Everyone’s A Winner
Well, not really. But SOME of you are winners. We thought we’d be too hungover and grumpy to actually post this on time, but in fact a fois gras-topped filet mignon, a nice Chianti, 9 hours of sleep, and bacon-filled brunch have reduced us to the bloated state of intertia optimal for judging others. You have all done a wonderful job and we suggest non-entrants scroll through briefly to understand what hastily posted commenting at work is all about, yo. Without further ado, we present the new-book owners of 2006:
1. Pre-Gelt Giveaway
Prize: Liam Callanan’s Cloud Atlas
Challenge: Most Dubious Weapon
Winning entry: “Were I given charge of outfitting an army and forced to start again with a new form of weaponry more devastating than that which humankind has dreamed-up to date, I would no doubt base my arsenal on marbles, which render opponents flat-assed and incapable of pressing forward in a charge against enemy lines.”
Winner: Mitch
2. A Partridge in a Pear Tree
Prize: Jeffrey Yamaguchi’s 52 Projects and Benrik’s This Book Will Change Your Life Again
Challenge: Best totally jacked idea
Winning entry: “Years and years ago, I had this fabulouso idea for an “alarm clock” that was actually a light with a rheostat to ever-so-slowly light the room like dawn, along with a recording that started subtly and quietly of birdsong … in essence, recreating a summer’s dawn at my winter window. And then somebody started making it. Well, the light part at least. Crap.” [We had this idea too. --Ed.]
Winner: Lucimama
3. Two Turtle Doves
Prizes: Charles D’Ambrosio’s Orphans & David Foster Wallace’s Consider the Lobster
Challenge: Author-inspired limerick
Winning Entry:
The David, the Wallace, the Foster
Bashed lobster catchers in Gloucester
With might and with main
He cried, “Lobsters feel pain!”
Since his gal liked to eat ‘em, he lost her.
Winner: Matthew Lickona
4. Francis Heaney Insertion
Prize: Francis Heaney’s Holy Tango
Challenge: Best anagram of “Elizabeth Skurnick” and “The Old Hag”
Winning Entry: Genevieve, Genevieve, how to choose? “She: lit biz. Credo: Hanukkah gelt!” “Zealous, hack, blighted thinker.” “SCHEHERAZADE, HOT TUB, KILL KING.” Done.
Winner: Genevieve
5. Three French Hens
Prize: Rob Walker’s Letters from New Orleans and Tom Piazza’s Why New Orleans Matters
Challenge: Most necessarily site-specific food
Winning Entry: “In Amsterdam: jenever (the famous Dutch courage: high alcohol content and low price) accompanied by rollmops.” [What the fuck are those? We believe you. --Ed.]
Winner: Isabella Massardo
6. Four Calling Birds
Prize: Lydia Millet’s Oh Pure and Radiant Heart and Gilbert Sorrentino’s A Strange Commonplace
Challenge: Best activatory self-delusion
Winning Entry: “I did not spend my week off in bed pretending to read my students’ final essays, living solely on granola bars and water, not having the least idea what the weather was like outside.” [1996-2002. --Ed.]
Winner: Ing
7. Five Golden Rings
Prize: Laila Lalami’s Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits & Marjane Satrapi’s Embroideries
Challenge: Most evil act born of jealousy
Winning Entry: “Here in Mauritius, we’re not as liberal (is that the word?) as the US and gays are kind of, a rare species here. And people freak out when they here that he is gay too.
So my girlfriend was getting sweet text messages from a git and she actually enjoyed the verses the git was sending. I got jealous and met the git. Told him that I was gay, put my hand on his shoulder and kissed him on the lips.
Never heard from him again.
P.S. That’s true.
P.P.S. Nobody ever knew about that.
P.P.P.S. I wonder whether he’s been speculating that I can’t be gay if I have a girlfriend.
P.P.P.P.S. I’m not gay. That’s true!” [Sure you're not. And we're totally going to have to start saying "git" all the time. --Ed.]
Winner: Khalil
8. Six Geese A-Laying
Prize: Neil Gaiman’s Anansi Boys & Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian
Challenge: Who cares? OMIGOD DO YOU HATE NEIL GAIMAN AND ELIZABETH KOSTOVA.
Winning Entry: “I went to a warehouse store to buy the fortnight’s ration of meat. I got in a long line. There was a curmudgeonly middle-aged fellow behind me bitching about the long line to his cell phone, his wife, passers by. As I put my items on the conveyor belt, he said to me, “At least the one good thing about you is, you don’t have much stuff.”
“Why, I’m sure there are many good things about me,” I said brightly (reading Alice in Wonderland aloud to my middle son is influencing my speech habits).
The curmudgeon sort of stammered.
Then I couldn’t find my warehouse membership card, so he let me use his.
I am not sure who was the Resident Evil in this exchange.”
Winner: Kate Dino
9. Seven Swans a’ Swimming
Prize: Litblog Coop Bundle
Challenge: Most irritating person at morning meeting
