Linkie O’the Day: Bait and Switch

motivation

Here is an excerpt, first published in the Guardian, from Bait And Switch, by Barbara Ehrenreich, published by Granta on March 6, ie yesterday. Me wants.

The plan was straightforward enough: to find a job, a “good” job, which I defined minimally as a white-collar position that would provide health insurance and an income of about $50,000 a year, enough to land me solidly in the middle class. The job itself would give me a rare first-hand glimpse of the mid-level corporate world, and the effort to find it would, of course, place me among the most hard-pressed white-collar corporate workers – the ones who don’t have jobs.

Middle-class Americans, like myself and my fellow seekers, have been raised with the old-time Protestant expectation that hard work will be rewarded with material comfort and security. This has never been true of the working class, and now it is increasingly untrue of the educated middle class that stocks our corporate bureaucracies. What sets the white-collar corporate workers apart and leaves them so vulnerable is the requirement that they identify, absolutely and unreservedly, with their employers.

Operation Global Media Domination: the market for Atwood shrinks apace!

TIAPeggy, take note!

For what it’s worth, blog posts featuring Margaret Atwood are half as popular as posts with Gay Pirates, which are themselves half as popular as posts featuring Giant Squid, which are in turn half as popular as posts of Stephen Hawking’s Christmas Album.

But none of them approach the media Juggernaut that is The Feminine Hygene Post!

Let’s Roll-ins

I was saving pictures, in preparation for making this post, when I experienced a nomenclature crisis. Now, it is not every day that one experiences a crisis of nomenclatory parameters, but it was, indeed, this day. I was, as I explained, saving pictures. And one of the things you have to do when you do that is give them all different names. The problem was, they were all pictures of Henry Rollins, and the only thing that came to mind when looking at these pictures, besides a powerful urge to crawl under the desk and cover my vitals with the office chair, were the words “Rollins Angry.” Eventually I settled on “Rollins Angry,” “Rollins Threatening,” “Rollins Screaming,” and “Rollins Not Actively Menacing Anything.”

Rollins Screaming

Would you mess with this man?

Well, Sploid reports that a couple of hapless Aussies have. In the case of the first one, I don’t blame Rollins for going somewhat apeshitish, particularly as that is the Rollins default. In the case of the second, I think he was out of line for killing the messenger, although that is surely a longstanding, if snivelly and tyrannical, political tradition, and therefore possibly considered acceptable, at least in DC and LA.

Henry Angry

 

 

No, no Henry, I wasn’t saying anything. Don’t mind me. Nothing to see here…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In any case, here is the article, in its glorious entirety. I’m too scared to take it out of context. Kudos to Rollins, though, for being one of the few who can distinguish between the role of the military in Iraq and the role of the politicians. Sucky enough? I don’t wanna get beat up.

 

‘The Aussie PM can go f@ck himself’

Henry WSJOn a recent flight from New Zealand to Australia a man found himself seated next to a musclebound gentleman reading a book bearing the ominous tile “Jihad: The Rise Of Militant Islam In Central Asia.”

He did what any hopelessly paranoid slab of quivering milquetoast would do: He reported the guy to Australia’s National Security hotline.

That guy was punk rock legend Henry Rollins.

 

 

Rollins received a letter warning him of his status as a suspected terrorist from a “nice lady” in the Australian government:

The person who sat next to you on the flight from New Zealand does not agree with your politics or choice of reading and so nominated you as a possible threat. As they were too cowardly or stupid to leave their details I can’t call them to discuss their idiocy with them.

In his response to the kindly tipster the former Black Flag frontman noted the irony that the book is written by a reporter from the Wall Street Journal, one of America’s more conservative newspapers, and was published by Yale University, President Bush’s alma mater.

The D.C. native then asked the woman to send along a message to her higher-ups:

Please tell your government and everyone in your office to go f*ck themselves. Tell them twice. If your boss is looking for something to do, you can tell him I suggest he go f*ck himself. Baghdad‘s safer than my hometown and your PM is a sissy. You have a nice night.

Though firmly against the war in Iraq and no fan of President Bush, Rollins is an unassailable patriot and supporter of the Armed Services. During the Christmas season he made his sixth USO tour.

“The troops, they’re my heroes,” Rollins said. “You don’t need me out there like some Tokyo Rose. I wouldn’t go on a tear on Bush out there, because it’d be distracting.”

Rollins Extreme Closeup

Yes Sir!

Anything you say, Henry. Now can I have your number?

short-selling Atwood

Atwood SignatureUndercutting the market for signed books by Canada’s Greatest Novelist? Machine-reproducing that irreplacable signature? Facilitating the production of hundreds of signed copies, worldwide, on a daily basis? That would completely debase the market value of the signed copies, as well as cheapening the emotional connection the “Dear Reader” feels towards the book and the author who, for at least a moment, handled it.

Who would do such a thing?

Margaret Atwood.

