\section*{Friends and ``Friends''} How do we remember the past? How do we remember all of those countless conversations that make up our friendships, our relationships, our enmities? How do we remember the past? The Book of Job remembers it through just the discourses. It remembers entire conversations, entire histories of friendship, through the lens of those two weeks Job spent in the cold firepit, covered with ashes and sores. It remembers them all through discourses and speeches and prayers. Perhaps strangest of all, though, it remembers them disjoint and out of order. Edward L. Greenstein discusses the transpositions and interpolations that go into the book of Job. Take, for instance, Job's first speech. ((end with vision such that Eliphaz can reference it, despite no one else mentioning that.))