People sum up grand concepts, thoughts, and plans in six words or fewer every day — in Facebook status updates, text messages, text-message novels, iPhone or Blackberry e-mails, Twitter posts, or analog Post-Its. We Internet-agers are honing our ability to broadcast details of our daily lives with brevity and concision. Perhaps Ernest Hemingway was nearly a century ahead of his time when he wrote one of the first short, short stories: "For sale: baby shoes, never worn."In December 2006, Papa's words inspired Larry Smith and Rachel Fershleiser, who edit the online magazine SMITH ("Everyone has a story. What's yours?"), to ask readers to sum up their lives in six words. Submissions poured in, and the result was a New York Times bestseller titled Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure — the first part of that title is a sixer submitted by Summer Grimes, a hairdresser from St. Paul, Minnesota. Now Smith and Fershleiser are following it up with a new book, Six-Word Memoirs on Love & Heartbreak (Harper Perennial, 144 pages, $10), upon which they'll elaborate this Tuesday at Brookline Booksmith.
That Love & Heartbreak's February 5 release coincides with the ramp-up to Valentine's Day seems like throwing rotten eggs at the dreaded, greeting-card-company-created holiday. As divorce attorney Raoul Felder states, rather grimly, in the book: "Love almost always leads to heartbreak." That sentiment runs rampant through the collection. "Now I hate hearing that song," writes T'Anna Holst. "We'll break up before this prints," predicts Porochista Khakpour. "Found my ex-husband on Craigslist. Twice," laments Yin Shin.
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There are more positive reflections, of course ("He makes me laugh every day," writes Detta Owens), but part of the charm and charisma of Love & Heartbreak lies in its unspoken imaginative possibilities. Reading the book opens a wormhole to thinking up your own summations ("I thought we'd just be friends" was the best one I came up with), and undoubtedly, by now, some creative-writing teacher somewhere has asked her students to pick one of the book's memoirs and craft a longer story from it. (Perhaps one composed entirely of six-word sentences, a feat the New Yorker's Lizzie Widdicombe accomplished when she wrote about the first book.)
Smith says that on a recent vacation his wife caught him counting words in his head on a beach in Mexico. "It tends to become an obsession," he sums up — in exactly six words.
Larry Smith and Rachel Fershleiser will read and discuss their new edition on February 3 at 7 pm at the Brookline Booksmith, 279 Harvard Street, Brookline. Call 617.566.6660 or go to brooklinebooksmith.com.
Phoenix Contest: Leave your six-word memoir below as a comment to this article. The winner will be published in the next SMITH magazine memoir book with a chance to read at the Brookline Booksmith on February 3.