"But I waited…waited until I knew I would be in Manhattan for the day…a day when I could purchase it at the book store at Grand Central (making sure to ask the clerk where it was even though it was on a table in the center of the store…just because I knew it would drive the guy nuts) and could then carry it throughout my day of meetings."
Let’s look at this woman’s big day on the town. She created a multi-stage pageant out of buying a copy of Goldberg’s Liberal Fascism — a book devised as though on the spot at a cocktail party, as an insouciant one-liner from a half-drunk Jonah to some cornball editor he was trying to impress (Adam Bellow, let’s imagine), which was then delivered only after years of flop sweat, excruciating mental gymnastics, and probably genuine debilitating mental depression, because as Jonah knew at the time (and as he probably knows still during certain late nights and lonely self-encounters), while its concept is guaran-freaking-teed to make liberals hop-hop-hoppingly mad, it cannot stand as a serious book because it is premised on an absurdity. So here she’s like, “Tee-hee, my plan begins by loudly asking for this book at Grand Central Station, just in case there’s a liberal nearby to whom I’d be sticking it.” It’s like those Mexican guys in Los Angeles with the bouncy cars: On the surface it just looks silly, but then you consider the industry and determination on display — step by step from concept to technical execution — in installing custom hydraulic systems in order to bounce up and down in their car all pocketa-pocketa while scowling at you at a random stoplight, and it’s genuinely sort of terrifying. What sort of people would do this, and by God, what else are they capable of?
Cool, funny post, which provides me a non-existent segue to a question. Don't know if you could help me on this, but I was reading Nixonland recently, and he mentioned Vance Hartke as a liberal senator from Indiana in the 60's. Was that the take the locals had? Just curious about what the Indiana view was.
Having once been a service worker, and having read Gavin's story yesterday, all I can say is yes, you see these asshole every working day, and yes, the grand life-changing scenes they construct out of such encounters occurs only in their minds. They stick in the service worker's mind just about as long as it takes to count their change to them, after that, no. Though I suppose I shouldn't clue them in to that fact, lest they decide they need to be, shall we say, more memorable in their antics. Service jobs suck enough as it is.
A Thomas Kincaide Chanukah? That's inspired. It is, as you know, The Festival of Lights.BTW, the reason your Rothko-by-numbers didn't click is, you have the wrong artist. Try re-branding it with Ellsworth Kelly By Numbers. You'll thank me later.
Let me see if I have this right: Kabuki Village went all the way to Grand Central to do an "in your face" purchase of a book that was so repulsive to the owners/employees of the bookstore that, not only was it in stock, it was DISPLAYED ON A TABLE IN THE CENTER OF THE STORE. Kabuki didn't pick up on that? I can only wonder why "the guy" didn't just have a copy waiting for Kabuki, having sensed K's smug-vibes from several blocks away and easily making the correct guess on what book would be requested.
Back in the late 80's/early 90's, I worked for a large chain bookstore. When Rush's first book came out, he exhorted his dittohead minions to accost bookstore employees for his book because by claiming that bookstores were purposely hiding his book and refusing to sell them. I would tell the dittoheads that I would love to take their money in exchange for the book, but we were unfortunately sold out and would you like to special order that so that when we get restocked, we can call you immediately?These were generally the same sort of person who would ask me how the fiction books were organized and would look confused when I told them "by color"...
I was really worried for a while when I read reports of gun sales to wingnuts spiking, thinking that some kind of armed rebellion might be on the way. I'm just relieved to see that Kabuki Katie has found a way to bravely fight in the winger guerrilla insurgency without killing anyone...yet.
Its really funny that she assumes a bookstore clerk would be offended or angry at seeing someone buy a Goldberg book, rather than simply contemptuous of her intellect.I wonder if she takes it with her to restaurants to "offend" the wait-person, or to, say, to Macy*s to offend the salesperson.And what does she imagine Starbucks barrista's feel about Goldberg. Are they liberals or neocons?
I think she left out the part where the clerk handed her the purchase with the statement, "Here's your sign".
