Category Archives: true story

Curriculum Non Vitae

The website is still underdevelopment. When it’s up, it will have a section on both my literary and non-literary work. This is a draft of what will be on the “non-literary” work page:

Curriculum Non Vitae

Not long ago, when I was looking for a job, I aced the interview, but then the boss’s boss called me on the phone. “Your resume is how shall I put this? Bizarre,” she said.

The jobs were all over the map, geographically and in many other ways. So here for your perusal and amusement and perhaps as a cautionary tale for the young folks is a history of my working life:

When I graduated college I believed that after a year or two I’d go to the Writer’s Workshop in Iowa where I wanted to go because it was the most famous writing program in the country. But I first I needed to work on my portfolio and get some real life work experience. Continue reading Curriculum Non Vitae

Lifeline

I’m turning 50 and still an aspiring writer which is like running around in a string bikini with a belly ring. At 50 even if you’re Madonna, it’s kinda sad.

Last summer, I enter the 3 Day Novel Contest – it’s Canadian. You start and complete a novel over the labor day weekend. On the honor system. Oh Canada.

The winner gets published. The rest of us shmucks are out 50 bucks.

Now it’s late January and I’m awaiting the results as though it were a biopsy, obsessively monitoring contest updates for hints about when they’ll announce, and meanwhile the brain won’t stop thinking about how my life will change if I win, how I’m destined never to win anything, how the producers of Who Wants to Be Millionaire sense my loserliness and I’ll never sit in the hot seat across from Meredith, how I showed early promise once, but let it slip away and ti-i-i-ime is not on my side, and maybe HRT would be worth it, even with the cancer risk…

And so I turn to the internets for distraction. It’s not surfing. It’s driving. It’s aimless driving with free gas on a highway with infinite exits, attractive rest stops and no reason to hurry home. I type my name, I type Pogo (the name of a story I’d written over 20 years ago – my entire published oeuvre) and I type The Quarterly (the name of the literary journal in which it appeared).

I get the usual: find Marion Stein, irrelevant links. Somewhere on the second or third screen there’s something in a language that’s not English. I click. It’s a course description in Danish with enough English words – titles and names of units for me to get the gist. The authors include Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, Ernest Hemingway, and William Shakespeare. And there in a unit called Man vs Nature: Marion Stein, Pogo, The Quarterly. There’s my story. All grown up and living in Europe.

It’s a secondary school.

I find my way to the school’s website. There’s a thumbnail of the teacher – graying curly hair, forties at least. I close my eyes and see her young, maybe during her gap year. In Chiang Mai, she stays at a backpackers hotel run by a German – don’t talk about the war – and his unstereotypicaly assertive Thai wife. Her friends are out hiking, but she’s getting over the effects of some bad Ecstasy. There’s a rooftop patio with comfy chairs and an astounding mountain view. Books left by fellow travelers mostly English but she majored in English. She picks up a weather beaten copy of The Quarterly, Issue 9. There are a couple of pieces she likes, so she holds onto it. Years later she’s working on the curriculum, has an idea and remembers reading something that would fit. Where was it again? She goes to her shelf and picks through several Grantas, a couple of Paris Reviews and oh there it is! Oh yes, that will do.

I email the teacher. A week later, I hear back. She first read Pogo in a class she took at the Southern Danish University and has been using it for years as an example of a “postmodern” text.

Okay, this isn’t exactly lunch at Balthazar with Scorcese discussing my screenplay. It’s not winning the 3 Day – which I found out today I’m not even shortlisted for . It’s not getting my shot on Millionaire, but somewhere out there, this story was floating like a note in a bottle and it was found, and miraculously, I found out that it was found, and in a moment of everyday despair, of hopelessness, Denmark sent me a lifeline.

God bless the internets.
God save Queen Margarette..

Famous in Denmark

So last week (1/10) I wrote about discovering that a story I wrote a lifetime ago was being read in a high school class in Denmark.

Now I’ve heard back from the teacher:

“Dear Marion!
How strange that I should receive an email from you. Yes, I can understand that you must have been surprised to see your story as part of a Danish final year in advanced English curriculum Way back I attended a university course at South Danish University about
short stories. Your text was there among many others. I got hold of The Quarterly where it was printed and I have used it many times in various contexts. Both when the theme was “Man and Nature” and as an example of a postmodern text. It must have touched a special nerve in me, the description of the good dog that gradually turns brutal, wild, and repulsive. Also the beginning with the allusion to the retarded, not-so-charming looking sibling in the smiling family photo, I have always found full of teaching possibilities.
So the fact that I have not grown tired of it is a sign that it is a very good story, indeed. I will keep your letter and read it to my English class. They will enjoy imagining their 60- year-old teacher as a backpacker, picking up a weatherbeaten short story somewhere far away from Odense.

