Day 10 – very serious book crimes + a very silly book heist

Pretty sure that’s not how it looked when I gave it to you

Two poems about very real crimes involving books today. One involving a book of my own (& generic crimes against books) & a Poetic Factoid about a very bungled book heist.

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rhyme & punishment (worse than death)

it’s a bit of a hot topic for me but
i’m not a big lender of books
most people (let’s be blunt) 
don’t know how to treat a book right
how to show it a good time
or at least  respect it in the morning 
if i really love a book & want others to too
where possible i’ll buy a second copy
designated purely for lending.

dog-earing  underlining   highlighting
note making in the margins
creasing (or cracking) the spines 
to the point pages are falling out
dropping it in the bath  or the sea 
getting so much sand in it we could build a castle
pages torn out  a bacon bookmark 
discovered greasy in chapter 33  all things 
that would cancel your gareth library card.

i don’t buy the kaka that a dog-eared
battered  beaten up  creased book 
is like the wrinkled face of someone 
who’s lived a full-on life & keeps on smiling
BS  it’s tomestic violence pure & simple.

all of which is reported purely to say this —
don’t think i’ve forgotten Anon Miti
(if indeed that is your real name)
how i leant you a copy of A Trip to the Stars
that you kept for ages  forever saying you’d 
return it  yet always conveniently “forgetting”
& when you did the book was so beaten up 
had green tea poured over half of it
& been used to put out a small brush fire
without technically burning it as some
of the less pleasant folks in history have done

— & yet this was still only the second 
worst thing you ever did to me.

*****

Day 10 Factoid – a pretty slapstick book crime

Special Collections: A Plan to Fail

four freshman friends while on orientation 
of Transylvania University, Kentucky
conclude rare books worth millions 
of dollars are resting in the college
library virtually unsecured
                                             a whacky 
heist  is plotted involving fake beards
& gray wigs  & step by step instructions
involving code names as if from a movie
Mr Green on lookout. Mr Yellow & Mr Pink 
proceed to the Rare Book Room where Mr Yellow 
“brings the elderly librarian down hard & fast” 
with a stun gun. Mr Pink then lets Mr Black
in to help grab the loot before escaping 
via the back exit
                          the plan almost immediately
goes very wrong  causing them to abandon 
many books (the 7 rare Audubons are 
“too heavy to carry”)  
                                   yet they still manage 
to flee the bungled scene  with several books 
total value: three quarters of a million bucks 

they contact Christie’s (using the same fake
email address they set up to contact the library
— & one of their actual cell phone numbers!)
for an appraisal rationalising  “they won’t 
suspect anything cos no one would bring 
in stolen books”
                            Christie’s did in fact 
suspect something
                                & they all spent 7 years in gaol

Day 28 — hard to take it seriously + sand

Working on poems about each of the IPCC Assessment Reports as well as the various Protocols that have been signed. This shows how unserious some of these conversations really are. There was much discussion over a single sentence. The balance of evidence suggests human influence on global climate. The debate over this sentence lasted well over several hours & various alternatives were proposed. This poem is non-factual fly-on-the-wall dialogue of that event.

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IPCC Madrid 1995 — the Saudis take the piss

Saudi Arabia : I’m sorry, “balance of evidence” is far too strong.

Suggestion : “appreciable” 
Saudi Arabia : No.

Suggestion : “detectable” 
Saudi Arabia : No.

Suggestion : “measurable” 
Saudi Arabia : No.

Suggestion : “noticeable perceptible observable” 
Saudi Arabia : No. No. No. 

Suggestion : You sure you’re not just being difficult because your vast oil reserves are threatened by action on Climate Change. 
Saudi Arabia :

Suggestion : “quantifiable” 
Saudi Arabia : No.

pause

Suggestion : “unmistakable” 
Saudi Arabia : Now, you’re just mocking us.

UK delegate : “discernible”

spontaneous applause

Saudi Arabia : That will be acceptable.

“The balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate.” 

FFS. Discernible has connotations of barely perceptible. Appreciable on the other hand is large or important enough to be noticed

And, this was for the summary. The bit the politicians & journalists read. Not the detailed stuff the scientists engaged in. 

And so, by relentless tiny paper cuts, the world burns.

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Day 28 — TIL about sand

a sandalous praxis

despite boasting the world’s largest driest sand desert
Saudi Arabia imports Aussie sand to fuel its construction craze 

— perhaps we should’ve sanctioned our sand sales
till the Saudi spokesman saw sense (by the sea shore)

Day 28 – Sand Trek

Today was about recuperation. I didn’t realise how stressed I’d become, so most of it was spent reading & catching up on some binge tv.

About 10 o’clock, the dawg & I went for a moonlit beach walk. Once we got home, this came out. & although it’s not strictly one of the Word Games (do I even have to use them now my Residency is finished?) weirdly, last week I read several chapters of Sand: A Journey through Science & the Imagination by Michael Welland, so there is a tentative link.

sand

love  :  taking sand … into the house … on my soles … fugue of beach … summer counterpoint … on this cool … autumn moonlight  :  the thought … of this sandalful … of golden grain … an ankledust’s worth … of microscopic rocks … fleeing the sea … to shipwreck … on my carpet … makes me feel … more connected  :  to everything

microsandCROP