Answering a Halloween Dare

It’s my favorite holiday, it’s my favorite holiday, it’s my favorite holiday…la-dee-da-dee-dum.

Happy Halloween to everyone! I’m back from my two-week excursion to Germany, Austria, and Italy (will post about Rome starting tomorrow or Sunday), and am so jet-lagged that my brain is like a leftover fried cheese stick an hour after a party has ended. You know what that’s like, right? Not terribly appetizing.

So much to do, so much to do. But first, I must take care of two orders of business.

1. I have been remiss in letting you know about a website started by our own Maureen Johnson http://maureenjohnson.blogspot.com. It’s a social networking site called YA FOR OBAMA. It features some thought-provoking and passionate blogs from YA authors about why they are voting for Barack Obama for president. I have owed Maureen a blog for ages and I’ll be writing it in about ten minutes or whenever I finish typing this. If you are interested, here is the link to the site: http://yaforobama.ning.com/

Of course, you are under no obligation to visit. But if you are interested, it’s a great site, and I have enjoyed reading blogs from YA authors, including John Green, Sara Zarr, and Meg Cabot, among many others.

2. Ms. Lauren Myracle, author of the EXTREMELY CREEPY new novel, BLISS, among many other fine novels, has issued the following challenge to me and several other YA authors: http://lauren-myracle.livejournal.com/37608.html
Basically, Lauren has challenged us to face a fear–something that takes us far out of our comfort zones. And we are to post proof of our fear-overcoming in some format. What, me worry? AAAAHHHHHHHHH!

Now, I’m pretty neurotic and have a lot of fears, so, you know, it’s great to have so much material to work with. Here is a list for those of you playing the at-home game:
1. Flying
2. Small spaces, particularly small elevators
3. Doll–any and all dolls
4. Yoko Ono albums
5. People not understanding my sense of humor
6. Driving
7. Being stuck somewhere without food so that I might have to reenact the Donner Party
8. Amusement park rides (which puts me in a category with the usually intrepid Maureen Johnson)
9. Putting my foot in my mouth (not literally. I’d do that quite happily just to entertain myself)
10. That part in “The Shining” with the creepy twin girls
11. Snakes
12. Scary sounds
13. Churches at night

Oh, let’s stop at 13, since it’s Halloween and all. There are more, people. But that’s a short list. Interestingly, I have faced some of those fears in just the past two weeks:
1. I flew two, trans-Atlantic flights solo.
2. I rode in elevators small enough to belong to Strawberry Shortcake and all by my lonesome.
3. I forgot to buy a snack for those flights and I did not end up eating my seat companion.
4. I faced audiences who probably did not understand my sense of humor and smiled politely.
5. I’m sure I put my foot in it a few times. Like, did you know that the “Hook ’em Horns” finger sign of my alma mater, U.T., actually means something very, very, VERY obscene in Italy? Yeah? Could you have given me a heads up on that one? Good to know. Now.

But I have more fears. In fact, I have a fear that pretty much puts those petty fears to bed and calls them Mary, because it’s jam-packed with the thick cotton stuffing of emotion. Are you ready? You sure? You don’t want to think about it for a minute or, I don’t know, a lifetime? I could come back later; take your time.

Really? Oh. Okay, then. My biggest fear is self-disclosure. Exposure. Being seen. Being known. Taking stage.

There. I’ve said it.

This may seem surprising. I have a big personality. I could be described, fairly accurately, as a free spirit. But we’re talking about the nitty-gritty inside stuff here. And at heart, I am an introvert. A loner who happens to like people very much. I like to fly below the radar. To turn the question to someone else. I often made friends with people who enjoy being in the spotlight because it made it easier for me. Public speaking makes my heart beat like a deathmetal drum riff. Sometimes writing this blog terrifies me as I wrestle with how honest to be. I think that’s why writing is both salvation and so very hard–I cannot lie or hide or run when I write. I must be 100% honest. Honest beyond all comfort. Honest to the point of pain.

My first thought when Lauren issued her challenge was to take the easy way out. I could ride a roller coaster. Yes, that would scare me, but after five minutes, it would be over. I could handle a snake. That would give me chills. But again, I’d survive. (Unless it was a cobra I was handling…) Same with listening to Yoko Ono. Okay, that would be excruciating, but I’d pick the shortest song I could and live to tell the day. And afterward, I could listen to Green Day for an hour to recover. (For the record, I respect Yoko Ono; I just don’t like her music.)

But that other thing. Exposure. Yeah. That. I don’t know. What if I were to let you see inside me? Tell you truths you do not know? Reveal some part of my hidden heart–a wound, a wish, a desire? Would I survive it? Hard to say. When I start to speak up, a voice inside me sneers, “Who are you? Who are you to do this thing? To speak up? Speak out? To stand in the center under the light? Don’t. Move aside. Don’t let that truth crawl out of your mouth. It might frighten someone. Might hurt them. Truth hurts, don’t you know? Tell us a joke. Make us laugh. There. That’s better.”

And so. Here we are. Facing fears. Should I tell you something true?

Okay.

I have always loved to sing. I sing in the shower. I sing while I’m mopping the floors. I sing at karaoke night but only when everyone else has already gone and they are mostly drunk and not paying attention. I sang with Shannon Hale on tour, because it’s hard not to sing with Shannon Hale, because she makes you do it, but she also makes everything feel okay. Singing gives me great joy but it also makes me exceedingly shy and self-conscious. Why? Because singing is like writing. You cannot hide your soul in a song. Not really. It’s there for everyone to hear. Your wants. Your pain. Your insecurities. Also, your mangled notes.

To truly sing a song in public, by myself, not as a joke but for real, would make me want to wear a Depends.

There. There’s one. But there is also this: I could tell you one thing about me that you don’t know. I could write a Truth Blog and there it would be–something hidden brought into the light. I want to erase those words I just typed. To take them back. I don’t want to put it out there. But there. I’ve done it.

So. Before I chicken out, I leave it to you. You may decide which fear I will face. It’s in your hands. And frankly, that scares me to death.

HALLOWEEN SCARE-A-THON CHALLENGE:
I think Libba should:
1. Sing a song and post it on YouTube
2. Write a truth blog
3. Go to American Girl and film herself playing with creepy dolls that will probably eat her brain if she turns her back for too long
4. Ride a roller coaster and post that on YouTube, especially the part where she hurls
5. Listen to an entire Yoko Ono album
6. Stop talking about herself in the third person

Happy and safe Halloween to everyone. 🙂

DAYS EIGHT & NINE–VIENNA, NURNBERG

***I apologize for the length of these posts, but since I can only get spotty Internet connection, I take it where I can. Danke for your patience.***

DAY EIGHT–VIENNA
My suitcases are becoming the bane of my existence. They’re like a relative I can barely tolerate spending my holiday with anymore: “Ack! Do you HAVE to come along? Can’t I go anywhere alone?”

My suitcases are overweight by 14 kilos for the flight to Austria. That will equate to 140 euros. Holy and shit. So I start taking out books. Because you know with me it’s always the books. I take out 6 kilos worth, which I am now carrying around in a plastic hotel laundry bag. Classy. I pay the 80 euros because I am not a pack mule, but whow, those are some expensive books. I wave goodbye to my costly, nuisance luggage, and Maike and I buy chocolate and part ways. She goes to Munich; I wait for my plane to Vienna. So long, Maike! Tschuss!

I’ve had four hours of sleep. Just thought I’d mention that.

We take a bus from the gate to the plane. I’m waiting, looking out at the tarmac, and over the bus’s radio I hear, “If you see a painted sign on the side of the road that says fifteen miles to the
LOVE
.SHACK!” I can’t help but smile. Everybody’s groovin’, baby. The bus drives us through the lot and the plane comes into view. Yup, there it is, and my brain starts shouting: Prop plane. Prop plane. Propplanepropplanepropplane. PROP! PLANE! It’s like “redrum” only without Danny Torrance’s creepy finger.

It’s okay. Breathe deeply. I hear we fly over the Alps! Out of superstition, I decide to study the plane safety card. It never hurts to be too prepared. I mean, Cheese Whiz, isn’t that the Girl Scout motto? The safety card shows images of people running for their lives away from the planes. You know what? Let’s not read the safety card. “Love sha-a-ack, that’s where it’s at. Love Sha-a-ack
”

I take my seat. By the window. The window right next to the propeller. I can’t help but think about my travels with Shannon Hale and wish she were sitting next to me singing John Denver songs. We take off and the ride is as smooth as a hot air balloon ride (which I have taken), and soon, I look out the window down at the peaceful green fields and enjoy the flight. They feed you on Austrian Airlines—even for an hour-and-a-half flight. Go, Austrian Air! They bring you chocolate cake. Chocolate cake is the cure for everything. Not that I don’t have a chocolate bar stashed in my backpack. (Did I not learn that from the story about the Peruvian soccer team whose plane crashed in the Andes and they had to resort to cannibalism to survive?)

We land in Vienna and I take a taxi to the Hotel Kaiserin Elisabeth. Vienna. Oh, wow. So beautiful you need to wash your eyeballs. All of these elegant, Victorian buildings. It is quite stunning, as is the hotel. I am greeted by Herr Pohr, the concierge, and the Old World Charm begins. Herr Pohr is a gentleman of perhaps fifty. He is courtly and gracious and, well, a big flirt. This is all fine, as I’m a big flirt myself and so we are speaking the same language. He tells me there is no room ready yet, but if I would be kind enough to wait, he’ll have a special room prepared just for me.

How could I not be so kind as to wait? 😉

“Ah, but I see you are only with us for one night. Tomorrow, we can talk about making it two.” He’s good. Yeah, Herr Pohr and I will get along just fine. If I’m not careful, we’ll end up playing poker all night in the kitchen and I’ll lose all my euros. I go next door to the cafĂ©.

