Taking Care of Bidness

Posted by Lizzie on 03/28/05

Emily.jpgYou have, from time to time, observed us demanding money for The Book Thing, our hometown free-books emporium. (Click for old demands.) You have also observed the free-cartoon contest won by one Mr. Bryant Paul Johnson, a lovely cartoonist in his own right. In an extraordinary act of generosity, Mr. Johnson has offered to forgo his cartoon AND DONATE ONE OF HIS OWN for a benefit eBay Auction for….The Book Thing! (We were going to tie it together somehow, you knew.) An original New Yorker cartoon retails for $1500, so we can only imagine the value of one never sullied by publication. Teaching Baby Paranoia.jpg Bryant’s sentiments–and artwork–are priceless. Why can’t the rest of you be more like Bryant? It’s ridiculous. Anyway, bid for books. Bid for Bryant. Bid for Emily. Just bid! If you’re one of those annoying people who needs to examine every little thing, click the images for more on the work of each artist.*

* We are going away for the AWP Conference this week, so this auction will remain here for 7 WHOLE DAYS. That’s the same amount of time the EBAY AUCTION IS UP. Coincidence? You decide.

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Okay, now you’re just asking for it

Posted by Lizzie on 03/27/05

I do love her. But I’m not in love with her. Nor with her two brothers or sister. Yes, I have four children. Four children with whom I spend a good part of every day: bathing them, combing their hair, sitting with them while they do their homework, holding them while they weep their tragic tears. But I’m not in love with any of them. I am in love with my husband.

It is his face that inspires in me paroxysms of infatuated devotion. If a good mother is one who loves her child more than anyone else in the world, I am not a good mother. I am in fact a bad mother. I love my husband more than I love my children.

[via an EQUALLY HORRIFED Carrie]

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Living Out of my Mind

Posted by Lizzie on 03/23/05

We haven’t weighed in — and, btw, fellow lit-bloggers, we would like to issue a moratorium on saying ‘weigh in’ or ‘weighed in’, as it makes us sound like a bunch of pudgy pedants around a fake-oak table on a 70′s political talk show — on the Ayelet Waldman brouhaha ( do you want us to STEAL ALL OF MAUD’S LINKS or just link to them, like an honest blogger?) yet, but, in true Ayelettian fashion, we feel like it and we’re going to, fuckers. We weren’t big fans of Ayelet’s blog, and we’re probably not going to be big readers of her Salon column. But we’re going to go ahead and take issue with — yes, co-litbloggers, we are nominating “take issue with” as the replacement for “weighed in on,” at least for the foreseeable future — her general vilification.

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The BOOG will never stir again

Posted by Lizzie on

It better include a self-emptying ashtray.

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Dude, you added an “s” to GROUNDHOG DAY. Oh, and you forgot that “self-” before “love.”

Posted by Lizzie on

Variety reports that Topher Grace will star in an untitled Harold Ramis (“Groundhogs Day”) comedy that will be based on the popular web service, Friendster.com. Gustin Nash will pen the screenplay.

Topher will play a character that will utilize the website, as well as instant messaging and camera phones, as he looks for love on the Internet.

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I’ll let you go on and on

Posted by Lizzie on

We love what goes on in Bruce Wagner’s ol’ squared-spectacled eggplantine head, so we’re happy Jessica Lee Jernigan took the time to round up everything we’re too lazy to link to, including the on-air interview in which Terry Gross — whom we don’t mind EXCEPT FOR THE FUCKING VOICE, WHY CAN’T RADIO PEOPLE UNDERSTAND THAT PEOPLE WHO WORK IN RADIO MUST NOT HAVE THAT VOICE — mispronounced “Force Majeure.” (We love pettily pointing out mispronunciations, never mind that it took us ages to get “privy” right.) Anyway, Jessica has an exclusive, secret interview with the man who waxed rhapsodic on the joys of a rubber-clad, goggled agent demanding sex in a bathtub way before Defamer got on it.

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Serifated at Birth

Posted by Lizzie on

Take a tragically dead father, a good-hearted but distracted mother, and a clever kid engaged in a mystery-solving quest around New York. Add weighty historical background, aging WWII survivors, some plot-driving letters/diary entries/manuscript fragments, and you have the constituents of not one novel but two: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer and The History of Love* by his wife, Nicole Krauss.

