Land Cruiser windows are open and the top
is raised. We’ve started on our morning game run into Serengeti National Park.
Prosper Huale, our driver, negotiates ruts, small boulders; his radio spouts
Swahili and static. Someone’s seen a leopard in the rocks. Flies come in.
Tsetse flies are larger than familiar house flies, and their wings, instead of
being held slightly out, are laid straight back over their bodies. Tsetses make
a buzz; they land on necks, arms, cheeks; passengers swat. Prosper pulls out
his fly whisk, made from a giraffe tail, and passes it around. I decline; one
of my African trip goals was to get bitten by a tsetse fly. Now it’s there, on
the back of my left hand. I slowly reach for the camera with my right hand as
it sinks its proboscis into my skin. Blood starts to flow. I see red in its
feeding tube. Luckily the road is reasonably smooth. I take picture after
picture. One of them turns out to be perfect.
I hope that Friday Coffee is a digital version of the conversations, with and among students, I've heard in the past 20 years at various coffee houses. If you want to contribute, feel free!
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Excerpt from OUTWITTING COLLEGE PROFESSORS, 4th Ed
The essay test (either long or short answer):
(1) Work on your penmanship. Practice writing legibly. You
may be perfectly capable of reading your own handwriting, but that remarkable
skill doesn’t mean that anyone else can read it. Poor handwriting is probably
the source of more lost points on essay exams than any other factor. Profs just
get sick and tired of trying to decipher scrawl. Often, however, if you’ve
answered the first question well, they’ll skip through the later scrawl and
give you the benefit of the doubt. But don’t count on this lucky event
happening; the first question might be the one you know least about, and in
that case, the scrawl-skipping will work to your distinct disadvantage.
As a rule of thumb, some perfect
stranger should be able to read your handwriting as easily as he or she reads a
printed page. Always (always!) use dark ink—black or dark blue—or if a pencil
is required, a dark and sharpened lead. Your letters should be large enough to
read at arm’s length. Never trust a college prof to have eagle-eye vision (or
an owl’s hearing, either), especially if he or she is over the age of 50.
(2) Work on your grammar.
Whatever you do, do not make any of the truly common mistakes made by
college students (see also the next chapter on papers). The truly common mistakes are:
a. Using “it’s” when you
actually mean “its” or vice versa.
b. Using “alot” when you
actually mean “a lot”.
c. Using “there” when you
actually mean “their” or vice versa.
d. Using the wrong verb form. If
you were born in the United States, for example, there is no excuse for using
“went” when you mean “gone” either in writing or in speech.
e. Using the incorrect
possessive form of any word, for example “cars” when you actually mean “car’s.”
This list could be much longer,
but I believe you get the drift. Poor grammar will hurt you not only on the
next exam, but also on the next job interview, the next potential promotion,
and the next time you have to accomplish some real business in the real world,
whatever that business might be, including contracts, agreements involving
money, pre-nuptial agreements, divorce proceedings, complaints to a school
board about how your child is being taught, you name it. Use correct grammar.
Alternatively, change your name to one that sounds exceedingly foreign so that
the person reading your writing believes that English is your second language
and you’ve just started learning it. Then you’ll be admired instead of
ridiculed.
(3) Practice writing in complete sentences. Failure to write in
complete sentences is probably the second most common source of lost points on
essay exams mainly because such failure suggests to a grader that you are not
well educated and thus don’t know much about anything, including the subject
over which you’re being tested. You may also have been told to write in
complete sentences, so read the directions and follow them before you start
your essay. If you can easily generate sentences that are grammatically correct
and at least 15 words long, then you have taken a major step toward getting
better grades on all essay exams no matter what the subject.
(4) Practice writing short paragraphs in which there is both an idea
and a fact to support the idea. This essay technique is usually difficult
for students to learn, but it’s the technique that profs use all the time in
their own work. So if you can master it, then you’ve made some major progress
toward actually getting better grades, especially if you combine this technique
with the above advice. Beyond these four behaviors, only true knowledge and
understanding of the subject matter stands between you and better grades. Now
for the most difficult of all exams:
The multiple choice test:
Buy OUTWITTING COLLEGE PROFESSORS, 4th Ed., on all e-readers and as a nice gift paperback from amazon.
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Excerpt from CONVERSATIONS BETWEEN GOD AND SATAN
“You
know, God, you’re great at creating stuff,” said Satan, washing down the last
bite of her big chocolate macadamia nut cookie, “but you’re not very good at
fixing stuff.”
And when
Satan said that, then God thought back over all the thousands of paintings and
sculpture and pottery and drawings He’d made while He was Picasso and all the
concertos He’d written while he was Mozart and realized that Satan was probably
right. Never once had He ever gone back and changed anything to make it
“better.” He’d just made His pieces, then stepped back and let them “live,”
which was exactly the same thing He’d done with all the planets in the Universe
that had life, as well as the trillions that didn’t, and the trillions of stars
that had no planets, the stars that were now dead, and the great clouds of
intergalactic dust.