“It’ll be like being the first man on the moon!” somebody said, trying to reassure Aki Beam, a New York librarian nervously waiting first in line to have her copy of Atwood’s new book signed by the LongPen‘s robotic arm.

Apollo 13 is the parallel springing more readily to mind,” murmured the bookstore’s stressed-out owner, as a technical expert fiddled frantically with the machinery.

I have a book that Viggo Mortensen signed for me, and frankly it means a great deal more that he, himself, hauled his decorative lefty ass to Beyond Baroque that night and stood up on stage and read his poetry and then sat down on the filthy floor next to my pal Trixxi because he was too late to get a chair (they tangled legs, hers and his being too long to put anywhere else) and then went and sat for hours at the table with the other people: Georgeanne Dean, Patricia Smith, Regie Gibson, Luis Rodriquez, and Marvin Bell although not Saul Williams, because apparently the Saul does not sit at tables with other authors and sign things; all of whom signed things very nicely, particularly Regie Gibson, with whom I shoulda followed up, athough I’m a great one for slapping my head six months later and saying, “Idiot! He was hot!” and I even hung onto the paper bag Ian Tracey gave me his phone number on for two years, although I was, as mentioned, too much of an idiot to do anything about it until six months after I’d finally gotten rid of the bag…but I’m over that now; and then Viggo actually held and signed my book, and didn’t even spill any of the whisky on it, and that means much more than something done by some mechanical pen With Free Bonus Gee Whiz Factor that, frankly, non-geeks couldn’t care less about.

Besides, he got Sharpie all over his fingers and I now have a nearly complete set of fingerprints with which to frame him someday. Put your suggestions in the Comments, please.

But that’s neither here nor there.

Nor was Atwood.Margaret Atwood

She was in London; 40 people were in New York for the booksigning. Now, I dunno about you, but I figure 40 is a pretty good number for a piece of machinery to pull; it’s a crappy number for Margaret Atwood, though. The market moves fast, I’ll tell you that.

And another thing.

“You’re talking to the person who was heading for Los Angeles when they had that earthquake, was heading for New York on the morning of 9/11, and set out to do a book tour in Japan when the Sars episode hit,” Ms Atwood said. “I’m the person whose limousine broke down on the New York freeway, green stuff and smoke came out of it, and I hitched. I was actually rescued by the marines.”

I’m wondering if Margaret Atwood would mind posting her travel plans in advance, for the benefit of the whole world…next time I’m planning to go somewhere, I’ll make sure she’s not headed there. Better safe than entombed in fiery grave with, I remind you, Canada’s Greatest Novelist.

You just know that, in a thousand years when we got dug up by future archaeologists, the caption would read, “Margaret Atwood, Canada’s Greatest Novelist, and unnamed fan.”

Unnamed fan

13 out of 30’s not bad

Behold the 30 books everyone should read before they die, at least according to the Guardian and the librarians they consulted, follwed by tick marks to indicate which ones I have read and, therefore, to what extent you may condescend to/suck up to me. It’s a bit heavy on the recent stuff; surely Paradise Lost should be in there somewhere, to say nothing of Brave New World, although at least with that one they could, given modern life, defend themselves with the indisputable claim that it’s redundant. It also seems to indicate that Charles Dickens was the greatest author the English language has ever known, a claim which is itself one of the great comedic set pieces. Much like the death of Little Nell, it just never ceases to bring a tear to the eye and a hearty laugh to the belly.

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee N
The Bible Y
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy by JRR Tolkien Y
1984 by George Orwell Y
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens Y
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte N must I?
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Y
All Quiet on the Western Front by E M Remarque N
His Dark Materials Trilogy by Phillip Pullman N but I will in two weeks when I go house-sitting
Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks N but I have some of his other stuff
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck Y
The Lord of the Flies by William Golding Y
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon N That became a classic rather quickly, didn’t it?
Tess of the D’urbevilles by Thomas Hardy Y, Unfortunately. Nuff said!
Winnie the Pooh by AA Milne Y
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte N Again, must I?
The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Graham Y Although I find it vastly inferior to T. H. White’s The Once and Future King
Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell N
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens Y
The Time Traveller’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger N
The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold N But I own it; it’s around here somewhere, probably underneath a pile of Vanity Fairs.
The Prophet by Khalil Gibran N Although I have read many a snippet as part of someone’s email signature
David Copperfield by Charles Dickens N Don’t wanna. Can’t make me.
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho Y
The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov N
Life of Pi by Yann Martel Y And met the man. Now may I be excused from reading David Copperfield?
Middlemarch by George Eliot N And it may interest you to know that neither Eliot, nor any of the Brontes, have made it into any of the three editions of the Norton Anthology of English Literature which I own.
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver N
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess N But I love his other stuff, will get to this one day.
A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Alexander Solzenhitsyn N Is it really better than The Gulag Archipelago?