Author fuses past, present, future tense in Boulder
Graduateās semi-autobiographical novel explores CU Boulder during the 1960s and beyond
Dan Culbersonās (Englā63) Plastic Man: A Novel of the Sixties took a long, strange trip on its way to eventual publication in 2008.Ģż
The novel tells the story of Hud Holyoke, who drops out of the University of Colorado Boulder during his final semester and hitchhikes to California.Ģż
āItās a present-tense description of Hudās trip, with past-tense reminiscences of things he did or heard about, and his friends while in school at CU. ā¦ All of it was based on my own experience, with a few tweaks and turns,ā says long-time Boulder resident Culberson, now 79. The story is not merely a reflection of his experience, he says, but is āa metaphor for the ā60s.ā
āI invented the āspineā of the plot after I dreamed it one night,ā he says. āThe route that Hud takes is the route that fellow fraternity brothers and I drove from Boulder to California on spring break.āĢż
But unlike his protagonist, he didnāt quit school. Instead, he earned an honors degree in English and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society.Ģż
But like so many other young men of the time, he lost his student deferment upon graduation and received his draft notice. Persuaded by a recruiting sergeant that the best way to avoid being sent to Vietnam was to enlist for three years, Culbersonāwho started at CU Boulder on a journalism scholarshipāchose to go to the U.S. Army Information School at Fort Slocum, New York so he could work as a journalist during his hitch.Ģż
He did so well that he was kept on as a teacher. But then Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara decided to merge the school with the U.S. Navyās information school in Michigan, and he was reassigned to Europe. The former commanding officer of his journalism school pulled a few strings so he could serve at headquarters, U.S. Army Europe in Heidelberg, Germany.
āIf she hadnāt done that, Iād have been sent to a tank school somewhere on the Czech border and probably been a typist for a motor pool,ā Culberson says.
In Heidelberg, he not only continued working on the novel, but also wrote a screenplay based on a buddyās idea and starred in the film they made, Carrying On, which was shown at the 1969 Malta Film Festival, where it won a C.I.N.E. Eagle Award from the Council on International Non-Theatrical Events. The dark comedy opens when Culbersonās character accidentally kills a man on a street corner, then follows him as he hauls the body around to parties and restaurants, trying to figure out how to get out of the mess.
āThat script is Weekend at Bernieāsāāthe 1989 hit comedy written by Robert Klane, he says. āI wrote it, starred in it, so Iām still a little pissed off.āĢż
Ģż
I invented the āspineā of the plot after I dreamed it one night"
Returning to the United States after his military service, Culberson met with an agent in New York about publishing the novel, without success. He began graduate school at CU Boulder, intending to become a professor of English literature, but was derailed when he fractured his skull in a motorcycle accident.Ģż
āThat knocked me out of getting a masterās degree and becoming a professor. But I think in the long run that was good,ā he says.
A friend who was working at IBMās burgeoning Boulder campus told him the company was looking for writers.
āI decided writing is writing, and I was hired as a programming writerā who wrote books describing the Boulder campusā programs, he says. He stayed with the company for the next quarter century, working as a writer, editor, photographer, publisher and writing teacher, before retiring in 1992.Ģż
But he never gave up on his own writing. In 1972, he replied to a notice that the Colorado Daily was seeking a film reviewer. He got the job, initiating a āhobby careerā in which he published and broadcast hundreds of reviews for local newspapers, magazines and radio stations for the next 42 years.
His favorite review of a bad movie, The Bad News Bears Go to Japan, is also his shortest:Ģż āGoodbye. Good riddance.ā But he says the worst film he ever reviewed was the John Travolta-produced 2000 science-fiction epic, Battlefield Earth, widely regarded as one of the greatest turkeys of all time. Culberson doesnāt hesitate when asked to name the best movie of all time: Orson Wellesā Citizen Kane.
In 1988, he was encouraged when an editor expressed interest in Plastic Man. But the editor questioned the plausibility of Hudās leaving school, so Culberson altered the story, making a girlfriendās suicide the impetus for his protagonistās drastic decision. He sent the revised novel to the editor.Ģż
āAfter a month, the manuscript came back to me with a standard rejection slip,ā he says.
Fast forward to the 21st century, when self-publishing has become a much more viable and respected avenue to getting a book into readersā hands. With the benefit of hindsight, Culberson rewrote the novel to reflect a āfuture tense,ā in the form of Hudās musings, and published it in 2008. The novel is available on Amazon, as are his two other published books, An Atheistās Handbook and The Searcher.
āBecause it took so long to get published, I decided to add that future tense. As Hud reminisces about his past at CU, he thinks about what might happen in the futureāwhich Iāve already lived through,ā he says.Ģż
One Amazon reviewer writes that Plastic Man is āthe perfect novel for Baby Boomers ... and for anyone who has ever experienced the angst of burgeoning adulthood. It is a witty, engaging, and insightful account of college life in the 1960s, an era in which tumultuous societal change mirrored the vicissitudes and emotional upheavals that have always characterized human adolescence.ā
Diagnosed with cancer in 2014, Culberson recently moved from his long-time foothills abode on Olde Stage Roadāwhence he was evacuated for three wildfires and the devastating flood of September 2013 over the yearsāinto a north Boulder condominium. His son, a local financial advisor, lives nearby.
Culberson first arrived in Boulder after graduating from Colorado Springs High School in 1959. Heād planned to go to UCLA, but was reluctant to leave a girlfriend behind, so he planned to follow her to CU Boulder.Ģż
āI didnāt want to be so far away from her,ā he says. She broke up with him before graduation, but he went to CU Boulder anyway, and knew heād found his home as soon as he arrived.
Excepting his three years of military service, and one year in Germany while on assignment for IBM, heās never lived anywhere else but Boulder since.Ģż
āI just liked the place so much,ā he says, āthat I decided I had to stay.ā