Wow! What a tremendous Derby race. If you didn't see it, you missed something amazing in real time.
But we'll get to that. I had a bad day. A real bad day. My gut was shitty from the get-go. When I took my long walk from home, around the lake shore, across the campus of Country Club College, down the avenue of mansions to the golf course, cutting through the grounds of the historic home, and back down the Boulevard, I could barely move. Knees, hips, back. Slow. Very, very slow.
It was early, though, so the Boulevard was not yet crowded, and rather than walking down the park side of the street as I usually do, I walked past the shops. I haven't been paying much attention, I guess, but the Boulevard is changing. Has changed, really. At one time in the '80s, the rent per square foot was higher than rents on Rodeo Drive in L.A. It had all the fabulous stores then. But times changed, I guess, and what was once hip and fun retail. . .well. . . the stores just left. Now, I expect to see all the high end stores come back.
So my pace was slow as I crawled along looking into shop windows, every other one a women's apparel shop of some kind. Or jewelry. Then, restaurants. Lots of restaurants and bars. And somewhere just off the Boulevard, a block away, a new men's store selling suits and sports coats. People in my own hometown like to dress, eat, and drink, it seems.
The hoi-polloi come in on the weekends and bring food to the park where their kids run around like banshees.
I stopped at the bookstore. A quick look. I saw this.
I opened the cover and read the inside jacket. Here's what struck me.
[The protagonist] stops at a café and has a chance encounter with a pretty young local girl in a turquoise minidress. What seems to him a chance meeting like so many we all experience daily will come to upend his life and morph into a fatal obsession.
For Bethany, a receptionist at the local hospital, who, like many twenty-somethings, is trying to sort out her options in life while haunting the local bars and clubs, this chance encounter is anything but trivial. Down on her luck after breaking up with her boyfriend and surreptitiously living out of her storage unit, she finds Terrence attractive on a number of counts, not least of which is his status as a doctor and, by default, a homeowner.
Really? Can a man write such a thing now? I mean . . . if Bethany was the doctor and homeowner or turned out to be trans or if she was a he or something, but. . . I mean. . . .
So, I'll probably buy it. I haven't read Boyle for years, but when he was new, the editor of the most popular intro to lit book used in colleges across the country, X.J. Kennedy, a poet of some repute, included several of Boyle's stories, themed often around the contrast between nature and human nature which was always weird and corrupt. One, "The Descent of Man," tells of a love triangle between a primatologist, a chimp, and the woman's dim-witted boyfriend. In a follow up, "The Ape Lady in Retirement,". . . well, it's complicated. But Boyle was on a roll.
I did a search for the stories online, but they are not available, so if you are interested, you're on your own.
I should add, Kennedy also included stories by Alice Munro such as "Wild Swans," "The Found Boat," and other stories that some found too tittiling for inclusion. Dana Gioia, also a poet, took over the editing chores, and the publication was tamed. Gioia and I had drinks one night after a reading, and we got along well. For some time, we corresponded. He was actually trying to help me find a publisher for my dissertation, but in the end, like most great opportunities in my life. . . .
Now, of course, Munro has been #Fuckyou'd for revelations her daughter made after her death. As I've said, artists don't make good parents.
But I love Munro's work.
Now, the Derby. Just wow. Down the stretch, from last to first. There has never been anything like it. But what made it even more spectacular was that the jockey, Jose Ortiz, went neck to neck with his own brother to win by half a length, and as they crossed the finish line, they rode side by side holding hands. It was beautiful. Later, when they interviewed him, he cried the entire time. I mean, it pulled at the old heartstrings.
Earlier, Susan Miller, known as the first female jockey to ride in the Kentucky Derby, interviewed trainer Cherie DeVaux as they walked to the stables before the race. DeVaux won my heart then as a most generous and graceful human. Let me see if I can find it.
Unbelievably, no. I can find a hundred interviews with DeVaux, but not the most beautiful one with Miller. Drats. But if you saw the interview after the race in the winner's circle, you got a taste of what a gracious person she seems to be.
What a story!
I was feeling lousy before the race, as I say, and the day got weird. The skies went strangely gray and clouds swirled and bouts of rain would fall. My tenant wanted to go to a celebration of a hipster brewery's 21st birthday over by the Cafe Strange and kept calling me, but each time, tornado weather would begin again. The wind came from all directions. I lay down and fell asleep, but around 3:30 she talked me into driving up.
The "celebration" was nothing. The weather was looking scary.
When I was walking on the Boulevard, I passed a pretty woman drinking a breakfast glass of champagne. That was what I really wanted to do, so I stopped at the liquor store and got a nice $60 bottle. Back at my mother's, I uncorked it. I had gotten a good pizza on the way back, and so we sat at five drinking champagne and eating pizza while the t.v played the lesser races before The Run for the Roses.
Later, I fell asleep in the lounger.
"You sure are tired."
"Yea. I haven't felt well all day."
But now, somehow, the champagne and the pizza had revived me. No kidding. I was feeling better. The Kentucky Derby sponsor was a big bourbon company, and their ads were not bad, but I hate mint juleps and am no fan of bourbon, so before the horses were put into the starting gates, I poured myself a scotch.
"And they're off!"
The entire affair had set me right, I guess, and I left the t.v. on to see the 76ers beat the Celtics in a crucial game 7. All with mom.
I've watched all the Derby's since I was a kid, and I've seen them at some pretty spectacular places. I've told you more than once the story of my own failed trip to the Derby when my buddy had a friend with a horse in the race. We were going to be at all the insider parties with the likes of Bo Derek.
But we never made it and ended up watching the race from a strip club in Atlanta.
Selavy.
Travis reminded me that he was at the Derby when Secretariat won and went on to win the Triple Crown. I just sent him YouTube videos of all three races.
It is Sunday, Buddha's birthday. So they say. I don't know if I have it in me to go to the celebration. It's up in the air.
But for a shitty day, yesterday turned out all right.






























