Apr 292013
 

Mary's in East Atlanta VillageI’d just like to apol­o­gize to David Sedaris for every­thing I did on World Book Night on Tues­day, but it was the pushy drunk gay guy’s fault.

I sup­pose I should start at the begin­ning, which–if I’m really fair–should also cast blame on author Dorothy Alli­son. I had the plea­sure of eat­ing lunch with Dorothy last sum­mer. We were dis­cussing con­ser­v­a­tive politi­cians and vibra­tors, as you typ­i­cally do when you’re in con­ver­sa­tion with a South­ern writer and self-identified les­bian femme, when I had men­tioned I had seen an infomer­cial for an intrigu­ing exer­cise pro­gram on my flight from Atlanta to Los Angeles.

“I like the fact that it’s all car­dio and resis­tance train­ing, yet doesn’t require any equipment.”

“Oh, that’s the Insan­ity Work­out!” In yet another exam­ple of the small world we live in, Dorothy’s part­ner works for Beach Body, the com­pany that pro­duces the Insan­ity Work­out. Although Dorothy could care less whether I actu­ally exer­cised along with the DVDs, she did encour­age me to buy them, so she and her part­ner could con­tinue to sup­port their son, Wolf–and she’d appre­ci­ate it if I kept push­ing copies of Bas­tard Out of Car­olina to read­ers while I’m at it.

Well, I filed that way and didn’t really think about it again until a few weeks ago when I real­ized I was bored with the gym and run­ning. I wanted some­thing new, some­thing chal­leng­ing, some­thing dif­fer­ent. That’s when I saw the ad for the Insan­ity Work­out and decided to order under one con­di­tion: I had to com­mit to doing the work­outs six-days per week for the next sixty days.

Since Tues­day was World Book Night, I fig­ured I’d bet­ter leave work a bit early, so I had time to com­plete it before I went to the book­store. I was only three days into the Insan­ity Work­out and fig­ured it would be real easy to skive off, instead. Plus, after my shift at the book­store and Jeff and I grabbed some din­ner at Grant Cen­tral Pizza, I still needed to come home and blog for the next day and write three pages on my man­u­script. I was a man with a plan and noth­ing would get in my way.

When I got home, how­ever, I found my first obsta­cle. The con­trac­tor was at the house fin­ish­ing up the punch list on the laun­dry room ren­o­va­tion, which is a per­fectly rea­son­able thing to do–except I had to do my Insan­ity Work­out. But I couldn’t do the Insan­ity Work­out while some­one was there. What if they saw me? Try­ing to make the best of the sit­u­a­tion, I man­aged to write my blog post until it was time to go to the bookstore.

Later, when I explained my Insan­ity frus­tra­tion to 2Fs, he would ask, “Why couldn’t you just do your work­out with Bran­don there?”

“You don’t under­stand,” I said. “This work­out requires a lot of jump­ing and it sounds like a herd of dinosaurs stam­ped­ing across the hardwoods.”

“I don’t think Bran­don would care.”

“Look, the truth of the mat­ter is I don’t want any­one to see me exer­cis­ing, okay? It’s like hav­ing some­one walk on you in the mid­dle of a prostate exam, while on your back, and admin­is­tered by a young female doc­tor of Indian ances­try with a val­ley girl accent, okay?”

Wisely, Jeff let it go. I watched the book­store and fin­ished the bi-weekly e-newsletter, while he left to hand out free books to light and/or non read­ers for World Book Night.

After we closed and Jeff daw­dled around doing some­thing in the back room that just couldn’t wait, I won­dered if I would man­age to stay awake long enough to do my work­out once I ever made it home. We finally made it to Grant Cen­tral and ordered our food. When we sat down, I decided to ask Jeff what was in the box he was carrying.

“They’re copies of Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris,” he said. “I thought we’d hand them out at Mary’s after din­ner.” I phys­i­cally restrained my hands to keep from smack­ing myself in the fore­head. My sched­ule was get­ting fur­ther behind than a dentist’s office on a rainy afternoon.

“I don’t want to hand out books,” I said, try­ing to sound pleas­ant through grit­ted teeth.

“Then you can carry my box for me.” Jeff smiled. “You seem a bit tense.”

Luck­ily, our food arrived then, because it gave me some­thing to chew.

