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Losing in Gainesville (9781940430331)

Page 45

by Costello, Brian


  APPENDIX D:

  “THE OCEAN AND THE SEA”

  A POEM BY

  NICHOLAS J. CANBERRY

  Green waves

  Green mind

  Bud kind

  Life unwinds

  The ocean and the sea

  It means so much to me

  The salt tastes sweet

  Feel the sand on my feet

  Something ’bout the ocean air

  Makes me forget all about my cares

  Waking dreams

  Are what they seem

  The jettys have

  The bettys

  But the waters kissing the shore

  Have my soul forever more

  All you hear is radio gaga

  All I hear is the seagull’s caw-caw!

  The fish and the sharks

  Swim in the deep, in the dark

  If I only had a boat

  To leave the shore and all her sea oats

  And leave the land for the worker bees

  For the ocean and the sea

  Is the life for me

  For the ocean and the sea

  Is the life for me

  Peace.

  APPENDIX E:

  A REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLE OF THE HAIKU WALL

  Hmmm: Triumph, or Rush?

  Canadian Power Threes

  Both? Neither? Neither.

  Bar-Bar-Bar-Bar-Bar

  Ba-rino. Bar-Bar-Bar-Bar

  Bar-Ba-Rino. Jeece!

  Welcome Back, Kotter

  Arnold Horshack, Juan Epstein

  Boom Boom Washington

  At Gatorroni’s

  I saw this nugget today

  With tits out to here:

  Bam Bam Bigelow

  Babyface, or Heel?

  Wrestlemania!

  Jake and the Fatman

  One guy’s Jake, the other’s fat

  Jack and the Fatman

  When Darby Crash said

  “someone get me a beeyah”

  He would then drink it

  Maux’s drunk on vodka

  William’s swiped Metrognome

  Roger eats tofu

  Devo: Mark, Bob One

  Bob Two, Gerald V., Alan

  Not much is better

  The Really Rottens

  The Laff-a-lympics Bad Buys

  Heavens to Murgatroid!

  Mushmouth says to me

  “Beeba deeba seeba see,

  Soba doba boo.”

  OJ, OJ, O

  J, OJ, OJ, OJ

  Jeez, who gives a shit?!

  Dee Dee Ramone on

  The bass guitar wrote many

  Of their greatest songs

  I like it when the

  Grungy guy in the grunge band

  Is all like: “eeeeeeeeeeeyeah!”

  It’s Sanford and Son

  Oh! Elizabeth!

  This is the big one!

  The Robert Plant bum

  Been a long time since he had

  A home. Ramble on.

  Oh, Beetle Bailey

  You are so slow and clumsy

  Careful, Sarge is mad.

  At EPCOT Center

  I got lost at Morocco

  Land but bought a fez.

  Webster has a dad

  It’s George Papadapolis

  Alex Karras, dude

  Curtains and the drapes

  Do they match? Well then? Do they?

  Folks should just say it

  In the tacklebox

  There are lures, bait, worms, hooks

  At least I think so

  Simon and Garfunk

  Loggins and Messina, Hall

  And Oates. Pro boners.

  Steely Dan records

  I like em all except the

  First and “Gaucho”

  Was watching jai-alai

  The betters scream at players

  Rip tickets, go home

  The Jenny Jones Show

  Moms and Daughters Who Party

  Together, Bad News

  We’re talkin’ big breasts

  Here, the bounce em squeeze em kind.

  Boobs. Tits. Juggs. Knockers.

  My socks are itchy

  Will you please scratch them for me

  My feet, not my socks

  Portobello slice

  That’s what I want, what I get

  I think Neal farted

  APPENDIX F: oreGONE, XMAS ’95

  SIDE A

  “Isabel”—Unrest

  “Driveway to Driveway”—Superchunk

  “Baby’s Way Cruel”—Guv’ner

  “Zurich is Stained”—Pavement

  “You’re a Million”—The Raincoats

  “Window Shop for Love”—The Wipers

  “24”—Red House Painters

  “Our Secret”—Beat Happening

  “Mothra”—Spoke

  “37 Pushups”—Smog

  “Slugger”—Tsunami

  “Parasol”—Sea and Cake

  SIDE B

  “Facial Disobedience”—Radon

  “Image of Me”—Flying Burrito Brothers

  “Questioningly”—Ramones

  “Game of Pricks”—Guided by Voices

  “Twin Falls”—Built to Spill

  “Seven”—Team Dresch

  “Supreme Nothing”—Tiger Trap

  “Insomnia”—Versus

  “Port of Charleston”—Seam

  “Tragic Carpet Ride”—Polvo

  “Sorry”—Galaxie 500

  “Realize”—Codeine

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Special thanks to Jacob Knabb, Victor Giron, James Tadd Adcox, Leonard Vance, Naomi Huffman, and everyone at Curbside Splendor.

  Also, thanks to Ryan Duggan for his work on the cover, and Luke Chappelle, Tim Lampinen, Ben Lyon, and Marieke McClendon for their illustrations.

