Record Details
Book cover

The best laid plans : a novel

Fallis, Terry. (Author).
Book  - 2007
FIC Falli
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Stamford Available

Other Formats

  • ISBN: 0771047584
  • ISBN: 9780771047589
  • Physical Description xix, 314 pages
  • Publisher Toronto : McClelland & Stewart, [2007]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Canada Reads 2011
"A Douglas Gibson Book."
"Emblem"--P. [4] of cover.
Canada Reads Top 40 Essential Canadian Novels of the Decade.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 19.99
Awards Note:
Stephen Leacock Award for Humour
Canada Reads winner, 2011.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Table of Contents for ISBN Number 0771047584
The Best Laid Plans
The Best Laid Plans
by Fallis, Terry
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Table of Contents

The Best Laid Plans

SectionSection DescriptionPage Number
Part 1
Chapter 1
After an impressive hang time, I plummeted back to the sidewalk, my fall broken by a fresh, putrid pile of excrement the size of a small ottoman. I quickly scanned the area for a hippo on the lam.
Before I quite literally found myself in deep shit, my day had actually been ripe with promise. I'm a big believer in signs. After six straight days of rain, I believed the sun burning a hole in the cloudless, cobalt sky was a sign - a good one. It somehow lightened the load I'd been lugging around in my mind for the previous six weeks. I lifted my face to the warmth and squinted as I walked along the edge of Riverfront Park. Even though it was a Monday morning, I hummed a happy little tune. Maybe, just maybe, things were looking up. Unfortunately, so was I.
My foot made a soft landing on the sidewalk and shot forward all on its own, leaving a brown, viscous streak in its wake. Congenitally clumsy, I was well into the splits before I managed to drag my trailing leg forward and slip the surly bonds of earth. Airborne, I surveyed the terrain below and, with all the athletic prowess of a quadriplegic walrus, returned safely to earth, touching down on the aforementioned crap cushion.
Just after I landed, I counted roughly twenty witnesses, who stared slack-jawed before many of them split their sides. Fortunately, only a handful of them had video cameras. I expect you can still find me on klutzklips.com. Everyone seemed quite amused by the prominent sign planted three feet to my left: keep cumberland clean. please stoop and scoop. The owners of whatever behemoth produced this Guinness-book offering would have needed a Hefty bag and a snow shovel.
And what an unholy aroma. I've always believed that English is better equipped than any other language to capture the richness and diversity of our daily lives. I promise you, the Oxford Concise does not yet have words to describe the stench that rose like a mushroom cloud from that colossal mound. Stepping in it was one thing; full immersion was quite another.
Bright sun in a clear blue sky - good sign. Russian split jump into a gigantic dog turd - not a good sign. Good form, good air, but not a good sign.
An hour and a shower later, I retraced my steps, eyes fixed on the pavement, ignoring the two township workers in hazmat suits at the scene of my fall. I quickened my pace, pumping myself up for the important encounter ahead. After nearly six weeks of intensive searching, I was down to my last seven days. I'd tried flattery, threats, cajolery, blackmail, and bribery, but had come up empty and bone-dry - nothing.
In the first two weeks after my arrival in Cumberland, I'd spoken to the mayor and every town councilor, including the lone Liberal, as well as the head of the chamber of commerce. No dice. In week three, I had pleaded with prominent business leaders, local doctors and lawyers, the head of the four-bus transit authority, and the high-school principal. They're all still laughing. In fact, one of them needed two sick days to rest a pulled stomach muscle. Last week, I had bought drinks for the local crossing guard, baked cookies for the chief instructor at the Prescott Driving School, and shared inane banter with the golf pro at the Cumberland Mini-Putt. No luck, although the crossing guard at least listened to half my spiel before holding up her stop sign.
I like to think that one of my few strengths is a keen sense of when I'm doomed. None of this "the glass is half full" stuff for me. I know when I'm in deep. So I gave up and returned to the no-hope option I'd rejected at the outset as cruel and unusual punishment. But what else could I do? I had splinters from scraping the bottom of the barrel.
The Riverfront Seniors' Residence loomed on my left just beyond the park. Built in 1952, it had that utterly forgettable but, I suppose, practical architecture of that era - early Canadian ugly. Two wings of rooms extended along the riverbank on either side of a central lobby. Everything looked painfully rectangular. The only architectural grace note, just adjacent to the dining room, was a curved wall of windows, overlooking the Ottawa River. For the residents, the panorama provided a welcome distraction from the steam-table cuisine.
The lounge next to the dining room was populated with 30-year-old couches and chairs, sporting strangely hued upholstery from the "shades of internal organs" collection, accessorized by protective plastic slip covers. I saw a couple of dozen or so residents camped out in the lounge. Some were reading. Others were locked in debate over what vegetables would accompany the pot roast that night. A few simply gazed at nothing at all with a forlorn and vacant look. The scent of air freshener hung heavy, only just subduing that other odor sadly common to many seniors' residences. I loitered in the lobby, surveying the scene and deciding on my approach. Evidently, I was too slow.
A grizzled, old man in a peach safari suit and a lavender, egg-encrusted tie looked me up and down a few times, wrestling with his memory. Finally, recognition dawned on his withered face. "Hey, it's the doggy doo-doo diving champ!" he shouted. I glanced at the aging alliteration aficionado before taking in the rest of the room. All eyes turned to me. I saw heads nodding and smiles breaking. A wheelchair-ridden centenarian gave me a thumbs-up. I heard a smattering of applause that slowly gathered strength and culminated some time later in an osteoporotic, stooping ovation. I felt compelled to take a bow. When the commotion abated, the guy in the peach safari suit approached.
"I gotta tell you that was some performance this morning. After that horse of a dog dropped his load in the middle of the sidewalk, we were all gathered by the window there, waiting for some poor sap to step in it. We even had a pool going."