I’m sitting in an actual Viennese cafĂ©, the kind I’ve only heard tell of in legend. The floor is laid out in a brown-and-black diamond pattern. The white-clothed table has a vase with a sprig of edelweiss. It’s plastic edelweiss, but edelweiss, nonetheless. I can look out the cafĂ© windows to see people passing by. It makes me feel very glamorous and international, connected to another part of the world that only used to exist for me in books. In a moment, I am joined by my publisher, Anne Schieckel, and by my translator, Ingrid Weixelbaumer. Ingrid is woman of many talents. She was also an editor, and she is quite cultured. A most elegant woman. She takes us on a walking tour of Vienna.

You cannot imagine the beauty of Vienna. I really love the look of the city. Plenty of late 19th century buildings, as well as churches dating to the medieval age. We step into the gothic wonderland that is St. Stefan’s Church. Ornate doesn’t really begin to cover it. The pulpit (chancel?) alone is a work of art. We stroll, and just doing that feels as if we are part of the Viennese Victorian bourgeoisie. I like watching the cable cars drive past the horse-and-carriages. Such an interesting mix of old and new.

There’s a big military holiday coming up on Sunday, and so the plaza is filled with tanks and helicopters; tents have been erected. It’s all guarded by soldiers carrying honest-to-God AK-47s that make me jumpy. It’s like an occupation and creates a really surreal scene against the backdrop of the elegant Viennese town hall in the distance, the colorful flowers and restful fountains in the park. The soldiers are baby-faced. I can’t stop staring at one who looks no older than sixteen, though I’m sure he is, but probably not by much. Another solider shwooshes by high over our heads on a zip wire like something out of a James Bond film. Surreal is the word.

Ingrid indulges me and guides us to the Sigmund Freud museum, which is a bit of a hike, but the walk feels good in the brisk air. I don’t have time to tour the museum, sadly, but I do take photos and grab some souvenirs. My favorite is a sponge with the word “Neurosis” on top. We take a taxi back to the hotel and from there, we move on to the Literaturhaus, which is a library where the Jury fur de Jungen Lesser meets. This is a group of teens who discuss and evaluate books for the Jury Prize much like the ALA Top Ten. They discuss my books—what they thought, what they liked or didn’t—and it’s fascinating to listen to them. Their analysis of the work is incredibly deep and insightful, plus it has the added bonus of helping me remember what happens in my own books, which, I have been discovering during my reading tour, I have forgotten most of. I’m really having a good time and wish that I could stay much longer but after two hours, I must head to the reading.

The reading takes place in a cozy bookshop called, “Lhotzky’s Literaturbuffet.” (www.literaturbuffet.com) I love the image of this—“I’ll have the George Saunders with a side of Emily Bronte and how is the Neil Gaiman today? It looks delicious. Yes, I’ll save room for the Pynchon—but just a slice of The Crying of Lot 49. I don’t think I can eat the Gravity’s Rainbow today.” Herr und Frau Lhotzky greet me warmly. They’ve been reading my blog and promise that there is no kartenschulter for the bathroom lights and they present me with a fabulous box of Viennese chocolates, which I offer to share with everyone while gripping it tightly and shaking my head. This is how I work: “I am being polite, but you don’t want these chocolates. No, you really don’t, but please remember that I have offered as my mother taught me.” The chocolates are all mine and I rip open the box and eat one right there. Heaven. They also present me with a hilarious Franz Kafka chocolate bar, which is wrapped in foil with Kafka’s face and a cockroach body for his “Metamorphosis” story. Literary humor. You gotta love it.

I meet the Lhotzkys’ daughter, the lovely Sabina, along with her friends Isabella, Julia, Christine, and Sabine’s brother, David. David brings me some water (Danke!) and the girls show me where we are on a map of Austria, since I asked. I goad Julia into showing me her Irish dancing, and the girl can throw down with some fancy footwork. It’s like Celtic DDR time. Very cool. We stand around chatting and getting to know one another, and I really appreciate that they’re taking the edge off my nerves. The reading begins, and I suddenly feel like I’m going to die. Heart racing. Mouth dry. Sheen of perspiration on my upper lip. It’s an intimate group, and everyone’s smiling, but I can barely talk about my own books. I read and babble some (Is it hot in here or is it just me?) and eventually we get to the Q&A part, thankfully, where kind people come up with intelligent questions for me and Ingrid, and I am awash in relief. Ingrid tells an interesting story about how she actually translated the anagrams by doing them the same way the girls did, with letter tiles. She had to change the name of Miss McCleethy because her name wouldn’t translate to the anagram properly in German. See, it’s things like this that are so cool to find out. Earlier, with the Jungen Lesser Jury, one of the teens, Margaret, whose mother is American, asked if the jokes translated and how hard that was. And Ingrid said that sometimes the humor was difficult. It took Ingrid six solid months to translate TSFT into German. She deserves a medal.

There is a young woman named Shrulti there. She is American of Indian descent and moved to Vienna for her dad’s job two years ago. She asks me some great questions about Kartik and afterward, we talk for a bit. She’s in college now, and I’m trying to imagine what it must have been like to transfer in junior year to a high school in another country where you don’t know the language. Wow.

Herr und Frau Lhotzky take us to dine at a traditional Austrian restaurant. We’re all so tired and giddy that translating the menu into English becomes a bit of a game, and a giggly one at that. There is a bit of discussion about what a particular word means in English—deer, venison—but first Anne puts her fingers to her head like antlers, and that is actually the way I always want to remember her. My “Deer” Anne. I settle on some sort of meat that is the size of a football field and potatoes. When I get back to New York, I will be eating lots of broccoli. I can’t manage the meat. It’s GINORMOUS.

Ingrid gives me a serious look. “You are weak.”
“I admit defeat.”
“I am disappointed. You are from Texas.”
And we laugh.

I AM weak, but the potatoes are outstanding and the dessert—potato noodles rolled in buttered poppy seeds and served with plum compote and fresh cream—is amazing. Herr Lhotzky tells me they are so easy to make and then gives me a description that is several steps beyond, “Open box, pour pasta in, toss with butter,” which, I am sad to say, is my preferred cooking style. But it sounds yummy and I’m sure I would impress my guests with it. (Note to future guests: Don’t get your hopes up. We will probably still be ordering Chinese.) It’s close to midnight when we get back to the hotel. I call the boys and hit the hay. The pillow is so soft it’s like I’m falling into a cloud of feathers. You can’t beat that with a stick.

I have put in for a wake-up call at 7:00 that comes at 7:45, but it’s no matter as I have been up since 6:40. Anne and I have a little breakfast and then we meet Ingrid at the Albertina Museum for the Van Gogh exhibit. It’s already crowded at 9:00 a.m.—lots of school visits. The exhibit is astonishing. It starts with Van Gogh’s early drawings, which are dark and somber and quite bleak. The trees seem particularly anguished. Then, Van Gogh moves to Paris and his paintings explode with color. But the most interesting and intense paintings to me are the ones he paints in the asylum after he mutilates his ear. The landscapes are downright threatening, the brush strokes furious. It’s like what he sees outside wants to eat him and the world around him is unraveling like his mind. It’s very powerful as are the paintings from the last 70 days of his life, before he shot himself, and I find I need to just sit quietly for a while after viewing them.

It also makes me think about the Hansel and Gretel book that won the Jury Prize for picture book at the Frankfurt Book Fair. I’ve always loved fairy tales even though they are dark and gruesome and frightening or perhaps because of all those things. I was a macabre child. Cheerful, but odd: “Hello! So nice to meet you. Would you like to come to my room to play? (whisper) I will show you my collection of fingers. And then we can play Barbies.” I would argue that this version of H&G was not so much a children’s book as it was an art book, but the art was spectacular and very disturbing.

After the exhibit, Ingrid and Anne take me to the famous Sacher Hotel to their coffee house where I am to have the famous Sacher Torte. It has the feel of old Vienna, with red-flocked paper on the walls, gilt and mirrors, and cozy booths to tuck into behind a little marble table. The cake is
how shall I put this? It is the absinthe of cakes. Sinful beyond belief. Chocolate on top of more rich chocolate. Add the coffee, and I will be buzzing for a week. Ingrid presents me with a book of old Viennese postcards of the city, and I am so very touched by her kindness. She is a class act.

While we wait for the taxi, Anne tries to help me shove more stuff into my suitcase, which resembles a portly man in need of an exercise regimen. We can’t stop laughing about these cases. Even the nice man who takes them to the taxi and the driver make comments. My suitcases have become quasi-celebrities. I have the slowest taxi driver in all of Vienna, and I’m starting to panic a bit. There are only ten minutes left to catch my train in a station I’ve never been to in a language I don’t know hauling all of Europe in my overstuffed luggage. I think I’ve found my train, but I want to be sure (Can you imagine if I ended up in Salzburg instead of Nurnburg?), so I find the youngest person on the platform and ask politely if he speaks English. His English is crazy good and once again I am shamed. But yes, I am in the right place and even one away from the right wagen (car). I find my seat
and there’s a woman sitting in it. I can see the electronic readout of my reservation above my seat, so I just take the seat next to her, and in a few minutes, a young guy comes along and lets her know that seat is taken and all is well.

Now, I am traveling back to Germany for five hours, which should be heaven. I love riding the train, and the scenery is still captivating to me. There is a dusting of fog on the countryside—perfect for spooky October just outside of Vienna. It puts me in the mood to write, and since I have a spooky short story due, I’m in luck. I shall get to it.

(INTERMISSION.)
(INTERMISSION OVER.)

