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    Camden's Knife

    Page 37
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      Julia

      The Inventory

      Abbreviations

      M = Missing In Sequence/Unaccounted For/

      Never Created/Appears Elsewhere/Reworked

      WP = With/Including Pencil

      WO = With/Including Object(s)

      WM = With/Including Modeling Paste

      OTS = Off-The-Shelf Canvas

      EXP = Exception to Set Description

      Please note that the Artist did not provide any titles for the following works; rather, I elected to speculate what JLD might have named them.

      Set One/Black Numbered on Reverse

      Works On Canvas, Acrylic and Enamel

      Off-The-Shelf/Store Bought Canvases

      01. Combat Prototype 36x36 WP, WO

      02. Combat Astronomy 36x36 WP, WO

      03. If You Knew Uzi 36x48 WO

      04. Combat Sex 30x48 WP, WO

      05. Chaos #1 20x20

      06. Untitled 24x24

      07. Untitled 18x36

      08. Send Lawyers #1 36x48 WO

      09. Combat Law 36x36 WO

      10. Combat Commodities 36x48 WO

      11. M

      12. Hook #1 36x36

      13. Is It Combat Art? 36x36 WO

      14. Combat TV 18x48 WP, WO

      15. Combat Radio 18x48 WP, WO

      16. Makeup #1 30x30 WO

      17. M

      18. M

      19. Hook #2 20x30

      20. Pandora’s Obsession 18x36

      21. #1 18x36 WO

      22. Is It? 18x36

      23. Obsession #1 30x30 WO

      24. Obsession #2 30x30

      25. M

      26. Control/-30- 18x36

      27. M

      28. Send Lawyers #2 30x30

      29. Reflection 18x48 WO

      30. Control #2 18x36 WO

      31. M

      32. Nemesis 36x36 WO

      33. Control #3 20x30

      34. Hammer/Sickle 18x36

      35. Commodities 28x36

      36. Money Changes 36x48

      37. Cage #1 24x36 WO

      38. Combat Control 18x48 WO

      39. Cage #2 30x30 WO

      40. Send Lawyers #3 30x30

      41. Makeup #2 24x36

      42. Chaos #2 20x20

      43. Radio 24x24

      44. Runaway 30x30

      45. Hard/Soft 28x36

      46. Fear 18x36

      47. Time 24x24

      48. Chaos #3 24x36

      49. Tough Darts 24x36 WO

      50. M

      51. Chaos #4 24x36

      52. Pandora #1 24x36

      53. Numbers 24x36

      54. M

      55. Sixers/-30- #1 40x40

      56. Nightmare #1 36x60

      57. Infinity/Numbers 36x60

      58. Retribution 48x48

      59. Risk 36x60

      60. Runaway 24x24

      61. Death 24x24

      62. Changes 24x24

      63. Hair 40x40

      64. #2 40x40

      65. Revenge 30x30

      66. Untitled 30x30

      67. 24x36

      68. Pandora #2 24x36

      69. Flag 24x36

      70. Sixers/-30- #2 40x40

      71. M

      72. Annonces Classees 30x30 WO, WM

      73. Untitled Pyramid 30x30 WM

      74. Mirage Pyramid 40x40 WM

      75. Control Pyramid 40x40 WM

      76. M

      77. Letter S 24x24

      78. Letter Z 24x24

      79. Letter K #1 24x24

      80. Numeral 26 24x24

      81. Alphabet 24x24

      82. Letter K #2 24x24

      83. Numerals 99 24x24

      Set Two/Red Numbered on Reverse

      Works On Canvas, Acrylic and Enamel

      (Incidental Use of Pencil on Many)

