Rana Dasgupta - Solo

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Rana Dasgupta - Solo» 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. Год выпуска: 2009, Издательство: Harper Collins, Жанр: Современная проза, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

Solo: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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With an imaginative audacity and lyrical brilliance that puts him in the company of David Mitchell and Alexander Hemon, Rana Dasgupta paints a portrait of a century through the story of a hundred-year-old blind Bulgarian man in a first novel that announces the arrival of an exhilarating new voice in fiction.
In the first movement of
we meet Ulrich, the son of a railroad engineer, who has two great passions — the violin and chemistry. Denied the first by his father, he leaves for the Berlin of Einstein and Fritz Haber to study the latter. His studies are cut short when his father's fortune evaporates, and he must return to Sofia to look after his parents. He never leaves Bulgaria again. Except in his daydreams; and it is those dreams we enter in the volatile second half of the book. In a radical leap from past to present, from life lived to life imagined, Dasgupta follows Ulrich's fantasy children, born of communism but making their way into a post-communist world of celebrity and violence.
Intertwining science and heartbreak, the old world and the new, the real and imagined,
is a virtuoso work.

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Irakli denies it, but he cannot focus properly on her face.

Khatuna sees Boris chatting to a scruffy stranger, while Irakli does not even have a seat at the table and is drinking himself stupid in the corner. She is seized with hatred for Boris, in whose company her brother is so pathetically diminished. She would like to erase this musician from their lives.

Plastic says,

‘I must have called you a hundred times, Boris. Everyone in the company has been trying to get hold of you. You’ve been back a long time and no one has heard from you. Why can’t you answer your damn phone?’

‘I don’t like the phone,’ says Boris breezily. ‘You should have come to my house.’

‘Do you think we didn’t try that?’ Plastic is beside himself. ‘Your house was full of people, but you were never there. Who the fuck are those people, Boris?’

‘Friends.’

‘That’s a company apartment. You can’t use it for just anything you like.’

His lips are tight as he speaks. He is trying to keep himself seemly.

‘You’re going too far, Boris. I’ve stood by you, but you’re making me look like an idiot.’

Boris says,

‘Would you like a drink?’

Plastic says,

‘No, I don’t want a drink. I want to know what’s going on. What have you been doing since you got back?’

‘I was resting. I was tired after the tour. Now I’m writing more music.’

‘I’ve been hearing all kinds of stories. You’ve made recordings with our competitors. It seems every last lousy music company is recording your music. Now I hear you’ve done a whole movie soundtrack.’

‘Yes,’ says Boris. He seems pleased.

‘You signed an exclusive contract with us, Boris: that means you record with us and us alone. I know you understand things perfectly well. Do you realise I have hundreds of thousands of your personal money which I can’t give you because you are in serious breach of contract? There are articles all over the press about it, asking if we’re going to send you to jail. And there’s everything else I don’t even want to go into, rumours I don’t even understand.’

Boris is not enjoying this conversation.

‘I can’t play the way you want me to play,’ he says.

Plastic calms a little. He has let the head off his anger. He says,

‘You’re a great musician. But there are ways of doing things. There are rules.’

Khatuna is frustrated with Plastic’s approach. She wants to see him take Boris into the street and beat him into oblivion. She says to Boris,

‘Isn’t it time you paid him back for your violin?’ She places her hand dynastically over Plastic’s. Her voice is caustic. ‘You’re making so much money and you can’t even pay your debts. Everything you have, you owe it to us.’

Boris finds the gesture absurd, and laughs in her face.

‘Everything I have,’ he says, ‘I had long before you knew me.’

A young woman approaches, and asks Boris to sign a napkin. Khatuna tells her to fuck off. There is silence around the table.

Irakli is suffering with all this. He says,

‘Boris bought me a pig.’

‘What?’ says Khatuna.

‘He bought me a pig.’

‘What are you going to do with a pig?’

‘Boris built a hut for it on the balcony.’

