Raising Fences: A Black Man's Love Story

Raising Fences: A Black Man's Love Story

by Michael Datcher
Raising Fences: A Black Man's Love Story

Raising Fences: A Black Man's Love Story

by Michael Datcher

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Overview

This New York Times–bestselling memoir about an African American man’s struggles and triumphs is “heartrending and beautiful” (Junot Diaz Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao).
 
A Today Show Book Club selection, Raising Fences tells the story of a man whose youth was spent committing petty crimes, experimenting with sex, and developing a mortal fear of police. Like many young black men, Michael Datcher’s childhood was marked by the gaping hole left by an absent father. Out of that absence grew the desire to fulfill a dream that seemed almost a fantasy: to leave the streets behind, build a family, and become what he had wanted so badly—a good father.
 
Moving past his self-destructive habits and taking responsibility for his mistakes wasn’t easy. Datcher’s journey nearly brought him to his breaking point—where he faced the threat of becoming what he feared most.
 
“Datcher’s voice is clear, bold, daring, and welcome.” —Junot Diaz, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
 
“Honest, brisk and ultimately very moving . . . A beautiful story of real-life redemption.” —Kirkus Reviews
 
“Combines attitude, honesty and romance . . . A stunning tribute to perseverance, courage and the power of positive thinking.” —Publishers Weekly
 
“Brutally honest, hauntingly poetic . . . Heartbreaking.” —Essence
 
“Riveting.” —USA Today
 
“Poignant . . . Complex.” —The Seattle Times
 
“An inspiration to all who dare to dream of a better life.” —The Star-Ledger

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781682301180
Publisher: Diversion Books
Publication date: 02/06/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 262
Sales rank: 750,828
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Michael Datcher, a journalist and spoken-word poet, has written for Vibe, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Baltimore Sun, and Buzz. A former Pacific News Service correspondent, Datcher has contributed essays to a number of anthologies.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

in the beginning

When I pull the letter from the mailbox, my heart starts jackhammering. I return to my second-floor Leimert Park apartment, leaping two white stairs per stride. Sit down at the heavy wooden desk. Tight-fist the letter opener butcher knife–style to steady my trembling hand:

STATE OF ILLINOIS CERTIFICATE OF LIVE BIRTH

There I am in Box 3, "Child's Name: Michael Gerald Cole." I've never seen Cole attached to Michael Gerald before. I stare like it's the first time. "Single" is marked in Box 5A, not "twin," "triplet," or "quad." Years of thinking maybe I was a separated-at-birth twin ends there at Box 5A. Born at 5:49 P.M. The box below: "Mother's Full Maiden Name: Mariam Cole. Age: 17." So young, I think. Just a girl. Pregnant at sixteen. But this really isn't about her, it's about Box 7: "Father's Full Name: Legally Withheld." I'm not really sure what I'm expecting to see. I'm hoping for some hint. Some clue. Eye color. Hair color. Height. Initials. Anything. Box 9: "His Age: Unknown." Box 10: "His Birthplace:" blank. Box 11A: "His Usual Occupation:" blank. Box 11B: "Kind of Business or Industry:" blank.

The blanks blur together on the page. I don't know who my father is. Don't know one thing about him. This truth seeps through the spaces between my rib cage, straitjackets my lungs. I am not going to cry this time. I slide out the top drawer of my black metal file cabinet. Under "Medical," I file the birth certificate, his punk ass, and all the blank spaces in my life. I slam the cabinet shut.

CHAPTER 2

the spinners

I've been obsessed with being a husband and father since I was seven years old. Quiet as it's kept, many young black men have the same obsession. Picket-fence dreams. A played-out metaphor in the white community but one still secretly riding the bench in black neighborhoods nationwide.

When the picket-fence motif was in vogue, only a few of us could get in the game. The swelling ranks of those who couldn't (the Perpetual Second Team) were forced to the sidelines, scowling — and pretending we didn't even want to play.

The bastard children of these Second Teamers stalk the same sidelines. We rarely sit on the bench. Too restless. We can't figure out if we want to beg to play or raise a stiff middle finger. Sometimes we do both. But usually we strike a cool pose. Hide Huxtable-family dreams in the corner: Can't let someone catch us hoping that hard.

