Dean Lipton’s Reign at the San Francisco Writers Workshop, 1960-1992

by Kitty Costello

Dean Lipton: A Portrait

Crossing Civic Plaza
every Tuesday evening—
a figure tall with hooked coat,
his gait pivotal,
a book bag slung shoulder high
accenting the triangular outline,
the bag clinking faintly;
within, the books and papers and empty tuna cans.
His voice, in parallel discongruity,
rumbling kindness through his layers of awesome monumentality.
He was a walking cave
glimmering sound.

   —Elinor Randall (aka Randy)

Every Tuesday evening, just before 7 p.m., Dean Lipton would lumber into the first floor Lurie Room in the old Main Library with his City Lights shoulder bag filled with a clatter of old tuna fish cans, which he would pass out as ashtrays to all the smokers. (Yes, you could smoke in the library in those days.) Just inside the front door, each of us would be greeted by kindly old Rusty Evans, a playwright—always wearing his signature canvas fishing hat—ever-present with his yellow legal pad, collecting names and addresses of every writer who walked in. This tradition began because Dean had seen more than one cherished writer suddenly disappear, with no way to find out if they were okay or what became of them or their work, and he didn’t want that to ever happen again.

Old Main Reading Room, SFPL archive

Dean would sit at a table up front as if on stage, with a reader’s chair pulled up beside him, while we, the “audience,” sat in straight rows arranged like theatre seats. This is in contrast to later moderators’ preference for having a circle of chairs. Dean would call us up one by one to sit next to him and read our work. Sometimes he would look over the pages as the reader set them aside. (There were no shared copies back in the days of typewriters, so he was the only one who got a look at the printed words. Everyone else just listened.) Always he would have one of his Pall Mall straights burning. He was often seen with his elbow resting on the table, his chin propped on his upturned palm, his cigarette dangling between his fingers, the smoke curling up beside his head, a rapt attention on his face, the ash on his cigarette growing longer and longer and longer, until he would finally go to flick it, and the ash would invariably fall off on the table before he made it to the tuna can ashtray. After the reader finished, he’d ask in his big, gruff, cave of a voice, “Okay, what are the comments?” and a lively discussion would ensue.

No one can properly envision the Workshop during Dean’s reign without recalling Dean’s astonishing appearance. He was a towering hulk of a man with a terrible sagging wound on the whole right side of his face. Once handsome, he had been mutilated by the slip of a surgeon’s knife, which severed a facial nerve, leaving his eye, his cheek and the right side of his mouth paralyzed. His lower eyelid hung down and teared constantly. His sagging cheek puffed out with air as he spoke, making his speech often difficult to understand, and this was after several corrective surgeries. As writer Daniel Borgstrom so bluntly put it: “Dean looked like a wax figure that was left too close to an open flame.”

In addition to his appearance, Dean was known for his growling, blunt and dictatorial manner, which kept in check the boisterous ego of many an opinionated writer. Yet he could be most kind and candidly supportive, bursting forth with a shower of praise for writers whose work showed promise. He had an almost boyish enthusiasm, and more than one generation of writers gratefully benefitted from his irascible guidance. In his own writing, Dean championed underdog causes, a spirit that came in no small part from being a (very secular) Jew who had lived through the Second World War.

Some complained that Dean had no manners, but it was more like he was unaware that manners existed. Truth-seeking mattered more than any of that. He followed his own whims, letting certain comments be made while cutting others short in an often-autocratic way. Yet there was a method to his growls and barks. For one thing, he had no tolerance for pretentiousness, literary or otherwise, and he would quickly put a stop to any bombast. If he was excited about a writer’s work, he might exclaim something like, “You could be the next Jack London!” Or he could be painfully honest if he felt the need, barking things like, “Your characters are flat. If you don’t learn to make them real, you’ll never be a writer.” He also used his gruffness to protect writers from abusive comments, rudely yelling things like, “Shuddup! You don’t know what you’re talking about,” to stop others from being rude. He understood the devastating impact overly-harsh criticism could have and admonished us to use care because, “That writer might go home and not write another word for six months!” I had the feeling he was speaking from experience, both as the critic and the critiqued.

