Archive for January, 2012

Stories

January 16, 2012 @ 8:45 pm | Filed under:

Wonderboy had an appointment with a new ear-nose-throat doctor this morning. When you wear hearing aids, you tend to build up wax at an alarming rate, which of course occludes the ear canal and further diminishes your hearing, so you have to go in for frequent cleanings with alarmingly pointed instruments. This was our first visit to this particular doctor, and after the cleaning she decided to send WB for bloodwork. She wants some allergy testing done—that’s a tiny piece of a very long story, fodder for another post (or book) altogether—and asked the office manager to call upstairs to the lab and make sure our insurance would cover the bloodwork.

The answer was yes. I was pleased; this meant we wouldn’t have to drive to the children’s hospital and grapple with their difficult parking and long lines. The office manager handed me the form, and Wonderboy and I headed upstairs to the lab.

The lab’s waiting room was moderately crowded. Several people came in after us, while Wonderboy and I were waiting to check in. But the woman at the desk took one look at our form and told me not to sign in. “Are you the one they just called me about? Look at this. They didn’t fill out his information,” she said, indicating the blank lines at the top of the lab slip. “Name, address, date of birth.”

“Can I fill that in?” I asked. She shook her head grimly.

“Nope. They have to do that downstairs. You’ll have to go back.” She started to hand me the form, then changed her mind. “Hang on. I want to make a copy of this. I have a file for this kind of thing. The way they tell it, they never make mistakes.” Her stern countenance had softened; she looked positively cheerful.

Wonderboy and I retraced our steps. The ENT’s desk clerk was puzzled to see us return. I explained.

She rolled her eyes and scrutinized the paperwork. “Whoops, we didn’t even put his name on. Sorry about that. What was the patient’s name?”

I spelled it for her as she filled in the squares at the top of the form. Name and date of birth. She handed the paper back to me.

“That’s it?” I was flabbergasted. “Why couldn’t I just have filled that in myself?”

“Oh, no, we’re supposed to do it down here.”

“But I could have just stepped into the hall and written his name, if I’d known that was all they needed.”

“Well, we’re supposed to do it. They get annoyed if we forget.”

“I know,” I said. “They made a copy for their mistake file.”

The desk clerk burst out laughing. “They’re keeping a file? Oh, Lord.”

Yes. Well. Wonderboy and I went back upstairs to the lab. Of course we’d lost our place in line. The woman at the desk was warm and cheerful, nodding approvingly over our paperwork.

“That’s better.” She watched me dig through my bag for our insurance card. For a long, bad moment, I couldn’t find it. I did find some buttons I meant to send to some young friends after Comic-Con last summer, tucked away and long since forgotten. I’m glad no one is keeping a file of my mistakes.

“Uh-oh,” said the woman. “I sure hope you brought it with you. We can’t take him without it.”

The card surfaced at last, sandwiched between the frozen yogurt punch card and the bookstore punch card.

My boy and I settled down in the waiting room for a medium-sized wait. The woman at the desk must have decided we were a sympathetic audience, because she began regaling us with tales of difficult patients: the sort who don’t understand why they can’t be treated without an insurance card (“I can’t just walk up to an ATM and expect service without my card, can I?”); the sort who bang on the door at 4:32 when the sign clearly says the lab closes at 4:30. (“I don’t know, maybe they can hear me moving around in here?”)

My friend Julianna Baggott talks about frustrating day jobs being rich fodder for writers: “these people around you are characters. you aren’t going to have access to them forever. this is short term — in the long view — it’s part of your story. it will inform your work. these people are material.” I have a collection of waiting-room and exam-room stories; I’ve spent so much of my adult life sitting in one or the other. I don’t think of them as material, exactly, from a distance outside the story; for me the stories unfold all around and I’m inside them, too close for perspective, sometimes. But I do know that these waiting-room encounters inform my work; the strangers with whom I have these curious exchanges teach me more about people. Everyone is so full of stories and quirks. I enjoy the heck out of the quirks even when they frustrate me—and I know that doesn’t make much sense, but it’s why I am usually giggling during these ridiculous red-tape runarounds. It’s all so funny, even when it’s infuriating. This woman keeps a file on her colleagues in other departments, evidence of their screwups, even when the screwup is a name missing on a form for a patient she had been discussing on the phone with the colleague in question just five minutes earlier.

In one of today’s four (yes, four!) waiting rooms, we met an 86-year-old man who told me he served in World War II, became an anesthesiologist, retired as a Colonel, and now builds computer systems. He moved across the room to sit next to Wonderboy and showed us his tablet computer, played us a recording of a six-year-old girl singing an Abba song. He has taught his great-grandson, an 8-year-old, how to fix computers. The Colonel was stationed in Germany when his own kids were little—his oldest daughter is 62 now—and he was amazed by how rapidly his kids picked up that language, just as his great-grandbabies have effortlessly learned their way around computers and gadgets. He loved talking to Wonderboy, comparing hearing aid notes—the Colonel’s wife wears aids.

In another waiting room, another man spoke with pride of his own grandchildren, how quick and bright they are, how different their world is from his. School was terrible for him; “I was on the slow side, you see. The teachers always had one or two favorites, the smart ones, and if you couldn’t keep up, you were out of luck.”

