(Girly Poem Alert. Look Away.)

Premenstrual Syndrome
– by Sharon H. Nelson

This is the time of the month when you find

your husband’s a fool,

regret having children, wish

you had studied music, architecture, law, anything but how

to get the potatoes, green beans, roast, and rolls

all hot and on the table together.

This is the time of the month

when your patience has shrunk

to the size of a pea.

This is the time of the month you discover:

the house you live in is unsuitable:

you’d rather throw out the dishes than wash them;

you’ve always detested ironing.

This is the time of the month

when things you usually overlook

irritate you to screaming;

when things you don’t usually notice

take on proportions that drive you to frenzy.

This is the time of the month

when you stomp

out of the house,

drive aimlessly round the city,

just to get away from the noise,

the electricity created by lives

rubbing up against each other,

and also,

to remember

the feel

of your own flesh

on your own bones.

This is the time of the month

when everyone’s wary,

when they smile slyly and shake their heads,

as if only they knew the name

of the dis-ease that afflicts you.

This is the time of the month

when doctors are kind to you,

prescribe tablets and capsules and liquids and rest,

are in sympathy

with those who must

live with this anguish, this tension,

this unfortunate physiological response to a genetic program,

that seems to provoke

witchery, bitchery, shadow, and shades in otherwise perfectly respectable folk.

What if

this is the time of the month

when your perceptions are sharpest?

What if

this is the time of the month when

the illusions you hug round you,

warm and comforting and thick as a rug,

flap in the chill wind of seeing

what actually is?

What if

this is the time of the month when

the normal, the usual, are revealed

as the lies you tell yourself

three hundred and thirty days of the year?

What if

this is the time of the month when

the tears you haven’t time for well up, overflow,

and you know, as surely as you know

what time of the month it is,

that your husband’s a fool,

you regret having children,

you wish to study music?

What if?

Cybils, Silliness & Stories


Ah, that Alfred. Loves a good book, that man. This is your Cybils Reminder! Things have changed this year, and the nomination time is quick-quick-short! One book per category, and it must be published in 2008. There, that’s not so tough to remember, is it?

Via Book Moot, more Heroic Tales of the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature. Our man has finally gotten his medal — which he will show to you if you even are on the same side of the street as he is — and recently he went to Washington to …fix things, and read bits from his autobiography, Knucklehead.

Operatives from both the Children’s Book Council and the Library of Congress had asked Ambassador Scieszka to perhaps refrain from reading certain chapters of Knucklehead. Chapters like the one titled Crossing Swords, a meditation on going to the bathroom with all five brothers, together, at the same time.

Ah, yes. Since he couldn’t READ that piece, he described it. To the President. ‘Cause he’s that “funny dude,” and he had a Job To Do.

Meanwhile, if you missed our man’s Ambassadorial efforts last summer you must catch up.. Ambassador Jon — blazing a trail for Young People’s Literature and saving it from anything remotely approaching seriousness.

Many people know that Neil Gaiman has been touring for The Graveyard Book, and has been reading bits from it. You may also know that he’s been reading a full chapter at each stop, and by the time he gets home, he will have read the whole book aloud. And now all chapters thus far are on video. You can listen to that delicious voice read and watch… *cough* Erm, yes, you can now watch Mr. Gaiman reading. Tip of the hat to SF Signal.