The lovely and talented Emma Garman pops her head out to discuss why Jonathan Safran Foer is not only desperately fond of email, he’s a big fat copycat.

* Editors, please: Do not allow the words distance, love, water, stones, history, footprints, weight, water, everything, anything, moon, dust, heart, or time to appear in titles ANY MORE. Unnamed editor? History AND Love? That’s one.

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NEVER lose an opportunity to bring your mother into it

Posted by Lizzie on 03/22/05

We post this not to gross you out but to comment how, when we had to have a similar boil lanced, our mother’s only comment afterward was that she wished she could have watched.

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And the unspecified bottle of Scotch goes too…

Posted by Lizzie on 03/21/05

Our intrepid New Yorker cartoonist spent all weekend poring over your responses, and a winner has been picked for the most original undone contest setting ever, or something. Needless to say, cartoonists everywhere will now be scrambling to be the first to draw it and claim credit for themselves, but the winner will have a bottle of scotch to cradle while slowly weeping. Here’s Lily’s verdict:

Twenty-some people responded to our call to answer this question: what’s a good, underused location for the setting of a gag cartoon? The responses fell into three categories: the smartass and/or bitter (“How about a cartoon about someone reading a cartoon in the New Yorker? Or one about a bunch of writers tossing around ideas for a cartoon? Or one about people commenting about cartoon ideas on a blog?”), the good-but-already-done-to-death (cow herds, mountains, passenger trains, dog parks, factory assembly lines), and the just plain good: ideas that are perhaps not yet fully done to death (co-ops, childcare centers, lumberyards, in the racks at Target).

Honorable mention goes to Genevieve for her funny and long list, which included lap pools and Lillian Vernon customer service headquarters, and to Fred, who suggested a good joke about the devil and his advisors discussing a job applicant (“He’s been to the best schools, and his letters of recommendation were positively glowing. But I don’t know…do you really think he’s evil enough?”)

Anyhoo: The winner of an original cartoon or a bottle of scotch is….Bryant! Bryant suggested lumberyards, seventh-grade dances, tent revivals, and soup kitchens. Bryant also points out that there should be more cartoons about autistic people. (How about more cartoons about all sorts of physical and psychological disabilities, especially congenital ones?) Contratulations, Bryant! Email theoldhag AT theoldhag DOT com with your Scotch/Cartoon selection, and we’ll get the ball rolling.

Lily, somewhat evilly, assembled a list of the been-there-done-that stuff you boneheads suggested. Why don’t you just sit on your hands, nudniks? No Scotch for you!

Snorkeling
Music stores
Museum gift shops
cows
Under the sea
Mountains
School dances
Lumber yards
Tent revivals*
Landscape artists

* Not a tent revival. — Ed

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Spring Waaaaaaaaaay Back

Posted by Lizzie on

We’re not even going to pretend that we can post today. In fact, we wrote this yesterday. Well, it’s right now for us, but tomorrow for you. Sorry. Which is to say, we hope to post some poetry stuff later, and CERTAINLY the winner to Lily’s New Yorker-cartoon-or-bourbon contest, but nothing much more will be coming from us today. If you give to a most bookish charity today, maybe Lily will send you the cartoon AND the bourbon, even David Remnick’s abandoned napkin from his afternoon tuna on rye. You never know.

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Link to Live, or, why BLOGLINES IS RUINING MY LIFE

Posted by Lizzie on 03/17/05

We’re in the process of transitioning (we quit) from one job (no windows) to another (great chairs), which means that, instead of spending a goodly amount of time on this blog, we will, once again, be doing work. What this also means is that we have, for whatever, subconscious, despicable reason, been spending our last days in a terrifying round robin of blog-checking, blog-posting, email-checking, email-sending, message-checking, and guilt. We have also been thinking — which is so, so, dangerous, especially when you really need to clean the bathroom — some nakedly philosophical thoughts. We have placed them where philosophy should ALWAYS go: after the jump. Jump! No, seriously. Jump!

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Y.P.R.: A Day in the Life of The New Yorker’s Fiction Editorial Board, if It Were a Person

Posted by Lizzie on

3 p.m. In the parking lot at Kmart, an Asian person took my parking space. When I saw that the man was Asian, I let him have the parking spot and did not show any anger in my face. I felt good about myself. My heart swelled and I felt satisfied and good.

