The Old Hag’s Two Turtle Dovitude

Posted by Lizzie on 12/15/05

Today’s reading: One of these people wears a babushka (Don’t know WTF this is about? Click here.)

dfw
Yes, he uses footnotes. Yes, he is a strict grammarian. Yes, his prose is nonetheless opaque, abstruse, and some other word we don’t feel like looking up. He has never even appeared on Oprah. But he’s DAVID FREAKING FOSTER WALLACE, FOR CHRIST’S SAKE. He’s got the hat, man!

orphans There are certain lovely writers one comes across from time to time who, because they are hatless, do not receive the attention paid to non-doffing authors. They write wonderful stories. Their wives are French-y musicians. And yet, because of the hat thing, they are just not on your radar. D’Ambrosio deserves to be immediately. (Bundled avec CD.)

Theme: The Essay Thing
We were going to make this a name-your-best-essay contest, but then we realized that would require a lot of “reading” on our part. THEN, we realized how long it’s been since our last limerick contest! So give us your best seaworthy work on the works of David Foster Wallace and/or Charles D’Ambrosio. Extra points for somehow working in both. Sextra points for having it actually contain, unlike the below, meaning:

There was a young man with bandana
Whose iPod came bundled as “Nana”
He to Genius Bar bolted
Mumbling,
Hell is eux autres—
I’m not going to rock out to Grandma!

Make is scan, people.

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The Old Hag’s Partridge In A Pear Tree Palooza: Day 1

Posted by altehag on 12/14/05

Today’s reading: Change your life TODAY (Don’t know WTF this is about? Click here.)

52 projectsFirst up is Jeffrey Yamaguchi‘s marvelous 52 Projects, a compendium of things to do, you lazy asswonderful ways to engage with your life through creative endeavors in which tangible results are achieved. (Warning: slowly… step… away… from the blog. We believe — sacrilege! — there was even a mention of turning off the T.V.)

change your life Don’t know whether to sip or spit? This book is for you! A gathering of daily tasks — like “think aloud” or “pass a note on the subway” — it will soon have you brimming, like so much milk boiling out of a pot, with purpose and power. Comes bundled with excellent swag (if you find T-shirts excellent).

Theme: The Vanquishing
It might surprise you to learn it, but your Old Hag has had many ideas in her time. First there was the televised garage- and house-cleaning service that was going to be called Places, Everyone! (It might have been Space Saver. We forget.) Then there was Teaser, the magazine that revealed salient bits of work in order to — ahem — tease the reader into buying that author’s work. There was a wondrous NPR piece on small companies advertising on smaller blogs. We’re not even going to get into the hobo thing.

So the question is, which project did you have in the works when someone totally got the jump on you, going on to fame and fortune while you sat around like a punk? We’re entering Stolen Dreamsville: Population You.

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The Old Hag’s Grand, Goyische Great Gift NO GELT GIVEAWAY!!!!!

Posted by Lizzie on 12/13/05

Around this time of year, Jews tend to get a little smug. Do you know why? No, it is not because we control the world’s financial markets. (That’s part of it.) And no, it is not because we are not stuck hauling prickeldy trees to and fro like the log-cabin builders of yore. No, it is for the simple reason that, while the poor fool-owers of Christ receive gifts on only one day, we, the chosen people, get gifts for eight — count em! — EIGHT GELT-FILLED DAYS.*

Sadly, a mysterious tune overheard recently has made us aware of the fact that, actually, Christmas not only lasts eight, but TWELVE DAYS. (Chosen? More like D’OH-SEN!) So, in honor and humility, we have decided to follow the example of our sandal-wearing countryman and offer you…

TWELVE COUNTEM TWELVE DAYS of FREE BOOKS!

That’s right, my friends. So here’s the deal.

