Stephen Markley - Ohio

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Stephen Markley - Ohio» весь текст электронной книги совершенно бесплатно (целиком полную версию без сокращений). В некоторых случаях можно слушать аудио, скачать через торрент в формате fb2 и присутствует краткое содержание. Город: New York, Год выпуска: 2018, ISBN: 2018, Издательство: Simon & Schuster, Жанр: Детектив, Современная проза, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

Ohio: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Best Books of Summer 2018 Selection •


The debut of a major talent; a lyrical and emotional novel set in an archetypal small town in northeastern Ohio—a region ravaged by the Great Recession, an opioid crisis, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan—depicting one feverish, fateful summer night in 2013 when four former classmates converge on their hometown, each with a mission, all haunted by the ghosts of their shared histories.
Since the turn of the century, a generation has come of age knowing only war, recession, political gridlock, racial hostility, and a simmering fear of environmental calamity. In the country’s forgotten pockets, where industry long ago fled, where foreclosures, Walmarts, and opiates riddle the land, death rates for rural whites have skyrocketed, fueled by suicide, addiction and a rampant sense of marginalization and disillusionment. This is the world the characters in Stephen Markley’s brilliant debut novel,
, inherit. This is New Canaan.
On one fateful summer night in 2013, four former classmates converge on the rust belt town where they grew up, each of them with a mission, all of them haunted by regrets, secrets, lost loves. There’s Bill Ashcraft, an alcoholic, drug-abusing activist, whose fruitless ambitions have taken him from Cambodia to Zuccotti Park to New Orleans, and now back to “The Cane” with a mysterious package strapped to the underside of his truck; Stacey Moore, a doctoral candidate reluctantly confronting the mother of her former lover; Dan Eaton, a shy veteran of three tours in Iraq, home for a dinner date with the high school sweetheart he’s tried to forget; and the beautiful, fragile Tina Ross, whose rendezvous with the captain of the football team triggers the novel’s shocking climax.
At once a murder mystery and a social critique,
ingeniously captures the fractured zeitgeist of a nation through the viewfinder of an embattled Midwestern town and offers a prescient vision for America at the dawn of a turbulent new age.

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“I raped his mother again / I raped his mother again / I met her on a FOB over in Afghanistan / I killed her heart with my sin.”

“Exactly,” said Bill. “They’re expressions of the dispossessed. It’s about a dude who can’t even understand why he acts out in these ways. People dismiss him as a monster because that makes it easy on them. But he’s been bred and brought up, almost like a dog, to be vicious, to be cruel. The song’s about his remorse. Very Johnny Cash.”

Dakota arched his eyebrows. “If you say so.”

From what his parents told him, Harrington’s music had been fairly polarizing back home. Certainly no sign was going up at the city limits: HOMETOWN OF WILLIAM BENJAMIN HARRINGTON. He’d had a following, he’d played the festival circuit, but he’d never really broken out. He’d certainly never made money. A gruesome OD may have since helped record sales and mythos, but rock stars don’t get remunerated for the good career move of dying at exactly twenty-seven years old.

“At the bar tonight we were talking about this New Canaan rumor—you heard of this? The Murder That Never Was?”

Dakota checked over his shoulder, the road empty. “Sure, everyone’s heard of that.”

“Right. So someone decides to make it up for a laugh. But it sticks, it spreads. It’s like any urban legend, like the guy with the hook for a hand who murders kids on lovers’ lane. That’s so teenagers will stop having sex at the Brew. It serves a social utility.”

“You lost me, man. Lost me good.”

“You know,” Bill said, waggling both hands in the air as he tried to capture his point. “It’s trying to provide meaning and narrative where there is none. The murder rumor is like a conspiracy theory in that way. People don’t want to believe dark, terrible violence can just spring out of—or onto—bored normal folk. Look at the kids we grew up with. How many ODs do you know?”

Dakota snorted a laugh. “That are dead or that just OD’d and started shooting up a week later?”

“Curtis Moretti, Ben Harrington.”

“If you’re only counting from the popular cliques. My class alone had eleven. If you’re talking jail, you got Tony Wozniak? Ron Kruger? And are we counting the Flood brothers? They’re like on frequent flyer miles. Still not sure what you’re steering at.”

“It’s the Harrington song, man. It’s all part of the same phenomenon in the end. You either fight for your dignity and some fucking justice or you lose it—no other way. And once you start to really lose it, the rot sets in.”

He knew a bag of weed was hidden somewhere in the substratum of Dakota’s jeans. The guy had a scent like a cyclohexane refinery.

