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Reading anything by Harry Crews is like watching your soul being starved, beaten and then gang raped . Harry Crews is THE southern author, in my opinion even moreso than Faulkner, his prose disturbs me and yet fills me with hope. His uncompromising lyrical savegery shows you beauty while skinning you alive, not an easy read, but one well worthwhile. I will be (hopefully) transcribing excerpts of his work for your reading "pleasure" soon in the meantime here is a biography of the man that I stole (the copyright is on the bottom just to prove it) hope you enjoy it 'till I get around to writing something of my own on the subject - enjoy.
Harry Eugene Crews was born on June 7, 1935, in Bacon County, Georgia, to
Ray and Myrtice, who worked a desperate and indigent living farming in
dirt-poor southern Georgia. Ray died at 35 leaving a farm and a family Myrtice
was incapable of sustaining by herself. She remarried shortly after, although
that marriage carried hardship of its own. Crews wrote:
My daddy died of a heart attack when I was 21 months old and
my brother was 5. Her second marriage was to a man who
might have been a good husband had he not been a brutal
drunk. ("Mama Pulled the Load Alone"55) 1
Young as he was when his mother remarried, Crews grew up calling and
thinking of him as his daddy, however belligerent and hostile that home life
became.
Crews suffered the first of two debilitating illnesses in 1940 at the age of 5. The
first was a fever accompanied by a painful muscle contraction which caused
the muscles in his legs to seize, drawing his heels up against the backs of his
legs, forcing him to lie in bed for six weeks until the cramps in his legs
subsided and he could be carried around the farm. Gradually, Crews's legs
straightened enough so he could haul himself along a fence, working and
strengthening the atrophied muscles. Later in life, Crews would ascribe the
illness as a physiological manifestation of the psychological stress induced by
the tumultuous home life.
It was not long after Crews was "well and whole again" (A Childhood 107) that
he was strong enough to participate in games with his brother and cousins. In
A Childhood, his autobiography, Crews recounts one game called "crack the
whip" and one day in particular, told with the bright intensity of one purging,
by fire, a memory. On that day, Myrtice had a boiler pot of water set at ground
level in which she momentarily dipped pigs to blanch the hair from their skins.
When the chain of linked hands was suddenly and forcefully let loose, Crews
was pitched into the boiling pot of water, up to his neck. Pulled from the pot
and set beside it, the children and on lookers stared at him. Crews wrote:
I reached over and touched my right hand with my left, and the
whole thing came off like a wet glove. I mean the skin on the
top of the wrist and the back of my hand, along with the
fingernails, all just turned loose and slid down to the ground. I
could see my fingernails lying in the little puddle my flesh made
on the ground in front of me. (A Childhood 113)
It would take several bed-ridden months for Crews to heal, for his skin to
regrow.
Used to moving from one hopeless plot to the next barren patch of land,
Myrtice took her family one night away from her husband who had taken to
severe drinking and to indiscriminate blasting of his shotgun in the house at all
hours. They headed south to Jacksonville, Florida, a burgeoning industrial
town, where Crews spent his adolescent years, reading and writing what he
could.
In 1953, with his brother already fighting in Korea, Crews, only 17,
volunteered with the Marines:
Being good, southern, ignorant country boys, we did the good,
southern, ignorant country thing: we volunteered as quickly as
possible, anxious as we were to go and spill our blood in the
good, southern, ignorant country way. (Introduction, Classic
Crews 12)
There were other factors motivating Crews to enlist. In an interview with
Rodney Elrod, Crews said that it was expected of him as a young man to move
out and find his own way. "And I wanted to go. Going in the Marine Corps
was the only way I knew to get out, to leave the state" (70). Joining the service
brought him into contact with the larger world, one he had read about in the
few books he had managed to obtain. "I'd been so damn isolated and knew it
simply because I'd gone to some trouble to get books. I knew the world was
out there, and I wanted to see it" (Elrod 70). It was during his three years of
enlistment that Crews began reading, broadly and comprehensively, including
all the novels by Mickey Spillane and Graham Greene: 2
As far back as I could remember, I had longed and lusted for
an unlimited supply of books . . . When I got to my first duty
station and walked into the base library, it was like throwing a
starving man a turkey. I did my time in the Corps with a book
always at hand. (Introduction, Classic Crews 12).