You do not get these books for free. (Actually, you do get them for free, because that’s the whole point. But wait for it.) You have to win them. An unknown number, quality and quantity of items will be posted daily, along with an appropriately themed question. The person who best answers the question wins that day’s round — meaning ALL THE LOOT. Further action items:

1. You can enter as many times as you please.
2. You can win as many times as you do.
3. You can enter as many contests as you please.
4. THERE ARE NO RULES!!!!!!!!!
5. There is one rule. Enter in the comments, so that everyone can see what you wrote and totally house you. No one but me can see your email when you enter it. (Oh, for Christ’s sake. If you are that big of a scaredy-cat, just freaking email me with your contest’s date in the subject line.)
5. You can be my sister.
6. All contests end December 31 at midnight. Winners will be announced on New Years’ Day, so that you may swiftly exchange one pre-pulped tree for a post-. That’s kind of awesome.

Questions. You still have QUESTIONS??? For Christ’s sake, it’s all about making sure the children have a really cool cover design this season. Anyway. Feel free to email me, then await further instructions .**

* Hmmm. An alternate view. [via Choire]

** Special pre-contest contest!

To win a signed copy of Liam Callanan’s The Cloud Atlas (we believe you have heard us speak of it), provide us with the most dubious weapon your imagination can scare up for a time of war. For further instruction, see here.

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Goodbye to all that

Posted by Liam on

She’s gonna be back any second, kids, so we have to scurry about and get in our last licks while the licking’s good.

Someone asked us last Thursday night if we write everything out on paper first — everything: novels, stories, articles, blog entries — and we said yes because this was a bar, and the person didn’t really know us and we felt that awful old urge to try to talk up the book again. In other words, act like a real writer, and we’re all given to understand that they write things out first, paper and pen and cross-outs and arrows and then streams of scrawl when it’s finally going well.

We’ve actually always written on a computer, ever since the Apple //c. But there are others who go the paper route.

The woman who teaches my daughter not to fall off a horse led her through this very quiet, very momentous occasion Saturday: she got my daughter to ride the horse in a figure 8 in the center of this barn. The woman just stood in the middle: a first. Before, she’s only ever been at my daughter’s side, within arm’s reach of her and the horse, but this Saturday was some sort of graduation, which is a good thing. My daughter probably took the move (mid)west the hardest of all of us, and though it’s just kindergarten, she’s been going through all the ABC after-school special kind of stuff: teasing, accidents, fights, loneliness, friend finding and losing. So even though horseriding lessons aren’t the sort of thing you do on an assistant professor’s salary, we did it for her, so it would be hers. All hers. And — this is like another one of those afterschool specials — it’s worked. She’s doing better in school, she’s better on the horse. Two months ago, she wouldn’t go near the animal. Now she’s riding around in figure 8s.

Have her draw them on paper at home, the woman told me after the lesson ended. Mary wasn’t quite in earshot. Drawing them on paper, well, you wouldn’t think it helps, but it does. So have her do that.

We bought peanut M&Ms to celebrate, tuned into NPR for the drive home and heard that Senator Eugene McCarthy had died.

We’re a McCarthy family. My aunt was one of his secretaries in DC, and my dad, after spending a stint in law school and then in the senator’s mailroom, wound up with a gig on the campaign not unlike what Charlie does on West Wing: the body man. My dad was always just behind McCarthy, so he’s in many of the pictures that turned up today. That one in Manchester, NH? That’s my dad under the “vote McCarthy sign.”

We didn’t talk much about the campaign growing up, or we did, and none of us kids understood much about it. We all inherited Ben Shahn McCarthy posters, we caught the odd documentary, but when dad talked about the campaign, if much at all, he talked about the people — the poets, especially. McCarthy was a poet, liked poets, hung out with Robert Lowell on the campaign trail.

You can decide for yourself what you think of his poetry; I think it’s inarguable that he would have been the best poet who’d ever made president (as opposed to vice-versa), and that he wouldn’t have turned over the writing of verse and stories to his pets, as later occupants of the White House have seemed to favor.