For those who are unfa­mil­iar with Mary’s, it’s a lit­tle bar in East Atlanta Vil­lage that Logo once named the friend­liest gay bar in North Amer­ica. Loaded with books, Jeff and I entered. Wouldn’t you know, I thought to myself, Tues­day is one of the few nights each week when Mary’s isn’t smoke-free.

It was also karaoke night.

I staked out a cor­ner with the box of books, and Jeff went from cus­tomer to cus­tomer, hand­ing copies of Me Talk Pretty One Day. That’s when the drunk gay guy stag­gered up to me and thrust in my face a black Sharpie and copy of the book opened to the title page.

“Here, I want you to sign this for me,” he slurred.

“I didn’t write the book,” I said.

“It doesn’t mat­ter, just write ‘For my friend Kevin.’”

I sighed and scratched the words out on the title page, then handed it back to him.

“No, you have to sign your name!”

“But I’m not David Sedaris,” I said.

“It doesn’t mat­ter, just sign it.”

Now, I could have eas­ily signed David Sedaris’ name, but it was dis­hon­est. Plus, what if Kevin ever tried to pass this book off as signed copy? On the other hand, I didn’t want to sign my name, because … well, it was a lot like hav­ing some­one walk in on you in the mid­dle of a prostate exame by a young female doc­tor of Indian ances­try with a val­ley girl accent.

I took a deep breath and con­sid­ered what would be the per­fect name to sign a copy of Me Talk Pretty One Day for a drunk guy in a gay bar on World Book Night. Then some­thing came to me and I laughed. I signed the book and handed it back to the drunk guy. He took one look at it and slurred, “Perfect!”

Once we fin­ished and were walk­ing back up the street to the book­store, I told Jeff about what hap­pened and how it drove home that although it’s good to be dis­ci­plined and have a sched­ule, it’s also good to be flex­i­ble and main­tain a sense of humor aboute life.

“So, how did you sign the book?” 2Fs asked.

“‘Love, always. Peter Coxswain.’”

Apr 042013
 

Post-It NotesOne of the more inter­est­ing aspects of man­ag­ing an inde­pen­dent book­store is the notes left by the day staff. Often, they are cryp­tic, odd, and down­right funny. Here are the most unusual and enter­tain­ing notes I’ve received over the past seven years:

01. Jerry Dan­vers would like to know if you receive any books on mak­ing cheese.

02. Cus­tomer asked if we plan to get Banana­grams in other flavors.

03. Does Go the F*ck to Sleep go in Chil­drens 0–2 or Children’s 3–5?

04. Susie Parker would just like to be clear that all the books she’s ordered on the sub­ject of polygamy are not for her and her hus­band, Bill.

05. Are there any trans­gen­der Fancy Nancy books? Cus­tomer needs to explain to her lit­tle girl that her babysit­ter Tracey will soon be Eddie.

06. Man wants to know if he can buy the book­store cat. If you’re not will­ing to sell, he would con­sider rent­ing her. Interested?

07. Cus­tomer wants to know if we still have that book she saw when she was here a year ago. She thinks it has a head­less woman in a white dress on the cover.

08. Majorie Jones would like to know if you think Fifty Shades of Gray would be too kinky for her taste.

09. Cus­tomer asked if would be okay to bring her live rats into the store if she kept them in her bra. She said you would know exactly who I’m talk­ing about.

10. If the cash drawer doesn’t bal­ance tonight, call me; it’s a LONG story.

11. She had it coming!

Feb 182013
 

On Sun­day nights I bring the cat home from the book­store since we are closed on Mon­days.  Kona Kitty, our Direc­tor of Pub­lic Rela­tions, enjoys a few days off at the Grant Park manse, before return­ing to the book­store Tues­day morning.

This jour­ney is less than a mile and only five min­utes by car.  Some­time, usu­ally after cross­ing over Glen­wood Avenue, I start singing to pass the time.  Within 0–30 sec­onds, Kona begins to yowl.  Judg­ing from her reac­tion, you’d expect to peek into her pet car­rier and find her paws pressed des­per­ately against her ears as blood leaks out of them.  There­fore, I stop singing and she stops mak­ing a fuss.  We arrive home, I carry her inside, and she dis­ap­pears to check the perime­ter.  Mean­while, I silently soothe my wounded ego.

“I don’t get it,” I said to my friend Trixie the other day.  “I know I can sing.  I was in choir and had a solo in the school musi­cal, so why does she react so neg­a­tively to my singing?

“Are you get­ting a lit­tle too much in touch with your Inner Ethel Mer­man and belt­ing it out to the guy in the last row?”

