Proud Highway:Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman (45 page)

BOOK: Proud Highway:Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman
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Now I am getting tired—and hungry—and I would give a nut to be able to step over to the icebox and find a bowl of tuna fish, a jar of hot peppers and a bottle of Ballantine ale. But no more. No, all I have now are the dregs of a bottle of wine ($1.14 a gallon), a wad of salami, and a shaky credit with the mailman—who also brings groceries. Somehow, we are having a 20 lb. turkey for Christmas. A crazed Tzarist writer, 60 years old and lecherous as a young bull, has come up with a monster turkey—and every winehead in Big Sur will be here to pick it clean. All week long we had the terrible public gluts, with bearded thieves hustling out of barns and shacks to share in the abundance brought in by the Big Momma from Sandusky. Every day I drove up to the mailbox in a sleek white convertible—top down and bare-chested, of course—and greeted the postman with a wide, opulent smile. Now, my credit is like Fort Knox—although he keeps asking why I don't drive my car anymore. I tell him I need the exercise.

I presume, of course, that you're picking up on my stuff in the
Trib
. Another one came out recently, and now they want something on Big Sur. If they paid anything, I might hustle for them. But they don't. Also selling an occasional story to the
Courier-Journal
, but the combined total is not even enough to keep me in wine. The Big Money is just around the corner, of course, and it won't be long before I get my hands on it. And then, by jesus, a Crotchdance of such heinous proportions as to whiten the hair of every Rotarian from Newark to Muscle Beach. […]

Unless the Big Money comes in by January 1, we'll head back to San Francisco & probably put Sandy to work. Suppose we'll get an apt., so come on out for a visit if you think you can stand the gaff. I keep applying for jobs and people keep running me out of offices because of my hair and my pipe-thing. Clancy is out here, doing six months in the Army just up the coast in Monterey, and once in a while he comes down for a bit of wine and a Sheep's Head [ale].

That's just about the score on this end. What the hell are you doing? Maxine didn't seem to know & I can only guess. I predict firestorms before summer, followed by a massive shitrain to finish us off. Until then, I shall prevail.

Pompously,
Hunter

 

Hunter and Sandy at their Big Sur home
. (P
HOTO BY
H
UNTER
S. T
HOMPSON
;
COURTESY OF
HST C
OLLECTION
)

Thompson at Big Sur
. (P
HOTO BY
J
O
H
UDSON; COURTESY OF
HST C
OLLECTION
)

Thompson's favorite portrait of his friend Paul Semonin
. (P
HOTO BY
H
UNTER
S. T
HOMPSON; COURTESY OF
HST C
OLLECTION
)

Thompson became known as “The Outlaw of Big Sur.”
(C
OURTESY OF
HST C
OLLECTION
)

Joan Baez was Thompson's Big Sur neighbor
. (P
HOTO BY
H
UNTER
S. T
HOMPSON; COURTESY OF
HST C
OLLECTION
)

1
. Rhodes was a high-quality men's store in Louisville.

2
. Fyodor Dostoyevsky's novella
The Gambler
.

3
. By “Hubbard Cure” Thompson is referring to his Cuddebackville landlord, Fred Hubbard, who had stolen a wheel from his Jaguar in lieu of rent.

4
. Thompson had a free-lance assignment from the Louisville
Courier-Journal
to cover Mardi Gras in Charlotte Amalie, capital of the U.S. Virgin Islands.

5
. Fred Hazlett was an executive at the Puerto Rico News Service. He got Thompson a lot of freelance ad modeling assignments.

6
. Hosford's new wife.

7
. Carl Solomon was a Beat poet who had been committed to New York's Rockland Hospital for psychiatric observation. Allen Ginsberg dedicated his signature poem, “Howl,” to him.

8
. Sala and Klemmens were layout editor and sports editor, respectively, of the
San Juan Star
. Thompson's reference to Sala, Klemmens, and Kazin being in the hospital is a joke. They were not hospitalized.

9
. “They Hoped to Reach Spain but Are Stranded in Bermuda: Trip of Americans Who Left Virgin Islands Three Weeks Ago,”
Royal Gazette Weekly
(Bermuda), July 10, 1960.

