![]()
Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
Read “The Wavy Rule” archive, and “order your Wavy Rule 2008 Anthology today!”:http://emdashes.com/2009/03/the-wavy-rule-anthology-now-fo.php
Author Archives: Emdashes
Kevin Fitzpatrick’s “Algonquin” Book Tour Starts Sunday!
Martin Schneider writes:
Via the mysterious conduit known as “Facebook” arrives news that the new book about the Algonquin Round Table by our dear friend and colleague Kevin Fitzpatrick is commencing his book tour!
I’ve not had the pleasure of meeting Kevin, but Emily knows him well and assures me that he is a capital fellow and an unimpeachable resource on the subject of Dorothy Parker and her acerbic friends. Really, I see no way that buying his book could ever constitute a poor decision.
Emdashes readers will remember that we presented exclusive coverage of the book a little while back.
Good luck, Kevin!
I’ve pasted his press release below, complete with events, each of which is a delightful occasion to marinate in all things Dorothy Parker, The New Yorker, and wit in general—and to buy the book!
Hi friends and family,
I am happy to announce that my second book is out now. I am the editor of “The Lost Algonquin Round Table” and I hope you will feel compelled to want a copy. It is a collection of writing by the members of the group, 16 writers such as Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, Robert E. Sherwood, Edna Ferber, George S. Kaufman, Heywood Broun and many others. It has fiction, essays, humor, poems and reviews. It was a lot of fun to work on with my co-editor, Nat Benchley. To promote the book I launched my own publishing imprint, Donald Books, which you can find out more about on
www.donaldbooks.com.
So how can you get a copy? Easy! If you live in NYC, my “tour” schedule is below. For those outside of the city, you can go to any decent bookstore and they can order the book for you. Just tell them the title and they should be able to locate it to order; ISBN (hardcover): 9781440151521, ISBN (paperback): 97181440151514; it takes about a week to get it in. The book is also on all the major online booksellers, such as Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Powell’s, etc. You can also order it direct from iUniverse.com (see link on donaldbooks.com).
From my web site, here is the info on where I will be starting this weekend and running through September:
Sunday, Aug. 16, 11 AM, Long Branch Free Public Library, 328 Broadway Long Branch, NJ 07740 732.222.3900. As part of the annual Dorothy Parker Day, Kevin C. Fitzpatrick will give a talk, reading and book signing. Free. Open to the public.
Wednesday, Aug. 19, 6 PM, The Corner Bookstore, 1313 Madison Avenue, at E. 93rd Street, New York, NY 10128. (212) 831-3554. Official book launch and reception party. Editors Nat Benchley & Kevin C. Fitzpatrick will be on hand with special guests. Books will be available for purchase and signing. Free. Open to the public.
Thursday, Aug. 20, 8 PM, Don’t Tell Mama, 343 W. 46th Street, New York, NY 10036. Big Night Out presents the “1930s Idol” cabaret competition. Kevin C. Fitzpatrick will be signing/selling copies of the book plus is a judge in the show. $12 and two drink minimum. Open to the public. Reservations encouraged: 212-757-0788.
Saturday, Aug. 22, 12 PM, Algonquin Hotel, 59 W. 44th Street, New York, NY, 10036. Algonquin Round Table Walking Tour. Editor Kevin C. Fitzpatrick has led this literary walking tour for ten years. Walk in the footsteps of the Vicious Circle and see the locations they visited, from speakeasies to old haunts. Cost is $20 ea. At 3 p.m. in the lobby will be a book signing, followed by a small celebration to mark Dorothy Parker’s birthday today. Reservations encouraged: 212-222-7239.
Wednesday, Aug. 26, 6-9 PM, Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Avenue, there is a special Wednesday evening “speakeasy” on the roof, with live music and Prohibition era cocktails. $12 admission gets you into the museum’s first floor and it’s Prohibition exhibition (and a free drink). Kevin will give a talk and sign copies of the book.
Sunday, Sept. 27, 12 PM, Governors Island (Colonel’s Row). The Jazz Age Lawn Party and Roaring Twenties Party. Live music by Michael Arenella and the Dreamland Orchestra. Book signing 12-3 PM. $5 admission. Open to the public.
Thanks for the support, I really appreciate it.
