Ink Spots
In
California, the Golden State, not all the gold takes the form
of nuggets and dust. It also takes the form of novels, poems,
and dramasliterary gold. Some writers, such as John Steinbeck,
created entrancing works set in California. Others, such as
Eugene O'Neill, produced some of their best work while they
were set in California.
By
Brad Herzog
Y
et the convergence of literature and place is a curious one. Even
though a location may provide both inspiration and subject matter,
should it also serve as a writer's monument? Do we really need
physical monuments to writers? Aren't their works enough of a
monument?
Glen
Fuller, superintendent at a National Historic Site that was once
Eugene O'Neill's home in Danville, Calif., was asked those very
questions. "If you've ever been to, say, an Anasazi ruin in the
Southwest, you sense the culture that allowed those people to
live and thrive," he replied. "When people come here, they get
that same understanding of the setting that sparked the writer's
creativity."
With
that in mindas well as the notion that such an excursion
is hardly different from a pilgrimage to Cooperstown, Monticello,
or Haight-Ashburywe have selected five of the most significant
literary landmarks in Northern California. A visit to each of
them constitutes a journey through both the pages of California's
history and the lives of some of the world's most renowned practitioners
of putting pen to paper.
Jack London's
Wolf House
On
the outskirts of the community of Glen Ellen in southern Sonoma
County, you can get more than just a taste of London. You can
buy a used or rare book at the Jack London Bookstore, read it
during breakfast at Jack's Café, grab a few beers at the Jack
London Saloon, and sleep it off at the Jack London Lodge. But
whatever you do, don't miss Jack London State Historic Park.
By
the time Jack London came to Glen Ellen in 1905, he was world
famous for Call of the Wild, The Sea-Wolf, and other stories,
some based on his own experiences. He began purchasing land in
the Sonoma Valley, seeking "a quiet place in the country to write
and loaf in." By 1911, he owned nearly 1,400 acres, which he called
Beauty Ranch. London moved into a cottage in the middle of his
holdings, and from there he supervised the construction of his
dream house.
It
was a four-story, 26-room, nine-fireplace mansion, made from boulders
of maroon lava and redwood logs. There was a two-story living
room, a dining room that seated 50, a pool stocked with bass,
a gun and trophy room, a library, a sleeping tower. The entire
structure, which he named Wolf House, stood on an extra thick
concrete foundation to withstand earthquakes. London expected
that it would stand for a thousand years.
In
late July 1913, the $80,000 project was nearly complete, and London
wrote, "And when it is done, I shall be really comfortable for
the first time in my life." But three weeks later, just as he
and his wife, Charmian, were preparing to move in, Wolf House
burned to the ground. Although arson was suspected, the fire may
have been caused by solvent-soaked rags left by workmen.
London
planned to rebuild, but lack of money (saving for a rainy day
just wasn't in his makeup) delayed the project and he died three
years later at age 40. His dream house remains a haunting collection
of charred rock walls and chimneys among the towering trees.
Today,
the ruins of Wolf House are the park's centerpiece. You'll also
see buildings that were part of Beauty Ranch, including the cottage
where London died (possibly of kidney disease, but speculation
about suicide persists). London is buried beneath a boulder nearby.
The home Charmian London completed in 1926 is now the park visitor
center and museum. Don't miss the brief film of London cavorting
with his livestock only days before his death.
The
park is open 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Thanksgiving, Christmas,
and New Year's Day. Admission is $6 per vehicle, $5 for seniors.
Paths take you through the park; be prepared to stroll.
Information: call (707) 938-5216 or visit
www.parks.sonoma.net/JLPark.html.
Robinson
Jeffers's
Tor
House
If
creating poetry is like
a building a housecareful construction, reflecting both
philosophy and stylethen it follows that a home is like
a poem. Nowhere is this more evident than in Robinson Jeffers's
longtime residence in Carmel, which he expanded painstakingly
over the years as he expanded his body of poetry.
Jeffers
and his wife, Una, arrived in Carmel in 1914, realizing that,
as Jeffers wrote, they "had come without knowing it to their inevitable
place." Often, their walks would take them to a large and nearly
empty tract of land known as Carmel Point, where the ocean and
the elements reigned. Their favorite spot was a craggy hill, or
tor, which by 1919 would mark the site of their home, Tor House,
built primarily from the rocks of Carmel Point (though one can
also spot lava from Hawaii, a headstone from Ireland, even a portion
of the Great Wall of China).
