Look
What I Found
Every
once in a while I take the time out to recommend something
here that some of you might never have heard of. Today
I thought I'd take just a minute to mention Found
magazine.
Found
is simply a repository of actual things that people
have found -- mainly notes, letters, and photographs.
Just lying on the ground or in an old trunk in the attic
or under the floorboards of the house. The finder never
knows who the found objects belong to or who is involved
with them. That's the point. They are anonymous glimpses
of other lives. The great thing is that so many of them
tell a story all by themselves. I occasionally go to
their
website, where you can breeze through a number of
the things people have found and sent in. Recently,
though, I got the book Found
by Davy Rothbart, and I've been enjoying it even more
than I thought I would.
I
suppose in a way it's a voyeuristic kind of thing to
read someone else's notes or letters (although the editors
usually change or blackout the names, if any). Sometimes
it's just a shopping list with some surprising additions.
Sometimes it's a love note. Oftentimes, it's an angry
note that was apparently left on someone's car or window.
Without any kind of actual context, though, we're left
to fill in all the blanks ourselves, and that's why
I like it. Every entry in the book (or website) is really
its own short story. If you use your imagination, you
can come up with all sorts of details about the people
involved (because, unless it's a note written to oneself,
there's obviously always at least two people involved
in every note or letter).
One
of my favorites from the book is a posted, handwritten
sign regarding a lost leather jacket. But the writer
didn't just offer a reward. He explained the entire
circumstance involved with losing the jacket and a long
tangent of why the jacket meant so much to him. In just
a couple of paragraphs, you learn so much about the
guy, his life, and his personality, it's really amazing.
Another
one I like is a note from a (probably grade school age)
boy to a girl, asking which of the boys in the class
she likes. With youthful, earnest, and perhaps naïve
clumsiness, the writer betrays his hopes that she will
pick him and tries (and fails) to be cool and aloof.
If
you do go to the website or check out the book, keep
in mind that since these are real notes and letters
and whatnot, written by real people, sometimes it can
have some harsh language.
The
things you find in Found give a great deal of
insight into human motivations and emotions. Certainly
better and more real than any reality show on television.
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