10
. Thompson is referring to Kennedy's unpublished novel, “The Angels and Sparrows,” in which such Albany Cycle characters as Billy Phelan made their first appearances.

11
. Kennedy's wife.

12
.
Who Do You Trust?
, hosted by Johnny Carson. This was Thompson's first ever TV appearance. He missed the $300 question: “Who was the inventor of penicillin?”

13
. Conklin's mother owned a travel agency in Deland, Florida; her father was a businessman in Port Jefferson, New York.

14
. Kennedy's still-unpublished novel, “The Angels and Sparrows.”

15
. O'Conner was a childhood friend of William Kennedy's who tried to get Thompson a journalism job in New York.

16
. Dick Murphy, a Louisville friend of Thompson's, had been killed in a car accident.

17
.
Time
ran a story claiming that the CIA had assisted in the overthrow of Colonel Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán's left-wing government in June 1954. Although Arbenz and his government appealed to the UN, where the Soviet Union backed their cause, the United States refused to allow the Security Council to intervene.

18
. John Clancy was a lawyer Thompson had met at Columbia University who would become a lifelong friend.

19
. Herb Caen, Art Hoppe, Royce Brier, and Lucius Beebe were the
San Francisco Chronicle
's ace team of reporters and columnists.

20
. William Randolph Hearst, Jr., owner of the
San Francisco Examiner
—for which Thompson would write a regular column twenty-five years later.

21
. Hosford's year-old son.

22
. Maxine Ambus was a boisterous woman from an Ohio steel town who had first met Thompson in 1959.

1961

HARD TRAVELER COMES TO BIG SUR … GREAT LEAPS OF A FREE–LANCE WRITER … $780 A YEAR … THE SOUTH COAST IS A WILD COAST AND LONELY … THE SECRET PASSIONS OF JOAN BAEZ KILLING PIGS AND SELLING DOGS …

Now, thirty-three years old and looking fifty, his spirit broken and his body swollen with drink, he bounced from one country to another, hiring himself out as a reporter and hanging on until he was fired. Disgusting as he usually was, on rare occasions he showed flashes of a stagnant intelligence. But his brain was so rotted with drink and dissolute living that whenever he put it to work it behaved like an old engine that had gone haywire from being dipped in lard.

–Hunter S. Thompson,

“The Rum Diary” (unpublished novel)

 

 

TO PAUL SEMONIN
:

Upon returning to the United States from Bermuda, Semonin spent a few months in both New York and San Francisco. Unable to find meaningful employment in either city, he moved to Aspen, Colorado, in December 1960, urging his best buddy, Thompson, to join him in the Rockies, where “the living is easy.”

January 6, 1961
Big Sur, California

Dear Mr. Semonin:

Your query concerning “pleasure spots” was referred to me by Mr. Thompson, who was kidnapped by queers on New Year's Eve and borne off to the south country. His widow has made an unnatural connection with the Slime God, and cannot at the moment deal with your correspondence. For that reason, I, the county Boarmaster, was called in to sock the deal home. My findings are listed below.

After driving some 21 miles today, the last three of them up a steep canyon full of redwoods, I came on a place called Upper Greenwood Shack. I drove these miles in an off-shift Willys Jeep with a deaf woman, and could not therefore express my dismay that we had come to a place called Moe Canyon—and at the end of this canyon rested a black shack which I (we) entered for the purpose of assay. The innards were bare and cold, but I was instantly struck with the resemblance of this abode to a dark hole once inhabited by an artist friend of mine who has since retired into the hash business. My first thought, upon seeing the skylight in the ceiling, was, “By George, how that fellow could deal with this place.” This suspicion was further strengthened when I made a full tour of the place for the purpose of loot. It was full of books and sweaters, a good many of which the deaf woman and I carried off for the purpose of enrichment. Now I want you to understand that a bearded artist has been trying to zip this place off on Mr. Thompson for the sum of $40 per month—but Mr. Thompson does not see it so much as a “pleasure spot” as a place where he will freeze
his strained and itching balls. Mr. Thompson is (was) a lover of the sea, you know, and he feels (felt) that a place on the shore would be more to his taste. And also better for his strained and itching balls. Warmth, you know. Mr. Thompson likes (liked) warmth.

BOOK: Proud Highway:Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman
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