20B - The Michigan Daily Literary Magazine - Thursday, March 13, 1997 0 BAXTER Continued from Page 3B learning more and more about family members. They get more and more interesting as time goes by." Baxter's writing does have its ardent fans. "Some people just want to see him as a nice Midwestern writer, but he's got a dark view," said Elwood Reid, University composition lecturer. "Inside (Baxter's) normal appearance lurks an edgy guy." Reid com- pares Baxter to John Cheever. "His writing is very well-observed. It's dead-on ... there's not a wasted word" Reid also has kudos for Baxter's teaching style: "It's one of the reasons I came here. He offers lit- tle bits of wisdom, hard-won for him, and he just gives them to you. He's very considerate - he tells you exactly where your writing's not work- ing." Baxter only took one creative writing course in his undergraduate career. For him, the craft of writing is not something easily taught. "I think what (I) primarily do ... is to help peo- ple, teach people to look at their own work analyt- ically. Not from the point of view of scholar, who's analyzing it for themes and symbols, but to look at it as a maker, a crafts-person and to see what it may need in emphasis, clarity, (and) coherence." Baxter does attempt to give students direction. "I try to help people find what their voice is, what their themes are. I try to help people find their way onto a path in which they can say: 'This is what I do; this is the kind of story I write; this is the voice that I have."' His work as a teacher has had some influence on his own writing. "It's caused me to write more slowly, and to revise more, because I'm more conscious of the craft now, with what I'm doing, than I used to be. I used to be able to write very quickly ... now I lug along, look- ing at everything I've done to see if it's okay." Early on in his career, Baxter struggled to find his own voice. He wrote three novels, all of which were so bad they had to be discarded. "Writing spontaneously ... was great but the trouble was that a lot of that writing I did was awful, and I did- n't know that it was. And when I did figure out that it was awful, I didn't know why." Chastened, Baxter said he turned to short stories. "If you write a bad short story you haven't lost a year out of your life, the way you can if you set off and start writing a novel and make a wrong turn." Baxter offers this advice to young writers: "I think you can learn more about writing fiction by writing short stories initially than by writing nov- els. Start with short stories and then if you want to write novels then that's what you do." DYING Continued from Page 8B away from me and when I got in to start the car the battery was dead. I had to fol- low the dirt two-track a mile back through the woods and I forced myself never to look back, never to run, because showing the world you are afraid means admitting that you believe whatever is out there might catch up with you. As I walked as fast as I could without break- ing into a run I thought over and over that if ['had a gun, if only I had a gun I could sight in on whatever was out there and I wouldn't have to feel so afraid. Some friends held a reception after the funeral only a few blocks away from my great-grandparents' house on Goodman Street. There were delicate curls of honey-baked ham on toothpicks, thin slices of cheese, and plates of dry Ritz crackers. While my relatives talked in small circles I stepped outside. My grandfather stood at the base of the three cement steps that led up to the front door and silently smoked. As I came down to join him, he placed his heavy hand on my shoulder and I waited for him to speak. Instead, his hand tightened and his voice choked. My father was walking up the sidewalk toward us with the long barrel of a gun sticking out from a faded flowered sheet. I could not see the ivy engraved stock, but I knew by the way he held the gun like a child in his arms that it was my great-grandfather's. My grandfather pushed away from me like a race horse at the gate. "You didn't. You didn't go down there, Matthew," my grandfather said. My father stopped and pulled the gun closer to his chest. "I'm taking it," he said. "He promised me. It's the first gun I ever shot. I'm taking it." They squared them- selves like boxers on the sidewalk and though I could not see their eyes I knew that the horrible exchange was of a son staring down his father. I felt ashamed, as though I were witnessing something that I had no business seeing. I turned back inside and drifted between the circles of relatives, keeping my eyes on the food on my white paper plate. My family ,. '' approached the next fall with trepidation. Even away from home for the first time I could sense the tension in my parents' voices across the taut phone line when I asked about the fami- ly. As the month began to wind itself in like a fishing line I thought that perhaps we might make it through, but then my mother called to tell me that her stubborn father had had to be admitted to the hos- pital for meningitis because he hadn't sought early treatment, and I felt the inevitable cycle that we had been drawn into solidifying and tightening. My mother had instructed us as children that the world worked in trinities, and with this third death, I felt as though our future had been nailed down. After the funeral, while my relatives eyed one another uneasily, not wanting to see who was next, I headed to the coat room. I wanted to escape to the cold October air, finish another year on the gray stone steps by myself with a ciga- rette. My mother was there, huddled in the row of coats, sobbing. I touched her shoulder and she looked up at me with bright red eyes. She grabbed my arms with such strength that I wanted to cry out but was too terrified. She began shaking me, shaking me with her lips pulled back and her teeth clenched together. And when she opened her mouth all she could say was, "Say my daddy believed in Jesus. Say my daddy believed in Jesus." Now, as the October days drop off the calendar, we unconsciously hold our breath, sometimes waiting until the open- ing of deer season in the second week of November to be sure. Turning into hunters we feel safe with the rifles in our hands, as though we could sight in on the vision of death coming across the corn stubble to the edge of the forest where we wait, the four of us together. As he comes gliding over the empty field toward my family, my father says, "Let him wander in, a hundred yards, seventy-five, until you can see him breathe. Then push the crosshairs into his chest like a branding iron, open his body with a fist full of shells, and you'll see him dropping, drop- ping like the first snow" Jeremiah Chamberlin is a creative writing subconcentration program senior His has received the Arthur Miller Fiction Award and teaches cre- ative writing at Community High School. Ann Arbor's Only Hemp Store 000 , A i s t a Jeans Hats Adidas Hemp Shoes Books & Videos -.Mmooo Jackets Jewelry Cannabis Clothing for the 3rd Millennium Backpacks Ring Binders Briefcases Duffels purses 25% off Ecolution Jeans and Jackets with this coupon offers expires 3-5-97 Pure Productions S. Fourth <2 G O 211 S. Fourth Ave Ann Arbor, MI 38118 (313) 668-7420 email: purehemp@wwnet.com