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Williams Meyers

topic 12 · 5 responses
~terry Tue, Sep 9, 1997 (08:45) seed
Updates from William Meyers.
~terry Tue, Sep 9, 1997 (08:46) #1
UPDATE III 9 September 1997 Dear Friends, Here's the latest: Still working as desktop publisher in the production department at Columbia University Press, I work with book designers in laying out books -- using the software program QuarkXPress on a Macintosh "Power PC" computer to do the on-screen "electronic paste-up" now required to prepare all the pages of a book (both typography and graphics) and perfect them in every detail before sending the book off (on disk) to be printed and bound. After taking two graphic-design courses in the spring, I came up with a small typographical portfolio that may be of some use in the future. I'll be putting together a basic book-design portfolio during the rest of the summer and the fall. By the end of the year I should be ready to take on some book-design jobs of my own. The design director at CUPress has been helping me out with this effort. I'm still sub-letting a beautiful apartment in Washington Heights, north of the George Washington Bridge, with a view of the bridge and the Hudson River. It's in a co-op apartment building which has limitations on the amount of time an apartment can be sub-leased -- but, providing I get the approval of the co-op board at the end of each year, I could still be at the same address for as long as another two and a half years. Whenever I have to move, I would want to stay in the same neighborhood. It's only seven subway stops away from the Columbia campus, where I work, and a relatively short commute each day. Also, of course, the rent level there is right for me -- and, by now, the neighborhood feels like home. All our family's kids seem to be doing well. Henry is happily married to Kitty in Washington, DC, and continues to take on increasing responsibility in the Environmental Protection Agency. Christine continues to work as a physician's assistant in a family-practice clinic in Seattle, but has been giving serious thought to doing volunteer medical work abroad. Genevieve will be returning in the fall to the California School of Arts & Crafts in Oakland for her second year of study toward a degree in art. Rose graduated from the Chicago Institute of Art two years ago and remains in Chicago, working in computer graphics. Mary's ashes, in the meantime, have dissolved into the Atlantic. Since her death, I have been a practicing Buddhist, and for the most part I study the teachings of the Dalai Lama as an educational aid to my own meditation. This year I took my two weeks of vacation in June in order to attend the Dalai Lama's three days of teachings in upstate New York; four days of teachings in Los Angeles; and the Peacemaking Conference in San Francisco, where Nobel Peace Prize laureates Josi Ramos Hortas of East Timor, Rigoberta Mencchu of Guatemala (her sister, actually, standing in for her), and His Holiness the Dalai Lama, among other major human-rights advocates (such as Harry Wu), addressed the issues of nonviolent conflict resolution among inner-city youth and the active use of civil disobedience to protest human-rights violations around the world. I also relate especially well to the teachings of Tibetan Buddhism as passed down through the Western mind of Prof. Robert Thurman, the preeminent academic authority on the subject, who conveniently teaches at Columbia University and lives nearby. I helped to get Prof. Thurman signed up with CUPress to edit a reference volume on Eastern religions, and am hoping to be able to work in some editorial capacity on that. I already edit his audiocassette albums for Tibet House, here in New York, and recently published an edited version of one of his Basic Buddhism lectures in the local (and L.A.) journal Free Spirit. That could lead to a book of such lectures, which we've been talking about with a friendly publisher. I'm also still connected -- hanging by a thread, as yet unbroken -- to the New York art-book publisher Stuart, Tabori & Chang, through my literary agent Sara Jane Freyman, with the proposal for an illustrated biography, The Dalai Lama of Tibet. The editor there asked in January for ten more pages, in addition to the three interior pages and cover painting originally submitted, to reassure her colleagues of our ability to sustain a dramatic and sequential narrative in an illustrated format. By September I hope to be able to turn in five new pages, inked and colored, for their review, in the hope that five pages, and not ten, will allay any anxieties or uncertainties about our capabilities. I believe the combined illustrative forces of my friends Dennis Janke, Marjorie Strauss, and Marc Greene should be enough to convince anyone on that point -- but production is a long-term, time-consuming task when there is no seed/support money and everyone must fit in the project, wherever possible, around the demands of their paying jobs. A contract with an advance would make a tremendous difference, but publishers are very cautious and conservative these days -- they're losing money as never before -- so we practice our patience and perseverance, while keeping the faith, in the hope that withthe completion of these five pages, a new productive day will dawn. The other major book project that holds some promise of being bought and given a material reality is the book on the Huichol culture of Mexico by Juan Negrin. The book would deal with not only the culture, the environment, and the art of the Huichol, but the work that Juan did with them over the last 25 years in the attempt to help them to preserve their traditional