Failure!” says Ian Brown.
“Big failure.”
The feature writer and broadcaster is talking
about his failure — to write a
book he still owes Random House, the chronicle of a car
high-jacking and kidnapping. We’re well into our
conversation that began about an hour earlier, just after 8 a.m.,
when he burst through the wooden doors of Bar Mercurio, an
Italian restaurant in Toronto’s Annex neighbourhood,
and ordered a mushroom omelette, side of potatoes and coffee.
“I don’t usually eat this much in the
morning,” he explained. Later, in his car, Brown will
look in the rear-view mirror, see that the heavy folds beneath
his eyes are puffier than usual, and say, “Jesus! Oh
fuck! I look like I didn’t go to bed last
night.”
On
this chilly October morning, Brown wears only a suit; he forgot
his overcoat at the International Festival of Authors’
“opening blowout” the previous evening, where
there were “writers, drinking constantly. I end up
drinking too much and having hangovers.” He liked the
party, but it was depressing, he says, returning to the subject
of failure: “Because you’re surrounded by
people who have just written really successful books.”
At 53, Brown is a Canadian media
mini-celebrity. His talent and big “I” charm
come through in all he does: his newspaper and magazine writing;
his books, Freewheeling and Man
Overboard, plus editing and contributing to
What I Meant to Say, a collection of essays
by and about men; and his broadcasting, as host of CBC
Radio’s Talking Books and two TVO
documentary series, The View From Here and
Human Edge. By any measure he has had major
career success. So why does he seem so fixated on failure?
Brown will admit to worrying about measuring
up to the great nonfiction writers he admires, such as Nicholson
Baker, Tom Wolfe and Garrison Keillor. A long-time friend has
said of him, “He wants to be among the best,
anywhere.” But when I ask Brown what he wants to be
remembered for, he begins by saying: “I’d
like [my daughter] Hayley to remember me nicely. That’s
most important. To be good company. Good in bed —
that’d be nice.” Reflective pause.
“It would be nice if someone remembered me as a good
writer. I’d much rather they kept reading me. They pick
up the book. They read something, ‘Oh, that’s
good. Oh, that’s Brown.’”
Much of what he writes is good, really good;
nearly every person interviewed for this feature can recall a
favourite Brown piece, a few citing newspaper articles 20 years
old. However, even some of his biggest boosters say that, lately,
his writing is too often superficial and lacks great import.
Brown’s high school English teacher
says his student was “a natural,” blessed
with a “golden tongue.” Toronto
Life called him a “legendary
journalist” by age 35. He was, in many ways, the golden
boy of Canadian journalism: articulate, smart, with an equally
accomplished spouse and a large circle of friends. But what most
people didn’t see was the hell he put himself through
while writing. Then, in 1996, came the event that would forever
change his life: the birth of a severely disabled son, Walker,
who a friend describes as Brown’s “great
grief, his great madness.”
Now he
is about to embark on the writing challenge of his life: a
book-length memoir about Walker. It could be the work that puts
him right up there with Baker, Wolfe and Keillor, as well as
other favourites, John McPhee, Ian Frazier, Calvin Trillin and
Joan Didion.
But Brown, the natural born
writer with a strutting kind of confidence, is no Norman Mailer
when it comes to public braggadocio about his work. He often
seems to prefer to hide behind a façade of
self-deprecation. Of his book on Walker, Brown, sipping the
morning coffee that may ease his hangover, says simply:
“I don’t know if it’ll be
interesting to anybody.”
One week
earlier, in a crowded north Toronto eatery called Grano, Brown
attends the book launch for colleague John Allemang’s
PoeticJustice, a new
collection of verse by The Globe and
Mail’s “Book-a-Day”
columnist. The room is filled with Globians. Among them:
Brown’s wife, Johanna Schneller, who also writes for
InStyle and Premiere,
and hosts TVO’s Saturday Night at the
Movies; Liam Lacey; Beppi Crosariol; and Cathrin
Bradbury, who oversees the feature sections at the
Globe, and with whom Brown’s
family went to Argentina last year. The day before, over the
phone, a prickly Brown wanted to know what I’d be doing
at the launch, worried that I’d interview people about
him in his presence. At Grano, though, a softer, more obliging
Brown is present—as is the Brown who likes to put on a
show. “So what do you need here?” he asks me.
