Doug Dorst - The Surf Guru

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A book of brilliant, adventurous stories from the award-winning Doug Dorst. With the publication of his debut novel,
, Doug Dorst was widely celebrated as one of the most creative, original literary voices of his generation-an heir to T.C. Boyle and Denis Johnson, a northern California Haruki Murakami. Now, in his second book,
, his full talent is on display, revealing an ability to explore worlds and capture characters that other writers have not yet discovered.
In the title story, an old surfing-champion-turned-surfwear- entrepreneur sits on his ocean-front balcony watching a new generation of surfers come of age on the waves, all but one of whom wear wet suits emblazoned with the Surf Guru's name. An acid-tongued, pioneering botanist who has been exiled from the academy composes a series of scurrilous (and hilarious) biographical sketches of his colleagues and rivals, inadvertently telling his own story. A pair of twenty-first- century drifters course through a series of unusual adventures in their dilapidated car, chased west out of one town and into the next, dreaming of hitting the Pacific.
Dorst's characters have all successfully cultivated a particular expertise, and yet they remain intent on moving toward the horizon, seeking hope in something new. Likewise, each of Dorst's stories is a virtuoso performance balancing humor and insight, achieving a perfect pitch, pulsing with a gritty and punchy, distinctly American realism- and yet always pushing on into the unexpected, taking us some place new.

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The Surf Guru - изображение 8

The following pages contain selections from the 462 profiles Quilcock wrote for Botanists in the Age of Quilcock. 12They are presented chronologically in the order that Quilcock wrote them. I hope, reader, that you will find this work informative, that you will be as taken with their author’s rebellious spirit as I have been, and that my annotations will offer illuminating context. 13

— JONATHAN PARKER KINGSLEE, PH.D.

August 4, 1968

Ventura, Calif.

Profile #1 14

Aeneas ScottwellScott I shall begin my series of profiles with a sketch of - фото 9

Aeneas Scottwell-Scott

I shall begin my series of profiles with a sketch of the botanist to whom all the backbiters, bullies, dullards, and thieves who rule our field ought to compare themselves, so they can see how glaring their deficits are.

Aeneas Scottwell-Scott did not care what others thought of his academic credentials or lack thereof. He did not care what others thought of his scientific conclusions, so confident was he in his species concept, his accurate observations and measurements, his encyclopaedic knowledge of botany and the history of its study. He did not care what others thought of his wardrobe or his failure to marry or his quickness to raise his fists. He did not care what others thought of his disinterest in politics, sport, or washing. He did not care what others thought of his approach to teaching, which was demanding, acerbic, and stern, and which occasionally made use of ear-boxing as a tool for emphasis.

Because he was an autodidact and an iconoclast, he was never embraced by the white-haired panjandra of east-coast botany. 15These fops and frauds, in their towers of ivory (and ivy), were too busy listening to each other’s clarion-blasts of flatus to hear the voice of a brilliant man in the wilderness, a man who routinely risked his physical and financial health trying to bring taxonomic order to the flora of the American West. 16

Scottwell-Scott improved those of us who studied with him. He taught us to observe meticulously, to avoid the small but disastrous errors that issue from hasty or careless work, and to be upstanding, honest, and truthful in all matters— botanical, financial, personal, or any other. He was a father to me — to all of his students, I once thought — and if he occasionally withheld approval, validation, warmth, or rewards, he did so with our intellectual and personal maturation in mind. (He was not, for example, one of those people who use each opportunity to name a new species as currency for bestowing thanks, building egos, or begging for funds. He most certainly did not bestow such favors on us, his students, except in one instance (Ptimorus kingsleei). In the interests of history, I asked him on several occasions to explain this aberration. I suspect he did not recall, for his mind had dulled a bit with age and infirmity, and he was never forthcoming with a convincing answer. 17In any event, he never bothered to petition the Society for renaming the offending Ptimorus, which is unsurprising; he was a man of fieldwork, not “paperwork.”)

Our field has suffered in recent years because Scottwell-Scott’s lessons have fallen out of vogue — even among some of his former protégés, such as the klepto- and ego-maniacal Kingslee and the spineless Fitzgilbert. I have maintained my mentor’s high standards and, like him, I have suffered as a result. However, these brief biographies are not the proper venue for detailing my mistreatment by my “colleagues” and by Mulholland University, and thus I shall not do so herein.

Profile #19

Clark Sydney Grimshaw Word comes that Grimshaw has gone and died although it - фото 10

Clark Sydney Grimshaw

Word comes that Grimshaw has gone and died, although it is hard to fathom how anyone noticed. He had published no work of value for decades. We should be grateful, I suppose, for the prolonged moribundity of his career, as it leaves us with less of his willfully obtuse scholarship to undo. 18

Profile #64

Colton Cates How Cates escaped this life without being formally repudiated as - фото 11

Colton Cates

How Cates escaped this life without being formally repudiated as the serial plagiarist he was 19is one of the earth’s great mysteries. I suspect a wide-ranging scheme of bribery and/ or intimidation.

Of course, even his meager output of ostensibly honest botanical work was execrable. Recently I was going over some of his final leaflets, and I read his treatment of Amorifera maldita, which makes one feel like planting a specimen of same on his grave so he can spend eternity studying it more carefully.

Still, Colton Cates’s greatest crime came not in his work but in his decision to reproduce. The less said about his offspring — in particular the reprehensible Slade Cates — the better. 20

Profile #96

Maximilian Unterdorf Another botanical irritant this one of the Teutonic - фото 12

Maximilian Unterdorf

Another botanical irritant, this one of the Teutonic variety. Unterdorf splits species left and right and left again, finding dramatic differences where none exist.

What on earth could account for this thuggish Hun’s rampage across the hallowed grounds of responsible taxonomy? With most splitters, the cause is usually arrogance, leavened with a wholly inappropriate sense of certitude, although in Unterdorf’s case, ineptitude may be an equal factor. Support for this hypothesis can be found in his abhorrent dichotomous key for Lamides, which induces its unsuspecting users to misidentify L. dorothyi as L. bettyi, and vice-versa. (I shall not even waste ink to point out how vulgar it is to name one’s botanical discoveries after whichever comely “volunteer assistant” happens to be in the field with one at the moment.)

Unterdorf somehow has no shortage of young and curvaceous dabblers to accompany him as he roams the West whilst allegedly botanizing. 21One imagines that in the musky air of his laboratory at the University of California-Lake Elsinore, these foolish girls clutch to his tweeds, sigh about how fascinated they are by his work, only to return from the wilds sullied, red-faced, and full of his gametes. At most recent count, sixteen children on this continent (and devil knows how many in the Old Country) call this man Father. One fears one can scarcely put one’s pencil down before one will have to pick it up again to mark the score-sheet as another poor lass’s cries of labor pain fly to the winds in Tucson or Provo or Ensenada or Heidelberg or wherever else Unterdorf has set foot in his quest to name everything his lizard-lidded eyes fall upon, regardless of whether it is in need of naming.

A hopeless, vile, and unrepentant splitter; as many bastards as he has produced, he has notched ten times that number in bastard species of the botanical variety.

Profile #121

GuyLaurent Petitfour In the human sense Petitfours accidental death 22in - фото 13

Guy-Laurent Petitfour

In the human sense, Petitfour’s accidental death 22in 1919 at the age of forty-three was a tragedy. In the botanical sense, it was a blessing, and it ought to have been celebrated with a great feast, much dancing, and that jubilant ritual the Mexicans refer to as “pinyata.”

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