When I hike to the end of a long trail and see a beautiful sunset or a sparkling river, a single thought always occurs to me: did I turn off the oven?
My friends have dragged me out for hikes along the woodland wilds of America. They’re trying to get themselves in shape and to get me out of my desk chair.
I like my desk chair. It has adapted to my contours. If I keep hiking, soon I’ll have no contours left. Plus, I think better on my seat than on my feet, so I don’t see why I have to get off one and onto the other.
Writing and hiking aren’t so different. One puts you under strain, makes you breathe fast, and causes beads of sweat to pop out on your forehead. The other requires boots.
The only thing that would get me to willingly leave my chair, apart from a cheese sampler, would probably be a book tour.
Not that I’ve ever been invited to go on one. There’s some sort of arbitrary requirement about needing to write a book in the first place.
I don’t think that’s necessary. Nobody actually reads what the visiting author has put out. Nobody actually reads, period.
If I said I was the person who wrote “Hamlet,” or “The Iliad,” or — why should I be modest? — “Green Eggs and Ham,” would anyone really check?
Even if anyone did, would anyone be seriously inconvenienced by the fact that I am not Dr. Seuss?
Anyone may be a go-getter, but they sure sound like a whiner to me.
Despite the fact that the last time I attended a book fair was when my age had fewer than two digits, I bet that the people who go haven’t changed much.
People don’t want to buy reading material when they go to a book fair. All they want is to get an autograph and one of those finger pointer toys that are sold for a dollar.
I never got one of those. I mean the finger pointers. I never got autographs either, but I was more bummed out about the toys.
Copyright 2024 Alexandra Paskhaver, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.