Terry Trafficant was spotted holding forth to his own group of fans. His prison diary,
The New York police lieutenant who'd arrested Trafficant on the manslaughter charge was quoted, too: 'This guy is serious bad news. They might as well light a stick of dynamite and wait for it to blow.'
The next few citations on Lowell turned out to be cross-referenced interviews with Trafficant. Describing himself as 'Scum made good, an urban aborigine exploring a new world,' the ex-con quoted from the classics, Marxist theory, and postwar avant-garde literature. When asked about his crimes, he said, 'That's all dead and I'm not an undertaker.' Crediting Buck Lowell for his freedom, he called his mentor 'one of the four greatest men who ever lived, the other three being Jesus Christ, Krishnamurti, and Peter Kurten.' When asked who Peter Kurten was, he said, 'Look it up, Jack,' and ended the interview.
The article went on to identify Kurten as a German mass murderer, nicknamed the Dausseldorf Monster, who'd sadistically raped and butchered dozens of men, women, and children between 1915 and 1930. Kurten had other quirks, too, enjoying coitus with a variety of farm animals and going to his execution hoping he could hear his own blood bubble at the precise moment of death.
When recontacted and asked how he could term that kind of thing 'greatness,' Trafficant replied, 'It's all a matter of context, friend,' and hung up.
A storm of outraged letters ensued. Several religious leaders condemned Lowell in their Sunday sermons. Lowell and Trafficant refused further interviews, and after a week or so the fuss died down. In May,
When questioned about Trafficant's whereabouts, Buck Lowell said, 'Terry walked out on us a couple of weeks ago. Right after all the
A sensitive soul? asked the reporter.
'It's all a matter of context,' said Lowell.
Over the next two decades, coverage of Lowell diminished steadily, and by the end of the period nothing was left but a few doctoral theses, inflicting upon him that peculiar gleeful viciousness that passes for wit in the academic world.
Checking out the gray volume, I drove home. When I passed Topanga Canyon, I wondered if the great man was still living there.
6
At Las Flores Canyon, static wiped out the music on my radio. I fooled with the tuner and caught the word
I couldn't find a newscast and switched to AM. Both all-news stations were doing the sports scores, and everything else was chatter and music and people trying to sell things.
I gave up and concentrated on the beauty of the highway, open and clean as it ribboned past true-blue water. Even the commercial strip near the Malibu pier didn't look half bad in the afternoon sun. Bikini shops, diving schools, clam stands, real estate companies pretending they still had something to do during the slump.
Once home, I took a beer and Lowell's poetry onto the deck. It soon became clear this wouldn't be reading for fun.
Nasty stuff. Nothing like the luxuriant verse and lust-for-life stories Lowell had put out during the forties and fifties. Nearly all the poems dealt explicitly with violence, and many seemed to glorify it.
The first, entitled 'Home-icide,' was almost a haiku:
Another proclaimed:
The title poem was an empty black page. Several other pieces seemed no more than random collections of words, and a six-page poem entitled
The final piece was printed in letters so tiny I had to strain to read them:
Snap.
Snap.
Easy to see why the book hadn't worked- and why it had enchanted Trafficant.
I pictured him poring over it in his cell, then rushing to Lowell's defense.
His motive would have been more than shared literary taste. With a few supportive words, he'd bought himself early parole.
I reread the final poem.
A woman begging for it, then scorned for giving up.
Classic male rape fantasy?
Lucy's incubus…
The abduction imagery in the dream.
Had she come across this dreadful little book, perhaps as part of her brother's 'roots' research?
Reading it and identifying with the victim?
Or what if the dream represented something more personal- being molested herself?
At the voir dire, she'd denied ever having been a crime victim. But if it had happened long ago and she'd repressed it, she wouldn't have remembered.
The dream had started right after she'd listened to Milo testify about Carrie.
Identifying with a child victim.