It was Monday, yes, it was. Or rather, ’twas, indeed, that’s right, a word of excellent preparation for 12th grade English, in whose daily work, essays, and other meanderings of writings will doom me for the next 4 years in college — in whose daily work, essays, and other meanderings of writings therein will, too, doom me for the next 80 years or so in life afterward. I went to the library on Monday.
But it was no ordinary “went”; it was not something along the lines of “walk out the door, hop in the car, drive to the library,” no it wasn’t. For this library was a new one (for me), and its location was undisclosed to me at that point I wanted to go to the library. Thankfully, resourceful online heroes such as Yahoo! Yellow Pages were there to guide the way — but even then, they couldn’t save you from the one thing that dooms most finders-of-new-locations: Being lost.
And, as you can probaby tell, I had befallen to this fate myself, not realizing the hidden-ness of the blasted library, dubbed as Alamoso Public Library. This library, clueless from most other people on the West Side, held a book of significant importance that no other library had. It was the main reason that I wanted to go to this library. That book was Crime and Punishment — indeed, a book of utmost importance, beware.

So anyway, Gonzalez was the street that I needed to find, unsure of whether it’s a main street with its very own — *gasp* — dedicated traffic light, or one of those blasted hard-to-find-unless-you-squint-and-get-in-a-collision neighborhood streets. As I looked left and right, while driving (oh yes, pure skill) for this street named after some Spanish legacy family (or was it Mexican?), I passed by a street that had a church that my mother often goes to (for the simple fact that it’s in Vietnamese, and not English)… I drove by its street unwittingly, thinking the library is just further ahead.
Little did I know that the library was next door (or rather, hiding behind like a sneaky bastage) to the church — and so I passed, still searching. It was like this for the next 4 miles or so.
At the end of the road, where the road met the barren plains and desert of the rest of southern New Mexico, I made a U-y (huzzah!).
To my dismay and anger, I found the library on the same street the church was located on… and it was called “Gonzalez,” but I didn’t see that until after I made my U-turn and drove back to it again.
And that is my story. Also, I need to mention the fact that due to my ineptitude of searching for locations and dangerous streets, I wasted a good hour or so finding the library. I arrived at the library at 6:40. The library closed at 6:00. I went home, and cried. And that is my story.
Tags
library, lost, reading, retarded, summer
This entry was written up around 2 years, 5 months ago.
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Tis a dreary day indeed in the chronicals of Eventide.
It seems you have developed quite a penchant for commas. I was once stricken with that disease. Actually, I probably still am, but more often than previously I have encountered teachers adding in commas in my writing - to my considerable distress.
I think it’s really just a stylistic thing, though. You never actually “NEED” a comma. But sometimes, commas are cooler. Other, times, they are, well, not.
Google Maps is The Best.
I’ve never actually read Crime and Punishment, though I’ve got a copy (not nearly so nice as the Oxford’s World Classics edition so proudly displayed with its 2-pixel padding, 1-px solid #ccc border, and margin: 0 auto; in this post of yours). It’s lying around somewhere, I may read it some day. That day, I will also read Jane Eyre. After this, you may expect to see pigs flying by your window.
You soulless, cruel writer. All that buildup, and you’re not even going to tell me about what you did at the library?! What a letdown!
By the way, in response to your last comment: truly, I will spare publishers the pain
Besides, nobody would buy a book half a page long. Unless, I become one of a legion of talentless children’s book writers, who write about 50 words of nothing, wrap it in some pretty pictures, slap on a franchise tag (like “Barbie’s Adventures”) and sell it to the world.
You know, they actually make really good money doing that — assuming they can make the pictures colorful enough to draw in the children and has so few text as to not scare them away either. Again, achievable with pure skill.
Now, I do notice my unfortunate syndrome of excessive commas. I’ve been using these many commas left and right for as long as I can remember; I do know that I use them less if I’m hyper or under the influence of sugar or other wondrous things that harm your body in excess amounts.
What did I do at the library when I was there? I walked out on it, that’s what.