Miscellany and Humor Writing“Miscellany and Humor” is the title of this somewhat catch-all section. (Actually, come to think of it, that would make a pretty good title for my career.) Anyway, if you are looking for persuasive proof sense of my humor, then you’ve come to the right place. Unsurprisingly, some of the funniest and/or wackiest writing archived in this section was never published, mainly because it was written for my own divertissement and/or was not submitted for publication because of the subsequent damage I feared same would cause my career and/or person. Witness “‘Nowledge Nosh,†my 1981 adult education parody. With its finely calibrated descriptions for such nearly credible fare as Dating After Death and Breaking Into Blackmail, it is arguably the funniest thing I have ever written; it sure got laughs when I read from it to the students who took the course that I taught, or led, or whatever, in hanging out….
And here’s where I really began to reach —
Needless to say, it was hard to find a mystery celebrity to have breakfast with my fearless band of nighthawks at 5 a.m. I mean, it’s hard enough to find any kind of guest, no less a celebrity, who is willing to have breakfast with a bunch of strangers at a normal time of day, no less at 5 in the morning. (In the end, I did manage to inveigle John Belushi’s drummer into tagging along with us.) Then, it was over to the Café Madrid, to watch my former girlfriend, a jazz dancer there. That’s where I would pull out the catalog I had written, and, with palpable tongue in cheek, read descriptions of the courses I was offering to my prospective Noshers in the spring, such as:
At which point, I would turn and give my little covey of nighthawks a searching look —
And so on and so forth. Then, there were my more arcane offerings, like this memorable piece of pedagogical persiflage:
I even included bite-sized bios of my “faculty at largeâ€:
Fun stuff, eh? Anyway, the Nosh catalog was usually effective in diverting my assembled wayfarers from the fact that I didn’t have a mystery celebrity guest (or, in the case of John Belushi’s drummer, that he had passed out). It also clearly was written by someone under the influence of — something. A few things, actually, cat food fumes being one of them…. Likewise of said “what was he on?” ilk is the wondrously loopy, inadvertently hilarious “Letter to a English Professor Explaining Radically Overdue Paper” that I wrote as a cover for an absurdly overdue paper, which includes my friend and fellow scribe-cum-space cadet Daniel Chilowicz’s “surrender to a gnawing perplexity” as an excuse for my craven dilatoriness. (It didn’t work.) Then, there is the prologue for what was to be “Coast Guard Novel,” a based-on-true-events, only-the-names-have-been-changed oeuvre about a Caribbean-based Coast Guard cutter-turned-pirate ship that I wrote in collaboration with a mad former CG lookout I met on a cross-country train, who really did have the inside dope on the drug war. What a story he had to tell — a cross between “McHale’s Navy” and “Billy Budd” with a soupçon of “Apocalypse Now.” As you can see from the promising start, this would have been a fantastic book — if I hadn’t had to scuttle it for fear of losing my life. Moral of the story: beware of Coast Guardsmen bearing bewitching tales! Anyway, there’s a statute of limitations for everything. (I hope.) Enjoy. |
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