We know few people believe in us. We struggle to believe in ourselves. So we pose. We have gotten good. We can pose and cry at the same time — no one sees. We can pose and cry out for help — no one hears. We are the urban ventriloquists.

Of the thirty families that lived in our east-side Long Beach, California, apartment building during the mid-seventies, I never saw a father living in a household. I never even saw one visit.

There were lots of boys in the neighborhood: Ricky, Dante, Pig Pen, Curt Rock. We rarely talked about our missing fathers. Instead, we poured our passion into our skateboards, our marbles, and our mothers. Yet the unspoken sparkled from our eyes whenever any neighborhood men showed us attention. Once in their gaze, we worked to outperform one another, trying our best to keep the manlight from straying.

"Watch this! I can do a back flip off the curb ... Heh, betchu a quarter I can make a shot from the free-throw line."

It's likely one of these men laid the seed that sprouted into a back-flipper before them. Neighborhood rumors have a way of falling off grown-up kitchen tables and splattering on ghetto playgrounds.

We flipped, pop-locked, and did the Robot for them, but we were knowing: Men weren't to be trusted. Even when our mothers didn't speak these words, their tired lives whispered the message.

I knew many of these men had kids. Where were they? Why were they watching me spin instead of their own children? No, these men were not to be trusted. How could I accept their advice when their personal lives screamed, "I'm lost toooo"? There was too much fatherhood failure around. The disease seemed to be contagious given the epidemic in our neighborhood. These men could watch me spin, but I couldn't let them get close enough to breathe on me.

The ghetto irony: Many of my generation's young spinners have become the twenty- and thirty-something men who can't be trusted. Making children who will grow up to hate them.

Circumstance, suspect choices, and fear have ways of disfiguring urban hopes with surgical precision. A four-ounce bottle of baby formula becomes much heavier than a forty-ounce bottle of malt liquor. Having five women becomes easier than having one.

CHAPTER 3

camille

I stroll into Hollywood's Club Flame with a slight malt-liquor buzz. Slow my roll so my eyes can adjust to the semidarkness most reggae clubs favor. No air-conditioning. I can feel sweat coming of age beneath my armpits, down my back. The pungent scent of high-grade marijuana flavors the air like designer musk. Invisible men in corners send snippets of Jamaican patois slicing through the dense wall of bass-heavy dance-hall reggae. This island funk is just what I need. It pulsates through my damp chest, lubricating the stiffness that graduate school at UCLA engenders. I'm in baggy black jeans, an oversized black Levi's shirt, and big black stomping boots. Feeling strong and sexy. It's August 1993. The last few weeks before the quarter starts. I need to be rubbed on.

My night vision kicks in. The club is crowded with an international set from the African diaspora. Nigerians, Ethiopians, and West Indians dominate the long bar. Bright colors abound. Accents and dialects I grew accustomed to on Berkeley's campus converge with gymnastic Ebonics of black L.A. folk. I'm in my element.

Despite the steadily increasing numbers, few people are dancing on the boxing ring–sized floor in the middle of the club. Instead, people are checking people. Just beneath the strobe light, a dark-brown sister with her hair pulled back into a ponytail is deep inside the island groove. From time to time she closes her eyes to get deeper. Wearing white short-shorts and a small, bright-red blouse knotted above her belly button, she is moving with the slow winding confidence of a woman accustomed to the gaze of men. With only three or four other couples on the floor, many of the men's casual scanning glances end at her slim waist.

After making my way to the bar to grab a beer, I walk over to the dance floor's edge. I want to watch her dance. I can tell she isn't really interested in the brother on the floor with her. Their bodies aren't communicating. They aren't even making eye contact. She's winding in her own world.

The side winder leaves the boxing ring and returns to two friends near the bar. Guinness in hand, I step to her. Heavily accented loud-bar chatter camouflages my motive for leaning past her cheek, just a warm breath from her ear.

"You're gonna hurt someone dancing like that."

"Hmmph," she says, angling her neck and ear away, eyelids squatting into a defensive stand. "As hard as you were looking, seem like you wanna get hurt."

