Wesley Tickle's 20th Century Bookstore
By sean mcnulty
- 2164 reads
Wesley arrived to find the lock jammed with glue again. Third time this month he had to stand outside waiting for the locksmith while passers-by eyed him with contempt, some unable to hide their glee at the circumstance he found himself in. The literature he sold was not as tolerated as it had been in the past. Each day brought a new spell of paranoia and fear.
Finally the locksmith came and let Wesley into his store.
--It’s a bad business you’re in these days, the locksmith told him. Go digital. It’s safer in the long run.
Inside, the books were just as nervous as Wesley. On a display of classic novels at the front, two books that by sheer coincidence both began with the letter L, Lady Chatterley’s Lover and Last Exit to Brooklyn, had been bemoaning the shop’s ill-fated predicament ever since Wesley placed them next to each other about a week before.
--I really thought we’d fixed things, but evidently not, said Last Exit to Brooklyn. This new century really has it in for us.
--Which one of us do you think they’ll come for first? asked Lady Chatterley’s Lover.
--You, for sure, said Last Exit to Brooklyn. You are much smuttier than me.
--Far from it. I have eroticism on my side. You are notoriously violent, not to mention all that misogyny. They’ll have your guts for garters.
On a shelf nearby, Ulysses overheard their conversation, and sniffed confidently. Ulysses was older now, gathering dust quietly, considerably dirtier than it ever let on to be.
Lady Chatterley’s Lover, who was just as old, shouted over to Ulysses: Don’t you get all high and mighty over there. They’re coming for you too.
As Wesley boxed up the last six copies of The Story of O for return, there was a loud crashing noise at the front, and he rushed to find the carpet on fire. An improvised fire bomb of bottle and cloth had been hurled through the window. Before he could think, another device had been thrown and the bestsellers on the shop wall were all lit up.
--Get the fuck out of here, Wesley, you stupid fucking fuck, yelled Tropic of Cancer in the back.
Wesley didn’t have time for tears. Without even saying goodbye to his beloved books, he darted out the front door and ran and ran as far away as he could from the business he’d established and nurtured for more than thirty years.
They can burn every last one of us, said Last Exit to Brooklyn. But they’ll never silence us.
Lady Chatterley’s Lover took a deep breath and said, submissively: Take me in your arms, Brooklyn, my dear, and let us burn together as one in the flame.
On the day Wesley Tickle’s 20th Century Bookstore went up in a fiery blaze, digital companies the world over made huge profits with the release of a self-help book full of timeworn wisdom, edited significantly and re-cycled as a low-risk property.
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Comments
If
books COULD talk 'though, eh?
I loved this Sean. It made me laugh and when it's dark those who make us laugh loudest are the best writers of all.
Ewan
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Have you tried Frank Harris's
memoirs? (He made them all up, but of their type they are quite well written).
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Just brilliant, Sean. I find
Just brilliant, Sean. I find it's my shelf with books by ABC writers that shouts loudest. You know what a smutty lot they are.
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Yes! I fear I'll be there.
Yes! I fear I'll be there.
Nice story Sean. And a good pick of the day.
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This artful piece
of whimsy, with a message we would do well to heed, is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day. Why not share or retweet if you like it too?
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God, well, not God, but next
God, well, not God, but next best thing, you've got Amazon flinging firebombs.
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This is perfect Sean - thank
This is perfect Sean - thank you so much - you cheered me up too!
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I enjoyed this a lot, I
I enjoyed this a lot, I laughed out loud in my office during the (usually quiet) lunch break!!
It really makes you think , that books like those you mention, which were once seen as subversive or obscene in their day, have lost their impact or voice in light of changing social mores.
An excellent piece.
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Last Exit will never be
Last Exit will never be silenced! Top story Sean. Your writing is just going from strength to strength. Lovely to see.
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