Journal of Alta California

the search for mardou fox

My whole life has been one long waiting to gain entrance.

—ALENE LEE

I never expected to find her in this unlikely place, “sitting on the fender of a car in front of the Black Mask bar on Montgomery Street.” And yet, here she was. Lingering within the first few pages of a sleek black paperback, taking up space, “saying something extremely earnestly,” setting ideas afloat.

This was my first glimpse of Mardou Fox, one of a constellation of urban intellectuals dubbed “the subterraneans”—night dwellers, “‘hip without being slick…intelligent without being corny…they are very quiet, they are very Christlike.’”

I wasn’t sure where I’d wandered, but I locked into its frequency.

At the time, the early 1980s, I was a quiet yet intensely restless English major, working shifts as a bookstore clerk in a fading shopping mall in Los Angeles. One slow weeknight, my hand lingered over a stack of slim paperbacks on our to-be-shelved cart.

The 1981 Black Cat edition of Jack Kerouac’s The Subterraneans featured a high-contrast black-and-white cover image offset by highlighter-yellow and green type. Beneath the title, bodies crowded together, suggesting a cellar-like setting.

I read on.

“Do you know this girl, the dark one?”

“Mardou?”

“That’s her name?”

The exchange both gave me pause and nudged me forward.

I had gone a round with Kerouac. I knew about the impact of his work. A few years before, I had visited my local library looking for On the Road. One copy remained. The others, the librarian speculated, had likely been filched, a testament to the book’s general scofflaw message.

I snatched it up. I don’t recall where I hit the brakes, but I do remember why. I couldn’t get past the mile-a-minute carnival show that was Dean Moriarty—the exclamations, the tumbling headlong after “chicks” and “kicks.” It wasn’t for me—wasn’t meant for me.

I might have returned it early.

This book, this tone, was casting a different spell.

By the second page, Kerouac reveals that the book’s beguiling central character, Mardou, is “a Negro.” That ignites a flare of ambivalence in the novel’s narrator, Leo Percepied—Kerouac’s thinly veiled fictional persona—who is a self-described “Canuck.” Mardou

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Journal of Alta California

Journal of Alta California16 min read
Imperial Dreamer
The Barbara Worth Country Club is a par-71, 6,500-yard golf course that spreads out on the fringes of Holtville, in California’s Imperial Valley. Like many desert golf courses, it has an apparitional quality: a square of deep green gleams against a s
Journal of Alta California2 min read
Journal of Alta California
Editor & Publisher William R. Hearst III Editorial Director: Blaise Zerega Creative Director: John Goecke Editor at Large: Mary Melton Books Editor: David L. Ulin Digital Editor: Beth Spotswood California Book Club Editor: Anita Felicelli Newsletter
Journal of Alta California5 min read
A Conversation with Charles Yu
JUNE 15 INTERIOR CHINATOWN BY CHARLES YU Join us for a free Zoom event featuring Charles Yu in conversation with John Freeman. Learn more at californiabookclub.com. When Charles Yu’s Interior Chinatown won the 2020 National Book Award for Fiction, it

Related Books & Audiobooks