Visitors today can experience the scene just as Jeffers did, relaxing
in the poet's furniture while listening to poems written about
and within those stone walls. Jeffers attracted many famous visitors
over the yearsfrom Charlie Chaplin to Charles Lindbergh.
But most days were quiet and predictable. He would construct his
poems in the morning and his home in the afternoon. This work
included a romantic decision in 1920 to build for Una a stone
tower reminiscent of ancient Irish architecture.
For
five years, Jeffers rolled boulders up from his private beach
and meticulously set them into place, making "stone love stone,"
as he put it. By the time he completed the tower, it was almost
40 feet high. "I hung stone in the sky," observed Jeffers, who
named his addition Hawk Tower in honor of a frequent winged visitor.
While
touring the tower, visitors first enter two tiny rooms on the
ground floor, one of them"the dungeon"several feet
below ground level. Then they corkscrew their way up a secret
stairway to Una's second-floor sanctuary, where they may enjoy
a recitation of a Jeffers paean to his love. From there, visitors
can ascend to a little turret on the third floor and then mount
an even steeper stairway to the top of the turret, which commands
a breathtaking view of the ocean and the remarkable development
surrounding the once-lonely Jeffers abode.
Tor
House, 26304 Ocean View Avenue, offers docent-led tours hourly
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Tours are limited
to six people; you must be 12 or older to take a tour. Cost is
$7. For more information and reservations, call (831) 624-1813
Monday through Thursday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., (831) 624-1840 Friday
and Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., or visit
www.torhouse.org.
Eugene
O'Neill 's
Tao
House
By
early 1937, Eugene O'Neill had firmly established himself as the
architect of modern American theater. Having refashioned it as
serious art rather than a pleasant diversion, he already had had
35 plays produced and earned three Pulitzer Prizes. But as firmly
entrenched as O'Neill the playwright was, O'Neill the man was
not. He and his wife, Carlotta (she was his third wife; he was
her fourth husband), were living in a San Francisco hotel.
One
year earlier, however, O'Neill had become the only playwright
from the United States to win the Nobel Prize for literature.
The accompanying stipend$40,000allowed the couple
to purchase a 158-acre ranch near Danville, a plot of land offering
a view of Mount Diablo across the San Ramon Valley. There they
built what O'Neill, always a lover of the sea, hoped would be
his "final harbor," a quirky house with a Spanish colonial exterior
and interior decor leaning to Asia by way of Gump's.
They
named it Tao House, a nod to O'Neill's interest in Eastern philosophy
and his wife's penchant for Oriental art. And indeed there are
several elements evocative of Taoism inside and outfrom
the curved walkways to the sky blue ceilings and terra-cotta floors.
Despite the view, outdoor pool, and player piano, there is a somewhat
shadowy aura about the house, a situation enhanced by unusual
colored mirrorsgreen, blue, even blackthat contribute
both an art deco touch and ghostly reflections to the atmosphere.
But as the park ranger will explain, it's not a haunted house;
it's just the house of a haunted man.
Every
Sunday in May, the Eugene O'Neill Foundation presents dramatic
readings of the playwright's works in a historic barn on the premises,
and one weekend in October is set aside for a full costumed performance
of an O'Neill play. There's quieter drama in a visit to O'Neill's
isolated second-floor study where he penned his final and most
successful plays, including The Iceman Cometh, A Moon for the
Misbegotten, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Long Day's
Journey Into Night.
O'Neill
didn't care for guests traipsing about his houseironic,
considering it is now open for two free tours a day (at 10 a.m.
and 12:30 p.m.) Wednesday through Sunday year-round. Because the
house is at the end of a winding private road, the National Park
Service provides free van rides to the site from a Park-and-Ride
location in Danville; reservations are required. For information
and reservations, call (925) 838-0249. Admission and van ride
are free.
Doc
Ricketts 's
Lab
Few
writers tapped the intimate relationship between humans and the
places they inhabit more profoundly than did John Steinbeck. California's
only Nobel Prize-winning novelist introduced readers the world
over to the people who lived and worked in the Salinas Valley
and by the shore of Monterey Bay.
Steinbeck
country offers widespread homage to the man, ranging from a $10
million museum (the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas) to nominal
nods (the Steinbeck Electrolysis Center). But one memorial is
essentially a monument to his musea tiny, two-story wooden
edifice tucked along a stretch of the Monterey shoreline known
as Cannery Row. Once named Pacific Biological Laboratories, it
is now revered as Doc Ricketts's Lab.
