Wed
May 19 2010 8:40am
This all happened so fast

Earlier this year, I wrote to my friend and hero Norman Spinrad to ask if we could get together for some Chinese food while I was visiting New York. We’d sat around a table a few years back with our ladies and talked of living abroad, his and Dona’s globe-trotting experiences in the past, ours still in the future, me licking Norman and Dona’s wealth of experiences off my fingers along with the oyster sauce. Norman was frustrated by American publishers at the time, getting more love from houses in France; his recent book He Walked Among Us finally saw print in English (the language it was written in) a few months ago, several years after its French translation published. They talked of giving up their West Village apt and relocating permanently to Paris.

So, from my new home in São Paulo, I wrote to Norman once our tickets were booked to make sure we’d be in the city at the same time to noodle together. I wasn’t even sure if he and Dona were still technically New Yorkers. Norman said he had a book tour in Europe but would be in the city during our stay and we promised to firm up plans once I landed in New York.

My seven days in New York came and went in a flash, and in the shuffle, I didn’t call him. He was on my mind but I never stopped running... and when I checked in online while waiting at JFK, I found that he likely wouldn’t have been able to meet at all: he’d begun posting updates from his hospital bed at the Sloane-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

I’ve been following Norman’s updates since I landed in Miami, and his condition seems to be worsening; he is set to undergo serious procedures Thursday to remove a tumor blocking his intestine and keeping him from being able to ingest food. As of his update yesterday morning, his surgeon tells him the proposed procedure has a 60/40 rate of success.

There’s so much still want to say, like telling him how much his work and imagination have meant to me and to my own... but even more to just sit and listen to him tell stories of a life well-lived. Norman’s craft is taut and true; he’s traveled around the world, connected to people by things he made up. It’s not often you run into a person who closely mirrors a Future-You you hope to grow into if you play your cards right: worldly and humble, eccentric and uncompromising, sensitive and funny.

I’m writing this in the hopes that others who’ve been touched by his work will send him some love and appreciation now when it matters most. You can reach Norman via normanspinrad [at] hotmail [dot] com.

8 comments
Yasminah
2. Yasminah
Author of one of my favorite all-time short stories, "A Thing of Beauty." Many, many, many good wishes being sent.
Yasminah
3. Catamariner
Hoping he will dodge all of the obstacles and recover like a champ afterward. Sent.
Yasminah
4. dmg
I was a snot-nosed, teenaged student when Norm accepted my invitation to address my high school.

To finalize the matter (with the ostensible purpose to offer privately the honorarium), a friend gave me a ride on the back of his motorcycle for 20 miles over a pot-holed, dirt road to get to Norm's aerie house in Laurel Canyon (Hollywood Hills). Which, I guess, goes to show my desperation even then to honor the writers who offered my life meaning. Or, equally valid, to waste their time.

Norm was gracious to a fault. He submitted to a chaperon during his presentation, which was wholly unnecessary. He was charming, witty, clever, informative, humble. He won over the small crowd, many of whom had zero knowledge of his writing. The chaperon wrote a glowing report.

I continued to enjoy Norm's books for the following decades -- until Russian Spring; his new books became scarce then after. (This was long before Amazon, obviously!)

I esteem Norm for his intelligent and passionate novels, as I revere the man for his grace and gentleness. And now you share the news that Norm is (deathly?) ill. 'Tis a sad day, indeed.
Yasminah
5. Kiloseven
And, may I please suggest the rest of us do what we can to avoid cancer in the first place? (NOT a screed aimed at Norman Spinrad, whose work floats to the top of my mind at the oddest times... genius! Sure hope he pulls through!)

The UCSD Med School and other prestigious med schools have a cheap, effective and easy prophylactic proven to work against breast, colon, kidney cancers as well as diabetes and heart disease: Vitamin D3. They have many, many international epidemiological studies which show the Vitamin D we get is adequate to prevent rickets, but not to prevent many other vexing and lethal disorders.

They lay it all out in easy-to-understand infoporn as well as video presentations, and for the scientifically minded also go into great detail. PLEASE go visit http://grassrootshealth.net and see the science behind this rather broad claim I make. Then, pass this on.

Different folks have different needs, and they recommend a blood test to see what your D3 levels are before and after. Factors include (but are not limited to) how much time you spend in the sun, how much skin is exposed when you sun, how far away from the equator you are, the cloudiness there, and your skin darkness.

OBTW, a nine-month supply of one (1) each 2,000 mg/day dose of D3 (the best variant) costs 16 bucks at Costco.
Yasminah
6. dmg
Interesting post, Kilolseven, and fitting when you recall Norm wrote Carcinoma Angels.

Several follow-on points:
1) Vitamin D should actually be called HORMONE D, as it is that vital to a body's health;
2) At some point, usually age, the human body becomes unable to assimilate sunlight into D3, so you must supplement;
3) Supplement D3, NOT D2;
4) 2,000IU is at the low end of a body's need; I ingest 6,000IU/day;
5) Buy the gel cap-like version (Costco's Kirkland brand), NOT the white tablet. Those powdered tablets are an utter waste of time and money. (Your body does not assimilate them.)

Bottom line, your body requires 'Vitamin' D for many functions and uses beyond strong bones.

Thank you for your post.
Yasminah
7. Counterglow
I sent Mr. Spinrad my regards. His work stretched the genre, and I have great respect for him.

If hope and best wishes can help, I'm doing my part.
Lenny Bailes
8. lennyb
Norman reports elsewhere, this morning:

"I'm less than 24 hours out of surgery and so not in condition to write at length, but I have to tell y'all that it went better than 100%. The surgeon in effect did the job he wanted to do after much more chemo, took out the tumor and a suspicious lymph node, didn't take my whole stomach. Thanks to y'all for your prayers of all kinds and degrees. More when more able."

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