- Gail Wilson Kenna
- Feb 22
- 3 min read
I’ve preferred this saying throughout my life. Three soft syllables to the terse, good-bye. This is to say I am not continuing with a website (Wix) or gailwilsonkenna.com. This means no more blogs. Yet I’ve enjoyed doing one the past many years. It has been a weekly discipline that kept me writing. And I am deeply grateful to Ilona Duncan for giving my words an artistic presentation each week.
Lately, I’ve been going through files and drawers and trying to get rid of paper. It’s as if I am re-visiting my life from the late 1970s in the Napa Valley. That’s when I took a weekend course at UC Berkeley, Overcoming the Fear of Writing. The instructor pulled my essay from the 80 or so she received, and told me I had “voice” and should write. Soon after, I was paid to take the Bay Area Writing Project through Berkeley and heard the same message. So after moving to Montgomery, Alabama, and no longer teaching high school English, I began writing each morning while the children were in pre-school. After that year our family began a sojourn that took us to five other countries and several U.S. cities. Throughout that time I taught for colleges and universities in Germany, Malaysia, Venezuela, Colombia, and Washington, D.C.

I’m keying these words to Elgar’s Enigma Variations. This British composer was told he lacked the talent to compose music. But he did it anyway and succeeded.

The other day in a thick folder on the Irish writer Edna O’Brien, I found these words. “I would be much lonelier on this earth without literature, and I might even have gone mad.” She continued, “As a last word, let me say this: Literature is the big bonanza, and writing is getting down one one’s knees each day and searching for the exact words.” Edna like Elgar succeeded.

Earlier I opened a file for an unpublished book I wrote, Long Night’s Journey, an epistolary novel set in Caracas, Venezuela, in which an imprisoned attorney writes to his 16-year-old daughter, a bright and talented student in a private Catholic school for girls in Georgetown, D.C. What happened when I opened the file? Microsoft AI came on and told me it was a long document. Would I like it summarized?

But AI, I said aloud, the letter writer is Nate, an erudite and well-read lawyer, who passed his intelligence on to his daughter, Lucinda. Nate, like all of us (excluding AI) did something human and stupid. Only he made his mistake in the land of Napoleonic Law where you are guilty until proven innocent. Nate survives by writing and reading Moby Dick, along with the help of Jan, the U.S. Embassy’s vice-consul.
Yet brilliant AI will somehow summarize this novel, a good chunk of it using Spanish and language from Melville’s Ishmael? I had to laugh so as not to scream or cry. (Elgar easily brings my tears.)

Earlier this morning I finished re-reading “Child’s Play” by Sam Kriss in the March 2026 Harper’s. The cover’s ‘tease’ for the article is, “Tech Boys in Toyland: Fear of Girls, Sperm Racing, and Silicon Valley’s Lust for Global Destruction.” One of the ‘boys’ interviewed is named Eric. He has a new company. I quote from the Harper’s article. “Last April Eric held a live sperm-racing event in Los Angeles. Hundreds of frat boys came out to watch a head-to-head between the effluvia of USC’s and UCLA’s most virile students, moving through a plastic maze.” Author Kriss then heard a spiel from Eric about how sperm racing draws attention to important issues and the “venture seemed to be of a piece with a general trend toward obsessive masculine self-optimization á la RFK Jr…. “This comment made me think of Hep the Warrior. Perhaps the two cabinet members should contact Eric and offer their optimum bodies for testing.

I only know this. Except for author Sam and a young man known as Donald the Boat, who tricked a lot of high tech folk, I have no way to relate to the boys described in the article. I did love reading in the next to last column of a ten-page article that Donald had taken two Penguin classics to Roy at Cluely. The Canterbury Tales and Boccaccio’s Decameron.” Roy’s response. “I do not obtain value from reading books.”
Now I hear Elgar returning to his theme, representing the loneliness of the creative artist. He dedicated The Enigma Variations to thirteen of his friends, beginning with his wife Alice.

My gift in life besides family, friends and music, has been literature, beginning with The Yearling in third grade. My first blog years ago was about this novel by Marjorie Kennan Rawlings. I hope to do a RILL course on this writer’s books. Not ready to stop teaching or writing.
Onward, I say, and Fare Thee Well …Gail





















