(urth) 3rd Cue's a Charm?
David Stockhoff
dstockhoff at verizon.net
Sat Jan 17 13:56:00 PST 2009
I haven't read Borski on this story, nor do I claim to understand it. But few of those examples are even puns or anything like puns. Chair = toilet, OK; Deneb = tail; OK. But the rest are simply not-so-clever misspellings or forced associations.
The game of football is no less scatological by this logic---all those tight ends, you know.
Wolfe doesn't require you to bring words to his stories. He provides all the words you need.
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Message: 5
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 21:59:53 -0700
From: Dave Tallman <davetallman at msn.com>
Subject: Re: (urth) 3rd Cue's a Charm?
To: urth at lists.urth.net
Message-ID: <497165C9.1060600 at gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Hi Greg, thanks for posting. I rarely agree with Borski, but on this one
I think he found the right approach. This thing is loaded with
double-entendres and near-puns, leading to a scatological interpretation.
"not so young man" = "old coot" = cootie
"chair" = "throne" = toilet
"dark spheres filled with stars" = "firmament" = fundament
"coal sack" = "cul de sac" = end
Deneb = Arabic for "tail"
humor = "butt of a joke" = butt
In short, the story is about an STD passed by a bug on a toilet seat.
When it withdraws, still grinning, it has just bitten its second victim,
the second bowling ball (bottom) to use the seat in a toilet queue.
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