Seeing the choosing-in-progress, her two friends turn away and rest their palms on the bar.

"Where you from, sister?"

"Dominican Republic," she responds, holding gaze to see if I'm duly impressed. Never good at geography, I don't even know where the Dominican Republic is.

"You must've gone to school in the States. I'm not hearing an accent."

"I went to Locke High, then Cal State Dominguez."

"What did you study?"

"Math," she says, her kumquat lips easing into a sly smile. "So don't be saying no shit that don't add up."

Her playful eyes sparkle.

"Is that little dance you do kinda like a Dominican national dance?" I say, winding into a heartfelt version of her hip-heavy groove.

She watches, cards close to vest.

I sneak a glance at her bare thighs. Although the upper part of her five-foot two-inch frame is small-boned, her legs are long and muscular.

"A little Dominican, mostly me, I got my own thang."

"You wanna teach that thang to me?"

"If you promise not to sue me when you get hurt," she tosses over her shoulder, leading the way to the ring.

Saucy. Book smart too — and a warm, easy smile to boot. My type.

Up close and personal, her slow wind is even sexier. I'm winding too — and looking her dead in the eye.

She returns my steady stare as our hips, just inches apart, synchronize pelvic circles to the island funk. As the dance floor fills, swaying bodies brush and bump us. I leave her eyes, taking in her long neck, breasts, naked stomach, fixing my stare below her waist. She begins to perform. A slow-motion pelvic orbit. I bring my hand around the small of her sweaty back, guiding her body into mine. Our hips meet in a nervous kiss. We settle into rhythm. Eye contact resumes. We wind close this way for several songs, saying little, but saying a lot.

After dancing together much of the night, I ask for her number. Embarrassed, I lean past her cheek. "Tell me your name again, sister?"

"Camille."

The first year of grad school at UCLA was intense; the second, beginning in a matter of days, doesn't look any easier. The workload is heavy, and there is little financial support in my African-American studies program.

Besides school, I'm working as a Los Angeles news correspondent for Pacific News Service and freelancing for magazines around the country, writing about politics, culture, and music — and working twenty hours a week as a research assistant. Sibling deadlines compete for attention. Stress levels are high. When I call Camille a few days after our Club Flame introduction, I'm looking forward to taking a break.

"Hi. This is Michael, I met you at Club Flame."

"Why is it that guys ask for your number," she coos in what must be her best telephone voice, "then wait a week to call when they want to call you next day?"

I start laughing.

"You know you wanted to call, now didn't you?"

"I'm calling you now."

"You know what I mean. Not a week later."

"It's only been a few days. Why you givin a brother a hard time? What's up with the full-court press?"

We begin to talk. Camille tells me that when she was a child, her parents separated, but she's remained close to her math-teacher father.

"My father's a teacher, and you know how teachers are when they have students who look like them. I didn't mind, though. I've always been good with numbers."

"Daddy's girl?"

"That's right, and proud of it. Do you have a girlfriend?"

"Damnn." I chuckle. "Did Daddy teach you that, too?"

"A man's calling my house and I can't ask if he has a woman?"

"It's not that you're asking; we ain't been on the phone five minutes."

"Well, if you didn't have a woman it wouldn't be a problem, right? You probably got someone ... or someone got you."

"Nope."

"Hmmph, I bet."

"Why I gotta have a girlfriend?"

"You don't gotta have a girlfriend, you just sound like you got one."

Camille insists that I must have a girlfriend, but I don't. Between school and work, I'm not really looking for a lady right now. I tell her that I'm just dating.

"When I'm in a relationship, I like to really be in the relationship, but that's not where my head's at," I say.

There's an awkward pause to match the awkward moment. We haven't been talking five minutes, and my cards are already spread sloppily across the table. Full house, no commitment please. I can tell Camille's a little disappointed. I'm embarrassed. The pace seems too grown. She changes the subject to our dance floor chemistry.

We talk on the phone about once a week. With her Quiet Storm telephone voice and playful, flirting manner, Camille does more than her part to keep the conversations stimulating. Our subject matter often turns to sex. Never overtly between her and me — but we're always the subtext.