      Hand Constructed Canvases

      Exceptions (EXP) as Noted

      099. Jasper/Don’t 68x90 WM

      100. Dazzle Me 56x72

      101. Black Box 30x40

      102. Jasper/Giant 68x80 WO

      103. Jasper/Win A Prize 56x72

      104. Q&A/So Many Men 68x80

      105. Jackson/Drunk 30x68

      106. Jackson/Nursery 56x72

      107. Jackson/Lucifer 56x72

      108. In The Air Tonight 60x80

      109. Ouija 30x40 WO

      110. Trinity 30x40 WO

      111. 6 Commonalities 36x48

      112. Chisel 36x48 EXP OTS

      113. Study for #105 EXP

      114. Study for #106 EXP

      115. Study for #107 EXP

      116. Misfire 27x27 9 mounted

      Polaroid photographs EXP

      117-124. See Set Three, infra

      125-126. See #131, infra EXP

      127. Jackson/Tree 30x80

      128. Stencil Madness #1 36x48 WO

      129. TB&GITB 68x90

      130. Zuni vs Popular 36x48

      131. The Serpent 46x64 note: it appears #s 125 and 126 (acrylic on wood 12x36) were intended to be companions to #131, forming a triptych

      132. Red Scare 46x64

      133. Jackson/Split Second 56x72

      134. Susanna & The Pharaoh 56x72 WM

      135. Stencil Madness #2, 68x90

      Set Three/ The Keyholes

      Acrylic, Enamel and Pencil on Deck-

      Stained Wood Constructions with Brass

      Hooks and Silver or Zinc Plated Hotel Keys

      117. Blow 12x24

      118. Nerd 12x24

      119. Pearls 12x24

      120. Heart 12x24

      121. Whore 18x36

      122. Tramp 18x36

      123. Stud 18x36

      124. Slut 18x36

      (WARNING: Please use care in handling any of The Keyholes. The screw points of the brass hooks protruding through the backs of each work are hard to see and are unforgiving, as discovered with a five-stitches-visit to the ER by Kari earlier in the week).

      Set Four (A)/Numbered on Reverse

      Observations and Board Game Designs

      Pencil, Enamel, Marker and Ink

      All examples on Paper, all 22x30

      All signed Lionne-Demilunes

      All stamped with Artist’s chop

      Observations

      72. Mugger

      73. IRA

      74. Elvis

      75. Russian

      76. Gold/Hoffs

      77. Black Holes

      78. Answering Machine

      79. Astigmatism

      80. Notre Dame

      81. Diagonal

      82. Maria

      83. S&P 500

      84. All The Hits

      85. Humid Saturday

      86. Hell

      87. Progress

      88. Apes

      89. Hole

      90. Send

      91. Rubber Dress

      92. Pyramid (Coins) #1

      92(a). Pyramid (Coins) #2

      93. Cat Assassins

      Board Games

      94. Best Seller

      95. MSDS

      96. Two’s Company, Three’s A Crowd

      97. Presumed Innocent

      98. Honey, Do You Want Me To Tie You

      Up Before We Go Out Tonight?

      99. Honey, Will You Wear Your Black

      Garter Belt Tonight?

      100. Standoff! Logo

      101. Confusion Will Be My Epitaph

      102. Down The Dark Ladder

      103. Pyramid (Johns) EXP

      104. Death

      105. Enough Is Enough

      106. A Loaf Of Bread, A Bottle Of

      Wine, And A 66S

      107. Dumb Investment

      108. Wrap It Up (incomplete)

      109. Get Away

      110. I Don’t Want That Prick Coming

      Over Here For Dinner Tonight

      111. Lawnopoly

      112. Law School Fantasy Camp

      113. Pick A Fetish—Any Fetish

      113. Screen Writer

      114. Springsteen Video Quiz

      115. Big Shot Pop Star

      116. Big Shot Movie Star

      117. Countdown To Love

      118. Really?


      119. Academmys ER

      120. The Park

      121. The Dream

      122. Blinded By The Light

      123. Streets Of Fire

      124. The Trip

      125. The Other Trip

      (I’ve misplaced the final page of this list which contains the titles of an additional number of games and will add them in the next draft).

