Genre: Mainstream Fiction
About cahootsLocation: San Jose Home Region: Age:21 Website: http://sonalimaulik.blogspot.com/ Favorite novels: About a Boy, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Catcher in the Rye, Cane, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, White Teeth Favorite writers: Michael Chabon, Nick Hornby, J. D. Salinger, David Sedaris, Edgar Allan Poe, Zadie Smith Favorite music: Badly Drawn Boy, Audrye Sessions, Coldplay, Tokyo Police Club, Rachael Yamagata, Radiohead Non-noveling interests: Eating, soccer, reading, crossword puzzles, the daily show, music, coffee shops. |
Joined: October 23, 2005 This Year: Staff NaNoWriMo History: NaNoWriMo posts: 8 NaNoWriMo buddies: 6
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Brief Author Bio: A recent college grad with a degree in English Lit, I'm headed out to Korea to spread my love for English, reading, and November novel-writing to Korean children. I'm hoping to learn a bit of Korean, eat a lot of pickled cabbage and perhaps check out North Korea in my spare time. Until then, I'm working on my fifth Nano novel, hopefully the longest and least coherent yet. |
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Synopsis: A Haphazard Arrangement
What was originally going to be a collection of 15 short stories each written in a different genre, has become four short stories and one very long short story about a university chancellor who uses art to brainwash his students into doing what he wants.
Excerpt: A Haphazard Arrangement
The artists had been on strike for almost a month now and no one had noticed. The leader, Yeong Park, issued a statement to the university officials stating that their strike was a symbolic move to bring attention back to what he called the “creative sciences,” a coin termed by notable Art History professor Dirk Wheaton in his essay “The Arts Aren’t for Sale.” Yeong and a coalition of fifteen students carried signs (acrylic on canvas) and marched around the center of campus for two hours each day from noon until 2 PM, shouting that the recent funding cuts in the art departments were a restriction of freedom of speech, a violation of the Equal Education Act, and a harbinger of more cuts to humanities departments across campus. Most humanities students knew this to be true but in the interest of staying on the good side of the university funding officials, slyly side-stepped their picketing brethren on the way to class.
Garcia was bored and had no idea what was going on. He had studied German in school, not Italian, and he thought that even if he had he would probably still have little idea about what was going on. His wife spoke Spanish (the irony of the situation, that Thomas Garcia did not speak Spanish but his wife, Laurine Geller, could, was not lost on him, nor was he allowed to forget it) and could figure out most of the words, when they were articulated clearly enough. Honestly, he didn’t care. There was a woman complaining about some man and a man complaining about some other man. It was either a love triangle or a story of unrequited love or something to do with love and people not being happy about it, like all operas.
The opera was coming to a crescendo and Laurine was crying, the tears streaming lightly compared to the snot running down her nose and into her (his) handkerchief. He put his arm around her and she lay her head on his shoulder. He knew it wasn’t about the opera, it was about the catharsis of emotions she kept bottled up because he rarely asked her to share them. In fact, though she had never told him explicitly, Garcia knew that his one great weakness was his inability to be there for his sensitive and emotional wife emotionally. He often wondered how long she would allow him to get away with it, but the opera, it seemed, allowed for their relationship to thrive better than any talk the two of them could have had. Marriage counselors be damned, he thought to himself confidently; Art was so often the answer to life’s woes.
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