Winning Entry: “The Meeting Super-Participator wears me out. The opposite of the guy who says nothing, the Super-Participator feels the need to comment extensively on EVERYTHING, and mistakes meeting participation for actual work. Often, Super-Participator’s comments are meaningless, little more than anecdotal, contribute nothing to the discussion, solve no problems, offer no helpful information, and involve a healthy dose of bragging and name-dropping. But for all the talking Super-Paticipator does, h/she never manages to leave a meeting with a task to complete or any responsiblity. Super-Participator is also always the first to say “That was a really productive meeting!” regardless of what was actually accomplished.”
Winner: April
10. Eight Maids a Milking
Prize: Tara McCarthy’s Love Will Tear Us Apart & Marcy Dermansky’s Twins
Challenge: Best Fantasy Twin [Get your mind out of the gutter! --Ed.]
Winning Entry: “My twin is ten years older than I am and looks just like me except she never had kids and let herself go. She’s single and carries on discreet affairs with married men. She participates fully in the life of the arts community whereever she is. She owns original artwork and her furniture all matches. She has invested well. She has handwoven oriental carpets. She takes me to lunch and invites me to parties sometimes and confides in me when she’s lonely. I remind her of what her life might have been like if she’d stayed married and reproduced. She has lots of people to spend time with but no close relatives and just a couple of real friends.”
Winner: Kate Dino
Runner-up: Britt
11. Nine Ladies Dancing
Prize: Davy Rothbart’s The Lone Surfer of Montana, Kansas and Joshua Davis‘s The Underdog
Challenge: How to endure tasks
Winning Entry: “Money and the knowledge that if I don’t go and do, I’ll be stuck at home with my mother-in-law.”
Winner: Who else? Kate Dino!
12. Ten Lords A Leaping
Prize: James Meek’s The People’s Act of Love and Nadeem Aslan’s Maps for Lost Lovers
Challenge: Most unacceptable/overused/ENOUGH ALREADY title word(s)
Winning Entry: “Also, enough “Secret”s. It makes a book sound like a Nancy Drew or Encyclopedia Brown. “The Secret Life of Bees,” “The Secret History”, “The Secret Life of Lobsters” – look, people, once it’s in the title, it’s not a secret anymore.”
Winner: Genevieve
13. Eleven Pipers Piping
Prize: John Hodgman’s The Areas of My Expertise
Challenge: Best supah-powah
Winning Entry: “I would like a superpower equivalent to having a Narnian wardrobe: the ability to disappear and to spend as much time as I want elsewhere, only to return at precisely the moment I left. My only fear is that I would use my power before a deadline, and each time I came back to finish the project, I would use my power to disappear over and over again. Is this a procrastinator’s dream (you can spend as much time as you want on other pursuits before returning to your work, but it doesn’t diminish the amount of time you have to get it done), or nightmare (since the time you have left doesn’t diminish, the pressure doesn’t kick in and you never complete the project)? Would I ever emerge from the wardrobe?”
Winner: Genevieve
Winning runners-up: Kate Dino, escapegrace (for bravely shirking even the exercise of answering)
14. Twelve Drummers Drumming
Prize: Elizabeth Skurnick’s Check-In and Paris Hilton’s God Knows What
Challenge: Whadja get, whadja want, whatcha take 13 of?
Winning Entry: “What I wanted for Christmas: money for PhD applications. What I got: lots-o-lotion, tons of bookmarks — with no new books to mark hint hint ;) — and the third season of The Brady Bunch. What I would have liked to get get thirteen of: crisp $20 bills (now I have to say I’m not greedy or ungreatful, it’s just applying to PhD programs is expensive and on a TA’s stipend it’s difficult! Any money at all would have made me feel like the family supports me in some way or another in what I’m trying to do).”
Winner: Britt [Gawd, this one was HARD. Kate, you already have the Kill Bill movies, and thus need nothing else on God's green earth. Tayari, we will send you some of our drugs. Britt, we send you these books not only because we don't have 20 crisp dollar bills or anything having to do with The Brady Bunch whatsoever, but to show you two paths to pursue THAT ARE NOT GRAD SCHOOL. Don't you want a little dog? Don't you want to write a chapbook? Don't you want to do ANYTHING BUT GO TO GRAD SCHOOL? Read our poems, ponder them, write in your Paris diary and slowly ease yourself into a life in the private sector. That concludes our lecture. And yes, Matthew--being half-Catholic IS fantastic. --Ed.]
Winners! In order to receive your loot, you must email me at theoldhag AT theoldhag DOT com with your name, address and the titles you have cleverly garnered. Please do it ASAP or risk losing your books to the chaos of our imminent move. Kate Dino and Genevieve, can your houses accept CRATES? Genevieve, remind me you get the Glamour, too. Congratulations, all. If you lost, let’s hope 2006 works out better for you.
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish @ Sunday, January 1, 2006 6:15 pm | | Comments (13)