“You want scenes? Okay, let’s make a
scene.” In a corner of the restaurant, he proceeds to
strike up a conversation with Allemang’s 24-year-old
son, Sam. “Your father refers to you in the most covert
way in the book,” prompts Brown.
“Oh, yes,” Sam replies,
“the epigraph about me being a demented drunkard or
something. Once in a while I indulge in ostentatious
debauchery.”
The back-and-forth
between the two unfolds in front of a small crowd,
Brown’s rhythmic voice projecting throughout the
restaurant. Brown is a great storyteller, but also a great actor,
and an audience—particularly of women
—follows wherever he goes.
Gary
Ross, who has edited Brown, says of the writer,
“There’s something about that cock-eyed nose
and cock-eyed grin that set hearts a-twitter.” When
Brown was single, he was a notorious flirt. Tonight, as the crowd
thins, he seems engrossed in conversation with a middle-aged
blonde woman. Afterward, he will whisper to Bradbury that the
woman was “a bore.” Sometimes when a party
bores him, he invents “Brown’s
myths.” One involved convincing Bradbury that his
wife’s aunt’s very large backside became
sealed to an airplane toilet seat in a loss of altitude.
Schneller doesn’t have an aunt.

Bradbury’s husband, Globe
city columnist John Barber, says, “Women go
ape for Brown” because “he plays the part of
befuddled lost soul to perfection.” According to
Barber, Brown is “a role player” and
“gets kicks from putting on various masks.” A
telling example can be found on Open
Letters, a website devoted to personal non-fiction,
which Brown co-founded in 2000 with current New York
Times Magazine staff editor Paul Tough. In one
posting, Brown discusses his own longing for drugs:
“Anything to take his consciousness away, anything to
relieve his self-loathing.” To hear Brown talk about
himself, at times, he’d have you believe he was
incompetent. His reporting: a catastrophe. His writing: even
worse. What’s behind such public self-deprecation
puzzles many. One explanation comes from Allemang, who says,
“Brown has afflicted himself with self-doubt, then
there he is, all over the page. But if you are filled with
self-doubt, you begin to wonder why you belong in the
story.”
Earlier, Brown’s
wife had made motions that she was ready to leave the launch
party and head back to their Annex home. Their 13-year-old
daughter, Hayley, just had her braces removed. She wants her mom.
Schneller had tapped Brown on the shoulder to tell him she was
leaving.
No response.
“This is my marriage,” she said,
grinning.
Finally, her husband answered,
“No really? This early?”
Schneller left and Brown remained; she has said he is
often the last man standing at parties.
Two
parking lots away from the Globe and nine
steps below ground is Rodney’s Oyster Bar.
It’s been five weeks since the book launch at Grano and
Brown is sitting on a wooden stool at the bar facing Bradbury, a
glass of white wine for each. The two are finishing a discussion
about a story on lobsters, which is late. After Bradbury departs,
Brown explains his difficulty with the piece, an odyssey that
takes him and stockbroker brother Tim from Boston to Halifax.
“You would think it would be a pretty simple thing to
write about,” says Brown, leaning forward.
“But the problem is two things: one is that I already
did a story about eating clams, so it can’t be like
that; and B, it turns out there’s a certain level of
indulgence. David Foster Wallace wrote an 8,000-word story about
the lobster and how you shouldn’t eat it. It hurts the
lobster. I think that’s an indefensible position
myself. Then there’s the problem that there’s
a war on. Everything is serious. Then here I am eating a lot of
lobster, so there is a certain level of frivolity.”