I crossed my arms and rolled my eyes.  “Please, I hardly need to project my voice in a Miata.”

“Maybe Kona doesn’t like your mate­r­ial,” Trixie suggested.

“I thought of that, too, but I’ve sang pop, rock, coun­try, reg­gae, and com­mer­cial jin­gles.  I once even sang J-Pop!”

“Cats usu­ally yowl when they’re try­ing to tell you some­thing.”  Trixie scratched her head.  “What song were you singing when you brought her home last?”

I thought for a moment, then started laugh­ing.  “I think I fig­ured out what Kona was try­ing to tell me.”

“What do you mean?”

“The song I was singing last night was ‘Enjoy the Silence’ by Depeche Mode.”

Touche, Made­moi­selle Pussycat!

Jan 232013
 

Question Mark of CandyI was sit­ting at Joe’s the other day, catch­ing up with a friend over cof­fee, when a ran­dom black man approached our table and asked me, “How much is your candy?

I smiled and replied, “It’s $3.19.”

And your gum?”

A dol­lar fifty.”

The man smiled and shook my hand, leav­ing with­out ever acknowl­edg­ing my friend. Obvi­ously, she was con­fused, as I had no candy or gum vis­i­ble. A puz­zled expres­sion appeared on my friend’s face and she asked, “Why are strangers ask­ing about your candy?

I laughed and gave her the back­ground on the guy that I and the rest of my book­store staff affec­tion­ately refer to as Candyman.

He comes into the book­store every day–a man some­where between his late 20s and early 30s, scruffy, and when he smiles he dis­plays a set of teeth in var­i­ous states of decay. He points to our Cho­colove choco­late bars and asks the same thing he asks every day:

“How much is your candy?”

“They’re $2.99 plus tax each,” we reply.

He points to a box of chew­ing gum. “And your gum?”

“It’s a $1.50 with tax.”

He smiles and thanks me and walks out with­out buy­ing or con­tin­u­ing the con­ver­sa­tion. He’ll return tomor­row, like clock­work, and ask me the same ques­tions again; I’ll reply as if he were ask­ing me for the first time.

All I know about him is what I’ve shared with you. I sense, how­ever, when I have tried to engage him in fur­ther con­ver­sa­tion, that he is men­tally challenged.

Can­dy­man has done noth­ing to make me believe he’s dan­ger­ous. In fact, I’ve felt more con­cerned about my self-preservation while more watch­ing a fraz­zled par­ent unhinge inter­act­ing with a dif­fi­cult child than from any inter­ac­tion with Candyman.

But because Can­dy­man is dif­fer­ent, I sup­pose some peo­ple will feel threat­ened and give him a wide berth and, unfor­tu­nately, treat him unkindly.

I like to think that peo­ple who chal­lenge what we per­ceive to be nor­mal are sent into our lives to give us a broader under­stand­ing of what it is be human and cul­ti­vate more com­pas­sion. Maybe Candyman’s daily rit­ual gives him some sort of con­sis­tency that con­tributes to a sta­ble envi­ron­ment. Per­haps I just tell myself to make myself feel better.

Mostly, it’s a good reminder that kind­ness is free and, usu­ally, easy, and never seems to run out.

Oct 152012
 

As I was pulling the clear­ance cart into the book­store the other evening, a young man, who appeared to be home­less, asked if he could have a mass mar­ket mys­tery. It was only a dol­lar, and the kid appeared to be car­ry­ing every­thing he owned in a back­pack, so I gave it to him. I fig­ured maybe it might bring some relief from the hard­ships of life on the street. One of the other busi­ness own­ers saw me, and he told me later, “You did a good deed tonight.”

“Care­ful,” I warned. “You know that no good deed goes unpunished.”

“Okay, but you’re inten­tion was good.”

“Hello, you know what they say about the road to hell being paved with good intentions.”

”@#%*, dude, can’t you take a compliment?”

A few days later, the same kid came into the book­store with his–are you ready for this–Kindle. Yes, the elec­tronic e-reader sold by Ama­zon. “Do you mind if I plug my Kin­dle in and recharge it in here?”

There have been very few times in my life when I have been speech­less, but I knew I needed to think before I responded.

First, I just gave this kid a book.

