The Exile Book of Canadian Sports Stories
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Priscila Uppal
Priscila Uppal was an internationally acclaimed poet, prose writer, and playwright. A York University professor and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, she was the author of Ontological Necessities and Cover Before Striking. Her memoir, Projection: Encounters with My Runaway Mother, was shortlisted for the Hilary Weston Prize and a Governor General’s Award.
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The Exile Book of Canadian Sports Stories - Priscila Uppal
Formatting note:
In the electronic versions of this book blank pages that appear in the paperback have been removed.
The Exile Book of
CANADIAN SPORTS STORIES
edited by
Priscila Uppal
Publishers of singular Fiction, Poetry, Nonfiction, Drama, Translation and Graphic Books
2009
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
The Exile book of Canadian Sports Stories / edited by Priscila Uppal.
ISBN
978-1-55096-125-6 (pbk)
978-1-55096-737-1 (ePub)
978-1-55096-738-8 (MOBI)
978-1-55096-739-5 (PDF)
1. Sports stories, Canadian (English). 2. Short stories, Canadian (English). 3. Canadian fiction (English). I. Uppal, Priscila II. Title: Canadian sports stories.
PS8323.S6E95 2009 C813'.0108357 C2009-905678-X
Copyright © Exile Editions, 2009
Design and Composition by Active Design Haus
Cover painting, Tour de Force 86, by Charles Pachter
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PDF, ePUB and MOBI versions by Melissa Campos Mendivil
Publication Copyright © Exile Editions, 2009. All rights reserved
We gratefully acknowledge, for their support toward our publishing activities, the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Ontario Media Development Corporation.
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for Emmitt Avtar Uppal
ready, set, go
Introduction For the Love of Sport Art
CLARKE BLAISE
The Sociology of Love
GEORGE BOWERING
October 1, 1961
DIONNE BRAND
I Used to Like the Dallas Cowboys
BARRY CALLAGHAN
The Cohen in Cowan
MORLEY CALLAGHAN
The Chiseler
ROCH CARRIER
The Hockey Sweater
MATT COHEN
Vogel
CRAIG DAVIDSON
The Rifleman
BRIAN FAWCETT
My Career With the Leafs
KATHERINE GOVIER
Eternal Snow
LINDA GRIFFITHS
A Game of Inches
STEVEN HEIGHTON
A Right Like Yours
MARK JARMAN
The Scout’s Lament
W.P. KINSELLA
Diehard
STEPHEN LEACOCK
The Old, Old Story of How Five Men Went Fishing
BARRY MILLIKEN
Run
L. M. MONTGOMERY
Natty of Blue Point
SUSANNA MOODIE
Brian, the Still Hunter
LISA MOORE
The Stylist
MARGUERITE PIGEON
Endurance
MORDECAI RICHLER
Playing Ball on Hampstead Heath
DIANE SCHOEMPERLEN
Hockey Night in Canada
RUDY THAUBERGER
Goalie
PRISCILA UPPAL
Vertigo
GUY VANDERHAEGHE
The Master of Disaster
JORDAN WHEELER
The Seventh Wave
Notes on the Authors
Permissions
Introduction
For the Love of Sport Art
Dear Reader,
Did you know that art competitions used to be part of the modern Olympic Games from 1912 to 1948? Medals were awarded for works of art inspired by sport, divided into five categories: architecture, literature, music, painting, and sculpture. Two people have actually won Olympic medals in both the sports and arts competitions: American Walter Winans, marksman and sculptor, and Hungarian Alfréd Hajós, swimmer and architect. Art competitions were dropped in 1954 because it was argued artists were professionals, while Olympic athletes were required to be amateurs.[1] Now that NHL and NBA professional players, among others, are permitted to compete in the Olympics, I wonder whether or not this old judgement on professional artists should be revisited. Many contemporary writers, composers, and visual artists would welcome the opportunity to vie in fierce competition for a medal, especially since most of us are not getting any younger, faster, or healthier.
