[Your Joke Here; We're Tired; This Was a Long Post]
(Click to enlarge…and be enlightened!)
So the results of our first offical Old Hag Reader Can You Even Handle This Action Survey are in and….wow! You guys absolutely do not have enough to do. You should get on that. But we were unsurprised to find that, in planning the rest of our year, a) most of you wanted us to do reviews for which we do not get paid; 2) pretty much the same amount of you were perverts, lazy, in love with Leonardo Dicaprio, or poetry-seekers (hard to choose, right?); 3) Podcasts and Pride & Prejudice people insisted on being tediously alliterative, 4) almost the same amount of people wanted more real-world reviews as didn’t know who we are. That’s fine; the people who read the reviews don’t know who we are either.
Since you apparently have nothing better to do than hang around here and click on things, you won’t mind if we take these one by one.
1. Speedreaders
Coming; we have a few real-world reviews first and then it’s going to all happen for you.
2. Real-World Reviews
See “Speedreaders”
3. Podcasts
Coming; don’t care if you want ‘em
4. Poetry
Incoming shortly; check out our porn haiku in the meantime.
5. More Leo fakeouts
Duh. Done. DIRTY LEO. Grrrrr.
6. Who is Old Hag?
Nobody
Fucking done….most ardently!
8. Seriously, who is Old Hag?
Nobody
9. We avoid working
Q.E.D.
10. Porn? No porn?
We’re the only pervert around here, sorry. But here’s that Old Hag/Young Woman picture all the rest of you are looking for.
11. More pics of adorable nephew (Write-In)
We’ll do you one better. Three things to note: a) This might take a sec to load; b) yes, that is Marketwatch; it’s never too early, and c) seriously, you might die. DIE!
Posted by altehaggen in Lit-ish, blog in the day, poesie, polls, the hottness @ Wednesday, February 14, 2007 5:42 pm | Tags: get a hobby, leo, Moi, nevvie, seriously, surveys | Comments (3)












It’s not clear why Random House threw 















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.








[...] Hag promises podcasts. Also, Pride and [...]
Pingback by meanwhile, elsewhere at pinkyspaperhaus — 2/27/2007 @ 11:49 am
[...] Podcasts, Haggis? [...]
Pingback by Edward Champion’s Return of the Reluctant » The “Wow, Where Did All These Deadlines Come From? Cool!” Roundup — 2/27/2007 @ 2:32 pm
Okay. Totally dying of cuteness here.
And I have one about the same age off at daycare….
Comment by Anne — 2/28/2007 @ 12:21 pm