Sec­ond, it’s no secret that inde­pen­dent book­stores have been chal­lenged by the grow­ing pop­u­lar­ity of e-readers, and Ama­zon in par­tic­u­lar, so you’ve got to be either really gutsy to walk into a book­store and ask that ques­tion or ignorant.

Third, he doesn’t have a home, but he has @#%& e-reader! If you have no money and you’re ask­ing peo­ple to give you books, how do you buy books to down­load to your Kin­dle. Granted, he could have been read­ing free books that are in pub­lic domain, except I saw the title of the New York Times Best­seller that he was reading.

I looked into my heart and searched for all the Jesus I had in me. I don’t like say­ing no. I like help­ing peo­ple. How­ever, what mes­sage does it send when I let peo­ple recharge their e-readers in my inde­pen­dent book­store. Fur­ther­more, I need to sell books to pay for the elec­tric­ity to charge e-readers, let alone the books that I give away to home­less peo­ple whom I assume have not Kin­dle. Ulti­mately, the Jesus I had in me that the road to hell needed to stop here, so I said, “No, you can­not recharge your Kin­dle in our bookstore.”

As the kid turned around and headed for the door, he said, “I didn’t think you would, @#%*.”

Sep 102012
 

This past week­end I attended the South­east­ern Inde­pen­dent Book­sellers Alliance (SIBA) Trade Show in Naples, Florida.  As we drove from the air­port to the Wal­dorf Asto­ria, I kept won­der­ing why there were so many Ital­ian restau­rants, then remem­bered that Naples is also a city in Italy.  Duh!   (I’m still try­ing to fig­ure out why Naples also has so many Asian mas­sage par­lors.  If you have any the­o­ries, please let me know.)

Inde­pen­dent book­stores face a lot of chal­lenges these days, so it’s impor­tant to attend events like SIBA every year, so they can com­mis­er­ate, exchange ideas, but, mostly, share sto­ries.  After all, sto­ries are why peo­ple got into the book busi­ness, right?  No mat­ter if it’s fic­tion or non-fiction, it’s still a story.

There are a few things you should know about book­sellers:  They like sto­ries and they like to eat and drink.  Authors also like sto­ries and to eat and drink.  When we come together at events like SIBA, we like to swap sto­ries over food and, as my friend Steve likes to refer to them, Refresh­ing Adult Bev­er­ages (R.A.B.).

On Sat­ur­day night, 2Fs and I went to din­ner with authors Lisa Alther,  Echo Gar­ret, Cliff Graubart, Cyn­thia GraubartPatti Calla­han Henry, and Katie Crouch at Sea Salt, which is a won­der­ful restau­rant.  If you ever find your­self in Naples, Florida, Sea Salt is not to be missed.

Nat­u­rally, there is a story behind the restau­rant.  Chef Fab­rizio Aielli and his wife, Ingrid, moved to Naples in 2007 with plans to retire, but soon found they were eager to cre­ate a new fine din­ing adven­ture in their new city, so they crafted a restau­rant around Chef Aielli’s love of sea salt.  I thought there was only one kind of sea salt; Chef Aielli has over one hun­dred dif­fer­ent types of sea salt in his restau­rant.  Our server brought us three sea salts from the Peru, Japan, and India to try with olive oil and bread.  The sea salt from the Andes Moun­tains was a hit; Patti and I agreed that the salt from India tasted like a pun­gent sweaty armpit.  (Don’t ask me how I know what a pun­gent, sweaty armpit smells like.  That’s another blog post for another Mem­ory Monday.)

Chef Aielli sent over six more of his favorite salts for us to try.  One was a white truf­fle that melted on the tongue with a hint of choco­late.  The ghost spice had a lot of heat to it, but the one that really cap­tured the senses was the sea salt with a smoky fla­vor.  In fact, I could smell the sub­tle scent of smoke from the salt even when the plate was at the end of the table.

Now when you bring together authors and book­sellers who’ve never met to break bread together, it’s very much like speed dat­ing on steroids; how­ever, the nov­elty of dif­fer­ent fla­vors of sea salts uncon­sciously low­ers bar­ri­ers like when we were chil­dren and con­gre­gated on the play­ground.  Before you even real­ize it, you’re laugh­ing and shar­ing with one another.  (I sup­pose the wine didn’t hurt, either.  See above where I refer to book­sellers and authors lik­ing to eat and drink.)

