Joan Didion & John Gregory Dunne |
We were at some kind of event--plein air--and the two of them, middle-aged at the time--were holding forth about something and having a grand old time of it. They teased each other about computers. He said he had two of them; she said she had her mother's computer. [Don't even begin to ask me what that's about!]
As I think of it now, there were very few people there--a somewhat generic urban setting.
Then they began to leave, and I said to Joyce, let's go introduce ourselves! We trotted (!) after them, and they slowed only a bit. I told her I used to review books for the Cleveland Plain Dealer. She said something that indicated she knew that the PD did not publish many reviews nowadays.
I told her I still reviewed a book a week for Kirkus Reviews.
She said, "Oh, I hear they have some very good people."
To which Witty I replied, "Just one that I know of."
They both laughed, and she told me I should review for her publication, Blue Verizon.
I asked if that were a publication for people depressed about their smart phones.
She smiled, and they danced away.
And then they were gone, and Joyce and I were walking across Randolph Avenue in downtown Enid, Oklahoma, where I grew up in the 1940s and 50s. We were not using a crosswalk, just in the middle of the wide busy street. I was attending to my iPhone, looking up Blue Verizon in a search engine.
A truck nearly ran us over. Stopped. The driver gestured impatiently. (But not obscenely: I dream clean!)
And then we were on the sidewalk, and we entered an antiquarian bookshop. I headed for the periodicals, hoping to find a copy of Blue Verizon.
I was looking through the stacks when I woke up with the certainty that I'd misheard Joan Didion: Surely she had said Blue Horizon!
**
I have little idea about where that dream came from. Joyce and I did recently watch that Netflix documentary about Didion (The Center Will Not Hold), and both Joyce and I have read a lot of her work--and I read some of Dunne's novels, too, back in the day. He's been dead since December 30, 2003 (he was 71), and Didion is now 83 years old.I have had other dreams about meeting famous writers--from Norman Mailer to William F. Buckley Jr.--but nothing as detailed and intimate as this one.
If the events in the dream had actually happened, of course, Joyce would hardly have been a supporting player, the role my Dreaming Self assigned her. (It seems that even in sleep I can be a jerk.) But it's kind of weird, isn't it, apologizing for events in a dream?
But I'll say I'm sorry anyway ...
No comments:
Post a Comment