by Barry Basden

My early years were chaotic, eight or nine different schools in twelve years. Read a lot. Hung around with poets and actors and other loners in high school. After graduating in Houston, I bounced around the country. Lived near MacArthur Park in LA. Rode a Greyhound to New York. Clerked. Drank. Spent a lot of time in the Village, but made sure I read for three hours every day—Faulkner, Hemingway, Wolfe, etc.—trying to educate myself.
Hitchhiked back to Texas. No trade, still clerking, I took freshman English at night. The teacher was an alcoholic, a former English professor at Notre Dame, but by then just an adjunct trying to get his life back together. He used to sip ginger ale with a bunch of us while we drank and listened to him in a quiet bar after class. He seemed to know everything I wanted to learn, very supportive, urged me to write about NYC, saw that I was published in the school magazine. My writing, raw and terribly derivative of the Beats, gained some notoriety in that west Texas town. The best teachers are often the kindest and I remember Mr. Mooney fondly all these years later.

I finished school on the GI Bill, 3 years in 18 months, top accounting grad, a piece of cake because all I had to do was go to class and do the assignments. I became a CPA and spent several years auditing youth training centers, wildlife refuges, and Indian affairs throughout the West, trying to make the world a little better place.
Then I worked for years as a financial manager for the military in Europe. There I found Annie Proulx’s Heart Songs and Carver’s What We Talk About. I now know that Gordon Lish had a lot to do with why I couldn’t read Carver’s book without weeping.
After I retired, I did oral histories for a WWII museum, writing up war stories that got filed away in dusty archives. That’s how I met Charlie Scheffel, a combat infantry officer who fought in North Africa and Europe. I found his story riveting and it eventually became Crack! and Thump, published in 2007. The book still gets nice reviews on Amazon. It’s actually a memoir in flash and writing it helped me find my natural way to tell stories.
I began to read and write flash and micro fiction and later founded Camroc Press Reviewthat focused on stories under 500 words. I couldn’t seem to get enough of it and ran CPR for 7 years before closing down last year.
I keep plugging away at my own stuff. I’m not prolific by any means, but I’ve turned out a couple hundred flashes, some of it collected, with a chapbook related to war coming out perhaps this summer. I love trying to hone a story down to its essence. It’s something I hope to spend the rest of my life doing, happy that my long strange journey has led me to such a perfect place.
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MacArthur Park Photo: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AMacarthur_Park.jpg”Macarthur Park” by Wurzeller at English Wikipedia – Self-photographed. Licensed under Public Domain via Commons