The Merger

Ya Sam takoitov at hotmail.com
Fri Jun 15 07:36:45 CDT 2007


http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?BRD=1291&dept_id=524048&newsid=18470717&PAG=461&rfi=9

Wall Street rocked today when Stephen King Enterprises announced it had 
outbid John Grisham Inc. and Barbara Cartland Unlimited for full ownership 
of Philip Roth, John Updike, and Thomas Pynchon. In a statement, SKE praised 
all three writers as "the foam of Post Modern Realism. This cements our 
image as forward thinking traditionalists. Stephen joins with our 
shareholders in welcoming these three literary giants into our family."

Longtime analysts were not so sanguine. Remarked Walter Hemshire of 
Sandborne Brokers, "This certainly establishes SKE as a player in the still 
evolving literary conglomerate field, although Disney's recent acquisition 
of Tom Clancy and Garrison Keillor gives them a slight advantage. Time 
Warner is right up there with its merging of Ben Bova Associates, Jackie 
Collins Inc. and Mary Higgins Clark International. But no one knows what 
these mergers will mean in terms of quality merchandise. How much influence 
these corporations exert on style and content is an open question."



Added another trading insider who asked not to be identified, "Soon, we will 
see the end of writers working alone, expressing their own ideas. It will be 
literature by committee."


One particular section of the SKE statement troubled most observers. "Only 
when absolutely necessary will downsizing be considered."



When pressed for clarification SKE spokeswoman Clara Winship responded, "All 
you have to do is read these writers to understand their brilliance, but in 
order for this to be the kind of fit we all want, changes are in order. 
Entire chapters in Roth and Updike fly by without a murder or even a 
maiming. Only a handful of readers understand Pynchon. I emphasize every 
effort will be made to keep as many modifiers and punctuation marks as 
possible intact. Frankly, there are a bit too many paragraphs per page than 
we're comfortable with, but these are incidental details to be hammered out 
between our people and these writers."



Asked about rumors that all semi-colons would be eliminated, Ms. Winship 
replied, "I think all of us agree semi-colons have always been problematic. 
The period makes a bold statement. The comma asks us to pause gently and 
taste the sentence flavor. The semi can't make up its mind. It equivocates, 
flustered and frozen. It is the Hamlet of punctuation. SKE simply will not 
abide that sort of ambivalence."



On Larry King, both Roth and Updike agreed that, in Roth's words, "This 
decision feels right at this time. I rejected the Cartland offer because, 
despite my respect for her 723 books, I could never adhere to their 
requirement of seven books a year."



Added Updike, "I hate cleavage in cover art." In a related story, Tim 
Robbins and Susan Sarandon were joined by fellow activist Alec Baldwin in a 
demonstration in front of SKE's offices, chanting "SAVE THE SEMI!"


Baldwin opined, "If Shakespeare had used semi-colons, my Macbeth would have 
attained deeper poignancy." Pynchon, elusive as usual, was finally cornered 
playing Frisbee in Riverside Park. The publicity shy author responded to the 
controversy by describing the merger as "an unfortunate necessity." Or 
perhaps he actually said, "I'm meeting Vinnie Testaverde." A bus drowned out 
much of his response. Then he scurried off, dodging traffic. - Joe Del 
Priore



Joe Del Priore is a frequent contributor. Comments on this piece can be sent 
to: current at hudsonreporter.com.

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