culture -- by means of educational exhibits of their art, as well as cooperative ventures in woodworking and weaving that helped the Huichol people to retain more autonomy over their natural resources and their own lives. As a result of a fortuitous visit by Juan to their editorial offices here a few months ago, this book, which has always had the potential for being lavishly illustrated and produced, is now under serious consideration by Harry T. Abrams Publications, the largest, most heavily funded art-book publisher in the country. An enthusiastic response by Harry Abrams editors to Juan's portfolio of visual materials has led to new requests for additional materials, both textual and visual. So far, it looks very promising. I would guess that by the end of the summer we will know whether they are going to go for itor not. And we continue to hang on the edge... William Website address: http://www.spring.com/~wmmeyers
~terry Tue, Sep 9, 1997 (08:53) #2
20 January 1997 To bring all my friends up to date at once, here's what's been happening with me: * I've been working long hours at Columbia University Press, working with designers in the production of books with QuarkXPress; I've also begun taking some classes in basic design & typography at the Fashion Institute of Technology in order to acquire and expand my own skills in book design. And I've been learning how to put this all presentably on a Web site with the assistance of my friend Marc Greene. It's been a long time coming, but the site is due for a major expansion soon, with a new art gallery, among other things. * The Dalai Lama of Tibet -- the Illustrated Life Story has been my major personal project for the last three years. My feeling for a long time has been that the book would be a hot and highly marketable item if it came out before the release of the upcoming movies about the Dalai Lama -- Kundun by Scorsese; Seven Years in Tibet by Annaud; and two or three others in the works, one by Oliver Stone. But the first two movies mentioned are due to be released by the end of 1997, and any book we return to work on now, should a publisher finally offer us a contract, would need at least two years to be produced and distributed. I would anticipate spin-off comic (or graphic-novel) versions of these movies, once the money has been generated to finance them. It's been frustrating for the last year and a half, having conceived of the idea originally and wanting to come out first with the best. Money has been a problem all along in getting the project moving. The first artist I asked to collaborate with me on the book -- Eva Van Dam, the Dutch artist responsible for the graphic novel called The Magic Life of Milarepa, which inspired this one -- demanded $500 a page to produce anything, even as samples to be included in a proposal. Not having great cash reserves, I had no choice but to look for someone else, then met Alex Grey, and in the forging of a new friendship, got his agreement to produce some sample art for interior pages (with the assistance, also volunteer, of Dennis Janke & Marjorie Strauss, of DC Comics); I also paid Alex a token $1,000 for a cover portrait of the Dalai Lama which could probably sell for ten times that much, and it's such a masterwork in itself that it has lent great weight to the proposal package that's been^Emaking the rounds of publishers, and has helped to keep the project alive. Now, after many attempts by my agent Sara Jane Freyman to find a publisher for the book, we finally have one -- Stuart, Tabori & Chang, "the illustrated-book publisher" in New York -- which has expressed enough interest in the project to invite all of us involved with it to their offices for a meeting about it. The editor, Erica Marcus, who called the meeting, liked the idea of a graphic novel based on the life of the Dalai Lama, but had some criticisms of the sample interior pages, particularly the typography, and asked that those pages be done over with some minor changes; and she also asked for eleven additional pages, not in color but finished in black & white -- dealing with the story of the discovery of the young Dalai Lama that brings Part One to an end. She asked for this additional material in order to have a sure sense of our ability to sustain a coherent narrative with a dramatic continuity that's engaging and powerful enough to sell a lot of books. Unfortunately, Alex is no more enamored of rendering sequential art than he ever was -- he just couldn't make the leap, though he gave it a good try -- and has no problem making the money he needs to support his family, being what he undeniably and most fundamentally is: a highly successful painter of visionary art. It was regrettable, I thought, that the art-book editor we met with did not have more appreciation of the potential offered by his being there in her office at all. I was already prepared myself to accommodate Alex to whatever level he felt comfortable with, valuing his collaboration to the greatest extent. But to produce eleven more pages of the Dalai Lama story -- which for Alex can be no other than time-consuming and highly meticulous work, yet with no sure promise of any financial compensation, just the promise to accept the book and push it at the acquisitions meeting -- is, under the circumstances of his life, understandably too much to ask. Even if I were to raise enough money to pay him the $500 apiece for those pages that Eva Van Dam was asking, I think he would probably still prefer not to do it. Having just finished a major work -- an altariece/triptych with seven panels, called The Nature of Mind -- he's hard at work now on his next book. Sara Jane told me after the meeting with the