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Authors: Mark Dunn

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IBID:
A LIFE
a novel in footnotes by
Mark Dunn

ebook ISBN: 978-1-59692-965-4

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Telephone: +44 (0)1624 618672
email:
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MacAdam/Cage
155 Sansome Street, Suite 550
San Francisco, CA 94104
www.MacAdamCage.com

Copyright © 2004 by Mark Dunn.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

Dunn, Mark, 1956 –
  Ibid: a life / by Mark Dunn
    p. cm.
  ISBN 1-931561-65-6 (hardcover : alk. paper)
  1. Biography as a literary form–Fiction
2. Abnormalities, Human–Fiction. 3. Cosmetics industry
–Fiction. 4. Philanthropists–Fiction. 5. Carnivals–Fiction.
I. Title

  PS3604.U56I25 2004
  813′.6–dc22

2003028137

Book and jacket design by Dorothy Carico Smith.

Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictiticously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

For my wife Mary
who rocks my world

Thanks for all the years of love and support,
and for rescuing me from the Young Republicans

“Footnotes let us hear the missteps of biases,
and hear pathos,
subtle decisions, scandal and anger.”

—Chuck Zerby
The Devil’s Details

“The author may, therefore,
include in the notes such things
as lists, poems, and discursive adjuncts to the text.”

—The Chicago Manual of Style

“I just love footnotes, don’t you?”

—Diana Gabaldon
The Outlandish Companion

February 18, 2003

Pat Walsh
Editor
MacAdam/Cage Publishing
155 Sansome Street
San Francisco, California 94104

Dear Pat,

Greetings to you and all my other friends in the City by the Bay. I have just completed my latest book project, a biography of Jonathan Blashette, the child circus sideshow performer who later made his fortune in male deodorants before engaging in philanthropy and other high profile hobbies. Blashette, for all his accomplishments, is best remembered for having three legs.

Please find the manuscript enclosed. I am in the process of completing the book’s extensive endnotes and will send these along shortly. If you choose to consider the manuscript for publication, I ask only one favor: please take care not to lose it, as it is my only copy. I had a second copy, but it was accidentally shredded along with other typescripts given to my friend Ellen Zeisler. I was curious to see how her new shredding machine worked.

I look forward to hearing if another one of my offerings might find its way into the venerable MacAdam/Cage catalogue.

With all best wishes,

Mark Dunn

February 26, 2003

Mark Dunn
P.O. Box 40
Old Chelsea Station
New York NY 10011

Dear Mark,

Please brace yourself. Perhaps you should even sit down. I have some bad news.

Your manuscript has been accidentally—and tragically—destroyed.

Remembering that it was your only copy, I thought that I should make a xerox before leaving work yesterday evening, but I did not. I was simply too excited to get home and get into it, a decision I shall rue forever.

As you, and a precious few others know, I do all my editing in my bathtub. I find the fragrant bath-powdered waters conducive to exploring story arc, character development, correcting noun-verb disagreement, and discouraging the overuse of the passive voice. I had set your manuscript carefully upon the rounded edge of my ancient claw-foot, and went into the other room to find CDs for setting an appropriate editorial mood. (To accompany your book, I selected Vivaldi’s
The Four Seasons
, Blue Oyster Cult’s “Agents of Fortune,” and the soundtrack to
Streets of Fire
.)

While I was poking about in my music library and letting the tub run, my three-year-old son, Jack, who only moments earlier had been quietly contenting himself with seeing how far he could stick his finger into a ripe pear, decided to venture into the master bath in search, I like to think, of his father. Not finding me there, he turned his attention to your manuscript, and promptly deposited the loose pages into
the rapidly filling tub.

I returned mere seconds later, but too late—sad to say—to rescue the manuscript. The agitation of the water pouring into the tub had quickly turned your paper to soggy pulp and the ink to purple broth.