The train ride is the most beautiful one yet. Lots of trees and hills and adorable hamlets tucked away. I manage to eat in the cafĂ© car and order only using my new German. The waitress is sweet and patient and when I get stuck finding the proper word for something I say it in English and she translates to German for me so that I know how to say it properly afterward. When I leave, she thanks me for using German, and I feel good. That is one of my goals when I return to NYC—to learn a language, probably German as it feels good in my mouth and Anne says I seem to have the knack, despite my protestations to the contrary.

When I disembark in Nurnberg, I am to meet Thomas, but apparently, I’m so fast off the train—even with my enormous suitcases, which I consider using like a toboggan in order to get down the stairs—that we miss each other. What follows is a hilarious twenty minutes of cell phone conversation and a game of hide-and-seek:
Thomas: What are you near?
Me: A store called Ditsch. And a McDonald’s.
Thomas: Did you go down one flight or two?
Me: One. I think. I’m pretty sure.
Thomas: I am standing in the middle of the hall. Can you see me?
Me: No
do you have your cloaking device on? Are you in Thomas stealth mode?
Thomas: Not today. (polite pause) Can you see an exit?
Me: Yes! I do. I see Burger King.
Thomas: Ah! Burger King. I can see it. (pause) But I don’t see you.
Me: Well, Burger King is reflected in the window because it’s backward.
(This goes on for several more minutes. There are two police officers standing nearby, watching. They think it is hilarious. In another few minutes, a few more officers come, and I wonder if they think it’s funny enough to share the joke with their pals or if they are assessing me as a dangerous character.)
Thomas: Can you see a track number anywhere?
Me: Track 1.
Thomas. Ah. Super. If you would please go to track one, I shall meet you there.
(I haul the suitcases to track one.)
Thomas: You are at track one?
Me: Yup. It says one. The numbers are the same in English and German, at least, right?
Thomas: Hmmm. I don’t see you.
Me: That’s because I have MY cloaking device on.
(This goes on for several more minutes. I stop a passerby and ask if she could please speak to my friend on the phone. She does, and then she leads me, like a little lost lamb, to a different part of the train station where I am reunited with Thomas.)

It’s great to see Thomas, and we walk to the hotel and then head to the Deutsch-Amerikanisches Institut for the evening’s program. A journalist, Wolfgang (!), has come to interview three American students about the elections and I am added to the mix. I mostly talk about what I have heard from teens while traveling around Germany, about their interest in our elections. I say goodbye and go to meet the teens in the other room. Kathleen Rober, the director, says she’s heard I like a microphone, so she gives me one, and I have a little fun then give it back. The room is small and I don’t want to blow everybody out, like a stack of amps at CBGB’s. The students are quite shy about talking, so I babble on for a bit about the books and writing and then I read from all three books, which makes me tremble, but I do it.

But the cool part comes afterward. The students’ English teacher, Stephanie, has given them a creative writing exercise. They were given a small passage from AGATB and then asked to write their own stories from that jumping off point, and three winners have been selected. The stories are WRITTEN IN ENGLISH. OMG. And they are so good. I mean, creepy, creepy good. The first, from Florian, is about Count Dracula raising an army of murderous creatures, and the last line is a killer: “Go, and show them the true meaning of fear!” (I may be paraphrasing.) The second, from Nicole, is a dream within a dream, or I should say, a nightmare within a nightmare. It is a series of nightmares that happen to a man on a bus ride. It’s delightfully disorienting. The last is from Hannah, and is uber-creepy. It involves a boy who is sent away to a boarding school where “disobedient” children are sent, and they become marionettes. It was called “The Dollhouse.” I find dolls exceedingly scary, so this did a number on me. I should have a link to all the stories soon so that you can read them. They were really great.

I meet one of my LJ-ers, Mona, who gives me a CD that she and her Canadian friend, Renate, made for me. It is filled with songs that they listened to while reading my books, and there is a wonderful note with a list of the songs and which characters they correspond to. Again, I am quite touched. Thanks, ladies.

Thomas, Kathleen, and I go out for dinner. I find out that Kathleen grew up in the former GDR. She says it was a happy childhood, but that it has been interesting to find out the history of Germany that is not the Russian side of things. Thomas gives me an account of going into the Czech Republic with his parents as a boy and being warned to be careful and not wander into the woods as there were mines.

By the end of the evening, we’re all falling asleep in our food and so it’s time to say guten nacht.

DAY NINE—NÜRNBERG

I get up early and join Thomas for breakfast and then he acts as my tour guide for Nurnberg, a very picturesque city, indeed. If you’re ever going to tour a city, it helps to have a historian as your guide. Thomas is a historian, and he tells me about the old medieval walls that once guarded the city and shows me that the street is much higher than it was back in the day when the walls looked quite intimidating, I’m sure. We take a peek inside St. Lawrence (I’m using the English spelling, sorry.) And then we walk through the absolutely charming center of town so that I can see the tower of the castle in the distance. We make one last stop at the river and the statue of Albrecht Duhrer, and then I have to grab a taxi to the airport. Thomas and I say “Tschuss!” I get to the airport and take flight #1 to Frankfurt. On the plane, I’m seated next to another American, Brad, who has been in Germany for a conference on bio-toxins and vaccines. He’s a scientist and he deals with serious CDC kind of stuff, real “Andromeda Strain,” and even though I am super, super, duper curious, I am not about to get into it. I’m not going to start peppering him with questions about MRSA and Hanta Virus and Ebola and all those gruesome things that will scare the crap out of me for the next week.

I wave goodbye to Brad and wait for my flight to Rome. That’s where I am now, using an hour’s worth of purchased T-Mobile Internet connection to post this.

So Tschuss and Ciao for now. Goodbye Germany. Time to start memorizing things from my Italian phrasebook. â˜ș

Days Five, Six, and Seven–Munich, Tubingen, Speyer, Leipzig

Okay. So I finally got an Internet connection. Here are the last two days of travel bloggage. Sorry–I hear my website is down. I think Theo is on it right now. Also sorry this is long but what can you do?

DAY FIVE

I am having major Internet difficulties, which I think could be related to my Mac. Argh. It’s so frustrating. I just spent thirty minutes chasing after the hotel’s network to no avail and even went through network diagnostics, which is sort of like asking me to operate on a patient: “Hmmm, well, I think this thing over here is the pancreas
”

I’m having an “I Hate Steve Jobs” moment. Anyhoo


Remember in my last post how I said I needed to get to bed at a decent hour in order to get up at 6:00 a.m. to get ready for my school visits? I did that. And then, at 1:35 in the morning, my cell phone went off. Now, it hadn’t rung in the four days I’d been in Germany because all my pals knew I couldn’t be reached—at least, not for $1.00 a minute. So the phone rings, waking me from a very, very deep sleep. I stumble around in the dark without my glasses trying to find the source of the hideous ringing. I reach the phone just as the ringing stops. I don’t recognize the number so I go back to bed. And then, twenty minutes later as I’m falling asleep, it rings again. It’s the cat lady calling about spaying Cocoa. I direct her to Barry in NYC, and, wide awake, try to will myself back to sleep, which doesn’t happen for another two hours.

I’m comatose when the wake-up call comes.

In a fugue state, I shower, dress, eat breakfast, and wait for Anna F. in the lobby. Hotel lobbies exist in some strange time zone all their own. Limbo would be a hotel lobby. People come and go and there’s always one person behind the desk listening to a small radio that plays a mix of really bad 1980’s American rock songs, some French chanteuse you’ve never heard of but find kind of catchy, and some knock-off of a knock-off of every pop-punk band you’ve ever heard. But sometimes you get a Duffy song and you’re happy.

Anna F. comes to pick me up at 7:50, as is clearly stated on my schedule, and not 7:15, as I had it in my head and we take a taxi through Munich to the first school. Anna tells me a bit about Munich, about what was bombed and not, about the quarter where the bohemians once lived before the war and how now it is very expensive to live there. It is very interesting to ride through a city where people live and work every day and think about the scars and wounds of its history. Would it be like living in some Thornton Wilder-esque “Our Town,” where the detached ghosts of the dead sit on the hill watching always? America is so new, with our gleaming shopping malls and bowling alleys, supermarkets and Wal-Marts, that the only history, I suppose, is what we supply, the personal: “Here is where I had my first kiss.” “This is the house where my grandmother lived.” “There is my old grammar school.”

I don’t know. I’m not able to fully articulate what I’m feeling at the moment.

The taxi drops us at the school, Karlsgymnasium Pasing, and we meet the teacher, Gaby, who is waiting for us with a big smile, putting me at ease. This will be my first school visit in another country, and I’m nervous. Mostly, I’m worried that my sense of humor, which can border on the bizarre, and my rapid-fire speech, which can also border on the bizarre and impossible to follow, will not translate. That I will terrify these poor teens. I’m actually sweating. (Maybe because it’s around 70 degrees and sunny?)

Gaby ushers me into the gorgeous meeting room. It’s pretty new and there are glass walls on both sides so that you can look out at the colorful fall foliage. There’s a grand piano, which is so tempting—“Who wants to have a Chopsticks marathon?”—but it is under its protective fabric shell and somehow I don’t think I should. The students are game for my harassment. They take my particular brand of caffeinated idiocy in stride. And, as usual, they rock at the writing exercise. Now, when I say they rock at it, bear in mind that they are not only thinking on their feet (it’s an improv storytelling exercise) but they are doing it in English. I’m astonished. Hell, I can’t even think in English most days, and it’s my mother tongue. One girl, Stephanie, says her character’s secret desire is to marry a millionaire, and in response, one of the boys, Chris, says his character’s desire is to become a millionaire and marry her character. We all have a nice laugh at this. I’m with them for nearly two hours, and at the end, they present me with a bottle of wine, and a darling painted cup filled with special Christmas chocolates that have gingerbread inside. I would offer you one but honestly, those didn’t last the day. Yum!