If the arts competition had persisted to the present day, perhaps more people wouldn’t bat an eye when presented with the words sport
and art
side by side; artists and athletes have more in common than our stereotypical image of jocks on one side of the gymnasium, and the intellectuals nowhere near them (perhaps reading books in the stands). However, both pursue excellence through discipline and rigour, both sacrifice other pleasures in this pursuit, and both are actively engaged in what I would call pain management
(the ability to turn pain into a creative, dynamic force). Moreover, truly great practitioners in both arenas are possessed with the curious ability to actively change the rules the games are played by, consummate originals rather than followers. There are many other ways that sport and art are complementary, and we could learn a vast amount from each other if the two worlds met more frequently. From this desire arises this one-of-a-kind literary anthology bringing together 26 Canadian sports stories – stories about sport from some of this country’s greatest storytellers and most compelling imaginations. It seems absolutely preposterous that this book is the first of its kind in Canada; but it is.[2] So, medal or no medal, let’s celebrate this first together.
Although I have already mentioned that sport and art rarely find themselves on the same playing fields, it is not surprising that the sport world provides the keen writerly imagination with ample subject matter, drama, and a myriad of emotions with which to produce exciting, moving, and provocative fiction. Some of the greatest novels of all time – novels not considered to be sport novels
– have made highly effective use of sport in their plots, though this is rarely acknowledged. The 17th century Spanish masterpiece Don Quixote, considered by many to be the greatest novel of all time, introduces us to a hero bent on proving himself in combat – one of his goals is to test his mettle at the Zaragoza jousting competitions and win praise and fame for his deeds. One of the most important scenes in Tolstoy’s Russian classic Anna Karenina occurs during a riveting steeplechase race. Ernest Hemingway’s bullfighting scenes are famous, but he also wrote about fishing, hunting, boxing, skiing, bobsledding, and more. Water imagery abounds in Virginia Woolf’s work, and therefore references to rowing, swimming, and boating. Academic Caroline Spurgeon has identified a total of 240 sports and games images in Shakespeare’s plays. And sport theorist Ronald J. Meyers claims that the classical Greek poet Homer, in describing the funeral games in The Iliad XXIII undertaken to give recognition to the hero (most of which are still played today), was the world’s first sports writer.
And so, our Canadian authors are in good company for taking on this worthy subject. Now, the question is, what have they done with it?
The first story in this collection, Clarke Blaise’s The Sociology of Love
does not at first even seem to be a sport story per se. A blonde university student interviews a successful South-Asian immigrant for a sociology project. The two seem to have little in common and cultural misconceptions and tensions arise; however, they are soon bound by tennis: memories of tennis, South-Asian and western tennis stars, tennis players in their lives. And sports is one of the ways that the man’s children assimilate into North American culture; his son playing tennis, skiing and surfing, the daughter a figure skater: To pay for tennis and ice-skating lessons takes up all our cash,
we are told. While most of the stories included herein present us with narratives we would clearly and immediately identify as sports fiction, The Sociology of Love
and a handful of others present to us further possibilities for the use of sport in narrative. Sport is real but it is also metaphor, paradigm, a way to experience some of the harsher realities of the world, a place to escape to, an arena from which endless lessons can be learned, passed on, learned again.
People are surprised when I tell them how many sports stories I’ve managed to find in Canadian literature.[3] We tend to associate certain sports with national character – U.S. with baseball, Canada with hockey, Brazil with soccer, Kenya with long-distance running – and so the makeup of our literature should tell us something about ourselves. What I discovered is that baseball is king in terms of the number of sport fictions produced by our writers (the unquestionable leader in American fiction as well), with hockey a very close second (but I bet hockey will overtake baseball in time, as more of our younger writers seem interested in writing about it). Our stories, however, also focus on all manner of athletic activities from basketball to surfing, skiing to diving. Like the makeup of our vast country, our sports stories are diverse in subject, tone, and perspective, and present us with unique as well as universal experiences. Nevertheless, W.P. Kinsella’s claim that baseball, due to its silences and stoppages of play, is the most literary of sports,
is intriguing. I’ve chosen three baseball stories: George Bowering’s witty and suspenseful October 1, 1961,
Linda Griffiths’ lust- and longing-driven A Game of Inches,
and W.P. Kinsella’s loving and elegiac Diehard.
