I usually have at least two books going at once. But lately I've been in a reading funk, seems like I haven't read a good one in weeks.
Blame it on "The Wire." What a show. I might have gone my whole life without watching it -- never saw it when it was running on HBO, and it's been off the air for months. But Mike, the video store guy, told me about it -- said I absolutely had to see it, said it was the best show ever.
So I rented a DVD and after that I couldn't stop watching it. I'd be renting DVDs every other night. Mike must a made a fortune off of me. I was like a junkie, staying up to all hours, watching up to two or three episodes a night. Ran through five years worth of episodes in no time. Finished with a bang -- four shows in one night. Didn't get to bed `til five in the morning. Woke up in a daze, like I'd been on a drinking binge.
I say this all to let you know that when the night began I thought: Tonight's the night I read a book. But, you know how it goes -- once you're hooked on the tube it's hard to get unhooked. I remember Game Five's on ABC -- Lakers versus Orlando.
I turn the tube to Channel Seven. But Channel Seven doesn't work. Instead, a sign comes on: "Weak Signal."
"Weak Signal?" I mutter to myself. "What the fu...."
I surf around -- Channels Five, Nine and 32. They all work. All the funky little VHS stations work. I go back to Seven. "Weak Signal."
It must be that analog thing. I got the converter box 60 million years ago and Merlin -- our friend, the computer genius -- installed it. It had been working. But now it's not.
I turn off the TV and stare at the blank screen. I'm hoping that if I stare at it long enough, it will fix itself.
I turn it on. "Weak Signal."
I call up to the stairs to my wife. "Hey! The TV doesn't work...."
Silence. She's got the radio playing. So I yell louder: "THE TV DOESN'T WORK!"
"What?" she yells back.
"It's that analog thing," I yell.
"You have to reload it," yells my younger daughter.
I'm stunned that she of all people would have an opinion on this. "How do you know?" I yell.
"I heard it on TV...."
I look at the screen. "Did you say to unplug it?" I yell.
"No, reload...."
"Reload?"
"Yes...."
"Reload?" I mutter to myself. "What the hell does that mean?"
I look at the TV changer. I look at the screen. It's like I'm expecting one or the other to tell me what to do.
"How do you reload it?" I yell up the stairs.
"Call Merlin," yells my wife.
I find the phone. I call Merlin. He's not in. I leave a message, something like: "Merlin, you won't believe this, but the TV doesn't work. My daughter says to reload it. But I don't know what that means...."
I hang up. I try again. "Weak Signal." What a joke. It's bad enough I can't watch basketball most of the year cause I don't have cable. Now I can't even watch it when it's on Free TV. They made such a big deal about how getting rid of analog was gonna improve our lives, but they somehow managed to make things worse.
I throw the TV changer on the table, flop on the couch, and lie still for a moment. I hear my daughter and wife moving about upstairs. I casually look to my left and lying on the living room table -- beneath an old, unread copy of Time Magazine -- is a book: "City of Thieves" by David Benioff.
I remember buying it weeks ago on an impulse. Forgot all about it while I was hooked on "The Wire." I pick it up and start reading. It's about these two young men -- one's only 17 -- wandering through Leningrad in the winter of 1942 when the Nazis are shelling the hell out of their city. You figured it'd be ghastly depressing. But Benioff's got a dark sense of humor. The two boys haven't eaten a decent meal in weeks. They're both constipated. They have this one exchange:
"`When was the last time you had a shit?' Kolya asked me, abruptly.
"`I don't know. A week ago?'
"`It's been nine days for me. I've been counting. Nine days! When it finally happens, I'll have a big party and invite the best-looking girls from the university.'"
I laugh out loud when I read that bit. There are few things in life as pleasurable as reading a passage that makes you laugh out loud. I keep reading. I forget where I am. Time goes by. I'm a hundred pages or so into the story. It occurs to me -- the game must be over. I wonder who won. I click on the TV. "Weak Signal."
I know my wife can fix it -- she's freaking genius with this sort of thing (remind me to tell you about the time she fixed my ex-brother-in-law's vacuum cleaner). But it will probably be months before she gets around to taking the time to figure it out. Oh, well, we'll survive.
I return to my book. We're better off without this shit anyway....
Showing posts with label City of Thieves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label City of Thieves. Show all posts
Monday, June 15, 2009
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