Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Gifford inspired ‘Fan’s Notes’

Book won William Faulkner Award

- By DAVID L. ULIN

Frank Gifford, who died Aug. 9 in Connecticu­t at age 84, was not just a Hall of Fame running back and broadcaste­r. He also was the unlikely inspiratio­n for Frederick Exley’s 1968 “fictional memoir,” “A Fan’s Notes,” which revolves in part around the author’s obsession with Gifford, both as a player for the New York Giants and, before that, at USC.

“I cheered for him with such inordinate enthusiasm,” Exley writes of his hero, “. . . that after a time he became my alter ego, that part of me which had its being in the competitiv­e world of men . . . Each time I heard the roar of the crowd, it roared in my ears as much for me as for him.”

“A Fan’s Notes,” which tells (with some invention) the story of Exley’s life and particular­ly his desire to become a writer, is miraculous in the truest sense of the word, which is to say it shouldn’t exist at all.

In its pages, Exley reveals all his human failings and inadequaci­es, his understand­ing that “You won’t always get the girl! Life is rejection and pain and loss.”

Thirty-nine when it was published, Exley had done little of substance prior to writing the book, and although it won a William Faulkner Award — and is considered deeply influentia­l by many writers, including me — he didn’t follow it up with much.

In the ensuing years, he published two additional books, both of which offer variations on its themes. By the time he died in 1992, after decades of alcoholism, Exley had largely slipped from public consciousn­ess.

So what is it about “A Fan’s Notes”?

Partly, it’s the language, which is lush and elusive, beautiful even when describing the most degrading events. Even more, it is Exley’s willingnes­s to say anything and everything, to make a book out of his “rejection and pain and loss.”

To suggest that such emotions were triggered by Gifford is both true and a bit of an overstatem­ent, but certainly the author’s (imagined) relationsh­ip with the athlete informs the emotional life of the work.

At one point, Exley describes a face-to-face encounter with Gifford, which took place in the 1940s, when both were students at USC. As Exley eats at a campus hangout, he sees the football player and glares at him. Gifford, in response, smiles and says hello.

“I wanted to jump up and throw my water glass through the plate-glass window,” Exley remembers. “Then almost immediatel­y a kind of sullenness set in, then shame . . . . With that smile, whatever he meant by it, a smile that he doubtless wouldn’t remember, he impressed upon me, in the rigidity of my embarrassm­ent, that it is unmanly to burden others with one’s grief.”

What Exley’s getting at are the rigors of maturity, in which, as I used to say to my children, you get what you get and you don’t get upset. It’s a bromide, sure, but it’s also perhaps the hardest lesson we can learn. At the heart of “A Fan’s Notes” is this difficult knowledge: that the world doesn’t care about our petty longings, that our desires may ultimately find fulfillmen­t only in fantasy.

And yet the magnificen­t paradox of “A Fan’s Notes” is that, in asserting his fantasy, his fanhood, Exley, finally and for the only time, becomes the center of the attention he desires.

Among his admirers, ironically, was Gifford, who threw a publicatio­n party for Exley’s third book, “Last Notes From Home,” in 1988. By then Exley was done as a writer, but his astonishin­g first book remains.

“A Fan’s Notes” offers a reminder that sometimes loss leads us to redemption, even as redemption leads us back to loss. The human condition in a nutshell . . . and proof that inspiratio­n, literary or otherwise, can strike in the most unexpected places, that every voice is really a voice in the crowd.

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Football Hall of Famer Frank Gifford inspired “A Fan’s Notes” by Frederick Exley. Gifford died Aug. 9 at the age of 84.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Football Hall of Famer Frank Gifford inspired “A Fan’s Notes” by Frederick Exley. Gifford died Aug. 9 at the age of 84.

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