Memoirs of a beatnik
Page 14
Gobs of words would go off to New York whenever the rent was due, and come back with "MORE SEX" scrawled across the top page in Maurice's inimitable hand, and I would dream up odd angles of bodies or weird combinations of humans and cram them in and send it off again. Sometimes I'd wander the house looking
Afterword
for folks to check things out with: "Lie down," I'd say, "I want to see if this is possible." And they would, clothed, and we would find out, in a friendly disinterested way, if a particular contortion was viable, and stand up again, completely not turned on, and go about our business.
By noon or one I would have had enough for the day, and close up shop, and wander off to Japantown for raw fish and sake, which I had discovered was the only way to acclimate to the rain and mist and seawind that were a constant on the panhandle. (Eucalyptus trees in fog, the smell of them and dog shit, and the gas fire in the tiled fireplace, is what I remember about those mornings.) After lunch there was play, and beads, and politics, and "real" writing, and all the business and pleasure of those busy days.
And the book got finished, and when the grant came I used it to buy off the husband who had returned from India; and then the scene got heavier and sadder, and the FBI started to show up everyday, and it seemed like time to close up shop and move to the backwoods. All that is another story.
Diane di Prima San Francisco
Autumn Equinox, 1987
Biography
Diane di Prima was born in Brooklyn, New York, a second generation American of Italian descent. She began writing at the age of seven, and made the decision to live her life as a poet at the age of fourteen. She lived in Manhattan for many years, where she was known as the most important woman writer of the Beat movement. During that time she co-founded the New York Poets Theatre, and founded the Poets Press, which published the work of many new writers of the period. Together with Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) she edited the literary newsletter The Floating Bear. In 1965 she moved to upstate New York where she participated in Timothy Leary's psychedelic community at Millbrook.
For the past twenty years she has lived and worked in northern California, where she took part in the political activities of the Diggers, lived in a late-sixties' commune, studied Zen Buddhism, Sanskrit and alchemy, and raised her five children. From 1980 to 1986, she taught hermetic and esoteric traditions in poetry, in a short-lived but significant program at New College of California. Her work has been translated into over twenty languages.
She now lives and works in San Francisco, where she is one of the co-founders and teachers of the San Francisco Institute of Magical and Healing Arts. Her current works-in-progress include Not Quite Buffalo Stew, a satire of California life; an autobiographical memoir, Recollections of My Life as a Woman; and a book on Shelley as magician/poet.