Authors: Frank Portman
Tags: #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Family, #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #General, #Parents
down, folded up the “killed by Tit?” printout, and placed it in 321
the book between the pages containing this Deep Thought.
That oughta confuse the hell out of them, I thought with in-calculable satisfaction. All we had to do now was wait.
I glanced over at Sam Hellerman, sleeping peacefully in
the corner. Then I got up and went down to the basement
and put the book near the bottom of one of the book boxes, feeling as though I were burying the sixties. Even though I guess I really wasn’t.
G R EAT B O OK, C HANG E D MY LI F E, YOU
KNOW
It’s rather ironic, wouldn’t you say, that things ended up arranging themselves so that I spent a considerable chunk of my sophomore year carrying around a copy of
The Catcher in the
Rye
everywhere I went? In a sense, I suppose you could even say that
The Catcher in the Rye
changed my life, though I’m not about to commemorate that fact by joining a cult or anything.
It set in motion a process by which I learned so much about some stuff that I ended up not knowing anything at all about it. And it indirectly influenced the fact that my rock band accidentally brought down a perverted high school sexploita-
tion empire and freed the little children from the devil-head predations of an evil associate principal. And it happened to coincide with my clumsy venture from pure fantasy to impure reality in the girl arena. Not bad for a sucky book you read only to suck up to teachers holding a gun to your head.
Look, it’s not even that bad of a book. I admit it. I can feel sorry for myself while pretending to be Holden Caulfield. I can. And I can see why the powers that be have decided to
adopt it as their semiofficial alterna-bible. Things were really, really bad in the sixties. You were always getting kicked out 322
of your prep school, or getting into fights at your prep school, or getting marooned on deserted islands on the way to your fancy English boarding school. And when you finally got off the island, your “old man” was always on your “case,” and
Vietnam just drove you crazy, plus you were constantly high on drugs and out of touch with reality and it was sometimes a little more difficult than it should have been to get everyone to admit how much better you were than everybody else.
It was rough. I get it. I really get it. Up with Holden. I’d have probably been the same way.
In the end, though, the attempt to save the world by forc-
ing people to read
The Catcher in the Rye
and dressing casually and supporting public television and putting bumper stickers on Volvos and eating only weird expensive food and separat-ing your cans and bottles and doing tai chi and going to the farmer’s market and pronouncing Spanish words with a
cartoon-character accent and calling actresses actors and
making up your own religion and so forth—well, the world refused to be saved that way. Big surprise. On the other hand, no one could ever mistake Hillmont High School for a prep
school, so at least you accomplished that. I mean, calling it a school involves the kind of generosity of spirit that in other circumstances might get you the Nobel Peace Prize nomina-tion or something. You stuck it to the old man, killed half of your brain cells,
and
dumbed down the educational system: you
are
the greatest generation.
Before all that character arc stuff happened, I might have been able to sing “all we are saying is make high school a little less sadistic” with a little more enthusiasm. Compared to Hillmont High School, Holden Caulfield’s prep school troubles seem like a sort of heaven on earth. But honestly, I’ve got my mind on other things. Girls and rock and roll, I mean.
Everything else is trivia.
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OUTRO
How we live now:
Christmas break. Band practice. We Have Eaten All the
Cake, me on guitar/vox, Spam L. Ermine on bass and domes-
tic hygiene, Shinefield on drums, first album
Slut Heaven.
Working on: “You Look Good on Drugs.”
Little Big Tom enters, tilts his head to one side, raises one eyebrow, does a quick, shallow knee bend, tilts his head to the other side, raises the phone he is carrying above his head, and brings it down, straightening his arm in one fluid motion, as though it’s a remote and he’s changing the channel. Or a phaser on stun.
“There a rock star in the house?”
I take the phone. “Oh, thank God,” I say, when I realize
it is Celeste “Fiona” Fletcher. Because we’ve started saying that whenever we call each other.
Fake Fiona: “Trombone!”
Amanda: “Get off the phone. Get off the phone. Get off
the phone.”
Mom: just about halfway visible from a certain angle,
seated at the dining room table at the end of the hall in a cloud of cigarette smoke, staring into her drink. Looking sad and beautiful.
Little Big Tom, sighing: “Rock and roll . . .”
Sam Hellerman: staring ahead inscrutably, fingering bass
strings. Saying nothing.
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bandography
( A U G U S T – D E C E M B E R )
1. Easter Monday
2. Baby Batter
guitar: Guitar Guy
base and scientology: Sam Hellerman
third album:
Odd and Even Number
3. The Plasma Nukes
guitar: Lithium Dan
bass and calligraphy: Little Pink Sambo
vox: The Worm
machine-gun drums: TBA
first album:
Feelin’ Free with the Plasma Nukes
4. Tennis with Guitars
lead axe: Love Love
bass and rat-catching: The Prophet Samuel
vocals, keys, bumping, grinding: Li’l Miss Debbie
drummer: Beat-Beat
first album:
Amphetamine Low
cover: white with the album title in tiny black type on
the back. The band name does not appear anywhere
on the outside packaging.
second album:
Phantasmagoria, Gloria
photo: a police dog licks a broken doll’s face.
