The Bird lands

Mark Fidrych, one of baseball’s true eccentrics, died today, 33 years after he took the game by storm and then flamed out into obscurity.

I loved watching his antics on the mound when the Tigers were on national television:

He often talked to the baseball, fidgeted on the mound and got down on his knees to scratch at the dirt. Fidrych would swagger around the grass after every out and was finicky about baseballs, refusing to reuse one if an opposing player got a hit, and rejecting fresh ones he declared to have dents.

He liked to jump over the white infield lines on his way to the mound, with a wide, toothy grin that, coupled with his hair, made him easy to spot even from the upper reaches of Tiger Stadium.

Rest in peace.

In

Memories and uncertainties: Thoughts on the death of a classmate

Yesterday’s wine, we’re yesterday’s wine
Aging with time, like yesterday’s wine
— Willie Nelson

I’d heard about the accident early on Monday, a seven-car pile-up on Route 78 that had left two women dead. I saw some of the videos — the terrible wreckage was sobering — but did nothing with the news. It didn’t appear to have a local connection and I had to worry about the communities our newspapers covered.

That changed later that night when my wife Annie received a call from her friend Nicki. One of the drivers had graduated with us.

Janet Ilnicki had been prom queen and homecoming queen, an incredibly popular girl at South Brunswick High School. I knew her, like I knew most of our class. Back in the late 1970s, there was probably 1,100 students at the high school (compared with current graduating classes of 700), so we all knew each other on some level.

I was friendlier with her during freshman and sophomore years than I was during our final two years at the high school. We travelled in different circles, had different friends, though we shared some of the same classes.

And yet, the news of the accident and her death struck a chord. I know it struck a chord with many others from our graduating class — about 30 or so of us have been communicating via a running thread on Facebook. Some of the writers had been good friends with Janet in high school; others were like me. All of us had nothing but good things to say about her.

I remember when I heard the news about another classmate, Mukul Agarwala, who died on 9/11. He had started at his new job in the towers that Monday. I was friends with him — pretty good friends, in fact — for a number of years, but lost touch after high school. Seeing his face on my computer screen was eerie and sad and reminded me that things are so fragile.

Janet’s death struck me the same way. The circumstances of her death could be described as the definition of an accident — as one of her father’s neighbors told me in an e-mail — one coincidence piling on top of another so that she was in the wrong place at exactly the wrong time.

Ms. Adamko spent Sunday with her family in South Brunswick commemorating the 10-year anniversary of her sister’s death. Ms. Adamko left early Monday and was killed in a seven-car pileup around 10:42 a.m. near Exit 49A on Route 78.

State police said the accident began after a dump truck, which was in the westbound express lane, crossed into the eastbound lane and turned over. The dump truck struck a tractor-trailer, which then jackknifed, and five passenger vehicles were caught in the accident as the dump truck spilled rock and dirt across the interstate, according to state police spokesman Stephen Jones.

Basically, it could have been any of us.

As with Mukul’s death, the news spread quickly through a high school community that splintered into memory within months after graduation. We were a cliquish class, not particularly unified, a fact highlighted by the fragmented nature of the two reunions I’ve attended (and by our inability, generally, to plan them). I’ve kept in touch with a handful of close friends, see a few others who I was friends with in high school and have wondered about a number of others. But I have not had an overriding desire to recreate my high school years (God forbid).

I think part of what I am feeling is tied to my growing older. I am 46 and the death of someone I’d known when I was younger, someone who was the same age as me and came from the same place, really underscores the fragility of things, highlights the reality that our time here is quite fleeting. That is something I understood intellectually when I was 16, but not emotionally.

At 16 — or 20 or even 25 — there is that sense that one is invincible, that there is an entire world open for us. By 46, our expectations have changed and we look at the world through very different eyes.

I can see that uncertainties are the only certain thing in this world — I guess you could say that it is my foundational belief, the idea that allows me to make sense of a world that often seems so chaotic and out of control. Death frames so much of our lives — my father-in-law, a brother-in-law, a cousin, a close friend, a couple of classmates, co-workers and the harsh news that runs across the TV screen daily.

And we move on, keep going, enjoy the highs — watching our new dogs play with a toy together, for instance, or taking my nephews to the Pennsylvania Dutch market on Route 27 — and huddle together in response to the lows.