Dean’s greatest passion was understanding the creative mind and human genius at work. (In 1970, he published a book called Faces of Crime and Genius, telling the remarkable stories of several nefarious geniuses from history.) He fervently believed in each writer’s own creative spark, encouraging each unique, individual voice. He detested formulaic writing. “Writers should grow like weeds,” he would say, and he cut short comments that seemed to him like too much “pruning.” He would likely not be happy to see today’s ubiquity of MFA programs and graduates.

Back then the group was peppered with lots of Depression-era leftists, Beat and hippie poets, and union organizer types, who gave the Workshop an anti-establishment, fight-for-the-little-guy undercurrent, very much in line with Dean’s own sentiments. On the whole, we could be a scruffy lot, Dean included.

A doctor named Phil (no, not that Dr. Phil) touched into those underdog sentiments when he read his travelogues that depicted ritzy, lavish globe-trotting. A wave of objections arose from those who disapproved of the way Phil reveled in his opulent lifestyle. Dean cut their protests short, reminding us, “We’re here to discuss what the man wrote, not how he lives. If I were to travel, I’d sleep under a bridge,” said Dean, “but that’s beside the point.” Later Phil read a draft of an article lamenting the plight of physicians who were being sued for malpractice by greedy scam artists. Who knows how Dean, who had sued his own doctor for malpractice, felt about that. He gave only his usual detailed, technical critique of the author’s craft. With so many ragtag writers attending the group back then, you could tell that Dean relished the prestige and validation of having a doctor-writer in our midst, so he gave Phil plenty of latitude.

Dean was a stickler for factual and historic accuracy, both in his own writing and in the writing of others. He would tolerate long discussions if it was a matter of getting the facts straight. He especially relished the chance to parade his own considerable knowledge when a writer touched upon a subject he had studied deeply, especially if the subject was Native Americans, the nature of genius, the American frontier, or the literary history of San Francisco. In his own writing, he liked to weave factual tales with many intricate twists and turns revealed one by one, point by point, highlighting the range of opinions on the subject, then revealing his own finely-wrought conclusion.

He was most comfortable commenting on prose, and non-fiction was his forté. He would facilitate the group’s response to poetry but would comment on poems only sparingly. “Poetry is hard to criticize,” he would say, giving a wide berth for the inner process of the individual poet. One young regular, Andrew Wells, who attended in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, read poems full of incomprehensible yet compelling images. For example:

Sight owed to the windows, even blue;
machines look askance from the
Conquistadors of Beef
who look askance at each other…

One night after the group had engaged in a lengthy discussion of the possible meaning of one of Andy’s poems, Dean burst forth, “Andy, you’re either a total genius or you’re full of bull. We can’t understand it well enough to tell.”

Dean’s own creative process was seriously derailed by his ill-fated surgery, and he could barely write for years afterward. In his 1978 book, Malpractice: Autobiography of a Victim, Dean describes the Writers Workshop as his lifeline, keeping him in touch with people, with writing, and with the creative process. When so many aspects of his life had been turned upside down, Dean’s role as moderator gave him an ongoing stature and sense of dignity, which might otherwise have been lost. Workshop-veteran Leonard Irving described Dean as “a frustrated swashbuckler who wanted to be a war hero or Jim Bowie or a desperado, saddled and bridled and riding into the sunset, but he never got within five feet of a horse, and his dashing looks were robbed from him so suddenly.”

Dean stayed up late every night, most often hanging out in North Beach cafes and bars, wrangling with the likes of Kirby Doyle, Howard Hart, Tisa Walden, Neeli Cherkovski and Jack Hirschman. His sleep was nightmarish, he told me, flashing him back again and again to the trauma of his surgery and its aftermath. So he tired himself out by wandering the nighttime streets until the wee hours, finally making his way back to his Cabrillo Street apartment, often just before dawn. If he gave you his phone number, he was sure to say, “Don’t call before 1:00!”

