This was my second time seeing author David Sedaris at the Aronoff Theater, but I still plan on buying tickets any time he's in town. There's a reason that Sedaris has made a name for himself through NPR: he has such a great, authentic personality and is just a pleasure to listen to.
You'll have to take my word about Sedaris being in this photo!
My mom was a Sedaris fan for eons before I was; she actually used to read me passages from Me Talk Pretty One Day. This was her first time seeing Sedaris in the flesh, and that alone was a joy to see.
We were also able to have our books signed afterwards. Even though David Sedaris has a huge following and rates the Aronoff Theater, he still takes a gracious moment to really talk with each person whose book he signs. In my mom's copy of When You Are Engulfed in Flames, he drew a picture of an elephant spraying water on itself; in my copy of Barrel Fever, he wrote a French word that he had just learned: quel gourqondine. I can't find anything online about what that term means. Thoughts?
What a fantastic evening downtown-- the whole city was hopping with Bengals fans, Reds fans, and Disney on Ice fans. I love the feeling of a bustling Cincinnati!
Farewell and Thanks for All the ChocoPots:
1 year ago
4 comments:
gourgandine means 'hussy' according to google:
http://www.google.com/dictionary?source=translation&hl=en&q=gourgandine&langpair=fr|en
The phrase looked like Latin to me, or a mix of French with quel - in mythology, the Gorgones were Medusa and her two sisters, so it could be a reference to hair of snakes, a beautiful face, and a petrifying look. What do you think?
Ha! My mom remembered something about him saying "whore," but I couldn't find anything online-- I tried qourqondine, gourqondine, gourquondine... but NOT gourgondine.
He said it was slang, too. :)
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