Strange Damn PlaceóDark, Too
I have lived in Irvine, California since 1978. It has proved to be an oddly inspirational place in which to writesort of like living inside a bear, side by side with some unusual characters and some entertaining ideas.
Besides being the home of the University of California, Irvine, and the professional home of Gregory Benford, Irvine has gained fame as a "planned community." This means there are lots of parks, convenient shopping, and peaceful bike trails. Living in a planned community also means you might get a nasty letter from your homeowners' association if you put a basketball hoop over your garage, or if you plant a vegetable garden in your front yard (instead of the usual mums and impatiens), or if you paint your house without getting the color approved.
In return, your association will maintain green belts, swimming pools, and tennis courts, and will protect you from junker cars and second-story house additions that infringe on either your view or your privacy. A fair deal, perhaps, but all this regulation also serves to protect us from anything truly artistic, innovative, or just plain different. Therein lies the strangeness, and the darkness, of Irvine, California. Living here is like being swallowed by a bear.
Driving this "planning" is an intense desire to achieve excellence. Not any old sort of excellence, but a decent excellence. An inoffensive excellence. Color-coordinated excellence with nice, even edges. You can see it in the way they landscape the common areas. The bushes are all trimmed square. The trees have crew cuts. Nothing's allowed to get too wild, too messy, or too blemished. Not only do they tame the landscape, they feel the need to explain it. One sign in a torn-up flower bed reads, "Landscape Renovation Underway." Nearby, another reads, "Plant Damage Due to Frost."
It could drive me nuts, except that people themselves are wild animals and can never be tamed. Wherever people are, there are never any really straight edges, any truly square corners, or any exactly-matching colors. People are willing to fight for their basketball hoops, their new paint colors, and other deviant desires, and their neighbors often support them. Sometimes, they go undergroundso to speak. One neighbor hides his Swiss chard underneath his roses. He plants other edibles in other secret places. Being rather unhip in the world of edible plants, the association board members can't tell for sure where his ornamentals end and his vegetables begin. On a larger scale, as more people from all over the world move here, we are treated to unfamiliar customs, foods, languages, and religions. I am presented daily with a wonderful tableau of competing realities, with the world as seen from different perspectives. Various relative truths squirm, spar, and grapple with one another, all inside the figurative bear of this town.
Irvine has changed since 1985, when the earliest story in this collection was finished. It is now less conservative, and far more cosmopolitan than it was fourteen years ago. Yet I am still intimidated by the unrelenting earnestness and niceness of the place; I hide much of what I really think and feel, just as my neighbor hides his Swiss chard. But if I didn't feel the need to hide my odder observations from most people, I doubt I'd feel the need to write. Writing gets me "outside the bear," which in turn creates new challenges. After all, as I begin writing for my next collection of stories, I must ask myself: What giant forest will I be excreted into this time?
Martha A. Hood
March, 1999
Irvine, CA