Before life dealt him that fateful blow, Dean Lipton had always been a man who threw himself up against the world, who came out punching before the debate had even begun. Born to a Jewish family in Detroit in 1917, he left home at age fourteen during the Great Depression, traveling the country in boxcars, working menial jobs, living in hobo jungles and migrant camps, then working for various newspapers. He moved to San Francisco in the 1930s and got involved in various leftist groups. Over time he put himself through college, was publicist for various political campaigns, was editor of a Jewish newspaper for a few years, and published numerous articles and books, including a novel. He was also a proud father and grandfather.

Dean was an original thinker who fought for what he believed in. His own writing championed causes about which he felt passionately, and his quest for justice was never roped in by current political fashion. Most notably, his writings on the case of Toguri D’Aquino, the so-called Tokyo Rose, were the first to point out the injustice done to her, and helped eventually to win a pardon for her from President Gerald Ford in the 1970s. Dean wasn’t graceful about agreements and disagreements, but he was exceedingly straightforward in a way that made him someone you knew you could trust.

Though many were understandably ruffled by Dean’s manner, Workshop writers on the whole had an unspoken tenderness for crusty old Dean. Here he was, a giant of a man with an unmistakably scarred face he couldn’t hide, staying in the public eye, holding his head up high, and even commanding respect. His awkward dignity announced that it’s possible to carry on no matter what, an inspiration to others who themselves might have felt damaged or different and felt more of a sense of ease and belonging in the Workshop because of Dean’s lumbering composure under such obvious hardship.

By the late-1980s, more and more people were living on the streets around the library in the Civic Center and the nearby Tenderloin. The Writers Workshop had always had its share of self-professed misfits, but now it began attracting more marginal folks. This included some very talented homeless poets, who always had to worry about their manuscripts being thrown in a dumpster when they were rousted out of wherever they were sleeping. It was no surprise to see Dean being sympathetic and protective of these writers.

When steep budget cuts hit the library in 1988 and the library’s evening hours were cut, there was steep competition for meeting room space, so after more than forty years, the Writers Workshop was summarily given the heave-ho and became homeless. By then I had been working for nine years at the Main Library myself. Knowing the administrators and hearing scuttlebutt from the security guards, I could see that management was relieved to have a legitimate excuse to boot the Workshop out. Dean and the group had gotten too funky for them.

Rescued by State Senator Milton Marks, the Workshop was soon given space in the nearby State Building for several years. Now to attend the group, you had to go through a security checkpoint to get to a small, florescent-lit, windowless conference room, which was not exactly inviting but was considerably better than having no meeting space at all. Without the gravitas of being housed at the library, there were no curious drop-ins. Since the Workshop had never advertised itself, word-of-mouth became the only way to attract new writers, and the group became more insular.

On top of all that, Dean was in his seventies by then, and his stamina was waning. It was not uncommon for him to doze off while someone was reading and to be heard softly snoring. Then he would wake up with a start, embarrassing everyone but himself, and carry on as if he had been paying attention all along. That was in the last few years before he died. Scottish poet and storyteller Leonard Irving was always there as backup whenever needed, and then stepped in to lead the group when Dean died in 1992.

Dean’s funeral gathering was as unlikely and unique as he was. It was held at a surprisingly-posh funeral home on Sutter Street, not far from the library. Writers who had attended through various decades of the Workshop showed up en masse to honor him, gathering around the coffin to see his blessedly-relaxed face, his always-unruly hair pasted down in a way he never would have worn it. Then we were ushered in for the service.

Dean may rank as the most unreligious person I have ever known, a man who was deeply suspicious of “true believers” of all stripes. His two daughters, on the other hand, were Mormons, in from Salt Lake. They had invited a local Mormon minister to lead the service, along with a small choir composed of cherubic-looking young men who had just returned from various missionary stints. Then there was our group of funky, unkempt North Beach and Tenderloin poet types interspersed with clean-cut Mormons and suited morticians.

