Friday, December 9, 2011

Meanwhile, Somewhere on the Caribbean...

Okay, I realize this is technically the kids' blog, but since JVL is away, I will share a couple of conversations from his working dinner last night (each night of the cruise you host a table of old, semi-drunk, opinionated conservatives -- you can see why it's not totally a vacation, right?).

**

Walking past a bar on the way to dinner, an old woman seated in a chair grabs my arms and demands, “Are you Matt Labash?”

I explain that no, I’m not.

She replies angrily, “Well why not?”

There follows an attempt by me to introduce myself and make nice. I ask where they’re from. She tells me Seattle. But that she’s really from the Isle of Rhodes.

Woman: You’re probably too young to know what the Spanish Inquisition is.

Me [laughing]: Oh, I’m Catholic. I know all about it. It was one of our finest moments.

Woman [angrily]: Well my family was from Spain, but in 1400, you people drove my family away and we had to move to Rhodes.

I excused myself to get to the dining room for dinner.

Woman: It was very nice meeting you, Matt. We really enjoyed your book.

**

At dinner, as I sit down:

Woman: Your picture in the program makes you look so handsome, like John Travolta.

Me: laughs

Woman [disappointedly]: You don’t look anything like John Travolta.

**

During the main course, a man asks me why the Standard doesn’t have a letters page. I tell him that we used to, but don’t anymore. That some magazines, like Commentary and CRB have lively letters sections, but that others, like the New Yorker, do not.

Man: The New Yorker? That’s the worst magazine in America. It’s terrible.

Me: You think so? I’d judge it to be the best and most important magazine in America.

Man: Well you’re wrong.

**

This, by the way, is par for the course. This is tame, actually. During my three evenings there, I was never asked a single question, but was hit on several times by the gentlemen to my left, whose wives were invariably to their left (though rarely, sadly, to their political left -- now that would have been interesting). One, upon finding out I went to Smith (I had to keep myself entertained--and awake--by throwing gauntlets like "Northampton!" and "Everyone running in the GOP primary is a clown --let's shake things up and write in a candidate!" Poor Jonathan.) immediately lowered his voice and asked me all about, you know, the hot girl-on-girl action at Smith, my opinions of it, and whether or not I participated. It was awesome. I told him the lingerie-clad pillow fights were everything he ever dreamed about, and more. And that they probably even happened in the library, where I spent most of my time, but who could say?

And I'm a Republican! Sort of.