The Curious Case of Peace Corps Evaluator Mark Harris

One afternoon back in 1963 novelist Mark Harris received a telephone call from Sargent Shriver inquiring whether he’d be interested in writing a special report about the Peace Corps. Mark gladly accepted, then waited five months while his loyalty and sanity were investigated (been there, done that), and then went overseas  to West Africa where he wandered around for ten days in a country he called ‘Kongohno’  and then wrote his one-and-only Evaluation Report for Charlie Peters.

Mark Harris retells all this in a book entitled, Twentyone Twice published in 1966. The book has two sections. One is about getting through security, the second is about Africa. The fictional name that he used of the West African country he visited is Kongohno…I’m not sure of the actual country, but I believe it is Sierre Leone. Old timers in the Peace Corps might know the real name of the country Mark Harris  visited as a Peace Corps Evaluator in 1964.

But who was Mark Harris and why did he come to the Peace Corps?

Harris came to the Peace Corps really at the invitation of Charlie Peters, head of Evaluation, and Bill Haddad, Charlie’s boss, who had one of those impossible titles that the Peace Corps favors: Associate Director for the Office of Planning and Evaluation. Both Peters and Haddad were fans of Harris’ novels, and they liked the idea of this rough and tough guy writing about the work of Volunteers. Harris was just the sort of person to comment on the new agency overseas. (James Michener was another.) 

Mark Harris arrived at the Peace Corps Office on July 28, 1963. He was an unlikely type, but the Peace Corps was full of unlikely types. Harris was best known for a quartet of novels about baseball: the Southpaw (1953), Bang the Drum Slowly (1956), A Ticket for a Seamstitch (1957), and It Looked Like For Ever (1979). In 1956, Bang the Drum Slowly was adapted for television and starred Paul Newman and Robert De Niro. (If you haven’t read Harris, start with Bang the Drum Slowly; a wonderful book and sad movie.)

Harris was born Mark Harris Finklestein in Mount Vernon, New York.  After serving in World War II., Harris worked as a journalist in New York City, St. Louis, and Chicago before enrolling at the University of Denver, from which he received a Master’s degree in 1951. He obtained a PhD in American Studies from the University of Minnesota in 1956 and went on to teach at several universities, eventually settling at Arizona State, where he was a professor of English and taught in the creative writing program from 1980 to 2001.

This journal of his Peace Corps tour was only one section of the life-long journal that he kept. I’m told he would mail out sections of his journal to his friend, and that today, all of these journals are with his papers at the University of Delaware. If someone is looking for a masters or PHD topic, here is a source of new and raw literary material. 

Anyway, hiring Harris to be an Evaluator (even for one trip to Africa) was pure Peace Corps, pure Shriver. It made no sense. But then Sarge once hired a guy he met on a plane ride. The best story I ever heard about one of Shriver’s early hires was this former military officer who Shriver made a Country Director and sent to Africa, and after a welcoming party of new PCVs at the Country Director’s home, the military guys wife asked her husband who would clear up the mess in the backyard and he replied, “oh, we’ll get the PCVs to police the area.” You can imaging what the Vols said. The first word begins with an “F” and the second word is “you!” 

Back to Mark Harris who arrived in Washington at the Peace Corps headquarters on July 28, 1963. Even though he was ‘just a consultant’ to the agency he was run through the famous ringer-of-interviews, a number that ran from 6 to 10, before he met up with Shriver on the 5th floor late in the day. Harris liked Shriver and he writes about Shriver, calling him, “the Prince of Vitality and the King of Hope.” He writes that Shriver was a front for all dreamers, giving confidence to the anti-dreamers because he doesn’t himself appear to be a dreamer. Coates Redmon, however, in her book says about Harris at the Peace Corps, “It soon became clear that Harris was far too imprudent a cause-seeker to work in a bureaucracy, even the most unbureaucratic bureaucracy in the world, which the Peace Corps prided itself on being.”