He was very funny. I remember that from adult parties in DC, as a kid, weaving in and out of legs and ducking under drinks. I remember him laughing, everyone laughing, and I remember laughing, too, because I so wanted to know what was funny. When I was older, I took my aunt to see him at a speech at Georgetown. He took a question on campaign finance reform, and during his answer, people seemed surprised that he was against limits. Very large donors, with very, very large donations were fine. What about Bebe Rebozo and Nixon, someone asked? That’s a wealthy man possibly assuming a great deal of influence over Nixon. McCarthy’s reply: thank God. You wanted pure Nixon?

No. We wanted you to win.

The last time I saw him was at the funeral for Mary McGrory, the late great columnist of the Washington Post. He was funny and kind, but he was old, too, and his eulogy was difficult to understand. Instead, it fell to McGrory’s Globe-columnist nephew Brian to get the biggest laugh line of the day: “every time I visited her, she made meatloaf, a dish she believed I loved and that she cooked better than anything else in the city…in this, like everything else, she was absolutely unique.”

I never forgave Colin Powell for duping McGrory, and everyone else, near the end of her life. One of her final columns, before a stroke took her life, was of how Powell had convinced her at the UN. And I suppose I never forgave Mary for that final column, “Why I’m convinced.”

And I’m sure there are people who’ve never forgiven McCarthy, not for scaring Johnson out of the race or scaring Kennedy in, not for splitting the left, not for being funny when there were politics to be done, not for being a poet when he was supposed to be a president.

I don’t know. I do know that it starts and ends with writing, somehow, both in the lives led and ended, the forgiveness sought, ignored, or received.

And I know what it was like, early Sunday morning, just this past Sunday, so early, 5:30 maybe, when I was awake, looking out of our cold house at another snowy morning, quiet. Everyone asleep, except for me, worrying about what I’d led my family into, this cold new life, which has an awful lot of great things, but at present, awfully few friends, at least not the sort who’ll run with you on the playground, share your chocolate milk, invite you to their birthday party.

Creaking on the stairs. Our youngest, probably, begging for us to wake up and serve her Cinnamon Toast Crunch, a battle we fight most days, but especially on weekends. No cereal before six, my motto.

But no, it was my older daughter, the rider, and she wordlessly came to my side of the bed, and called to me, “Daddy?” I leaned over. She held up a piece of paper. “I made an 8.”

It was a beautiful, perfect 8, round without being fat, smoothly drawn, no wobbles, and she crawled into bed beside me, and promptly fell asleep. She’s five. She never met McCarthy, nor my aunt, nor my aunt’s sister, her grandmother, her namesake. But she knows how to ride a horse now, she has friends now, school’s OK now, and maybe Milwaukee, too, and so — trust me on this one, Gene — she knows peace.

And that’s a start.

*

And this is an end, folks. For now, at least. I’ve got to finish edits on my wonderful new novel, due out — you heard it here first! — in Spring 07, when TOH better let us back on the blog to sell ourselves silly. And before, then, sure. You’ve got a nice place here. Good people. Great view. You go on and invite us over to play, anytime.

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We don’t write on Saturday

Posted by Liam on 12/11/05

Keep holy the sabbath and all that, but also because we live in the New North (or just south of), whose capital is the greatest strange city in the world, Milwaukee, and Saturdays are busy days in Cream City:

1. Shovel snow. Get conned into buying a $40 snow shovel by the earnest young hardware store owner two blocks away, and then discover it’s the greatest cold weather tool ever invented.

2. Shovel more snow after it snows again.

3. Have breakfast with Santa, whom my five-year-old quietly declares is a “fake”. And forget about the cult of Claus for a moment, I didn’t want her — don’t want anyone– to know what fake means until they’re about 8 or 9 (younger by special permission and in some jurisdictions).