Best wishes
Karen Dickmeiss
Odense Katedralskole”

I’m going to work on a story about this. Next week’s topic at The Moth (www.themoth.com) is going to be HOPE. So I’m going to tell a story for everyone out there who’s waiting to hear back about that manuscript, hoping that the boss will say a kind word, waiting for some sign that the lover appreciates you or that your familly “gets” you, or that the work you do every day actually has some meaning. Because all this time I’m thinking I’m obscure, I’m being read in Denmark. How fucking cool is that!

Saturday, January 10. 2009 Finding Myself on the Web

Googling oneself — masturbation or just another way to say: I’m a self-indulgent narcissist?

I was awaiting the results of the 3-Day Novel Contest as though it were a biopsy, obsessively searching out all links that would help me decipher when the winner would be announced. Jan Underwood, who previously won for Day Shift Werewolf , said in a podcast that she got an email New Year’s Day which made me question the veracity of the Contest’s official Tweet.

Before 11/4, I was constantly bouncing from Huff Post to Wonkette, Politico and of course Nate Silver, as though by visiting often enough, I would influence the outcome which would be determined based on the number of hits (Luckily this may have been the case). Afterwards I applied the same magical thinking to the 3-Day – like it might increase my chances if I checked the website and googled early and often. (Except of course the Election delusion was shared by millions who wanted the same outcome whereas with the contest every one of the 500 suckers who paid their 50 bucks wants to win.)

I kept thinking about how my life would change if I won, how the novella I’d submitted might be really good, how there was almost no chance of marketing a novella unless I won, how I’m destined to never win anything, how the producers of Who Wants to Be Millionaire just weren’t that into me and I never got my shot to sit in the hot seat across from Meredith, how I showed early promise but let it slip away and time is running out and maybe HRT would be worth it even with the cancer risk…

And there I was distracting myself on the Internet. Out for a metaphorical drive past a place I used to live. It’s not surfing. How the hell is it surfing? It’s driving. It’s aimless driving with free gas on a highway with infinite exits. I typed my name, Pogo (the name of a story I’d written over 20 years ago – my entire published oeuvre) and The Quarterly (the legendary literary magazine in which it was published – known primarily because of its famous editor.)

Previously I’d done this and brought up links to used copies on Amazon, maybe Powell’s and a blogger or two who was looking for old issues.

But somewhere on the second screen there was this:
• [MS WORD] Undervisningsbeskrivelse
Fra The American Way – an Introduction, (Prentice-Hall 1984) Kearny and Crandall, The Rugged Individualist artikel. Marion Stein, Pogo, The Quarterly 1989 …

Danish is sort of like English with extra syllables, plus enough of the doc was in English for me to figure out that it was some kind of syllabus and in a unit entitled: Nature versus Man, in a course with readings from Shakespeare, Hemmingway, Arthur Miller, Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, there I am – or rather there’s that story I wrote so long ago featured in a literary mag that featured writers who were also up and coming but unlike me, actually arrived.

Google translation clarified that it was a secondary school. The document was to let parents know what the kids were reading. ¡Fijate! — as they say down south. How did the teacher even come across that story printed twenty years ago in a magazine with a circulation in the thousands?

I found my way to the school’s website and the personnel page. There was a thumbnail of the teacher – graying curly hair, forties. But I imagined her in her twenties, maybe during the gap year that those social welfare types get, trekking through Asia with various friends and lovers. In Chiang Mai, she stays at a backpackers hotel run by a German and his unstereotypically assertive Thai wife. Her friends are out hiking, but she’s getting over the effects of some bad seafood or maybe Ecstasy and sits the day out. There’s a bookcase with free exchange and a rooftop patio with comfy chairs and a startling mountain view. Nothing in Danish except Lonely Planet, but that’s okay. She loves English literature. She picks up a weather beaten copy of The Quarterly, Issue 9 and starts to read. There are a couple of pieces she really likes, so she holds onto the book and it makes it’s way to her home. She moves a few times and it always winds up on her bookshelf. Then one day in the late summer before the kids come back to school she’s working on the curriculum for her English class and comes up with an idea. There’s a story she remembers reading years ago that would fit in. Where was it again? She goes to her shelf and picks through several English language anthologies. Oh there it is! Oh yes, that will do.

So it isn’t exactly lunch with Scorcese and a discussion of my screenplay. It isn’t winning the 3 Day or even getting my shot on Millionaire, but it’s something. Somewhere out there, this story was floating like a note in a bottle and it was found, and miraculously, I found out that it was found, and in a moment of everyday despair, I was rescued.

God I love the Internet.

BTW, I emailed the teacher to ask her how she really got the story and why she picked it. I’m waiting to hear back.