These three narratives constitute the most fantasy-oriented stories in the book: the first a time-travelling story that will change the history of baseball, the second a girl-meets-boy, girl-falls-for-boy-and-therefore-must-fall-for-baseball tale complete with seduction sequences involving pro ballplayers, the last a road-trip concerning the afterlife of an old baseball player. We love hockey stories and write them with panache and with an authenticity that speaks to every Canadian who has ever anticipated ice-covered landscapes with delight, or has ever fiddled with rabbit ears on the television on a Saturday night. Roch Carrier’s French-Canadian classic, The Hockey Sweater,
is practically a Canadian anthem – our most famous short story, period, a tragicomic parable of Anglophone and Francophone relations so quintessential to our national character that lines from it are printed on our five-dollar bill. But also included are stories running the gamut from poets turned into hockey stars to how sport can create both fond memories and rifts in marriages to secret information collected from participating on the inside; Brian Fawcett’s farcical My Career with the Leafs,
Diane Schoemperlen’s moving coming-of-age story Hockey Night in Canada,
Mark Jarman’s compelling dramatic monologue The Scout’s Lament,
and Rudy Thauberger’s much-anthologized Goalie.
We also write about basketball (Barry Callaghan’s lyrical descriptions of the feather touch needed for perfect arcs in The Cohen in Cowan,
and Craig Davidson’s cringe-worthy scenes in The Rifleman
), football (Dionne Brand intersects war with sports in I Used to Like the Dallas Cowboys
), boxing (Morley Callaghan’s minimalist classic The Chiseler,
Steven Heighton’s erotically playful A Right Like Yours,
Guy Vanderhaeghe’s absolutely cinematic The Master of Disaster
), skiing (we welcome getting stuck on a gondola in Katherine Govier’s Eternal Snow
), running (Matt Cohen’s Vogel
gives us a glimpse of the infidelity that can occur when one marriage partner decides to get active and buff and the other doesn’t, and Barry Milliken’s Run,
which shows us how people sometimes literally run for their lives), swimming (Lisa Moore’s sensual The Stylist
), diving (Priscila Uppal’s depiction of an athlete under research in Vertigo
), extreme marathoners (Marguerite Pigeon’s fascinating portrayal of those who take the body to its very limits in Endurance
), softball (Mordecai Richler’s laugh-out-loud funny look at film men and ex-wives who jeer them in Playing Ball on Hampstead Heath
), surfing (Jordan Wheeler’s tragicomic midlife-crisis story The Seventh Wave
), and more. I’ve also included some sports stories from the 19th and early 20th centuries, on fishing (Stephen Leacock’s charming The Old, Old, Story of How Five Men Went Fishing
), hunting (the queen of 19th century CanLit, Susanna Moodie’s Brian, The Still Hunter
) and rowing (L.M. Montgomery’s story of averted tragedy Natty of Blue Point
).
In a country as large as Canada, we write about these sports with our differing landscapes (our small towns and our cities, our mountain tops, prairies, and coasts) and our complex social and cultural histories (including shared fears and jokes and misunderstandings) in mind. The narrator of Dionne Brand’s I Used to Like the Dallas Cowboys,
confesses her past preference for American football over Canadian football; a fiery office worker looking for love and for a fight spars with a reluctant male target in A Right Like Yours
; a woman’s memories of her childhood vacations to Banff and Lake Louise are dimmed by her return with a lover in Eternal Snow
; in Hockey Night in Canada,
a lingerie seller whose husband and baby have died finds passion in being a hockey fan who shrieked and howled and paced around the living room... begging them to score
; in Stephen Leacock’s story five men sabotage their own fishing expedition, and this has happened and is happening to all the other fishing parties
in Canada and the U.S.; an Aboriginal university student goes along with his young girlfriend’s friends to surf the west coast in The Seventh Wave,
even though in Canada the best known surfing spot is the West Edmonton Mall.
These stories contain several more stories within them, and point to hundreds more beyond these pages.
Sports experiences can cross boundaries of gender and help overcome stereotypes. Critic Michael Oriad even suggests that "participation by girls and women in sports will probably do more to change male and female attitudes about gender roles than any other factor. Whose admiration for female athletes wouldn’t grow when presented with the boxer in
A Right Like Yours, who throws herself in the ring even though
breast shots really kill, or the mental strength demonstrated by the narrator in
Endurance" to continue racing after hallucinations and other gruelling physical punishments have afflicted her body?