4. Shovel.

5. Lose e-bay auction for a daybed that we need for holiday guests.

5. Take 5-year-old for horse ride on her favorite one-eyed-horse, Ethan. (Ethan’s keeper: “Well, the eye was bothering him, so the vet just took it out, and he’s been happy ever since.”) Could be why I’ve been hesitating to get started with a new opthamologist now that we’ve moved here.

6. Visit four furniture SUPERSTORES in search of a 6x more expensive daybed than was on ebay. Leave daughter in the “do not leave children unattended” play area in each store while shopping.

7. Realize, as snow continues to fall, that I’m not home shoveling.

8. Purchase bed from fourth store, back up to loading dock to collect, hand a whopping $3 as a Christmas tip to the 17-year-old who loads the bed into the minivan. Note with delight and shock his delight and shock about receiving $3. Next dock over, seven men have backed up a standard yellow school bus to load their purchases, which seem to be a series of plasma televisions. Think that there are worse things to buy, such as the Shotgun Shell Holiday light set we saw for sale earlier in the day, “MADE WITH REAL SHELLS”.

9. Remember my second-favorite sign in Milwaukee, so favored I may have already blogged about it: at the school bus depot, across the street from Wal-Mart, there’s a large red sign on the chain link fence that surrounds the lot: CHECK FOR SLEEPING CHILDREN.

10. Check my own child; she’s not asleep, but is riding in the front seat of the minivan because the bed is in back. Work on excuses for my wife, a former insurance executive, as to why I let my toddler ride in the front seat. Daughter says riding in front is “silly”.

11. At home, slip-side bed out of car in the unshoveled snow.

12. Depart for cash-only Serbian restaurant with a brave Milwaukee couple who’s offered to take us out. Eat a salad that is entirely cheese and onion.

13. Depart for a cash-only “specialty drinks” restaurant that serves only mixed drinks: no beer, no wine, no food. Have a “Pink Squirrel” because it will be good to blog about, and because the 80-year-old waitress tells me the drink was popular in the twenties.

14. Return home around midnight. Shovel.

15. Recall that earlier that day, my Daughter, adopting the weary familiarity that apparently comes with sitting in front, had said, “You know, I tell everyone my dad is silly.” Dad: “Silly?” Daughter: “Everyone.”

Better than being a person of no integrity, to wit, a fake.

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The dangers of a secular republic

Posted by Liam on 12/09/05

Lest anyone think that this whole Christmas thing has gone way too far, let me offer up the example of my three-year-old, who, as of 6:30 p.m. Central Time last night, began dubbing any horse she rode on (and she rides on a lot: stick horse, stuffed horse, horseshoe crab), “Big Baby Jesus” (As in, “C’mon, Big Baby Jesus, c’mon Biiiig Baby Jesus, c’mon Jesus!” as though she were neck and neck at the Derby rail.

I knew this would happen when they switched to all-soy milk, all the time at her preschool.

Updates: thanks for the library anthology submissions. They are EXCELLENT. I also want to toss Nancy Pearl’s name into the mix. Seattle’s most famous librarian, and to date, the only librarian I know with her own action figure. (Full disclosure: she’s reviewed my first novel.)

Updates: the spooky deodorant house had a moving van in front of it this morning, labelled: “University Movers: Grand Rapids, Toledo, Indianapolis, Cincinnati”. So I guess it’s settled; it is a witness protection program thing. Because no one ever moves to those cities, let alone moves among them.

Updates 2: Weird ‘Waukee watch: Confidential to Jeanne Marshall: I found your take-home exam on the American Revolution in the snow this morning, corner of Linwood & Downer. I think you did OK, but I’d capitalize “Declaration of Independence”, and I’d lowercase “secular republic,” just because, and I’d also like to know just what the hell is going on in that middle school class of yours.

PS Best stranger e-mail I’ve received this week: Dear Hag, Who is Lizzie?