"Why is there this sexual double standard?" Camille starts one night on the phone. "When a man enjoys sex he can go out and shake his little pole at any fish biting and it's no problem. But when a woman has a strong sex drive and enjoys expressing that side of herself, she's a ho and everybody has a problem with it."

"Me, myself, I don't have a problem with it."

"Hmmph, I bet you don't."

We laugh and change the subject.

After a month of telephone flirting between busy schedules, Camille and I finally get together. We spend an evening in Santa Monica, eventually taking a late-night stroll along the beach. Camille's got a lot of personality. She wears clear lip gloss that accentuates her sly smile. We talk and laugh about our flirtatious natures. She teases me about the way I dance.

"You get all serious. Looking at me like you'd rather be doing something else."

"That reggae just puts me in a zone, man. Plus, those little short-shorts, working your magic, your Dominican vodun."

"You put a spell on yourself, okaay," she says, turning to face me. "Cause I don't work my spells on the dance floor."

She pivots and starts walking back to the car.

When we arrive at my apartment, we bend and wind and sway with an intensity that leaves my thin, student-budget sheets soaked from our effort.

There are probably a handful of people you're intimate with during your life who really butter your toast. People who touch you in a primal place. When both parties are having their toast buttered, watch out. This is the case with Camille and me. When I talk to her the next evening, we laugh that our dance-floor chemistry was a sign of things to come.

A couple of nights later, writing at my desk, I get a call from Camille.

"Busy?" she asks, her voice melting.

"Could be. Whachu have in mind?"

"I need help on a real tricky logarithm. Just can't seem to work it out."

"Is that right? I thought you had that math thing all sewn up?"

"Well, see, it's one of those word problems, and I figured, words ... that's your thing, right?

"Right, right. I'll see what I can do for you."

I make the ten-minute drive up Crenshaw Boulevard, passing liquor stores, barbeque joints, hair shops, and churches. An appropriate mix of opiates for a people concerned with salvation, how they look, and how they're going to get through another day.

As soon as we get inside my place, I swing Camille so she is facing the door, arms raised, legs spread LAPD-style. I press my pelvis hard into her arched 501 blues. All hands, motion, breath, and heat, we hang from the wooden door like a human Christmas stocking caught aflame.

After our first time together, I had tried to figure out what made our intimacy so passionate. When Camille wiggles and writhes free to turn and kiss me, I start to figure it out.

It's the way she looks at me.

Her stare is so intense. Even when she kisses me, she keeps her eyes open. I love her confidence and boldness. She seems to want me as much as I want her. Mid-kiss, I try to unbutton her blouse. She stops me.

Camille wants to undress me. Great.

After she takes my shirt off, she tells me to close my eyes. I can tell she's fumbling through my tape collection in the milk crate against the living-room wall. My dance hall reggae mixed tape begins to play.

"Stand still and keep your eyes closed," she says above the bumping music. Camille steps me out of my jeans. Still in the last stages of my latent Prince period, I rarely wear underwear. When she stands and gyrates her body behind me, it's skin to skin. Spin. Facing me, she-reaches up and wraps her arms around my neck and shoulders.

"No peeking."

She brings me down to the carpet on my back. The sound of plastic tearing. She's brought her own condoms. After mounting, she starts her slow orbit. My hands find her concave back. She pleads, "Open your eyes and talk me through this." We lock eyes, wind and talk, and sweat through the night.

After this evening, I start making the ten-minute drive up Crenshaw Boulevard two or three times a week. The more we learn each other's body and mind, the more heated the talk-heavy sex grows. When we are sated, we often lie in bed and share stories about each other's life. Lying naked with someone in the dark facilitates another kind of nakedness.

Three months after our first dance, Camille and I are exchanging "the-wildest-thing-you've-ever-done" sex stories, laughing and getting aroused all over again. Her turn. She grows serious. We're lying naked on our backs. The two white candles on opposite sides of my low-slung bed provide the only light. Camille rotates on her side to face me.

