To the Mountains of Madness, there & back again with
R.T. Gault
People have influenced me for good, bad, or
indifferent. I am largely a mass of other people’s ideas and tastes. Of course,
I have made them my own. Taken their idea’s, proclivities, and notions;
internalized, distilled them, used them to create what I hope is my unique
outlook and experience. We are products of those around us, and I am no
different.
I started reading comic
books in Junior High, around age 12 or so. It started small with just a few
here and there; then like a kudzu vine sprouting from the virile soil of
adolescent literature. My hunger grew exponentially. I was the Borg of the wire
rack newsstand. Devouring comics in the way Mighty Galactus devoured
home-worlds. Discernment, was not my forte. Fantastic-Four was read along with
Teen Titans, Robot Fighters, and Weird War. Somewhere along the line I heard
about Centaur Books and Comics, in Tullahoma.
I begged my Mom, a long
suffering woman that loved/loves her child. I used logic, passion, and
desperation to get my way, but in the end my Mom took me to the Comic Shop
simply because she loved me, and probably knew I was not going to shut up about
it any time soon. There’s a moral here, be careful of your desires. Because,
you might just get it, you might just get it in spades. Those fairy tales where
the loud, precocious child comes to bad end because of his unreasonable
desires, they’re true. But at the time I didn’t know that. All I knew was I
wanted some comic books and Speedy-Mart was no longer cutting it. I had to go
to Tullahoma, had to go to Centaur Books and Comics.
So Mom
would drive me out there once a week, after my allergy shots. I would be so
excited………so excited. Centaur Books & Comics was located in a single line
strip mall of desperate venues. There was a Musical Instrument Store, a tax
service store (read money laundering) and then there was Centaur, located on
the very end. Out front and in plain view, just in case you were confused there
was the sign. Lit large with florescence was a dancing centaur with the face of
R.T. Gault wearing glasses. This was Centaur Books & Comics. Inside, the
front was replete with rack upon rack of comics. He had all your main stream
comics, and I immediately went for these. Enthusiastically, I would dig into
back issues squealing with delight over G.I. Joe “America’s Hero” or Marvels
“Secret Wars”. I’m sure R.T. was annoyed to no end by my gushing enthusiasm.
However, over time we sort of developed this odd relationship. Me, the eager
student and him the all-knowing, all wise sage of comic-literature.
R.T. Gault was a big
man. Very tall, stoop shoulder he had the worst posture imaginable. He wore
glasses, big brown 1980’s shatter-proof style glasses. His dress habits are
sort of what you’d expect, and he smoked, but who cared? It was the 80’s and
second hand smoke wouldn’t be invented for another 10 years. You could tell he
wasn’t from around here and he informed me that he was from Indiana, and his
family had once owned Roark’s Cove out in Decherd. Not sure why he decided on
Tullahoma as a place of residence unless he was hiding from somebody.
I guess he got sick of
me reading such garbage or what he thought was garbage, or maybe I was his
little Guinea Pig. He was probably just bored. Who knows but one day he starts
recommending comics for me to read and before long I’m into all this bizarre
stuff.
·
Cerebus the Ardvark
·
Watchmen Series
·
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (when they were
still B/W)
·
Miracleman
·
The Shadow
·
Swamp Thing
·
Epic Illustrated
·
Heavy Metal
Of course there were some misses as well, but I’ll forget all about
“Radioactive Black Belt Ninja Hamsters” if you will. His store also probably
had the largest collection of “Omaha the Cat Dancer” in the entire state of
Tennessee at the time. He had all the R. Crumb stuff, back when everybody
thought R. Crumb was just a dirty old man with his dirty old picture books.
Yeah R.T. was a visionary in some ways. His store ran the gamut. “To catch many
fish cast your net far and wide”, as the saying goes. R.T. is probably the
reason I still enjoy comics.