This is how Brown’s brain works. He
circles a story from every imaginable angle, tortured with the
notion that he couldn’t possibly capture something
fresh.
Brown then proceeds through a series
of questions to himself:
“How
indulgent is it?” he asks.
“It’s extremely
indulgent,” he answers.
“What is the point of extreme indulgence?
Liebling eating in Paris. Was that indulgent? I don’t
think so because now I get to read about Liebling eating oysters
in Paris.”
In the hour at the oyster
bar, he makes nearly 30 references to other writers and their
works. He is steeped in books and characters from stories. At
about 12, he read Hemingway’s “Big
Two-Hearted River.” Of the main character, Nick Adams,
Brown has said, “He goes fishing by himself, shattered
from the war. He comes back. He goes to Michigan. He hikes, he
sets up camp, catches the fish. He makes himself a sandwich out
of bread and onions. Bread and onions.” This
is like being, Brown thought. He later stated:
“There was a strain of loneliness I could relate to, a
loner quality, self-sufficiency without being a hardass; a guy
who thought about things but liked physical things, too; a guy
who had to tell himself to take it fast and slow at once, one
thing at a time but everything into that one
thing….”
Born in
Montreal, the writer attended the 142-year-old Trinity College
School, then an all-boys, private high school in Port Hope,
Ontario. His British father, a metal trader, started at boarding
school at age four and thought his sons should go, too. Tom
Lawson, the English teacher who coached Brown on
Trinity’s debating team, which included two other
future writers, Ian Pearson and David Macfarlane, says,
“My idea was basically to generate in my students the
capacity and courage to think for themselves, to say what they
mean rather than what they think will get marks.”
Lawson remembers Brown pushing himself so hard at a cross-country
running meet that he literally ran himself into the ground.
“That’s the way for Ian. When he does
something, he really does it.”
But
not always. There was one debate for which Brown did not prepare,
and it made the “A” student realize he had to
work hard and not rely on natural ability. “His
strength as a writer,” adds Lawson, “is he
always had the gift of clarity and he always had this golden
persuasive touch, right from the beginning. Speaking and writing.
Some people are born with it and some people develop it. He had
too much of it too early.”
What he
didn’t have too early was expertise in the subject area
of his first job in journalism: business. Brown’s
oft-repeated story about his first assignment sounds a bit like a
comedy sketch. Freshly graduated from the University of Toronto,
and back from Radcliffe’s summer publishing course,
Brown joined the FinancialPost
in 1976. Wearing a new, “shit
brown,” three-piece corduroy suit, he set off to report
on a new Brampton development over lunch with the businessmen
behind it. At the end of the meal, after far too much coffee,
Brown asked his first question: “How much money do you
guys make?” The men stared at him, cold stares, the
kind that shrink you in your seat. Brown grabbed some sugar to
add to his coffee. His hands shook and the sugar flew —
everywhere. “I get up and just leave,” he
says. “I am a fuck-head. It’s so bad
I’m gonna get fired.”
Of
course Brown wasn’t fired. Instead, his editor, Dalton
Robertson, said, “Good story. Write that.”
Robertson was a man, Brown says, “with a first-class
mind, always surrounded by a semi-static cloud of
smoke.” Now 79, the retired editor remembers:
“Brown’s character is such that you knew he
would be a good journalist.” He wasn’t
“a figures man” but “an offbeat
generalist.” His strength, according to Robertson, is
the ability to write about almost anything and make it
interesting. But it would have been “extremely
interesting” if he developed specialties within his
range of interests — a suggestion of promise
unfulfilled. From the Financial Post Brown
moved to Maclean’s in 1978 to be
the associate business editor. A colleague, Ernest Hillen,
remembers Brown: “I’m seeing a face
that’s perspiring.” Brown would pluck madly
on his typewriter, hair a mess, shirt out of his trousers, tie
hanging loose. “You might meet him in the
men’s room and he’d be so preoccupied he
wouldn’t even see you.”