Thankfully, the Mormon minister grasped the irony of the situation—that here he was, leading a Christian service for a Jewish guy who didn’t believe there’s a god, and doing it in front of a bunch of irreverent San Francisco literati. To his credit, he pulled it off brilliantly, saying, “I understand Solomon Dean Lipton was not one to suffer fools gladly, so I had better keep my comments brief and sit down.”

The floor opened to a tremendous creative outpouring of poems and remembrances. An old college friend from the 1930s recounted how the two of them used to wrangle non-stop all night and day, roping in whoever else they could into the debate. “And remember, he was Jewish!” she said. Gail Kaplan put it all together, saying, “Dean was the real thing in a world that too often isn’t. What you saw was what you got, like it or not. And I did. I liked his growling attitude toward life. I suspect it’s what kept him alive, kept him busy fighting a world that had been most unkind to him.”

One of Dean’s daughters got up and spoke to her dead father, pleading, “Please, Daddy. Please accept Jesus Christ into your heart so we can all be together in the afterlife.” There was awkward silence while everyone imagined Dean’s grumpy response, most likely his signature, “Oh great.” I felt sorry that her Mormon beliefs were making her loss feel even bigger at such a tender time.

Leonard compared Dean to a ship: “Not one of your sleek cabin cruisers but some gaunt ragged schooner that after braving the elements still scorns safe harbor and rests restlessly, ever ready to set sail again to unknown places.” I read a poem about Dean’s restless, wakeful, all-night walks, now finally ending in his last and deepest sleep… his body soon to rest in a Mormon cemetery out in the salt flats! Culture clash and all, this disparate commemoration added up to a most worthy send-off for inimitable Dean.

On the one-year anniversary of his death in 1993, writers gathered again to commemorate him with an even greater outpouring of poems and tales. Afterward, Leonard gathered the various elegies from far-flung Workshop writers, and I edited them into a chapbook, The Dean Lipton Memorial Anthology, published by Grow Like Weeds Press, founded in Dean’s honor.

Leonard ran the Writers Workshop at the State Building for two years after that. His style was very lowkey compared to Dean’s. He didn’t hold himself out as the expert or the last word but simply facilitated the readings and comments. When his partner Randy (aka Elinor Randall) moved back east to Vermont, he began spending summers there with her. It was time to turn the leadership of the workshop over to other reliable hands.

A young Afghan-American man had been coming to the Workshop since the mid-1980s and kept showing up through its ups and downs. I remember Tamim Ansary reading a wide range of works, starting with his translations of the poet Hafez, who I had never heard of until then, and his translations of his own father’s poetry from Farsi. He was hatching an intriguing novel, set in old-world Afghanistan before the Soviet invasion. What a blessing that Tamim stepped in to lead the San Francisco Writer’s Workshop, then moderated it masterfully for 22 years after.

This piece came out of my long participation in the San Francisco Writers Workshop and from interviews I did with several old-timers. It came equally from my lifelong friendship with Leonard Irving, Randy (Elinor Randall), and Daniel Borgstrom. We spent countless hours together around the hearth at their farmhouse, sharing Workshop memories. I can hardly tell anymore which of these words came from them and which came from me.

San Francisco Writers Workshop, an Introduction

by Kitty Costello

The San Francisco Writers Workshop has a long history, so long in fact, that even its oldest living members don’t know exactly when it was founded or who the original moderator was. As close as anyone can figure, it started in 1946 or ‘47 at San Francisco’s Main Library, and has met nearly every Tuesday night since then.

No one has ever disputed the group’s claim to be the longest consecutively-running writing workshop in the country, perhaps even the world. The Workshop has witnessed the rise and fall of the Beat era, the Summer of Love, the assassination of George Moscone and Harvey Milk, the ’89 quake, the advent of personal computers and the web (with the concomitant demise of the typewriter), multiple wars, and two pandemics. It survived a sudden eviction from the Main Library in 1988 and a long nomadic period, meeting everywhere from the Civic Center Burger King to the State Building to noisy cafes to the Rex Hotel, then landing for years at Meridian Gallery near Union Square. In more recent times the group met at Alley Cat Books in the Mission District, on Zoom during COVID, and currently meets at Noisebridge, a collaborative space whose guiding rule is: “Be excellent to each other.” Each Tuesday evening at 7 p.m., yet another generation of writers continues to unfold their sheaves of paper, bringing to life their images, ideas, lyrics and tales for other participants who offer their feedback. No hype. No gimmicks. Just pure, live, original writing and critique.

