78
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
oft-nominated for the Nobel Prize
doing with pulpy romance
novels like
Soul/Mate
and
Th
e Stolen Heart
on her résumé?
She never meant them to be: Written under pseudonyms
“Rosamond Smith” (a feminization of Raymond Smith, her
husband’s name) and “Lauren Kelly,” respectively, Oates was
surprised and disappointed when her
cover was blown by an
anonymous source in 1987.
✖ ✖ ✖
If you’re hoping for a heaving bosom or two, Benito Musso-
lini’s
Th
e Cardinal’s Mistress,
serialized in a socialist newspa-
per long before he was an iron-fi sted fascist leader, is bound
to disappoint. While fi lled with purple prose, there’s not a lot
of action between the sheets. Th
e story, about a cardinal’s
unhappy aff air with a doomed woman, is mostly a soapbox
for its author’s anticlerical ranting. Sorry, Duce—propaganda
makes terrible beach reading.
✖ ✖ ✖
In
between all his Kurd-gassing, Kuwait-invading, and dissi-
dent-murdering, Iraq’s own Great Dictator somehow found
the energy to pen
Zabiba and the King.
Published anonymously
after the fi rst Gulf War, the book’s authorship by Saddam was
revealed by a Saudi newspaper in 2001. But was its prove-
nance really a mystery? Not only
was there zero criticism of
the novel upon its release (the Iraqi press called it an “innova-
tion in the history of novels”), the book’s thinly veiled allego-
ries were a total giveaway: A kindly leader (Saddam) loves a
beautiful commoner (the Iraqi people) who is raped by her
cruel husband (the United States).
✖ ✖ ✖
Just another breathy melodrama when it was published in
1981,
Sisters
sold poorly and was soon out of print. So why
are paperback copies selling on the Internet today for $300?
79
Because
Sisters
makes
its author, second lady of the United
States and vocal gay marriage ban advocate Lynne Cheney,
look like a big, fat hypocrite. It’s a lesbian romance set in
the Old West that features lots of romance and sex—both in
and out of wedlock—and promotes contraceptive use for
women who want to remain “free.”
Asked to comment on
Sisters
by the
New York Times
, Cheney said “I don’t remem-
ber the plot.” Apparently, gay marriage is even more con-
troversial now than it was in 1981. And speaking of
marriage . . .
10
Love and
Marriage
(and the Baby Carriage)
While “jumping the broom” has become synonymous with
the happy institution of marriage, the phrase is borrowed
from a distinctly unhappy one: American slavery. Denied the
right to marry legally, slaves
improvised ceremonies with
what they had on hand. Leaping over a broom handle came to
symbolize a couple’s leap of faith, a tradition still practiced in
many African-American weddings today.
✖ ✖ ✖
Nothing like a little hard labor to get a marriage off on the
right foot. Th
e Italian custom of sawhorsing holds that neigh-
bors must set up a log, sawhorse,
and double-handled saw for
newlyweds, who halve the log together. Th
e thicker the log
and duller the saw the better; the arduousness of sawhorsing
symbolizes the equally mundane tasks a couple will have to
endure together throughout their married life.
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