High school mate Pearson says what drives Brown is a
great fear of failure, and that he “always wrote like
he thought it’s the most important article in the
world.” And he wrote everything down, and still does.
His black notebooks are well worn, with crumpled and bent pages
covered in squiggly script. He pulls them out everywhere: while
walking, on the streetcar, while driving.
In
1984, Brown got a coveted job, writing features for the
Globe. Among his subjects: skinheads, the
Senate, business magazines, bioethics, artificial insemination,
and an often cited exposé of 1980s excess, illustrated
by the wedding of a wealthy couple who obviously did not know the
journalist’s angle. In 1989, he left the
Globe to freelance and host his own local
CBC Radio show, Later the Same Day. He left
that to move to L.A. in 1991, where Schneller took a job at
GQ as a senior writer, and where Brown wrote
Man Overboard in anticipation of
Hayley’s birth. They returned to Toronto four years
later and for nine more years Brown freelanced for newspapers,
magazines and radio. In 2004, he went back to the
Globe. His mission: tell stories and write
more. “I want to know if it’s as important as
I think it is.” If finances weren’t an issue,
Brown says he would just write forever: “As long as you
have your mind it’s okay. That’s why you have
to stop drinking and stop doing those things. You have to
preserve your mind.”
Brown is an
idea machine. His wife constantly reminds him he is very lucky to
have “a thousand ideas a day.” This plethora
of ideas, though, often means false leads and bafflement about
which to pursue. When Brown settles on an idea, it usually
hatches like this: he goes into a Globe
story meeting and exclaims theatrically, “I
don’t want to say this. It’s a stupid idea.
It’s so stupid!” But, as Allemang says,
“I’ve never seen Ian at a meeting where what
he says doesn’t fly. Ian could say anything, anything
at all. People wouldn’t just be interested —
they’d be on the edge of the seat, waiting.”
Allemang claims 19 of Brown’s 20
“stupid” ideas are accepted. Brown claims his
editors are thinking, “Weiner. Weeeein-ner!
Can you get more superficial than that?” But
then he says, “I know I will write a piece they will
read. I know I will talk more about human desire, life, than any
of their important stories combined.”
Getting his stories on the page involves what Schneller
describes as an “incredibly laborious process. First
draft is 10,000 words. Then, in there, is a
story.”
Stephen Brunt,
Globe sports columnist, met Brown in the
’80s when he was “a young, hotshot,
world-at-his-feet guy.” Before deadlines, Brunt says
Brown is like “a caricature of someone working a
deadline, blood dripping from his temples.” He paces
the newsroom, talks to himself, swears at the computer screen,
and darts up and down the flight of stairs to the editors on the
third floor.
One of the third-floor editors,
Carl Wilson, says Brown reports and questions every bit of a
story until the last moment: “He has so many thoughts
and impulses,” he says, he needs an editor to help him
find the thrust of the story. Brown’s drafts often
reflect this comment. At the top, they are usually writerly and
tight. Then, says Wilson, “It’ll start to
degenerate”: erratic typing, capital letters,
questions, second-guessing the direction of the piece and whether
the lede is right. Mix in ribald humour, and a smattering of odd
facts and there you have a classic Brown draft.
“Even though the process itself can be
explosive and cause conflict and frustration for
everybody,” says Wilson, “he’s very
grateful and generous afterward so there is a real sense of
accomplishment.”
Despite seven
national newspaper and magazine awards and praise from his
colleagues at the Globe and elsewhere, there
are rumblings in media circles that Brown is coasting, not living
up to his greater potential. The biggest criticism: way too many
superficial pieces with himself, that big Brown
“I”, at the centre. Since his return to the
Globe full time, a notable exception was the
three-part series in 2005 about Toronto health care, a moving
picture of life and death crashing into each other in grey
hospital hallways.