Over the next few hours, every one of us shared sto­ries.  Liza told me about what it was split­ting her time between Ver­mont, New York City, and Ten­nessee.  Echo recalled how she was so lonely as a child that she once res­cued a frog that her father had sev­ered the legs from and pro­ceeded to play with him in her sand­box and pushed on her swing until her mother put it out of its mis­ery.  Cliff spoke about how it was a treat for his par­ents to take he and his brother out to din­ner to the del­i­catessen once a year when he was a kid.  Cyn­thia enthralled us with the con­cept of but­ter­milk bis­cuits meet­ing choco­late gravy.  Patti warned us against the evils of absinthe.  “The last thing I remem­bered was the sugar cube,” she said.  Katie talked about research­ing a famous mur­der case that had been in the news.  2Fs told a story about a marine lit­er­ally pick­ing him up in a bar.  (He didn’t believe Jeff when he men­tioned how much he weighed, so the marine picked him up.)  And I recalled the time I had to share a bed with class­mate on an overnight col­lege trip who squeezed my breast in the mid­dle of the night and whis­pered his girlfriend’s name in my ear.  (Patti insists that she’s going to call me Keisha from now on.)

As the evening came to an end and I looked around the table, I noticed how for a few hours every one seemed to have for­got­ten about the threat of  Ama­zon, e-readers, hit­ting sales num­bers, author plat­forms, and who’s mind­ing the book­store back home.  For the time it took to eat our meal, we focused our atten­tion on the taste and tex­ture of our food and wine and the sto­ries that we shared.  Every per­son at the table told a story that was as unique as their age, gen­der, back­ground, or per­spec­tive, yet–somehow–proved to be uni­ver­sal in that short time and brought us closer together, which started when the server brought a sam­pler of sea salt to our table.  It reminded me of how salt has been used for cen­turies to heal, as well as fla­vor food, and book­sellers and authors need each other to reju­ve­nate and reminds our­selves why we’re in the busi­ness of telling sto­ries in the first place.

Human beings need to remem­ber to peri­od­i­cally fill their inner well by seek­ing out new expe­ri­ences and new fla­vors, tak­ing risks by tak­ing the first step to turn a stranger into a new friend, which we do by lis­ten­ing to them and shar­ing our own sto­ries.  Authors write the sto­ries that book­sellers read and share with our cus­tomers, who need sto­ries that enter­tain, learn, and grow. It’s a sym­bi­otic rela­tion­ship, much like remoras that attach them­selves to sharks, but don’t ask me to tell you whether the author or the book­seller is the suckerfish.

Aug 272012
 

The other morn­ing I woke up face-down on the liv­ing room car­pet, my fin­gers still poised over the key­board of my lap­top. I had fallen asleep writ­ing the night before. I seemed to recall think­ing, I’m just going to rest my eyes for a sec­ond until I fig­ure out what Stephen does next. Sadly, there was no alco­hol involved; I was just try­ing to work 36 hours of tasks into a 24 hour day again.

Over break­fast, I told Jeff that I had fallen asleep in the liv­ing room floor.

“Oh, I won­dered about that.”

“You saw me?”

“I got up in the mid­dle of the night to use the bath­room and I checked on you,” he said. “I wasn’t sure if you were just think­ing or not. I fig­ured if you were still there in the same posi­tion in the morn­ing, I’d trace your body in chalk and call the police.”

“I think I’m try­ing to pack too much into one day.” I pulled out a piece of paper and scrib­bled on it.

“What are you writing?”

“I’m jot­ting down all the things I want to do every day and try­ing to fig­ure out what things I can elim­i­nate. I’m just going to focus on the most impor­tant ones.”

“What’s the first thing you scratched off your list.”

“Sleep,” I said. “Do you know how much more I can get done in a day if I didn’t have lie on my back with my mouth open?”

“Peo­ple go crazy when they don’t sleep.”

“Do you mean eccen­tric crazy? Or insti­tu­tion­al­ized crazy?” I asked.

Jeff frowned at me.

“Maybe I can just quit sleep­ing until I need to be sedated with a tran­quil­izer dart.”

“When was the last time that you slept with­out pass­ing out from exhaustion?”

I blinked. “I didn’t real­ize there was any other way to go to sleep.”

“Most peo­ple lie down in their beds, close their eyes, and wait for sleep to come.”

“Well, that’s never going to work, because I’m just going to be think­ing about all the things that I could get done while I’m wait­ing to fall asleep, and that’s going to make me anx­ious, which will keep from falling asleep.”

“You’re hope­less,” he said.