Sports also appeal to a respect for measurement, mathematics, going from nothing to something (zero is the worst number in the world), rules, order, our need for judgment criteria (the diver in Vertigo
states: An athlete lives by numbers. And by belief in change. For better or worse, we’re all a series of calculations
). Here is where sport differs from art, where judgments are considered subjective, and the only statistics that matter are book sales, not usually an indication of the quality of the artist. Perhaps this is also a reason why certain artists are drawn to sport. Artists and athletes both love the competitive arena, but with sport, you can’t fake it. You can either score that basket, run faster than your competitor, land that triple axle, or you can’t. You are awarded by merit and demonstrated ability. You compete. There are clear victors and clear losers. You attain greatness, or you are humbled by the greatness of others. What writer wouldn’t want the bragging rights of being the current gold medallist of the novel? The physicality of the body must be trained to perform the correct actions effectively and efficiently, but the mind and spirit must also be strong – as many athletes tell you, the mind game can be far more important than the physical game. And how athletes think and feel, rationalize and experience – an arena that few fans or spectators of sport can enter – can be imagined and represented by artists, which is why sport art can do so much, not just to counter gender stereotypes, but to counter stereotypes of all kinds (nationality, religion, race, class, and more) with understanding and empathy, and to highlight how important sport experience is beyond the body.
However, the body still counts for a great deal. Sports are sexy – the physical beauty, perfection of the human form – Dionne Brand waxes poetically on the male form of football players, while the narrator of The Stylist
dreams about kissing her coach, A kiss so ripe and desperate, nothing ever comes close,
and the pining protagonist of A Game of Inches
has her first satisfying sexual experience with baseball player George Bell, who touches her with the sweetest part of his bat.
And vulgar – the distortions of the body, the brutality – such as the frostbitten toes of Alaskan racers in Endurance
or the viscerally described beatings dished out in The Master of Disaster.
Steroids and other drugs are realities in the sports world, as our insider informs us in The Scout’s Lament,
because Not everyone’s a star or a rocket scientist. Not everyone has a million choices.
Threat of injury is ubiquitous: the narrator of Vertigo
will never dive again, the boy’s glove hand in Goalie
is always swollen. Sports can cost: physically, mentally, emotionally, financially. But like the little boy in The Hockey Sweater,
we too know there is regular life of school, home, and church (or insert your own noun here), and then there is real life,
the life of the rink. Or in the case of Susanna Moodie’s obsessed hunter, the bush, or Barry Callaghan’s Jewish businessman, the court. And we create our own narratives when we play sports – how many of us put ourselves into sport types and roles (which is where much of the humour comes from in My Career With the Leafs
when the poet turned hockey player is told post-interview, You’re supposed to pretend you’re really dumb
; or the sad helplessness in Eternal Snow
: If I jumped and succeeded, I would be a heroine. If I jumped and failed, a fool.
)
Sport appeals to our need for strength, stability, vitality (the boy in Run
claims It is a power that makes me know that when I run I am strong, and there is nobody who is better
), but also to our knowledge of frailty, vulnerability, weakness. Sports are filled with danger: of overexertion (the father in The Rifle-man
tortures his son to practice in the winter in the middle of night with the threat Every minute you’re not practicing is a minute some other kid is
); the whims of mother nature (and the state of the art equipment needed to fend her off evident in Endurance
); and public intimidation (George Bowering’s story begins, Do you remember those death threats Roger Maris was getting in August and September of 1961?
). Sometimes sports are connected to our livelihoods, not just for professional athletes but for others like the PEI lobstermen in Natty of Blue Point,
or the film industry professionals in Playing Ball on Hampstead Heath,
whose actions on the baseball diamond have direct consequences on workplace politics.
And then there are all the great sport aphorisms, adages, sayings, terminology, what writer Don DeLillo has called elegant gibberish.
Who can resist the language of slam dunks, foul balls, right hooks, sow cows, butterfly strokes, 3 1/2 somersaults in the pike position? The language of sport is a shared narrative among those initiated, welcomed into the world of the game, who think and live and even die by these truisms. I know I can’t help smiling, and tearing up a bit, every time I read in W.P. Kinsella’s Diehard
: You know, Hec, if there’s anything after this life, the first words I want to hear when I wake up are ‘Play Ball!’
