I'd been on the run a long time
and I knew the cops were at my heels. They missed me by seconds over in
Fresno. I caught the squawking of their scanners as they came up the stairs
and I beat feet through a window and onto a fire escape. A big bull of a cop
was waiting for me on the ground and we fought. He had me in a chokehold and I
felt my freedom slipping away, along with my wind. But I came around after a
few seconds and beat him down. When I left the musclehead, he was writhing in
a mound of trash.
Those were hot, desperate times
over on the West Coast. Everywhere I turned, those gumshoes were right behind
me. I caught a train for Chicago and laid low there for a while. Then some
U.S. marshals sniffed me out of the rathole flat I was living in and a whole
squadron of them swooped in. I duked it out with another gorilla and managed
to escape, this time through a dumbwaiter.
It's all hazy. The strip joint mix-up in Manhattan, the meth lab down in
Baltimore, the brothel in Tennessee. I was using a lot then and the memories
are fuzzy, like a blown-out photograph on a computer monitor. Running from The
Man, fighting with The Man, knocking The Man down and beating feet.
Yeah, I was on the run a long time and I saw some crazy stuff. I was just a
kid, but I was faster, meaner and slicker than the rest. I hear someone wrote
a folk song about me in Tucson. In the Midwest they named a tornado in my
honor. That's me, all right. Powerful, unpredictable and enigmatic.
Great stories I could tell for a lifetime. Too bad none of them are true. I
just felt like going James Frey for a while. I felt like recreating my youth
in hopes that people would believe it and find me heroic. Hey, feel free to
send me money if my story has moved you.
I don't mean to get down on Frey and his struggle with booze and drugs. I
think it's admirable that he conquered his addictions through sheer will and
that he chose to write about his travails. What irks me is that he invented a
majority of his experiences and then asked his reading public to believe it
without question. One gets the feeling that Frey sat through a few group
therapy sessions and felt inadequate for the tales he had to tell.
Which is fine. When one guy starts talking big, the guy next to him will start
talking bigger. It's what we do. We are hardwired by evolution to build tales
as high as they will go when we are in the company of our peers.
The problem I have with Frey is that he presents his struggles as mightier
than those of the the next alcoholic or the next addict. He asks that you
believe his battle was more valiant and harder fought.
He scrapped with cops. He served long prison stretches. He threw down with
every officer and lost a girl while he was in the slammer. He suffered through
a double root canal without anesthesia, stared down a Mafioso and established
himself as the toughest hombre in rehab. He lost a girlfriend to a train wreck
and spent his young years drinking away her memory.
At an AA meeting, it would make a great drunkalogue. Few people would bother
to check the facts. But, sell a few million copies of a book and people will
rightfully begin asking questions. They will find the police reports that
reveal only minor arrests. They will find officer statements describing you as
polite and cooperative, instead of combative and powerful. They will check
prison records and find that you were never there. They will learn that the
young lady killed by the train was never your girlfriend, and that you were
never the neighborhood ruffian.
And so as the lies stack up, we start to wonder if Frey's sins of hyperbole
are equal to or greater than those of someone like Jayson Blair. Blair
fabricated news stories and hornswoggled those who trusted him. Frey deceived
people who needed to believe the most - the suicidal drinkers and ragged-edge
druggers who were inspired by his story. When they learned about his deceits,
they might have felt they had been betrayed yet again, that there was one more
entity in which they could not believe.
Mothers of rowdy children might claw your eyes out if you utter a word of
criticism about Frey's book. Because they want to believe that even bad kids
are essentially good, and that change is always possible. And while that may
be true, Jim Frey should not be the symbol of the transformation.
Jayson Blair, Jim Frey. Two men who concocted clever mixtures of fact and lies
and hoped they would ring true. Two men who fooled their audience for a time
and then were called on it. A word of advice for them both: If you want to
make things up, write fiction. People may still condemn your work. But at
least they can't call you a liar.
Mark
LaFlamme is the Sun Journal crime reporter. Visit his blog at
http://marklaflamme.blogspot.com.