“No, I’m a writer with two jobs who’s try­ing exer­cise, eat healthy, keep up with laun­dry, and occa­sion­ally see his friends.”

“Just imag­ine if you had kids, too.”

“Look, I don’t care if a Chi­nese baby fol­lowed me home, I’m not going to feed it. Any extra time I have left is going toward my word count. Just imag­ine how much more I could write every day if I didn’t have to eat.”

“Maybe I could eat for you and help you out,” Jeff said. “Are you going to fin­ish that cin­na­mon roll.”

I pointed my fork at him. “Not so fast, buddy.”

“Maybe you could try get­ting up an hour ear­lier to write,” he suggested.

“What if I could teach myself to jog while I sleep?” I said. “I mean, I’m just lying there in bed, surely I could exer­cise. In fact, if I could keep it up the entire four hours I slept, just imag­ine how skinny I could be.”

“Per­haps you could hook up an IV before bed and do away with eat­ing solid foods entirely.”

“That’s not a bad idea. Where could I buy hos­pi­tal supplies?”

“I was being sar­donic,” he said.

I would have responded with some­thing equally sar­cas­tic, but I had passed out again, face-down in my cin­na­mon roll.

Jun 252012
 

There’s a kid who some­times comes into the book­store to chat while I work at the counter.  I call him a kid, but he’s actu­ally a young man, prob­a­bly around 20.  I learn a lot about younger peo­ple by lis­ten­ing to him.  How­ever, the other day, he floored me.  “Do you want to see the brand new naked pics I took of myself?”

I looked up from the used book that I had been clean­ing.  “What did you just ask me?”

‘Do you want to see the brand new naked pics I took of myself?” He said it with­out the slight­est bit of shame.

Now, when some­one asks if you want to see nude pic­tures of him­self, it can be tricky.  If you’re not inter­ested roman­ti­cally and/or sex­u­ally in the per­son, it’s wise to avoid seem­ing too enthu­si­as­tic to take a peek.  On the other hand, you don’t want to seem like afraid you’ll turn to stone if you see snap­shot of heir junk.  I’ve found a short but sweet response always works best.  “Tempt­ing … but no.”

‘That’s cool.”  I returned to clean­ing my book, although with a lit­tle more ner­vous energy.  About thirty sec­onds later, he asked, “Can I see your naked pics on your phone?”

I set my book down and looked him in the eye.  I didn’t know where to begin.  “First, why would you assume that I have nude pho­tos of myself on my iPhone?”

‘Every­body I know does.”

‘What?  Why would you need nude pic­tures of your­self on your mobile phone?”

‘You know, in case you meet some­one you want to hook up with,” he said.

‘I don’t hook up with people.”

‘Maybe you haven’t yet,” he said.  “But maybe one day you’ll meet some­one that you’d like to hook up with, and you’ll think ‘Oh crap, I’d love to hook up, but I don’t have naked pics of myself to send!’”

‘That’s about as likely to hap­pen as Long Horn Steak House going vegan,” I said.  “My sec­ond ques­tion is why would you to see nude pic­tures of me, anyway?”

The kid shrugged.  “You know, just killing time.  I thought maybe I’d com­pare yours to mine, you know, see how I stand up.”

Oh great, I thought.  The only rea­son some­one asks to see a nude pic­ture of me is because they’re bored and have noth­ing bet­ter to do.  Maybe that’s why my response may have sounded a bit harsh.  “Take my word for it, I would tower above you.”  I picked up my book, then set it down again.  “Aren’t you the least bit con­cerned that these inti­mate pho­tos of your­self might come back to haunt you later?  Like if you decided to run for Pres­i­dent?  Or adopt a child?  Or open a frozen yogurt franchise?”

‘No.”

‘Why not?”

’”Because by the time I’m old enough to do any of that, every­body will have naked pics all over the Inter­net, so who’s going to care?”

Tak­ing this in con­sid­er­a­tion, the kid had a point.  He offered to take a photo of me drop­ping trou in the children’s sec­tion, but I again replied with a polite “Tempt­ing, but no.”

I got together with my friend Trixie for lunch a few days later.  She had recently been dip­ping her toe back into relationship-infested waters via online dating.

’”Do you have any nude pic­tures of your­self on your mobile phone?” I asked.

‘Define nude.”

‘Any­thing that might be con­sid­ered art in a museum, but inde­cent expo­sure in front a police offi­cer,” I said.

