105 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
105 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
A Relevant Excerpt from "The Snarkout Boys and the Avocado of
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Death", by Daniel Manus Pinkwater.
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"Walter! Come see what I've got!" said my father.
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What he had was an avocado. Whenever he brings one home, which is fairly
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often, he makes a big fuss about it.
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"Looky, Walter, an avocado! What do you think of it?" My father is the only
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person I know who says "looky!" He also says "lookit!"
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What I think of avocados is this: On principle, I do not eat green, slimy
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things, My mother doesn't eat them either. She says she doesn't like the taste
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of avocado. That's good enough for me. If there's any question at all about
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the taste, I'm leaving those suckers alone.
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My father loves them. Every time he brings one home, he acts like it's a
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three-hundred-pound sailfish he's caught singlehanded, or an elk he brought
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down with a bow and arrow.
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He's really enthusiastic about avocados. He skins them and digs out that
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oversized, stupid-looking pit, and then mashes up the slimy green part with a
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fork. Then he puts lemon juice and vinegar, salt and pepper, and powdered
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garlic and paprika on it. Of you have to go to all that trouble to disguise
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the flavor, why bother, I say.
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Then he makes a speech about it. "My goodness, this is one fine avocado," he
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says. "You have to know how to choose them. You have to look for the ones
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that are black and blasted looking. The pretty green ones aren't fit to eat.
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The funny thing is that they reduce the price of the really scrumptious ones
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just because they're ugly. I guess they want to sell them before they rot
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completely."
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My father isn't a bad guy, in my opinion. There are just a few subjects,
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like avocados, on which he's irrational.
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My mother had found another tuna-casserole recipe. This is something of a
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hobby with her. She's constantly finding these recipes in women's magazines.
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She tries another one at least once a week. They all taste like tuna fish.
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Usually the have things in them you wouldn't expect to eat with tuna fish -
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like grapes, hot- pickle slices, fried Chinese noodles.
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"I hope you will appreciate this, kiddo," my mother says, "seeing that your
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mother took a healthy slice out of her finger whilst chopping up the
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ingredients." She usually manages to injure herself at least once while
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preparing a meal. She has a Band-Aid on her finger.
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"Eat up, champ," she says. "It's American." My mother has an idea that tuna
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caught in Japanese waters is tainted with radioactivity, so she always shops
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for brands canned within the continental United States. Even Canadian brands
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are out. "They're too chummy with the Commonists," she says. She calls
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Communists "Commonists."
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If you were blind, or only knew my mother from talking with her on the
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telephone, you'd probably think she was about six feet tall...and maybe two
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hundred and fifty pounds in weight. It's her voice, and the way she talks.
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She sounds like she ought to be a big, slow- moving person, maybe a little
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sloppy. Actually, she's small and nervous, always well dressed, and a chain
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smoker. Once my father and I have started eating our meal, she brings a little
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ashtray to the table and puffs a cigarette between bites of food. This is far
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more disgusting than avocado eating. If I can possibly get out of it, I try
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not to have meals with my parents. I've complained to them about various
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nauseating things they do, but it doesn't do any good. "Everybody has a
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family," my mother says. I don't know what that means.
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Our apartment is new. We are the first people ever to live in it. When we
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first moved into the building, it wasn't quite finished. The whole place
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smelled of paint, and there was brown paper on the floors in the elevator and
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the hallways. In those days, we had to take our shoes off outside the the
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apartment door so we wouldn't track plaster dust onto the carpet.
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Come to think of it, I've never walked on the floor in our living room.
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There are those clear plastic runners my mother put down, making a kind of path
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through the living room to the dining alcove. The furniture has plastic
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covers, too. My mother says that when you decorate with light colors, you have
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to be careful. Nobody ever sits in the living room, except when my parents
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have company - and then it has to be company wearing suits and ties, and fancy
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dresses. When they expect company like that, my father puts on a suit and tie,
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and my mother puts on a fancy dress and rolls up the plastic runners, and the
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all sit in the living room. I get called in to be introduced to the company.
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I always stand at the edge of the living-room carpet. The company says, "I
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understand you're a fine young man," or, "He looks like a football player. Are
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you a football player?" I'm at least a foot too short to be a football player.
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Besides which, I hate football.
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"Yes," I say, "I'm a football player." This happens -having company in the
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living room - about twice a year. The rest of the time, nobody sits there.
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When regular people - relatives and such - come over, everybody sits in the
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den. The den has a linoleum floor. Sometimes my father sits around in his
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undershirt. When he's feeling funny, he gets Nosferatu, my parakeet, and gets
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him to sit on his head. Apparently, Nosferatu likes him. He'll sit on my
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father's head for an hour.
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-=End
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-=Typed in by Mr. Pez for about an hour.
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Want to call the Perfect World? 914-666-3997?
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Or the Works? 914-238-8195?
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