According to Wilson, the
cinematic structure of the hospital pieces didn’t
require Brown’s presence; it would have sentimentalized
the stories. This lack of “I” is now uncommon
for Brown, which irks National Post
columnist Robert Fulford. In an email to me, Fulford
wrote that Brown is “a talented, bright guy who
unfortunately suffers from a peculiar maladie, Globe
Columnist Disease. He writes about himself far more
than is healthy for a boy his age.” In a follow-up
phone call, Fulford explained that he thinks Brown’s
reporting has gone soft over the years. “He’s
got a great theme that he keeps going back to, but he never quite
gets it: what is it like to be a man in this era?”
Fulford then added, in a mocking tone: “Oh
God, it’s so hard to be a man, a white man in
Toronto.” And followed with: “If
you’re born into a half-decent family here,
you’re among the richest three per cent of people in
the world and the last thing you should be doing is whining about
it.” According to Fulford, personal journalism is just
not fresh or revealing anymore. He thinks
Globe editors probably encourage the
first-person stuff: “It’s easier. They get
more copy out of you.”
Brown’s other lighter fare, like roundtable
conversations about food and fashion that appear in the
Globe’s Style section, are to Gary
Ross “a fairly convenient way of not really writing.
It’s a shorthand approach to filling a
newspaper.”
Long-time friend Hillen
shares this view: “I personally find them sort of
peripheral. I know that he does them with the same intensity.
It’s not worthy of him anymore.”
Near the end of our interview at the oyster bar, I ask
Brown about his soft stories, like last summer’s
“The Leech” series about freeloading, of
which Barber says, “I praise Ian for being
outré and for taking an unconventional look at things.
And one of the consequences is that it can be about nothing, like
Seinfeld.”
From Brown’s perspective, he’s just
doing what other, more celebrated writers do. Take Susan Orlean,
he says, “one of the best writers of her
generation”—she’s written about
such topics as girls’ underpants and show dogs.
Then he says: “All that separates
you from an animal is frivolous. Extra.” He answers
partly with his hands, trying to express the
“Extra” that isn’t coming out in
words.
“All we really need is bread
and water.”
Next: “I see
[the critics’] point; it is true. I should write about
things that are bigger than a pair of running shoes.”
A grin. “Everybody has a little
sideline.”
Pause. Forehead
wrinkles, drawing up the excess baggage beneath his light blue
eyes. “I do write about some
important things. I wrote about the hospital, I wrote
about Africa.”
Laugh. “I
sound pathetic. What a
whiner.”
He
admits that he regrets the piece about men wearing kilts, which
justice reporter Kirk Makin posted on a Globe
filing cabinet to show his disdain for such flippant
writing. But Brown argues that it’s hard to know what
will resonate until you write it. His wife says, “Like
everyone else, you’re drawn to the easy story or the
quick thing, which he pulls off really well. But as much fun as
those things are for him to write, in the end, he wishes he
hadn’t been seduced by them.”
Brown then starts to talk about his son:
“Everything about Walker I want to write about: the way
his eyes go dull, the way he smiles, the way he laughs.
Everything.”
Did Ian tell you about the night Walker broke every wine
glass at our friends’ house?” Schneller asks,
smiling in the kitchen of their home on a dark Sunday morning in
December. “We call it Krystalnacht.” While
they ate dinner, Walker escaped from a playroom and, suddenly,
there was a “Bang, bang, bang!” from
upstairs. The little boy was surrounded by shattered glass,
unscathed.
Of Walker, Brown has written,
“He can’t speak, or reason, or walk too well,
or protect himself, or eat without a tube in his belly. At nine,
he has the body of a four-year-old and the mind of an
infant…. He is something to look at, though I have
never been ashamed of him.” The boy is one of about 100
people in the world with a genetic disorder called
Cardiofaciocutaneous (CFC) Syndrome, which is characterized by
heart malformation and skin abnormalities, as well as delayed
growth and mental retardation. When Walker was seven, he moved to
a group home in Pickering, a suburb east of Toronto.
