I won’t call him a writer. I won’t call him anything other
than a human, because Harrison didn’t, as far as I could tell, write about
things – not in the usual way that usual people do. Like they’re trying to say
something, sell something. Harrison just lived, intensely, and his writing
emerged to reflect and refract that life as it unfurled.
Like all great writers, whatever Harrison was writing was a
guidebook. He’d seen something unvarnished, he’d felt something indelible, he
had it. And he kept it, and it sustained him, and he passed it on. To help. He
helped me.
This is about wine. Harrison drank a lot of it, and especially once he started to make some money from his writing – there were many years when he hadn’t, and his life from early on was filled with so many profound sorrows that poverty wasn’t the worst or second-worst of them – he drank well.
This is about wine. Harrison drank a lot of it, and especially once he started to make some money from his writing – there were many years when he hadn’t, and his life from early on was filled with so many profound sorrows that poverty wasn’t the worst or second-worst of them – he drank well.


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