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Arts

Of vice and men: Family publishes Sydney Blair’s posthumous short story collection

After writer and UVA professor Sydney Blair died unexpectedly in December 2016 due to complications from pancreatitis, her children, Tom and Abbie Swanson, found a manuscript-in- progress titled Honorable Men: And Other Stories. When they revealed their discovery to their mother’s longtime friend, Sheila McMillen, she agreed to serve as editor to finish the work.

It proved to be a challenge, McMillen says, to piece together the collection, which explores the “complicated relationships between men and women.” More than half of the stories in the table of contents Blair drafted had been previously published in literary magazines. And while some of those magazines continue to thrive, such as Callaloo and The Texas Review, others no longer exist, which made it difficult to track down all of the stories. As a result, McMillen had to make some editorial decisions, selecting other stories to round out the book. Some she re-typed from print copies when they couldn’t locate digital files.

After McMillen sent Tom and Abbie the assembled collection, Abbie says, “I laid them out and Mom’s voice came through crystal clear.” McMillen agrees. “If you know Sydney, you will hear her voice, the way she would look at things and phrase things,” she says.

In one particular story, “Route 80: Wyoming,” Blair draws on the experience of driving with her daughter from New York to Oakland. As a reporter and producer now based in Los Angeles, Abbie says, “I was always moving around looking for the next good job.” Her mother, who joined her three or four times on her cross-country drives, “was very encouraging of all of our crazy plans for the things we wanted to do with our lives,” Abbie says.  In the story, that support is tested by fear when a man poses a potential threat to her daughter’s safety.

As she ordered the stories, McMillen says intuition guided her sense of how they would build to the final story, the titular “Honorable Men.” That piece examines, from the perspective of two veterans, what the past can and cannot give us.

“Her understanding of men, and writing from their perspectives, is a hallmark of her work,” Tom says.

“Some of the men are not so honorable, so there’s a kind of ironic quality,” in the title, McMillen says. The characters in these stories, “are often quite intelligent, but they don’t really know their own mind. They are easily led by their emotions, the men especially.”

For Abbie, her mother’s deftness at crafting characters of either sex stems from the person she was. “She was so patient and thoughtful, and made everyone feel like she was concerned with them and focused on them. That’s why her stories are so good. She took the time, making sure she got the people right on the page.”

In the last year of her life, McMillen recalls, Blair was busy and happy. She traveled to California and England, and bought a house on the Rappahannock River, where she intended to spend summers with her grandchildren. She had plans to climb Mount Whitney, retracing the steps of her great-grandfather, Hubert Dyer, who made the climb in 1890 and would become a charter member of the Sierra Club. She had begun writing a novella about Dyer and was at work on Honorable Men.

“I think, had Sydney lived, she would have sent the book out for publication,” McMillen says. So when she and Blair’s children had trouble finding an interested publisher for a posthumous collection, they decided to publish it themselves. Once local artist Rosamond Casey—a mutual friend of Blair and McMillen—finished designing the cover, they were ready to go to print.

Currently available at New Dominion Bookshop, the book will eventually be available at the UVA Bookstores and online. Copies will also be housed at the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library, UVA Library and in UVA’s Special Collections. The inaugural recipient of the Sydney Hall Blair Fellowship for Creative Writing, a fund established by her family after her death, will receive a copy of Honorable Men, along with Blair’s novel Buffalo, this fall.

“In today’s world when everything is so fast-paced and we’re so focused on our devices,” Abbie says, “it’s nice to have good literature in front of you and stories that make you want to stop and reread it. That’s a rare find these days.”

For Tom, the publication of Honorable Men is “an opportunity for other people to have a little bit of insight into who she was. And it’s another opportunity to remember and celebrate her.”

“If Tom, Abbie, and I hadn’t done it, these stories would’ve disappeared,” McMillen says. “We didn’t want that to happen. For all of us, it’s a way to keep her voice alive in the world.”