Sports intersect into all areas of our lives, whether we want them to or not. But, I think, they also give back to us many parts of selves we wouldn’t otherwise acknowledge. And sport also reinforces the mystery, the precariousness, the randomness of existence. The athlete and the sports fan are always anxious: the outcome of a match, race, or game, no matter what the odds, how conscientious the training and planning, is always unknown, just like the paths of our lives.
The experience of sport is, arguably, universal. All of us have memories of sport – some good, some bad, some foundational and fundamental, some less than inspiring, perhaps even haunting and humiliating – and sport, one of the most ubiquitous of human activities, frequently impacts the most important aspects of our lives: our friendships, love affairs, family dynamics, workplace dynamics, vacation plans, leisure time, community involvement, and more. Playing sports throughout school – basketball, volleyball, hockey, softball, track – was a way for me to escape my troubled family home, to spend time with my brother, to build friendships and meet people from other cities and countries, to test my body’s limits and experience its sensuality, to express my energy and anger and creativity, and to compete against others for praise and fame. It was also, as a spectator – and I would watch just about anything – a way to enjoy an afternoon or evening, to cheer on excellence, and to be part of someone’s biggest dreams. In the last several years, I have taken instructional classes in diving, swimming stroke mechanics, fencing, and figure skating, a way to keep learning in an arena where, unlike my artistic and professional pursuits, I have no pressure to be the best, only to keep improving. Each sport continues to teach me something new about myself, and about the world. And like me, many of the writers in this book have also played sports (Barry Callaghan was a high school basketball and baseball star, Matt Cohen played competitive tennis. Steven Heighton boxes and runs, Katherine Govier not only skis, but has martial arts weapons-training belts, many play hockey, softball, and more). And sometimes, I must admit, that like Joseph Epstein who writes in his article Obsessed with Sport
that he has heard more hours of talk from the announcer Curt Gowdy than from my own father, not a reticent man,
I have spent more hours watching hockey with my father and brother than I have asking them about their lives. And I’ve cared more about the outcome of an Olympic swim race than I have about the results of certain important literary competitions. I wrote about sport when I was in high school, but then I think I was unconsciously convinced that it was not considered a literary
topic. How silly. I’m glad I’ve come through on the other side and am able to collect together for the first time, for the enjoyment of many, great literature about an activity I have loved since childhood, and which continues to sustain me. Sport, like art, is about potential and possibility. And therefore sport is the perfect subject for those of us interested in the pursuit of excellence, fame, dignity, and joy. As David L. Vanderwerken and Spencer K. Wertz, in Sport Inside Out, posit: Sport is better than life. Perhaps this is so because the spirit of play is triumphant in such scenes.
I must agree.
In these stories there are dreamers, visionaries, rebels, mad geniuses, benevolent greats. We encounter current players and past players, pros and amateurs, coaches, scouts, parents of athletes, friends of athletes, trainers, researchers, sports writers; the months and years of training, and the moments of competition, some deciding fate in weeks or days, sometimes in mere hours or split seconds. There are, I must admit, a few more tragic stories than there are victorious ones. But this, of course, testifies to the fact that glory in sport is as elusive as our dreams, and why sport draws our attentive fascination to its peculiar machinations of fate over and over and over again. And failure can be funny in sports. We can laugh about weakness, limitations, and pain through sports stories in a way we usually can’t otherwise. So, dear Reader, there is tragedy and comedy in what is to follow. What is most inspiring and devastating in both the athletic and artistic realms, is that the majority must lose.
Lucky for us, these stories represent some of the best writing in Canada, from coast to coast, across genders and across ages, from our past to our present. In sports and in art you must have the courage to put yourself out there. Spectators and readers, qualified or not, criticize your performance, skills, or lack thereof, openly, publicly. Nothing is more frightening or more exciting. Talent and ability only take you so far. One must risk, and dream. And we do so regardless of medals. We do so for love. Dear Reader, allow the stories before you to inspire, fascinate, and amaze.
Priscila Uppal
Toronto 2009
[1] For more information on this, see Richard Stanton’s The Forgotten Olympic Art Competitions.