This weekend, Walker is back to visit. He usually comes
home every other weekend and sometimes mid-week. But lately,
Walker is here more often; it’s helpful to have him
around to get Brown “geared up” to write the
book, for which he has started gathering notes, assembling a
table of contents and examining old medical records. Tomorrow,
Brown will bring Walker to Sick Kids Hospital for a dentist
appointment, “a very involved process.”
Before his son left for the group home, Brown has explained, he
and Schneller “were both insane. Now when he comes, you
would think you want him to sleep through the night but, really,
what I want to do is wake him up and bring him into bed with me.
And I can put him to sleep and I can go to sleep.”
These are the feelings he wants to articulate in the book:
“To be moved, and to figure out why you were moved, and
to actually recreate for somebody what moved you, and to move
them in the same way: that’s being alive to
me.”
Brown says Schneller
“did most of it, more of it,” when it came to
attending to Walker’s numerous appointments each week
and often biweekly ear infections. But they rotate the task of
Walker night-watch. Last night was Brown’s turn and his
son woke at 3 a.m. “You gotta make sure he’s
okay because he can’t swallow and he doesn’t
know how to cough,” he says. Sleeping with Walker is an
involved process: Brown contorts his body as he sits on a kitchen
chair, showing how he has to hold the boy, “arms around
him, leg across his leg,” to keep him from hitting
himself, which started when Walker was about three. Night after
night of this took a physical toll: Brown says it may have caused
arthritis in his neck.
Maybe because
it’s the weekend and he’s more relaxed, Brown
is a little more forgiving of himself today, less
“on.” He mentions that he talked to a friend
recently about his regret over the yet to be completed crime
book. The friend reminded him the book was due around the time
when he hardly slept. Brown says, “I’m not
blaming Walker or anything,” and adds, “Now
that I think of it, if I had had more sleep during those years,
then I would have been able to make the leap of faith,”
and write the book even though key players were not complying
with interview requests. Brown says not producing the book and
keeping the advance was “just not a good thing to
do… it always takes a bit away from you. It always,
you know, it’s....” He pauses, then adds:
“I hesitate to say failure. I don’t really
think there are failures. If you’re smart about it,
everything fails in a way because nothing is as good as you want
it to be because you always learn from what happens and then you
move on.”
It’s time for
Hayley’s ballet class and his daughter bounds down the
stairs. Minutes later, Walker comes down the stairs, flanked by
his mom and the nanny, Olga. The tiny, delicate boy with sparse,
brown curly hair bursts into the kitchen and goes for his dad,
swinging his “macho Popeye arms” at Brown.
Schneller calls his arms “Popeye” because of
the fleece-lined, modified Pringles containers that beef them up
beneath his red flannel shirt. They cost $300 and protect him
from hitting himself. His mom says, “He’s a
skinny guy but every inch of him is muscle.”
Walker can never be left unattended: he constantly
explores, wanders into the fridge, puts his face against the
stove. Brown and Olga feed Walker breakfast via syringe into a
valve in his smooth, white belly as he stretches on the kitchen
floor, humming. His feet kick around, protected by red socks,
which were knitted by Brown’s mom.
The father is concerned about his son’s ear.
It’s oozing a little. “When I go to the
hospital tomorrow I have to see if I can get him a recommendation
for an ear, nose and throat specialist. If he had another sinus
it would be easier; he would have more drainage
possibilities.” Brown then changes Walker’s
bib, and says in wonder: “The amount of stuff that
comes out of his head: the colours, the
foaming….”
The first time
Brown mentioned his Walker book to me was on a late summer
morning at a Queen and Spadina café patio. Over the
sound of honking cars, the writer with the lived-in face talked
about authors he admires: McPhee, Frazier, Trillin, Didion, et
al. He admires them not only for their hard work and skilled
reportage, but for their “venturesomeness,”
that willingness to tell off-beat, memorable stories.
“These guys live in his mind,” says
Schneller. “And it’s not a coincidence that
they’re all journalists.”