Harris’ ‘journal’ is full of interesting nuggets, and while names are not named (in most cases) older timers will be able to recall jobs and faces and put names to old friends and famous enemies. One paragraph that caught my eye–and is something that I clearly remember from working in HQ back in 1964-65–is this. Harris is new to the Peace Corps and a woman named ‘Prudence Churchill’ is his guide “through the labyrinths of the Peace Corps building.” She is a former Volunteer, Harris writes, having spent two years in Africa. “She (Prudence) is amazingly religious in her devotion to the Peace Corps and to the people she works for and with….The other girl with her is a regular civil-service worker, and it was soon obvious to me throughout the building who was a Peace Corps person and who was a civil-service type: The Peace Corps worker works harder and stays later and leaves when the work is done, rather than when the clock says it’s time to go home.”

If Peace Corps Director Aaron Williams needs another reason to hire RPCVs, this is it:: they work hard, stay longer, and get the job done.

At the end of his Evaluation Report of the African country ‘Kongohno’ Mark  Harris would put down in prose his last  thoughts on his experience, and the Peace Corps.

“I hope the Peace Corps will never fall backward, as institutions often do, into the swamp of self-perpetuation,” he wrote. ” The Peace Corps was itself a “risk” when it began. The world and America would suffer without the Peace Corps, if my extrapolations tell me right, but the danger arises not from official disolution but from the danger of the Peace Corps itself forgetting its original ideals, and become timid, safe, avoiding ‘risks.’..The only absolute fact I know is that the work of the Peace Corps in Kongohno filled me with optimism, pleasure, and hope. Respectfully submitted, Mark Harris.”

As far as I know, Mark Harris never again wrote about the Peace Corps. When he retired from teaching creative writing, but was still connected to Arizona State, I emailed  him and asked about interviewing him for my Peace Corps Writer newsletter. He never responded. 

In 2007 he died in Santa Barbara, California of complications of Alzheimer’s Disease. He was 84.

One final note. When Harris passed away his ashes were brought back to New York and scattered over the baseball sandlot field in Mount Vernon where he first played the game.  The famous southpaw had come home.
 

3 Comments

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  • I seem to recall that mark harris’s country was Liberia. i’m sure the book is full of wild exaggerations. the truest part of the book is the moment he reports that everything is wonderful in Liberia and charley’s face falls. The funniest part, at least to evaluators like myself, were the scenes of PCVs pounding on his door hoping to tell him all the screwups; Harris tells them to go away because he is writing his journal.
    I may be wrong about Liberia, because Fletcher Knebel, the novelist, evaluated Liberia at that that time. Perahps it was Sierra Leone. It surely was in West Africa.

  • My father, Dave Elliott, who was Deputy Director in Sierra Leone in 1964, told me the country Mark Harris wrote about in Twentyone Twice was Sierra Leone, and that he stayed with us, which would have been in Freetown. Harris says in his story that the family he stayed with had four kids, but there were only two of us. I love Harris’ writing style. Hilarious and real. The only other book I’ve read of his is Bang The Drum Slowly.

  • Note :“Riding the tiger” is seen as a wondrous inability to change (ie get off),once you are on it, and yet many have changed horses midstream and the new life is quite rich. The difference between the two being that the horse is unlikely to kill you. I like the tiger myself for myself because I like the ride of writing my own poetry because you see it rides me.

    Riding-The-Tiger of Writing

    For ANTHONY RUDOLF who, on reading the poem, quoted Blake & I added it as the final line

    Within the context of ‘writing’ as another form of ‘riding
    the tiger’ (“who rides the tiger cannot dismount”), asking “who am I” questions identity in a life-lock seat-belt realm.

    From gloaming, tigers get mounted, ridden, through twilight: between the two there’s mostly dark, either way, dusk. Heros don’t attend dark being so much too occupied.

    David and Jonathan switching their clothes.
    Anthony and Cleopatra exchanging their clothes.
    Enkidu and Gilgamesh grappling swept through love.
    Doing my own steps I’m driving extremely riding the tiger.

    “The tigers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction.”*

    *From the Proverbs section of Willian Blake’s MARRIAGE OF HEAVEN AND HELL

    ©Edward Mycue 28 December 2015

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