
Edgemont Park in my town of Montclair, New Jersey. (Photo by me, 9-21-2024.)
I’m doing something different for this week’s blog post — reprinting my local “Montclairvoyant” humor column from this past Thursday, September 19. Why? This particular Montclair Local piece melds news in my New Jersey town with a literature theme. Some of my local references will not be understood by non-Montclair residents, but I think the column will still be an entertaining read as various famous novels and authors are mentioned.
My weekly Local column is always in a question-and-answer format — with me doing both the asking and the replying. So, I’m conversing with myself. Obviously, I have some psychological issues. π
As usual with my weekly Sunday literature blog posts, there’s a link to my weekly Thursday humor column at the very end of today’s piece, where you can see local reader comments and my replies. Some weeks just a few exchanges, other weeks many.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
Montclair’s government operates under the Faulkner Act, which was explained at a recent meeting hosted by our two councilors-at-large. That Act gives a township manager lots of power, right?
Sincerely,
Clare Mont
Too much power, as granted by an Act named after late Montclair mayor Bayard Faulkner rather than author William Faulkner, whose 1932 novel Light in August chronicled 31 Montclair sunrises last month.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
Not true. But the Faulkner Act makes me think that other forms of local government could be named after novelists. Some examples, please?
Sincerely,
Nitwit for Lit
I’ll start with the Jane Austen Act, which mandates that 21st-century councilors wear clothes from the 1810s and put a needed-but-expensive new Municipal Building and Police Headquarters in Mansfield Park.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
There’s no such park in our town. What about the Stephenie Meyer Act, named after the author whose Twilight vampire novels have a high school setting?
Sincerely,
There Will Be Blood
That Act forbids Council meetings from taking place the same evening as Back to School Night, which was held at Montclair High on September 11. So, none of the impressive teachers that evening wore Dracula baseball caps.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
Are Dracula baseball caps even a thing? What about the Toni Morrison Act, named after the author of such novels as Beloved and Jazz?
Sincerely,
Sula Solomon
That form of government prevented the talented musicians at September 14’s Montclair Jazz Festival from going into executive session.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
A day later, the September 15-to-October 15 National Hispanic and Latino Heritage Month began, and it’s being celebrated in various ways in and near Montclair. Your thoughts as the parent of a Guatemalan-American daughter?
Sincerely,
Latina Heritage, Too!
I’m reminded of the Gabriel Garcia Marquez Act that allows a resident’s OPRA request to remain hidden for One Hundred Years of Solitude before the requested public records are released.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
That seems exaggerated. On September 18, a special election was held to fill the seat of the late U.S. Rep. Donald Payne Jr. in a congressional district that includes part of Montclair. Is there a form of government that evokes a political novel?
Sincerely,
G.O. Peeved
Yes, the Robert Penn Warren Act named after the All the King’s Men author born early enough (1905) to walk from his native Kentucky to New York City for the 1910 opening of the old Penn Station.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
Penn Station and Robert Penn Warren are not related. What about the Marcel Proust Act?
Sincerely,
Remembrance of Pings Past
That Act, named after an author known for his LONG multi-volume opus In Search of Lost Time, codifies Council meetings that last more than five hours — a frequent occurrence in Montclair. After midnight, a pumpkin turns into another pumpkin.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
Interesting take on Cinderella’s transportation. Is there a form of government that allows a resident to make a Council meeting public comment when not physically present at a Council meeting? (A resident currently can’t do that in Montclair.)
Sincerely,
Peak Speak
The Alexander Pushkin Act allows virtual commenting, but only if the resident has the same name as Pushkin characters Eugene Onegin or Tatyana Larina.
DEAR MONTCLAIRVOYANT,
Seems rather limiting. Other current councilors besides Montclair’s at-large ones have also held or will soon hold community meetings. Is there an Act besides the Faulkner law that encourages those welcome meetings?