Discharged from the Marines, Crews returned to Bacon County to visit his
family. In A Childhood, Crews wrote that in July of 1956 he stood at the edge
of a tobacco field, having worked with his four cousins since sun-up, cursing
the Georgia summer heat. He wrote, "I stood there feeling how much I had
left this place and these people, and at the same time knowing that it would be
forever impossible to leave them completely." (A Childhood 171)
Some months later, Crews enrolled at the University of Florida:
With the G.I. Bill I went to the University, not because anyone
there might teach me to write fiction, but because I thought
someone there might teach me how to make a living while I
taught myself how to write fiction. At the end of two years,
however, choking and gasping from Truth and Beauty, I gave
up on school for a Triumph motorcycle. (Classic Crews 12)
Crews's road trip lasted 18 months. The essay "The Violence that Finds Us"
documents parts of the trip, as does the Introduction to Classic Crews. During
the road trip, Crews worked as a bartender, a short order cook, 3 and a caller
at a carnival sideshow attraction (Introduction, Classic Crews 13). 4 He was
jailed in a small town in Wyoming and "beaten in a fair fight by a one-legged
Blackfoot Indian" in Montana (Introduction, Classic Crews 14). 5
Interviewing Crews in 1974, Al Burt noted that "the burden of writing
ambitions brought him back [to the University of Florida] in 1958" (1974).
About his return to higher education, Crews wrote:
But at least I still had the good government tit to suck on. If I
carried a full load of courses and maintained a C average, I got
three hots and a cot and more time than I needed to read and
continue my efforts to learn to write. (Introduction, Classic
Crews 14) 6
Around this time, Crews took his first creative writing class with Andrew Lytle.
Lytle was the author of The Velvet Horn, twice-editor of The Sewanee
Review, teacher to Flannery O'Connor and Madison Jones, and a founder of
the Agrarians, the socio-literary movement which attempted to hedge the
insidious advancement of industrial culture in the South. 7 A Rolling Stone
article highlights one of Crews's early experiences with the taskmaster Lytle:
When Crews handed him one of his early efforts, his
cantankerous teache�with barely a look at the story's first
paragraph�flung it back at him. "Burn it, son," he said. "Fire's
a great refiner." (Hedegaard 1982) 8
Prior to leaving Gainesville for the road, Harry had met Sally Ellis, a
sophomore at the university, and they conceived a child, Patrick Scott, who
was born on September 4, 1957 ("Fathers, Sons, Blood" Classic Crews 173).
Harry and Sally were married on January 24, 1960 (Hargraves ix). Their
second child, Byron Jason, was born August 24, 1960 ("Fathers, Sons, Blood"
Classic Crews 174). When Crews graduated from the university, the Crews
family moved upstate to Jacksonville, where he taught a year of Junior High
English (Burt 1974). 9
Crews returned to Gainesville, where he entered the master's program for
English Education. Absorbed by graduate studies and perpetually dedicated
to the writer's muse, Crews admitted that, as a result, his family suffered:
I try to write when I'm rested, and do everything else when I'm
tired. For instance, when I was married I tried to be a husband
when I was tired. I got up in the morning and exhausted myself
at writing, and I took care of being a husband, I took care of
whatever job I had to have to feed my family while I was trying
to teach myself to be a writer. (Bonetti 1983)
During graduate school, they were divorced, and Sally moved her children
out of Florida ("Fathers, Sons, Blood" Classic Crews 176).
Harry graduated, and, denied entrance on the basis of his expressed
performance as a writer to the graduate program for Creative Writing at the
University of Florida, he ventured south to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, where he
taught English at Broward Community College. Finding himself settled in
South Florida, Harry persuaded Sally, "out of love and longing for my son," to
join him there and remarry ("Fathers, Sons, Blood" Classic Crews176).