Here is a poem I wrote back in probably 2002 or 2003 (published in Big Hammer a few years ago). I guess it is my 9/11 poem, but I think it is apt as I stare out the window of my office on Witherspoon Street in Princeton, the sun shining on the wet macadam:

CERTAINTIES AND UNCERTAINTIES
(After Attila Jozsef, “To Sit, To Stand, To Kill, To Die”)

To drag this rake across wet leaves,
to scrub the crud from the bottom of this pan,
to wake as sunlight breaks through the gap in the shades,
to worry that all this could burn out, break,
all in the blink of an eye,
to pray that it won’t, that this can continue,
that these loves, this life can live on,
to wait for the telephone’s electronic ring,
to wander in the vast tundra of the mind,
to catch lighting bugs in jars,
to stare in disbelief as jets crash
and the towers crumble,
to know the calendar pages still turn,
to wander the curves of your hips
and the crevices of your soul,
to capture your queen and move on your king,
to reboot your computer after it’s crashed,
to answer nasty e-mails
or just delete them unread,
to forget,
to crest upon you like a wave in your mind,
to leave and never return,
to only know the moment
and guess the future,
to look these uncertainties in the eye
and laugh or cry but
always to keep it going, to get along
in this, this uncertain world of ours.

Studs Terkel: The voice of us all

Studs Terkel‘s books were about America. His method — to tape record interviews with average people (and sometimes famous ones) and then present their stories in their own words, unvarnished — produced what may be the richest and most significant oral history of the last century that anyone will use. His books — “Hard Times,” “Working,” “Hope Dies Last,” among them — made the trials and travails of the people affected by history into history, added flesh to the famous-person narratives we usually receive.

He died today, according to The New York Times, which offered a fine obituary:

In his oral histories, which he called guerrilla journalism, Studs Terkel relied on his enthusiastic but gentle interviewing style to elicit, in rich detail, the experiences and thoughts of ordinary Americans. “Division Street: America” (1966), his first best-seller and the first in a triptych of tape-recorded works, explored the urban conflicts of the 1960s. Its success led to “Hard Times: An Oral History of the Great Depression”(1970) and “Working: People Talk About What They Do All Day and How They Feel About What They Do”(1974). “ ‘The Good War’: An Oral History of World War II,” won the 1985 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.

In “Talking to Myself,” Mr. Terkel turned the microphone on himself to produce an engaging memoir, and more recently, in “Race: How Blacks and Whites Think and Feel About the American Obsession” (1992) and “Coming of Age: The Story of Our Century by Those Who’ve Lived It”(1995)’ he reached for his ever-present tape recorder for interviews on race relations in the United States and the experience of growing old.

Although detractors derided him as a sentimental populist whose views were simplistic and occasionally maudlin, Mr. Terkel was widely credited with transforming oral history into a popular literary form. In 1985 a reviewer for The Financial Times of London characterized Mr. Terkel’s books as “completely free of sociological claptrap, armchair revisionism and academic moralizing.”

The Times goes on to explain his particular gifts:

The elfin, amiable Mr. Terkel was a gifted and seemingly tireless interviewer who elicited provocative insights and colorful, detailed personal histories from a broad mix of people. “The thing I’m able to do, I guess, is break down walls,” he once told an interviewer. “If they think you’re listening, they’ll talk. It’s more of a conversation than an interview.”

Mr. Terkel’s succeeded as an interviewer in part because he believed most people had something to say worth hearing. “The average American has an indigenous intelligence, a native wit,” he said. “It’s only a question of piquing that intelligence.

In “American Dreams: Lost and Found” (1980), he interviewed police officers and convicts, nurses and loggers, former slaves and former Ku Klux Klansmen, a typical crowd for Mr. Terkel.

Readers of his books could only guess at Mr. Terkel’s interview style. Listeners to his daily radio show, which was broadcast on WFMT since 1958, got the full Terkel flavor, as the host, with breathy eagerness and a tough-guy Chicago accent, went after the straight dope from such guests as Sir Georg Solti ,Toni Morrison and Gloria
Steinem
.

“It isn’t an inquisition, it’s an exploration, usually an exploration into the past,” he once said, explaining his approach. “So I think the gentlest question is the best one, and the gentlest is, ‘And what happened then?’”

His death is not a surprise — he was 96 — but it is a blow. May he rest in peace.