Sincerely,
Feedback to the Future
Not the Anne Bronte Act, because that author wrote The Tenant of Wildfell Hall rather than The Councilor at Edgemont Park House.
My comedic 2024 book — the part-factual/part-fictional/not-a-children’s-work Misty the Cat…Unleashed — is described and can be purchased on Amazon in paperback or on Kindle. It’s feline-narrated! (And Misty says Amazon reviews are welcome. π )

This 90-second promo video for my book features a talking cat: π
In addition to this weekly blog, I write the 2003-started/award-winning “Montclairvoyant” topical-humor column every Thursday for Montclair Local. The latest piece — which is reprinted in the above blog post — is here.
Entertaining indeed. You get to answer a lot of questions people are afraid to ask.
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Thank you very much, Portraitist! π Yes, there’s a lot of freedom involved when posing questions one’s self. π
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HI Dave, a very entertaining post. It is wonderful how you weave all these authors and books into your posts. Very clever, indeed!
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Thank you very much, Robbie! π Glad you enjoyed the post. π
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Your posts are one of the highlights of my week.
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Very appreciated, Robbie! π As are your posts. π
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You are very kind, Dave. Hugs.
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π
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Oh excellent… and what fun!
Enjoy your Fall, Daveπ
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Thank you very much, Chris! π Enjoy your new season, too! π
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This doesn’t have anything to do with this week’s post, but it is hard to find books published after about 1925 on the internet. Sometimes I find newer novels on the net but they tend to disappear after a few months or so. This must have something to do with copyright laws, could you please inform me how long copyright protection lasts in the U.S. before a book comes into the public domain. Thank you for your kind attention.
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Thank you for the comment, Tony. I googled your question, and saw that books enter the public domain after 95 years. I also read that “copyright protection lasts for the life of the author plus an additional 70 years.” So, it’s a bit confusing. π
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Dave, I am asking you this question because you are a published author, so I thought you would know. Best wishes.
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I’m a published author who was pretty much clueless about when older books enter the public domain. π
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Good Funny Day Dave,
A most amusing Q&A column. Anne Landers and Dear Abbey would have been very nervous had you revealed your voyantcy during their reigns.
I confess:
I have been to & read your column several times. Being the brain child I am, during my first read, I thought your town was filled with some strange folk. π
The second time, I suspected it was possibly all made up.
Third time’s a charm. I got it. Whew! It could have turned out – Three strikes, you’re out (of it) π΅βπ«
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Thank you, Resa! I enjoyed your part-comedic comment! π Yes, all the questions and answers are made up by me, though there’s a lot of fact-based stuff interspersed.
By the way, I had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing Dear Abby (Abigail Van Buren) and Ann Landers a number of times when I covered newspaper syndication for a magazine. (Their real — married — names were Pauline Phillips and Eppie Lederer.) Very interesting people…and often rivals, despite (or maybe partly because of) being twin sisters.
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Dave – you have the best Montclairvoyant articles. Local politics have the most impact on our daily lives. To me, these discussions are very important. And here is where I will go off script. I took a leap of faith and read a book by Donna Leon, an acclaimed author known for her compelling crime novels set in Venice. I found out that she was born in Montclair, New Jersey. Anyway, I found a quote about what she thinks is importantβ¦
βWe are a nation of egoists. It is our glory, but it will be our destruction, for none of us can be made to concern ourselves about something as abstract as βthe common goodβ. The best of us can rise to feeling concern for our families, but as a nation we are incapable of more.β Donna Leon
I am enjoying her rich storytelling and vivid characterizations! Many thanks for another great post!! It is good to laugh and see the humour in life.
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Thank you very much, Rebecca! π Yes, local politics are SO important, and something the average citizen has somewhat more control over than national and international politics.
Interesting that Donna Leon is from Montclair! It’s a town that definitely has a bunch of writers as past or present residents. I remember reading the “Martha Speaks” books and watching the “Martha Speaks” children’s TV show when my younger daughter was younger, and thought the style of houses looked kind of familiar. Sure enough, it turned out that “Martha Speaks” creator Susan Meddaugh was born and raised in Montclair. π
That’s an insightful quote from Donna Leon!
