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Misguided
in every aspect of its intention, design and execution, actually misguided
at its core, this resolute display of narrative perversity now and again
nearly succeeds, quite mysteriously, in its far-too- evident ambition
to surpass the time-honored conventions of genre fiction. Before I describe
my own vital but unacknowledged contributions to the achievement, simple
modesty requires that I point out that Koko, for all its flaws, deserves
a greater degree of consideration than would ordinarily be granted to
a desperately played-out horror writer's attempt at producing an international
thriller in the manner of Robert Ludlum, or David Morrell while in the
midst of a classic mid-life crisis. My own role in its creation was crucial
merely in its timeliness.
Near the end of August , 1983, not long after the completion, so to speak,
of my friend's minimal "role" in the writing of the Stephen
King novel, The Talisman, I arrived unannounced at his Westport palace
with the idea of "filling in the gaps" of our recent histories
during the five days between my return from the Conference on Popular
Culture on the lovely isle of Corfu (at which I had been awarded my second
prestigious "Atwood" while enjoying the hospitality of the Earl
of Macclesfield's charming villa, "The Antlers") and my return
flight, delayed by reason of my airline's intransigent notions concerning
the allocation of frequent flier miles, to the humbler comforts of Popham.
The only economical means of managing the journey from Kennedy airport
to Westport, Connecticut is by a van or bus under the management of the
sadly misnamed Connecticut Limousine Company, which deposits the weary
traveler in the parking lot of a Westport motel. I called my former companion
of the sandbox from a pay telephone in the lobby of this establishment
and was gratified by his willingness to appear upon the moment and deliver
myself and the usual luggage to his abode. Unusually for one lately so
absorbed by his own concerns, he seemed cheered by the prospect of my
visit.
Within minutes a new Mercedes, even longer and more splendid than it
predecessor, spun into the motel parking lot, driven by a deeply, in fact
almost alarmingly, sun-tanned Peter. The fellow had virtually grilled
himself to the color of a well-baked Gingerbread Boy. Not only that, in
place of his usual garb he wore a short-sleeved polo shirt, khaki shorts
and loafers without socks! His language had undergone a similar transformation,
incorporating many casual obscenities previously unheard in his speech
and frequent usage of the meaningless interjection, "man," as
in the startling phrase with which he greeted this long-lost friend, "Put,
man, shit, it's really good to see you, man, you know, fuck, man!"
I believe I concealed my shock at this coarsening of speech and manner
even as I worked out its most likely causes during our wild ride back
to Straub Manor, a journey which included lay-overs at two favored drinking
establishments. My friend, evidently, was in no hurry to rejoin the domestic
scene.
The first of these establishments, a mediocre restaurant located a short
distance down the Post Road and named something like Mahler's, or perhaps
Schoenberg's, was remarkable only for a barren, wholly suburban ugliness
epitomized by the bar to which Peter urged me, a comfortless and irregularly
shaped slab of marble fitted with spindly metal stools. The youth behind
this modernist, in fact all but Cubist structure greeted my friend with
a wide grin and a cabalistic handshake. Any doubts that the sun- blackened
author had attained the status of “ regular" at this dubious
and even slightly sinister place were dispelled by the incomprehensible
conversation chiefly, in so far as I could follow it, about the comings
and goings of mutual acquaintances which began the instant this fellow
placed Peter's brimming glass upon the bar and rather grudgingly, I felt,
filled my own order for a Lime Rickey diluted with a splash of Coca-Cola.
(No prude, I enjoy a cocktail as well as the next fellow, but three in
the afternoon seemed too early for a genuine Rickey, much less for whatever
filled my friend's glass, a potion I judged by its odor to be gasohol.)
During the hour we spent at this inexplicable place, so involved was Peter
in conversation with the bartending youth, as well as the with waitresses
arriving for their evening shift, each of whom greeted him with a glad
cry and a fond embrace, also with two smooth thugs with slick-backed hair
I understood to be the owners, that he and I exchanged but a few sentences.
This left me sufficient time to interpret the event in the following way:
if after some three years in this affluent and self-consciously artsy
community his chosen companions were bartenders and waitresses, Peter
and Westport were a bad match indeed.
Our next stop, an even unhappier establishment known as the Black Mutt
and located within an ancient houseboat berthed at a riverbank, deepened
this impression. Here the attractions were what my deluded friend described
as the "ambiance," meaning the general gloom, the listing stools,
the battered old bar lined with sots, and above all the prematurely aged,
decidedly common bawd serving up drinks, whose faded good looks Peter
found attractive. Like all her cynical breed, the floozy knew to keep
her distance while returning his flirtatious sallies, thereby compelling
my friend to turn his conversational efforts toward myself. These had
mainly to do with jazz musicians whom he had succeeded in befriending
or at least to some small degree attaching himself, their various approaches
to improvisation, yawn, I mean, really, the disquisitions of the musically
illiterate upon such things are helplessly infantile, the habits and quirks
of these obscure folk and the many hours their devoted fan had spent in
company with them. Sadly, he was trying to impress me with the familiarity
he enjoyed with these gentlemen, whose names, I confess, I failed one
and all to recognize. It was they, of course, who had so affected my friend's
speech patterns. My poor old friend had so lost his way that he aped the
hipster language of his jazz musicians and consorted with waitresses and
bartenders - Westport had provoked him into a ruinous second adolescence,
and while we swilled our fifth or perhaps sixth drinks of the day I vowed
to do my utmost to bring about his return to the safety of his native
Midwest.
