Suds in Your Eye
4/5
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About this ebook
With this first book of Mary Lasswell’s to feature the “Arkies,” you’ll be hard pressed to not grin along with the charm of Lasswell’s characters. Go back to the ’40s in this authentic piece of Americana and see how the story of your new three favorite ladies begins.
Mary Lasswell
Mary Lasswell was born in Glasgow in 1905 and raised in Texas. Many of her novels, which enjoyed immense popularity in the 1940s and 1950s, are set in the American Southwest. She is perhaps best known for her series of humorous titles, beginning with Suds in Your Eye, that center around three altruistic, beer-loving elderly women who reside in the San Diego junkyard Noah’s Ark. The series features illustrations by George Price, known for his art in The New Yorker. In 1944, Jack Kirkland adapted Suds in Your Eye into a Broadway play. In addition to her novels, Lasswell wrote editorials for the Houston Chronicle in the 1960s.
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Reviews for Suds in Your Eye
20 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5My mother recommended this book to me when I was about ten --- hmmmmmmmm. (Note: No one in our house drank anything alcoholic.) I love it, and the next one -- is that High Times? After that book they fall off a bit, but are still enjoyable. The Price illustrations really add to the books.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book is probably mostly unknown book, it really is out of print but you can buy used books and there is an e-book available. My book club voted to read this book. Mary Lasswell is an American author who wrote during WWII while she waited for her military husband to return. Suds in Your Eye is her first book and it is a rather silly book about 3 old, impoverished women who live to drink beer. The book is set in San Diego during WWII and it is about living life to the fullest without working your life awy. It embraces making do with what you have, eating well but cheaply and not overextending your self so that you can't enjoy life. It is a book that embraces community; in this book you have 3 old women and an old man, you have Chinese, Mexicans, tuna queens (fish factory workers), teachers and secretaries. A bit of this book reminded me of John Steinbeck's book Cannery Row but just not great literature like you expect from John Steinbeck. What I think the essence of this book is "the community" that one can have with other people and how this book embraced all peoples and classes of people and when you think about this book being written in 1942, that's saying something. The plot is just a simple story of 3 old ladies trying to survive in Noah's Ark (the name of the place Mrs Finey lives). It's a quick read, the e-book was without defects. I think the author chose to write as a way of getting by while she waited for her husband to return from th e war. The book is humorous. Because it is so much about drinking "cases of beer", living in a junkyard with a fence of beer cans, I think it makes the book a bit quirky and will give it that tag as well.
Book preview
Suds in Your Eye - Mary Lasswell
Suds in Your Eye
Mary Lasswell
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Books by Mary Lasswell
SUDS IN YOUR EYE
HIGH TIME
ONE ON THE HOUSE
WAIT FOR THE WAGON
TOONER SCHOONER
LET’S GO FOR BROKE
The characters in this book are fictitious; any resemblance to real persons is wholly accidental and unintentional.
For
LASS
Chapter 1
MRS. FEELEY was dividing the calla lily bulbs that multiplied so rapidly beside her garden wall. Every so often she raised up and craned her neck, partly to relieve the strain in her back, but mainly in order not to miss anything that might be going on around the neighborhood.
There she was again! Must be looking for rooms or something, because she had a folded newspaper in her hand. Mrs. Feeley had often noticed the tall, stately woman who was making a house-to-house canvass of Island Avenue. Looked like an awful re-fined woman, too. You could always tell a lady, Mrs. Feeley decided, even from far. She was most likely a pensioner of some kind. They were always looking for cheap places to live; some of them lived real nice, but Mrs. Feeley knew one that lived in a chicken coop, and then there was that old maid who lived in an abandoned monastery until the cops found out about it.
The tall woman was different, somehow. She had an air. Mrs. Feeley couldn’t quite decide whether she was a retired school-teacher, or maybe a milliner. No…she wasn’t flashy enough to have been a milliner. And her face wasn’t severe enough for her to be a school-teacher Mrs. Feeley had never read Socrates’ remark about the thin lips of old school-teachers, but she had her own ideas on the subject.