“We’re here on business,” Dakota warned. “Don’t fill my ear with your liberal bullshit.”

Bill stopped, his feet skidding in the gravel berm, and regarded him. “Thought you were down with my T-shirt protest back in the day?”

“Didn’t mean I was no Democrat. Ain’t like I voted for Barack O-fucking-bama.”

In the wind, the leaves looked like an addict’s agitated fingers, stroking night and sky. They turned onto New Canaan Avenue, which ran by a few industrial lots, the bowling alley, the park, and over the Cattawa. For some reason the town had never felt it necessary to put a sidewalk on this road, so they walked on the berm, uncapping their booze and swigging, vigilant for the NCPD patrol car.

“Yeah, well, neither did I. The second time, I mean. I was in Mexico anyway.”

“Doing what?”

Bill went on to describe his many aborted journeys: the reservation, Cambodia, Occupy, the cartel town. It sounded a hell of a lot more exciting than it actually felt to live, sitting unbathed in interminable airports waiting on delayed planes; broken phrases in disparate languages; chopped English and hand-gesture communication; keeping your whole life strapped inside a forty-pound Osprey pack. Of course that was after he lost his job on the 2008 campaign.

“See,” said Dakota. “Democrat.”

He laughed, thinking of when he got fired for an “outrageous, indecent, indiscriminate” tweet ( Ready to string up these Wall Street fucks & their families from light poles on Park Ave #JacobinTime ). He hadn’t bothered cleaning out his desk, accidentally leaving behind a glass cube with a piece of the net from when Harrington tipped in his own missed free throw for the conference championship. Self-fucked, out of the whole incident Bill regretted this the most.

They passed under a street lamp, one of those sodium-vapor deals that cast the worst kind of orange-soda color and made half the streets in America look washed-out and sick. Only under its glare did Bill now realize that roughly a third of the lights on New Canaan Avenue were dark, which created large pockets of sallow shadows.

“What you learn’s like: the American system…” He flicked his cigarette into the road. “It’s not like this conspiracy of Illuminati. It’s just this adaptive, fucking assimilating, smooth motherfucker. It gives you cars and credit and religion and television and all this other comfort that we go and call ‘freedom.’ Problem is, there’s no raging against the machine because the machine just consumes whatever objection anyone makes about it.”

“Hey, can I bum a smoke?”

“Sure.” Bill fished in his jeans for the pack of Camels. He popped the top with one hand, offered the pack to Dakota, and then drew another for himself with his teeth.

“But it’s— Here, I got a lighter.” He snapped a flame for Dakota and then lit his own. “It’s way more subtle than that. Like anyone trying to say her piece,” Bill explained. “You’ll just get commodified, assimilated, appropriated. You’ll get a tenure-track teaching job or a record contract or your own TV show, or God forbid, a publishing deal. Now you’re owned by the status quo. By GE or Comcast or Pearson PLC or worst of all, some neoliberal Ivy League university.”

Dakota ashed with expert flicks and ticks of his fingers, like an old-timer sitting on the porch matter-of-factly recounting the moment his wife left him. They passed the varsity baseball diamond and neared the secluded safety of the football field where—eons ago it seemed—he’d graduated on one balls-dripping-hot summer day.

“Democrat? Liberal? Duckfuck. At this point I’d rather be called a Nazi. Liberals are the Harvard grads interested in diversifying the plutocracy. And if you’re really causing trouble, if you’re really being heard, and it needs you to shut up? It’ll find a way.”

Dakota appeared bored by this, but at least he was someone to talk to. Bill had never actually met a person to whom he did not enjoy ranting.

“Ever seen that John Carpenter movie? The Thing ?” Dakota asked, smoldering Camel sticky-tacked to his lower lip.

“Yeah, Kurt Russell?”

“Right. Great flick. Yo, let’s cross here.”

They waited for a lone pickup truck to pass, its lights sweeping over their faces, one of the two dim, nearly padiddled out.

“The monster in The Thing is like this alien parasite that takes the form of the people it eats. It can become whatever it’s parasiting off of, if you get me.”

“Let’s assume I do.”

“So. You’re talking like the Great. American Thing , man.”

“The Great American Thing?” he asked, amused because he could hear Dakota placing the capital letters. He sucked on his cigarette. There was a pothole in the road and sticking out of this pothole was a stuffed animal, a lobster. He swore to Christ it was waving its claw at him. He started laughing really, really hard, choking on smoke and light. “Shit,” he said when he finally recovered. “The Great American Thing. That’s pretty goddamn hilarious.”

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