I heard J. Robert Lennon's prose piece "The Accursed Items" on the recent This American Life and greatfully was not the only person to appreciate it with the desire for a transcription...
Here's a copy of underthebridge's transcription:
A bottle of pain reliever, brought along on a business trip, that proves, at the moment it is most needed, to be filled not with pain reliever, but with buttons.
Sneakers, hanging from the power line, with one half of a boy's broken glasses stuffed into each toe.
A Minnie Mouse doll, you found by the roadside, and brought home, intending to run it through the washer, and give it to your infant son, but which looked no less forlorn after washing, and was abandoned on a basement shelf, only to be found by your son eight years later, and mistaken for a once-loved toy that he himself had forsaken, leading to his first real experience of guilt and shame.
Love letters, seized by federal agents in an unsuccessful drug raid, tested in a lab for traces of cocaine, exhaustively read for references to drug contacts, sealed in a labeled plastic bag, and packed along with a plush bear holding a plastic red heart, into an unlabeled brown cardboard box, itself, loaded into a truck with hundreds of similar boxes, when the police headquarters was moved, and forever lost.
Nude polaroids of a fifteen-year-old female cousin.
An icicle, preserved in the freezer by a child, which, when discovered months later, is thought to be evidence of a problem with the appliance, leading to a costly and inconclusive diagnostic exam by a repairman.
A gay porno magazine, thrown onto a ball field from a car window, and perused with great interest by the adolescent members of both teams, two of whom meet in the woods some weeks later, to reproduce the tableaus they have seen, leading to a gradual realization that they are in fact gay, an incident, the memory of which causes one of the two, when he is well into a life that is disappointing emotionally, professionally, and sexually, to fling a gay porno magazine out his car window, as he passes an occupied ball field, on his way to what will be an unsuccessful job interview.
A biscuit, crushed into the slush of a Kentucky Fried Chicken parking lot.
The orange tobbaggen, whisking her to her death.
A resume, that portrays its author as utterly unqualified for the position for which she has applied, but which, because it smells good, leads its reader, a desperate, experientially undernourished middle-manager at an internet-based retail corporation, to invite her into the office for an interview, which, although further portrays the applicant's complete unsuitability for the job, provides the middle-manager with a physical impression to complement the good smell, which impression is intensely exciting, forcing him to hire her as a supplemental secretary, much to the bafflement, chagrin, and eventual disgust of his extent secretary, who, during her employer's lunch hour, removes the resume in question from his files, and personally delivers it to the CEO, and is with the CEO when he barges into the middle-manager's office, and finds the unsuitable supplemental secretary standing beside him, crying silently with her dress half-off, while he sits in his reclining office chair, sweating profusely, and holding a plastic letter opener in a threatening manner.
The houseplant, that will not die.
Fifty pairs of old blue jeans, found at second-hand clothing stores, and brought at great expense, on a trip to eastern Europe and the former Soviet republics, where rumor had it, old blue jeans could be sold for a lot of money, but where this was no longer true, as so many previous visitors had heard the same rumor, and done the same thing, creating a glut of old blue jeans, which were not even all that stylish there anymore, and causing the entire trip to be ruined by the necessity of hauling around these huge suitcases full of other people's jeans, which smelled kind of bad, as if those other people were currently wearing them.
The urine sample, produced for the cancelled doctors appointment, and forgotten in the back of the fridge.
My eyeglasses, covered with a thickening layer of dust that I never seem to notice, and simply adjust to, until, at last, I clean them out of habit, and discover a new world, sharp and full of detail, whose novelty and clarity I forget about completely within fifteen minutes.
Your signature, rendered illegible by disease.
I rarely listen to NPR, but my girlfriend turned on the station as we drove back from a vacation last Sunday. There was a comedic program with Paula Poundstone and Brian Unger on that was quite entertaining so I didn't mind listening.
We stopped for lunch at a Cracker Barrel that was packed to the point of claustrophobia, so we had to wait a while. By the time we finished eating at headed back out on the road, the excerpt from The Accursed Items was playing. I hadn't heard the title or author, but was really fascinated as the baseball field porn magazine story was read. They were just the oddest thing these little stories. I needed to hear it again.
We got home and I tried to find the segment on TAL's website to no avail. That day's show wasn't in the archives yet. When it finally became available it wasn't there, and the theme was family. I e-mailed them with no luck, and used the search to try to find it, but struck out again. Finally I saw the episode Plan B and gave that a try. It was on there! Now I've heard the whole thing, and it is brilliant, and weird and very entertaining. Now I'm off to try to find the original short story in it's entirety in print.
Posted by: John Mosley at February 2, 2005 2:51 PMYou've probably already found this, but McSweeney's has it in issue 5. McSweeney's is great, but I can never figure out the organization on their Web site. And the author has a plentitude (hey, gotta use those word-a-day words when talking about an author) of information on his site.
This American Life is such a solid show. I can't tell whether it's the random subject matter (probably somewhat) or the format (that too) or Ira Glass's style (sure, why not) that hooks me. It's one of those shows that makes you interested in subjects you're otherwise not interested in. And like most every NPR show, they archive everything.