‘It’s pos­si­ble,” she said.  “Why do you want to know?”

I told her about my con­ver­sa­tion with the kid.  “Ever since my con­ser­va­tion with him, I’ve sort of won­dered if I’ve fallen out of step with the times.  You know, maybe I should have some naked images of myself on my iPhone.”

‘Well, if you think it’s some­thing that might make you feel bet­ter about your­self, I would encour­age you to do it,” Trixie said.  “I remem­ber how ner­vous I was when I attended that women’s self-empowerment class at that bar and had to sing karaoke to my vagina.”

My eye­brows shot up to the top of my fore­head.  “What does one sing when one per­forms karaoke for one’s unmentionables?”

’”I chose the Bee Gees’ ‘How Deep Is Your Love’,” she said, “And my vagina really appre­ci­ated it.  In fact, I think I felt it hum­ming along.”

‘In an odd way, I can under­stand why some­one would sing to their gen­i­tals, but I know that I’m never going to e-mail or text dirty pic­tures of myself to anyone.”

‘Who says you have to share them?  And who says they have to be dirty?  Why can’t you just take a nude photo of your­self for yourself?”

‘Why would I want to do that?”

‘Some­times doing some­thing that scares us empow­ers us,” she said.

‘I’m not scared of tak­ing a nude pic­ture of myself, it’s just …”

‘Just what?” she asked.

‘It just seems so silly.  I don’t even enjoy hav­ing a pic­ture taken with all of my clothes on, let alone a shot of me on my back with my butt cheeks spread open for the camera.”

‘Really?” Trixie leaned across the table with a huge grin on her face.  “Is that what you were plan­ning to do?”

‘Of course not,” I said.  “I was exag­ger­at­ing, which just goes to show you that I don’t even know what’s involved with tak­ing a naked pic of myself.”

‘I highly rec­om­mend ade­quate light­ing.  And make sure there are no pets in the back­ground, or else no one’s going to give you the time of day if they have to choose between star­ing at a kit­ten or your penis.”

‘Well, I’m glad we’ve clar­i­fied that.”

‘Mostly, the boys just raise their shirt up to show off the fact that they zero per­cent body fat and pull down their shorts just enough to show some penis cleav­age,” Trixie said.

‘Penis cleav­age?”

‘Yeah, leave a lit­tle mystery.”

‘What’s left?”

‘Now, since guys your age–”

‘Our age.”

Trixie nar­rowed her eyes at me.  “Guys–COUGH! COUGH!–age, usu­ally don’t have zero per­cent body fat, so they nor­mally just find a pic­ture of some well-built naked guy on the Inter­net and pan it off as themselves.”

I care­fully con­sid­ered what Trixie had said.  “So, let me get this straight:  Pass­ing off a naked pic­ture of some­one else on my iPhone is sup­posed to make me feel bet­ter about myself?”

‘Hmm … yeah … that doesn’t make a lot of sense, does it?”  Trixie mulled this over.  “Well, maybe you should take a pic­ture of the part of your body that you feel best about, so that when­ever you feel down, you can pull it up on your iPhone and be reminded of how hot you are.”

‘Trixie, that’s a bril­liant idea.”

A few days later, the kid came back in the book­store, and I asked him if he wanted to see my naked pic­ture.  He seemed sur­prised, but expressed inter­est, so I pulled up the image on my iPhone.

‘Hey, this is just a pic­ture of your face,” he said.

‘Yeah, I know, but I was naked when I took the pic­ture,” I said.  “I just decided to show what I con­sid­ered to be my best side, and how I want peo­ple to remem­ber me.”

Mar 122012
 

Daisies recently vis­ited the book­store to sell Girl Scout Cook­ies.  After los­ing 30 lbs. last year, it was dif­fi­cult not to see these lit­tle girls with their boxes of sugar-coated fat as Satan in blue smocks, but I just breathed deeply and told them that I had given all of my cash to home­less peo­ple to pur­chase a bot­tle of Mad Dog to share.  They asked what Mad Dog was; I asked them to tell me the last book they read.

I’d for­got­ten how loud and excitable girls in the 5–7 age group can be.  Every­thing they see requires them to shout, “That’s so cute!” and com­mand their friends to focus their atten­tion the cute object of their atten­tion imme­di­ately.  “LOOK, GERTA! LOOK!  LOOK!”  Mean­while, Gerta twisted a strand of hair around her fin­ger, as she pressed nose against the glass of the door that I had just cleaned with Windex.  Finally, I had to shout, “For the love of God, Gerta, look at the damned book­mark!”  Gerta’s mother gave me the I’ll-Be-Waiting-For-You-In-The-Parking-Garage-With-My-Car-Running expres­sion.  I sup­pose Daisy enthu­si­asm can be contagious.