Anna helps me drag my suitcases through the fall leaves, and we manage to accidentally rake them with the wheels. Performing my civic duty simply by overpacking. A local bookseller whose name just flew out of my addled brain (argh!) meets us with her car, and we make the drive to the next school, Feodor Lynen-Gymnasium Planegg.

In appearance, the school reminds me of a very large Swiss chalet. The doors are automatic, which momentarily stuns me, because at heart, I am only four, and I just want to play with the doors—“I’m coming in; no, I’m not! Ha! Fooled you, automatic door! Okay. Now I’m coming in—oh, psych! You fell for it AGAIN! Silly automatic door.” I resist the urge. Sort of.

The kind teachers at FLG bring me into a HUGE auditorium that is truly stunning, like some modern church, and they give me a microphone. And I think you know the minute there’s a microphone in my hand, a twinkle comes into my eye. So tempting to stage a karaoke reading, but really, how much ABBA can you take for an hour-and-a-half? “If you’re near me darling can you hear me
S.O.S
.”

The students are warm and friendly and they are also willing to put up with my ridiculousness. A student named “Hot” (I’m not making this up. That was his nickname, for a basketball player named Hot Sauce.) who has read my website asks me about the influence of punk on me as a person and on my writing—does punk somehow speak to my soul. Wow. Great, great question. (The answer is yes, btw.) There are more questions like that. I am asked about the elections again, as I am everywhere. They want Obama. Everywhere: Obama. As someone says, “It affects us, too. I think we should get a vote.”

Word.

During the exercise, one of the students, Martin, says his character’s name is “Gaby.” Only he says it with a certain suggestive breathlessness that I cannot help but imitate. This becomes our running joke, that I always say “Gaby” with a sexy voice. (Gaby, it turns out, is the name of his English teacher, the one sitting to my right. Good to know. And are all English teachers in Munich named Gaby? Is it a rule?) Anyway, Martin wants his story to be political, and so there is a moment in the story where naughty Capitalist Japan is flying over the ocean, going after the fighting Communist Sharks. No. It doesn’t translate. You had to be there. But it was funny. I also meet a student whose real name, I believe, was Anne, but she will always be Reba in my head because she chose that as her character name. (She loves country music.) And she hopes to go to U.T., my alma mater, next year, and I hope she does. Gaby the Teacher who has endured our teasing presents me with this absolutely beautiful floral arrangement, and I am sad that I can’t take it with me, but there is, sadly, just no way to travel with the flowers and the suitcases. I thank her for her thoughtfulness and then I’m off to have lunch with the fine folks of dtv, my publisher.

Do you know what’s hard to say? Sweinsbrauten. Doesn’t seem hard to say, and yet, I butcher it every time. Anyway, it’s delicious and it involves potatoes on the side, so what’s not to love? I have the pleasure of dining with Anne, my publisher; Marion, who designs my beautiful covers; Anke, my editor; Stephanie, who does the Internet hoodoo; Beate, another editor; and Thomas, publicity god. We also have with us two journalists: Hilde-Elisabeth Menzel, Sylvia Mucke and Christine Paxmann. We talk books and politics and laugh a lot—and not just at my bad German. Sylvia tells a funny story about her favorite book when she was a child, which was called THE LITTLE ONION. She said her parents were communists and this was really a fable about communism, all the vegetables working together. And the tomato was sort of KGB and was depicted as being a big, fat, red-faced veggie. But, she said, it was the only storybook her father would sit and read to her, and so it became her favorite. And there you are. I remember my mother reading BREAD AND JAM FOR FRANCES to me at a young age, and the Frances books still have a special place in my heart because of it.

After lunch, I tour the dtv offices, which are housed in a stunning old apartment building with beautiful arched windows that look out onto gardens on one side and the street on the other. It has the feel of being up in a treehouse, tucked away. Wouldn’t that be great? To have a treehouse of an office where you read books? Obviously, they do a lot more than that, but the offices are charming and they are located in that former bohemian quarter that Anna told me about during our morning drive.

I have to say goodbye to everyone, including the lovely Anna who has been such a good companion. I’m sure she was looking forward to sitting at home and watching TV. Maike comes to collect me, and we dash off to catch our train to Tubingen.

Maike cracks me up. The first morning we had breakfast together, I asked her what she did when she wasn’t at work. She pursed her lips like she was thinking and shook her head. “Nothing much.” A minute later. “I keep a horse because I grew up in the country and I like to ride. I play violin—sometimes I play with an orchestra when I have the time.” Right. You do nothing, Maike. You’re just a lazy lay-around. I get it. So yesterday, as Maike and I make the four-hour train journey to Tubingen, I get more info: “I lived with a host family in Boulder, CO, when I was in high school.” “I got my Ph.D. at Washington University. It was on American travel narratives from 1573 to the 1700’s
” Her thesis, which she tells me about, is fascinating and, naturally, uber-smart. She draws me a map of Germany and gives me the history of the Federal states. Today, I am waiting for Maike to say, “Oh, and I used to be a Navy SEAL but the training got in the way of my studies in particle physics and I was needed at CERN.” Maike is great company, and I feel as if I’ve known her much longer than I have.

On the train, we pass the town of Kissing. Yes, Kissing! I wished I could have gotten out and taken a picture. I’m sure people must stop there just to snog. Maike tells me there is also a town called Petting. No joke. I like these Germans and their towns. â˜ș

The train station in Tubingen has lots and lots of stairs. Did I mention that I am hauling two enormous suitcases? Yeah. Okay. This very nice man named Hennoch takes pity on us and insists on helping us carry the suitcases. In fact, he insists on pulling the most cumbersome case all the way to our hotel. His name is Hennoch and he is from Togo. He is a translator and speaks six different languages. Six! Holy. Cow. His son is studying at UNC at Chapel Hill. Hennoch has the most marvelous laugh. It is very, very close to Geoffrey Holder’s laugh. (I would provide a link if I could get on the Internet. Sigh. Geoffrey Holder was a dancer and actor who had this deep, musical laugh he was famous for. He was also in a James Bond movie—“Live and Let Die”—and as I have seen every single James Bond movie at least eleventy-two-billion times, I know that laugh well, Mr. Bond.) We exchange cards and Maike and I have a very late dinner in the hotel’s restaurant where a jazz band is playing. It is all I can do not to fall asleep in my soup. As dinner progresses, I sink lower in my seat, my chin propped up by my hand.
“You look tired,” Maike says.
“Mmmm? Flsighjgishrrre,” I answer.

She pays the tab and I say good night and go directly to my room. I fall right into bed and I don’t even bother to take wash my face or take off my socks.

DAY SIX
I wish you could see the view from my hotel room in TĂŒbingen. The sky is overcast, but there is a rip in the clouds—one long scar—and light is pushing through. There are actual shafts of light coming down like you only see in paintings. Across the way is a large, clay-colored house with a pitched roof. Its evenly spaced windows have white shutters and window boxes filled with bright red-pink flowers. The street is littered with fallen leaves. And the black birds that had been perched near the flowers have just taken off, beating their wings against that bright rip in the sky. It is beautiful.

Also, I have a pink bathroom. Pink tile. Fluffy pink towels. Everything is pink. The bathtub is the size of my first NYC apartment. Yes, I soaked in it. And as I did, I sang a little song, “Who’s the girl
the girl in the pink bathroom
in Germany
Oh, it’s me!”

After I am thoroughly prune-ish, I go downstairs to have breakfast with Maike and Christiane Pyka from the Deutsch-Amerikanisches Institut TĂŒbingen. Christiane is a very small woman with a very big amount of warmth and energy. She immediately takes my hand and smiles and makes me feel right at home. And as is the case with many people here, I am sorry that there will soon be an ocean separating us, because I know they would be fun to know on a regular basis.

Christiane takes us for a lovely walk through the center of Tubingen. We cross the Necktar River (I hope I’m spelling it correctly) and see the house where Holderlin http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Hölderlin supposedly went mad and lived out the remainder of his years. The story is a tragically romantic one: Supposedly, he fell in love with a French woman who was already married. He was so poor that he walked all the way to France just to see her, and then he came back, brokenhearted, went mad, and lived like a hermit in a yellow house with a tower overlooking the river. Someone had scrawled in graffiti on the side of the house: Holderlin wasn’t mad. We walked past the punting boat and up leaf-strewn cobblestone streets that were quite steep and slick. We walked past the beautiful church and through the marketplace. Tubingen is a university town and there are many fraternities set up in the beautiful houses along the river. I hope they don’t pull an “Animal House” on any of those fabulous places. I find Tubingen to be quite charming.

I buy a few souvenirs, and then Maike, Christiane, and I haul my ridiculous suitcases, which are now impossibly heavy (though I swear I haven’t packed livestock or a dead body in either of them) to the train station and up all the stairs to the tracks and catch our train to Speyer. We have to change trains twice which is big fun with the aforementioned suitcases and wins me all sorts of friends every time I block the door trying to yank them out. Also, I am going to need to pay for Maike’s chiropractic bills for many months to come.

Our train is delayed, and so we get to Speyer just in time for the evening’s program at the library—Stadtbibliothek Speyer. The room is filled with about fifty or so high school girls who have been studying English. We have a few laughs over my mispronunciation of their names and other common German words. I let some of them take a turn at the mic to do their best rock star impersonations, and one girl named Julianne is a really good sport because she lets me tease her throughout the program. (I do my impression of Julianne as an emo singer.) Why do these nice people keep making the mistake of giving me a microphone?

