Chapter 8: A FIRST TASTE OF THE BIG APPLE
It's a matter of great regret to me that I didn't think to ask for a window
seat on the DC-10 taking me to New York. Because of this I missed taking a last,
lingering look at San Francisco, that beautiful city on the bay. No, my final
glimpse of SF came as Rich Coad drove me to Oakland Airport by way of the Bay
Bridge, a magnificent structure destined to suffer a partial collapse during the
big earthquake five years later. Once over the bridge I'd made a few desultory
notes, jotting down names from various road-signs (I added 'Yerba Buena', 'San
Jose' and 'Alameda' to my collection) and also been amused to discover that on
the airport approach road, Hegenberger Road, was a fast-food joint selling
something called, inevitably, 'Hegen Burgers'. Rich and I had said goodbye to
each other at the airport in manly fashion and now here I was, soaring into
those clear blue Californian skies bound for the self-proclaimed 'greatest city
in the world!'
The distance from San Francisco to New York isn't too short of that from New
York to London, so I must have been in the air for a long time. Quite how long
I'm unsure, thanks to the time zones we crossed and to the fact that a great
fatigue was settling over me, a spaced out feeling that I'm now sure was a
combination of delayed culture shock and a jet-lag still lingering thanks to the
late nights I'd enjoyed at L.A.CON II. This was only my third ever time in a
plane but I was already a little jaded with air-travel. Even had I had a window
seat I suspect I would have ignored the view this time. Lost in reverie, I spent
most of the flight staring into space.
It was early evening when we landed at New Jersey's Newark Airport, then the
entry point for most Britons visiting America, and after collecting my luggage I
went in search of my native guide. Arrangements had been made for Tom Weber to
meet me, but as we'd never met before I had to rely on descriptions I'd been
given. In the event this wasn't a problem since not only is Tom considerably
shorter than most people but he was wearing a 'Forbidden Planet' T-shirt (from
the store, not the film). We shook hands and then Tom led me outside to the bus
stop, where we caught a bus to New York. It was while on the bus that I
discovered I'd left my camera on the plane. I'd only shot a third of a roll, but
it contained all the photos I'd taken at the party Rich and Stacy had thrown for
me in San Francisco. A call to the airport some time later proved futile, as I
thought it would. It's the loss of the pictures I regret more than that of the
camera, which was only a cheap 110 anyway. I didn't know it yet, but this was to
be only the beginning of my problems with cameras in New York.
The road between Newark and New York skirted some fairly uninteresting
swampland and even more uninteresting industrial buildings. I couldn't help but
think that, given the huge numbers of visitors whose first view of the state
this is, New Jersey's administrators could do a lot to help their state's
unfortunate image by sprucing up the view along that road. My heartbeat
quickened when we were afforded a brief glimpse of Manhattan as the twin towers
of the World Trade Center came into view over the tall grass. (New York! I would
soon be in New York!) Tom quizzed me about L.A.CON II as we travelled over the
New Jersey turnpike and, shortly after the turn-off to the George Washington
Bridge, I caught my first sight of the Empire State Building and other
sky-scrapers over the tops of some trees. There was a sign on the right pointing
to Hoboken, and then we were barrelling through the Lincoln Tunnel under the
Hudson River. Almost before I knew it, we'd emerged in Manhattan, traversed
various nondescript streets, and arrived at our destination, the Port Authority
terminal on 42nd and 8th.
The Port Authority was a bleak, unpleasant and threatening place peopled by
derelicts and a number of suspicious-looking characters. I was glad that we
didn't hang around there but proceeded directly to the nearest subway station.
This, too, was a vaguely menacing place, since the New York Subway Authority
takes a minimalist approach to decoration. The station was all bare steelwork
and exposed I-beams, neo-primitive brutalism made even more unbearable by the
teeth-rattling cacophany produced every time a train thundered through. And
those trains!
Subway car graffiti
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Like most people, I'd seen news items and the like about New York graffiti,
usually with various critics and poseurs waxing lyrical about how wonderfully
creative it all was and how New York was the only city in the world that gets a
fresh coat of art every night. This is bullshit. Given the brutal impersonality
of the subway I can understand the urge humanise it with something like
graffiti, but the graffiti on the subway only added to the dehumanising effect.
It was not so much an artistic outlet as a howl of rage, a chillingly nihilistic
expression of despair and the death of hope. Or so it seemed to me on that long
ago day. The train we boarded was both unbelievable and typical. Not only was it
spray-painted on the outside but also on the inside. The walls, the ceiling, the
floor and the windows were all concealed beneath multi-coloured swirls of paint
-- as were the hard plastic seats and the subway maps! Not only could you not
see out of many of the windows, but you couldn't tell where you were heading
from the maps either. Going down into the subway was like descending into Hell,
and I was glad when we arrived at our destination.
