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The other day, I started reading a book called Boy A, by Jonathan Trigell. As I was reading, I was pleasantly surprised to come upon the aftermath a wedgie on the written page, although it took me some time to realize a wedgie is what it was I was reading about due to my unfamiliarity with some British terms.
Anyway, here's the passage (in chapter 2 of the book, so there might be more down the road):
"Once A had walked home with one shoe. Ripped junior Y-fronts stuffed into the pocket of the trousers that he'd managed to rescue. His other shoe was still thickly lodged in a tree; impervious to sticks and stones and names and all the other things that A felt so deeply. He trudged with a sock sodden from the pavement, and a lopsided swaying like the plastic boy on the Barnados boxes would walk, his legs imprisoned in torturous iron callipers."
And a few paragraphs later:
"His dad held the ladder steady, as in a half-hearted suicide pact. And A worried, more even than death, that his father would see the ripped pants still bulging in his trouser pocket."
The book was made into a movie starring Andrew Garfield years ago, though I haven't seen the movie so I can't comment on the presence of wedgies in it.
Anyway, this got me wondering. Are there any other books out there that feature wedgies? I remember coming upon one years ago, in the novel Black Swan Green, by David Mitchell.
I remember it was not referred to as a wedgie, but with some British synonym for it (snuggie perhaps?). I own a copy, so I might find it later to post it.
I'd love to hear more examples.
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Off the top of my head, the only book I'm aware of that includes a wedgie would be the early portion of Sea of Monsters by Rick Riordan. There's a reference to the upperclassmen having a contest of who could give the biggest wedgie to younger students.
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Here's the passage from David Mitchell's Black Swan Green (towards the end of a chapter called 'Maggot'). The synonym I was blanking on was "Grundy":
Ross Wilcox and his lot’d streamed off the bus first without even a glance at me. I crossed the village green thinking the worst of this turd of a day was over.
“Where d’you think you’re going, Maggot?” Ross Wilcox, under the oak tree with Gary Drake, Ant Little, Wayne Nashend, and Darren Croome. They’d’ve loved me to make a run for it. I didn’t. Planet Earth’d shrunk to a bubble five paces wide.
“Home,” I said.
Wilcox flobbed. “Ain’t yer go-go-go-going to t-t-talk to us?”
“No thanks.”
“Well yer ain’t goin’ to yer poncy fuckin’ home down poncy fuckin’ Kingfisher Meadows yet, yer poncy fuckin’ Maggot.”
I let Wilcox make the next move.
He didn’t. It came from behind. Wayne Nashend pinned me in a full Nelson. My Adidas bag was ripped out of my hand. No point in shouting, “That’s my bag!” We all knew that. The crucial thing was to not cry.
“Where’s yer bumfluff, Taylor?” Ant Little peered at my upper lip. “Ain’t yer got any bumfluff left?”
“I shaved it off.”
“‘I shaved it off.’” Gary Drake mimicked me. “That s’posed to impress us?”
“There’s this joke going round, Taylor,” said Wilcox. “Have yer heard it? ‘D’yer know Jason Taylor?’”
“‘N-n-n-o,’” replied Gary Drake. “‘B-b-but I t-trod in s-s-some once!’”
“Yer a laughingstock, Taylor,” spat Ant Little. “A piss-flaps toss-pot laughingstock!”
“Going to the pictures with your mummy!” said Gary Drake. “You don’t deserve to live. We should hang you from this tree.”
“Say somethin’ then.” Ross Wilcox came right up close. “Maggot.”
“Your breath smells really bad, Ross.”
“What?” Wilcox’s face arseholed up. “WHAT?”
“I’m not trying to be insulting, honest. But your breath reeks. Like a bag of ham. Nobody tells you ’cause they’re scared of you. But you should clean your teeth more often or eat mints ’cause it’s chronic.”
Wilcox let a moment drag by.
A double-handed slap whacked my jaw.
“Oh and you’re saying yer not scared of me?”
Pain is a good focuser. “It could be halitosis. The chemist in Upton could give you something for it, if it is.”
“I could kick your head in, you dickless twat!”
“Yeah, you could. All five of you.”
“On my fuckin’ own!”
“I’m not doubting it. I saw you fight Grant Burch, remember.”
The school bus was still by the Black Swan. Norman Bates sometimes gives a bundle to Isaac Pye and Isaac Pye gives Norman Bates a brown envelope. Not that I was expecting any help.
“This—oily—spacko—Maggot”—Ross Wilcox jabbed my chest with each word—“needs—a— GRUNDY!” A grundy’s where a bunch of kids yank you up, hard, by your underpants. Your feet leave the ground and the crotch of your pants is forced up your bum-crack so your balls and dick get crushed.
So a grundying’s exactly what I got.
But grundies’re only much fun if the victim squeals and tries to fight. I steadied myself on Ant Little’s head and sort of rode it out. Grundies humiliate rather than hurt. My attackers pretended to find it funny, but it was heavy, unrewarding work. Wilcox and Nashend trampolined me up and down. My pants just burnt my crotch rather than split me in two. I was dropped onto the soaking grass.
“That,” promised Ross Wilcox, panting, “is just for starters.”
“Maaaaaaggot!” Gary Drake sang out of the mist by the Black Swan. “Where’s your bag?”
“Yeah.” Wayne Nashend booted my arse as I got up. “Better find it.”
I sort of hobbled toward Gary Drake, my bumbone smarting.
The school bus revved up. Its gears cranked.
Grinning this sadistic grin, Gary Drake swung my Adidas bag.
Now I saw what was coming and broke into a run.
Tracing a perfect arc, my Adidas bag landed on the roof of the bus.
The bus jerked into motion, off to the crossroads by Mr. Rhydd’s.
Changing course, I sprinted through the long wet grass, prayed the bag’d slide off.
Laughter acker-ack-acked after me, like machine guns.