ABSTRACT

"In the course of an impressive career as a writer, Herbert Gold has demonstrated many gifts, among them his talent for mak-ing high drama of ordinary events, ordinary people." -Chicago Tribune Book World

"Gold...has a sharp eye for detail."-The Washington Times Magazine

"Not just a good book, but a great one."-Daily Mail (London)

"Herbert Gold... gives his stories a wry, bright air of wonder...he is a born storyteller."-New York Times

"One of the most gifted writers in America."-Detroit Times

Important writers are expected to gather together collections of their shorter works-the obligatory book of stories or essays. In this collection, Herbert Gold discards convention, and instead combines fiction and non-fiction themes that have been important to him as a writer and social thinker. This "interchange between fact and fiction," as Gold writes, "presents the picture of an American mind wrestling with the American mentality." And that mind ranges wide: from the miseries of Haiti to the disasters of Biafra; from the new universities and the beatniks and hippies of San Francisco in the 1960s to the literary life and encounters with random violence, love, death, and sexuality in the present.

Portions of this book have been published in periodicals as varied as Esquire and Look, Hudson Review, and Tri-Quarterly, and some appear here for the first time. For this edition, Gold bridges the sections with new introductions, which link the specific works, the times, and his life. The book includes the savage and moving story "A Death on the East Side," and his meditation on the doom of Biafra and the meaning of its fate. He has added two new essays, "King of the Cleveland Beatniks," about his brother, and "Quality Time with Sonny Barger," about the former president of the Hell's Angels Oakland Chapter. These show his consistent interest in what many would see as the margins of social life.

Of the title, the author writes: "The Magic Will" seeks to make the real world unreal and magical, and the unreal and magical world practical and real." Amusing, touching, playful, ultimately deeply serious, this book by Herbert Gold further illuminates the mind and heart of a superb writer. It will be a joy to those interested in the humanities, as well as cultural history and social awareness in the broadest sense.

Herbert Gold is a novelist, short story writer, essayist, and occasional journalist, who has made his living as a writer for fifty years.

chapter 1|9 pages

Programming The Peculiar Things

chapter 2|18 pages

A Selfish Story: A Story

chapter 3|21 pages

The Magic Will

chapter 4|33 pages

A Death On The East Side: A Story

chapter |11 pages

A Survival

chapter |14 pages

A Day With The Bogeyman

chapter |16 pages

A Haitian Gentleman: A Story

chapter |13 pages

Max And The Pacemaker: A Story

chapter |19 pages

The Older Woman: A Story

chapter |8 pages

Letter From A Far Frat

chapter 16|11 pages

Waiting For The Forty-One Union: A Story

chapter 17|9 pages

From Proust To Dada: A Story

chapter 18|8 pages

Young Man, Old Days: A Story

chapter 19|18 pages

My Summer Vacation In Biafra: A Journal

chapter 21|10 pages

Stories I Guess I Wont Write

chapter 23|19 pages

King Of The Cleveland Beatniks: A Memoir