Alternate Title: Why You Should Always Open Your Mail in a Timely Fashion
So the new job is going very well indeed, but some of my mail is still going down to the Children’s Center. No biggie. I stop down there about once a day anyway to pick up holds and the like. Stopped by yesterday, in fact, and while I was there my old boss pointed out that there was a package for me. Not a dinky little nothing of a package, mind you, but an immense package roughly the size of a ping-pong table.
“Did you know that was for you?”
Nope. We took a gander at it and the mystery only deepened. Written all over it in big letters were words decrying “DO NOT BEND!!” and “THIS SIDE UP!!”
“Who’s it from?”
“Carl Jones.”
Nope. No idea. I gave it a glance and then recognized the name. Not Carl Jones. Karl Jones. Karl Jones of the amazing mustache, as written up in my November 1st librarian preview of Penguin Books. That guy. Well, shoot. He was sending me something? To quote Ren & Stimpy, “Could be something good. Could be something bad!”
“I wrote about his mustache on my blog,” I explained as we delicately took a box cutter to the tape. “Maybe what he’s sending me is mustache-related.” I was joking, of course. Nothing as big as this box could possibly be tied into facial hair.
Oh, how wrong I was.
You see that? Yep. That is a ginormous mustache signed by, insofar as I can tell, every single person at Grosset & Dunlap. Folks, I don’t usually blog about the stuff I get in the mail because I get a lot of stuff and it’s not fair to highlight one thing over another. But, guys, there was some serious work put into this ’stache and I gotta give old G&D some credit. Let’s run through the steps of what took place here.
Step One: G&D notices that I’m bowled over by Karl’s near-handlebar. He tweets his amusement. I think that’s the end of it. Instead, someone at G&D (possibly Karl himself, though I am willing to consider other folks had a hand in the initial planning phase) suggests, “Hey! Let’s send Betsy the World’s Biggest Foam Mustache as a thank you!”
Step Two: Others agree that this is a good idea.
Step Three: Someone goes out, purchases sturdy black foamy papery stuff (I’m not a crafty librarian so I can’t tell you exactly what it is) along with a thick silver marker. To make the mustache as large as possible they purchase two huge sheet’s o’ foam with the intention of putting them together. It’s possible that they had these items lying about the office but somehow I doubt it. Where do you even get foam that large in New York City anyway?
Step Four: Someone cuts out two rather even and symmetrical sides to the ’stache. Maybe they mess up and have to redo it on ANOTHER ENTIRELY GIGANTIC PIECE OF BLACK FOAM. Howsoever they manage it, it works in the end. Voila. Two equal halves of the same ’stache.
Step Five: They walk ar