I would send this proposal right away to Jonathan Karp, the Simon and Schuster CEO since my partner Hope Hoffman, a Detroit business consultant, has been explaining to me the difference between a CEO and a CFO.
A CEO is Chief Executive of Operations while a CFO is Chief Executive of Finance.
Yes, I would submit SHORT ANGLE to Jonathan Karp if I didn't think that SHORT ANGLE would have a SHORT LIFE then, and if I did not suspect that Jonathan Karp is a COLD FISH.
(He wouldn't even tell me if he plays tennis.)
I am, after all, the guy who got run out of Eastport, Maine for quoting Abner Stokes in The Maine Times.
Abner was a Canadian who came across the border to work in a herring plant.
"You can always tell Eastporters," he said. "They're all inbred and they look like fish."
That quote put me on lively journalistic ground and I've never looked back. Except when I look back. I know to use the word "fish" whenever possible.
The thing about a short angle is that we tennis players all have hit one. We dished up a short ball sort of like a dead fish.
And suddenly there was our opponent bouncing at the net.
ZING! We hit a stunning crosscourt right past him.
Now that was our natural short angle, the one we should always have hit thereafter.
But things happened, reader, not least discovery that there are many kinds of short angle, too many in fact.
Which other than the passing shot I just described is the best?
That is a question I shall endeavor to answer here and in "A New Year's Serve" and out on the court.
A lifelong project, kind reader, for which I solicit your help.
A CEO is Chief Executive of Operations while a CFO is Chief Executive of Finance.
Yes, I would submit SHORT ANGLE to Jonathan Karp if I didn't think that SHORT ANGLE would have a SHORT LIFE then, and if I did not suspect that Jonathan Karp is a COLD FISH.
(He wouldn't even tell me if he plays tennis.)
I am, after all, the guy who got run out of Eastport, Maine for quoting Abner Stokes in The Maine Times.
Abner was a Canadian who came across the border to work in a herring plant.
"You can always tell Eastporters," he said. "They're all inbred and they look like fish."
That quote put me on lively journalistic ground and I've never looked back. Except when I look back. I know to use the word "fish" whenever possible.
The thing about a short angle is that we tennis players all have hit one. We dished up a short ball sort of like a dead fish.
And suddenly there was our opponent bouncing at the net.
ZING! We hit a stunning crosscourt right past him.
Now that was our natural short angle, the one we should always have hit thereafter.
But things happened, reader, not least discovery that there are many kinds of short angle, too many in fact.
Which other than the passing shot I just described is the best?
That is a question I shall endeavor to answer here and in "A New Year's Serve" and out on the court.
A lifelong project, kind reader, for which I solicit your help.
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