When Richard Ford read from a story featuring his beloved character Frank Bascombe at 92nd Street Y last week, one had to ask if this meant Bascombe would soon return in a fourth novel. Mr. Ford had told interviewers he was done writing about Bascombe when he concluded his trilogy of novels, âThe Sportswriterâ (1986), the Pulitzer Prize-winning âIndependence Dayâ (1995) and âThe Lay of the Landâ (2006).
I recently asked Mr. Ford via e-mail whether the excerpt portends a new novel. He said the piece he read was from âFalling Forward,â a short story that is, for now, not part of a longer project.
The new story takes place in the days before last Christmas, and it prominently features the effects of Hurricane Sandy on New Jersey. âKristina.â his wife, âand I did go down to Toms River and across the bridge to Lavallette and Ortley Beach in late fall - when the cleaning up was well under way but also a bit overmatched by calamity and thus quite moving,â Mr. Ford said. âI'd also been, previous to that, plucked at a bit, wanting to write something in Bascombe's voice, and had already considered writing a story - about what I hadn't decided. So in a sense, the two experiences fused, and âFalling Forward' has been the result.â
Mr. Ford didn't rule out the idea of a possible novel, saying he would âat least try to write another Frank Bascombe story this late spring and see how that goes.â
âWhat draws me to writing Frank Bascombe is what's always drawn me: he's funny (and it's thrilling to write things that are funny), but also he offers me the chance to write into the breach between what Henry James calls âbliss and bale'; in my own way, to connect âthe things that help and the things that hurt' and to find some kind of reconciling vocabulary for both,â Mr. Ford said. âI always think that, when I'm writing Frank Bascombe, I have the chance to write about the most important things I know, and that's always been irresistible - as it probably is for most writers.â