Friday, October 18, 2013

The Lost Manuscript...




I cannot believe that I somehow lost the working manuscript of my second book, including the first hundred pages of the most recent second revision. It just disappeared from my laptop. I had a paper copy of some of those 100 pages but not enough to easily reconstruct, rewrite really, all over again.

It was very unlike me not to have a backup. I know I wasn't careless about saving the manuscript with these recent edits. I looked in every file and every program for it. I wondered if it was meant for me to give up and move on. 

This will be a more difficult book to publish than it is to write. It is often too close to home, and it could/may/will be hurtful to some people I love. I told myself I would not decide what to do until I finished the book. 

Then: two nights ago, while playing Words with Friends on my iPhone, the manuscript popped up. I swear this is true. It just appeared. I immediately sent myself an email copy and guess what? When I opened it, the copy I received was an older version. I can't explain any of it. I will only say that from my iphone I managed to copy-paste pages 60-100 and they were the most important. The next day, on my iPhone, the updated copy was no longer there. 

Anyway, here is a chapter, where sometimes pathetic Casey Mango and her partner Bee vacation in Italy. 



Chapter

Bee and I and the tour gang are traveling to Pompeii.

Considering that the city was partially destroyed and buried under up to twenty feet feet of ash and pumice when Mount Vesuvius erupted in AD 79 what we see is remarkably intact: it is the bones of a mud crusted bombed out city with roads and marked lots and some standing buildings. Pompeii was lost for nearly seventeen hundred years before its accidental rediscovery in 1749 and since then, excavation has provided extraordinary details into the life of an ancient city.  

Because the Roman legal system that govenerned Pompeii unified the administration of justice throughout the provinces, the empire was largely free of large-scale power disputes. This alllowed art and architecture to flourish along with commerce and economic prosperity. This is not to say, however, that women and slaves benefitted; not even. From our first step into Pompeii, now one of the most popular tourist attractions of Italy with approximately 2,500,000 visitors every year, the ‘power over’ male aristocracy is apparent. Bee and I are fascinated and then appalled by the cave like entrance to the sex rooms frequented by the city’s wealthy men. Upon entering we see mud calcified walls creating separate spaces for makeshift straw mattresses and with explicit diagrams of various sexual positions etched on many of the interior walls. 

“The merchants and governors visited the sex rooms often, then gorged themselves with food and drink, and then, on their way home to their wives and families, they would stop to relieve their indulgences at one of several vomitoriums.” Our tour guide describes this quite matter of factly. “Then,” she says, “the slaves would clean and maintain the vomitoriums every day. Being a slave was very difficult: their average life expectancy was barely twenty one years.” 

Bee and I are disgusted. When we look at a the petrified body of a young male, now encased in a glass enclosure, his arms in the air in his last moments to protect himself from volcanic lava, we are speechless. We are looking at a young man who had a literal shit life. Covered by nine feet of ash, as his body decomposed, he and others apparently left a perfectly formed hollow in the ash. Historians injected the hollow with plaster, thereby recreating the position of his body, including his terrified facial expression.

“Jesus Christ, Bee, can you imagine being so misused that he would have probably died before he was even an adult?”

Bee looks very serious. “We are so lucky, Casey. Sometimes we don’t know how lucky we are.”

Pompeii is now a calcified city. Although the roads are crusted mud it’s clear they were impressively organized, leading to separate areas of banks, merchants, and elaborate homes for the privileged ruling class. There are few physical structures, of course, but it is not hard to have a sense of how the city operated.

At the time of the eruption, this was a wealthy Roman trading town, famous for its fish sauce and grand villas.  Although there was a day’s warning and many residents had time to flee, many did not. The eruption came fast and furious, lasting nineteen hours. Pliny the Younger, circa A.D. 97 to 109, documented the terror: 

"You could hear women lamenting, children crying, men shouting. There were some so afraid that they prayed for death. Many raised their hands to the gods, and even more believed that there were no gods any longer and that this was one unending night for the world."