[2] Other Canadian sports stories anthologies do exist. However, all the ones I’ve been able to find are either devoted exclusively to sports journalism; combine some sports fiction with sports journalism; or combine fictional short stories with excerpts from longer fictional works such as novels or plays. In addition, the majority of these anthologies are devoted to representation of a single sport activity only (baseball or hockey, for instance), rather than a variety of sports. Furthermore, almost none of these anthologies feature female writers or stories about women playing sports. Therefore, I believe that this is the first anthology to represent Canadian literary short stories about nearly two dozen sports, penned by men and women writers, and exploring the sports experiences of men, women, and children.
[3] And the stories collected here are certainly not exhaustive of what is available. There is more to enjoy; fine stories by other Canadian writers not featured in this book: Dave Bidini, Anne Carson, Lynn Coady, Bill Gaston, Steven Hayward, Paul Quarrington, David Adams Richards, to name only a few, who were not included due to space limitations and other considerations.
Acknowledgements
Thank you to all the authors and publishers for permissions and for your enthusiasm for this project. Thank you to Barry Callaghan and Michael Callaghan, Richard Teleky, the Exile Editorial Board, Marilyn DiFlorio, Matt Shaw, Leigh Nash, and others who worked on this book or offered story suggestions, including Len Early and Claire Dé. Thank you to graduate assistants William Lind, Laura Scoufaris, and especially Jennifer Hann, Anthony Hicks and Kathryn Roberts. Thank you to Charlie Pachter for the fabulous cover, I have coveted Tour de Force 86
for years. Thank you to my female sports heroes, Ann Peel, Suzanne Zelazo, and Jane Roos at Canadian Athletes Now Fund, who join me in my passions for sport and art. Thank you to Jit Uppal, Jen Hacking, Dean Penny, Justin Connidis, Julia MacArthur, Leon Berdichevsky, Marc Zahradnic, and my other sports fan friends, the time I spend laughing and cheering with you is some of the best time of the year. Thanks to all the cool coaches I’ve had in my life, both athletic and artistic. Thank you to Mats Sundin and number 13. Go Canada Go.
And thank you to Christopher Doda, my number one goalie, for saving me time and time again.
Clarke Blaise
THE SOCIOLOGY OF LOVE
A monstrously tall girl from Stanford with bright yellow hair comes to the door and asks if I am willing to answer questions for her sociology class. She knows my name, Dr. Vivek Waldekar?
and even folds her hands in a creditable namaste. She has researched me, she knows my job title and that I am an American citizen. She’s wearing shorts and a midriff-baring T-shirt with a boastful logo. It reads, All This and Brains, Too.
She reminds me of an American movie star whose name I don’t recall, or the California Girl from an old song, as I had imagined her. I invite her in. I’ve never felt so much the South Asian man: fine-boned, almost dainty, and timid. My wife, Krithika, stares silently for several long moments, then puts tea water on.
Her name is Anya. She was born in Russia, she says. She has Russian features, as I understand them, a slight tilt to her cheeks but with light blue eyes and corn-yellow hair. When I walk behind her, I notice the top of an elaborate tattoo reaching up from underneath. She is a walking billboard of availability. She says she wants my advice, or my answers, as a successful South Asian immigrant, on problems of adjustment and assimilation. She says that questions of accommodation to the U.S., especially to California, speak to her. And specifically South Asians, her honours project, since we lack the demographic residential densities of other Asians, or of Hispanics. We are sociological anomalies.
It is important to establish control early. It is true, I say, we do not swarm like bees in a hive, Why do you criticize us for living like Americans?
I ask, and she apologizes for the tone of her question. I press on. What is it we lack? Why do you people think there is something wrong with the way we live?
She says, I never suggested anything was wrong—
She drops her eyes and reads from her notes.
—That there’s something defective in our lives?
Please, I’m so sorry.
I have no handkerchief to offer.
Perhaps we have memories of overcrowded India, when everyone knew your business. I know where her question is headed: middle-class Indian immigrants do not build little Chinatowns or barrios because we are too arrogant, too materialist, and our caste and regional and religious and linguistic rivalries pull us in too many directions. She hangs her head even before asking the next question.
No, I say, there are no other South Asian families on my street. My next-door neighbours are European, by which I mean non-specifically white. I correct myself. European
is an old word from my father’s India, where even Americans could be European. Across the street are Chinese, behind us a Korean.