All at once it came to her!
‘I’ll bet my bottom dollar she’s a music teacher! She’s got that dreamy look!’
Mrs. Feeley dug furiously at the callas now that the problem of the tall woman’s probable occupation was settled.
Miss Agnes Tinkham continued to walk along Island Avenue slowly. That is, until she saw the wall. Then she came to a dead stop. It was the most spectacular wall she had ever seen: it was made entirely of beer cans.
‘My, my!’ mused Miss Tinkham, unconscious that she spoke aloud. ‘What an extraordinary structure!’
A head covered with a riot of short white curls appeared from behind the wall and a grubby paw wiped the sweat from bright blue eyes. The face was small, round, and well tanned. It would not be long before the nose and chin met.
‘Talkin’ to me?’ When she smiled it became evident that Mrs. Feeley didn’t have a tooth in her head.
‘I was just admiring your wall; such an original idea!’ said Miss Tinkham, flashing a little cattily her own slightly yellowed, but perfectly sound teeth.
‘I guess there’s not another like it in the whole world,’ the owner admitted modestly. ‘Them beer cans kep’ pilin’ up so fast I never closed an eye till I figgered out some way to use ’em up. I seen you walkin’ around here before. You don’t live around here, do you?’
‘No, unfortunately for me! I’d like to, though. Such a lovely view of the bay! I feel I’d be happy in this atmosphere.’
‘You would? Well, the atmosphere ain’t so hot when the tuna factory’s goin’ full blast. Island Avenue ain’t what it used to be. There’s nothin’ here now but a few Filipinos and Portygee fishermen. Used to be a lotta Japs, but they moved ’em all off since the war. ’Course there’s me an’ my junk yard…we been here thirty-seven years!’
Miss Tinkham was duly impressed.
‘Then you own all this?’ With a wave of her long slender hand clad in a pink rayon glove she indicated the lots on which were located a junk yard made up mostly of old cars, sinks, and bathtubs, the riotous garden, and a structure which had obviously been a store at one time, judging by the two show-windows, one on each side of the door. The building boasted the same kind of false front the stores had in the cowboy pictures Miss Tinkham sometimes saw at the fifteen-cent matinees.
The building had been thickly daubed with pink kalsomine, but through the paint the name ‘Noah’s Ark’ was still visible high up on the front. Both sides of the house were obliterated by flowers. On one side giant California sweet peas in wild profusion of color and bloom towered far beyond their wire supports. Bougainvillea swirled madly up the other side and over the roof. It was not the screaming, tooth-rasping magenta variety that is all too common, but a rare variety, deep, rich burgundy in color.
Mrs. Feeley turned and surveyed her domain.
‘Yeup! Me an’ my husband opened this junk yard thirty-seven years ago, may he rest in peace. It was his idea to name it Noah’s Ark on account o’ you could find two of every thin’ inside!’
‘‘What a clever man he must have been! Do you communicate with him often?’
‘Huh?’
‘Through a medium, of course. My dear, I was at a perfectly marvelous séance up on University Avenue last night; any number of believers had their loved ones materialize for them! Such a comfort! I talked to the spirit of my dear Mimi, my little white poodle that was run over last year!’
This business was getting out of hand. Mrs. Feeley wanted badly to change the subject without offending this fascinating creature who was so willing to stop and talk; but Father Deal had given her hell when she followed Mr. Feeley’s wishes and had him cremated. On top of that, she had gone to work and buried his ashes right here in her own garden where he had wanted to lie, instead of in proper consecrated ground. But spiritualism! That was going a bit too far, Mrs. Feeley thought. She was literally back to the wall.
‘You’d never believe the time I had fillin’ them cans with sand! Got me a funnel an’ stuck it in the hole, an’ filled every one of ’em! Then I laid me some boards an’ poured me some concrete, an’ stood the cans up in it an’ let ’em set! Then I went to work an’ piled one row atop another with more cement between till it was high as I wanted an’ I’d used up all my beer cans!’