It was shortly after their reconciliation, in July of 1961, that Patrick Scott
drowned in a neighbor's swimming pool ("Fathers, Sons, Blood" Classic Crews
173). Crews was devastated by Patrick's death, burdened by guilt he attributed
to inattention, both to the boy and to his family, and to preoccupation with
learning to write. In "Fathers, Sons, Blood," an essay which deeply excavates
his feelings, Crews wrote:
Being low-rent, though, doesn't keep guilt from being as real
as an open wound. But in my case, it got worse, much worse.
Part of me insisted that I had brought him to the place of death.
(Classic Crews 175)
Eventually, Harry and Sally were divorced a second time:
I'm not interested in assigning blame about who was at fault in
the collapse of our marriage, but I do know that I was obsessed
to the point of desperation with becoming a writer and, further,
I lived with the conviction that I had gotten a late start toward
that difficult goal. ("Fathers, Sons, Blood" Classic Crews 176)
Crews realized, regretfully, that learning to write had cost him his family. It
was equally painful, however, to realize what little reward�at what great
cost�Crews had earned from his efforts. In an interview in 1974, Sterling
Watson asked Crews about what it was like "between the time [he] began to
write and the time [he] began to publish":
I used to dream when I was as old as twenty-five or twenty-six
that one of my novels (of course I'd written four novels by that
time which had been rejected), I used to dream while I was
asleep this tremendous joy and celebration and the rest of it
and then wake up literally humiliated, crushed, depressed,
stricken that I was still where I was. (71)
In 1968, The Gospel Singer was published. Once again, Crews returned to
Gainesville and the University of Florida, not as student of creative writing,
but faculty, in the English department. 10
Reflecting on his marriage and family life, Crews said in interview with
Rodney Elrod:
I came to peace with myself a long time ago about that and
realized that a happy marriage and home and children and
grandchildren and all the rest, that all was not meant for me. (66)
What was meant for Crews was to continue writing:
The bottom line on this for me is�you do whatever you have
to do to get to where you need to go. You dig that? You do
whatever you have to do to get where you need to go . . . the
world doesn't want you to do anything. The world wants you to
work the lawn or walk the dog or paint the house anything
but write, just so you bleed whatever energy you have away
from writing, and if you're not careful that's exactly what you're
going to end up doing. (Walsh 95)
Since The Gospel Singer, Crews has published continuously, and except for
a spell of about 10 years between A Feast of Snakes and All We Need of Hell,
a new novel has appeared nearly every year�as of 1995, The Mulching of
America marks his thirteenth novel.
Crews has also written extensively for magazines, from stories and essays in
Sport and Playboy, to a column at Esquire called "Grits," which ran
uninterrupted for fourteen months. His non-fiction has been collected into two
books, Blood and Grits (1979) and Florida Frenzy (1982), and as well in two
limited editions, 2 by Crews (1984) and Madonna at Ringside (1991), from Lord
John Press.
The lull in published novels during the 1970s and 1980s can be attributed to
writing non-fiction, screenplays of his novels as well as others', and an
autobiography, much of which stemmed from, or despite, his work at Esquire
(Nuwer 1988).
In 1978, Crews published A Childhood: The Biography of a Place. A
Childhood chronicles the horrors of his upbringing, the traumas of his early
adolescence, and the attempts of an older Crews to reconcile, as an adult, his
past:
I thought if I wrote all that stuff down, in as great a detail as I
possibly could, talking to as many people as I could and
reliving it, it would be cathartic. I thought that it would in some
sense relieve something. And it may have, but it didn't do what
I thought it would do. It didn't work out that way. (Moore 1992)
In fact, said Crews, "Writing that book damn near killed me. It was a very,
very, very, very hard book to write" (Moore 1992)
Considering that before A Childhood, Crews had published eight books in
eight years, and except for the publication of his non-fiction, it would be
several years until Crews published his next novel, attesting, perhaps, to the
intensity and demands of that singular endeavor.
In 1993, a widely praised anthology, which included the full-text of two early
out-of-print novels, A Childhood, several essays, and an introduction by
Crews, was released by Poseidon Press in the U.S. and by Gorse in the U.K.