Stuart, Tabori & Chang editor that she thought Erica was right -- that more substantial material for the Dalai Lama story was definitely needed; that this was undoubtedly why the many other publishers who had expressed interest originally had never followed through; and that she saw no point in continuing to offer the book to other publishers, if we couldn't come up with those pages. If only I were an illustrator myself and could realize my own visions in the medium, I would have not only those pages done already but the entire book. That not being the case, I think the lesson that the universe may be giving me to learn now is not to initiate any project that I can't independently see through to completion. I must do what I need to do on my own -- and I must completely minimize my needs, so that I can at least be of some use to the world myself in the time I have left. I will accommodate it and be of service to it however I can. Fortunately, Dennis Janke & Marjorie Strauss, the DC Comics artists who inked and colored Alex's sample pages, are willing to fill in for him and are taking on the task of producing the remaining 77 pages -- if the next 11 that Erica Marcus is asking for help to push it over the top. Mike Zeck, our other mutual friend at DC, will be assisting in some capacity as well. Master as he is of panel art, any assistance he manages to give us will be highly valued and appreciated. And we all hope that Alex will at least remain available for consultation on such matters as Buddhist iconography, where no one of the rest of us feels as knowledgeable as we would like. * The revised edition of Stephen Gaskin's Monday Night Class has not yet found its way to a publisher either. Our editorial work on it has been finished for almost a year now, and our agent Stephany Evans, who had placed it with a great number of publishers, has relinquished it to us as being one she can't do anything more with. She came close with St. Martin's Press, whose enthusiastic editor Jim Fitzgerald, recommended to us by Steve Hager at High Times, wanted to do a back-to-back "classic reprint" of both Monday Night Class and The Caravan, but he couldn't get the approval of his own marketing department, which reflected the opinions of other publishers that it was all "too retro," "too esoteric," "too limited in appeal," and "wouldn't sell enough copies." When even Acid Test Productions in northern California, "out to celebrate the spirit of the '60s," turned down our revised update as being "too dated," Stephany finally bailed out. (Acid Test Productions, incidentally, is another front for the Grateful Dead group head, which had unresolved problems with Stephen and the Farm for years.) Stephany did do a great service for us (and all participants in future home birthings, I would say) by selling Ina May Gaskin's new Spiritual Midwifery: The Next Generation to Simon & Schuster. I think Monday Night Class (as well as its sequel, The Caravan) will be published eventually. It may take more time for the psychedelic culture of the '60s to metamorphose in the cultural consciousness from being a quaint and old-fashioned scene left behind to one that, having acquired the luster of the antique, is rediscovered to be rich in relevance to present-day concerns. Good tripping instructions, whether for psychedelic trips or the trip through life, are always relevant. In the meantime, as a short-term fix and possibly the only way to get it published, I think it would be necessary to re-title the book (nobody but a rapidly depopulating subculture knows what Monday Night Class is or was, and it sounds boring and like a tedious read); and also add a lot more visuals from the San Francisco and northern- California scene in the '60s, not necessarily MNC-related, in order to give it a more general and wide-ranging scope. In other words, I think it needs to be transformed from an updated "classic" eries of talks to a revelation and celebration of the formative years of a unique and beautiful subculture that, in one form or another, still lives and flourishes -- with the present text presented as a running scriptural subtext within an art-and-caption-heavy context. Meanwhile, Stephen has published a new book, Cannabis Spirituality, with High Times Publications, and thinks that if its sales take off after the upcoming promotional tour, Monday Night Class -- the New Edition might sell as a good follow-up. And he may be right. I suspect that question will have to be resolved before any agreement can be made to change the title, much less to radically revise the basic concept, structure and format. * We've had high hopes for The Culture of the Huichol, a proposed book of essays by three PhD anthropologists (Jay Fikes and Philip & Acelia Weigand) and a scholar of art and comparative religion (Juan Negrmn, who has spent the last 25 years working for the preservation of the Huichol culture and ecology), old friends of long standing, dating back to the days when our family livedin Guadalajara. Over the last three decades, they've produced a substantial body of work, both in scholarly research and in the field, on the most prominent of the best preserved and most traditional of meso-American cultures (in Mexico's Sierra Madre Occidental). With its heavy emphasis on the spiritual and visionary art and ceremony of these cultures, the book could conceivably hold some spectacular color inserts; in any case, art and photography in some format, at least partially in black and white, would be included. This extensive collection of material had been offered at first to the Smithsonian Institution as providing the foundation for an extensive meso-American exhibit that might be appropriate for