I’m sure that I was just as loud at that age and pressed my nose against just as much, or more, clean glass.  Still, I couldn’t help feel­ing that kids these days are dif­fer­ent from when I was young.  It’s not just the fact that milk is filled with hor­mones and that these girls could sprout a bosom like Dolly Par­ton at any moment.  I worry that kids are overly stim­u­lated these days.  They come out of the womb, latch on to their mother’s nip­ple like it was a joy­stick, and say, “How come I can’t find the cur­sor?”  By the time they’re a few years old, they often times sound so jaded.  I asked a lit­tle girl a few weeks ago if she liked to read Dr. Seuss.  She rolled her eyes at me and replied, “Per­son­ally, I find Seuss to be rather banal and cliche.  I pre­fer the edgi­ness and unpre­dictabil­ity of Shel Sil­ver­stein.  He’s real.”

There­fore, I was delighted when the Daisies took an inter­est in our book­store cat, who was snooz­ing soundly on a dis­play table of bar­gain books.  The girls imme­di­ately flocked around her.  The cat tensed up.  I sug­gested to the girls that they not crowd around the cat and pet her, one at a time, very gen­tly.  Instead, they pro­ceeded to all grab at her fur like she was the last food sam­ple on the tray at the gro­cery store.  Need­less to say, the cat nipped one of them.  One of the girls grabbed her arm and stepped back, then screamed “THE CAT BIT ME!”  She spun around the room like she was going to pass out from the blood loss of the scratch.  I asked if she needed a tourni­quet.  She asked what a tourni­quet was, sud­denly obliv­i­ous to the pain.

At this point, the Girl Scout leader rounded them up to stand out­side and sell cook­ies.  I found myself admir­ing the energy of those lit­tle girls, hun­gry to expe­ri­ence the world with all of their senses, yet, at the same time, feel­ing for the par­ents who must be exhausted.  I lis­tened for what their 5–7-year-old sales pitch would be to passersby:  “They’re deli­cious,” “Will that be one box of Thin Mints or two?” or the clas­sic “They freeze well.”

Instead, I heard “GERTA, WATCH THIS!”  A thud against the glass door made me look up from the books I was sort­ing behind the counter.  The lit­tle girl had slammed her behind against the door and yelled through the glass at the cat, “HEY, FURBALL, BITE THIS!”  She pro­ceeded to accen­tu­ate her point by hook­ing a thumb toward her bot­tom.  On one hand, I was shocked that a five-year-old could sound like a middle-aged taxi dri­ver, but I couldn’t help but laugh at the clever way she had cho­sen to mimic the adults around her.  The cat, on the other hand, kicked her rear leg back over her head and cleaned her­self.  Evi­dently, she was not impressed.  It’s not easy sell­ing Girl Scout Cook­ies to a cat, but that’s def­i­nitely not the way to do it.  Then again, lit­tle girls are basi­cally just kit­tens, aren’t they?

Oct 202011
 

Work­ing in an inde­pen­dent book­store, I’m asked daily about how e-readers have affected the sell­ing of phys­i­cal books. They are often shocked when I tell them many peo­ple still buy books. How­ever, you just have to know what to say when you inter­act with them.

01. OMG–that book makes you look soo skinny.
02. You know, if you’re stranded in your car dur­ing a bliz­zard, you can eat a book.
03. When you turn the book this way, I think I can see the face of Jesus. If you don’t buy that book, I’m def­i­nitely sell­ing it on eBay!
04. When you hold that book up to your face, I don’t even notice that you’re bald.
05. If you’ve ever expe­ri­enced a paper cut, you know that a deftly wielded book can eas­ily decap­i­tate a zom­bie in one fell swoop.
06. All the kids are read­ing books these days. E-readers are soo five min­utes ago.
07. Books are loaded with fiber!
08. I bet you can’t even read. Oh yeah? Prove it!
09. Most peo­ple assume that other peo­ple just buy e-readers to dis­creetly read porn in pub­lic.
10. What woman wouldn’t drag her­self across a cof­fee shop on all fours to reach a straight man read­ing Jane Austen?