The girls are reluctant to ask questions even when I threaten to fill the silence with my singing. But it’s very hard to speak in a public forum, much less to do it in a language not your own. I know I almost never speak up in such forums unless I’m forced to, so I can just imagine how difficult it is. But they do ask me questions. The teens ask me about Germany, if I like it, and I say, truthfully, that when I was a little girl and reading about Germany in Grimm’s Fairy Tales and the like, Germany always seemed unreal to me, like Fairyland. It was like it couldn’t possibly exist. Even when I was standing in the airport in NYC with my ticket, there was a part of me that thought, “Hey, I’m going to Fairyland!” So it has been wonderful to see a country that I had my first connection with through books, really.

We have dinner with Birgit Hock, a journalist, her daughter, Annika, and Annika’s friend, Klara. Klara was one of my victims for the writing exercise, so I’m amazed that she will sit at the same table with me. Birgit leads me through the menu and explains the various items that are particular to the region. She’s having pig’s stomach with sauerkraut, and when she first offers me some, I’m a little leery, but it’s good, and so is my dish, which involves spatzle, which is a hearty noodle. Mmmmm. You can’t go wrong with that. By the time the check arrives, I feel like I might need toothpicks to prop my eyelids open. It’s been a whirlwind of a day—the kind you expect to get when you start off with a bath in a pink bathroom—and much fun.

Tomorrow, I’m off to Leipzig. Auf W!

DAY SEVEN

Right now, I am on a train from Speyer to Leipzig with two stops (changes) along the way. I’ve just had a very interesting visit to the WC. Finding your way in a foreign bathroom is always a comedy. If there had been a short film, it would have gone something like this:

Woman tries door handle twice but door does not open, so she stands staring at it politely as if it will take notice of how politely she is waiting and say, “Oh, I’m sorry. I didn’t see you standing there. Would you like to come in?” Eventually, woman tries again and discovers that door is not so hostile, it simply requires pushing. Once inside, woman is baffled by the lack of the familiar—handles, in this case. There is not one for flushing or for turning on the water that she can see. Woman stares at wall, perplexed. To her left is a small button that reads, WC. The button is red. To her, red is the color of danger, of “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up.” If she presses that button, will a poor employee of the Deutschebahn come running with the jaws of life and a medical team ready to extract her from the cabinet? Will she launch nuclear missiles? Will an alarm sound and protective metal doors descend? Woman remains perplexed. Woman is also perplexed by water faucet. She peers under it. Moves her hands quickly back and forth to activate a sensor that does not exist. She looks for something to twist, manipulate, turn. The faucet is a model of sleekness with no extraneous parts. There is another red button behind the faucet, but it is underneath a drawing of water drops coming from what looks suspiciously like the faucet in front of her. Risking death, she pushes the button. Water flows over her hands. Ah! This is like discovering a new world! I bring fire back from the mountain! Feeling brave and with newly clean hands, woman dares to push the red button marked WC. Toilet flushes. She emerges victorious and promptly walks past her seat and nearly into the next car, tripping up the man trying to push the coffee trolley down the narrow alley.

This morning, Maike and I took a little walk in the rain through the old medieval gate that used to guard the center of town and now mostly keeps watch over several coffee houses and shoe stores and make our way to the Speyer Cathedral. The Cathedral is quite famous and is 1,000 years old. Its architecture is Roman—very plain. Inside it is enormous with huge arches. It is surprisingly warm, which feels pretty good after our walk in the chilly rain. We also step into a camera store and Maike helps me buy an additional battery for my camera. This one is fully charged and so I am once again able to play tourist and take photos. Huzzah!

(Note: We just passed a Volkswagen dealership. I don’t know why I find this amusing, I just do. Maybe it’s because my best friend used to drive an old VW when we were in high school. There was a hole in the floor of the car in the back, which we covered with a mat, and when people would accidentally step through the hole, we’d gasp and say, “OMG, look what you did to the car!”)

The sky is overcast so that when the sun tries to break through, it looks like the moon is out too early. In the distance, beyond the green fields dotted with barrel-like hay bales, a chemical factory belches two enormous plumes of white smoke, which I mistook for clouds at first. There seems to be a little more industry in this region, and it reminds me a bit of driving from the DFW airport to my hometown in Texas, those long stretches of no-man’s land occupied only by the things that always live on the outskirts of towns. It lends a certain loneliness to the landscape.

Maike and I have lunch in the cafĂ© car. It’s incredibly civilized. I feel as if it is the 1930’s, and we are spies traveling into the shadowy heart of some secret intelligence mission, which will require us to wear fedoras. But first, we must eat. The cafĂ© car actually has a waitress, and we order a hearty lunch and share a piece of chocolate cake. As we are traveling east into the former GDR, I ask Maike about what it used to be like. She tells me about going to visit relatives there when she was a child. The border patrols would force them to unpack everything in the car, everything in the suitcases, to make sure they weren’t smuggling anything in. It would take hours. She tells me that one way the government used to silence critics was to take their children away from them and give them to regime-friendly families to raise them. I, of course, think of my own child and want to cry. She says they used to smuggle blood pressure medication and the like to their relatives by putting the pills inside Smarties candies. Wow. She recommends “The Secret Lives of Others,” a German movie I had wanted to see when it came out. I will bump it up in my Netflix queue.

We’re now in the former GDR. It seems quite rural. Quaint houses. Fields. Abandoned buildings, the shattered glass in the windowpanes like broken teeth in a guarded smile. A man walks alone down a tree-lined lane near a small house. Graffiti tags pop from the low walls that border the tracks. This makes me smile: Taggers are universal. A fleet of trucks sit in a lot with their back doors open, exposing their empty bellies. An old stone wall is built so into the side of a hill that it has been reclaimed by the land; the vines wrap their spindly arms around it, pulling it in. Great wind turbines turn lazily in the distance in a modern Busby Berkley contagion.
And the trains pass by.
And the trains pass by.
And the trains pass by.
Everyone of us trying to get somewhere.

A Jacob’s ladder of electrical wires overhead announces our arrival at another station. Two big power plant silos mark the distance. They turn the horizon foggy with their smoke. It reminds me of the oil refineries in Corpus Christi when I was a child except that I can’t smell this.

I’m watching all of this while liistening to Bob Dylan on my iPod. It seems strange seeing these very old German houses in the countryside and communist bloc colorless apartment complexes fly past the window while listening to the musical poet laureate of America in my headphones singing about being tangled up in blues. The stories should be incongruent, and yet, they feel joined.

For a moment, I catch my ghostly reflection in the train window. It is as insubstantial as I feel, just a traveler passing through. And this is also a valuable part of journeying. Being the foreigner. The observer. Taking everything in. Having a chance to stand so far outside of ourselves that what we see staring back at us is startling and new. It’s a reminder that we take with us some sort of existential loneliness that crawls into every suitcase we ever carry. I look out at these hilly green expanses and I may as well be looking through to the flatlands of north Texas where the sky is so wide it is like an impenetrable border crossing of its own. When I was a little girl—four, five—I used to climb up on top of the toilet each night while my mother ran my bath, and I would stare out the bathroom window in the direction of the sea. I don’t know what I was looking for. Something. Something to carry me away. Something to bring me home again. Can’t say, really.

Right now, I am the writer traveling through the German countryside on my way to Leipzig. I am the American who does not know the language. I am the little girl gazing out the bathroom window. And I am the teenager heading her car for the edge of the blue horizon in a game of chicken. I am a constant traveler, searching for what, I’m not certain. Maike and I exit the train at Leipzig and go to our hotel.

Okay. Funny story. I can’t figure out how to turn the lights on in my room. I push everything four or five times. There is something on the wall which says, “kartenschalter.” I don’t know what it means, so I push it, too, fearing that I’m about to be electrocuted at any moment. Finally, I knock on Maike’s door. She opens it to reveal she has lights.
“How do you DO that?” I ask in awe.
“Oh,” she says, spitting out her toothpaste. “You put your card in the slot that says ‘Kartenschalter.’” Oh. Sure. I knew that. You’ll be pleased to know that now I have lights.

We head to the cafĂ© for an interview with the lovely Roland Kruger from Deutschlandradio and his wife, whose name is something like Annegoethe (Argh—the spelling is killing me) and their daughter, Paula. (that one I know.) We sit in the cafĂ© and have a few laughs. Roland asks me some questions about myself, about how my car accident at 18 shaped me as a person and as a writer, about Germany. His wife and I share our love of David Bowie. I find out that Paula is an accomplished gymnast. It’s a good time, and then we are all off to the bookstore for the night’s event.

Maike and I meet up with an actress named Karine who will do the German translation. So I read in English and she reads in German, and when she finishes one passage, there is a gasp from the audience, and I think, “Cool!” (It’s the Poppy Warriors scene from REBEL ANGELS.) We read from all three books, which takes the hour. The reading is filmed for the Internet, and I should be able to give you the site: http://www.leipzig-fernschen.de (it is also possible that that “c” is an “e” in “fernschen.” So if it doesn’t work one way, try the other.) There is a girl named Nina who gets stuck in the women’s bathroom at the beginning of the reading and is stuck for an hour-and-a-half. She misses the whole reading but makes it out in time to get her book signed. I think about making up some FREE NINA! T-shirts. Poor girl. Can you imagine? At least she had plenty of soap and paper towels to make some weird art collage.

After the reading, Maike, Karine, and I have dinner and head back to the hotel. Maike heads to the sauna. I hate to sweat so I head to my room to call home on Skype and see the boys, which makes my heart happy.

Good night from Leipzig. Tomorrow, I fly to Vienna. I intend to eat my weight in chocolate and drink lots of coffee. I’ll need it.

Goodbye Frankfurt, Hello Munich

***I tried to post this yesterday, but the Internet, she hates me. Fingers crossed.***

I’m at the hotel here in Munich, and I have no Internet connection. Hopefully, I can post this at some point.

