Archive for February, 2008

So Whooooooooooooooo’s a Debbie Downer?

Posted in epicly strife with tags on February 18, 2008 by joebookshop

I had been reading a skateboard magazine. An older guy in his 70s came up with some books, so I set the magazine on the counter. As I was counting up his change, I noticed how he couldn’t take his eyes off the a two-page sequence of Ted DeGros doing a switch front crooks fakie flip on this knee-high ledge that keeps going up”It’s a sick sequence, huh?”

He chuckled.

“I mean, look here how proper that fakie flip is; he catches it above the ledge and stomps it down bolts. Sick.”

He smiled and conceded that it was, in fact, “sick,” and took off.

Awesome.

I went back to thumbing through my magazine when the next lady, trim and in her 60s, stepped up with a few books. I notice that her eyes are really bloodshot. Not as if she had just smoked pot, but as if she’d been at some windy beach and kept getting sand blown in her eyes all day. Either that or she hadn’t taken her contacts out in, like, a fortnight. Anyway I put the magazine down and ring her up. She asked what I was reading.

Thrasher. It is sick.

“Oh, sure. Skateboarding,” she said with a hand gesture I usually reserve for bothersome flies. “What a great way to break your neck.”

Yeah, Right. I inform her, matter-of-factly, that skateboarding has fewer reported injuries each year than both hockey and football, which is significant when you consider the fact that skateboarding is more popular than baseball. [ed: Yeah, he still fucking cares about this.]

Debbie ain’t fazed.

“Well, that’s just what my sister said about skydiving. She said, ‘oh, don’t worry. Skydiving is safer than driving on the freeway.’ She had 6000 jumps and then her parachute didn’t open and she died.”

……

…..

“Um, sorry to hear that.”

…..

“I’m…uh…”

…..

“…still gonna skate?”

She looked at me with a tight little smile and left. Hopefully For. E. Ver.

This Bookshop is Made of — People!

Posted in PROFANE LANGUAGE!!!, SEXUALLY EXPLICIT!!!, THIS TIME IT'S LITERAL!!! with tags , , , , on February 12, 2008 by joebookshop

Like a lot of second-hand stores, the books that fill the shelves of Happy Dusty Books represent the tastes and predilections of its customers. Our shop relies almost entirely on both random people swapping a few dog-eared hard-backs for in-store credit as much as we do the estates of deceased booklovers selling entire libraries to pay off debt (or to at least get rid of some thirty-odd volumes dedicated to the fine craft of butterfly collecting). Our stock of new editions is almost an afterthought. As such, my everyday task of pricing and shelving new arrivals is nothing if not rewarding. In fact, it’s not uncommon that I lock up the store each night with two or three newly-found treasures tucked under my arm. It’s a bit humbling, however, to think that the books our customers no longer want are often times far more random and interesting than whatever I’ve independently found for myself. Take a gander of the first page of my latest snag: I am not SPOCK, by Leonard Nimoy.

I don’t go around introducing myself to strangers as Mr. Spock. But when someone addresses a letter to “Mr. Spock, Hollywood, California,” I’m the one who gets it.

Most people play many roles in their lives. Roles like parent, child, breadwinner, homemaker, brother, sister, friend and lover. But most function under one collective role — individual identity.

Not so in my case. I am identified in at least two specific roles. Leonard Nimoy–actor, and Mr. Spock–Vulcan.

“I didn’t recognize you without your pointed ears.” I hear that all the time. It’s a joke, well intended and good natured, and it’s part of my life.

The obvious intention is to communicate with me. “You are Leonard Nimoy, an actor who plays the role of a pointed-eared Vulcan named Mr. Spock on Star Trek.”

Let’s try a variation. “You are Mr. Spock of Star Trek. You are standing here now, looking like a human named Leonard Nimoy. Therefore, I have difficulty recognizing you.”

One more variation. A parent holding a bewildered child by the hand says, “Johnny, this is Mr. Spock. Don’t you recognize him?” The child stares and in his eyes I see no recognition. If he had the verbal skills he would probably say, “No. That’s not Mr. Spock. Mr. Spock has pointed ears and arched eyebrows and greenish skin and wears his hair in bangs and he has a uniform with a blue shirt and black pants and boots and he’s on TV. This man doesn’t have any of those things and he’s not on TV, he’s standing here in front of me!

Who is correct, the parent or the child?

Wow. This man is on-point like a Vulcan’s ear (sorry, that’s a Rob Sonic lyric — I couldn’t resist). I never took a philosophy class in college (and I very consciously avoided all philosophical dialog at the coffee shop I once practically lived at), but damn, isn’t that deep? Wouldn’t you love to spend two hundred pages with Mr. Nimoy as he waxes poetic on matters of celebrity and identity? I for one sure would, but then again, before I made it past the first chapter, I switched Nimoy’s company for that of a nymphomaniac.

Shelving in the forever-disorganized Erotica section, I recently came across The Sexual Life of Catherine M. by Catherine Millet. What initially caught my attention wasn’t the word “sexual” in the title, but rather the Grove Press logo — a little cubist tree — printed on the book’s spine. In college I took a class titled “Modernism & Obscenity” in which we read a selection of books that had been banned throughout the middle half of the Twentieth Century (picks included James Joyce’s Ulysses [blech!] D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover [yeh!] and Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer [blech!] — the latter two published by Grove’s imprint Black Cat), and I’d come to associate Grove Press (kinda despite myself) with little that’s not odd-ball and smutty and highly intelligent, all at once.

