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J.C. Hallman's avatar

I studied with Clark at Iowa (and I was born in 1967!). I'll never forget his lesson about the "then moment" of stories. I've used it a number of times. Also, a moment in one of his seminars stands out...we were discussing Cheever's "The Swimmer," and Clark said that he believed writers often put themselves in their own stories, somewhere, hiding. He asked the class where Cheever was hiding in "The Swimmer." No one answered. Finally, Clark pressed upon me for an answer. Bear in mind, I was very, very young at Iowa -- 22, when the average age was closer to 29. But I knew where Cheever was. He's in a small plane, flying overhead very early in the story, observing everything from afar, above it. "He's in the plane," I said. "Yes," Clark said, and we went on.

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ben woestenburg's avatar

So very different, this. In 1969 I was 11 years old. It was a decade that was coming to a tumultuous end. I was having breakfast with my brother this morning, and we actually had a discussion about the 60s in a round-about way. I said how I remembered the things that stood out for me, and how the Viet Nam War was the first war they actually televised without censoring. They showed it as it really was. A big mistake I said, because the world saw it as well. Remember all the riots taking place? Washington, Kent State, Paris? I said I remembered when that monk lit himself on fire in the streets of Saigon. He said the thing he took with him was when that North Vietnamese soldier was shot in the head. It traumatized him, he said. He's six years older than me. It's the first time he told me that.So strange the things we take with us. My biggest take in the 60s was 1969 and the moon landing, not because of the moon landing itself, but because my neighbour was 75 years old and told me he remembered going to the theatre in Saskatoon to watch that famous clip of the Wright brothers flying for the first time...and now they're landing on the moon., he said. It's funny the things we take with us. We never really leave anything behind though, do we? That Buddhist monk; that Viet-Kong soldier; the Civil Rights Movement and the water canons on the streets; the cops beating protesters in Chicago. And through it all, I remember wandering through Coles bookstore and looking at the one single shelf they had for Canadian literature...and seeing your books of poetry there...but then, what proper 11 year old read Canadian literature, let alone, poetry? I was looking for TARZAN!

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