Sincerely,
Kevin C. Fitzpatrick
kfitz@bway.net
Bob Mankoff on David Marc Fischer, the Winningest Non-Winner We Knew
Emily Gordon writes:
Recently, everyone at Emdashes was saddened by the death of David Marc Fischer, a dear friend of our site and of The New Yorker‘s cartoon caption contest. The following tribute is by The New Yorker‘s Bob Mankoff, and we think David would have loved it (click to enlarge the image):
In his “Blog About Town,” David Marc Fischer meticulously catalogued The New Yorker‘s Cartoon Caption Contest, including his 179 consecutive non-winning entries. Upon learning of this lovely man’s untimely passing, I went back and meticulously reviewed all of his entries, looking for the one that would best honor him and his devotion to the contest. I think this one, from contest 150, fits the bill.
–Bob Mankoff, Cartoon Editor, The New Yorker magazine
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: The E-Book of Deuteronomy (Location Range 1:6-4:49)
![]()
Read Nicholson’s Baker “report”:http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/08/03/090803fa_fact_baker on the Kindle–does the e-book make the book obsolete or is it a new source of annoyance and eye-strain in America?
Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
Read “The Wavy Rule” archive, and “order your Wavy Rule 2008 Anthology today!”:http://emdashes.com/2009/03/the-wavy-rule-anthology-now-fo.php
I’m Not Hanging Noodles On Your Ears: Jag Bhalla’s Book on Idioms, Illustrated by New Yorker Cartoonist Julia Suits
![]()
**Illustrations by Julia Suits**
(click to enlarge)
_Pollux writes_:
Enjoying “Jag Bhalla’s”:http://www.hangingnoodles.com/ new book on idioms comes as easily as a river imp’s fart. _I’m Not Hanging Noodles On Your Ears_, published by the National Geographic Society, is a collection of “intriguing idioms from around the world.”
_Hanging Noodles_, which also features the work of _New Yorker_ cartoonist “Julia Suits'”:http://www.cartoonbank.com/search_results.asp?sitetype=1&advanced=1§ion=all&artist=Julia+Suits visualizations of the idioms, collects wonderful and diverse idioms from various languages, including Chinese, Russian, French, Yiddish, and Spanish.
Our brains, as Bhalla explains, enjoy novelty in language and word play, and idioms are perhaps the best example of our collective love for linguistic playfulness. Bhalla calls idioms “frozen metaphors” and the definition is both pithy and apt.
The origins of some idioms have been lost in time. Idioms are living relics that see life everyday despite their hazy origins. They are frozen baby mammoths that we resurrect from the ice on a daily basis.
Idioms are figures of speech that are usually unintelligible to someone who hears them for the first time. If a Russian lets you know, perhaps while you are “journeying”:http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/08/03/090803fa_fact_frazier across the wastes and wonders of Siberia, that he’s not hanging noodles on your ears, he means he is not pulling your leg.
But Bhalla’s _Hanging Noodles_ isn’t a soulless compendium of idioms, but a look at language and its formation. Bhalla prefaces each chapter with a short linguistic study that examines, for example, the capacity for babies and animals to learn languages, the role of facial expressions in language, the role of culture in language, the role of numbers and counting in language, semantic shifts, and what he calls the “woo-woo theory,” in which language may have gained complexity as a result of man’s efforts to woo the opposite sex, with idioms, for example, serving as a sort of linguistic peacock tail.
![]()
Bhalla also includes trivia on words and word origins. For example, he mentions a neologism based on the Spanish word _tapas_ (literally “lids”, but referring to the little dishes of appetizers served before the main course), which is _crapas_ -a new coinage used to describe the terrible finger food served at public events. In addition, Bhalla not only discusses the origins of words, but also his own origins, and his own tastes and background regarding language.
Let me mention some of the actual idioms in Bhalla’s book. As the Germans say, _here the donkey falls_ (“that’s the important part”). Some of my personal favorites include “to vomit the sound of weakness” (Japanese, “to whine”), “to show your lamp to the sun” (Hindi, “to waste time”), and “to stick one’s nose in every sour curd cheese” (German, “be nosy”).
Julia Suits’ drawings illustrate the bizarreness of some of these idioms, making _Hanging Noodles_ not only a compendium of idioms, a collection of trivia, an autobiography, and a scholarly look at the history of language, but also a book of cartoons.