Categories
Arts

Writer Sydney Blair lives on through her work and collective memory

University of Virginia professor and writer Sydney Blair was generous with her time. The author of Buffalo, winner of the Virginia Prize for Fiction in 1991, could often be found in her office having a one-on-one conference with a student—she was an integral part of UVA’s MFA program, first as an administrator and then as an associate professor, since her own graduation from the program in 1986. Blair, who died December 12 at age 67, following a sudden illness, was also one of the inaugural faculty advisers for the literary magazine Meridian. In addition, she pushed for the creation of a literary prose concentration for undergraduates, taught the popular Writers in Paris class and spearheaded an undergraduate creative nonfiction course. Her legacy at UVA lives on through a memorial fund her family set up to help support students in the MFA program.

Sheila McMillen, a writer and editor, remembers well when she met Blair: October 15, 1985, the day Allen Ginsberg spoke at UVA. “I was new to Charlottesville,” McMillen says. “People kept telling me, ‘You have to meet Sydney Blair.’ We hit it off very quickly.”

For 10 years they worked across the hall from each other and remained friends after McMillen left the university. Blair once told her, “I came to writing through life. Through living and realizing I wanted to write about it.”

Blair’s novel Buffalo is a middle-life bildungsroman that takes place in Charlottesville. It follows protagonist Ray McCreary from service in the Vietnam War, to his untethered life afterward and through the relationship he develops with Vivian, a painter who works as a server at The Virginian, a local institution since 1923. Without asking overt questions about the trauma of war, the novel explores one man’s quest for significance, for something worth fighting for.

“One of the things Sydney did very well was write from a male point of view,” McMillen says. “Though her portraits of men are sympathetic, she’s very gimlet-eyed about them. …She was able to balance between being inside their heads and revealing things that you as a reader would see as limitations.”

Not only did Blair receive the Virginia Prize for Fiction for Buffalo, but she was also sent many buffalo trinkets and knickknacks following the book’s publication. McMillen says that Blair once remarked, “Had I known that was going to happen, I would have called it Diamonds.”

It’s Blair’s sense of humor, lightness and amiability that those close to her will miss the most.

McMillen attributes these qualities to the fact that Blair grew up in a Navy family, moving often. “She was always the new kid,” she says. “She was very flexible around people and put them at ease quickly. She was a very cheerful person. You were always happy to see her. Everyone was happy to see Sydney.”

Ann Beattie, a former UVA professor of English and creative writing, first met Blair in 1975. She even rented a house from her at one point on the Cobham property where Blair lived, which McMillen says bears some resemblance to the one featured in Buffalo, complete with copperheads. Beattie writes in an e-mail, “Privately and professionally, Sydney was always eager to hear about what mattered to you, and while she didn’t give advice directly, she had an amazing ability to lead you toward discovering the hidden joke in what you thought was tragic, or the problem implied in the plan you thought you’d so brilliantly figured out. She was always at least one step (and often half a mile) ahead of you.”

Friend and colleague Jeb Livingood says, “She was always this very bright and optimistic presence. Always laughing and finding the humor and joy in everything. It wasn’t cavalier or blithe or naïve. She had a sort of wicked sense of humor, she was often seeing the idiosyncrasies of what was going on in the situation. It was that sort of humor she brought to every occasion.”

Jason Coleman, who first befriended Blair through the MFA program in 1997, says he will remember her presence most, and then her voice. He writes in an e-mail, “It’s very painful to think I’ll never hear that voice again—that very quick, intense way she had of speaking, her exuberant laugh. Sometimes we got together to play music, and I will miss that delicate singing voice more than I can say.”

McMillen recalls traveling with Blair last spring to London. They were on their way to see the musical Sunny Afternoon, based on music by The Kinks, when Blair made a beeline to a man standing on the corner and asked him, “Is it you?” It turned out to be none other than Ray Davies of The Kinks. Blair told him she’d been a fan since she was 13. Later, McMillen knocked on Blair’s hotel room door and found her dancing and blasting The Kinks from her cell phone. “That’s a consoling memory,” McMillen says. “She was as happy as I ever saw her.”

