Archive for February, 2012

My Boss Is Really Cool

February 14, 2012

I suppose it would be pretty easy for me to be fired for writing things about my job here a la Dooce, but my boss aspires to transparency, so I think he wouldn’t be sad at all if he knew I was posting this.  Besides, this text was already in a book, so it’s not like it’s a secret anymore:

Peter Mayer was Salman Rushdie’s courageous publisher at Penguin Books, and he received many death threats, including one scrawled in blood. An anonymous telephone call told Mayer that “not only would they kill me but they would take my daughter and smash her head against a concrete wall.” Cohen takes up the story:

Far from rallying to defend an innocent girl and her innocent father, the parents of her classmates demanded that the school expel her. What would happen, they asked, if the Iranian assassins went to the school and got the wrong girl? And Mayer thought, “You think my daughter is the right girl?” The same cowardice greeted him when he applied for a co-op apartment in New York. “There were objections that the Iranians could send a hit squad and target the wrong apartment. As if I had done something wrong.”

Currently Obsessing Over…

February 12, 2012

Prologue to Carl Theodor Dreyer’s 1927 film The Passion of Joan of Arc:

Shot in France in 1927 by Carl Th. Dreyer, The Passion of Joan of Arc was the victim of several ordeals.  Censored before its release in 1928, the original negative was soon destroyed by fire.  A second negative reedited by Dreyer from alternate takes was also thought lost to fire.

For more than a half-century, this great classic of silent film was known only in mutilated copies, or in a sonorized version which made numerous changes to the original.

Then, in 1981, an original Danish copy, complete and in very good condition, was miraculously discovered in a closet of a Norwegian mental institution.  Thanks to the aid of Ib Monty, Director of the Danish Film Museum, and of Maurice Drouvy, who reestablished the French text, the Cinematheque Francaise has been able to reconstitute this French version, probably very close to the original.

AHHHHH

February 10, 2012

Okay so I know I’ve been annoying you with stupid thoughtlets and re-tweeted re-blogged regurgitated bullshit, but SERIOUSLY GUYS THIS WAS TOO GOOD TO PASS UP!!!

OMMMMMMMMMMMG STOP IT!!!!!

Three Little Things

February 10, 2012

1. Sweet jaysus, John Jeremiah Sullivan of Pulphead fame(ish) stole my idea for an essay about Ireland, published in today’s Times!  Well, Times Magazine, but still…

2. Kind of disappointed that they caught Madonna’s crazy ass stalker so quickly.  I was looking forward to a big showdown.

3. Apparently I’m so restless with today that I can no longer do anything but flip through super precious lifestyle/design blogs and escape into the bathroom to check out how greasy my hair is (answer: a little neglected looking, but not slick.)

Things I Would Like To Write About

February 10, 2012

Part of me wants to outline in detail all my pitches here in the hopes that Hamish Bowles or Sally Singer or Sam Tanenhaus or someone editorial at Harper’s will stumble across it and give me mad dough to research all these things, but as that’s unlikely to happen, I will instead give snippets and keep the meat of the ideas for a rainy day.

1. A small Arab bookseller in Jerusalem

2. An ill-fated cult leader in Texas

3. A mysterious grave in Recoleta Cemetery in Buenos Aires

4. The ashram of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, today

5. Going off anti-depressants –– forever

6. And, of course, this:

Hands on a Hardbody, the new musical by Pulitzer Prize winner Doug Wright, Amanda Green and Phish band member Trey Anastasio, will have its world premiere at the La Jolla Playhouse beginning April 27, 2012.

La Jolla Playhouse commissioned the musical based on the 1997 documentary film of the same title about a small-town endurance contest to win a hardbody truck. The musical received a private New York City reading in April.

Neil Pepe (Speed-the-Plow) and Benjamin Millipied (Black Swan), who directed and choreographed the readings, respectively, will return for the La Jolla production that will run through June 10, 2012, in the Mandell Weiss Theatre.

Hands on a Hardbody has a book by Wright (I Am My Own Wife), with a score by composer-lyricist Green (High Fidelity, Bring It On) and Grammy-nominated composer Anastasio.