It’s not clear why Random House threw 




It’s difficult to pinpoint the exact moment one achieves literary success, but when Stephen King picks up the phone to interrupt your Good Morning America appearance to personally thank you for writing your latest book, you know you are in the ballpark.
It might seem odd to describe a novel that involves barfing in cars, stalking boys and a drunk dad playing beer pong in his underpants as heartwarming, but Beach Week author Susan Coll is a master at finding wisdom in the unexpected.





Remaking society can take decades. But global rebellion is short work for sharpshooter Katniss Everdeen, who single-handedly foments a revolution in Suzanne Collins’ blockbuster young-adult Hunger Games trilogy. America likes its champions reluctant, and Collins specializes in that surly breed: her heroine trounces dystopic despots while chewing her cheek in self-doubt.






I live in Jersey City, about as far from a Betty Draper’s magnolia petal-overlaid redoubt as you can get. But every morning, I am mildly taken aback when I find myself marching among a troop that is entirely female, women of my age and station, ranging from the harried to the glamorous, all pushing one or two offspring toward the park in an assortment of urban-optimized carriages. Really? I think.
Jonathan Safran Foer has a son. He’s not the Son, I don’t think, although I might be forgiven for doing so. Because even though it is generally agreed that we are living in a child-centered moment, Eating Animals, the Everything Is Illuminated author’s somewhat reheated contribution to the recent spate of ruminations on flesh eating (verdict: don’t), is a singular entry in the annals of parenting literature—bypassing a now-commonplace obsession with one’s offspring to head straight to sanctification.












Welcome to ‘Fine Lines’, the Friday feature in which we give a sentimental, sometimes-critical, far more wrinkled look at the children’s and YA books we loved in our youth.












A story that rides on its own melting also runs the risk of dissolving entirely. In William Henry Lewis’s second collection of short fiction — his first, ”In the Arms of Our Elders,” was published by Carolina Wren Press a decade ago — the slow, lyric stories of love, loss and longing have a sensuous appeal, but they often threaten to disappear into the ether before they get off the ground.





Well dammit! ~spits~
Comment by Mindy — 1/1/2006 @ 9:36 pm
[...] I actually won something — and not just something, two free books! What a way to begin the new year! I’m thrilled! [...]
Pingback by Pastiche » I won! — 1/1/2006 @ 11:37 pm
More contests coming up, Mindy! I will possibly become an all-contest blog, in fact.
Comment by altehaggen — 1/1/2006 @ 11:51 pm
Oh, I don’t believe it, I actually won 2 books. Thank you so much!
Comment by Isabella Massardo — 1/2/2006 @ 3:33 am
I’m almost certain that this represents the only time in my ever-shortening life that I will be rewarded for writing a poem. I’m glowing.
Comment by Lickona — 1/2/2006 @ 10:18 am
Then I will hang around. ~spits some more~. If that 52 things book gets returned I am calling dibs on it!
Comment by Mindy — 1/2/2006 @ 10:56 am
So cool! Thank you, thank you, Old Hag!
Comment by Genevieve — 1/2/2006 @ 5:30 pm
Thank you!
Comment by Kate Dino — 1/2/2006 @ 8:16 pm
Wow! I guess it’s the consolation prize: I’m not making any money off my invention-that-never-was, but at least I won a prize! Cool! Thanks!
Comment by lucimama — 1/3/2006 @ 10:35 am
[...] Everyone’s A Winner [...]
Pingback by Old Hag — 1/3/2006 @ 11:56 am
Thanks.
Comment by Khalil A. — 1/3/2006 @ 2:13 pm
I won…
… two books.
…
Trackback by My own small world — 1/3/2006 @ 2:49 pm
Payday Loans
Instant Payday Loans, Get your cheap tickets at Travel Europe
Trackback by Payday Loans — 2/27/2006 @ 2:08 am