God could
not remember a single time that He’d ever gone back and changed anything in
order to make it “better.” Instead, He’d just created it then gone on to
another project and let His creations live out their natural lives, whether
those be of a mouse about to be eaten by some owl or a giant star evolving into
a black hole. Nobody ever called Him God the Fixer of What He’d Made Imperfect
in the First Place. Instead everybody called Him just God the Creator. So now
He began to worry a little bit about the Parallel Universes that He was
thinking about creating, and wondered if Satan might be right about those, too,
if they ever came to pass.
“I get up
every morning early and try to create stuff,” said Satan, “but then I have to
go back and fix it. I got pages and pages of stuff like that. They’re called
Really Shitty First Drafts in this book I was reading about how to write books.
Then I spend all night editing them, and moving sentences around here and
there. Because I say I’m a writer, people think I’m a creative force, but
really I’m only a fixer. That’s what I spend most of my time doing, fixing
Really Shitty First Drafts. You’re a creator because you spend so much time
building stuff. But I’m trying to be a creator and you’re sitting there
wondering why all your creations need fixing.”
“There’s
just something . . . something so incredibly satisfying about making a piece of
art,” said God. Of course He wasn’t thinking only about “art”—literally—but
about everything someone might call “art,” for example shrews and begonias and
mosquitoes and paramecia and planets and solar systems and globular galactic clusters
that gave out highly periodic bursts of strange radiation.
“There’s
also something extremely satisfying about fixing things,” countered Satan. “I
mean, look at all the stuff I could fix if people would just let me do it.”
“Like
what?” asked God.
“Well,
for starters,” replied Satan, “like the environments of all those millions of
planets where You have dumb people reproducing like crazy and tearing the
places up at the rate of 50 acres a minute, or whatever units they’re using to
measure their space that ones who believe only in You think it’s okay to do
that because You’re going to come take them to Heaven some day and they don’t
need to take care of the places they live.”
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Excerpt from DINKLE'S LIFE: A SPIRITUAL BIOGRAPHY (the ultimate ghost story for our times!)
An excerpt from DINKLE’S LIFE: A
SPIRITUAL BIOGRAPHY
Strolling,
thinking, analyzing, Dinkle chooses a brick-paved walk through the older part
of campus. Hell to be in this mood. He kicks at twigs. What could be more
dangerous than an idle mind, especially one with nagging unfinished business?
He savors the knowledge that what he’d done before with spare time—the list of
his great works, culminating with The
Nature of God. He frowns at the suspicion that he cannot top his own
performance. Not that he considered it so grand, of course, to be the one who
writes a classic, mind-bending, incendiary bomb too hot for libraries. Did
Charles Darwin know what he’d done? Karl Marx? They may have thought something
at the time, or wished, whispers LPD, out loud; but did they know, actually
know what they’d accomplished, as he did? Probably not, he concludes; they
could not have known.
The mockingbird
flies to the top of a small, newly planted pecan tree and with hardly a break
in its rhythm dumps a stream of notes down Dinkle’s back. For the first time in
my life, he says to the bird, I’m stumped. Hands in pockets, he looks back into
the Wichita Mountains. At fifty-five, Theory of Complex Systems having done
its nasty work, freeing innumerable patterns from their prisons of chaos; Mystic Experience Correlates having
hypnotized the daytime television crowd; the theoretical portions of Subatomic Sociology having destroyed the
few remaining hunter-gatherer societies; and The Nature of God having . . . having . . . well, now just what did
The Nature of God accomplish?
Nothing. Wait. It had, so far, done something no other power in the universe
could do: It shut down Lonnie Paul Dinkle’s mind and put him to physical work
for a year.
Ants scurry on
the bricks, a mound of finely chewed soil marking their origin. Dinkle stops,
digs in various pockets for his glasses, finds them in the left rear. He’d sat
on them. And on his cigarettes. Now which is worse? he wonders. It depends on
whether one wants to smoke or study ants, he concludes. A sudden pain sweeps
through his forehead, down his neck, and into the region of his chest. It
happens every time he gets down on his knees. Luck I don’t have much need for
prayer, he says to the ants. The glasses are too dirty and bent for use. He
sits back on his feet, a giant doughy groundhog, and starts bending the frames
and polishing the lenses on his shirt.
“Hello, Dr.
Dinkle!” He looks up at a bare leg. “I loved your speech!”
“Did you
understand it?”
“As well as I’m
supposed to at this stage of my life.”
“And your
parents?”
“We enjoyed it,
too.” Dark trousers, wingtips, stood to the left; a slightly slit skirt and
high heels to the right.
“Thanks!”
“Sorry to
disturb you. Say ‘hello’ to the ants, Dr. Dinkle.”
“Congratulations!”
The three pairs of legs move out of his field of vision as he gets down on his
elbows. He sees organization, communication, specialization, life, death,
territoriality, defense, agriculture, architecture, bustle, a society that
outlives its individual members, all within inches of his face. He struggles
back to his feet, dizzy for a moment from the effort, puts his glasses back
into the left rear pocket, and looks back toward the mountains, over the city
that lay beside a river, then down at the ants, then back at the city.