Recently, in 1995, Gorse re-released a U.K.-only version of The Gospel
Singer, along with a never-published novella titled, Where Does One Go
When There's No Place Else to Go? According to the publisher, the first
printing of that book was sold out. Gorse has future plans to reissue more of
Crews's out-of-print novels.
In the early 1990s, Crews, now the department's senior faculty member,
entered gradual retirement, teaching one class per semester. In the spring of
1997, Crews retired from the university to devote his time fully to writing.
Crews has been hard at work. In the fall of 1996, I visited Crews for an as yet
unpublished interview. As he often does for guests, Crews read from what he
was then in the midst of writing, a second autobiographical book, which he
said was to be completed in a year's time. We also looked at the cover proof
for his next book, Celebration, which was eventully published in January
1998. When I visited him in December 1997, Crews had been up three days
working on his next novel.
Notes
1. All citations reference material included in this bibliography. [back]
2. Crews often mentions Graham Greene as a major influence on the
development of his narrative style�a narrative line like a piece of string tied
to the first page of a story, drawn straight and held taught to the last. While it is
Greene's novel The End of the Affair which Crews "dissected"�broke it
down into "the number of characters, scenes, rooms, etc." (Walsh 94)�in
order to reassemble and substitute with his own characters, scenes, and rooms,
it is Greene's novel The Power and the Glory which Crews marks as his
favorite. Crews's interview with William J. Walsh examines the dissection of
Greene's book in detail [See also Watson 1974, p. 64].
"The thing I loved about Graham Greene is that no matter what
else he did, he always told a story and the story had that hard,
clean narrative which I admire very much. It is the thing that is
most central to the way I work. Those long, introspective,
bemused wanderings over some sort of psychological
landscape inside the character are alien to me, although there
is some of that in Greene. There is some of that in any writer.
Obviously, there are characters who think and wonder about
the implications of who they are and what they've done, and
where they're going and all that. But you take a book like The
Power and the Glory and it's got this nice, clean, hard narrative
sort of line that I admire."�Bellamy 1976 [back]
3. In conversation, Crews has said, to paraphrase, "You can get a job
anywhere in America if you can handle a grill." [back]
4. In response to questions asking why he writes about "freaks," Crews
frequently recalls waking one morning in a carnival trailer to see a bearded
lady and a man with a cleft face�a married couple, who happened to be
sideshow performers�discuss plans for dinner and then kiss. "And I," writes
Crews, "lying at the back of the trailer, was never the same again"
(Introduction, Classic Crews 13). [back]
5. For the full story, see the essay "The Violence that Finds Us." [back]
6. Crews has expressed, in conversation, a similar disdain for the traditional
expectations of an academic career. He has, in fact, admitted to refusing to
attend or to serve on academic committees at the University of Florida. [back]
7. "From about 1928 to 1935, twelve writers united to challenge the foundations
of modern American life . . . Their discussions at Vanderbilt University
generated a set of culturally impious essays, I'll Take My Stand: The South
and the Agrarian Tradition (1930). It implored the South not to forsake 'moral,
social, and economic autonomy' for the pervasive industrial model." [From
Robert Gingher's study on Andrew Lytle, "An Agrarian for All Seasons" (1996
July). World & I, vol. 11, p. 258.]
Considering Lytle's influence on his student, it is no coincidence that much of
the mature critical attention given to Crews's novels centers on the individual's
response to "outmoded lifestyles that conflict with postmodern urban values"
(Robert Covel 1994). [back]
8. Sterling Watson's novel The Calling is a revealing account of one young
writer's encounters with an older, established author. Even more revealing is
the fact that Watson was an apprentice to Crews in the early 1970s. [back]
9. In print and interview, Crews only dimly explicates details of these highly
personal events and circumstances. It is likely, therefore, that I have
misconstrued dates and facts in my effort to construct a biographical narrative.
I apologize for all inaccuracies and hope that future biographical endeavors
will correct my errors. [back]
10. The very same departmental faculty, Crews has said in conversation, who
denied him entrance into the graduate program some years earlier. [back]
- - - - - - - - - -
Harry Crews Bibliography: sunsite.unc.edu/ob/crews
Copyright � 1998 Damon Sauve
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