how times change! i worried in the fifth installment of this guess-who's-reading-what series that the male reader was going extinct; in 2014 he is all up in my trains, and he is spending a lot of time on personal care (male reader all up in my trains, i salute you). he's still wildly outnumbered by the commuters playing candy crush on their smartphones, of course, but he's there, he's earnest, and at some point he'll make it to the second page of the pale king (sweet, bearded thirteenth reader who just missed my count this time, i salute you as well).
as in previous posts, i've linked the title of each book to descriptions and cover images, mostly from powell's.** when a book and its reader are paired correctly, i'll update the lists; if you need hints, i'll compose haiku on request. who's the urban farmer? what do the people in headphones play as they read? where were the schoolchildren headed? is all of this facial hair here to stay? if amazon were a buffy-the-vampire-slayer-universe monster of the week, what sort of monster would it be? i await your responses!
{the readers}
01
02 M, late 30s, smooth tan knit skullcap pulled low on forehead, heavy olive green hooded puffer over popped black denim collar and paisley silk scarf, slim black trousers, black socks, cap-toe black oxfords, B train
03 M, late 20s, floppy dark hair, trimmed beard, black pea coat with copious pockets over green hoodie, thick brown scarf, blue topo designs backpack bristling with pens worn on both shoulders, cuffed raw denim jeans, brown moccasins, D train
04 F, 20s, wavy black pixie cut with purple ombre bangs, high silver ear cuffs, blue puffer with white-fur-trimmed hood and antarctica patch, rust scarf, black slacks, two-tone brown leather oxfords, raw leather messenger bag, pen in hand, F train
05
06 M, early 30s, teal rectangular glasses, black mustache and goatee, back-of-the-head black neoprene earmuffs, green army jacket, dark jeans, white pumas, F train
07 M, 20s, shiny black oversized headphones, floppy brown bangs, short beard, blue and rust plaid shirt buttoned over black tee, open khaki jacket, slim grey jeans, orange and blue lace-up vans, padded black backpack between legs, B train
08
09
10
11
12
{the books}
the administration of fear, paul virilio
dune, frank herbert
greenhorns: 50 dispatches from the new farmers' movement, zoe ida bradbury
salt sugar fat: how the food giants hooked us, michael moss
*tip of the hat, as always, to coverspy.
**we'll be making a pilgrimage to the pearl district mothership this july, and i am already weeks into hemming and hawing over which pair of underwear to throw at the rare books section.
26 comments:
i would die of happiness if person 10 was reading "the double helix" (young female science nerds unite!) but i will guess "the field day from the black lagoon". which honestly, would be nearly as cool.
i have full confidence that it'll end up on her bookshelf; she was a badass. correct!
If 09 wasn't the "Flat Stanley" reader then I just don't know. Hooray for kids' books on mystery train; I'd request more, but I'm guessing you don't see them too often.
he was indeed! i too was exceedingly pleased to see the wee ones reading on the train.
I'm terrible at matching. I just really enjoy your descriptions of strangers.
the guy with the man-bun dressed like a third member of the white stripes was russian. he was pretty amazing.
01: Greenhorns [Love those ornamented birds!]
04: Salt Sugar Fat [Underlining stuff to eat later]
05: Ham on Rye [Underwhelmed by sandwich-related content, natch]
0?:Gwendolen. [Examines diary through her lorgnette carefully.] It is certainly very curious, for he asked me to be his wife yesterday afternoon at 5.30. If you would care to verify the incident, pray do so. [Produces diary of her own.] I never travel without my diary. One should always have something sensational to read in the train...
@MDF bonus points for oscar wilde; i'd be reading earnest if i were on a train right now. was on a train right now? this weekend has deprived me of things. your guesses, alas, are incorrect!
Ham on Rye was in the hands of #12, I'll warrant. And anyone who sees C.B. as a god is undateable. Si, si mysogyniste.
@Anonymous ding ding ding!
Young Mlle. #05 was holding "Sharp Objects," I'll warrant.
@Katherine a solid guess, but she was team nonfic. the key to this game is probably figuring out which pairings i as the subway creeper find amusingly stereotypical and/or incongruous, which makes it difficult and deeply unfair, but what isn't, really?
unrelated: i dreamed last night that the missus and i visited seattle again. for the first time in more than a decade! it has been far too long.
jacob says:
this elaborate facial hair trend needs to end, is what i'm taking from this. can that and bacon be shown the door?
oh, and #11 for "greenhorns," #8 for "july 1914," and #5 for "dune" - i'll try to play to stereotype.
@jacob correct for #8 / july 1914!
i've never read dune, though i have read a letter paul wrote me on a long paper towel while he was watching dune. that was a fine letter.
BACON MUST GO. unsurprisingly, i'm also getting pretty down on chicken - not that i've ever been up on chicken, really, but now that i work with little chickens on a regular basis it feels especially violent to work on a story in which they're roasted or hacked into nuggets.
#1 was reading Salt Sugar Fat I reckon
a fine guess, anon, but incorrect! she was one of the fiction readers.
#1 reading Sharp Objects.
@anon ayup!
it would be nice if 05's nonfic were either "salt sugar fat" or "greenhorns." hope for the next generation?
@valya she had neither, but her book was pretty boss nonetheless.
#2 is dune.
#3 is delirious new york.
#5 is the double helix.
#11 is virilio (and virile, lolol)
@Anon correct on #5! apologies for the lag there. was commuting from the west coast.
#2 is salt
#4 is dune
#7 is greenhorns (going on the plaid alone)
#11 is rem koolhaas
@Anon 11 is indeed koolhaas! i like the idea of plaid-based deductive reasoning, as well.
#4 cares about flu epidemics past, and supports lady writers, to boot
i suspect #4 does indeed, Anon, but she was not reading gina kolata; for sure she supports lady writers, though.
Post a Comment