Thus far my first impressions of New York had not been very positive, so I
was pleased by the familarity of the surroundings we encountered on emerging
from the subway in Greenwich Village. Oh, the buildings were different and the
billboards trumpeted brand names I'd never heard of, but for all that I was
obviously in an alien environment the ambiance of the area was
remarkably like that of the theatre district around London's Covent Garden. The
hustle and bustle, the busy little cafes and the arty-types on the street were
all very reassuring. It was with my spirits thus lifted that we arrived at the
Chinese restaurant where some of the city's most active fanzine fans awaited me.
Moshe Feder and Lise Eisenberg I'd met at L.A.CON II, and Stu Shiffman I'd
known for a couple of years, but this was my first meeting with the others. They
were John Carl (about whom my notes say nothing, and of whom I'm afraid I now
recall very little), and Patrick & Teresa Nielsen Hayden, whose writing and
fanzines I'd admired since first encountering them two or three years earlier.
Patrick was short and dapper, bespectacled and moustached, and moved in a way
that reminded me curiously of Groucho Marx. Teresa was also short and
bespectacled, with broad, attractive features and had her hair styled in short,
tight curls that (I hope she won't mind me saying) were the least attractive of
the many ways I've seen her hair styled since. Still, these were merely
superficial details and in what counted, in their personalities and
conversation, they were as sharp and delightful as their fanwriting had promised
they would be. As usual my notes fail totally to give any clue as to what it was
we discussed, but then I hardly need notes for that. Apart from the sort of
stuff any group of fans with a TAFF winner in their midst would talk about, the
main topic was what it was during most of my trip: the Bergeron Affair. At this
point most everyone still thought he could be reasoned with and the conversation
centred on speculation as to just why he appeared to have gone crazy, and just
what could be done to bring him to his senses. No-one then realised that over
the next few months the affair would develop into the most damaging feud to hit
fandom in twenty years, or that many of us at that table would find ourselves
deeply embroiled in it. Much of fanzine fandom would be plunged into war, with
effects that persist to this day.
Teresa Nielsen Hayden, Stu Shiffman
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Chinese food is to US fans what Indian food is to British fans, and also
better than the Chinese food generally available in the UK. (This was largely
due to a difference in cuisine, I later learned, Cantonese being the dominant
style over here and Sichuan in America.) After eating we returned to the subway
station by way of a slight detour that took us past the building that once
housed Towner Hall, the famous early-60s home of VOID boys Ted White, Terry
Carr, Pete Graham, and Greg Benford. Located on the corner of West 10th Street
and 7th Avenue at number 163A, the address was now -- appropriately enough -- a
Chinese restaurant. It was called the 'China Taste Restaurant' and Patrick got
me a copy of their menu as a souvenir.
"We bring lots of visitors here," said Patrick, as we moved off, "and
I often wonder what the current owner makes of these groups of people that turn
up periodically to stare at his restaurant. OK everyone," he announced,
pointing to the left, "we bear right here."
At this point Teresa started laughing and fell down on the sidewalk. This
was my first direct experience of Teresa's unique neurological problem, the
result of a condition associated with her narcolepsy that makes it impossible
for her to stay upright when something makes her laugh. We've all heard the
expression about people falling down laughing, but I never imagined I'd ever
witness this phenomenon myself. Though it shames me to admit it, I realised
there and then that before my visit to New York was over I had to say something
myself that was funny enough to make Teresa fall over. It's hell being
competitive.
Somehow night had crept over the city and I began to feel just how tired I
was. I was grateful, therefore, when we decided to take the subway to Washington
Heights, the district at the far northern end of Manhattan island where Stu and
the Neilsen Haydens lived. We got off at the relevant station, 190 Street, and
Stu pointed out the 'Taki 183' graffito on a column, explaining that these first
started appearing in 1969-70 and sparked off the graffiti explosion that had
buried the subway. Historic graffiti! Whatever next?
The alarming buildings-on-stilts of Washington Heights
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I was staying at with Stu at his famed 19 Broadway Terrace apartment while
in New York, and I was quite curious to see this fabled fannish address. As we
entered, Stu explained that he had earlier set off a "bug-bomb" which,
he assured me, should have cleared the apartment of cockroaches. I almost wish
he hadn't since, having never seen a cockroach before (and having been assured
by other New York fans that Stu's was the place to observe them), I'd
rather been looking forward to finally coming face to face with one of the
hideous brutes. Oh well, that was one famous New York sight to save for a future
visit.
Stu's place was as cluttered with mounds of old magazines and dangerously
unstable piles of books as my own flat, and I felt instantly at home. I admired
the fannish memorabilia about the place, chuckling at the image of Roscoe on the
wall with the light-switch protruding from what Dave Langford once described as
a "theologically debatable part of his anatomy".
The apartment was small -- four rooms -- but servicable and, after a brief
chat with Stu, I settled down on the sofa that was serving as my bed. I was soon
asleep. Tomorrow I'd be refreshed, and able to get out and explore this
strangely compelling city called New York.