As a public service person (librarian), such a request is not interesting enough to register, much less offensive. Maybe they are projecting, in that they think people who disagree with us are ipso facto insulting, when in fact they are just disagreeing. But until she asks a librarian to translate her speaking in tongues, or finding information about a person she discovered via ouija board, (both true stories) she is just a self-important bore.
I would love to take their money in exchange for the book, but we were unfortunately sold out and would you like to special order that so that when we get restocked, we can call you immediately?
As a bookstore owner, now retired, I can honestly say I wouldn't remember this person longer than it took me to put her cash in the drawer.Now the guy that once asked me for a copy of "Madame Ovary by some French guy", him I remember.
Post a Comment
11 comments:
Cool, funny post, which provides me a non-existent segue to a question. Don't know if you could help me on this, but I was reading Nixonland recently, and he mentioned Vance Hartke as a liberal senator from Indiana in the 60's. Was that the take the locals had? Just curious about what the Indiana view was.
Having once been a service worker, and having read Gavin's story yesterday, all I can say is yes, you see these asshole every working day, and yes, the grand life-changing scenes they construct out of such encounters occurs only in their minds. They stick in the service worker's mind just about as long as it takes to count their change to them, after that, no.
Though I suppose I shouldn't clue them in to that fact, lest they decide they need to be, shall we say, more memorable in their antics. Service jobs suck enough as it is.
A Thomas Kincaide Chanukah? That's inspired. It is, as you know, The Festival of Lights.
BTW, the reason your Rothko-by-numbers didn't click is, you have the wrong artist. Try re-branding it with Ellsworth Kelly By Numbers. You'll thank me later.
Let me see if I have this right: Kabuki Village went all the way to Grand Central to do an "in your face" purchase of a book that was so repulsive to the owners/employees of the bookstore that, not only was it in stock, it was DISPLAYED ON A TABLE IN THE CENTER OF THE STORE. Kabuki didn't pick up on that? I can only wonder why "the guy" didn't just have a copy waiting for Kabuki, having sensed K's smug-vibes from several blocks away and easily making the correct guess on what book would be requested.
Back in the late 80's/early 90's, I worked for a large chain bookstore. When Rush's first book came out, he exhorted his dittohead minions to accost bookstore employees for his book because by claiming that bookstores were purposely hiding his book and refusing to sell them. I would tell the dittoheads that I would love to take their money in exchange for the book, but we were unfortunately sold out and would you like to special order that so that when we get restocked, we can call you immediately?
These were generally the same sort of person who would ask me how the fiction books were organized and would look confused when I told them "by color"...
I was really worried for a while when I read reports of gun sales to wingnuts spiking, thinking that some kind of armed rebellion might be on the way. I'm just relieved to see that Kabuki Katie has found a way to bravely fight in the winger guerrilla insurgency without killing anyone...yet.
Its really funny that she assumes a bookstore clerk would be offended or angry at seeing someone buy a Goldberg book, rather than simply contemptuous of her intellect.
I wonder if she takes it with her to restaurants to "offend" the wait-person, or to, say, to Macy*s to offend the salesperson.
And what does she imagine Starbucks barrista's feel about Goldberg. Are they liberals or neocons?
I think she left out the part where the clerk handed her the purchase with the statement, "Here's your sign".
As a public service person (librarian), such a request is not interesting enough to register, much less offensive. Maybe they are projecting, in that they think people who disagree with us are ipso facto insulting, when in fact they are just disagreeing. But until she asks a librarian to translate her speaking in tongues, or finding information about a person she discovered via ouija board, (both true stories) she is just a self-important bore.
I would love to take their money in exchange for the book, but we were unfortunately sold out and would you like to special order that so that when we get restocked, we can call you immediately?
As a bookstore owner, now retired, I can honestly say I wouldn't remember this person longer than it took me to put her cash in the drawer.
Now the guy that once asked me for a copy of "Madame Ovary by some French guy", him I remember.
Post a Comment