The Mistress’s Daughter

mistressdaughter.jpgMost New Yorker readers from 2004 will be unable to not recall A.M. Homes’ essay “The Mistress’s Daughter,” a painful portrait of the relationship the author forges with her birth parents when she finally meets them in her early 30’s. The essay has now grown into an autobiography of the same name, published in April 2007, and The Mistress’s Daughter is not only the story of Homes’ meeting her birth parents, but of her family at large–both the one who raises her and the one she makes.

The redesign of The New Yorker’s website kicked the original essay off the site, but Viking has graciously consented to allow us to reprint a portion of the work here–Yes! the notorious ‘ass’ section–and has given us one copy for a giveaway. First person to email us at “theoldhag AT theoldhag DOTT com” with “Homes” in the subject line wins–good luck. J. Khaler is the winner.

“You have to sign the tubes.”

They are warm in my palm, filled with the chemical sum of who and what I am. I sign quickly, hoping not to faint. I am holding myself in my hands.

Norman is next. He takes off his jacket, revealing short shirt sleeves, sad-old-guy style. His arms are plump, pale, almost fluffy. There is something so white about him, so soft, so exposed that it is perverse. He lays out his arm. The technician ties it off, swabs it, and I look away unable to watch this strange genetic striptease.

I am sickened by it all. I wait in the hall. I do not watch him holding his blood, signing his tubes. He comes out of the room, puts his jacket back on, and we are out the door.

“I would have liked to take you for a nice lunch if you’d worn something better.” He says when we are in the hallway.

I am dressed perfectly well—in linen pants and a blouse. DNA testing is not a black-tie occasion. I am tempted to say, “That’s okay—I would have liked you to be my father if you weren’t such a jerk.” But I am so stunned that I because stupidly apologetic. I am not wearing what he wanted; I am not wearing a dress. I am not meeting his fantasy of his daughter.

We go to a less-than-mediocre restaurant down the block. People seem to know him there. He introduces me to the maître d’ as though that means something. We sit down. The tablecloths are green, the napkins polyester.

“You don’t wear jewelry,” Norman says.

I am single, I live in New York City, I am not wearing a dress. I know exactly what he is thinking.

I say nothing. Later, I’ll wish that I’d said something, I’ll wish that I’d told him the truth. I have no jewelry, but if you want to throw some diamonds I’d be glad to wear them. I come from a family that doesn’t do that sort of thing. I grew up boycotting grapes and iceberg lettuce because they weren’t picked by union workers.

What kind of father makes his child travel to another city to prove that she is his child and then criticizes her for not wearing the right clothes to the blood test, for not wearing jewelry she doesn’t own to the lunch she didn’t know she was having?

“How will you feel if the test comes back and I’m not your father?”

(more…)

Posted by altehaggen in Teaser @ Wednesday, May 30, 2007 6:05 pm | Tags: | Comments (3)

Old Hag rarely interrupts with the contents of her inbox, but…

I CHALLENGE you to find a better email than this:

You are! that was fun picking up those unavailable gay guys with you. When we doin it again??!!!

Seriously. It’s a challenge.

Posted by altehaggen in Uncategorized @ Friday, May 18, 2007 12:56 pm | Tags: , , | Comments (4)

Thank you for listening

“There was a lot of wonderment about whether the transmissions will be the 21st-century equivalent to the radio broadcasts that began in the 1930s,” Mr. Scorca said. Opera managers also talked about whether theater transmissions will galvanize enthusiasm for opera and complement the performances of resident companies, he said.

Yay! In honor of the series’ continuance, a clip of the opening credits–now there are opening credits, bizarre!–for Tan Dun’s The First Emperor, which we slept through on the first round. (Although this was, apparently, the way to go.)

Posted by altehaggen in Uncategorized @ Thursday, May 17, 2007 10:35 am | Tags: , | Comments (0)

Audio Amusements; Or, Much Ado About Podcast

That’s it. I give up. One book is coming along poorly, and the other is not coming at all, so I am retreating back to the two things I apparently actually know how to do: light verse and blogging. So first: Wednesday I appeared on WYPR’s redoubtable Maryland Morning to share the mostly-scanning “Memo to Staff: Steps to be Taken in the Event HRH Queen Elizabeth is Accidentally Launched into Space”* (listen here), and second, Saturday I will be at Baltimore’s City Lit Festival, discussing blogging and books, or something, along with Sarah Weinman, a.k.a. Galleycat, and Scott Mackenzie, a.k.a. Slushpile.

I am also finally linking to this podcast interview (also here) with the lovely and talented Laura Lippman, whose latest work, What the Dead Know, you should read immediately if not sooner, LAST WEEK.

I think I have partly avoided linking to the interview because I am catastrophically embarrassed at how much I say “um”. (It’s obscene, truly.) But I also think it is largely because the podcast comes full circle in a way that, for lack of a better phrase, is sort of blowing my mind. Old Hag, which now approaching something close to its 4th year (unacceptable) would not have been here, ever, were it not for Laura.

NARRATIVE FOLLOWS! (more…)

Posted by altehaggen in blog in the day @ Thursday, May 10, 2007 5:00 pm | Tags: , | Comments (6)

HOW can we be expected to post about books when this mystery remains unsolved!

No comment, unnamed page renamer–except insofar as posting this image IS A COMMENT.

harrumph.jpg
(click to enlarge)

We are still pulling for “Hot Ribs”!

Posted by altehaggen in Uncategorized @ 4:03 pm | Tags: , | Comments (0)

Tea, Whatever

timescouplets.gif I’ve been forgetting to link to these each Friday; here’s the latest. (Excerpt below.) Believe it or not, this is the SECOND round of light verse about the Queen I have been contracted to write in the past two days. I’m not even a royalist! I sided with Diana and everything!

Here you go:

Back in U.S., Queen Celebrates Ex-Colony

Hopper’s America, in Shadow and Light:
Sometimes You Can Go Home Again.

Confusion and Deception as a Royal Family Affair
In a New Space and Time, a Classic Story of Tragic Love,

Family Values, Betrayed….

That’s it–the rest is here.*

* For any new readers–this is where I arrange Friday Times‘ headlines in verse for New York magazine because I don’t know how to do anything else.

Posted by altehaggen in poesie @ Friday, May 4, 2007 4:55 pm | Tags: , | Comments (0)

Not Cheating, But Posting

….away from you, where I try not to say “fuck” so much. But these are very good links and my Cowon X5 is great and I will never buy an iPod, never, so ever, as long as I live, except for the Shuffle I bought so I could jog with it, and I can’t use it because I DON’T UNDERSTAND ITUNES, why can’t I just use FOLDERS for God’s sake, I don’t want my music to shuffle I want to be able to DELETE it, how can I DELETE IT.

Anyway, these are fun poetry links, and paulmuldoonpaulmuldoonpaulmuldoon RINGTONES!

Posted by altehaggen in poesie @ 3:43 pm | Tags: , | Comments (2)