Later in the day, I had a doctor appointment of my own. My big toe and I are not on speaking terms at the moment. The podiatrist’s nurse was a man a few years younger than I; he was astounded to hear I have six kids. Somehow this opened the floodgates and he began telling me a pretty harrowing story of a family member he and his wife have raised since the child was quite young. The podiatrist enjoys taking his family to the mountains, but not skiing; or at least that’s what he says when he’s trying to deflect attention from the giant needle he is repeatedly jabbing into your sore toe. (It doesn’t work.) The x-ray technician has often thought about getting a pedicure but can’t bring herself to spend money so frivolously. The phlebotomist (in a second lab; my turn this time) does about forty sticks a day. He blushes shyly when you exclaim over his skill. The woman reading a fashion magazine in the ENT’s waiting room does not approve of the very short skirt worn by a departing patient. Not even her grandchildren dress “like that.” The receptionist at my doctor’s outer office is not entirely thrilled about the new machines they’re going to be bringing in soon: hand scanners that confirm your identity by the pattern of your veins. (That makes two of us, sister.)

I don’t feel outside their stories, observing. Our stories intersect, and sometimes I get so caught up in them I forget about mine. Which, on a day like today, is just as well: I could spin a harrowing tale of my own involving needles and a scalpel and a bloody slice of toenail lying on a silver tray, but ugh, who wants to read that? I’d rather contemplate that mysterious mistake file (not so mysterious anymore, I suppose, now that I’ve spilled the secret to one of the people in the file). Is it a folder full of photocopies of blank lab forms to be brandished in triumph someday?

Milestones

January 11, 2012 @ 7:29 pm | Filed under: , ,

We’re having a week of milestones around here. Rose got her braces off today; she wore her Smile shirt in honor of the occasion, but her own smile was even bigger.

Our orthodontist and his staff are wonderful. They sang to Rose when she was finished and gave her a bag full of goodies from the verboten-while-you-have-braces list: Skittles, Snickers, Fritos, gum. And a bottle of sparkling cider. Awesome.

I sent my copyedited manuscript (the middle-grade novel) back off to my editor at McElderry, so that’s one step closer to publication. Did I tell you this book has a new title? My working title was Not the Whole Truth, but we’ve changed it to The Prairie Thief. I discovered it has a Kindle page already, even though the book doesn’t come out until August. My first digital edition!* (I’ve been told there will eventually be digital editions of my Martha and Charlotte books, but I don’t know what kind of timetable Harper has in mind.)

The final cover isn’t ready quite yet, but I think I’ll be able to share that soon.

Rumor has it there will be another major milestone in this household this week: evidently a certain two-year-old intends to become a three-year-old on Friday. At least, that’s what his sisters claim. Personally, I find it hard to believe, seeing as he was born only ten minutes ago.

*Edited to add: The book is coming out in hardcover as well.

Booknotes: Ready Player One

January 5, 2012 @ 7:06 pm | Filed under:

I’m about a third of the way into Ready Player One. This is a reading experience not quite like any other because of the steady bursts of recognition/nostalgia/squee. The fictional James Halliday, the MMO-designing genius, is (was) exactly the same age I am. Since the entire conceit of the book is that the SFF, video games, and pop culture of his youth, and particularly his teen years, are the clues to the mysterious Easter eggs he has coded into the game, every page is one little dopamine hit after another. Oh I loved that show! I totally had that book! I rocked at that game! I still quote that film on a regular basis!

An unexpected side-effect of reading this book is that it makes me want to play games myself. I mean, that’s not much of a stretch: I’m already a gamer in a quiet, squeezed-into-the-interstices way. (Not long ago, I was on the phone with a friend, comparing notes about various family health issues and endless insurance hassles. “But how do you stay upbeat?” she wanted to know. “How do you keep from losing your mind over this stuff?” I answered in all seriousness: At night, after the kids are in bed, I SLAUGHTER ORCS.)

But what’s happening with this novel is that the more I read about the main character playing games within games as he hunts for Halliday’s hidden keys—and his repertoire includes all the good old-school games: Adventure, which I beat before anyone I knew did, and Pitfall, and Joust, oh, all of them, console and arcade alike—the more the kid plays, the stronger my urge to play, so suddenly I’m putting down the book and loading Warcraft. This is counterproductive to the actual reading of the book.

Not to mention counterproductive to the sleeping of the sleep!

Current Read-Alouds

January 4, 2012 @ 8:57 am | Filed under:

To Jane, Rose, and Beanie: David Copperfield. (At twenty minutes a day, we figure it will take us in the neighborhood of 100 days.)

To Rose, Beanie, and Rilla: The Family Under the Bridge. (Last time I read this aloud, Jane was about Rilla’s age. Eep!)

To Wonderboy, Rilla, and Huck: new Elephant and Piggie books appeared under the Christmas tree, so they are dominating our read-aloud time this week.

At night, Scott continues his read-aloud of The Return of the King. His voices are the best.

The View from Here

January 2, 2012 @ 9:26 pm | Filed under: , ,

Dandelion boys, paperwhites in January, a perilously narrow train trestle, artists at work, The Family Under the Bridge.

Not pictured: Grieg’s “Hall of the Mountain King,” a small chunk of David Copperfield (enter Miss Betsey Trotwood), a great deal of Elephant & Piggie, a bit of Latin, that game where you stack the states, a lot of Wii Party, Gutenberg and Copernicus, and The Second Mrs. Giaconda. Have I mentioned I love high tide?

Booklists, Empty and Full

January 1, 2012 @ 10:10 am | Filed under: , ,

I’m determined to be organized this year: I’ve already set up my 2012 booklog.*

(The snippet of Johnny Crow art is meant to be centered. I can see it right in the code: aligncenter. There is something wonky in my template somewhere that always overrides the centering of images. I’m planning a massive redesign in near future, so I’m not going to worry about these little finicky details right now.)

(And by “not going to worry,” I mean it’s going to drive me batty until I get it fixed.)

But enough of that. The big news, the exciting New Year’s news, is that the 2011 Cybils finalists have been posted. Let the library queuing begin…

*Whoops, had the wrong link here before. Corrected now.