Read Blame It on the Dog Online

Authors: Jim Dawson

Blame It on the Dog

BOOK: Blame It on the Dog
2.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Copyright © 2006 by Jim Dawson

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except brief excerpts for the purpose of review, without written permission of the publisher.

Ten Speed Press
PO Box 7123
Berkeley, California 94707
www.tenspeed.com

Distributed in Australia by Simon & Schuster Australia, in Canada by Ten Speed Press Canada, in New Zealand by Southern Publishers Group, in South Africa by Real Books, and in the United Kingdom and Europe by Publishers Group UK.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Dawson, Jim.
Blame it on the dog : a modern history of the fart / Jim Dawson.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-77877-2
1. Flatulence—Humor. I. Title.
PN6231.F55D39 2006
818′.6o2—dc22
      2006011433

v3.1

CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION

A
fart is just a turd with all the shit scraped off,” a sage told me several years ago, implying that flatulence wasn’t a subject worthy of filling a book—or at least a book worth a hill of beans. But what did he know? The idea of writing the definitive history of farting had been nagging at me for thirty years, since my student days and wayward nights at West Virginia University, a notorious party school. It wasn’t the all-night keggers and marijuana binges that inspired me (though they certainly helped), but rather the English literature class where I discovered the fart jokes in Chaucer’s fourteenth-century
Canterbury Tales
. And by 1998, when the time—like a good fart—seemed ripe, I approached Ten Speed Press with a coffee-stained, thumb-smudged, and altogether unsavory-looking manuscript called
Who Cut the Cheese? A Cultural History of the Fart
. (All right, it was actually an email attachment, but a mysteriously soiled manuscript sounds much more romantic; and if nothing else, this sordid saga of a grown man obsessing on butt stink could use some romance.)

The rest is history, and that’s probably where it belongs, but I’ve never been one to leave well enough alone. After all, I’m still psychologically smarting from the humiliation of being tarred, feathered, and run out of my home town of Parkersburg, West Virginia, for hosting an art gallery exhibit of X-rays of my lower colon, with superimposed green arrows pointing out that the little gray blobby areas were farts about to happen.

On the eve of the publication of
Who Cut the Cheese?
my editor solemnly sat me down and told me, “Jim, when this thing comes out, your life is going to change. I mean
really
change. People will revile you, call you a sick bastard. Pretty women will shun you like the plague.”

“I know all
that
,” I said, “but how is my life gonna change?”

(Actually, several attractive women did stop me on the street after the publication of
Who Cut the Cheese?
They asked me questions like “Why are you following me?”)

Anyway, when the book came out at the beginning of February 1999, none of the major magazines or newspapers would touch it. A columnist I knew at the
Los Angeles Times
told me that no family newspaper would dare print the word
fart
. But fortunately there was one corner of the media that greeted me with open arms: morning drive-time radio, where shock jocks and wacky zoo triplets were waiting for an excuse to air the second F word (the FCC having expressly prohibited the first) and discuss its many facets. For six or seven months I was up almost every weekday morning around 4:00 or 5:00
A.M
., Los Angeles time, standing in my kitchen in my underwear or sweatpants, pumping coffee down my throat in hopes of ratcheting up my ability to engage with motormouth deejays in the eastern time zones without falling back on a slight stutter I’ve had since childhood. Being a night owl who normally didn’t get to bed before 2:00
A.M
., I had a tough time with this schedule and stumbled around in a perpetual state of jet lag, yet still I pursued my new mission as America’s emissary of toilet humor with doo-doo diligence.

I think I did a phoner with every
A.M
. radio program in America except Howard Stern’s. (Howard’s staff pre-interviewed me, and Howard talked about
Who Cut the Cheese?
on the air, remarking pointedly that no way could a book about farts be as funny as the real thing, but I never got to speak to him personally.) First I’d get a call from the producer, who would give me a last-minute prep, put me on hold, and let me listen to the commercials and the bumper music on the feed until the on-air personalities introduced me to the audience and punched me into the show. I couldn’t help but notice the similarities between them, whether they were in Birmingham, New York, or Birmingham, Alabama. Most of the jocks came in threes, with monikers like Frosty, Tammi, and the Bean, and approached me one of two ways: I was either this cool guy who had come up with the greatest book idea ever (the “I’m too sexy for my farts” Jim) or some creep who’d crawled out from under a rock (the “Yes, I really do stink!” Jim). I would figure out which one they were looking for—cool or creepy—and play along. During one phone-in, the girl of the team dramatically evacuated herself from the studio before my voice came on. But who cared, as long as listeners bought my book.

As it turned out, many people did. The book has sold many tens of thousands of copies, has gone into its tenth printing, and continues to sell at a steady pace seven years later. Two other books called
Who Cut the Cheese?
(with different subtitles) came out a year or so after mine. They were both parodies of Dr. Spencer Johnson’s best seller,
Who Moved My Cheese?
In England, where I’d done several phoners and appeared on a BBC radio special, Michael O’Mara Books, a publisher of novelties and knockoffs, commandeered the clever cover art from
Who Cut the Cheese?
and printed a somewhat faded facsimile on two of its own paperbacks, including
The Little Book of Farting
. The cover, a detail of
Thirty-Six Faces of Expression
by Louis Boilly, had been painted in France some 150 years earlier, so nobody was in a position to sue. Besides, isn’t imitation a sincere form of flatulence?

BOOK: Blame It on the Dog
2.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Murder on the Mauretania by Conrad Allen
I Am the Chosen King by Helen Hollick
Alive and Dead in Indiana by Michael Martone
Bad Habits by Jenny McCarthy
Plastic Hearts by Lisa de Jong
Masquerade by Gayle Lynds
The Lie by Kultgen, Chad