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       ASK ROD

Here we are at the edge of December. Frightening how fast this particular year seems to be traveling. More days going, more letters arriving.

THANKS CAPTAIN

What a joy it was to discover your Website after all these years. You were so much a part of my life during college in the 60's and early 70's and such a part of my early growth and sensitivity. As a former Army Capt. in Special Operations stationed in Northern Ireland I kept my Rod McKuen books hidden. But the words kept me comfort during the long winter nights waiting for combat. Even more...the strength to recover my humanity upon my return to the States. I often heard the snide comments, but my God your poetry came from the heart...to the heart. All I know is I love your poetry and prose. And I for one am so pleased to have re-discovered you. Thank you for so much joy and "Humanity"! Jim Waters

Dear Rev. Jim, Thanks! I needed that. I’ve had a mixed up, busy, but not particularly happy and fulfilling November, so I’m delighted to enter the last month of the year with your compliments. I wonder if you found grey/green Ireland as beautiful as I did? A remarkable country with seemingly unsolvable problems. Whenever I leave Ireland I can’t wait to be on my way back to it.

As for snide remarks, criticism, whatever, it’s nice to be on the other side of life where most of that stuff can’t reach me. After all, I never set out to prove anything but did so anyway, thanks to people like you who outshouted the naysayers and critics. All the best, Jim, Rod.



WHERE CAN WE GET BOOKS

My sister insists that I ask you where she may purchase some of your earlier works which, apparently, are out of print. Forgive my straightforward approach, but it's almost mid-night, I'm tired as heck, and yet she is merciless, as she stands above me, glowering as I type.:- She doesn't even believe I would send this but here I go . . .

On behalf of my sister, an ardent fan of yours since I was a little
boy, I THANK YOU (I'm not totally without manners) for your attention to this request. J. F. Altman


Rod, Where can I find copies of your books, particularly "Lonesome Cities" and "Celebrations of the Heart?" Rita, Seal Beach Ca.

Dear Rod, My mom introduced me to your works by sending books and tapes to me while I was in Vietnam. This year for Christmas I’d like to return the favor but I’m having a hard time finding much here in St. Louis. Is there a particular store or mail order outlet you could recommend that’s up to date on Rod McKuen books, CD’s and tapes? Tom Billings.

Dear J. F, Rita & Tom, Dwight Michaels is attempting to revive The Stanyan Mail Order Catalog with a number of books and recordings for sale. As of this week he has paperback editions of Love’s Been Good To Me, Seasons In The Sun, Looking For A Friend, Watch For The Wind, Hand In Hand & Too Many Midnight’s. Hardcovers include Valentines, Intervals, Celebrations of the Heart, Beyond The Boardwalk and Coming Close To The Earth. He also has Stanyan Street & Other Sorrows, Listen To The Warm & Lonesome Cities in hardback pocket editions. These mere books however are dwarfed by my favorite "Dwight Discovery", a box each of the 1985 & 1986 "Another Beautiful Day" diaries and date books. His theory being we all should have them, in case the years come back. Hmm. At this rate can the 1972 Calendar be far behind? Dwight can be reached at  stanyanr@aol.com.

Based on what I pick up from tara’s RM Message Board, another good place to find my early books is your local second hand bookstore. And, again courtesy of the Message Board, there seem to be several ongoing auctions of the books and recordings. More on where to find CD’s, tapes and LP’s tomorrow. Good hunting and thanks for the continued interest. Rod



SCHOOL DAYS

I recently was going through some old things of mine and came across an Assignment that I did in my English class in 1973. I made an A and it was my reactions & feelings about 4 poems by Rod McKuen. I don't remember anything about this assignment and I did not have the actual poems in order to refer back to. Could you tell where I can find these in order for me to understand why I felt the way I did about the poems. The names of the poems were: "Channing Way", " Kearny Street","Jim Jann" & "Holidays". I know this seems like a strange request, but when I read the reactions, if I didn't know I had written it, I would think the person who wrote them was a very sad person at 17yrs old. Thanks, Deborah.

When I was in high school, I read one of your poems which I believe began "After every summer's rain, an August rainbow..." Unfortunately, I cannot remember the rest of the poem and I can not find it either. I've looked in libraries, book stores, on the Internet. I just cannot find a copy of it. I first read this poem during a difficult time, and it touched a part of my soul that I thought had died. Now, almost 12 years later, I began thinking of this poem and how much it meant. Please help me to find this beautiful poem again. Thank you so much. Juli, from Columbus, Ohio

Dear Deborah & Juli, There is an early concordance of my work that a professor of English compiled in the mid-seventies, but nothing beyond that until just recently. Thanks to Jay Hagan I’ll never have to put aside letters like yours until my memory has a better day. Jay sat down at his own volition and produced a whale of a document that is far and away the best reference to my work I’ve ever seen. It consists of thousands of entries on every poem in every book and every song in every album he could get his hands on.

For instance there are 34 entries on "Some of the Best of Rod McKuen’, including first lines of every song sung in a released album by that name and the titles and first lines to each cut of another album by that name that has never been released. The amount of hard work that must have gone into this compilation is staggering. It took a lifetime for me to produce all this "stuff", so perhaps Jay is a lot older than he makes out to be. As my brain goes on sorting out what to remember & what to forget, this compendium is quickly becoming the most important reference work I own. Just as a McHistorian (sorry to stick you with that JH) Jay has become indispensable in my work.

