Agouti story on NPR - 10 years ago?
OK, this is totally random. Ten years ago (or more, perhaps), I heard a fabulous story on NPR. A woman tells the story about going to meet her fiancee's family. The fiancee had told the narrator that she must eat whatever his mother prepares or the mother-in-law will be highly offended.
When they arrive at the mother-in-law's home in Central America, the narrator sees a dead, wet, sleek rodent-like animal in the sink. She begins to dread that that animal will soon be prepared in a dish she will have to eat.
The story builds up great tension and anticipation. I would love to be able to hear it again, but I cannot find it on the NPR.org website.
Does anyone have any suggestions for finding this story on-line? (And please don't post "let me google that for you".
Thanks in advance!
When they arrive at the mother-in-law's home in Central America, the narrator sees a dead, wet, sleek rodent-like animal in the sink. She begins to dread that that animal will soon be prepared in a dish she will have to eat.
The story builds up great tension and anticipation. I would love to be able to hear it again, but I cannot find it on the NPR.org website.
Does anyone have any suggestions for finding this story on-line? (And please don't post "let me google that for you".
Thanks in advance!
Comments
-
I have a suggestion, but unfortunately it's only a variation on "Google it." You'll have much better luck searching with a tool like Lexis-Nexis. NPR publishes transcripts of most or all of their programming, and those are indexed on Lexis-Nexis going back many years. This will probably be more fruitful than searching NPR.org, since finding articles like this is the purpose of that database.
(I actually ran a couple of quick searches for variations on agouti, mother-in-law, etc., but didn't find anything. There were only three articles on agoutis at all; are you sure that's the term they used?)
I'm guessing that either the Brooklyn Public Library or NYPL has a subscription to Lexis-Nexis. Or you can always borrow the account of a friend who's affiliated with a university.
Good luck! -
Sounds like one of the Selected Shorts. Try contacting them
http://www.symphonyspace.org/shorts
You might have to resort to the telephone, or sending an e-mail -
could it be this american life? they have a search engine on their site.
-
Thanks for all the suggestions! I'll try them all. The story has a really lovely moment at the end between mother and daughter-in-law. It's sweet.
Howdy, Stranger!
Categories
- 40K All Categories
- 27.1K Neighborhoods
- 5.1K Crown Heights/Prospect Lefferts Gardens
- 7.1K Prospect Heights
- 2.3K Fort Greene, Clinton Hill, Bed-Stuy
- 8K Park Slope
- 549 Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Bushwick
- 442 Flatbush/Midwood/Ditmas Park
- 657 BoCoCa (Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens)
- 151 Red Hook
- 104 Gowanus
- 304 Bay Ridge/Bensonhurst
- 130 Coney Island, Brighton Beach, Sheepshead Bay
- 270 Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO and Downtown
- 598 Windsor Terrace / Kensington
- 673 Greenwood Heights and Sunset Park
- 749 Brooklyn and Beyond
- 6.3K Stuff
- 86 Brooklyn Back When
- 1.2K Brooklyn Pets
- 257 Brooklyn Kids
- 241 Brooklyn Eats
- 51 Brooklyn Booze
- 3.6K The Lounge / Random Stuff
- 611 Brooklyn Politics
- 122 Brooklyn Sports and Fitness
- 111 Brooklyn Photos
- 339 Site Issues
- 8 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- 6.2K Listings
- 1.1K APARTMENTS and REAL ESTATE
- 1.3K Sales Openings Events
- 2.3K The Classifieds