Today, I managed to haul my two huge suitcases (what was I thinking again?) to the Book Fair and to the dtv stand where I had one last interview. It was with Daisuki, a German manga magazine, and I had the pleasure of spending an hour with Anne and Bella, answering their wonderful questions on love, friendship, Gemma & Co., the color pink, manga, comics, music, and lots of other stuff. There was a lot of laughing. They apologized for their tape recorder, which they said was ancient. I apologized in advance for the fact that I tend to talk a lot, in a non-linear fashion, and very, very fast. Long story short: I used up their tape halfway through the interview. But we had fun, and I promised to answer the other questions by email so poor Anne wouldn’t get a hand cramp trying to follow my motormouth.

After that, Thomas Zirnbauer—the Bavarian Knight in Shining Armor of dtvℱ–insisted on pulling one of my suitcases everywhere we went, even though he had his own, because this is how he rolls. (no pun intended.) So Thomas continued to spoil me and we went to the train station, where you will be pleased to hear that I bought shampoo. Huzzah!

We settle into our seats in an actual compartment with a sliding door—the kind that say, “Hey! You’re in Europe!” I had just finished a horror short story before I left New York that involves train travel in Europe (that’s not the horror part, although I have some stories
), so it was really cool to sit in the compartment and think, Huh, I just wrote about this. The scenery was beautiful. Rolling green hills. Red-roofed houses dotting the countryside. Gothic spires jutting up like swords from the tops of old churches. Vineyards sloping down the hills to the south. Rivers cutting through. And then the more modern influence as we approached Munich. I wanted to take pictures, but sadly, I discovered that although I remembered to bring my charger for the camera battery, the European adapter I bought for my computer plug doesn’t work for anything else. Can’t my adapter, um, adapt? So now I have a camera with an ailing battery and no way to charge it. Argh. I’ll have to see if there’s a place to buy an adapter somewhere.

Thomas had a very nice archeology book on an important battle that took place between the Romans and the Germanic tribes roughly two thousand years ago. He told me about the battle, about the myths surrounding it, and about how the archeologists have had very little actual evidence to go on in reconstructing the truth of it. What can I say? He’s a gentleman and a scholar. Sometimes I like to pretend that Thomas is my own personal secret service officer because it feels a little that way, though I haven’t asked him if he would be willing to take a bullet for me. I have the idea the answer is no. But it will a very polite no.

Once I got to my hotel in Munich, I went for dinner at a traditional Bavarian restaurant down the street. Using my horrible German (and relying on the waitress’s much better English and sense of pity) I got a booth. “Today is a special day in Bavaria,” the waitress tells me. “We have a special Bavarian dish. Goose with dumplings and cabbage.” She seems very proud, and I can tell it’s a really special meal, and even though the many offerings of fried potatoes are calling my name, I decide that I’m in Bavaria and I am going to eat like a Bavarian. Bring on the special! Now, the thing is, goose is a lot like duck, and I don’t really like duck. Also, I don’t really like dumplings. Or pickled cabbage. I mean, I don’t hate them, but they’re not my first choice. But I don’t want to disappoint the waitress with my silly American ordering, and I can’t stop thinking, “But you’re in Bavaria, woman! Go for it!”

Once I get past the digging under the roasted skin aspect of it, the goose is quite good. The dumplings are tasty, and if I don’t think about their dumplingness, I’m good. (It’s a texture thing.) The pickled cabbage is excellent. An older couple comes in, and we share a table because the place is packed. I blush with embarrassment, because, once again, I don’t know the language. I smile, pull out my phrase book, and say, “I’m sorry, I don’t speak German” in the worst German probably ever. But astonishingly, they thank me for trying. They are lawyers who are originally from Italy but who have lived in Germany for nearly thirty years. They are also accomplished musicians and teachers as well, and we find some common ground in music. (I mention that I am traveling on to Leipzig, which is where Bach lived—my mother is a Bach freak—and they talk about its world-famous orchestra.)

Then Claudia says, “Today is a special day. It is the Bavarian equivalent of your Thanksgiving.” Ahhh! “That is why everyone is out with their families.” The week is called Kirche-vie (sp? I’m guessing
), which literally translated means, “Church blessing.” I just happen to be in Bavaria during Bavarian Thanksgiving. Cool. Claudia and her husband, whose name, I believe, was Falco (unless I am confusing him with a German New Wave novelty singer of the 1980’s—“Don’t turn around/uh-oh/Der Kommissar’s in town/Uh-OH!”), help me with my German during our shared meal. Falco mostly laughs at me, as well he should. They are very interested in our election. EVERYONE is interested in our election; I am asked about it everywhere I go. And I can only think of what Eddie Izzard said when I saw him in concert this summer: “Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to travel again, America? To have the world say, ‘We’ve missed you. Welcome back.’”

We share dessert—Apfelkerchul—which consists of baked apples encased in fried dough sprinkled with cinnamon sugar and topped with ice cream that I swear is about 110% cream. Like it should be a Class C misdemeanor at the very least. I resist the urge to lick the plate. Claudia and Falco have another engagement, and so we say Auf Wiedersehen and I walk back to my hotel.

But I had wanted to tell you about the manga kids. Apparently, if you dress up as manga characters, you can get into the book fair for free. So there were tons of teens walking around dressed as their favorite manga characters, and I saw what I would call steampunk kids walking around, too. Lots of elaborate costumes. I did manage a few pics before my camera went kaput. When I get back to NYC, I hope to upload them with a link for you.

I’d best get to bed. I have to get up at the insane hour of 6:00 a.m. for two school visits, a lunch, and a reading, and I don’t want to be a total zombie.

Guten nacht.

Frankfurt Book Fair, Day Three

Guten morgen once again.

Frankfurt is very lovely from my window right now as I type this. It’s sunny and fall-ish. The leaves on the tree just outside my window are shades of green, orange, brown, and yellow. Across the street is an apartment building that looks old, but, as I was informed last night, probably isn’t, because the bombing in WWII destroyed much of the city, and things weren’t really rebuilt until the 1980’s. And when they decided to rebuild, they decided to make things look as they were before. Very interesting. But the opera house pretty much survived WWII. We drove past that last night and it was gorgeous in the moonlight, with a winged horse statue on top. Made me feel like writing something spooky.

But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Yesterday, I shampooed my hair with actual shampoo. What a treat! Wow, I said to my hair in the mirror, you are bouncin’ AND behavin’. Foxy. Today is special!

Then I spent approximately twenty minutes trying in vain to find my exhibitor pass that lets me into the fair.

Now, I knew I had used it and placed it right back in the inner pocket of my purse. I had not taken it out to, say, stage photos of my pass all over Germany. “Look! Here is my pass enjoying a nice espresso near the reading tent!” “Now my filly of a pass looks shyly over her shoulder at the crowds. Do not fret, pass, for you are beautiful here among the throngs!” So I am growling and snarling over this–where could it be? Resigned, I take a taxi to the hall and buy a day pass to get in. Two hours later, I discover my exhibitor pass tucked neatly into the passport that I shook earlier which had been in the inside pocket of my purse. Oh, pass–you little minx. Why do you play so with my heart? Ah, you are as you are, ma fille.

Then I stop pretending I am a pipe-smoking Frenchman buffeted by the cruelties of love and existence because it’s just a piece of paper.

I had some of the famous dtv book stand coffee, which is made with a touch of rocket fuel and makes you feel as if you can cheat death. Actually, I drank two cups, so I pretty much felt like Iron Man at that point. A very animated Iron Man. I met with some of my foreign publishers–Loretta, from Italy; May, my subagent in Japan; and Thilla, my Dutch publisher. It was very nice of them to take the time out from their own duties at the fair to say hi, and I much appreciated it.

After that, there was another photo shoot. That was fine since I no longer had Godzilla zit taking over the Tokyo of my face. (“The Tokyo of Your Face.” Doesn’t that sound like it should be a cheesy 1970’s song? I can see the album cover with some Hall & Oates-ish guy lounging against a piano, his mustache a paragon of hirsute virility, his polyester shirt open to reveal many gold chains like age rings on a tree, and in his martini glass is a Godzilla swizzle stick. “The Tokyo of your face,” he sings, “trembles…’neath the lizard of my…desire….” Now I am completely distracted. You know I will spend part of my day trying to come up with more ridiculous lyrics to “The Tokyo of My Face.” Better yet–YOU GUYS come up with them. Feel free to submit your own stanzas here. Let your inner ‘stache, sensitive-songwriter-playa-man go wild.)

But I digress.

After the photo shoot, I met with my audio book goddess, Julia Nachtmann, and journalist, Tanya Lieske. Tanya interviewed Barry and me in our kitchen in Brooklyn back in the spring, and it was such a wonderful interview. Tanya is warm and smart and engaging, and I was so happy to see her again. And Julia! Wow, what a voice: husky, whisky-like. I just wanted to hear her read all day. We go to the public reading, and I’m gobsmacked because there are actual people there and they are kind and attentive, even when I do my Marlene Dietrich impression, which is always a big crowd pleaser…if, say, you’re incarcerated and there’s no other entertainment. Tanya asks the questions in German, then whispers them to me in English. I answer in English and she gives a translation in German. We read, with me starting a section and Julia reading the last half of a section. Julia is so good that even though I don’t know German, I know exactly where she is in the text, because her emotion and her various voices are that good. Chills. Afterward, I meet with some lovely German readers and sign books. We get kicked out to make room for the next reading, and so Jessica from audiobooks leads us on a long, winding tour of the Frankfurt Book Fair–all of us following her like ducklings. There are quite a few Manga kids in costume (more on that in a moment) among us, so we must like quite the spectacle. I sign books and talk for a good while, and then I have an interview with the lovely woman whose name has just flown out of my head. Argh! It will come back to me. Anyway, we do an audio book interview along with Julia and there is a lot of laughing. She asks which character I most identify with, and I say Gemma but with some Felicity and Gorgon thrown in. Julia says she most identifies with Gemma, too. She does her Gorgon voice which scares the pee-pee out of me. AAHHHHHH!!!!! It is scary.