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Check out

Posted by Liam on 12/08/05

If I ever had it in mind to draft one of those soul-searching quizzes that buzz around the internet like needles in search of blood, I would leave off the what books would you bring to a desert island (I might ask instead, what desert island would you like to visit), and instead get right to the point: if you could edit your own Norton anthology, what would be your theme?

(A brief warning: I don’t know how to use the “more” command. And I don’t want to learn. If you’ve come to read, you’ve come to read. Put away your clicker finger and sit back.)

Mine (my anthology) would be library literature, books about librarians and libraries and patrons who haunt them and the strange quests they go on. We’d have “Proper Library” from Carolyn Ferrell, and “Wants” from Grace Paley, which isn’t about a library but ends on the steps of one. And something from Elizabeth McCracken, whatever she wants to include, really. And Nicholson Baker, sure. I’m all for questing library zealots.

Library quests might be a whole subsection of the anthology, in fact. I tripped across an exemplary candidate for my anthology at NY Press (while I was studying up on the ever-more bizarre literary Vice case, which also seems to have involved a bit of library sleuthing). The anthology link will take you to a writer who talks about seeking out Salinger’s 25,000 word ramble in the June 16, 1965 New Yorker, which made me think about the time I combed through the stacks for that famous issue where the New Yorker handed the keys over to John Hersey and let him drive for an entire issue: his epic, first-in, first-out at length reporting about Hiroshima before and after the bomb. It’s one thing to read the piece in book form, but absolutely essential, I think, to read it in magazine form: all that fire and skin and wailing neatly spilling down all those columns, tucked, as always, between the New Yorker’s famous tiny ads. And the cover! Wildly or deliberately out of sync with the contents inside. I remember standing there in the stacks and finally sinking to the floor as I read the whole thing. I’m all for that New Yorker DVD collection, but really: thank God for libraries with dusty, dim-lit floors. The last place I’d want to read that article for the first time is a bright-lit computer screen with its disc drive lurching in and out of life in the background.

That said, I don’t think I’d use that anecdote for the introduction to my Norton anthology (and I’d be too humble, of course, to include any of my own pieces in the collection). Rather, I’d talk about the time Tim Hyde and I somehow convinced the powers that be that it would a great, great idea for us to clamber on top of the stacks of the Beinecke Rare Book Library and shoot photos.

We were escorted up by a very tall, very polite guard in a coat and tie. Our adventure was prompted by the Beinecke’s strange architecture, basically a glass box inside a marble box. We wanted to climb on top of the interior glass box and shoot the crepuscular (sorry, any chance to use that word, I take) interior. Up and up we climbed, passed all sorts of grave warnings: the glass box was protected with a halon suppressant system, which, while it protects the books without soaking them, also kills anyone who sticks around to see this magic. At the top, the guard turned off — I swear — these electronic beam-like things, and then we crawled out.

There were about four or so feet between us and the real roof. The top of the glass box was slippery and dusty. (I hope I’m not selling this glass box short: it was about 4-5 stories tall and occupied a footprint about as big as an Olympic pool.) We carefully crept out to the edge and peered down. I think I knew then that my undergraduate career had basically peaked; everything after would be anticlimactic. We took our pictures, knowing they wouldn’t come out — it was so damn crepuscular, remember? — and then we went back down, turning the beams and halon and robot dobermans as we descended.

We recently discovered that our new local library, in this fine city we’ve just moved to, checks out (NOTE CLEVER REFERENCE TO THIS POST’S TITLE) animal hand puppets, complete with bar codes hanging off their furry little ears and tails. That’s an exciting discovery too, but it’s nothing like being stuck for a time, five stories off the ground, trapped between glass and marble, and returning alive.

Should Norton ever contact me about said anthology, please feel free to nominate your own contributions. Check-in anyone? (YET MORE CLEVERNESS.)

(yes, she’s coming back soon. sooner than you know. which means i will have to…check out shortly. now: back to work. or, to the library.)

