EXCHANGES BETWEEN THE AUTHOR AND A READER ABOUT THE NOVEL:
A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© April 16, 2014
READER:
I am reading A GREEN
ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA. Many
distractions, in and out all day, finally warm enough for a sweatshirt instead
of three layers, so gardening possible.
Found a hawk of some kind dead under the triple white pines, such beautifully
mottled feathers, head and beak in good shape.
I won’t touch it because it is protected. I am at a loss as to how it came to die
there. Appears no stress like from a battle,
so curious the cause of its demise.
My review of GREEN
ISLAND will go something like this: “For a history and biography reader, just
having finished the last volume of Game
of Thrones, taking up James Fisher’s A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA provided
a riveting experience. It felt like
tumbling down a mountain never knowing where the course was taking you, surely
not straight down! It is a book to be
savored not simply read. It fits no
form, coursing akin to pinball. You are
whacked quite suddenly just when you think a course has been set. For a thought provoking read, I would
recommend this revolving door, a book casting you repeatedly beyond an
unsettled comfort zone. A book that the
mind returns to repeatedly. I get the BLACK SEA.”
AUTHOR JAMES RAYMOND FISHER:
Yes, I believe you do
“get it.”
I struggled for forty
years to tell the story as it unfolded in my mind. It started out as therapy in 1969 and
progressed as I unraveled my self-deception.
Haslam’s bookstore in St. Petersburg (Florida) became an oasis that I
frequented nearly every day. It is where
I was introduced to Krishnamurti, and his personal brand of mysticism, and Alan
W. Watts, and his outrageous blending of Eastern and Western philosophy.
Religion had failed
me or I had failed religion. I wasn’t
sure. So, I read on Catholicism,
Protestantism, Islamism, Judaism, Hinduism and Buddhism. I found Buddhism the sanest of the lot. Books were medicine for my sick soul, a soul
that failed to extricate itself from South Africa although I was no longer in
South Africa.
It is perceptive of
you to sense South Africa was like riding a roller coaster, or falling off a
mountain, only to reappear on another before you could sense the danger. It was like that for me.
The people of the
story are real, as real as life itself.
Sad as one reader found its lack of redeeming characters, they all
vibrate with sine qua non exuberance. Alas, there are no really good or bad people,
only people largely on automatic pilot doing the best they can to survive until
the next day.
There is the Bantu Daniel,
who is Devlin’s driver; Josiah, his Bantu gardener and “friend”; Asabi, the
Devlins' Bantu maid; Gabriel, the Devlins' Bantu chef and house manager; the
outrageously honest and erotic Afrikaner Nina, who was Devlin’s teacher, muse
and god, as she was able to penetrate the tinsel façade of his propriety American society and culture.
There was the
Matthews brothers, managing director and regional director of Polychem’s
subsidiary, Devlin’s employer. There was also Frieda, the transplanted German, who was the MD'a secretary, as well as the
predatory and sensuous Heather Matthews, the managing director’s wife, while Birgitte Matthews, the regional
director’s wife, represented the British leisure class with a seductive
fragility that Devlin found intoxicating.
This and assorted others, British, Bantu and Afrikaner, along with a few Americans provided the metaphorical montage of a time and place and space that vibrated with uncontrolled excess, a green island in a black sea. It was a play within a play, as the world was having a nervous breakdown at the precise moment that Devlin and South Africa were having theirs.
This and assorted others, British, Bantu and Afrikaner, along with a few Americans provided the metaphorical montage of a time and place and space that vibrated with uncontrolled excess, a green island in a black sea. It was a play within a play, as the world was having a nervous breakdown at the precise moment that Devlin and South Africa were having theirs.
GREEN ISLAND also
profiles the Roman Catholic Church in South Africa during apartheid with
something akin to the political schizophrenia that Pope Pius XII showed toward
Nazi Germany and the Holocaust.
Seamus “Dirk” Devlin
is in the center of this vortex, and it is through his nightmarish narrative
that the story of deceit, betrayal, and intrigue unfolds. And yes, the Devlin's narrative is constantly interrupted
by his guilty reflections, dreams, introspections, and assessments, many of which
suggest his crumbling spirit as he rides his erotic
dance into denouement.
This erotic dance is meant as a metaphor to South Africa in 1968, with nothing spared to show it as if on camera.
This erotic dance is meant as a metaphor to South Africa in 1968, with nothing spared to show it as if on camera.
Devlin’s constant
spiritual companions are such travelers as Goethe, Dostoyevsky,
Schopenhauer, and Jesus. Devlin who doesn’t smoke or drink, and never
has, nor does he swear, while expletives are the common language of this contentious place and time.
If I were to describe
the novel in one word, it would be “life.”
THE READER RESPONDS:
I am at a loss as to
how to identify your audience. My sense is that
your readers are not honest with themselves, and that their shock value is phony or
simply, they choose to be blind. “Life,”
as you put it, IS what we are here for. My hope is for the day the book is in print,
the Kindle market, at present, is narrow.
I must confess I prefer a book in my hand.
How this can come
about I don’t know; pray that the book takes off on Kindle, and makes its own
market.
Another snow and blow
day here in the middle of April, ugh! It
puts one into pondering what is spring?
We have lived a long
and interesting time, my friend. That in
itself is an accomplishment. Be well.
AUTHOR FISHER
RESPONDS:
I’ve just finished
Robert Goddard’s “Set in Stone.” I never
started to read novels seriously until I came back from South Africa, first
reading the classics and then more popular novelist, but always in an attempt
to get their sense of telling a story without inhibition.
At the University of Iowa, I sandwiched “understanding the American novel,” “understanding American poetry,” “a course on Shakespeare,” between my studies in physics and chemistry, calculus and statistics, as I have always wanted to be a writer. Largely, in courses with English or humanities majors or graduate students, I only wanted to get a sense of context not content from these detours. Substance and style were guarded zealously as my proprietary product.
At the University of Iowa, I sandwiched “understanding the American novel,” “understanding American poetry,” “a course on Shakespeare,” between my studies in physics and chemistry, calculus and statistics, as I have always wanted to be a writer. Largely, in courses with English or humanities majors or graduate students, I only wanted to get a sense of context not content from these detours. Substance and style were guarded zealously as my proprietary product.
People compliment me when they say “you don’t write like anyone else I know.” I don’t want to write like anyone else
because no one else has lived my life, or experienced what I have, but they might be able to identify with some aspects of that journey.
The reason
I like Goddard is because he writes of loss, always loss, as do I. Someone wrote me today and said, “You’re one
of the very few in the world I know, still alive, that speaks truth out of
habit.”
It is a moving compliment. I hope the reader gets this sense from A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA, as there are no detours here.
It is a moving compliment. I hope the reader gets this sense from A GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA, as there are no detours here.
Be always well
yourself.
Jim
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