  Thank you to the following for their friendship, support, and inspiration during the years this novel was written: Scott Adams, Randy Albers, Dustin Atwater, Sean Atwater, Shawn Bailey (RIP), Sara Bassick, Seth Bohn, Julia Borcherts, Chris Campisi, Todd Campisi, Pete Capponi, Russ Calderwood, Justin Champlain, Chicago Reader—especially Tony Adler, Jerome Ludwig, Philip Montoro, and Miles Raymer, Chris Costello, Deborah Costello, Peter Costello, Brett Cross, everyone at Empty Bottle, Zach Dodson, Chris Erickson, Rich Evans, Matt Flaiz, David Gregorski, Jered Gummere, Brian Hieggelke from New City, everyone at The Hideout—especially Seth Dodson, Michael Slobach, and Katie and Tim Tuten, Bryan Hoben, Chuck Horne, Nathan Johnson, Spencer Johnson, Rob Karlic, Ryan King, Rick Kogan, Dan Lang, Mark MacKenzie, Jim McCann, Jonathan Messinger, Kevin Meyer, Kristy Moss, Carin Mrotz, Mike Mrotz, Nick Myers, Wendy Norton, Todd Novak, Outer Minds (Gigi Lira, Mary McKane, Zach Medearis, A-Ron Orlwoski), Brian Pineyro, Trent Purdy, Chris Rice, the Class of 1986 from St. Vincent de Paul Catholic School in Peoria, Illinois, Shame That Tune (Abraham Levitan, Jeanine O’Toole, Nick Rouley), Tony Sagger, Justin Santorsola, Marin Santorsola, Joel Shaugnessy, Ginna Springer, Matt Springer, John Sturdy, Nicole Torres, Wesley Torres, and Dan “The Fan” Urban.

  Boogie Dave was not modeled after any independent record store owner in Gainesville. —BC

  (Write your own book. Start your own band. Paint your own picture. Do it.)

  BRIAN COSTELLO

  is a writer, musician, and comedic performer living in Chicago, Illinois. He plays drums in the band Outer Minds, and co-hosts Shame That Tune, a monthly live game show. Losing in Gainesville is his second novel.

  ALSO FROM CURBSIDE SPLENDOR

  THE GAME WE PLAY

  Stories by Susan Hope Lanier

  “ The Game We Play is a triumph. An outstanding debut that should reaffirm our shared belief in the absolute necessity and imaginative possibility of the short story.” — Joe Meno, author of The Great Perhaps and Hairstyles of the Damned

  The ten riveting, emotionally complex stories in The Game We Play examine the decisions we make when our chocies are few
and courage is costly. Topics include a young couple facing disease and commitment with the same sharp fear, a teenager stealing from his girlfriend's mother's purse to help pay for her abortion, and a father making a split-second decision that puts his child's life at risk.

  THE OLD NEIGHBORHOOD

  A novel by Bill Hillmann

  “A raucous but soulful account of growing up on the mean streets of Chicago, and the choices kids are forced to make on a daily basis. This cool, incendiary rites of passage novel is the real deal.” — Irvine Welsh, author of Trainspotting

  The Old Neighborhood is the story of teenager Joe Walsh, the youngest in a large, mixed-race family living in Chicago. After Joe witnesses his older brother commit a gangland murder, his friends and family drag him down into a pit of violence that reaches a bloody impasse when his elder sister begins dating a rival gang member. The Old Neighborhood is both a brutal tale of growing up tough in a mean city, and a beautiful harkening to the heartbreak of youth.

  DOES NOT LOVE

  A novel by James Tadd Adcox

  “...Adcox is a writer who knows how to make the reader believe the impossible, in his capable hands, is always possible, and the ordinary, in his elegant words, is truly extraordinary.” — Roxane Gay, author of Bad Feminist and An Untamed State

  Set in an archly comedic alternate reality version of Indianapolis that is completely overrun by Big Pharma, James Tadd Adcox’s debut novel chronicles Robert and Viola’s attempts to overcome loss through the miracles of modern pharmaceuticals. Viola falls out of love following her body’s third “spontaneous abortion,” while her husband Robert becomes enmeshed in an elaborate conspiracy designed to look like a drug study.

  LET GO AND GO ON AND ON

  A novel by Tim Kinsella

  “I give Kinsella a five thousand star review for launching me deep into an alternate universe somewhere between fiction of the most intimate and biography of the most compelling. It’s like...a pitch-perfect fine flowing bellow, the sound of celestial molasses.” — Devendra Banhart

  Let Go and Go On and On is the story of obscure actress Laurie Bird. Told in a second-person narrative, blurring what little is known of her actual biography with her roles as a drifter in Two Lane Blacktop, a champion's wife in Cockfighter, and an aging rock star's Hollywood girlfriend in Annie Hall, the story unravels in Bird's suicide at the age of 26. Let Go and Go On and On explores our endless fascination with the Hollywood machine and the weirdness that is celebrity culture.

  WWW.CURBSIDESPLENDOR.COM

 

 

 


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