This day stinks! Move back one!

Those of you wishing to preserve the illusion that book publishing is a glamorous and thrilling, Mad Menesque profession may want to look away now. Those of you looking for stories of the great city that is New York, tales to rival the classic yarns of days gone by, are sure to be sorely disappointed.

I spent my day, for the most part, immersed deep again in the tedium of manuscript reformatting. I had what should have already been a single document of alphabetized references — but was instead several documents, full of errors and left-over track changes and only a passing acquaintance with which letters in the alphabet go before which other letters — and I bent it to my will using only the gifts that god (and Microsoft Word) gave me. Which means, basically, that I spent the day doing a lot of cutting and pasting, cutting and pasting. (They are, after all, aspects of my game.)

And I was doing all of this, among a few other things — like, oh, compiling a list of contact information for everyone who’s reviewed a manuscript or proposal for me in the past year — while the office was besieged by incessant noise. Like insanely, unbearably, miss-the-constant-fire-alarms-from-the-old-office-ly loud noise. The work crews outside our windows were back, apparently repairing or removing or something a bridge around the outside building. I don’t really know what that means, but that’s what the late-in-the-game e-mail from management told us. They’ll be moving around the building, so they won’t always be directly in front of us, and there’s the possibility that yesterday and today will be the loudest, but the work is scheduled to last all summer long. As I noted on Twitter, it was like listening to giant robots make fart noises, loud enough to rattle the windows, or like being stuck inside a dentist’s drill. It really was difficult to concentrate, and there were points when I thought they really ought to send us home.

There were points when, a split second after I’d cut, I couldn’t remember what or where I was supposed to paste.

Oh, and did I mention the office was uncomfortably cold?

When I overslept this morning, and then the ticket collector on the train shouted loudly as I tried to board, “This car stinks! Move back one,” I probably should have guessed it was going to be one of those days. I don’t even want to think about psychotherapy references all weekend, or even alphabetic order. And whatever I do think about, I want to be able to hear myself do it.

All that said, I’m not going to characterize it as a bad day. It didn’t make me miserable, was just aggravating and tedious in a lot of ways.

I’m glad it’s the weekend.

There will come soft-serve rains

The construction workers/window washers/whatever-they-were finished early(ish) today, only being insanely loud and disruptive until a little after lunchtime. I spent most of the day waist-deep in the big muddy, editing — or rather mostly reformatting — a manuscript, which really could not be more problematic in its formatting if it tried. No, wait, I take that back, not least because there’s a tiny part of me that’s afraid the manuscript itself may be reading this and will have its revenge before I get in tomorrow. (Not really. But yeah.) Truth is, I’ve run into worse manuscripts, messier formatting, bigger problems. But oh man, my head? It asplode.
Otherwise, the day was pretty uneventful. We had another birthday celebration for another co-worker — I’m seriously starting to think everyone I work with was born in June — with red velvet cake (and cupcakes) instead of cookies. It’s a tough life. And the heat continued to rise, slacking off just a little this evening when the skies opened up and it poured rain. But, seriously, when you start talking about the weather, and it’s not even particularly interesting weather…

What day is it again?

Today was pretty typical for a Thursday. Too bad it was actually a Wednesday.

Workers spent the entire day outside our windows, mostly one floor up or one floor down. For the longest time, I was convinced they were window washers, but by the end of the day, when I actually got glimpse of their very shaky-looking scaffolding, I saw bricks and broken-up concrete, so they may have been doing some kind of refacing or demolition for all I know. All I do know is, they were very noisy, and it felt like we were working on top of a jackhammer all day. Or, as a coworker suggested, like we were Doozers in Fraggle Rock. (I never saw the show growing up — we didn’t have cable until only fairly recently — but I got the reference. And felt immediately old when a younger coworker of ours didn’t, at all.) Hopefully, they’ll be done — or higher up where we can’t hear them — by tomorrow.

Which is, what, Friday, right? No? Rats.

Party Tuesday

Today was a typical Tuesday, for the most part. We had a small birthday celebration for a coworker at the office this afternoon, with cookies and brownies and a card I don’t remember being asked to sign. It’s not really his birthday, but he’ll be out the rest of the week at a conference. Then this evening, my parents and I celebrated my father’s birthday, which is actually today. There were presents and cake and all that good stuff.

And meanwhile, the weather outside has just be lovely.

Oh, and I finished reading William Sleator’s House of Stairs. I don’t have a lot to say about it, except that I can maybe see the influence it had on the movie Cube, and that ultimately I was left kind of disappointed. It was one of those books, like A Wrinkle in Time, for instance, that I probably would have loved if I had read when I was younger but now…

Still, lovely weather.