      Set Four (B)/Unnumbered

      The Repeaters - Enamel and Ink

      plus The 2 Grids—Pencil, Marker and Ink

      All examples on Paper, all 22x30

      All signed Lionne-Demilunes

      All stamped with Artist’s chop

      a. Combat Art

      b. Hard/Soft

      c. Money Changes Everything

      d. My Own Hook

      e. Birth Life Death

      f. Pandora’s Obsession

      g. Send Lawyers

      h. Sex Control

      i. Infinity Numbers

      j. Infinity Logic

      k. TV Revenge Woman

      l. Illinois #1

      m. Illinois #2

      n. JLD

      o. Jasper/Own Hook

      Set Five/The Fuhs

      Numbered on Reverse

      Biographies of Imagined People

      Pencil, Marker and Ink

      All examples on Paper, all 14x17

      All signed Lionne-Demilunes

      All stamped with Artist’s chop

      111. Coincidence

      112. Mister Ears

      113. Turk

      114. Teri Tracer

      115. Robert Sanderson

      116. Michael Marsh

      117. Cindy Sharp

      118. Merlin

      119. Dreamer

      120. Roddy the Rodman

      121. Kookie

      122. Evil Patricia

      123. Magic Man

      124. Sweet Susie

      125. DJL

      126. Vibrations

      127. Laura Freckles

      128. Masterwork

      Set Six/Larger Studies and

      Observations

      Numbered on Reverse

      Pencil, Marker and Ink

      All examples on Paper, all 10x14

      All signed Lionne-Demilunes

      All stamped with Artist’s chop

      37 Examples

      Set Seven/Smaller Studies and

      Observations

      Numbered on Reverse

      Pencil, Marker and Ink

      All examples on Paper, all 8.5x10.25

      All signed Lionne-Demilunes

      All stamped with Artist’s chop

      143 Examples

      Set Eight/Smallest Studies and

      Observations

      Numbered on Reverse

      Pencil, Marker and Ink

      All examples on Paper, all 5.25x7.75

      All signed Lionne-Demilunes

      All stamped with Artist’s chop

      106 Examples

      Set Nine/The Shrouds

      Unnumbered

      Acrylic, Enamel, Marker and Ink

      All examples on 6x9 foot Canvas

      Drop Cloths

      All signed Lionne-Demilunes

      All stamped with Artist’s chop

      5 Examples, believed to have been used in

      the execution of the 5 Jacksons, supra

      Set Ten/Miscellaneous

      Various Materials and Objects

      including etched stencils, tape,

      Artist’s paint brushes, stirring

      sticks, gloves, paint cans, paint

      tubes, utensils, yardsticks, pencils,

      receipts, notes, coins, shell casings, unetched stencil letters and other items

      In excess of 200 Objects (estimate) not counting over 600 anchoring coins.

      Set Eleven/The Missing Fifteen

      Based on a Surfaces Inventory list kept by the Artist, it can be stated with certainty that an additional fifteen canvases are missing from the collection, no doubt additional works by JLD as this table tracks perfectly the quantities of various sizes of the canvases known to exist (e.g., there are ten which are listed as 30x30, and precisely that amount of finished works have been documented). With an extrapolation based on list-to-works, it appears these undocumented creations include:

      Seven hand-constructed canvases measuring:

      2 @ 68x90

      4 @ 27x72

      1 @ 30x96

      Also unaccounted for are eight elaborate constructions for which JLD paid a substantial sum to a local craftswoman to fabricate. Custom made to his specifications including polished pinewood backing frames, substantial bracing and expensive primed canvas, they measure:

      2 @ 30x40x3

      3 @ 36x48x3

      2 @ 46x64x3

      1 @ 30x68x3

      AUTHOR’S NOTES

      There are three other sets of fingerprints all over this book besides mine.

      The first belongs to Lori Perkins who in the autumn of 1986, as a rookie literary agent at Barbara Lowenstein Associates picked from the slush pile a query package submitted by a first time author regarding a near-future book titled Sapien II. Based on the treatment and first three chapters, she requested the entire manuscript and after completing it, liked the undertaking enough to retain a reader for a second opinion. Based on his and her own thoughts, she requested a number of changes for a rewrite which the novice novelist promptly accomplished, including a new title—Sixers.

      On 31 July 1987, I accepted Lori’s offer of representation.

      Following perhaps 20 rejections—most of them of the Close but no Cigar variety—she phoned me the afternoon of 04 March 1988 and said: “John? This is Lori Perkins. We’ve got an offer. You’re going to be published. Congratulations. Here’s the deal.”

      My elation quickly turned to dread as she outlined her strategy, which included doubling the advance and our retention of all rights beyond print and even as to those rights, a much more generous cut of any foreign royalties. A few days later she called to say her counter-offer had been rejected but that my potential suitor was still mulling it over. A week later, the publishing contract arrived with all of the alterations Lori had negotiated.

