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February 2006
Do you know your fire-drake from your ha-ha?
Test your vocabulary skilss with Timothy’s quiz inspired by a tortoise who lived in the garden of the eighteenth-century English curate Gilbert White, and was given a voice by New York Times columnist Verlyn Klinkenborg in the critically acclaimed Timothy; or Notes of an Abject Reptile. Plus, send the Timothy e-card to a friend!
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What is the good life?
Jay McInerney asks this question in his new novel about New Yorkers living in the aftermath of September 11th, and lives it on his current book tour. Visit the official website for The Good Life to find out more about both.
Behind the Book: Find out why McInerney wrote this book and how the cover was designed
Podcast: Listen to the audio book tour diary
Subscribe to the diary in the iTunes Music Store
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The Amalgamation Polka by Stephen Wright
The bearded ladies were dancing in the mud. Outsized country feet that just wouldn't keep still, strutting and reeling all along that slippery stretch of flooded road. Yellow paste clung to the hems of their gowns, flecked sunburnt arms and whiskery cheeks, collected in thick earthen coins upon the lacy ruffles of their modest chests like a hero's worth of medals artlessly arranged. A cold rain fell and continued to fall over the lost hills, the yet smoking fields, the rude, misshapen trees where light—vague and uncertain—struggled to furnish the day with the grainy quality of a fogged daguerreotype. And at the center of this dripping stillness these loud animated women without origin or explanation, refugees from a traveling circus perhaps, abandoned out of forgetfulness or deceit or simple spite, the improvised conclusion to some sorry affair of outrage and betrayal, and as they danced, they sang and reveled in the rain, porcelain pitchers of ripe applejack passing freely from hand to unwashed hand, the echo of their song sounding harshly across that desolate country:
Soupy, soupy, soupy, without any bean
Porky, porky, porky, without any lean
Coffee, coffee, coffee, without any cream
Keep reading this excerpt, and check out more excerpts from new novels.
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THE AMALGAMATION POLKA by Stephen Wright
The bearded ladies were dancing in the mud. Outsized country feet that just wouldn't keep still, strutting and reeling all along that slippery stretch of flooded road. Yellow paste clung to the hems of their gowns, flecked sunburnt arms and whiskery cheeks, collected in thick earthen coins upon the lacy ruffles of their modest chests like a hero's worth of medals artlessly arranged. A cold rain fell and continued to fall over the lost hills, the yet smoking fields, the rude, misshapen trees where light—vague and uncertain—struggled to furnish the day with the grainy quality of a fogged daguerreotype. And at the center of this dripping stillness these loud animated women without origin or explanation, refugees from a traveling circus perhaps, abandoned out of forgetfulness or deceit or simple spite, the improvised conclusion to some sorry affair of outrage and betrayal, and as they danced, they sang and reveled in the rain, porcelain pitchers of ripe applejack passing freely from hand to unwashed hand, the echo of their song sounding harshly across that desolate country:
Soupy, soupy, soupy, without any bean
Porky, porky, porky, without any lean
Coffee, coffee, coffee, without any cream
Keep reading this excerpt, and check out more excerpts from new novels.
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