Joseph Kaufman “Roots”

My sisters would wear their best dress coats and I would brush my hair and wear a tie when my mother’s parents, wealthy Jews from the City, neighbors of Marlene Dietrich on east 52nd street, sent a limousine to Pittsfield to gather us up. We were the country bumpkins of the family, exiled to the Berkshires after my mother married the son of a toy salesman who was, in this stern grandfather’s pronouncement, “swarthy, with a prominent nose.” These grandparents’ apartment smelled like baked potatoes, the Little Rascals were on black-and-white TV, and there was a forbidding height down to the street where, when no was looking, I spit. We were taken to museums, parks, Broadway shows, other places of betterment, expected to dress for dinner – no elbows allowed on tabletops – and often taken to the best restaurants of New York and expected to remember what the French or Spanish on the menus meant.

Such sophistication only reinforced my sense of us as a segment of family exiled from “True Life”, relegated to the hillocks, lakes, woods, insects, and other infestations of rural Massachusetts. It took many years to appreciate the emotional health that was bestowed by being raised in what felt like a blue collar isolation tank and the simple activities of rural life: shimmying up trees, trout fishing, good country hardball, sandlot tackle football, skiing, sledding down the hermit’s driveway, ice skating in the city square, country fairs, spaghetti dinners at The Busy Bee, steak sandwiches at The Rainbow. But, of course, there were the learned pleasures of country living, too: Tanglewood with the Boston Symphony and, one time, Duke Ellington, Melville’s Arrowhead, Hawthorne’s house in Lenox, the Berkshire Museum, the greater oddities of Alice’s Restaurant, Mundy’s bar, Officer Obie, Bonnie Raitt and Leo Kotke concerts at the Music Inn.

Like my father before me, I was born and raised in in this GE town of 40,000 where Jack Welch started out, located one hour west of Springfield and one hour east of Albany. I attended the same summer camp and high school as my father. My grandparents raised their children in Pittsfield and my great grandparents lived there as well. All of us so far – great-grandparents, grandparents, uncles, aunts, cousins – are buried in the Pittsfield Cemetery. We have been living in the Berkshires for over 100 years, a rare statement for any Jew to be able to make. Pittsfield remains an amalgam of Irish, Polish, Italian, WASP, and Jew. There remain the Elks, the Masons, the war veterans, and Pittsfield people are still very nice.

My father’s mother, who lived near us in Pittsfield, was a Yankee, a short woman of great stature who would not allow liquor into her house and refused to listen to a bad word about anyone, while my father, the son of this Jewish woman, is a retired, Calvinist-work-ethic businessman. I inherited this work ethic if not that ban on alcohol, both of which served me well during the many-year writing of “The Legend of Cosmo and the Archangel”. The hours, the revisions, the heartache of rejections, the attempt to develop a style that could speak about many things in a deeper way – it all came partly from the experience of Bennington College and the tutelage of Bernard Malamud, the Peace Corps in Africa, yeshiva in Israel, the years working for my father at Kay Bee Toys. But even more than my post-Pittsfield life, the development of style is, in large part, the temperament that was forged from the pine and elm and barbecues of long-ago childhood, the lifelong sense of trying to punch my way out of Paradise.

Meet Joseph Kaufman, New Author with French Creek Press

It feels great to offer a good fiction book that looks at who we are: post baby boom, post 60′s, post rebound, post lots of growth. It doesn’t surprise me that our readers, many of a like age, connect with “The Legend of Cosmo and the Archangel”. We all question who we are today, 40 years hence. Do we hold by the ideology that drove us when we were young and on fire? Can we identify that young piece of ourselves in our middle-aged lives? The surprise came from our young readers, the teens and twenties, the immortals, the invincibles. They are the ones on fire! They are grappling with passions that yank them across a spectrum of experiences and emotions. And yet, they identify with the terrible events and choices Cosmo and Nick face in “The Legend of Cosmo and the Archangel”.

A group of tight-knit friends grow up together through high school in a world twisted inside out by a terrible war, accessible, affordable  drugs, great opportunities for education and tremendous drive to change. While all ages have some need to throw off authority, our group comes of age in a time when all authority must be destroyed because it is authority. What happens to someone young and unworldly as he or she steps out into that maelstrom? Who do they become if they survive?

Cosmo leaves the group first as he heads off to Viet Nam, burning with American patriotism. He returns wounded and broken, his best buddy dead, himself a user. Then Woodstock explodes on the scene amidst the rain. For many it is the identifiable point-time of change. College, not-college, travel, poverty and fame follow the young adults. It seems as though everyone is diving off a cliff into the unknown. Cosmo makes his first mistake when he goes AWOL from his hospital bed in search of oblivion from memories of his stay in Viet Nam. Joey’s life turns secretive. Frankie dreams of being Dr. Schweitzer. Dave dreams of the starting lineup on a professional football team and Nick makes his first irreparable mistake that forces him into years of global travel.

From Viet Nam, and terrorism through out the 70s and 80s, through Ireland, France, Asia, and the Middle East, Cosmo and Nick run from themselves and from each other. It ends in Jerusalem, to where all roads lead.

First Books Published

My first ever publishing experience was in grade school. I learned how to make paper. Then I learned how to bind it into a book using thread and glue. Only after the book insides were ready was I allowed to draw, color, paste, and print my story. It was kind of backwards, creating the book and then filling it in. The priority was on making the book, not creating content. Fast forward to high school where I, as a very frustrated, fluent writer, had no outlet for my creativity. My school was so small that there were only 17 girls in my class. The other classes were slightly bigger, but no class had over 25 girls. Due to lack of demand or perhaps lack of energy and guidance, we did not have a newspaper nor a literary magazine. The yearbook was the only creative outlet.

In my Junior year, at age 16, I decided to publish a literary magazine. Of course, I decided this after all funds were allocated to other extra curricular activities, so there was no money even to seed this venture. Over five months I learned how to put together a team of editors, con teachers into sitting on an advisory panel, and how to judge poetry, short fiction, and artwork. I also learned how to beg, I mean, raise the money needed to print the book. I had many encounters with printers and learned a great deal about paper, ink, and size of books.

By May of that year our magazine, Ginko Lines, published its first edition. After I submitted the book to the printer I went back to the dormitory, collapsed on my bed and started to cry. One of the teachers came in to my room and explained the emotional upheaval I was experiencing. She even said, “It’s like having a baby. You just had a baby.” Well – that’s not a good thing to say to a teenage girl in an all girls school.

The next year, my senior year, I went through the process again. The difference in planning ahead financially and emotional was tremendous. I made it through the process to publishing and distribution without crying or breaking. That was the end of my budding publishing career – until now.

I have in front of me the proof copy of the first book published by French Creek Press Ltd. All my experience as a project manager, engineer, editor, book doctor, and layout artist came into play along with the extraordinary talents of the French Creek Press staff. This time I felt like jumping up and down, running down to the street and stopping everyone there to come and look at this baby, book. Excitement replaced tears of exhaustion. Age tells. Experience tells.

Keep looking in this space for the announcement of our newest book.