I say goodbye to them and go back to the dtv booth for an interview with Katharina, a high school student, and her brother, Max. They present me with a lovely jar of mustard from Dusseldorf, where they are famous for their mustard. I love mustard, so I’m thrilled.

There is a dinner out with dtv and Anya Ulinich keeps us all in stitches. “You should also be a stand-up comedienne,” I tell her.
“They tried that,” she says in her heavily accented English. “They sent me to ‘Funny Jew Hour’ at Joe’s Pub. I flopped. I am apparently not such a funny Jew.”
Anya is funny. Trust.

I’ll try to tell you more about the Manga and Steampunk kids and the dinner later as I have to check out and get to the Fair pronto and then onto a train to Munich.

Work on those lyrics, folks.

Frankfurt Book Fair–Day Two

Guten Morgen!

Wie geht es Ihnen? (How are you?)
Brauche ich einen Regenschirm? (Do I need an umbrella?)
Nein! Es ig sonnig. (No! It’s sunny.)

Aren’t phrase books fun? They give you a false sense of security. Then you meet an actual person and they smile and speak to you in rapid-fire German and you swallow hard and make strange hand motions that look as if you have said, “Now, I strangle the bunny.” Sigh.

Yesterday was a long, busy day but loads of fun. I had managed to catch my second wind Thursday night and so stayed up waaaay too late–about 1:30 am. When my wake-up call came at 7:30 Friday morning. It was like a bomb had gone off. I hugged the hotel pillow and went, “Noooooooo.” I whimpered a few times for good measure and then trundled off to take my shower. It only took me about ten minutes to figure out how to get hot water, because I’m a super genius, and then I stood under the spray and said, “I’m counting on you, water. Don’t let me down. It’s wakey-wakey time.” The water answered, “Who’s the idiot who didn’t go to bed on time. Stop bothering me and get on with washing your hair.” So I did. I open one bottle and go, hmmm, this is very rich shampoo I bought. No. It’s not shampoo. It’s conditioner. I open the other bottle and go, hmmm, part two. For it is conditioner also. I have no shampoo. I am going to have the softest, most manageable FILTHY HAIR in Germany. I begin to laugh. I wash my hair with soap which I know means I will look like a punk chicken for the rest of the day, but what can you do?

It’s a photo shoot day, so naturally I am sporting a zit on my cheek the size of a football field. I’m not kidding–you could see this thing from space. A zit? Seriously? If I’m going to be visited by the youth fairy can I put in for my former metabolism? I put on a distracting amount of lipstick, which I know I will just eat off but, again, what can you do?

I’m introduced to a Turkish writer named Osman. Osman speaks Turkish and German and I speak neither so Maike translates for us and we do a lot of smiling and nodding and throwing out various words in English and German. Also, I do the stupid thing with my hands like somehow my fingers are the key to understanding. “That’s it! By god, I’ll just act out everything I want to say like charades! That’s the ticket!” No doubt Osman wonders about who the strange American woman who puts her hand to her ear in a “sounds like” gesture before acting out the words “sleep” and “eat” and if all people from New York do this.

Note to self: study German phrase book tonight.

At the fair, I meet with six different journalists. Their questions are incredibly thought-provoking and incisive. If there is one thing I’ve been struck by here it is how seriously journalists take childrens’ and teens’ literature. I do feel that much of the media in America tends to marginalize YA lit, largely because they haven’t read it and don’t know the amazing books that are out there, but also because I think we as a society don’t tend to value our teens. We want put them in a box labeled with a One Size Fits All stereotype–“All teens are X or Y”–and wait for them to become adults. (I have many theories about this, because I like to make up useless theories in my spare time on the bus, but one is that teens speak the truth and have a built-in bullshit radar and this makes them frightening to adults who can’t understand them and so want to discredit them in some way. But that’s just one theory and off-topic.) Anyway, it was very exciting to talk to other people who are excited about books, especially teen books.

While I’m sitting at the dtv booth, a trio of readers comes up to talk to me. They are adorable and we take pictures and talk. Sadly, they will not be able to attend today’s reading, but I can’t tell you how at home it made me feel to meet some teens and say hello. Thank you, ladies.

I go to the photo session with Phillip. Oh, how I wish I had taken a photo of Phillip for you, my friends. What a dish. I think he was probably about 25 and about twelve kinds of cute and I so wished I could have had you all be flies on the wall for that one. Now, I HATE to have my formal picture taken. I feel like a complete dork, like I should be wearing a turtleneck and staring into the distance, an expression of existential crisis upon my face. Yeah, not good at that. Poor Phillip at one point has to implore me nicely, “Could we take a few serious ones, please? For my boss?” So he poses me in front of various interesting pieces of industrial architecture and I try to pretend I’m David Bowie during his Berlin years. Mostly it looks like I’m smelling something bad in the distance.

We go to an awards ceremony for children’s literature. I have a headset so that I can hear the simultaneous English translation which is fun, especially when the guy who’s translating gets bored and starts to read the information on the books in a sort of Monty Pythonesque announcer’s voice. I am the only person around me giggling because no one else needs a headset. I try not to giggle too much. The coolest, absolutely coolest part, though, is that a group of teens gets up to present the six different books in the teen category. They do dramatic interp of the books and it is AMAZING. Even cooler? One of the books is LOOKING FOR ALASKA by John Green and another is NICK AND NORAH by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan. I got chills (they’re multiplyin’…). I suddenly feel connected in so many ways and it makes me a little teary because I’m corny like that. John and R&D don’t win (Meg Rosoff does) but it’s the experience that is so fantastic.

After the ceremony, we go to dinner and I meet the English YA writer, Kevin Brooks. I had read Martin Pig ages ago, so it was exciting to get to meet Kevin, who is an absolute sweetheart of a guy. We talk Westerns and blues and music and about how much we love our jobs and that we are the luckiest idiots ever to live because we are lucky enough to do this–work with you guys who keep us honest and remind us to be true to ourselves. Thank you for that, by the way.

I fall into bed at 1:30 again and this morning, I wanted to have a deep and abiding relationship with my pillow. But now I must hie to the book fair for another day.

Auf!

Frankfurt Book Fair, Day One

Guten nacht from Frankfurt.

It’s 10:30 pm here and I’ve been up since Tuesday night. This will be such a fun post. I might accidentally make sense.

The adventure so far:

Yesterday morning, my tooth broke. Yeah, the same front tooth that broke a few months back. I was in a total panic because I was flying out that night and suddenly, I needed to get an emergency visit with my dentist. Which I did. Thank you, Dr. Mittl. “Don’t eat anything chewy or hard,” she warned on the way out. If you see a woman gumming her food on one side, you’ll know it’s me.

I managed to do my laundry, pack, pick up the boy, and still make it to JFK by 7:00 pm. I stand in line at Singapore Airlines, get to the front, and the lady keeps swiping my passport and frowning. Then she walks over to another station to talk to an official somebody. He looks at me, looks at the passport, looks at me again. Then he makes a phone call. I’m starting to feel like Cary Grant in “North By Northwest.” Official Guy walks over to two more official guys. They converse. He asks me to step to the side. I’m glad I packed the trench coat because this scene calls for one. Finally, after about twenty minutes, he gives me my boarding pass with a smile, and I half expect him to say, “Have a nice flight, Dr. Jones,” but he doesn’t, thereby ruining my delusions of grandeur-espionage fantasy with the realization that it was just some bureaucratic blip, and I’m not so interesting after all.

In line, I strike up a conversation with a woman who is there with her adorable toddler son, her mother, and her great aunt. The great aunt, Bittl, is traveling to Frankfurt by herself. She’s in her seventies and sad about leaving her family (she’s a recent widow), and her great-niece asks me if I will look out for her. Bittl doesn’t speak any English and I speak no German, but it’s okay. Because we’re in this together, and sometimes that’s enough. So after I share my Mickey D’s French fries with the completely edible Nathan-the-toddler, Bittl and I stand in the world’s longest security line. She talks to me in German, and the weird thing is that I sort of get the gist of what she’s saying even though I don’t understand the words, and she sort of gets me. I look up the words for “shoes” and “jacket” and point to the gray security bins. We board the humongous Airbus as if we are old friends. We’re not seated in the same section, but the flight attendant assures me that we can exit the plane in Frankfurt together.

I’m seated next to a nice lady who speaks both German and French and a little English. I pull out my very, very rusty college French, and somehow we manage to communicate: Her sister lives in Paris, she and her husband are traveling on to Singapore. I tell her that I am in Europe for two weeks and that I would like to see Paris. I tell her my name and she tells me hers: Genevieve. Silently, I vow to practice my French.

If you can, learn another language now. Join the global village. I hate that I speak only smatterings of phrases in other languages. I feel embarrassed by it. Anyway, that’s my PSA.

Singapore Airlines believes in feeding you. Often and a lot. So if you’re hungry, I highly recommend flying Air Singapore. I pick at some mashed potatoes and cheese and scarf down a Klondike ice cream bar the size of my purse. I manage about an hour or so of restless sleep. We land in Germany and Bittl and I wait together at the luggage claim until her driver comes for her. She says something to me that I don’t really understand and so I nod and then we use the universal language of a hug and a wave goodbye.

I meet up with the lovely Anna from the publicity dept. at dtv, my German publisher. “Wow. You brought two suitcases!” she notes. I’m too embarrassed to tell her about the scarves, and I don’t know her well enough yet to say, “Yes, for the dead body.”

