by Douglas Messerli
Frederic Tuten My Young Life (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2019)
Richard Kalich The Assisted Living Facility Library (Los Angeles: Green Integer
2019)
By sheer coincidence within a three-week period I read an autobiographical fiction by a writer I twice published, Richard Kalich, The Assisted Living Facility Library (in manuscript) and a new memoir by another friend, Frederic Tuten, My Young Life. These two works were equally fascinating, self-critical, and quite humorous—despite the fact that they were written at a time when both men were facing old age, Kalich born in the same year that I was, 1947, and Tuten a few years earlier.
But, in this case the two
books, read back-to-back, contained so many similarities in tone and matter
that I simply could not resist yoking them, and explained to both authors that
I was about to do so.
Of course, both
publications, even if one of them poses as a fiction, are autobiographical, and
in both heterosexual men speak of their regret for not establishing longer
relationships with women, even though Tuten, by the end of his memoir,
describes a brief marriage. Kalich, unlike his twin brother, who married,
speaks of his books and his love of literature as having replaced a long-term
relationship.
What I hadn’t know,
moreover, is that both obviously intelligent New Yorkers (Tuten growing up in
the Bronx and Kalich in Manhattan) recognize that at times they were not living
up to their full potential. Even more startingly, both attended City College in
New York, finding in the City College cafeteria, as Tuten describes it,
“stretched along the dark basement of Shepard Hall, like the mess halls in
black-and-white prison movies,” a kind of home in which for hours (not fully
described in Kalich’s fiction, although in a personal note he spoke strongly
about it), but almost the center of Tuten’s book. I asked Tuten, who describes
hanging out with the “Bohemian group,” whether he knew David and Eleanor Antin,
and he admitted that they were, in fact, at the center of that group. In short,
City College becomes almost an unspoken center of their youthful activities, a
place that helped to determine their futures, much like the role the Ratskeller
at the University of Wisconsin played out for Howard and me.
Both of these figures
sought out adventure in foreign shores, Kalich, primarily, through his large
collection of books, which in his fiction he must now winnow down to just a few
titles before moving into an assisted living facility. I’ve visited him in his
South Central Park apartment, and cannot imagine making such a drastic
selection.* For Kalich, reading is as good as traveling.
The dreamer Tuten imagines
himself in Paris but can only afford such a trip beyond the confines of his
youthful memoir, although he does spend some time in Mexico, which appears to
be transformative.
And both writers are often
haunted and controlled by their loves for their mother. In their adventures out
of the home-bound indentures, they seek close companionship with males, Kalich
with his twin brother and in Tuten’s life the writer John Resko (author of a
novel, Reprieve), an artist who in
his youth had been imprisoned but was himself eventually and quite miraculously
“reprieved,” and other artists such as Jack Micheline and his “Hippie girls.”
And yes, there are numerous books such as The
Magic Mountain in his life as well. And then, later, Tuten became close
friends with Roy Lichtenstein and other artists.
These self-biographers were
not, after all, so very different from Benjamin Franklin, a self-made genius
who kept in touch with the common his entire life, despite his adventurous time
in Paris. Symbolically speaking, both have been touched by the lightning of the
imagination, and reading their texts, you too will surely be enlightened or
even electrocuted by their stunning perceptions.
*Instead of selecting 50-100 titles to save, I gave all of my thousands of treasured volumes to the Chapman University Library, keeping only a few books I still intended to read at home
Los Angeles, February
8, 2019
Reprinted from EXPLORINGfictions (February 2019).