The Art of Fiction No. 72
“I have beliefs, of course, like everyone—but I don't always believe in them.”
Joyce Carol Oates was born in Lockport, New York, on June 16, 1938. A prolific writer of short stories, novels, essays, and poems, Oates has received the O. Henry Special Award for Continuing Achievement, the F. Scott Fitzgerald Award for Achievement in American Literature, and the National Book Award for Fiction for her novel them (1969). Oates is interested in realism and violence, often taking inspiration from actual people and events. Among her most notable works are A Garden of Earthly Delights (1963), We Were the Mulvaneys (1996), and Blonde (2000). In 1974, Oates founded The Ontario Review, later Ontario Review Books publishing house, with her husband Raymond J. Smith. She is the Roger S. Berlind ’52 Professor Emerita of the Humanities at Princeton University and visiting professor of short fiction at the University of California, Berkeley.
“I have beliefs, of course, like everyone—but I don't always believe in them.”
I wasn’t born ugly. I’ve seen snapshots of myself as a baby, as a toddler. Beautiful little girl with springy dark curls, shining dark eyes, a happy smile.
It was midsummer, the heat rippling above the macadam roads. Cicadas screaming out of the trees and the sky like pewter, glaring.
The days were the same day, like the shallow mud-brown river moving always in the same direction but so slow you couldn’t see it.
Early Saturday afternoon the man who had introduced himself as Oliver took Ginny to several shops on Madison Avenue above 70th Street to buy her what he called an appropriate outfit. For an hour and forty-five minutes she modelled clothes, watching with critical interest her image in the three-way mirrors, unable to decide if this was one of her really good days or only a mediocre day.
Hypothesized: X follows me continually, whenever I go out, for one of several reasons that are mutually exclusive. He is on a mission of reclamation, a private detective hired by my father; he is a police agent; he is an acquaintance in disguise or an acquaintance of someone I know/have known, who wants revenge for a real/unreal offense I have committed.
So much depends
upon
forgetting much
The skin is the largest organ in the body. The skin of an average-
sized man has an area of approximately seventeen square feet and
weighs about five pounds. —medical handbook
Beyond our seed-littered pond a small forest of bamboo grows wild.
Hear the wind-rustling like shaken paper? Bamboo.
My anger is such that the very ice-fields would melt,
if I had the power.
If I had the power.
—with only the cavernous house as a witness.
It nudges you from your shallow sleep,
it whispers love-mockeries.
After the first death there is a shrinking.
Miracles to fit in a spoon.
The sun rolling crazy and free as the wheel of an old baby buggy.
Where the gale winds blew they crouched low
where too much horizon leered they fashioned a circle
and drew its boundaries tight
“I declined an offer from our friend Lanny Jones, People editor, to write an O.J. essay for them, based upon a few days at the trial.”
“For the widow there is one looming question: Should you outlive your husband?”