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Category: Rope Walker

Extracts

So far, no one writing about my book, Rope Walker: A Texas Jewish History Mystery, has commented on its epigraphs, those borrowings from other writers appearing at the start of a book and at the start of chapters. So, I will. The epigraphs in Rope Walker, thirty-six in total, comprise one of the best things in this book. Not a peep.

The epigraphs add necessary contrast and accent, summarizing and supplementing my exposition of historical fact and logical analysis. They are elegant sophistications of idea and musing. Did I mention, all but one were taken from Moby Dick, Herman Melville’s 135-chapter shamanic agitation? That one outlier, appearing at page x (that is, roman numeral ten), is not unrelated:

How the world whirls by! Herman Melville died the other day almost without newspaper notice

Pages x and xi provide reference citations for the thirty-five other epigraphs, excusing me from having to include a citation for them in the thirty-two chapters and three appendixes where they appear. An explanation of the use of the epigraphs is given on page x. A table on the next page lists Rope Walker chapters seriatim cross-referenced to the chapters in Moby Dick whence each epigraph came. I call this two-page author’s note, “Extracts.”

Not coincidentally, “Extracts” is the title of a note to readers at the start of Moby Dick, a collection of borrowings Melville never placed in the book’s interior—perhaps—or simply a “higgledy-piggledy” compilation of references to whales. I extracted Melville’s “Extracts” concept.

As preface to his eighty or so “burrowings,” Melville writes an appreciation of the unappreciated compiler, a “sub-sub-librarian”:

by how much the more pains ye take to please the world, by so much the more shall ye for ever go thankless!

Melville’s lament might be more broadly applied to the sizable nonfiction portions of Moby Dick, what Melville calls his “cetology,” a complete examination of whales and whaling. The thorough exposition is an “anatomy,” a genre today familiarly called a “microhistory.”

Rope Walker is a cetology, a microhistory of sorts. It is an anatomy of an event which grew into legend, a legend revolving around a mystery, the mystery of the unknown identity of an acrobat with one leg who fell to his death in Texas in 1884. Would anyone have ever read Moby Dick if Melville never added that fictional business about a peg-legged man and his deadly relationship with a rope?

Oh, the luxury of fiction. The author names and describes his protagonists according to his fancy. Melville never gave Ahab a last name and never said which leg was amputated. Why? In Rope Walker, I say which leg was amputated and provide the man’s name, both of them… Oh, the intellectual opportunities of fiction, where narrator waxes philosophic, poetic. All I could do was extract some of Mellville’s intellect to put at the head of each chapter.

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March 3

I woke this morning with a sense of renewal. Too long, this covid winter; too many things unstarted, and unfinished. Technically, Spring starts a few weeks from now, but something in me says this is the day to slough off the old skin. Maybe I’ll shave the scruff off my face, pick up some new clothes, get rid of the clutter that surrounds me, physically, mentally, spiritually.

Or maybe it’s that I need to organize my papers and receipts for of Tax Day.

It could be the melting of the snow. The promise of defeating this awful pandemic. The potential for justice, peace, love, harmony, blah blah blah another one wrote and hoped.

For this Rope Walker, it’s may be just another day: screw on my peg leg, grab my balancing pole, heave the stove onto my back, and walk a half-inch rope two stories above Beaton Street.

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I Finished Writing My Book!

Nearly five years ago I had the euphoric experience of solving a real-life mystery that had stumped the people of Corsicana, Texas, for well over a century: who was the man buried in their Jewish cemetery under a tombstone engraved with only two words, “Rope Walker”?

Now, I’m finally done writing a book about this man, who they call “Rope Walker,” and the legend about his fall from a tightrope in 1884 in the town’s commercial center, titled, appropriately, Rope Walker: A Texas Jewish History Mystery. SOLVED! Look at this book cover. See anything unusual? Right! He had a wooden leg! Or was it his left, as shown in this 1936 drawing? And what is that on his back!??

Galley Proof of Rope Walker
Galley proof of Rope Walker. Final printing pending and on sale REAL SOON!
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