      Lynx Books, a division of Lynx Communications, Inc., had been launched 18 months earlier by a pair of publishing veterans backed by a huge chunk of venture capital money. They’d started off by picking up the reprint rights on over 200 previously published paperbacks and an assortment of other properties, and were now positioned to trot out their inaugural hardcover line, five books by new writers. Sixers, in March of 1989, was scheduled as the third released.

      I was maintaining a hectic schedule on the road with my attorney pursuits but always found time to visit bookstores in the various cities my work took me to, but Sixers was nowhere to be found. Inquiring about this state of affairs, I was told there was a distribution problem so not to worry. Which I didn’t, because back in February Lynx had arranged for a catered book signing event to be held 15 April 1989, Kroch’s & Brentano’s at Water Tower Place in my sweet home Chicago. It was one of the best evenings of my life—Lori and my editor Judy Stern having flown in from NYC for the festivities—marred only by a snippet of a conversation between Judy and a K&B honcho I overheard during a brief break.”Things are pretty bad?” he’d asked.”We’re not sure,” she’d replied. I never got the full story, though apparently Lynx’s distributor was holding all of the company’s receivables when it went into Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which in turn led to Lynx going belly-up overnight.

      Sixers made it as high as #4 on the Chicago Tribune’s Hardcover Best Seller List, did very well (I recently learned) in its Japanese translation, was reviewed as “(a) well-wrought first novel…engaging and fun to read” by Publisher’s Weekly, deemed “Terrific” by one of America’s most elegant novelists, Scott Turow, and was subsequently optioned for 20th Century Fox by the late film producer Laura Ziskin (of Pretty Woman and As Good As It Gets fame). But the brief party was over as there were only a small number of copies in circulation and no publishing house to produce additional volume
    s.

      I completed a pair of other manuscripts (one a sequel to Sixers) which never found a home. Lori told me that was probably due to the rapid contraction within the industry to a narrow focus on blockbusters, the massive shift in readership to non-fiction works and my minimal track record. Fair enough, although I guessed maybe the two works simply weren’t good enough to make the cut. So I moved on to other pursuits, creative and otherwise.

      When I received an email from her in February of 2013 informing me she was now (along with running the L. Perkins Agency and juggling another half dozen balls of various sizes and colors) the head of Riverdale Avenue Books—who in that capacity wanted to chat about a project—I phoned her immediately. After a moment of awkwardness (we hadn’t spoken in years) we segued into the easy-going chat of two old friends and partners as if we’d last conversed a few weeks earlier. She asked if I’d be interested in reworking Sixers because it’d always been one of her favorites, had never gotten the chance it deserved, would still be timely with some updating and made for a good fit in the burgeoning worlds of electronic publishing and social media. Though near future pop culture novels weren’t the lead genre at RAB, she’d find it a place on the list. I replied I’d be willing to tweak it enough to make it current.

      Sorry. Wrong number.

      For starters, she wanted me to undertake a complete line edit; a survey extending from broad concepts down to the smallest details. Concurrently, she’d require replacing anachronistic references with more recognizable substitutes, adding more meat to the bones of tangents previously glossed over and eliminating some admittedly idiosyncratic fluff the novel contained. But above all, she wanted to see “The Universe.”

      Not the one seen through a telescope; the universe I’d create that had a past, a present and more importantly a future.”What’s going to happen with the big board game tournament? How did the Combat Art painter end up? Are there some new seeds to plant for future reference? Does the Pope book (the other manuscript she’d read) fit in anywhere? Looking three or four books down the line, do we need some foreshadowing? Remind me—did you get rid of the dragon?”

      Sixers didn’t exist in an electronic format, so I found a company that converted a sacrificed copy of the hardcover into an .rtf file. So far, so good. It was now mid-March and I’d jotted pages of notes so was ready to have at it. Prologue, 18 Chapters, Epilogue, 310 pages. I figured two four hour days per chapter, six days a week would be more than enough time to complete the exercise so marked May 5th as my target. Though I hadn’t read the entire book in ages, I figured I knew it well enough that the rewrite would be a snap. A page and a half into the Prologue, I leaned away from the monitor, folded my arms, then reached for my calendar and superimposed a large red X over the blue words THE END in the Cinco de Mayo square.

     


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