Suits’ simple lines are effective in a second translation of these idioms. Idioms such as “to stand like a watered poodle” are translated not only into English, but also into the visual language of cartooning. The result is a series of funny and surreal drawings that demonstrate the great complexity and strangeness of language.
Adding to the bizarreness of these idioms is the fact that Bhalla provides us his frozen metaphors only in their translated, English form. As Bhalla explains, the book is not intended to be a language reference book, but instead his purpose is for you to connect as a reader with the lists of idioms and “make your own sweet, beautiful meaning together.”
Bhalla includes a quote by _New Yorker_ cartoon editor Bob Mankoff that defines humor as the “counterweight to the hegemony of reason,” and _Hanging Noodles_ helps in the good fight against dispassionate logic. “Our minds,” Bhalla writes, “are not as reason-able as we like to think.”
But instead of lumping them in terms of their language of origin, Bhalla groups idioms according to theme or category. Thus, we get chapters such as _The Language of Love: Swallowed like a postman’s sock_, _Colors: Sighing with blue breath_, and _Time: When dogs were tied with sausages_.
This makes the book not only informative but funny. For example, a selection of romance-related idioms includes:
* _To live like an old farm rifle_ (Spanish, Nicaragua): to always be pregnant
* _Reheated cabbage_ (Italian): an attempt to revive an old love affair
* _Aunt seducer_ (German): a young man whose manners are much too good
Idioms enliven and brighten the languages of the Earth. Jag Bhalla’s book, adorned with amusing drawings by Julia Suits, is a welcome addition to the library of anyone who loves words.
Reading _I’m Not Hanging Noodles On Your Ears_ put the butter back in my spinach. I hope it does for you too, and may an onion not grow out of your navel.
![]()
Old Magazine Articles We Wish Were Online: Fran Lebowitz in the Woods
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: The Secret of My Succe$s
![]()
Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
Read “The Wavy Rule” archive, and “order your Wavy Rule 2008 Anthology today!”:http://emdashes.com/2009/03/the-wavy-rule-anthology-now-fo.php
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: The Sealand Murders
![]()
Has _The New Yorker_ ever done a report, profile, or story on the “Principality of Sealand”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principality_of_Sealand? If not, it really should.
Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
Read “The Wavy Rule” archive, and “order your Wavy Rule 2008 Anthology today!”:http://emdashes.com/2009/03/the-wavy-rule-anthology-now-fo.php
Infinite Summer: Location 3590
Martin Schneider writes:
Note: I’m participating in Infinite Summer, the widespread Internet book project dedicated to reading David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest. For more information, consult my introduction. My strategy has been to avoid lengthy commentary but instead list quintessentially Wallacean vocabulary and note other oddities, including Kindle typos.
I’m quite a bit farther than this, but I thought it’s preferable to present these lists in shorter form. Expect another update this week.
location 3154: Worcester, correct spelling seems off in this section
location 3229: addict/ alcoholic, errant extra space in Kindle
location 3240: galoots
location 3244: mythopoeia
location 3246: feldspar
location 3295: ¶
location 3323: tripodic
location 3390: PRECIPITANT
location 3391: FREDDIE-MAC FUND, very prescient!
location 3412: arational
location 3424: Good old aural, narrative voice here is distractingly close to DFW’s nonfiction voice
location 3435: usnlikable, Kindle error
location 3436: 60% of respondents, I love the wit and insight of the “videophony” section, but the bit about the self-consciousness over appearance is wrong, isn’t it? People simply adjust their expectations of visual attractiveness to the situation, right?
location 3440: Dysphoria(or, Kindle typo
location 3470: Masking(or, Kindle typo
location 3487: 149, Kindle error (page number included in text)
location 3512: and c.
location 3513: Tableauxdioramas, Kindle typo (hyphen missing)
location 3516: panagoraphobia
location 3523: agnate
location 3548: naïver
location 3558: 70° driveways. Very, very strange. There’s no such thing as a 70° driveway, right? 45° would be crazy steep.
location 3581: spronging
location 3585: truly what is it to pünch the volley, hilarious
location 3590: Stanford-Bïnet, why is DFW adding a diaeresis to Binet?
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: Cuba Dances
![]()
Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
Read “The Wavy Rule” archive, and “order your Wavy Rule 2008 Anthology today!”:http://emdashes.com/2009/03/the-wavy-rule-anthology-now-fo.php