According to La Jolla, “When an auto dealership in Longview, TX launches an endurance contest, ten economically-strapped strangers embark on a journey that puts their hearts, minds and bodies to the test. The contestant who keeps at least one hand on a brand-new hardbody truck the longest gets to drive it off the lot. What initially seems like a mere publicity stunt soon becomes a soul-baring battle of wills. Only one can win, but for all involved, the truck holds the key to their own private American dream.”

Sweet Dreams, Babydolls

February 10, 2012

 

If you click on this image and wait a second, you’ll get  a surprise.

Highlight

February 10, 2012

HSD: Are we still on for drinks on monday?

Me: We are definitely on for Monday.  Is there anywhere in particular you’d like to go?  My friend tends bar at —–, have been meaning to head over there for a while and say hello to her and see if we can get some buy backs.  Could be nice, could be slammed, but it is Monday –– or do people drink more on Mondays to forget their work-related sadness?

Oh great, I just realized I’m at a crossroads in my professional life and you would be a great person to talk to about this.  (After all, it is a DAY, so of course I’m at a crossroads.  My house is built at a fork in the way.)

HSD: The parenthetical at the end of your email sounded like an Emily Dickinson poem.  I even googled it to see if it was, but apparently not.  I would looove to talk about professional crossroads; mine also seem to be permanent.

Me: Ooo, well, the first paragraph of this email just totally made my day, and it’s not even noon yet!  I’m submitting that one sentence to poetry journals, btw.

People Who Have Their Own Action Figures

February 9, 2012

(And NOT the obvious ones.)

Kurt Cobain

 

Jesus.

 

JSB

 

Ben Franklin

 

Walter and the Dude.

 

"America's Rabbi" Shmuley Boteach

 

Cheech and Chong (though I guess this one is kind of obvious.)

 

Sylvia Plath –– okay, so this is a paper doll, but you'll forgive me this transgression, won't you? Don't make me use that oven.

 

FLAUBERT!

 

LITTLE EDIE!

America's Most Famous Librarian, Nancy Pearl

 

FREUD!

 

WARHOL!

 

Pocket ID!

 

 

This Is My Every Day, Now

February 9, 2012

I’m just like Patricia Marx as I, too, am struggling to get through AK!  Although my mental wanderings have less to do with Zumba and making waffles and more to do with annotating John Waters’ Role Models and contemplating why all Mormons are good looking.

Me, Reading 

‘O my sweet!’ he said inwardly to Frou-Frou.”

Wait a second. Frou-Frou? Frou-Frou is his brother or his horse? Or is Frou-Frou Dolly’s sister? But then who’s Kitty? Uh-oh . . . do I need a manicure? Where’s the place that does the new color? Guppy Green? Is it faster to take this to the shuttle or take the crosstown to the 1 and transfer to the 2?

“ ‘Yes, I understand it all now,’ said Darya Alexandrovna. ‘You can’t understand it; for you men, who are free and make your own choice, it’s always clear whom you love.’ ”

Did Larry really finish the Pecan Sandies? Now what will I eat?

“Sergei Ivanovich Koznyshev wanted a . . .”

Jane’s a nice name. I could make waffles.

“The Karenins, husband and wife, continued living in the same house, met every day, but were complete strangers to one another.”

I bet Larry hates the name Jane. Susan’s a nice name, too, but why does every single Susan end up divorced?

“And the prince with surprising ease fell in with the Russian spirit; he smashed trays full of crockery, sat with a gypsy girl on his knee, and seemed to be asking: What more? Or does the whole Russian spirit consist in just this?”

Can you get knee damage from crossing your legs?

“When he got home, Vronsky found there a note from Anna. She wrote, ‘I am ill and unhappy. I cannot come out, but I cannot go on longer without seeing you.’ ”

If I start uncrossing now, is it too late? I should skip the squats in Zumba class. Do wedding registries ever include knee replacements?

“The doctors said that it was puerperal fever, and that ninety-nine chances in a hundred it would end in death.”

