My New Book: A Safe and Happy Place

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

As you might imagine, I often hear from wannabe professional writers who have finished a book-length project and are horrified to discover that getting it published is harder than writing the damn thing. (They think I can help them — ha!) I offer them the sagest bit of wisdom I possess, which is that perseverance counts more than talent. A harsh message perhaps, but essential to incorporate in your world-view if you want to take up the vocation.

I came by this knowledge the hard way, having been fucked around by morons in the publishing industry my whole career — not to put too fine a point on it. If you can’t suck up endless adversity and carry on with the task at hand, then culinary school is probably a better career path for you. It’s especially troublesome if you produce something original, something that doesn’t fit into a tried-and-true marketing template. There is surely an inverse relationship between originality and success in mainstream publishing. Go ask Herman Melville.

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The truth is, you are producing work that nobody asked for and that no one especially cares about. You have to grind away at this lonely business day-after-day to get the job done. The only thing that avails to keep you going is your own conviction that it is worth doing. Thus, the second morsel of wisdom I offer wannabes is to give up seeking validation from friends and relatives. I never ask friends to read my works-in-progress. If nothing else, reading loose manuscript pages is a pain in the ass. And most of the people I know spend so much time working in front of a video screen that the last thing they want to do is read your novel on a computer at home. As for mom and dad, they are understandably terrified that they will turn up as odious characters in the pages of your book, and in my case they often did. So I actually hoped they wouldn’t even crack one of my books open in the aisle of Brentanos. Happily, I have no evidence they ever read my published works.

Now that the book industry is whirling around the drain, like the music business before it, managing a career in letters is harder than ever. Publishers grow desperate and therefore only interested in works that seem like absolutely sure things — preferably books by celebrities with a TV-based following. They are, least of all, serious about literature these days (if such a quaint term is still comprehensible). For them, it’s down to throwing spaghetti at the wall to see if it’ll stick. There must be another way… and I was forced to find it.

I finished my latest “book” project last year around Halloween. In late December, my publisher turned it down. I’d been with The Atlantic Monthly Press, part of the Grove-Atlantic group, for seven books, starting with The Long Emergency. There was a story in my landing there. In 2004, my then-agent didn’t want to even bother trying to sell The Long Emergency. It was “too dark,” he said. This left me no choice but to drop the guy. On my own I tried to interest a half-dozen other experienced agents. They wrinkled their noses. So, I sent the manuscript out to two editors who had expressed some interest in my work over the years. The first guy, Daniel Menaker at Harper Collins, had a snit when he learned I’d made a multiple submission — a no-no for authors in those days — and told me to get lost. The second guy, the editor-in-chief at Grove Atlantic, Morgan Entrekin, offered me a contract. The Long Emergency turned out to be my best-selling book.

They eventually published my four-book World Made By Hand series of novels about life in a small New England town after the sort of economic collapse I described in The Long Emergency, a natural progression for me. I sensed they were none too happy about the project, but perhaps the chance that the series might be picked up by a cable network kept them on the line. My advances sank with each book. In any case, they never offered a kind word (e.g. “Hey, nice job… I enjoyed it….”). They did absolutely nothing in the way of marketing the books. So, when I handed in A Safe and Happy Place last year, they dumped me just in time for Christmas. My current agent didn’t want to try to sell it elsewhere, either. He said it was “off my brand” of hard-hitting polemical non-fiction and no other publisher would want it.

So I decided to publish it myself on Amazon, the arch-enemy of the mainstream publishers and booksellers. I enjoy writing fiction and believe that I do it pretty well, and I intend to persevere at it. I’m not convinced that the long-form work of fiction packaged as a novel will continue to exist as a literary artifact a whole lot longer — it is mainly a product of the past two centuries, which featured great advances in printing and the arrival of a middle-class with leisure time that could be filled with literature — but the novel is not quite dead yet. Anyway, human beings do like stories, whether printed and bound, played upon a stage or screen, or told around the campfire. We like to hear how the rest of the human race is doing.