Ed
Ricketts was a self-taught marine biologist who has been called
the inspiration for the creation of the world-famous Monterey
Bay Aquarium, which sprouted up near his old lab in 1984. He had
an equally large impact on Steinbeck, who met him in 1930, after
Ricketts had established his laboratory amid the city's sardine
canneries, brothels, and flophouses.
For
nearly a dozen years, until Steinbeck moved to the East Coast,
the two would often end a day by swapping philosophy and swigging
beers at the lab (which was rebuilt after being destroyed by fire
in 1936). Steinbeck later claimed Ricketts "was part of my brain."
He became part of Stein- beck's literature, too, as the model
for half a dozen characters, most notably Doc, the beloved protagonist
of Cannery Row and Sweet Thursday, books that transformed
Ed the scientist into Doc the legend.
Although
Ricketts died in 1948 when his car was struck by the Del Monte
Express train at the other end of Cannery Row, his famous laboratory
remains very much alive. In 1957, it was sold to a group of 14
local men, several of them Doc's old friends, and it became an
exclusive club of sorts. Every Wednesday for years, the men enjoyed
cold drinks and cool jazz, continuing the celebration of artistry
and informality at 800 Cannery Row.
In
1993, the remaining members of the group decided to assure that
such sacred ground was treated reverently. They sold Doc's lab
for a song to the city of Monterey, and the Cannery Row Foundation
sponsored a restoration and seismic retrofit so successful that
the city recently received the Governor's Award for Historic Preservation.
Although
the lab is used for special occasions, it is open for public tours
only three times a yearon Steinbeck's birthday (February
27), on Ricketts's birthday (May 14), and during the annual Sardine
Festival (in early June). For $15, visitors can imagine themselves
back in the 1930s, when a biologist-philosopher found life teeming
in the strangest placesand his writer friend found much
the same thing.
For
more information, call the Cannery Row Foundation:
(831) 372-8512.
City
Lights
Bookstore
In
1953, poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Peter D. Martin founded a
simple bookstore in San Francisco's North Beach district. City
Lights was the nation's first all-paperback emporium. It was not
long before this unusual store came to symbolize what the store's
own Web site describes as the "antiauthoritarian politics and
insurgent thinking" of "beatniks."
Ferlinghetti
expanded from selling books to creating them in 1955, launching
City Lights Publishers. The fourth book in his Pocket Poets Series
was a poem by Allen Ginsberg called Howl. Its publication
proved to be a watershed moment for the book and the bookstore.
Ginsberg's work inspired obscenity charges, followed by Ferlinghetti's
arrest and a long trial (in which the beatniks beat the rap).
All
of this turned the poem into a nexus of censorship debate, the
poet into a herald of insurgent literature, and City Lights into
ground zero of everything bookishly beatific. Tour buses even
began to pull to a halt in front of City Lights, passengers eager
to claim beatnik sightings.
Howl,
which had an original run of 1,000 copies, now boasts nearly
800,000 copies in print. A first edition, originally a 75-cent
sale, now has an asking price of up to $2,500. City Lights Publishers
now has more than two hundred titles in print, and the bookstore
has expanded several times over the years. It is no longer exclusively
paperback and isn't solely a small press outlet. You can find
new-release hardcovers from major publishing houses on its three
floors.
Although
the place has become internationally famous, the attitude remains
intimate and alternative. Inscriptions above doorways pronounce
things like "Abandon all despair, ye who enter here," and books
are listed under quirky categories like Green Politics, Commodity
Aesthetics, Muckraking, Anarchism, and Class War. Climb to the
third-floor room devoted to Beat literature, and you might find
a wild-haired sixtysomething sitting cross-legged on a stool and
reading William Burroughs.
Antiestablishmentarianism
may not be what it was: In 1998, Ferlinghetti was appointed San
Francisco's first poet laureate. Even so, his inaugural speech
was vintage Ferlinghetti. Taking the measure of "this far-out
city on the left side of the world," he railed against freeways,
warplanes, and chain stores, called for writing poems that say
something supremely important, and repeated a suggestion that
the Golden Gate Bridge be painted gold.
The
beat goes on.
City
Lights, 261 Columbus Avenue, is open from 10 a.m. to midnight
daily. For more information, call (415) 362-8193 or visit www.citylights.com.