The art of love in the far North

Winter is a thoughtful time. Snow falls in the trees and my natural meanness dissipates and the urge to bash my enemies’ mailboxes with a baseball bat. I put fresh strawberries on the cornflakes and taste the sweetness of life. I speak gently to the lady across the table. Marriage is the truest test — to make a good life with your best-informed critic, and thanks to her excellent comedic timing, we have a good life. My third marriage and this year we ding the silver bell of twenty-five years.

America is the land of second and third chances, not like Europe. We have remedial colleges for kids who slept through high school. In Europe, the system is geared toward efficiency: it separates kids by age 12 into Advanced, Mediocre, and Food Service Workers, and once they assign you to a lane, it’s hard to get out of it. In this country, if our children are lazy and undisciplined, we try to see signs of artistic ability. We put them in a fine arts program. They spend three years writing weird stuff and get an MFA and you drive through McDonald’s and the young people fixing the Egg McMuffins are poets and songwriters.

It’s a land of high hopes, thanks to the Atlantic and Pacific that serve to isolate us from reality. Our ancestors were happy to escape the zeal of revolutionaries and the madness of despots and come to America and work like draft horses, hoping their children and grandchildren would have an easier time of it. And we do. Fifty years ago, when we referred to “homosexuals,” it sounded like people suffering from a condition that required treatment, but when “gay” became common usage, it changed everything. How can you be opposed to happiness?

For an old man, there aren’t many second chances, but we still hope for them. I miss my youth, the buzzin’ of the bees in the cigarette trees near the lemonade springs where the bluebird sings, and now the bee population is down, the smokes are gone, lemonade contains dangerous additives, and when did you last see a bluebird? In my youth, men worked on their cars, changed the oil and the spark plugs, replaced the fan belt, and other men gathered, squatted around the car, and talked about manly things. The driveway was their territory. This is all gone now. Cars can’t be repaired by ordinary people with ordinary tools. Men have been forced into the living room, which belongs to women. They say, “Take your shoes off” and you have to do it.

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In the Press

The St. Paul Pioneer Press reviewed Garrison's newest book, "Living with Limericks," and found that "the bottom line here is that 'Living with Limericks' is a funny book that gives us peeks into Keillor’s thoughts." 
 
Read the full review >>>
Get the book >>>

On the Road

The first new tour dates of the new year have been announced! Garrison will be performing his one-man show of poetry, songs, and stories in Milwaukee, Madison, and Chicago in mid-February. In addition, he has added 2 nights of duets and stories with Heather Masse at the Dakota Jazz Club in Minneapolis. We hope to see you there!

Wednesday, February 12 - Lake Forest, IL
The John & Nancy Hughes Theater. 7:30 p.m. Tickets $45.00. More info >>>

Thursday, February 13 - Milwaukee, WI
The Back Room at Colectivo. 7:00 p.m. Tickets $40.00 More info >>>

Friday, February 14 - Madison, WI
Barrymore Theater. 8:00 p.m. Tickets $40.00 More info >>>

Tuesday, February 18 - Minneapolis, MN
With Heather Masse. Night 1 of 2 at the Dakota Jazz Club. 7:00 p.m. Tickets $30.00 More info >>>

Wednesday, February 19 - Minneapolis, MN
With Heather Masse. Night 2 of 2 at the Dakota Jazz Club. 7:00 p.m. Tickets $30.00 More info >>>
 
See the full schedule >>>

A poem for January

The CD collection "A Year in Lake Wobegon" gathers many of your favorite stories culled from live broadcasts of A Prairie Home Companion from 2014 to 2016.

These twelve "above-average" stories represent all the goings-on in Lake Wobegon over the course of one calendar year. Family gatherings, holiday celebrations, the predictable, the unexpected––it all happens in "the little town that time forgot and the decades could not improve."

As a bonus, the liner notes include a written poem for each month of the year. Here is the poem for January:

Another year gone and the old man with the scythe
Is mowing closer. He hasn't been subtle, has he.
Too many good people gone, and I could sit and cry
For them––except that you look exceptionally snazzy
And sexy despite the miles on your odometer,
As if you have a few more aces up your sleeve.
Maybe you were born under a lucky comet or
Maybe it's just the delirium on New Year's Eve.
I gaze in your face and take your hand––you're
Positively glowing. Maybe we've been sorry a 
Long enough time and now we get some grandeur
And do our dance and sing our aria.
     May the New Year bring us before it has flown
     All we would have wished for had we only known.
 
Read full content list >>>

Lake Wobegon Water Tower Hat

The Lake Wobegon water tower stands for everything tall, proud, and useful. When you wear it, you’re saying something. Embroidered cap is blue washed cotton twill. One size; adjustable strap.         

Get the hat >>>

Beautiful Dreamer

"Wild Horses" is ranked #334 by Billboard on its list of 500 best songs of all time. Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, the song first appeared on the Rolling Stones album Sticky Fingers. Here, Garrison Keillor and Heather Masse perform a duet version on A Prairie Home Companion. Their version is included on their duet album Beautiful Dreamer, available exclusively via our shop. 

Listen to "Wild Horses" >>>
Purchase Beautiful Dreamer >>>

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