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Woodland Pattern: On the Road with Eddie Kilowatt
by Mary Vuk
If you happen to be driving along
the highway next summer and spot a
young man on a motorcycle, talking into
a microphone attached to his helmet,
chances are you have come across one
of your Riverwest neighbors: Eddie
Kilowatt.
Kilowatt wants to travel the whole
country by motorcycle and digitally
record his traveling experiences while
they are occurring. His plan is to
create a talking journal, which will be
accompanied by separately written
poems, his written journal entries and
photographs from the trip.
“This summer I went out east for
about a month just to get used to the
process and see if it even actually
worked. I was able to get some good
quality recordings. It has kind of a neat
sound to it. You can hear road noise a
little bit,” Kilowatt said.
Would Jack Kerouac have approved
of such an undertaking?
Kilowatt wasn’t sure. “I don’t know,”
he said. “I wasn’t drunk the whole time,
so he probably wouldn’t have been a fan
because there was no drinking involved
really.”
The most memorable moment of his
2006 road trip occurred while he was
visiting West Virginia. There he met a
middle-aged man who got very caught
up in the romance of what Kilowatt was
doing and kept telling Kilowatt how
much he wished he could do the same
thing.
“When [people] feel like you’re
doing something they’ve always wanted
to do, they kind of open up to that a
little bit. The point of the trip is to say
‘everybody can do this.’”
Since last February he has been
living in an unheated space without
bathroom or kitchen, which a friend
has allowed him to use. His frugality
is helping to underwrite his next trip,
and he doesn’t seem to mind the lack of
creature comforts. When he is on the
road he camps out in a three-man tent.
He is in negotiations now with a
Milwaukee manufacturer who is going
to underwrite his 2007 trip.
Kilowatt is mostly self-taught. He
grew up in Colgate, WI, graduated
from Germantown High School, then
attended UW-West Bend for only one
semester.
“It just wasn’t my kind of place. [At
first] I was all excited like ‘oh yeah, I’m
in college, and I’m going to meet all
these new people who want to learn
things’ but it was just like a high school
with ashtrays. It wasn’t very exciting.”
After his unhappy college semester,
Kilowatt worked for five years at the
corporate offices of a large retail chain,
working his way up from the loading
dock to setting up the computer
systems in new stores and eventually to
overseeing all the computer systems at
all the branch stores.
But somewhere along the line he
thought: “either I’m going to quit or do
this for the rest of my life. That scared
the hell out of me. I didn’t want to do
that. So I quit. Since then I’ve just been
making writing more the focus of what
dictated my life.” Kilowatt self-published
his first book of poetry, Manifest
Density, last spring and hopes to bring
out another volume in 2007.
Kilowatt will read at Woodland
Pattern, at 7 pm, November 17.
Riverwest Currents online edition - November, 2006
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