And so here is A Safe and Happy Place, my story about a hippie commune in Vermont in the 1960s, an era which, all of a sudden, is now a half century ago — meaning the misty, distant past. Why did I decide to write the story of the Sunrise Village commune from a young woman’s point-of-view? Because I hadn’t done anything like it before. It was an interesting challenge, and with all the attention these days on the grievances of women, I wanted to create a plausible heroine who was not a complainer or a sap or a doormat or a designated victim, but a fully imagined capable person without an annoying ideological agenda.

I knew that a lot of people would bristle at the attempt — as if I lacked the credentials to try such a stunt. And, who knows, it may be a reason that my publisher dumped it and me in this idiotically hyper-politicized moment in history. Anyway, I feel that I successfully channeled my narrator, Erica “Pooh” Bollinger from the first sentence, and she lived in my head vividly until the job was done. And now I rather miss communing with her every day. In case you’re wondering, I did not suffer any personal gender confusion in the process.

I liked Pooh more and more the deeper I got into the story — her pluck, her common sense, her humor, her skepticism, her moral compass. The things that came out of her mouth often surprised me. I enjoyed imagining the male-female dynamics of young love from a point-of-view different from my own cis-het-white-privilege bunker. Forgive me for saying it wasn’t that difficult. Sure, men and women are different, but they operate in the same universe and are programmed for a similar menu of emotions. Mostly, I was rooting for Pooh to come through her adventure safely and happily, and in the course of 368 pages she is transformed from a troubled teen to a confident and autonomous adult.

In real life, that journey for me was rather difficult, and that liminal period of development — what we simply call “growing up” — is one of the themes I find myself returning to in my fiction. It also happened that I was there, I was in college through the heart of the hippie era, I saw a great deal of the action — though I skipped Woodstock, thank you very much (crowds were not my thing). I never lived on a commune, but I visited several of them and saw how they operated. I was susceptible to the military draft, but I enjoyed a student deferment from 1966 to 1970, when they instituted the draft lottery, and then I drew nearly the highest number, 353 — nobody above 100 was drafted in the last five years of the Vietnam War.

Like Pooh, I was not entirely on-board with everything about hippie culture. A lot of it was just plain creepy to me. The radical politics of the day seemed nascently despotic to me. I was not into group gropes or spookish oriental mysticism. I went pretty light on the drugs. My “trip” was mostly being an observer of my times. I was interested in trying to understand it all. As it happens, Pooh’s story ends in 1968, before events like the Charlie Manson murders and the fiasco at the Altamont Music Festival drove the Age of Aquarius into darkness. A few years after that, I was working as a professional journalist.

The differences in generational behavior then and now — 1967 to 2017 — seem much less marked than the differences between 1967 and what went before. College kids today can still recite the lyrics to Beatles songs, and quite a few of them affect hippie-ish garb and long hair. When I was a sophomore in 1967, I couldn’t have told you the title of a single pop song hit of the 1920s, and we sure didn’t wear raccoon coats. We didn’t have computers, iPhones, Facebook or even answering machines in 1967, but we managed to find other ways to network, spread the “underground” news, and goof off with friends and lovers. The radical politics of the 1960s had the basic aim of ending a stupid war; today’s campus politics seem bent on starting one. Both styles of youthful idealism had and have their shortcomings, I suppose, and beyond the narrow realm of politics lies the greater magic of emerging into adulthood in this complicated world, with all its joys and sorrows. The 1960s was the time of my coming into personhood, and I wanted a fresh way of presenting the experience in fiction. Hence: Pooh Bollinger.

Authors don’t usually tell you this much about how they came to write a book, but I thought you’d be interested in how and why I decided to self-publish A Safe and Happy Place on Amazon. It’s my way of saying that I intend to persevere. I believe readers will enjoy the journey. If you do happen to like it, write a review on Amazon — it actually helps a lot. And a very big thanks to my Patreon contributors who made it possible to write this book in the absence of a publisher’s advance.

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9 Comments
Lucia W.
Lucia W.
May 15, 2017 10:46 am

Looking forward to it. I’ll be ordering a dead-tree copy.

I’m a former brick-and-mortar bookseller now selling antiquarian (heh) books on Amazon. I am happy to tell you that the death of tangible books has been widely overstated. The Cult of Gutenberg lives on.

