I am reading, for the second time, the unique and wonderful novel A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole. The setting is New Orleans which, though I lived there just 18 years, I consider my home town to this day.
They were important, formative years. I arrived just after I turned 20 and I departed about when I hit 40. In between I spent 16 months in San Juan, Puerto Rico, but that was just a diversion.
In New Orleans I met, married and divorced my first wife and spawned my daughter, not necessarily in that order. Later I met the woman who would become my second wife. My track record with Gringa spouses is dreadful.
My first father-in-law was an often-violent alcoholic carpenter. My second was an often-commited schizophrenic. Many years and children later, they finally made him placid via medication.
The first was a Louisiana sort. The second was from St. Louis, or somewhere around there. A Confederacy of Dunces‘ lead character, Ignatius J. Reilly, lived on Constantinople Street with his mother in a house of disarray, which got me to thinking about my first in-laws.
They lived in a shack in Kenner, a small municipality on the outskirts of the New Orleans area. The carpenter built the house himself in the woods and years later, Kenner grew up around that shack.
Picture this: A small, wooden house sitting on brick pilings. You step into the front door and see an engine block on the living room floor. Other junk litters the area. Off to the right is the kitchen where years of grease hang like small stalactites from the ceiling.
The father-in-law, Bud, who was sober more often than not, thank God, would be sitting at the formica table, drinking chicory coffee, smiling and talking. His artworks, on poster paper, were tacked to the wall. He was very talented.
The mother-in-law, Violet, would be standing by the old stove, cooking and chain-smoking Picayune cigarettes. Picayune packs hilariously proclaimed themselves Extra Mild. Those cigarettes would choke a mule if only mules had the habit.
There were two small bedrooms in the back. I rarely set foot there, but a hallway led to the sole bathroom on the left. This is where it gets goofy. Due to a rotted hole in the floor, you could sit on the porcelain throne and look between your legs to the ground beneath the shack.
I often expected to fall through, but I never did.
There were dogs outside, lots of dogs, because they were rednecks.
In the unkempt yard sat an old DeSoto. I’m guessing the make and year, probably about a 1948.
This looks about right.
I recall just one ride, a night when Bud drove us to a pizza parlor. The seat springs were shot and so were the shock absorbers. We undulated down the street like a ship at sea.
Ignatius J. Reilly would have looked all right in that car.
I recommend the novel to you. It won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981 and had been published posthoumously after the author commited suicide at 31.
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