"I had this friend in high school, a really nice guy. He wasn't trying to get in my panties and everything," she starts softly, with a look that makes me uncomfortable.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Raising Fences"
by .
Copyright © 2001 Michael Datcher.
Excerpted by permission of Diversion Publishing Corp..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

What People are Saying About This

Junot Diaz

Heart-rending and beautiful, an odyssey through family and love, through heartbreak and desire.

Mark Matousek

With this unforgettable memoir, Datcher brings honor, commitment, and soul back to the orphaned American dream....

Charles Johnson

...a powerful narrative...I read this book...with gratitude for Datcher's brutal honesty, humor, and poetic probes....

Quincy Troupe

Raising Fences is a stirring, insightful, compelling account...Honestly told...Datcher's narrative is deeply moving, poetic, wise and much needed today.

Reading Group Guide

DISCUSSIONQUES:Question: Of the thirty families who were Michael Datcher's neighbors in a Long Beach, California, apartment building in the mid-seventies, Datcher writes, "I never saw a father living in a household. I never even saw one visit." Disappointed at having been abandoned by their fathers, Datcher and his friends fell into a macho sort of posturing to protect them from their hurt feelings. Discuss the many manifestations of this in the neighborhood and in Datcher himself. How does Datcher link this "epidemic of fatherhood failure" to the lack of hope that arises in the inner city?

Question: The ghost of the father he never knew haunts the author throughout these pages. Datcher writes about his longing for marriage, fatherhood, and a stable family, but his actions are not always consistent with these goals. Why do you think it is so difficult for him to become the responsible man that he wants to be?

Question: Discuss the way in which Datcher's first brush with the law forms his feelings toward police officers. To what extent do you think that our prejudices are formed in response to other people's biases? Do you feel it is a cycle that is doomed to continue?

Question: Discuss the role of community in Datcher's life. What are some of the communities to which he belongs during his childhood and adulthood? Are their influences positive or negative? How does each contribute to his sense of identity?

Question: Why do you think Datcher became so intensely involved with the Church of Christ? What did the Church give him that had been lacking in his life? What conflicts did Datcher's Church membership create? Did you come to see the Church as a cult or a religion? Did the Church of Christ serve a constructive or destructive purpose in Datcher's development as a man?

Question: In an argument with Datcher over whether or not to get an abortion, Camille says, "You tryin so hard to get me down to the clinic so you can protect your little dream. Well, I have dreams, too." Did you take sides in this argument and, if so, did your feelings change when Nicole's paternity was revealed? Why do you think Camille lied to Datcher about her baby's paternity? Do you think that anything positive resulted from her lie?

Q>Datcher's friendships with other men play an important role in his life. In Raising Fences, he describes a number of close male friendships he has had at different times in his life. Name a few of Datcher's closest male friends and discuss the lessons he learned from each of them, both positive and negative. How has following their examples made Datcher "a better human being," as he claims on page 234? At the World Stage Writer's Workshop, the male participants have rare moments of catharsis and talk openly about their lives. Do you think that a group like this would benefit men you know? Why or why not?

Question: Datcher describes coordinating the World Stage Writer's Workshop as his "chance to turn some of the hurt into art." Discuss the role poetry plays in Datcher's life and in the lives of the other men and women who participate in the Workshop. What does poetry give them other than an outlet for difficult emotions? Why do you think Datcher decided to propose to Jenoyne with a poem, in front of their friends from the World Stage?

Question: Tyrone Tillman has overcome his disadvantaged background and is, at age twenty-seven, considered a "wunderkind" by Datcher and his friends. He is rich, smart, successful, and generous. He appears to have everything-and yet his accomplishments are shadowed by a violent and cruel side to his personality. How do you reconcile Tillman's anger with his generosity? What do you make of the following lines, from Datcher's poem about Tillman:
"this is where he is safest./ where beauty is in the black eye/of the beholder./ manhood is easy here."?

Question: At the end of Raising Fences, although Datcher refers wistfully to the father who will never come to show him how to be a man, there is a sense that he has "outgrown the dervish of want and need" through determination and desire. What kind of man has Datcher become by the end of the book? Will fatherlessness continue to define him? Or, in marrying the woman he loves, has he broken the cycle of abandonment he feared?

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