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If Lizzie posted about wine, doesn’t that mean I can post about cheese?

Posted by Liam on 12/07/05

I live in Wisconsin, after all, where we would never make this kind of stupid mistake.

(Hey–yes, you! Listen, I can’t be at the reading tonight, so could you go for me? Bring your cute friend, too.)

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There will be wine, poetry, and, more important, wine

Posted by Lizzie on 12/06/05

Live in New York?

Not sick of me yet?

Come here me read!

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Frosty

Posted by Liam on

Um, we don’t know where The Old Hag is. We know for darn sure that she ain’t here, in Cream City, the-nickname-only-outsiders-think-is-icky for Milwaukee. Because no one in their right mind would be here today, when we awoke to 3 degrees F outside. Now, I grew up in Los Angeles, so I know from cold, but this–this is cold.

I came to this realization last night when I was wrestling with our inflatable Frosty–yes, yes, give me a sec, we’re going to go full-contact literary soon–anyway, our inflatable Frosty the Snowman, and no I’m not the kind of person who buys such things, but it was on sale, and I have, as I mention daily, young daughters, of the type that fathers do anything to make smile. So. Frosty. I hadn’t stabilized him properly (read: at all), and so he’d taken to listing, lounging, really, rather louchely (yeah, so I’m too much with the alliteration, fuck off (hey, I’m getting my Lizzie on! (did you know louche also refers to a grave wine condition?))), basically blocking our stairs and creating a hostile work environment for our postwoman.

We got no mail yesterday.

As my fingers went through that now familiar descent through cold, then numb with knifing pain, then plain numb, and then later–go figure–briefly froze to the metal doorknob of our shattered back door (another story, but not Frosty’s fault (although, you know–)), I thought: I’ve got to tell them to read Wolf Willow. So, read it. Because you’re going to want to say you’ve read Stegner, but you’ve never been able to make it through Angle of Repose. Wolf Willow is a strange anthology, really, with some straight-up history, then some memoir, and smack in the middle, the world’s greatest cowboy story, and, coincidentally, the perfect story for any cold winter’s night.

Notes:

1. Yes, I know I’m missing the point of blogs. You’re supposed to link to vitally important things online, not send people offline, god forbid, to paper and ink. Be patient with me.

2. For the record, Alan Cheuse is the one who pointed out the world’s greatest cowboy story to me. Many don’t know it, but Alan’s also got a cowboy story under his belt, set in the middle of Los Angeles. Sounds impossible? I know on good authority–my dad–that people ride horses there all the time.
2a. Yes, “Brokeback Mountain” is good, and the movie looks durn pretty, but it’s too sunny a story for the season. For your winter Proulx, you’re going to want to read the “Half-Skinned Steer,” which is also in Close Range.

3. Confidential to Nick L.: Lizzie is TOTALLY sorry! Don’t go back to Jessica. Give TOH another chance. She’ll meet you at the clock in Grand Central. [Worth a click there, kids!] Wear something recognizeable. And show some class, for chrissakes, and take her to the Campbell Apartment.

4. The best book of the year was Saturday. Happy?

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Today’s prompt

Posted by Liam on 12/05/05

I know, I know. Lit bloggers are supposed to spend their time reading books, or other blogs, or poetry chapbooks, or at least the NYT Book Review, so that you can air complaints about the 10 “Best Books of the Year”.

Instead, I need to tell you about this totally spooky house I visited today. Consider it your writing prompt, if you need one, and I’m guessing you do, because no one has submitted evidence of having accomplished the task laid out in the previous prompt.

We recently moved to the capital of the new-new economy (that is, equal parts tech, finance, heavy industry and Indian gaming), Milwaukee. The swankest street in town is a long, Frederick Law Olmsted-designed boulevard named Newberry. I cross it en route to school each day, and today I saw that one of the famous old mansions on the street was having an estate sale.