I first came to the group in my early twenties in 1977, about a month after moving to San Francisco from the DC area. I attended regularly for several years, then drifted in and out of the group again and again, through various eras and incarnations. Now in 2024, it’s been there for me for 47 years, and more importantly, it’s been there for many thousands of writers for more than three quarters of a century.

So why has this workshop lasted so long? What has gone so right? First and foremost, we have to credit the devotion, generosity and constancy of its moderators who have shown up every Tuesday night for over 75 years and led the group… for free! And when it was time to retire, each moderator made sure there was someone to succeed them when they left.

The name of the original moderator has unfortunately been lost in the mists of time. By the time I started in 1977, the oldest participants didn’t know the name anymore, though some had heard that the Workshop was founded by two women. A former moderator told me that a woman named Lois Neville ran the group next, from some unknown date until 1960. Then there was the 32-year tenure of hard-boiled newspaperman Dean Lipton from 1960 until shortly before his death in 1992, followed by a two-year stint from 1992 to 1994 by Scottish poet and raconteur, Leonard Irving, who had long been backup moderator on the rare occasions when Dean couldn’t be there. Acclaimed Afghan-American writer Tamim Ansary was next, leading the Workshop for 22 years from 1994 until 2015. Tamim waited a long time for a likely successor to emerge, then struck upon the innovative solution of having a group of four seasoned participants share the role. The current team of moderators is Kurt Martin, Judy Viertel, Olga Zilberbourg and Monya Baker.

Another reason for the longevity of the San Francisco Writers Workshop is—it’s in San Francisco!—a town known for creative thinking, a counter-culture mecca, a magnet and fertile ground for writing legends like Bret Harte, Dashiell Hammett, Diane di Prima, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg, Armistead Maupin and Alice Walker. People have long come to San Francisco looking for that special free-spirited something, and they find each other.

The set-up of the Workshop has always made it easy and inviting. You can’t beat the price—totally free—and there are absolutely no strings attached. You can come and go as often or as little as you please, as I have done for decades. There are no fund drives, publicity campaigns or membership dues. As Dean Lipton liked to say, “The Workshop doesn’t have members. It has participants.” As such, the group thrives under the power of its own persistent magnetism. For many years now, it has steadily drawn an overflow crowd.

The Workshop has always managed to keep a singular focus on its simple yet powerful mission, and has never gotten sidetracked by glamorizing itself or boasting about its accomplishments. Simply put, the group is humble. Little has been written about the Workshop over the years. The group has simply gone about its business, far below the radar of fashion or trend (though people do get excited to hear that Afghan-American writer Khaled Hossieni, author of the acclaimed novel, Kite Runner, honed his craft here). Any showcasing of its writers has been motivated not by fame or fortune but has most often been done to raise funds for the venues that have so generously donated space for the group to meet.

The Workshop has lasted, too, because it casts a wide net. It has always been open to every kind of writer and writing, welcoming all forms, genres and content—novels, poetry, essays, memoir, short stories, articles, children’s books, plays, biographies, potboilers, porn, travelogues, confessional writings, works published and unpublishable, odes and rants. If you can name it, it’s been read there.

The Workshop has also welcomed every kind of writer—locals and newly arrived writers, wealthy and poor, beginning writers and professionals, college graduates and grade school dropouts, veterans, immigrants, doctors, ex-cons, stockbrokers, exotic dancers, engineers, longshoremen, SSI recipients, techies, students, unhoused people. The lively and ever-changing mix has given generations of writers a safe view into the minds and hearts of others very different from themselves, each allowing themselves to be seen and shaped by these connections across difference.

The deepest of lifetime friendships, romances, and even marriages were forged in the group. (Frank and Hilda Kidder, for example, met at the Workshop—she was a fine arts painter and he was the local “godfather of stand-up comedy,” founding the renowned San Francisco International Comedy Competition.) Over time, these individual connections have woven themselves again and again into the fabric of real community.

