Everything Is So Close We Can Even Walk to the Carwash

by Maynard Good Stoddard


Formats

Softcover
£10.75
Softcover
£10.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 28/06/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 180
ISBN : 9780759624108

About the Book

In 22 years as senior editor, I have somehow come up with 154 (to date) humor pieces for The Saturday Evening Post. Requests for my books continue to come in. The 24 chapters of this book constitute my first attempt at answering these letters.

Everything Is So Close We Can Even Walk to the Carwash will help substantiate the many marital boners of my dear wife, Lois. (If she should ever get her act together, I’ll be out of business.) In the meantime, I hope to keep our act together after 64 years (seems more like 65) of being suckered into an "I do" from my quivering lips by acknowledging my own limited lapses in this game of chance called married life.

Among them: How I Converted an Old Farmhouse Into a Shambles, Sailing Down the Root Canal, Long Time No Ski, Wrapsody in Blue, and Waiter, There’s a Glass Eye in My Tapioca. While others may come along, the balance definitely lies in my dear wife’s favor.

Please take my words for it. You’ll find them later on in My Wife – and Other Garden Pests, Knit 2, Purl 1, Hubby 0, Marriage – The Best Exercise, Her Cat/My Dog, Women and Gasoline Don’t Mix, and Try Not to Bleed." And that’s only the beginning, folks. Only the beginning.


About the Author

Released from a wartime job in Indianapolis, I packed my wife, Lois, and our two little kids into a house trailer (now upgraded to a mobile home) and took off for Bradenton, Florida, to launch my writing career.

I would spend many dreary months tied to the dock, however, before shoving off. So dreary, in fact, that the morning we needed a 22-cent quart of milk for breakfast, we could only raise but 18 cents. That afternoon, in the normal mail of rejections, a strange blue envelope stood out like the proverbial sore thumb. The editor of Extension, a Chicago magazine, regaled me with the news that my Do You Mind If I Breathe had their staff literally rolling on the floor. They would be sending me a check for $150.00 . . . and did I have more.

Yes, I had at least a dozen more. And after selling to True and The American Legion, I thought I had it made. I thought wrong.

I would spend another twenty years (as Director Of Communications for the Realsilk Hosiery Mills) before The Saturday Evening Post asked to reprint one of my free-lance efforts. That beloved magazine has to date printed 154 of my original efforts.

This book covers 24 of them.

I was recently interviewed by a sophomore high school student who asked what advice I would give to would-be writers. I believe I said it all in only these three words: "Don’t give up."