Anna and I take a taxi to the hotel where they have a hotel mascot–a six-month-old English bulldog puppy named Emma. I immediately make a fool out of myself by making kissy noises at Emma who eyes me warily, as she should. (She wasn’t in this evening. Apparently, she is only available to charm visitors between the hours of 9:00 and 6:00.) Anna graciously offers me coffee which I suck down like it’s a jet-lag antidote, which it is. We take a taxi to the Frankfurter BuchMesse. (Frankfurt Book Fair.) There I meet up with my publisher, Anne Schieckel, and the rest of the fabulous dtv crew: Thomas Zirnbauer, Maike Kolbeck, and my editor, Anka. Anna F. and I wander around the halls and take in an exhibit of Turkish design and photos (Turkey is the guest of honor country this year), read up on Turkish writers, and run from building to building in the rain. I have a lovely chat with Thomas and Anka, who make me laugh and feel at ease. Then Thomas, Maike, and I go to hear an American author, Anya Ulinich, read and speak.

Anya is very smart and funny and, it turns out, lives two neighborhoods away from me in Brooklyn. Small world. We make a plan to have a playdate with our kids and she graciously signs an English-language version of her book, PETROPOLIS, for me. Then we all go to dinner along with Jasmine T. (who read Anya’s book aloud in German) and Pietra, who conducted the interview and whose name I am sadly butchering in print here. (Note to self: write down the correct spellings of first and last names.) Over a delicious and hearty dinner, we discuss politics, the upcoming election, immigration (Yasmine grew up in Iran and Anya lived in the former USSR until she was 17.), books, movies, and all-in-all, it’s a wonderful evening. I am grateful to my dinner guests for keeping me awake.

So that was day one. Tomorrow, I have six interviews back-to-back from 10:30 am until 3:30 pm followed by a dinner. And Saturday is the public reading:

*Saturday, October 18: Frankfurt Book Fair 2008*
3.00-4.00 pm: Public reading: FOCUS Forum Hörbuch, 4.1., audiobook-speaker Julia Nachtmann, presentation: Tanya Lieske, Deutschlandfunk

Just before I left NYC, they announced the National Book Award Nominees, and I was thrilled to hear that my pal, E. Lockhart, was nominated for the absolutely wonderful THE DISREPUTABLE HISTORY OF FRANKIE LANDAU BANKS. This is one of my favorite books of the year. If you haven’t read it, grab a copy. I can’t recommend it highly enough. Congrats to all the nominees.

Alrighty. I think it’s time to take the battery pack out of my back and try to crash. More tomorrow.

World Domination Tour–European Version

Tomorrow I leave for a book tour of Germany, Austria, and Italy. Let me type that again:

GERMANY! AUSTRIA! ITALY! ME!

WHOO-HOO!

I am up to my lederhosen in excitement, baby.

I’ve never been to Germany and Austria, and I don’t think repeated viewings of “The Sound of Music” count. For the past two hours I’ve been trying to figure out how and what to pack for a two-week trip. I’m not a terribly economical packer. I tend to err on the side of “But I might need rainbow toe socks and a pair of galoshes and a simple green dress with an apron so that I might twirl on a mountainside while singing about the hills being alive with the sound of music.” (You know I really, really, really want to do that. As a child, I pondered becoming a nun for a nanosecond, even though I’m not Catholic, just because I wanted to be Julie Andrews. Honestly, who didn’t?) In my head, I need lots of scarves and sunglasses and a trench coat and a cigarette holder even though I don’t smoke. I need a hat. Several hats. A trunk full of hats. I need hair gel so that I can look like David Bowie on the cover of “Low.” I’ve been walking around the house singing “Falling in Love Again” in my best Marlene Dietrich voice because “I caahn’t help it.”

The truth is, I need comfortable shoes and a lot of clean underwear and to stop scaring my family by living my life as if it is a foreign movie and I am a world-weary femme fatale. And yet, I have packed many scarves. This is how I roll.

*Sigh* How do you solve a problem like Maria?

Anyhoo, here are the public readings:

Saturday, October 18: Frankfurt Book Fair 2008
3.00-4.00 pm: Public reading: FOCUS Forum Hörbuch, 4.1., audiobook-speaker Julia Nachtmann, presentation: Tanya Lieske, Deutschlandfunk

Tuesday, October 21: TĂŒbingen and Speyer
11.00-12.30 pm: Public reading Deutsch Amerikanisches Institut TĂŒbingen, Karlstr. 3, 72072 TĂŒbingen

Wednesday, October 22: Leipzig
6.30-8.00 pm: Public reading Lehmanns Buchhandlung, Grimmaische Str. 10, 04109 Leipzig

Thursday, October 23: Leipzig – Wien
7.30-9.00 pm: Public reading: Lhotzkys Literaturbuffet, Taborstr. 28, 1020 Wien →

Friday, October 24.: Vienna and NĂŒrnberg
7.00 pm-8.30 pm: Public reading: Deutsch-Amerikanisches Institut NĂŒrnberg, GleißbĂŒhlstr. 13, 90402 NĂŒrnberg

I don’t have info on the public reading in Rome yet, but I think it will be Sunday, October 26th. I’ll have my computer with me and will be posting as often as I can.

So if you’re across the pond and can make any of these readings, please come on down. I may or may not be wearing sunglasses and a hat, but no matter what I’m wearing, I’d love to see you.

Movie Update

Apparently, I need to be watching “Pushing Daisies.” This is the consensus. Okay, I’m sold. I’ll try to catch up. Also, thanks to whoever it was who posted the “Target Woman” videos on youtube. Hysterical.

Okay. Movie stuff. I’m still waiting to hear from Icon (the production company) about a few things, but I had a nice chat with Eddie, my film agent, today. Here’s the update:

NOTHING HAS BEEN CAST. NOTHING. DO NOT BELIEVE WHAT YOU READ ON THE INTRAMANETS.

It’s still early days. We’re waiting on some stuff. Things are progressing. BUT NOTHING HAS BEEN CAST YET.

And there you have it.

I promise, when there is more news to report, I will post it here. So, you know, if you hear that they are now reinventing AGATB as a Kabuki sock puppet musical with songs by Radiohead and Shonen Knife intercut with odd, moody images of a lone tree, you can rest assured that unless it came from this site, it ain’t true.

Although now that is the only version I want to see.

Happy weekend, everyone. 🙂

AGATB movie almost-update

I’ve gotten a lot of emails recently about the movie version of AGATB. It seems there are rumors of everyone and her brother being cast: “Starring Daniel Craig as Mrs. Nightwing…and Seth Rogan as Gemma Doyle…”

Just to let you know–I am having a conversation with my film agent tomorrow and then I will know the latest scoop. And then I will post it here. And then YOU will know the latest scoop.

So, please don’t post and ask if Bonnie Wright or Brie Larson or Gary Coleman has been cast. I don’t know. (But I’m holding out hope on Gary.) Tomorrow. TOmorrow the fabulous Eddie will tell me things. And I will tell you. Promise.

I just got back from the store where my shopping list included trash bags, bleach, rubber gloves, a new mop, and scissors. I looked at my cart and thought, “This is a serial killer’s shopping list. They are going to think that I am dismembering people in my basement. But they’ll know that I’m clean about it. It’s important to be clean.” I added candy and a magazine just to break it up. It was too creepy otherwise.

I’ve been trying to catch up on some things stored on my DVR. I watched back-to-back episodes of “Project Runway.” Oh, lordy. If I were trapped on a deserted island with Kenley, I would have to eat her, and not just for sustenance.

I tried watching “Fringe” but was left cold. It seems like it wants to pick up where “X-Files” left off, but it feels like it’s all surface. “X-Files” had great chemistry and smart, subversive humor and a sense that at least one of the characters really, really believed in the paranormal. He was emotionally invested and so we, the audience, were emotionally invested. And also, he was David Duchonvy, which helped. Anyway, I think I’ll give “Fringe” one more try and see if I like it better.

I want to watch “Eleventh Hour” tonight just because it stars one of my favorite unsung British actors, Rufus Sewell. (Any “Dark City” fans out there?) I’ve got the third season of “Heroes” taped. I hope it’s an improvement on season two. What else? I’ve got “Chuck” and “Reaper” and “House” recorded, although I had to stop watching “House,” because even though I LOVE Hugh Laurie and have since his “Black Adder” days, I start to imagine that I have whatever the disease of the week is:

Me: OMG, I think I have that.
Husband: (wearily) You don’t have that.
Me: No. Really. I have a metallic taste on the back of my tongue.
Husband: Then stop eating metal.
Me: Funny! (smack, smack)
Husband: Stop tasting your tongue.
Me: (sheepish) Okay.
(two minutes later)
Me: So it’s not schizophrenia but rabies from a cat bite. Crap. I was playing with that cat up the street–the one who sits outside all the time?
Husband: The one that’s so tame it lets you scratch its belly? The one that lives in the house where they take very good care of it?
Me: You never know. Maybe they feed it Purina Rabies Chow. Maybe that cat saved them from a genetically altered rat the size of Godzilla but not without taking it in the neck first and it hasn’t started showing symptoms yet, like John Hurt in “Alien.” Do you think I have rabies? Do I seem afraid of water to you?
Husband: You have something. I think it’s called a six-pack of crazy.
Me: Yeah, but beyond that. Wait–did the lights just dim? Or is that a brain tumor? OMG. I have a brain tumor. Hold on, let me blink and see if it happens again. Okay, I’m blinking and…wow, it’s really hard to tell about the light when you’re blinking. Hey, honey? Why don’t you try it? Just blink and–
Husband switches to “Monday Night Football” and ups volume.

Yeah. So. No more “House.”

What are you guys watching? Anything good? What’s your favorite new show of the year so far?