R.T.’s store was truly
unique. My mom even said as much when after perusing his shelves she remarked,
“He has some strange books”. Little did she know that she was gazing upon what
was at that time likely the largest collection of occult material East of the
Mississippi, South of the Mason-Dixon Line. He had it all. Allister Crowley,
Golden Dawn, Atlantis, and Lemuria: you name a conspiracy or obscure mystic
order, R.T. had it. Centaur Books & Comics was a vast cavern of occult
esoterica that has fueled my imagination to this very day. R.T. introduced me
to H.P. Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos, Edward Abbey and eco-terrorism, and
finally one of my favorite fantasy books of all time he simply handed to me and
said “Why don’t you read this?” “Little, Big” by John Crowley which is still to
this day one of my favorite books. Not only is it still in print; it is hailed
as an “unrecognized masterpiece”. The book is good, and yes I still have my
copy.
R.T. told me stories
about writing “romance novels” to make extra money while he was in college. “It’s all very formulaic” he said with a chuckle and
downward glance. One day while listening to him lecture about the JFK
assassination………he went into the back and returned with a book “The politics of
Heroin in Southeast Asia”. R.T. says, “this book talks
about the Heroin Trade and the Golden Triangle, did you know they smuggled
heroin inside coffins coming back from Vietnam?” Of course how could I
know this I was like fourteen. He had to “decide” whether or not to sell it to
me, as it was his only copy. Reluctantly he did.
Here’s a review of the
book he sold me for like $2.
“This
in-depth academic study researches the central role that opium plays in the
economy, politics, and wars of the region. It follows the trial from the
highlands of Laos, where the opium is grown and harvested by the Hmong
tribespeople, to the Golden Triangle, where it is refined into heroin.
Published in 1972, this was the first printed account of the USA's massive
engagement in a "secret" war in Laos. It documented the use of CIA
helicopters to bring Laotian opium to market in Vietnam (where, ironically, it
was sold to addicted US soldiers.) This was done to finance weapons for the
army of Hmong highlanders, being led by CIA "advisors", who were
fighting the Laotian communists.
There was only one edition of this book; immediately after its first printing, the entire publisher was bought by the U.S. government, and all warehoused copies were destroyed. However, with a bit of luck it can still be found in used bookstores.”
There was only one edition of this book; immediately after its first printing, the entire publisher was bought by the U.S. government, and all warehoused copies were destroyed. However, with a bit of luck it can still be found in used bookstores.”
This review stresses a simple fact, yes R.T. was a bit misanthropic
and eccentric, but that doesn’t mean he didn’t know what he was talking about. He
was one of the smarter more interesting people I’ve met. R.T. certainly had a
lasting impact on my literary tastes and view of the world, and I’m good with
that. Yeah, I was reading this stuff when I was in Junior High School. His reading
list and my own geekiness combined with Edward Abbey, Anton Wilson, William Faulkner,
and George Orwell’s 1984 to make me truly paranoid. I was ready to pop smoke
and vacate Western Civilization for the remainder of my days. If R.T. was alive
today he’d have a fit with all these 9/11 Theories and CIA Torture Planes. I
imagine him to be doing 360’s in his grave as I write this.
My good
friend, Alex would come over to the house to hang out. He’d find me dressed out
in a hybrid blend of combat boots, camouflage pants and Native American regalia
either reading the Flaming Carrot or some occult history of the JFK
assassination, I’d start yammering about Masons, Lee Harvey Oswald and the Iran-Contra
affair. It also didn’t help that down the street the family of Tupper Saucey
was selling his book on the Martin Luther King assassination. How James Earl
Ray didn’t do it, that it was the FBI who framed him. All this came to roost
inside my little head sitting up in my room, tweaking on Sun-Drop, and
listening to Pink Floyd’s “The Wall”. Yeah, it was a perfect recipe for madness
and I jumped in with both feet begging for it.
“I
was going to the worst place in the world and I didn't even know it yet. Weeks
away and hundreds of miles up a river that snaked through the war like a main
circuit cable plugged straight into Kurtz. It was no accident that I got to be
the caretaker of Colonel Walter E. Kurtz's memory any more than being back in
Saigon was an accident. There is no way to tell his story without telling my
own. And if his story really is a confession, then so is mine.” – Captain
Willard from “Apocalypse Now”