Not the case, however, with Catherine Millet’s Sexual Life, a bukkake-covered autobio of the well-known (at least in France) art critic’s love of swingers’ parties, gang-bangs, and other gatherings in which she invites 100 plus men run the train on her. Sure, such accounts of wanton orifice-stuffing are sure to furnish something akin to j.o. material, but by time I reached the half-way point in the book, I realized that — despite myself — I was bored, which is probably the worst reaction the founder and editor of Art Press could have anticipated. It’s as if she assumes her swanky anecdotes are so sweltering, so titillating, that they practically tell themselves. All she needs to do — her attitude seems to indicate — after a passage in which she describes how much men (her observation, not mine) love to blow their load in a vagina already dripping with other men’s muck — is write something trite like “and so I rang in my thirties…”. It’s like she’s a somnambulant cowgirl riding bareback through the range who, from time to time, yanks on the horse’s mane as she navigates the stony creek of a chapter break. Hicc-cup!

And while I revel in our bookshop’s liberal borrowing policy and the $200+ in credit I’ve accumulated by trading in all the paperbacks I’d stacked up during college, I think, after five months of employment, I’ve reached a breaking-point. After racking up great titles like Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States, Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49, Alberto Manguel’s A History of Reading, Philip Roth’s The Plot Against America, and Simon Winchester’s The Professor and the Madman, I think it’s about time I sit down and actually fucking read these books. Sometimes when customers buy a stack themselves, they feel a need to apologize for their apparent gluttony, or at least explain themselves. After I stuff Happy Dusty bookmarks into their fresh purchases, I wave my hands and say, “Hey, I work at a bookshop. You’re talking to the worst of them.” I wonder if they’d ever guess the extent of it. I’ve somehow become the type of guy who’s read the first twenty pages of every book that’s become a household title. Well, maybe that’s a stretch, but I’ve probably at least skimmed a good chunk of these books. Maybe I do it because I hope to impress an after-party by casually sizing-up the host’s book collection. Equally plausible is the act of consuming that I relish as much as I do reading. There’s not much a bookstore clerk earning minimum wage can afford (trust me, daily bus fares and coffees are luxuries), but second-hand books, on the other hand, coupled with a healthy employee discount, is always too tempting a pleasure to pass up. And the bolstering to one’s ego a slightly better-than-average knowledge of books provides? It might just be that the kid-in-a-candy-store syndrome has as much to do with it as a compulsion to flash my literary colors. I just don’t know which impulse is more childish.

Hello, Sincerity!

Posted in PROFANE LANGUAGE!!!, epic with tags , , , , on February 11, 2008 by joebookshop

Michael and I were sitting around behind the counter during the fifteen minute period in which his morning shift overlaps with my evening shift. Michael is a funny guy. He’s also kind of an asshole. He and I were talking about the traits — physical or otherwise — he looks for in a girlfriend when a woman, in her mid-sixties, wearing a gray pea coat, rushed through the door. She stood at the counter, tapping her fingers on the formica like a finicky piano.

Excuse me. I’m looking for a book about the Eighty Percent Church,” she said while looking over her shoulder at the bookshop.”It’s about sincerity,” she said over her shoulder.

“Huh,” Michael said.

“I sincerely doubt we have it,” I said.

“It was reviewed by the New York Times,” she said. “I want a used copy.”

Michael, sitting at the computer, did a quick google search. It just came out this week, he told her, so I doubt we’d have a used copy. For my part I checked our new inventory on the register computer, coming up without an entry for the book. I told Grey Pea Coat about another bookshop she could visit in the Haight-Ashbury.

“I’m not going that far for a book,” she said, as if referring to the Iditarod instead of a fifteen-minute walk. Yeah, I don’t blame you, I said.

After Grey Pea Coat went off to huff about the store, Michael and I resumed our discussion.

“I guess I like really pale girls with black hair — naturally black hair,” he said.

“So, basically, you like girls who look more or less like you,” I said.

“Yeah! Basically. I also like chubby girls. She should also know how to bake. Baking is very important.”

“Okay, so you want a girl who looks like you and can provide for you like your mother?”

“Yeah. Basically!”

“You know, Michael, you lazy mug, I really don’t think such an open and warm embrace of Freudian-uh-ism, or whatever, is gonna get you laid.”

“Actually, you know what? My baller status is currently at an all-time high,” Michael said, folding his hands behind his head and leaning back with a self-satisfied grin. At this moment Gray Pea Coat barged to the door before stopping to scream at Michael.

“Yes! that’s great, isn’t it? That’s the whole idea: find a woman who cares for you like your mother and then dump her for a younger woman when she gets old!” ejaculated the Gray Pea Coat.

“Uh, yeah,” Michael said, looking at her. “Pretty much. But she needs to have natural black hair, be chubby and pasty, and she better bake. This last point is paramount.”

“It’s just always about you, isn’t it?”she said.

Michael paused a moment.

“Actually, right now, it seems to be entirely about you.”

Gray Pea Coat stormed off. Zasha, our senior co-worker who’s not our “boss” but is always telling us to get back to work, strolled over and asked about the commotion. Michael and I, fearing reprimand, downplayed the harshness of the exchange. Regardless, Zasha looked shocked and appalled. A few customers, standing around tables of books, pretended not to listen.

“Jesus Christ,” she said, making no effort to contain her projecting voice. “Women like that should have a plastic bag pulled over their head until they suffocate and fucking drop dead!”

Our demonic cackling rang through the store.