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5. Helmet Boy
guitar: Moe
bass and procrastination: Sambiguity
first album:
Helmet Boy II
6. Liquid Malice
7. The Underpants Machine
guitar: Super-Moe
bass and bottle rockets: Sam Sam the Piper’s Son
first album:
We Will Bury You
8. The Stoned Marmadukes
guitar: Moe “Fingers” Henderson
bass and paleontology: Mr. Sam Hellerman
first album:
Right Lane Must Exit
9. Ray Bradbury’s Love-Camel
guitar: Moe-Moe
bass and calisthenics: Scammy Sammy
first album:
Prepare to Die
10. Silent Nightmare
guitar: The Lord of Electricity
bass and gynecology: Samson
first album:
Feel Me Fall
11. The Medieval Ages
guitar: St. Moe
bass and bodywork: Samber Waves of Grain
first album:
That Stupid Pope
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12. The Sadly Mistaken
guitar: Moe Vittles
bass and landscaping: Sam “Noxious” Fumes
first album:
Kill the Boy Wonder
13. Oxford English
guitar: Moe Bilalabama
bass and lollygagging: Sam “the Cat” Hellerman
first album:
What Part of Suck Don’t You Understand?
14. Some Delicious Sky, aka SDS
treble and vocals: Squealie
thick bottom and industrial arts:
Sambidextrous
first album:
Taste My Juice
15. Arab Charger
guitar: me
bass and preventive dentistry: The Fiend in
Human Shape
first album:
Blank Me
16. Occult Blood
guitar and vox: Mopey Mo
bass and teleology: Hell-man
percussion instruments: Todd Panchowski
first album:
Pentagrampa
17. The Mordor Apes
guitar: Mithril-hound
bass and necrology: Li’l Sauron
percussion and stupefaction: Dim Todd
first album:
Elven Tail
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18. The Nancy Wheelers
guitar: Pseudo-Moe
bass and ouija board: Sam Hellerman
first album:
Margaret? It’s God. Please Shut Up.
19. Green Sabbath
guitar: Monsignor Eco-druid
bass and industrial sabotage: The Grim
Recycler
drums, percussion, acoustic and semi-
acoustic drums, cymbals, tambourines,
cowbells, chimes, gongs, toms, shaker
eggs, bongos, stick clicks, wood blocks,
percussion, percussion and more
percussion: Todd “Percussion” Panchowski
first album:
Our Drummer Is Kind of Full of Himself
20. Balls Deep
guitar: Comrade Gal-hammer
bass and embroidery: Our Dear Leader
real fancy and important percussion: the
Lonely Dissident
first album:
We Control the Horizontal
21. Super Mega Plus
guitar/vox: Moelle
bass, prevarication, and procuring young
girls under false pretenses: Sam Hell
irregular timekeeping: Brain-dead Panchowski
first album:
A Woman Knows
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22. The Chi-Mos!
guitar: the Reverend Chi-Mo
bass and being aware of his own mortality:
Assistant Principal Chi-Mo
percussion and counting to four:
Chi-Mo Panchowski
first album:
Balls Deep
23. The Elephants of Style
guitar: Mot Juste
bass and animal husbandry: Sam Enchanted
Evening
first album:
Devil Warship
24. Sentient Beard
guitar/vox: Mot Nosredneh
bass and upholstery: Samerica the Beautiful
first album:
Off the Charts—Way Off
25. We Have Eaten All the Cake
guitar/vox: Tomcat
bass and domestic hygiene Spam L. Ermine
:
drums: Shinefield
first album
Slut Heaven
:
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glossary
AC/DC
(ACK-dack): the fourth-greatest rock and roll band of all time.
Advanced French
(a-VALST flalsh): a form of the French language in which only the present tense is used. Primarily employed for telling time and for describing the activities of this one guy named Jean and this other guy named Claude.
Advanced Placement
(ud-VANT-udgd po-LEES-munt):
classes that are far easier than regular classes and for which students receive inflated grades. Rumor has it that “work” done in some AP classes can even count as college credit, though it is doubtful that the sort of college that would accept such credit is the sort of college you’d ever want to put on a resume.
anglophile
(an-GLOF-eh-lay): someone who is under the mistaken impression that there is something cool or impressive about trying to speak in a fake English accent.
ankh
(ANK-ul): the ancient Egyptian symbol of life, often worn as a pendant or tattoo, or emblazoned on drug paraphernalia.
atheism
(AUT-iz-im): a religion for people who figure they probably already know everything there is to know about
everything.
The Bad Seed
(dee BUD sayd): the charming story of a typical American childhood. The second-greatest movie ever
made.
Bayeux Tapestry
(bay-OOKS tap-ESS-tree): a long strip of material embroidered in the Middle Ages that illustrates
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the events leading up to the Norman Conquest of England.
Starring the Pope, William the Conqueror, a guy named
King Cnut [sic], and a lot of guys with swords dressed up
as chess pieces.
The Beatles
(the RUTT-ulz): four mop-topped lads from Liverpool who set the toes of the world a-tapping. Then
they turned into hippies.
be-in
(BE-ing): back in the sixties, hippies used to have these, where everybody took drugs and tried to feel important. I
think it’s pretty much the same as a “happening.”
bête noire
(bait nwah-RAY): “black beast” in nonadvanced French. It’s slightly worse than a pet peeve, though not as bad as a bane, as far as I can tell.
The Bible
(the bibble): a big creepy book, the contents of which have influenced and formed the basis for much of
the history and culture of Western civilization for thou-
sands and thousands of years. Mention of this book is for-
bidden in public schools and in progressive right-thinking households, thus ensuring that substantial chunks of history and literature and the culture at large will be virtually incomprehensible to a sizeable minority of the country’s
population. Highly prized by religious and other wrong-
thinking people for these and other reasons.
The Big Chill
(tha BEEG cheel): a nauseating movie about everybody’s parents. If anyone has ever tried to make you