I am completely at fault, something I am loath to admit (ask my wife). I trust that you will find it somewhere in your heart to forgive me. In the meantime, may I know if there is any chance you can recreate the book from notes or memory? We’ll happily send out one of our many hardworking interns to assist (perhaps the one who keeps leaving his lattes on my slush pile; I don’t like him anyway). Failing that, may I at least see the endnotes?

Call me. I know you never use the phone, fearing electrical shock. Perhaps you could make an exception, considering the circumstances.

Your editor, still…I think,

Pat Walsh

March 3, 2003

Pat Walsh
Editor
MacAdam/Cage Publishing
155 Sansome Street
San Francisco, California 94104

Dear Pat,

I am still reeling. It is hard for me to write, let alone pick up the phone and form coherent sentences. I forgive you, I do. But this is a blow.

I do not see myself rewriting the book. The original task took two years.

Per your request, I have enclosed the completed endnotes. Knock yourself out. I’m going into retirement.

Best wishes,

Mark Dunn

March 11, 2003

Clay Dunn
c/o InSouth Bank
6141 Walnut Grove Rd.
Memphis, TN 38120

Dear brother Clay,

My editor, Pat Walsh, has just made an offer to publish the endnotes that accompanied my now tragically water-pulped biography of businessman Jonathan Blashette.

By themselves.

I am quite torn over what to do. These notes, while extensive, are still, by definition, subordinate to the lost text—a text which I do not wish to invest another two years of my life attempting to reconstruct. While the notes illuminate the dusty, crepuscular corners of this man’s life, they tell its story only through sidebar and discursion. The book, therefore, becomes a biography by inference.

I should confess that over the last two years I’ve grown fond of both Blashette and the odd cast of characters that formed the retinue of his colorful existence. I wished that I had given more attention in the text to each of his girlfriends—the high-spirited childhood sweetheart Mildred; the former prostitute and Blashette’s odd soulmate Great Jane; homefront heartthrob Lucile; the spitfire bohemienne Winny; and Clara, his wife and mother to his only child; as well as to Blashette’s bumbling right-hand man Davison, and life mentor Andrew Bloor. Publishing these notes by themselves allows me the opportunity to examine the role that each played in the man’s life, in ways that I could not in the original text. There is a certain freedom here—stitching as I am upon the fringes of that life the kind of colorful
piping that usually defines the whole garment.

On the other hand, can the cloth of a man’s life truly be defined by its embroidery?

What do you think? What would you do? How are things with you? How’s the ol’ back?

Your brother,

Mark

March 14, 2003

Mark Dunn
P.O. Box 40
Old Chelsea Station
New York NY 10011

Dear twin brother Mark,

My back is better. Thank you for asking. I think you should do it. Why not?

Good luck.

Your brother,

Clay

P.S. I don’t know what the word
crepuscular
means.

Epigraph
Grover Bramblett,
The Quotable Sanford and Son
(New York: Ebony and Ebony Press, 1984), 215.

1
LITTLE JONNY SPARE LEG

1.
“’Turned out that womb of his mother’s wasn’t barren at all. A right healthy little fellow grew inside her, grew big and strong and popped right out on March 17, 1888.
Interview with Jonathan’s first cousin Odger Blashette.

2.
Barnum’s Dead; At least write to Pulitzer and Hearst.
Nowhere could I find documented proof that William Randolph Hearst ever accepted Addicus’s invitation to come to Pettiville, Arkansas to see the “amazing quintuple-limbed child,” but there is ample evidence of Joseph Pulitzer’s visit, followed by a series of sensationalist articles in the
New York World
somewhat bizarrely illustrated by Richard F. Outcault, who gave Jonathan both the oversized ears and gap-toothed smile that would later characterize his “Yellow Kid.” Pulitzer never got to see the illustrations, however. A. Candell Moseley in his biography of the publisher,
Pulitzer’s World
(Chicago, Prather Press, 1968) notes that at this point in his life the publisher was almost totally blind. He also possessed a debilitating hypersensitivity to sound. His first words upon arriving at the Blashette house were, “Bring the baby to me. I want to feel that third leg. Spread sawdust upon the lane while I am here. I require almost total silence. And a cup of hot tea. With lemon. And a little nutmeg. Strange request, yes, but that’s me. Ah, there’s the leg. Fully formed. With all his toes. He shall have music wherever he goes. Waltzes. Teach the boy to waltz. He should be a natural.”