As for me, I met three of my own most beloved, lifetime friends at the Workshop, and they each shaped the trajectory of my writing and my life in phenomenal and fundamental ways. They were all considerably older than I, so they are all gone now, but I recorded their memories of the Workshop, as well as interviewing a dozen or so other old-timers. Over the years, people started giving me things related to the Workshop—letters, posters, books, and other artifacts—so I initiated an SFWW archive in the San Francisco History Room at the new Main Library, donating most of what I was given. The stories I have to tell about the Workshop come from what I witnessed and what so many others confided.

Continue reading the first chapter, Dean Lipton, 1960-1992

Ballad for a Scottish Bard

for Leonard Irving, 1924-2016 (San Francisco Writers Workshop Moderator for a few years, starting in the late 1980s until 1993)
by Kitty Costello

Scottish poet and latter-day bard, his words brimming
with ancient Celtic magic, rebellion, song
barren borderland childhood infusing lifelong
bristle and grit for working stiffs, for despised bourgeoisie
preeminent 20th-century spokesman on behalf
of drifters, tinkers, vagabonds, drunkards
wayfarers, outcasts and the like 

born in a wee cottage in Dundrennan Village
dreary southwest coast of Scotland, midst Depression times
“flitting” from place to place for his father to find work—
in Castle Douglas, in far off Banwell Village in Somerset
always the outsider in a new place

craving adventure and escape, joined the Home Guard at 16
the Royal Marines in ’41, a sharpshooter surviving
two ships being shot out from under him
four-fifths of the crew lost in the second
off the coast of France

took to drink early, thirsting
for freedom from cold and mournful moors
for grand exploits and warmer climes
joined the Merchant Marines, sailed hither and thither
to farflung shores, seafaring to South America and back
sojourning in the Falklands, lingering as Canary Island beachcomber

nomad, rambler, gallivanter, settled in New York in ‘52
discovering his passion for wordsmithing
enraptured with James Joyce, Dylan Thomas
befriended by lefty literati who lauded him
as the voice of the genuine proletariat
hitchhiked back and forth across North America
innumerable times, a drifter drifting his way to San Francisco
to its rough and tumble Tenderloin of the 1970s

nurtured his literary fervor and his love of drink
in equal measure, beloved regular at library workshop
at open mics around town—Sacred Grounds, Yakety Yak
Harrington’s Bar, Grady’s Bar, Keane’s 3300 Club
his uncontrolled binges landing him in hospital again and again
he’d return ghostly to the mic, find his footing

a friend, partisan and chronicler of roustabouts, vagrants,
barkeeps, reprobates and fellow wandering minstrels
a champion of the working man everywhere
though his finest knack was perhaps avoiding work
altogether, being once carefully schooled in how
to feign madness to quality for SSI, better known as the dole
living 20-some years in grand SRO style
at the rowdy Elk Hotel on Eddy Street

said yes to any summons to read, bringing down the house
at Edinburgh Castle on Geary St., at rollicking ceilidhs
his Scottish burr overflowing, entrancing, his rrrolling of rrr’s
rrresounding like ancient song, old world music come alive
both blessed and cursed by the magic others heard in his voice
once penning a poem entitled “Vitriolic Curses:
dedicated to all those who said I could read
the telephone directory and it would sound good”

cherished partaker at the Institute for Celtic Studies
reveling in old world spirits, myth, enchantment
in Irish rebels and balladeers, at home amongst
Blarney Stone raconteurs, harpers, myth weavers,
poets, scholars and Wiccan priestesses
such as the likes of Randy, his life partner to be
with her West Oakland “farm,” her yard full
of chickens, geese, dogs, ducks, cats
and turkeys who had grazing rights in the neighbor’s yard