9 p.m. I lay in bed thinking about how terrible rape is. How interesting foreign cultures are, I thought. Black people are important, I thought. Then I fell asleep very quickly. I snored immediately and loudly and slept flat on my back. I had one dream about buying a fat hog and doing many interesting things with it that, when I woke up, I couldn’t remember.

6 a.m. After breakfast, I called up a friend and told him about the dream with the fat hog. Isn’t it strange that a fat hog was in my dream! I said. We both chuckled extremely loudly into the phone.

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God, we wish we’d saved that “Google” T-shirt they gave us for free in 1999

Posted by Lizzie on

Flash + Doobie = EPIC.

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Also, all art, dance, artisanal cheeses. Seriously, we’re IDIOTS

Posted by Lizzie on

It seems retarded, considering our best friend is a New Yorker cartoonist — as is our almost-sister-in-law’s brother — we might give a shit about cartoons. Alas, we really don’t. Still, since cartooning is the theme around there this week, those of you who DO give a shit should check out this week’s Slate journal, from the founder of the Center for Cartoon Studies, James Sturm.

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This Lit is FPO

Posted by Lizzie on

Andrew Hearst points to an applet that creates a graphic of your author search on Amazon. We know now when Judgment Day comes and we are asked to account for our words and deeds, this is what we will have to write in the fucking Book of Life.

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This is actually the only funny entry…but it’s REALLY funny

Posted by Lizzie on

India is a software giant based in Toronto. The company achieved overnight success in 1986 when founder Al Gore invented the internet. Today, India is one of the largest companies in the world, with 1 billion employees and yearly profits of over $10.

The Uncyclopedia. [via Amerdeep Singh, via Out of the Woods Now]

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By the way, will someone give Lily a crash course in HTML imaging, cuz we have to work? No RTFM today, please

Posted by Lizzie on

The lovely David Freeman at Meet the Author wanted us to let you know that they are actively soliciting authors in the US to add to their Real Player roster. If you are a published author, not hideously deformed, and WANT PEOPLE TO BUY YOUR BOOK, contact him (email david AT meettheauthor DOT com for you non-clicksters) and say so.* We’re going to have a multi-part post later from some authors on publishing your chapbook of poetry, which we’re sure will fascinate and spellbind you into submission (heh). Until then, we leave you in the capable hands of Lily, who should really be using this opportunity to name-drop about how it’s “Rick” Hertzberg and what Malcolm Gladwell eats for lunch and all.

* On a semi-related note, the BOOG is looking for people for facial imaging. If you are NOT a published author, not hideously deformed, but would still like to wax bathetic to a camera about your life and works for hours on end, contact us. Baltimore area only.

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We’re just going to have to go on an honor system type of thing here

Posted by Lizzie on 03/16/05

All this talk about twist endings reminds us of one of our favorite ones, the dinger at the end of Edith Wharton’s short-ish “Roman Fever.” If you haven’t read it before, see if you can guess the ending by the time the scrollbar is halfway down. If all that tabbing between windows doesn’t make you lose your sense of time and place, place your prediction below. We’ll award an outsized feeling of triumph to the winner.

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To be followed shortly by “Money, Lack Thereof”

Posted by Lizzie on

The newest Boldtype is about Creativity.

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All Almodovar =Best

Posted by Lizzie on

Slate’s David Edelstein is soliciting absurd twist endings from readers. HOW ARLINGTON ROAD is defensible, we’ll never know. We’re going to have to give a huge shout-out to Robert Massing, though:

The Usual Suspects
I know everyone will disagree with me; in fact, many will rank this among the BEST endings of all time. But that is because everyone is an idiot. As it turns out, he made the whole thing up! He lifted names from the stuff on the detective’s office wall! Oh my God! Brilliant! Who is Kaiser Sose? We’ll never know! Wow!

We totally called that in the first five minutes, and don’t get us started on THE BLATANT MANFACE FACTOR in that….tranvestite….movie…we’re actually blocking on the name. Anyway, we’ve long contended that a healthy dose of Isaac Asimov, Shirley Jackson, Stephen King and Roald Dahl’s adult fiction sadly renders all movie twists bovs and obvs. We love No Way Out, Fight Club and The Others, though, and we will kick the ass of anybody who says different.

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