‘I don’t see how you ever had the patience!’
‘It was a job, all right; but I think it looks right pretty with them iceplants growin’ outa the top row. They’s ten thousand beer cans in that wall!’
Miss Tinkham was overcome with respect for anyone who could get on the outside of that much beer.
‘Inspired, my dear; simply inspired! Not to mention the expense!’
‘’Course the cans wasn’t all mine. Some of ’em me an’ Old-Timer—he’s my workin’ man—picked up an’ hauled from the dumps. But it was right after Mr. Feeley was took, an’ I think I’d a went crazy if I hadn’t a had that wall to build!’
‘It is terrible to be lonely. I know. You really should come to the Rosicrucian Society with me this afternoon! They will keep you in touch with your dear departed!’
‘Hold your hats, boys! Here we go again!’ said Mrs. Feeley to herself. ‘What was you doin’ round this way?’ she asked a trifle abruptly, in her anxiety to steer the conversation away from the shoals of the occult. Her visitor’s reply gave her ample time to study the lady at close range, for Miss Tinkham’s conversation was punctuated by slow graceful turns of the head, gestures, smiles, and sighs. Mrs. Feeley decided she was pushing seventy…not a day younger.
If Mrs. Feeley had been a sculptor she would have said Miss Tinkham’s bones were beautiful,
especially those of her face. The planes and contours were delicately modeled. She had a triangular depression between well-marked eyebrows, a piquant delta that gave her a wide-awake enthusiastic expression.
Mrs. Feeley thought she had a horse-face and awful long teeth, but her own, she added in all fairness. Her clothes were badly out of date, though nice and ladylike, dripping with long strings of beads and numerous chains. But was the Dutch cap of net embroidered in sequins quite the thing for a morning stroll? At any rate she had nice legs, and was certainly a lady.
‘As a matter of fact,’ Miss Tinkham was rambling on, ‘I was looking for a different place to live; more congenial surroundings, you know! My present landlady has no regard for the finer things. A crass materialist, my dear! She says the house is being sold, but the truth of the matter is she simply wants to get rid of her present roomers and rent the rooms to defense workers at three times the normal price!’
‘Ain’t it a shame?’ Mrs. Feeley clucked. ‘I hope the price ceilin’ falls on their lousy heads!’
‘That Oriental fellow across the street had some very nice rooms, but he said the oddest thing to me: he said I was too old to get a room in that house! I just can’t think what he meant!’
Mrs. Feeley snorted and opened the gate.
‘I can! Cribs! That’s all them houses is! Dirty cribs! You don’t want nothin’ to do with them, m’am! Come on in! We might’s well talk sittin’ down!’
Miss Tinkham followed her down the path like a person attending the annual convention of the Loyal Buddies and Kindred Spirits Society. She was amazed to notice as Mrs. Feeley waddled ahead of her that her tiny feet were bare; cute, sunburned feet, like a little girl’s, Miss Tinkham thought. Nothing like her own gnarled and twisted extremities. Miss Tinkham’s mother had hated what she called her daughter’s indecently large feet, and had set about remedying the calamity by the simple expedient of always buying her daughter’s shoes two sizes too small. Somehow Mrs. Feeley reminded her of a grandmother Teddy Bear as she rolled along clad in a pair of chunky, extra-wide brown denim overalls, worn over a man’s blue denim shirt with the collar open and the sleeves rolled up.
‘There! Set a spell!’ Mrs. Feeley patted the bench cordially. The arbor was dripping with yellow roses. To the right of it stood a black-and-white bull with flaring nostrils and waving tail. It was remarkable how lifelike these plaster garden ornaments could be! Miss Tinkham wished they had not been quite such realistic sticklers for detail in the case of this particular animal, and turned her eyes away modestly to admire the gaudy plaster Indian chief that stood at the other end of the arbor. He was much nicer.
‘What green fingers you have, dear lady! The magic touch!’ Miss Tinkham sighed wistfully as she looked around the lavish yard. There was scarcely a foot of soil that was not a mass of color. There