Mt. Vesuvius erupted with superheated ash that also rained a fiery death on several Roman cities nearby. But none was hit harder than Pompeii, which was buried in a thick layer of broiling ash in a matter of seconds. The ash killed over a thousand people instantly and buried the town nine feet deep.
Wealthy Pompeians had poured their savings into their houses.  The sophisication defied belief: rooms heated by hot air running through cavity walls and spaces under the floors,  hydraulic pumps providing running water.  From a great reservoir, water flowed invisibly through underground pipelines into drainage systems and into aqueducts supported by arches. 
Now, beneath the layers of the muddy ash  a snapshot of everyday life emerges, complete with bank receipts, graffiti, "for rent" signs, public mosaics depicting extremely graphic sex, and penis decorations on street corners.  Outside one shapely building on a main street in Pompeii, Bee and I see this piece of graffiti: "Hic bene futui," or "Here you'll get a good fuck.”
I motion to Bee to look at our tour mates, Roberta and Ellen, who have also just come across this translation. They are almost doubled over. Ellen winks at me and I know we will have a good laugh at Maria and Eddie’s kitchen later that night. 
If you've made it this far, thank you very much.
Love kj

19 comments:

  1. I am not so sure the digital age is all it's touted to be.


    The Chapter: Take out all of the information you could find on Wikipedia. Leave in all of the sex stuff and vomitoriums. And have the slave in whatever position he would be in as he worked. Novels do not need an abundance of historical information.

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  2. Ghoulies and ghosties, tis halloween time it tis...whooooooo...

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  3. Okay that was a silly comment- sorry you lost your hard work. xx

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  4. what an odd occurrence, I'm sure it was in your computer somewhere but why was it hiding or did someone mysteriously delete it?

    I'm with WM on the Wikipedia stuff as your strength lies in images, and feelings. Too many facts blur that line. And your bits....they're good!

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  5. yes...'sometimes we don't know how lucky we are'! but you my sweet friend, you do know! so pleased the manuscript popped up....enjoyed it very much....

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  6. wow......so must to digest here. first of all, recovering the manuscript is nothing less than miraculous. sounds like the universe is asking you to consider something about the work you're doing.....when things like that happen to me i try to uncover the deeper meaning. it may mean you're meant to rewrite it, or pay more attention to it.....so many things.

    and the pompeii chapter - wow. as an archaeologist i know this stuff happened there but your portrayal is fascinating, focusing on the literal and proverbial shit of ancient life. those phallic statues were known as herms - signposts that marked off boundaries. but the ancient bordello sign is priceless.

    the universe (and me!) are telling you to keep writing! xxx

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    1. Amanda, I agree I was sent a cosmic message. I've been on an ethical fence with this novel, and yet when I laboriously printed all 500 pages, just to be ultra safe, I felt exhilarated ! So I'll stick with it.

      I'm pondering mark and mim's comments about historical back stories . I kind of like them....

      Thanks for your feedback. I hope your writing goes well xo

      Love
      kj

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  8. wow that must've been overwhelming to think you lost this.I'm usually not great about backing things up but since I started writing I'm awesome at it now. congratulations on finding it... kind of ironic that it was about something archaeological and it took some digging to find it ...no pun intended. that whole piece about the young man and his facial expression making the cast just kinda freaks me out a little bit. You can take that as a compliment. I would take it as a sign of good writing.best of everything with the rest of the endeavor.

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    1. Zoe, the greatest irony is that it appeared after all the digging :-) I am flicking relieved!

      I will never forget the sight of that young boy...

      Love
      kj

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  9. I've come back to read this again, that says something my friend! I remember coming here to read excerpts for the book and being drawn in. And it's happening again. I want more.

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  10. Regarding historical bkg, I love some and I love it in your words, your writing is so good and descriptive. But for me, with my science mind, I went back and forth between story and history, which if you want that is great. But if the focus is more on the people....I dont know how to say it.

    Anyway... The point is, I want more!

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  11. Mum, remember when I told you no kid would eat an anchovie pizza ? :-)

    I appreciate your feedback and I'm pondering it. No worries . But what do I do with all that info on the Philippines ?! :-)

    Love always!
    kj

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  12. My spellcheck sneaks in mum and mom for Mim and I resent it :-)

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