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t it recurred to him in the fall of 1995; following his return from the Frankfurt Book Fair; a kind of international trade show where every day is a showdown for foreign agents like Ralph。 He broached the serialization/ chapbook idea to me along with a number of other matters; most of which were automatic turndowns。
The chapbook idea was not an automatic turndown; though; unlike the interview in the Japanese Playboy or the all…expenses…paid tour of the Baltic Republics; it struck a bright spark in my imagination。 I don't think that I am a modern Dickens…if such a person exists; it is probably John Irving or Salman Rushdie … but I have always loved stories told in episodes。 It is a format I first encountered in The Saturday Evening Post; and I liked it because the end of each episode made the reader an almost equal participant with the writer…you had a whole week to try to figure out the next twist of the snake。 Also; one read and experienced these stories more intensely; it seemed to me; because they were rationed。 You couldn't gulp; even if you wanted to (and if the story was good; you did)。
Best of all; in my house we often read them aloud…my brother; David; one night; myself the next; my mother taking a turn on the third; then back to my brother again。 It was a rare chance to enjoy a written work as we enjoyed the movies we went to and the TV programs (Rawhide; Bonanza。 Route 66) that we watched together; they were a family event 。 It wasn't until years later