(DINKLE’S LIFE is available on all
e-readers.)
Sunday, May 10, 2015
For Mothers' Day, an excerpt from BERNICE AND JOHN
Here are three excerpt from BERNICE AND JOHN: FINALLY MEETING YOUR PARENTS WHO DIED A LONG TIME AGO. The excerpts are from different parts of the book, but they all deal with Lillian Bernice Locke Janovy, who died in 1962.
Lillian Bernice Locke Janovy may
have received enormous pleasure, even an all-consuming happiness, from reading
Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead in 1944,
but most of that pleasure and happiness came, I know, from her appreciation for
the art of writing instead of from Rand’s philosophy regardless of how much she
may have agreed with it. She knew what was happening to her as she read, and she
knew why it was happening, and from that knowledge came enjoyment. The
philosophy was important, even important enough to be a guide to one’s personal
life, but it was also always secondary to the art. The words were the art, the
art that could capture a person’s attention and mentally transport that
individual into settings and circumstances that he or she would never have
access to otherwise. But in all honesty, in the opening years of the
Twenty-first Century, my widescreen Mitsubishi in the basement accomplishes the
same thing as Ayn Rand. With nothing more than a few punches of my finger, in
the course of an hour I’m on the green with Tiger Woods, participating in an
armed robbery, solving an old murder case, dunking a basketball against the
Chicago Bulls, cooking up a Cajun storm, having an affair with some elegant
blond, or completing a long pass into the Pittsburgh Steelers’ end zone. But
Johnny, you don’t have to think about
any of it, Bernice would say were she sitting in her wheelchair beside me. Then
she would pick up her book. The message would be clear: when all you have is
words on a page, then you have to think
about your journey.
.
.
.
By the time an artist finally
painted John
Janovy Petroleum Geologist on the 721 Hales Building office door,
Bernice could clearly see the end of her life, could probably feel the tumors,
so she did what any terminally ill person probably ought to do: she decided to
go to college. At the time, daily family events strung out the clock, hid the
historical perspective that could, in turn, reveal the personality. Fifty years
is barely enough time to gain much historical perspective on a nation’s acts
and their consequence, but it is plenty of time to compress a single human life
into its defining moments, erasing all the breakfasts, lunches, dinners, the
Joseph McCarthy hearings, “I Love Lucy” and Ed Sullivan shows, and Ayn Rand
novels, or at least painting them into a faded background landscape. I don’t
know which of her doctor’s visits was the one in which she finally received her
death sentence. But I can picture the scene clearly; although admittedly
fictitious, it is clearly in character—the truth without being literally true.
“You have a year, maybe two, to
live, Mrs. Janovy,” says the oncologist.
“Oh,” says Bernice, drawing her
gown up around her neck, looking at him in the same way she’d studied all the
other humans who’d entered the range of her x-ray vision, “then maybe I should
go to college.”
The most accessible
post-secondary institution was Central State College—now University of Central
Oklahoma—in Edmond. Edmond exists in its late 1950s form because of the West
Edmond Field, an enormous mineral resource that fuels the financial careers of
a generations’ lawyers, “land-men,” and gamblers, not literal gamblers, of
course, but people betting lots of money on what they’ll find in rocks they
can’t see except through lines on a map, lines drawn by people like Bernice’s
husband. At Central State she will study English, read literature, and maybe
write some papers. Decades after her death, in a casual conversation about
Edmond, someone makes a remark about her driving. When the doctor tells you
exactly how long you have to live, suddenly speed limits disappear. Bernice, it
seems, sentenced to a slow, degrading, painful, death at an early age gets into
her car and drives like the wind . . . to Edmond . . . to college . . . to
study literature.
.
.
.
Were she alive, Bernice from her
wheelchair, and from the depths of her mind, would bring a library’s worth of
voraciously consumed literature to bear on the great Third Millennial
conflicts.
“What makes them think they can
change people who are so different from us?” she would ask. Last month’s issues
of Harper’s Magazine and Atlantic Monthly would be lying on her
lap, just as fifty years earlier Saturday
Evening Post had been lying around for her children to read. Stanley
Karnov’s Vietnam: A History would be
on her night stand, a card marking a page. She would be looking both at and
through her visitor, assuming that this individual had read up on global
issues, assuming that this person knew as much as she did about history,
language, and all those human traits learned best from experience but more
pleasantly from literature—deceit, duplicity, provinciality, ideology, and
belief, the last as capable of metastasizing and killing as the cancerous cells
spreading unchecked through her body. “And what have you been doing today?”
would be her second question, expecting the answer to involve some kind of
intellectual activity, some kind of effort to sustain one’s individuality,
one’s personal dignity, in a world that seemed determined to strip her of hers.
BERNICE AND JOHN is available as an e-book on all readers.
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