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This is an interesting addition to the post, Rebecca.
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Clever nods to ye olde literature π I especially liked how some records need to be kept out of the public for βOne Hundred Years of Solitude.β
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Thank you, Dave! I enjoyed your comment! Given how slow my town’s clerk and other officials are in responding to Open Public Records Act requests, a century didn’t seem that far off. π
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Very droll!
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Thank you, Liz! π
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You’re welcome, Dave!
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A nice merger between your two domains, Dave. I think most government operations should be governed by people who understand the difference between fiction and reality.
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Thank you, Dan! “A nice merger between your two domains” — I like the way you said that! π And, yes, it would be nice if there were fewer politicians who don’t understand — or deliberately flout — reality.
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Thanks for the link Dave. Funny stuff and we all need more funny stuff considering today’s political climate. I’m choosing funny and silly over any other form of being. What can I say– I’m a Groucho Marxist. Susi
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Thank you, Susi! Glad you found the piece funny — as I found your mention of being a “Groucho Marxist.” π I think Groucho and The Marx Brothers in general are hilarious: “Duck Soup,” “Horse Feathers,” “A Night at the Opera,” etc. — and also Groucho’s “You Bet Your Life” TV show (which once had Ray Bradbury as a contestant!).
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Dave, forgive my lack of grasping the municipal-literary humor π¦
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Not a problem, Rosaliene. π There ARE a number of local references amid the more widely known stuff (the authors and novels named in the piece). My Sunday blog post should go back to normal next week. π
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Ahahaha, funny! The park does look like a lovely place!
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Thank you, Leah! Glad you found the piece funny. π And Edgemont Park is indeed lovely. It includes a war memorial (on the left) and one of my town’s elementary schools (on the right).
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What a beautiful place you live in, Dave, judging by the picture you’ve posted. As I’ve spent the day battling to get to grips with my new laptop (the cursor is far too sensitive and keeps flying off in all directions, clicking on things I don’t want) my head isn’t in quite the right place to do justice to your post. I did note the skill with which you added the names of novelists into it, good work. When my brain is settled in a week or two I’ll give it another read. Have a good week and many thanks. π
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Thank you, Laura! The park in the photo is one of the loveliest places in my town, so it’s not totally representative of where I live. But, overall, a nice-looking community by United States standards. π
I hear you — not easy getting used to a new computer, and that cursor sounds like it needs a tranquilizer or something. (The letters on the keyboard of my 2023 laptop are too close together, so I’m often touching a letter I don’t want to touch.) Good luck adapting to your new machine, and have a good week, too!
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I’ll get there, albeit with a lot of grumbling on the way. I do wish they wouldn’t ‘improve’ technology. I could use the old one with my eyes closed, and now it’s back to square one. There are far worse things though, so I’ll try to cut back on the complaining. Catch you next week. π
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Yes, some “improvements” are not improvements. π¦
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That was very amusing. I love how you tied these famous authors into the narrative. I am particularly fond of the Jane Austen Act.
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Thank you, Darlene! Happy you found the piece amusing! Elected officials wearing Jane Austen-era clothing in 2024 works for me, too. π As it does for Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy. π
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I found the reading really interesting and entertaining although, as you predicted, some of the local references were a bit obscure to me
Have a great start to the fall, dear Dave πΉππΉ
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Thank you, Luisa! Glad you enjoyed the piece! Yes, a local column read not-locally can be partly incomprehensible. π Have a great start-of-fall, too! It’s a beautiful early-autumn weekend in my town, as yesterday’s photo atop this blog post shows. π
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That is a fantastic photo for a very pleasant period of the year!
I wish you a beautiful and colourful autumn, dear Dave
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I agree, Luisa, that late September can be wonderful! π
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