That’s not the writing prompt. That was up on the third floor, which I’ll get to in a second. The place was crawling with people, of course. It’s rare these mansions open up, and this was a rare opportunity: come crawl over the whole house. So in I went.

It was massive, of course. And had all the old-fashioned touches–beyond priceless wood paneling, floors, a dining room with a high-art plaster ceiling featuring swags of grapes, diamonds, nymphs and whatever other kinds of things swag on plaster ceilings. But before I got too far into the house, I started to get a really creepy feeling.

Estate sales are usually of older couples, right? I mean, I’ve not been to many, but I get the concept: everything goes. And so you usually find yourself poking through a smelly, dusty, wildly outdated house looking at old dishes and wondering if they’re worth anything.

This house was not like that. It was well-kept up. Extensively redone, inside and out. True, it reeked faintly of that off-the-rack-style luxury favored by the suburban Sopranos, but this was no older couple. So why were they moving? (For sale sign out front.) And why were they selling all their stuff?

All their stuff. In the kitchen: egg timers, dishwashing liquid. In the living room, a huge menorah. Patio furniture outside. Upstairs, beds, televisions, computers. In the master bedroom’s walk-in closet, dozens of pairs of shoes, men’s and women’s.

And then, on the top floor: the boy’s room. A teenager, if I had to guess. A sagging bookcase of mostly sci-fi, but some schoolbooks. A collected edition of Faulkner. In one corner, his drum kit.

And on his bed–select comfort bed, priced at $625, full–his Dopp kit, with a toothbrush, and a Mennen deodorant stick.

Who sells that?

On the first floor, I thought: they’re moving abroad, starting over, getting rid of all the excess. But the higher in that house I climbed, the more uncertain I became. And then–that boy’s toothbrush. His deodorant.

I had picked up a copy of Louise Erdrich’s Bingo Palace on a lower floor, from the library, where it sat amidst some National Geographics and (another clue) a bunch of books about orthopedic medicine.

But now I put it down. Left it beside the sci-fi and the Faulkner and got out of there as quick as I could.

What happened?

You tell me.

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something old, something blue

Posted by Liam on 12/02/05

No, the Old Hag is not getting married. That I know of. Or, she’s not sent me an e-mail about such in the last 24 hours or so. But then, she lives in Baltimore, where, as she would say, ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN.

Back to our point. We know that one reason you tune into The Old Hag on your blogio dial is for those profanity-laced, blue rants that make you laugh so uncontrollably that you mist your keyboard and screen with your morning coffee. Or meth. I’m sorry I’ve been so, well, prim. I’m working on it. Really, really hard.

Back to your weekend reading assignment: Republic of Love, by Carol Shields. Is there another novel that will make you want to move to Winnipeg? It’s a deceptively warm and cozy book, and other than the subplot involving the father, I have absolutely no quibbles with it. I press it on everyone. It’s also the only pink-covered book I own. Well, it’s partially pink-covered, and that’s enough.

When my book, which I think we’ve failed to mention for at least five minutes or so, The Cloud Atlas, came out, there was much head nodding by some sage publishing types who told me: “Smart, you have a blue book. Smart.” Blue, as in the cover was blue-hued. Blue, as in all literary bestsellers are blue: Cold Mountain. The Lovely Bones. Snow Falling on Cedars (gray-blue, but still). I came out the same spring as Chang Rae Lee’s Aloft — also a gorgeous read, but you’ve got to read Shields first, OK? — and his cover was blue.

My next book, though, I think we’re going to do in peach, because that’s your kids’ reading assignment for the weekend: Peach Heaven, a curiously captivating new children’s book my daughter found at the library about the great 1976 Korean peach deluge. Great opening line about looking up from her desk at a picture of heaven.

By the way, heaven — I’ve been, so I say this with authority — is blue.

PS If you wonder just what an Old Hag guestblogger sounds like, tune in to WUWM today about 10:50 central time.

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