Deborah: Here’s your answer: Channing Way, JimJan, Holidays & Kearny Street are all from "Stanyan Street & Other Sorrows" first published in July 1966. JimJan is also on "Alone", the LP,  the tape and LP "In Search of Eros" & the CD "Speaking of Love." Channing Way is available on the following LP’s "Love Songs 1&2," "The Best of Rod McKuen," "A Portrait of Rod, "The Essential RM" and the CD & LP "Rod Sings His Own."

"Holidays" was recorded for the LP "Time of Desire" and it was widely circulated in the 1960’s on three pirate albums "About Me", "The Sounds of Day / The Sounds of Night" & "Desire Has No Special Time." "Kearny Street" was recorded for the album "The Yellow Unicorn". Other LP’s that feature versions of it include, "In The Beginning," "Try RM in the Privacy of Your Own Home," "The Essential RM" and "Seasons In The Sun."

Juli, The poem you refer to is titled "August Rainbows" and is from the book "Celebrations of the Heart," published in 1975. I recorded "August Rainbows" in "Summer", part of The Seasons Boxed Set. The recording has wonderful music written & arranged by Anita Kerr and played by The San Sebastian Strings. This track can also be found on the LP "Bouquet." Not incidentally, Anita’s music was the inspiration for the poem.

Whew. This is undoubtedly more information than anyone wants or needs to know, but there it is. Thanks Juli and Deborah with a special nod to Jay. I’m off to raid the icebox & make a turkey & mushroom omelet, with a side order of Bloody Mary - of course. See you tomorrow.

                                               - RM 11/30/98

notable birthdays Woody Allen o Alfred Cellier o Etienne Maurice Falconet o Mary Martin o Keith Michell o Bette Middler o Billy Paul o Jaco Pastorius o Richard Pryor o Lou Rawls o Dick Shawn o Rex Stout o Charlene Tilton o Lee Trevino o Alexander Ryan Ward
Rod's random thoughts I’ve never known a cat that couldn’t calm me down just by walking slowly past my chair.

If a cat has nine lives – then don’t forget they’re his to do with as he wishes.

Life is less and less defined without the company of cats.

The best thing about cats is everything.

THE LEAVING OF LITTLE JOE

Cats know.
They’re as good
as bank clerks
           at sensing
loss or gain,
better than the clergy
or the clairvoyant
at seeing up ahead.
And in the dark
they’re more at home
than any ghost.

One year
to the day
that Mama died
Joe turned up missing.
          He was Mama’s cat
more than all the others.
He had grieved with us
and been estranged from us
since that Easter night
                         a year ago
when Mama’s clothes
         came home.

At first
he stalked the house,
not satisfied to prowl
          only her own rooms.
Finally sure that she was gone
and not in hiding,
he began to talk to each of us,
and then to scold us all
           as if we were to blame
                  for her long absence.

One by whiskered one
he finally took on
all the other cats
         till none
would venture near him.

Cats are deliberate.
Nothing that they do
is done by chance.
Whether making love
or making conversation
they work in earnest
for earnestness is all the work
                              they do.
Ed says that when the time comes
cats go off to die alone.
We looked everywhere,
but didn’t look for long.
Joe stayed away,
and all the other cats
                         came back.

In retrospect
there’s always been
a cat or two in transit
moving in and being loved,
then leaving at his own volition.
Playing, if it pleased him
               preening if it didn’t.

Cats that helped us show
the better sides of ourselves
          to each other
or anyway, the calmer one.
It didn’t start with Sloopy
and it won’t end with Little Joe.

Once Billy found an old Tom
we nicknamed A Marvelous Cat
                                I believe he was,
though why I can’t remember.

Currently, there’s Paco the Brave
                             and Greta,
Charlie with the mustache
Squeek who talks
along the hallway
announcing himself as he enters
                   every room.

Nickoli and Odyssey I leave out.
They’re merely kittens
and kittens you know
are not exactly cats.

                And Nuisance.
Nuisance is the loner.
She dines with Mr. Kelly
                       every night.
She doesn’t like most other cats
and bites to signal
when she’s tired of being petted,
by even those of us
she knows are friends.
She comes to eat
but sleeps in someone else’s yard
                                     or wherever.

Paco’s preference
is to be with Edward.
He wanders slow about the house,
his tail long and dragging,
every time that Eddie goes away.

But when Helen
or good company
          comes into town
that tail’s straight up and fanning.
He even cleans himself in private
before beginning to show off
his plumage and his Valentino stare.

Greta’s friends with everyone.
At the moment she’s curled up
                        on my left foot.
Instead of moving to get comfortable,
          I indulge her
just as I did all the other cats
who came and went throughout the years.

Nuisance will be next to go
for she loved Mama, too,
and lately she has started sitting
                               outside Mamma’s room
as if to guard it.
She bares her teeth
at all who travel by.

Knowing cats
we all know what to make of it.

Cats when ready leave at night.
Or maybe it’s the daytime.
One is never sure because
               before they’re gone
each has managed to become a habit
as comfortable as any well loved child
or a piece of furniture.
They turn up missing
only when you’ve time
                            to miss them.

Little Joe must have known
we cared for him as much
                            as Mama did.
He should have given us a chance.
But cats are not like anything
                    but cats.
You don’t choose them.

With any luck at all
a cat will come along
               and fancy you
for his duration, not your own.

If I thought
that cats were anything
                    but deliberate,
I’d bolt the door on Nuisance.
But I do believe
that she’s determined.

After all
she’s given us
a full six years
of precious time.

She’s entitled to be rid of us
if that’s her choice.

                                - from "And To Each Season," 1972

© 1965, 1971, 1972, 1986, 1998 by Stanyan Music Group & Rod McKuen. All Rights Reserved
Birthday research by Wade Alexander
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