But all “these guys” have major
books that have placed them in the pantheon of literary
journalism in North America. Brown’s book on Walker has
the potential to garner acclaim similar to Didion’s
2005 memoir of love, death and grief, The Year of
Magical Thinking.
“You
have kids,” Brown has said. “That’s
like writing. You write them into existence, except
it’s more fun. Sex: you get a kid. You unite. You
actually finally come together. You have a kid. With luck,
tragedy, happiness. Horrible, moving, so moving, it’s
terrifying, too much moving, it’s like too
much moving. And then writing, I think it’s
the same thing. It’s trying to make a record of
‘this is what it was like.’” Brown
wants to write about Walker and write him so clearly that he
understands what his son is thinking. Plus, says Brown, he must
write the book, “because there are things in your mind,
in your life, that you’re resolving I
guess.”
In Man Overboard,
Brown explored that recurrent theme of “what
it’s like to be a man in this era.” This
theme also laced through the essays in What I Meant to
Say. In each of these books, and also in the kitchen
with Walker, Brown quotes from English philosopher, statesman and
essayist Francis Bacon: “He that hath wife and children
hath given hostages to fortune; for they are impediments to great
enterprises, either of virtue or mischief.” For Brown,
it seems that part of being a man is making necessary sacrifices
for something greater than yourself: like children.
On Open Letters, though, Brown
wrote something seemingly contradictory, that he’s
“the kind of man who drinks and drugs and marries and
wanders and possibly even fathers mainly to escape the anxiety of
being his own flawed self, a being he despises and can never
please.” It’s hard to reconcile this with the
Brown who explains how he protects Walker in his sleep. But as
Wilson points out, “Often what Ian provides as a voice
in a story is another level of complexity: having a really
intelligent and sensitive narrator who takes something that would
have seemed like a more isolated phenomenon, but brings a level
of contradiction and nuance that wouldn’t have been
there.” And as his wife has said, “Part of
what makes him who he is, is that he resists as much as he
explores. That tension and ambivalence is always in him, and
always was in him. Even though I might not like when he writes
about his ambivalence, I respect his honesty, I respect his way
to describe. He writes what a lot of people are thinking, when it
comes to things, when it comes to
fatherhood.”
Brown’s essay
in What I Meant to Say focused on fatherhood
and Walker. He took a bold approach and compared his own
voyeurism at strip clubs to the gaping stares his son faces. He
wrote: “It was in that grey time, after we knew Walker
would be leaving but before he actually left, that I began to
visit strippers again. This time the urges were sharper, more
impatient, but also shorter lasting, and less satisfying when
indulged. At least it wasn’t Internet porn, that
sterile repetitive motion machine. At least these women were
living flesh and real.” The essay evoked strong
reactions. Allemang, who never read it, said: “Having a
handicapped son and feeling a need to go to the strip club, I
just don’t want to see the connection. I
don’t want to know what your family life would be like
the next day.”
Schneller’s
response: “As a wife, it’s not my favourite
thing to read. And as a reader, I recognize how good it
is.”
Brown has said one of the
reasons he became a writer was “to figure out what it
is you feel and what you think.” Yet Brown, the expert
communicator, will never really be able to tell Walker what he
feels or what he thinks.
Hillen says of his
friend with the “leaping mind”:
“Knowing the pain of knowing that you can’t
entirely comprehend your own child must be hard to
bear.” But Brown can attempt to write about it and no
doubt that big “I” will play a prominent role
— and the critics be damned.
In
1994, Brown defended personal writing in a Ryerson
Review of Journalism column, and in a phrase worthy of
Mailer, pointed out that “history doesn’t
remember impersonal journalism.” He also wrote that, as
he ages, he finds it “near impossible to write anything
that isn’t personal,” that first-person
writing is “most likely” better and that it
helps him improve the odds of writing fairly about his subjects
because they are measured against the one thing he thinks he
knows best: Ian Brown. “I notice the flaws in great
people, strength of character in criminals, and ambiguity in
everything.”
And, Brown could have
added: the flaws, strength and ambiguity in himself.