its National Museum of the American Indian. After it was turned down (an upcoming exhibit at a yet to be determined gallery in New York City is now in the works), the same material was passed on to John Michel, the acquisitions editor of social/political/anthropological books at CUPress, and he went for it, with enthusiasm. He's a collector of folk art himself, it turns out, and he would have liked, if he had had his way, to publish the kind of large-format book with color that the material deserves. But it first had to pass a "peer review" by three reputable scholars in the field (common practice with an academic press); then pass approval by the publisher; by an acquisitions committee; a marketing committee; and finally a publications committee composed of members of the board of trustees. Unfortunately, but all too typically, John Michel took it first to the Columbia University Press marketing committee, and they (i.e., the head of the department) turned it down with the comment, "Latin American stuff doesn't sell." I thought that was one of the more obtuse things I ever heard to rationalize a rejection, and let that opinion be known probably more than I should have, since I also work there -- but I couldn't help it. It was a resounding confirmation of what I've been hearing for some time now, about how the entire publishing industry is now so profit-driven (even nonprofit academic presses, struggling to break even) that it's directed primarily by its marketing departments -- for whom the editors are now loyal assistants ("product managers"), and from whom approval must be obtained, or any project must be assumed to be dead in the water. John Michel suggested we try the Universities of Texas, New Mexico or Arizona, who are more inclined to handle "Latin American stuff," but for the most part he lost my respect for his editorial counsel, having caved in immediately and most obsequiously to the marketing department's offhand assessment (he didn't even show it to them). But then, how can he be blamed, when the truly independent editors have either resigned or been fired, and those who have been retained know their place and the limits of their power, and hang on to their jobs by not making waves? * Without promise, without hope, life wouldn't be worth living. But, so far, even in the face of consistent rejection over the last few years, there has been no shortage of new and hopeful engagements to turn to, and new sources of encouragement and support. My agent Sara Jane told me in my last conversation with her that she had just last year sold a beautiful full-color book on the Lacandon subculture of the Maya Indians to one of New York's major art-book publishers (Abrams, I think), with an accompanying first-person account of efforts to preserve its culture and environment. When I told her about Juan Negrmn and his 25-year effort to help the Huichol culture attain greater self- sufficiency, defend its traditions and protect its environment, she said she would be very interested in seeing what we could come up with that had to do with that endangered culture as well. So now I'm putting together a new proposal for that one. Saludos, amigos. Wm E-mail addresses: wmmeyers@tuna.net (home -- nights, weekends) wm64@columbia.edu (work -- weekdays) Website URL: http://www.spring.com/~wmmeyers
~terry Thu, Feb 5, 1998 (22:25) #3
Latest from William: 3 February 1998 This is to let you know that Christine is in the middle of her eight-month trip through southeast Asia, and, after a month in India, is currently trekking in Nepal, with a home base in Kathmandu. She can be contacted there during the first two weeks of February and, wherever she may be on this trip (Thailand and Vietnam are next), by phone and e-mail: Telephone: 1-800-864-8000 206-548-0061# press 1 leave message E-mail: cmeyers38@hotmail.com Mail: c/o Heather Harder 502 South Fremont Avenue, Apt. 622 Tampa, FL 33606 Christine's friend Heather will be leaving on the 24th of this month to rendezvous with her in Bangkok. She will be bringing her any mail we send her. Christine sends her love to everybody and says she looks forward to getting back in August and visiting with us all soon after that. Love to all William
~terry Mon, Oct 4, 1999 (11:21) #4
Something recent by William, who I haven't heard from for a while: http://www.newstrolls.com/news/dev/wmeyers/index.html "This has been a century of war. Ever since the Great War delivered a traumatic blow to civilization�s sense of permanence and security, the world has endured an unending scourge of increasingly genocidal wars. With the exponential growth of world population and the inevitable conflicts among self-serving and expansive nations, the triumph of militarism as the primary means of conflict resolution has been all but assured. Add a blind dedication to perpetual economic growth, and the result for all of us has been the devastation of life, habitat, and cultural heritage on a formerly unimaginable scale. Many of us have grown used to the enormities and pay little heed to the less than awesomely devastating while whole peoples and cultures�not to mention species and ecosystems�are systematically destroyed. Yet some cultures and systems of belief have evolved to a degree of such beauty and complexity�and what sometimes seems to be a level of enlightened wisdom�that we can�t help but take notice of their fragility, and feel moved to take some action to save them, because their destruction is simply too painful to watch."
~sprin5 Wed, Jul 19, 2000 (12:30) #5
We do then to overlook these momentous shifts in species and plant life in the morass of sensationalism on the news.
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