The man next to me, was that a cough?

“At midnight the patient lay without consciousness, and almost without pulse.”

Won’t he be offended if I move? What if he has TB? Isn’t TB making a comeback in the United States, especially among the prison population? Couldn’t he have a gun?

“The end was expected every minute.”

Better to get TB than be shot.

“ ‘A sledge, sir?’ asked the porter. ‘Yes, a sledge.’ ”

No! How can this be?! I’ve read only fifty-two per cent of this damn book? Wasn’t I at fifty-one per cent like seven months ago? The Kindle must be broken.

“ ‘There’s nothing, nothing I wish . . . except for it to be all over.’ ”

The lady across the aisle, is she looking at me? She thinks I’m a slow reader, doesn’t she? Do I care? Should I skip ahead so she sees that I’m pushing buttons and making progress? Really, what can happen in a few hundred pages? I can always download the SparkNotes.

“The baby girl—his child—was so sweet, and had so won Anna’s heart, since she was all that was left her, that Anna rarely thought of her son.”

Anna had a baby?! Who’s the father? Anna didn’t do it with Vronsky, did she? Should I go back to the beginning again? Am I losing my marbles? Everyone says they have Alzheimer’s, but I really do. Who do I know who would know the name of a good neurologist in the city?

“As Vronsky had from a child a taste for painting, and as, not knowing what to spend his money on, he had begun collecting engravings . . .”

Why didn’t Larry give me a gift? Can I really be with a man who doesn’t give me a gift on Arbor Day?

“ ‘Une partie de lawn-tennis,’ Veslovsky proposed, with his handsome smile. ‘We’ll be partners again, Anna Arkadyevna.’ ”

I should friend that guy on Facebook, what’s his name, who took me to the junior prom. Didn’t he have a Russian aunt? He was cute. Would he like green nail polish, though? Hold on. Do we have milk? How can I make waffles without milk?

“And exactly at the moment when the space between the wheels came opposite her, she dropped the red bag, and drawing her head back into her shoulders, fell on her hands under the car, and lightly, as though she would rise again at once, dropped on to her knees. And at the same instant she was terror-stricken at what she was doing. ‘Where am I? What am I doing? What for?’ She tried to get up, to drop backwards; but something huge and merciless struck her on the head and rolled her on her back.”

Hey, this sounds familiar. Did I already read this? Should I break up with Larry before or after Zumba class?

“ ‘My life now, my whole life, regardless of all that may happen to me, every minute of it, is not only not meaningless, as it was before, but has the unquestionable meaning of the good which it is in my power to put into it!’ ”

If the place next to Zumba class doesn’t have Pecan Sandies, I bet they’d have Nutter Butters. Would I look better in bangs?

New Lows I Have Reached Recently

February 8, 2012

In the past two weeks I have:

1. Injured my shoulder while SLEEPING

2. Taken a nap during my lunch hour at my boss’ house

3. Not even bothered to hide the Vanity Fair I was flipping through while sitting at my desk

4. Thoughtlessly forwarded an email in which I copped to ogling diamond rings to my boyfriend (who is a champion and only made fun of me for 5 minutes)

5. Touted my own email writing skills (“Seriously, I write the most charming emails.”)

6. Ate two bagels in the course of 15 minutes.

7. Drank a sake bomb (though it took me wayyyy more gulps than it did in college)

8. Read all of three pages of Anna Karenina –– this wall is brutal!  Help me get through it!  I must finish!

9. Stayed in bed until 3 PM –– twice

10. Put my foot in my mouth at least three times –– once when I called the idea for liquor-infused baked goods “gross” in front of a girl who just made them, and once when I made some joke about Staten Island in front of a girl from there.  The first statement I totally retract.  Guinness-infused cupcakes with cream cheese frosting are delicious, so thank you for proving my dumbass self wrong.  The second statement I don’t really take back.  Staten Island is kind of wack, and she was a little too snippy with me even after I told her she could make fun of me for being from Connecticut.  LOTS of material there, I promise you.