‘He’s been building on our balcony?’

Khatuna’s instinct tells her Boris is trying to sabotage her life at its very core.

‘You better get rid of it right away,’ she says. ‘And whatever Boris has built. I don’t want to see it when I get home.’

Boris has had enough. He gets up to leave, and Irakli joins him.

‘You’re drunk,’ Khatuna says to her brother. ‘I want you to come home with me.’

‘I’ll be OK,’ Irakli says.

Plastic says to Boris,

‘Come to the office tomorrow morning. We have a lot of things to discuss. Do you understand?’

Boris’s grunt is ambiguous. He and Irakli walk outside and disappear from sight. Khatuna stares after them.

She and Plastic wander in the streets. It’s a Sunday night, and the city is empty. The helicopters droning overhead are the only sign of life. They come to a corner that Khatuna knows well.

‘This is one of the blocks we’re developing,’ she says. ‘We’re going to pull down the whole thing and convert it into high-security housing for high-end individuals.’

They walk the length of the block, Khatuna pointing out its features.

‘Businessmen need a secure environment, which you can’t get in Manhattan. Manhattan buildings open directly on to the street. So we’re pulling this whole area down, we’re making a private road with barricades. It will be a totally secure block, as good as you can find in any modern city.’

High above, advertisements flash on and off, signalling to each other. Khatuna’s heels echo in the street. They pass an empty square where a three-storey-high inflatable puppet is cavorting with the night, flapping and flailing with the air blowing inside, and no one there to see. Suddenly Khatuna says,

‘I want to kill Boris.’

‘What are you talking about?’ says Plastic.

Khatuna goes silent, and Plastic can feel her harden towards him. They are walking under old bridges where the bricks are black and the rivets are mighty. There is scrawled graffiti, and people are sleeping here and there.

Passing under a bridge, they see a young man standing by a fire that he feeds every now and then with a squirt of kerosene. She and Plastic stop and watch for a moment. She calls out,

‘Why don’t you pour the whole bottle?’

The young man looks at her, wide eyed.

‘Why?’

‘I want to see it.’

She is suddenly flirtatious. The man unscrews the lid from his bottle and upends it over the fire. The blaze roars — at their distance Khatuna and Plastic feel a sudden heat on their faces — and the man is engulfed in flames. He backs away, yelping, and beating his head. The fire dies down quickly.

He is dazed, and his hair is singed.

‘You idiot!’ shouts Khatuna.

‘You told me to do it!’ he wails.

‘Next time I’ll tell you to jump out of a window.’

Plastic feels estranged by everything he has just witnessed, and he and Khatuna continue on in silence. There are no cars in the streets. They turn on to Fifth Avenue, where the mannequins are vibrant in the windows, but there are no people. They wander down the empty road and find a man who has fallen asleep while walking his dog.

‘I wish I was in Shanghai,’ remarks Khatuna bleakly, ‘where everything is new.’

They walk all the way to her building. She goes up the steps to the front door and Plastic stays below. She shuts the door behind her without looking back.

Upstairs, the apartment is in darkness. She puts the light on in Irakli’s room and contemplates his empty bed. Then she opens the balcony doors and goes out to see what has happened there.

Boris has built a giant, dirty thing that he has nailed into the side of her house. She can see his footprints in the sawdust, and everything smells of pig shit. She picks up a hammer and gives a few angry blows to the construction, but it is not as flimsy as it looks. She peers inside and sees the pig huddled in a corner, trying to keep warm.

‘Disgusting creature,’ she thinks.

She goes back into the apartment and sits down. She thinks about Boris, who has dared to take hammer and nails to her house. She smokes several cigarettes. She taunts herself with unhappy thoughts. She thinks of her mother, living alone, her poor mother who was beautiful once. She thinks of all the things she bought Irakli, and how he scorned all of them, only to be delighted by Boris’s pig.

She knows Irakli will not come home tonight, and she goes to bed.

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