McMillen, who lived near Blair, says, “We were in each other’s lives and pockets.” Even now, a month later, her dog keeps leading her up the steps to Blair’s front door. “So now comes the long art of learning to live without my friend,” McMillen says. “It’s hardly an art.”

Categories
News

In brief: Payne, Ross outta here, Woodriff buying arena and more

Payne, Ross closing

When politicians need flack assistance stat, there’s one number they call: Payne, Ross and Associates. And around the beginning of the new year, Charlottesville’s public relations institution will close its doors after almost 35 years. “It’s a new vision,” says principal Susan Payne. Partner Lisa Ross Moorefield says the closing is a mutual decision, and she’ll be “exploring less structured options.”

Woodriff confirms arena deal

Hedge fund founder Jaffray Woodriff is buying the Main Street Arena, as previously reported by C-VILLE. Attorney Valerie Long says, “Our client is now the purchaser of the ice park for an entity he’s involved with.” His QIM firm is not involved in the deal, and he is not ready to talk about whether there will be an ice park in another location, says Long.

sydneyBlair
Courtesy UVA

R.I.P. Sydney Blair

Beloved UVA creative writing prof Sydney Blair, 67, died unexpectedly December 12 after being hospitalized for pancreatitis. She joined the faculty in 1986, won the Virginia Prize for Fiction for her novel Buffalo in 1991 and wrote many stories, articles and reviews for journals.

Why it’s not paying for West Main

UVA generates $4.8 billion in economic activity in this region, according to a recent study. The university has been cool to city suggestions that it pitch in on the West Main streetscape project, saying it already significantly contributes to the local economy. UVA doesn’t pay Charlottesville property taxes.

Albemarle County Executive Tom Foley says the good news about an otherwise grim budget is that no one gets laid off and county employees get a raise. Staff photo
Tom Foley. Staff photo

County exec wanted

Albemarle’s Tom Foley is riding into the sunset, er, to Stafford County, to be head administrator there. Foley started in Albemarle in 1999, and succeeded Bob Tucker as county exec in 2011.

Day in the sun

Solar Panel 2 by Dominion“The sun is my almighty physician,” once said the ubiquitous Thomas Jefferson.

In a small room at UVA on December 6, packed wall-to-wall with people eager to celebrate the installation of 1,589 solar panels on university rooftops, President of Dominion Virginia Power Bob Blue said, “I’m not exactly sure what he meant by that.” But what he does know is that UVA is one of 10 groups participating in Dominion’s Solar Partnership Program, and once all the panels are installed atop Ruffner Hall and the University Bookstore, they will generate 364 kilowatts of energy—or enough to power 91 homes.

Bright future

  • 965 panels, which could power the equivalent of 52 homes, are already installed
  • Students and Dominion will study the energy pumped back into UVA’s grid
  • The school’s 2008 Delta Force sustainability program reduced energy usage in 37 buildings, saving $22 million in energy costs so far

Steak of America

The Downtown Mall will be Bank of America-less, but will have another steakhouse. Staff photoWhen Bank of America closes its branch doors downtown in February, it leaves a grand 1916 building in its wake that will house a steakhouse, according to building owner Hunter Craig. And while he declined to identify the grilled-meat purveyor, he did say it would be locally owned, not a national chain.

Also inhabiting 300 E. Main St., which began as Peoples Bank and during its 100-year history has morphed into Virginia National Bank, Sovran Bank and NationsBank before Bank of America, will be…another bank. “Not Virginia National Bank,” specified Craig, who sits on the VNB board of directors.

Other as-yet-undisclosed tenants will lease office space in the building.

Quote of the week

“Plaintiff threatens to set a dangerous precedent for news organizations and those who rely upon them for accurate up-to-the-minute news throughout the country.”—Brief filed by eight news organizations in support of Rolling Stone’s motion to overturn Nicole Eramo’s $3 million judgment

Correction 12/19: Sydney Blair’s age and date of death were both wrong in the original version.