That’s why I’m involved in sociology, she says, it’s so exciting. Sociology alone can answer the big questions, like where are we headed and what is to become of us? I offer a counter-argument; perhaps computer science, or molecular biology, or astronomy, I say, might answer even larger questions. In the here and now,
she insists, there is only sociology.
She is too large to argue with. She apologizes for having taken my name from the internal directory of the software company I work for. She’d been an intern last summer in our San Francisco office.
I say I am flattered to be asked big questions, since most days I am steeped in micro-minutiae. Literally: nano-technology. I can feel Krithika’s eyes burning through me.
The following are my answers to her early questions: We have been in San Jose nearly eight years. I am an American citizen, which is the reason I feel safe answering questions that could be interpreted by more recent immigrants as intrusive. We have been married 20 years, with two children. Our daughter Pramila was born in Stanford University Hospital. Our son Jay was born in JJ Hospital 17 years ago. When he was born I was already in California, finishing my degree and then finding a job and a house. My parents have passed away; I have an older brother, and several cousins in India, as well as Canada and the U.S. My graduate work took four years, during which time I did not see Krithika or my son. Jay and Krithika are still Indian citizens, although my wife holds the green card and works as a special assistant in the Stanford Medical School Library. She will keep her Indian citizenship in the event of inheritance issues in India.
Do I feel my life is satisfactory, are the goals I set long ago being met? Anya is very persistent, and I have never been questioned by such a blue-eyed person. It is a form of hypnosis, I fear. I am satisfied with my life, most definitely. I can say with pride and perhaps a touch of vanity that we have preserved the best of India in our family. I have seen what this country can do, and I have fought it with every fibre of my being. I have not always been successful. The years are brief, and the forces of dissolution are strong.
Jay in particular is thriving. He has won two junior tennis championships and maintains decent grades in a very demanding high school filled with the sons and daughters of computer engineers and Stanford professors. As a boy in Dadar, part of Bombay – sorry, Mumbai – I was much like him, except that my father could not offer access to top-flight tennis coaching. I lost a match to Sanjay Prabhakar, who went on to the Davis Cup. How will I be worthy?
I had asked my father before going in. You will never be worthy of Sanjay Prabhakar,
he said. It is your fate. You are good, but he is better and he will always be better. It is not a question of worth. I sold my racquet that day and have never played another set of tennis, though even now I know I could rise to the top of my club ranks. I might even be able to beat my son, but I worry what that might do to him. I was forced to concentrate on academic accomplishment. In addition, public courts and available equipment left much to be desired.
Do I have many American friends? Of course. My closest friend is Al Wong, a Stanford classmate, now working in Cupertino. We socialize with Al and Mitzie at least twice a month. She means white Americans. Like yourself? I ask, and she answers not quite.
She means two-three-generation white Americans. Such people exist on our street, of course, and in our office, and I am on friendly terms with all of them. I tell her I have never felt myself the victim of any racial incident, and she says, I didn’t mean that. I mean instances of friendship, enduring bonds, non-professional alliances… you know, friendship. You mean hobbies? I ask. The Americans seem to have many hobbies I cannot fully appreciate. They follow the sports teams, they go fishing and sailing and skiing.
In perfect frankness, I do not always enjoy the company of white Americans. They mean well, but we do not communicate on the same level. I do not see their movies or listen to their music, and I have never voted. Jay skis, and surfs. Jay is very athletic, as I have mentioned; we go to Stanford tennis matches. I cannot say that I have been in many American houses, nor they in mine, although Jay’s friends seem almost exclusively white. Jay is totally of this world. When I mention Stanford or Harvard, he says Santa Cruz, pops. He’s not interested in a tennis scholarship. He says he won the state championship because the dude from Torrance kept double-faulting. Pramila’s friends are very quiet and studious, mostly Chinese and Indian. She is fourteen and concentrates only on her studies and ice-skating. I am not always comfortable in her presence. I do not always understand her, or feel that she respects us.
We will not encourage Pramila to date. In fact, we will not permit it until she is finished with college. Then we will select a suitable boy. It will be a drawn-out process, I fear, but we are progressive people in regard to caste and regional