During our jet-propelled, careening drive to his palatial house, he confirmed
my observations by singing along, more or less, with the jazz solos on
the tapes he fed into the car's sound system. "Get hip to this, man,"
he told me while blasting through a four-way stop, "I don't know
why it took me so long to. realize, that I'm an artist, not a bourgeois
square, I mean, man, damn, I blow like Bird, man, you dig, except Bird
blew through his horn, and I blow with words, you dig?" In response
to this pathetic utterance, I could but answer, "I dig, man, you
can be assured of that," and wondered what sight would greet me upon
arrival at 1, Beachside Common. I imagined Susan puffing on a "reefer"
and attired in black tights, skirt, sweater and beret while the children
wandered in foul diapers through a landscape of record sleeves and empty
bottles. The scene which greeted our arrival was of a deeply reassuring
normality. Evidently accustomed to her spouse's new incarnation, Susan
joined us in the manse's handsome library for another round of drinks
while my friend discoursed upon the fine points of several "solos,"
then disappeared to prepare the evening's entirely adequate repast while
the children squalled and screamed in the manner of ordinary tots, those
not under the sway of imitation jazz musicians. To my surprise, Susan
never betrayed even the slightest displeasure at my unheralded arrival,
my characteristic mountain of bags or the declaration that I should be
joining the household for a few days. She even took the time to admire
my second "Atwood" and attend to my descriptions of the dear
old Earl's residence high upon the curving streets of Corfu. By that time,
I imagine, she had become accustomed to just about everything.
Over the next few days, we settled into a routine. As of old ensconced
in his office, now within a bed prepared on one of the dormer platforms,
I arose at seven and joined the rest of the family downstairs so that
Peter might spend a couple of hours writing, or thinking about writing,
or whatever he did while playing the endless records which penetrated
all the rest of the house. In practice, this meant that I was left to
my own devices while Susan ferried the children hither and yon. At noon
there was some sort of hasty lunch. From one to three o'clock, my old
friend and I occupied adjacent lawn chairs and read books while Peter,
clad only in his khaki shorts, soaked up yet more damaging ultra-violet
rays and several bottles of St. Pauli Girl beer. After that he threw on
a polo shirt, gestured me toward his Mercedes and sped off to one or both
of the bars we had visited on my first day, there to drink gasohol until
six or seven, when we rocketed homeward for the evening meal. At nine,
when the children had been dispatched to their beds, he and I returned
to his office, where he drank single-malt Scotch whiskey, now and then
permitting me a miserly dram. During these hours, which often extended
into the wee hours, he frequently repaired to his desk to conduct lengthy
telephone conversations rendered inaudible to me by the incessant moaning
of saxophones and pounding of drums emanating from the gigantic speakers
installed on every side, front and back, and even overhead.
During these late hours, he at last confessed to me that his latest project
was a sort of thriller involving Vietnam veterans and with no discernible
supernatural element whatsoever. So daunting did he find this basic material
- a plot even he knew to be better suited to a half-hour of television
than a novel-length work of fiction - that he had been unable to write
any more than a kind of introductory but unrelated short story, which
he declined to offer for my inspection. He had spent months writing no
more than increasingly irrelevant notes. "Put, baby," he said
while pouring another twenty dollars of malt whiskey into his glass, "I
don't know if I can still blow my horn any more, you dig? Can't hear the
changes, man, can't get into the groove like I did when I was a young
cat, sometimes it's like my talent went Splitsville, man, this is some
crazy shit, dig?"
I couldn't help myself - I let him have it straight between the eyes
with both barrels. What I said to my despairing old buddy must remain
forever confidential, but from that day to this he has at least managed
to conduct himself like a responsible citizen and not a blear-eyed denizen
of sordid late-night haunts. Neither does he sprinkle his conversation
with filth. I wish only that I had succeeded in deterring him from writing
the tediously long thriller on which he had embarked and in persuading
him to return to his native soil. Even the imprecations of a devoted friend
can only go so far, it seems. At least he changed his ways and did a decent
job of writing Koko. Despite its irresolute conclusion and frequent lapses
into inconsequentiality, this book manages to keep its head above water
most of the time. The sour, vindictive chapters set in Milwaukee should
have been edited out of the book altogether. No one who did not serve
in Vietnam is capable of writing about that experience. That accepted,
Peter's effort to do the undoable contains at least a poignant tone which
renders several passages of this muddled but oddly effective tome very
nearly... what shall I say? Moving? No, but “affecting" will
do well enough.

— Putney Tyson Ridge
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