You keep writing. I’ll keep Patreon-ing.

Rob
Rob
May 15, 2017 10:53 am

Well I did go to Woodstock, not that that matters, but I do agree with the publishing thing. Publishers do nothing for writers unless they manage to bag a big one. Then all they really do is offer a little advance money so they can siphon all the money off of the sale of the book, which they don’t help with either. So they can all die an ugly death as far as I am concerned. There are many writers self publishing on Creatspace just as there are many getting their news from alternative sources. Amazon is going to sell all of your books anyway so you might as well just skip the other assholes and go straight to the distribution point.

Daniel Menaker
Daniel Menaker
May 15, 2017 1:41 pm

I don’t remember the snit. Can you remind me more specifically about this possible unseemly behavior of mine, for which I (potentially) apologize. Also, most publishers are used to multiple submissions and have to deal with them. Altogether very strange.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
  Daniel Menaker
May 15, 2017 5:54 pm

That is really interesting – a publisher reads TBP. What kinds of books / stories / novels are you publishing these days, and how are sales holding up in the era of the Internet?

i forget
i forget
May 15, 2017 6:48 pm

Melville’s a fave. Even more so after learning he couldn’t support himself, his family, with his top notch writing (what a world, it’s always been). Even more than Moby I liked The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade. But, if you ever read that one, suggest do what I did: get The Wake of the Gods: Melville’s Mythology, by Franklin, as a companion volume.

Tony Bourdain, doing some Montana eating, with Jim Harrison (who died not long after, pen in hand it’s said) , had this conversation:

Bourdain: Is writing any way to make a living?
Harrison: No. Not hardly.
Bourdain: I try to explain this to people: You have to be either a monster of self-regard, delusional, or just so lucky that…the forces of the universe are aligned against you.
Harrison: The only thing to do is just if you’re completely tenacious & write in disregard for every outside circumstance that there is.

“I have such trouble, getting all these manuscripts every year by the hundreds, and galleys and so on, because you can tell right away if a person’s not in touch; if they want sincerity, or to be right, it’s hopeless. If there isn’t a primary intoxication with language and playfulness of their own consciousness, it’s hopeless. If they just want to be right, well then they’d be better off being a professor, wouldn’t they?”
― Jim Harrison

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 16, 2017 6:39 am

I really enjoy JHK’s writing and find it kind of shocking that after all those books he’d get dumped by his publisher, but considering what does get published these days, it’s not really a surprise.

I hope he had a chance to read Drop City first. T C Boyle wrote the definitive commune novel about ten years ago and it was impressive.

flash
flash
May 16, 2017 8:32 am

GASP ….a ” safe and happy place” should never include “gender appropriation.” ..unless of course, like JHK , you’ve already had your wing-wang removed.

Be Prepared
Be Prepared
May 16, 2017 7:49 pm

Jim,
I am surprized that it took you this long to realize that the traditional avenues of publication were closing because of the great apathy and greed of the publishing industry to keep their monopoly wrung tightly around the neck of anything or anyone writing a single interesting thought… so the vultures are circling looking only for the carrion produced by the likes of “Dr. Phil” and the addled minds of vapid narcissists. I love that an editor you mentioned commented on your article…when I am sure he couldn’t be bothered otherwise to engage in a frank discussion about your work. Love your creative mind…

Norbert P. Garvey
Norbert P. Garvey
July 8, 2017 10:57 am

Hi,
I really enjoyed “a Safe and Happy Place” thank you for writing it, I am the youngest of 6 children and we all grew up around these events. It was fun to read it from the feminine perspective, well done!
I have enjoyed your writings for many years, including the “World Made By Hand” series and I have recommended it to all my friends and family. I have lived in a commune (moved on), helped raise 4 children, we built our own world by hand and I still do work by hand (Master Carpentry) everyday, albeit I still gladly use electricity when able. I write and play my songs on the guitar and ukulele, many of them are from a feminine tilt, we all live together, as you note, it’s not that hard if we listen to each other. Keep writing.
Near Bloomington, IN
Thank you again,
Norbert P. Garvey