3.
Doctors were baffled.
The third doctor to attend the child in his first weeks, Able Stanton, agreed with the other physicians that the extra appendage should pose few physiological difficulties for the boy. However, he differed
with his colleagues on another point, writing in his unpublished memoir
Three-legged Boys and Birdbeaked Spinsters: Fifty Years of Doctoring Freaks
:

“It was my early estimation that young Jonathan would probably be walking much sooner than other children his age because the third leg would have a helpful stabilizing effect on the young man, much as a three-legged stool stands better than a two-legged one.”

4.
Challenges presented themselves.
Jonathan Blashette writes in his
Early Memories
of an argument between his mother and a local cobbler over the cost of making three shoes, Emmaline contending that she should only have to pay half again more than what she would pay for a pair. The cobbler, however, deemed the request a “special order” and tacked on a surcharge. Jonathan continues:

“Mother threatened to take her business elsewhere, only to discover that all the cobblers in town were related by blood and had somewhat of a rudimentary price-setting system in place, one which put her at a decided negotiatory disadvantage. In the end, Mother and the shoemaker reached a compromise. She bought me a pair of handsome boy’s lace shoes and the cobbler threw in, at only a nominal additional charge, an orphaned remnant from the previous year’s Thanksgiving pageant—a shiny black-buckled Pilgrim’s shoe which didn’t match the others by any stretch of the imagination but nonetheless had a certain historically evocative charm about it.”

5.
And yet on the whole, Jonathan was generally well-regarded and with the help of friends and family adjusted easily to his unique anatomical circumstances.
Several years were to pass before Thaddeus Grund arrived with his invitation for Jonathan to join his traveling circus and wild west show. This relatively quiet interstitial period in the
boy’s life was disrupted only on those rare occasions in which a visitor to town might gasp or emit an unguarded, “Dear me!
Three
!” The only concrete exception to this “era of good feeling” for the boy came when Emmaline and Addicus were asked by indelicate roustabouts, many of whom Addicus would bring home for Sunday dinner, “If that’s where the third leg goes, where the hell’s the pup’s little willy?” Upon such occasions Emmaline would usually sweep Jonathan up in her arms and fly indignantly from the room while Addicus was left to explain to his uncouth guests that his son’s third leg branched off the left leg like the limb of a tree, “the willy hanging free like wisteria.”

6.
Jonathan did not even seem to mind his “only child” status.
According to Blashette’s cousin Odger, the boy made friendships quite easily. He was an outgoing child and had a healthy curiosity about the world unveiling itself all around him. By the age of three Jonathan was cantering eagerly behind Pettiville’s one-eyed blacksmith, Cletus Meeker, who took an instant liking to the boy whom he felt had “all the stuff, a spiffin’ smithy to make.” Odger recalls the story of the one exceptional morning in which Cletus showed Jonathan an uncharacteristic lack of respect: the blacksmith arrived for work in a bilious humor following a long night of binging after catching his wife sandwiched in bed between the Bellamy twins, bright-witted Henry and doltish Benry. That day he found fault with everything Jonathan did, and eventually hung an oat bag around the boy’s neck and deposited him beneath an active rainspout. As Odger tells it, Jonathan responded by looking up at the irritable blacksmith and inquiring in a tiny, tearful voice, “You don’t
really
mean to be doing this, do you, Mr. Horsy-shoe Man?” Meeker, stabbed by sudden shame and contrition, gently pulled the boy from the miniature cataract. Embracing him tightly, he blubbered, “Never again the oat bag! Never again the rainspout! Oh Jonathan, this foolish momentary lapse,
please forgive!”

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