Volume 17 Issue 6 | July 2 - 8, 2004
THE PENNY POST
The rain in Spain
By Andrei Codrescu
I dont know about, but the rain in the U.S has been something else lately: in the Midwest it set whole towns floating down swollen rivers; it kept me long hours in airports, streaming down those huge sad windows, not a plane in sight; in New York it was cold and constant, chasing the premature spring-crazed youth off the chilly streets; in San Francisco it was like powdered glass and cold enough to make the humorists quip the coldest winter I ever spent was summer in San Francisco too true for comfort; in New Orleans it poured, keeping my 747 circling over the airport like a soggy vulture watching its nest turn into a soup bowl. There were some sunny days in-between, slivers of blue hope celebrated fervently, but they vanished way too soon. I cant remember when it rained like this. I dont want to be like the Cassandras whove run out of one screening of The Day After Tomorrow shouting the sky is falling, but the skys been falling enough to turn even the sunniest disposition into something funereal. The only rain-lover Ive run into this far who thought that it didnt rain enough is Tom Robbins, the novelist, who lives in a pretty town in the rainiest part of Washington State. Tom considers rain essential for his writing, he just doesnt write when its sunny. Mostly, he doesnt worry. It once rained 99 days in Washington State, twice as long as it took to break Noah, and Tom wrote his best book then, every sentence running steadily down the page. Tom lives in the Villa de Jungle Girl, a house he designed himself to house his extensive collection of circus banners featuring nubiles about to be devoured by snakes. There are also jungle girls and snakes on rugs and paintings in Toms house and it isnt hard to imagine all of them coming to life when it rains enough. When they come to life they move into Toms prose which is chock full of fancy creatures facing off on cliffs and perilous mental pathways. There are possibly others like Tom, endless rain fanciers, but for the rest of us the sun is God. Im writing this at the New Orleans airport waiting for, what else, a rained-out aeroplane.
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