder of my subscription with More, which is like being told that the vacation to Paris that you paid for will be replaced by a pass to the French pavilion at Epcot center.

I miss that feeling of aspiring to things of quality.  Most lives are about the striving, not success. I think we lose something when the unattainable is commonplace.

Dystopian Present

“Why?” my sister asked, standing in one of the surviving brick-and-mortar bookstores, waiting for her tweens to pick out something to read. “Why is the YA section all dystopian science fiction?” She was more annoyed than curious, concerned that her children were being limited to a narrow vision of alternative worlds. But it got me thinking…

Her theory was that this is a trend based on simple market-driven economics: the success of The Hunger Games spawning imitators. My theory goes beyond the cash to the human desires that wrest it from our hands. We (not just the kids; we’re all reading this) are drawn to the stories that help to explain our lives. Previous generations were drawn to Westerns or kitchen sink dramas. A few years ago, we were still believing that, in a magical battle between good and evil, good would ultimately win (thought to ponder: if Harry Potter had not been introduced until 2007, would he have made the same emotional connections with his public as he did by debuting ten years earlier?).

I’m wondering if dystopian futures are compelling to us today because we’re living in a dystopian present. For over 200 years, the American Dream relied on a sense of limitless possibility. But right now, nothing seems possible. Our politics are broken. Most of us live from paycheck to paycheck. The social contract has more riders than a rush-hour subway. And nothing is punished as consistently as good behavior.

Is it surprising that we’re drawn to big stories with protagonists who are imprisoned by what seem to be unshakable contraints? Look at a tiny slice of dystopias on offer: Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games, Justin Cronin’s Passsage and Hugh Howey’s Wool (the success of which makes me, dare I say it? at least 50 shades happier than other self-publishing phenoms). These are epic tales of societies born of disaster, societies which have since outgrown and perverted their initial purpose. What was refuge has become cage. Their protagonists are people of large spirit who can no longer bear such empty survival and are prepared to risk death for an hour of life.

No happy endings in these fictional worlds. Sacrifices are great. Walls come down, only to be replaced by new walls. The best we can hope for our heros is that they experience a moment of joy or love along the way, and end with the peace of having at least tried. Is that the new American Dream?

World Enough, and Time

I haven’t updated this blog in far too long.  Two months.

In the blog-o-sphere, where you are advised you must feed the feed almost constantly in order to cultivate an audience, that’s more like eons too long. Even with my far more modest goals (once or twice a month seems plenty to me), two months is  bit much. The problem has been, as it often is for me and for most people I know, time.

Simply stated: if I’m blogging, I’m not writing.  Yes, I know blogging is writing. But the hour I’m using on this post is an hour of not working on the novel that is already a good three months behind schedule (and I’m talking about the amended schedule at that!), the novel that will probably not, after all, be finished before I take my annual inspirational break to participate in National Novel Writing Month in November.  Every social network post and tweet eats away at the time I have to work on that novel. So does cooking and cleaning. Getting a haircut. Balancing the checkbook. So do all the little things that have to be done in support of the work that’s already out in the market. And then there are the thoroughly enjoyable and refreshing things: spending time with friends; going on vacation; taking a walk in the park.

Every hour needs bargaining.  What do I have to do? What will cause more problem to postpone than would be worth the pause to handle? When is the time lost far outweighed by the benefits—and vice versa? Which is the better value?

And so, Dear Reader, there’s been a two-month gap in this blog. I had to make a choice. And if you’ve missed having more frequent posts, let’s hope that the book that ate up that time turns out to be something that you’ll (someday) enjoy reading.