moving in with her and joining AA
though not necessarily in that order
scavenged clothing from giveaway piles
lumber from construction sites under the freeway
dragging home whatever wasn’t nailed down
spending countless song- and poem-filled evenings
among friends, around her overflowing table, around the hearth, until
longing for seasons and rain, she packed to move back east
to ancestral Vermont homeland, her farm menagerie
and Wedgewood stove in tow, in cross-country caravan splendor

for 16 years he summered in Vermont, May to October
wintered in San Francisco, November to April
finally moving to Vermont full time in o-eight
spending his days puttering and lounging, though not
a shirker, slacker or slouch, painted the eaves, hung the sheets
wrote poems, mended fences, turned soil, spent long afternoons
nattering with neighborly callers, tended horses and hens
chopped wood, built the winter fires, provided
a ready lap and tender pets for many a fine feline
pilfered hard cider from hidden vats in the basement
whenever he could, reading whenever asked
never missing the yearly winter celebration of Rrrobbie Burrrns
dubbed “the Jack Kerouac of Vermont”
by local journalist for his on-the-road escapades
having crisscrossed the U.S. and Mexico umpteen times

by now, creating a world-class barn museum abounding
with ancient rusted wheels, shovels, hammerheads, saws
plough blades, barrows, hasps, struts, stirrups, pry bars
winches and the like, hundreds of them, gathered
on his treks around their land, and at age 91
still out in the back forty felling trees for firewood
though always refusing to operate large motorized machinery
preferring the limits of 19th century hand-hewn work

no care for publication or posterity, though Randy and friends
had long ago gathered and published his poems and stories
typed over decades on manual typewriter, into multiple books
at Stone Circle Press, recorded his reading voice, saved for good

lucky stiff, literally, dying as he did at age 92
in the wee hours before election day morning, 2016
never having to know what the rest of us were in for

kept every last marble until that final night on earth
when the boarder from the far side of the farmhouse
came in to find him hosting a grand party
with invisible Scottish and Irish word wizards and revolutionaries
come to shepherd him to the other side—
William Wallace, Robert the Bruce, Robbie Burns, Michael Collins
Sean O’Casey, Joyce, Yeats, Lady Gregory, Dylan Thomas
the whole grand lot, toasts all around
Leonard proclaiming that all would be well because
the Irish genius for communication would save the world
“Are you a rrrevolutionary, Paula?” he asked the boarder
and she hesitated, not sure what to say
“You say, YES,” I later told her on our walk
out to the graveside, “You say YES!”

buried out in the tiny back-forty cemetery, its chest-high walls
stacked stone by stone by hand as in the old country
just east of the stone circle erected on their land
just west of the stone chamber sighting the solstice rays of sun
the neighbor having retrieved his body
from the hospital morgue, he lay resting there
in the back of the pickup as we pondered
how to get him out of the plastic zip body bag
and into the simple white sheet, the shroud
we used to lower him as gently as we could into the grave
with him still sporting his silly pajama bottom pants
covered with dancing penguin clowns with pointed hats
no doubt acquired from the same ever-abundant free box
where every stitch of his clothing ever came from

we stood in a broad circle reading poems
his “Dirge for an Old Warrior,” telling tales, singing songs
sharing shots of 12-year-old Macallan single malt Scotch
remembering this man so frugal he had money left over each month
from his pittance of a government check, who once
gave himself the challenge of going an entire month in San Francisco
without spending a single cent, ate every bite of food
at soup kitchens and traveled only on the shoe-leather express

another friend recounting how when he picked Len up
at the Burlington Airport, when he finally moved full-time
from San Francisco to Vermont, Len had stepped off the plane
with only a gym bag full of earthly goods, and when the friend said,
“Let’s go get the rest of your stuff at baggage claim,”
Leonard held up the tiny bag and said, “This is it”

on strips of parchment we penned our memories and prayers
dropping them one by one with our flowers into the casketless grave
each friend shoveling a spade of soil atop his earthly remains
while singing Randy’s favorite Irish tune, “Isn’t it Grand Boys”—
  “to be bloody well dead. Let’s not have a sniffle
  let’s have a bloody good cry, and always remember
  the longer you live, the sooner you bloody well die”
the Vermont wind carrying                our voices                    away

10/21