Link to the n*de photos
4. The students in English Composition were beyond illiterate; in Survey of American Literature, they complained to the department chair when I assigned poems by Emily Dickinson and Langston Hughes (only white men counted as canon); and in my side job teaching report writing at Houston Police Academy, they passed out a map of the neighborhoods where "homosexuals" congregated.
5. God forbid I come out to anyone, so I was beset upon by male colleagues asking me to rate the attractiveness of female movie stars, and female colleagues trying to fix me up with their unmarried sisters and nieces.
6. The Montrose neighborhood had clandestine gay bars and the Wilde and Stein Bookstore, but it was too frustrating to get to, with hour-long traffic jams and constant flat tires, so I depended on a personal ad in The Montrose Voice. First I was looking for dates, but soon I settled for a hookup. Even then, it was a mess:
"There was a car in the driveway of a house three doors down, so I got scared and bailed."
"Meet me at the public restroom somewhere far away, and we'll do it there."
The quickest way to get back to Rock Island was to head north, but that would mean five more hours in Texas, so instead I drove south on the I-45 toward Houston for twelve miles.
Fortunately I turned onto the I-610 before it became a parking lot.
Ten more miles around the eastern edge of Houston in traffic that was just horrible, not a parking lot. Mostly I was surrounded by roaring trucks and nondescript Brutoian warehouses
Then the I-10 east in more horrible traffic through horrible Houston suburbs: Jacinto City, Cloverleaf, Channel View. Greens Bayou, Marwood.
I hooked up with a guy in Jacinto City once. I felt like the town's first mayor, a guy named Inch Handler.
The suburbs went on endlessly. Nothing to see but billboards, car dealerships, warehouses, and the occasional streetful of fast-food joints.
Or a rest stop. I didn't care. I wasn't stopping until Texas was a distant memory.
At the small redneck town of Winnie, home of the Texas Rice Festival, the I-10 veered northeast.