Craig Davidson - Sarah Court

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Sarah Court: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Sarah Court. Meet the resident.
The haunted father of a washed-up stuntman. A disgraced surgeon and his son, a broken-down boxer. A father set on permanent self-destruct, and his daughter, a reluctant powerlifter. A fireworks-maker and his daughter. A very peculiar boy and his equally peculiar adopted family.
Five houses. Five families. One block.
Ask yourself: How well do you know your neighbours? How well do you know your own family? Ultimately, how well do you know yourself? How deeply do the threads of your own life entwine with those around you? Do you ever really know how tightly those threads are knotted? Do you want to know?
I know, and can show you. Please, let me show you.
Welcome to Sarah Court: make yourself at home.
Davidson (The Fighter) delivers a dark, dense, and often funny collection of intertwined tales that are rewarding enough to overcome their flaws. The five families in the squirrel-infested homes on the titular street are made up of broken and dysfunctional characters. Patience shoplifts for a hobby; daredevil Colin has no sense of fear; hit man Jeffrey was raised in a foster home and might have Asperger's, synesthesia, or some entirely different neurological weirdness; Nick still rankles from the years his father forced him to try his hand at boxing; and Donald is trying to sell a strange box that he says contains a demon. Davidson delivers his story at a leisurely pace with only a hint of gonzo gore, aiming for readers who appreciate nonlinear narrative structure, flawed characters often unsure of their own motivations, and an evocative sense of place.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Lives of the people who live in five houses in one block on Sarah Court, just north of Niagara Falls, intertwine in these five chapters of tightly packed prose. River man Wesley Hill, who picks up the “plungers,” can’t dissuade his daredevil son, Colin, from going over the falls. Patience Nanavatti, whose basement was blown up by Clara Russell’s pyromaniac foster child, finds a preemie in a Walmart toilet. Competitive neighbors Fletcher Burger and Frank Saberhagen pit their children, pending power-lifter Abby Burger and amateur boxer Nick Saberhagen, against each other athletically. And there’s much more, as Davidson loops back and forth, playing with chronology to finish stories. There is a strong emphasis on fatherhood here, with wives and mothers largely absent, and the masculine bent is particularly obvious in a stupid bet — a finger for a Cadillac — over a dog’s trick. Given that a handful of characters suffer significant brain damage, caused as often by intent as by accident, the introduction of a mysterious alien being seems superfluous. In Davidson’s vividly portrayed, testosterone-fueled world, humans cause enough pain all by themselves.
—Michele Leber From Publishers Weekly
From Booklist

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He looked the part of wizard, albeit a modernday variety. A threadbare man who cultivated a beard out of expediency and the rising cost of razor blades. His favourite article of clothing a macrame poncho bought on a Pueblo reserve, which he wore in his drafty basement workroom. Drywall hung with tools whose outlines he traced in black marker. Unlike other handymen whose toolboxes contained spanners and drillbits and lugnuts, my father’s contained pill bottles — he bought them wholesale from a medi-supply company — full of powders, pellets, shards, clusters, and gems all carefully labelled. Sodium D-Line. Potassium Perchlorate. Rice Starch. The indentation of safety goggles permanently impressed into the flesh round his eyes, the way spectacle-wearers have nose-pad grooves on their noses.

My father once found a box of flashcubes at a garage sale. A joyous discovery, it turned out. We returned home with haste, to the basement, where he put the cubes in a vice and drilled a hole through the paper-thin glass.

“Everything on earth is made up of four elements,” he told me. “Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen. All living things are carbon-based. There is a static number of carbon atoms on our planet. No more or less today than a trillion years ago. Things are born, live, expire, break down to component elements. Those carbon atoms go on to be part of new life. Like plasticine: mould a dog, smush it up, mould a cat. The bulk of matter never changes. Only the creations.”

He had me fetch an egg from the icebox. He poked a hole in it to drain white and yolk. He mixed coloured magnesium with the flashbulb powder and funnelled it into the egg. Wadding, a fuse, sealed with a bead of paraffin wax.

“You and I are cobbled together out of carbon cells that were once other things entirely. You may have a trilobite’s tail in your elbow, pet. A cell from Attila the Hun in your eye. Your tonsils could have a brontosaurus nail in them.”

“Where did we come from?”

“The simplest answer is the stuff making up all life is hydrogen, whose atoms come from the fusion process taking place at the centre of suns. So I suppose you can say we come from stellar waste.” He touched the tip of his tongue to a canine tooth. “Or from stardust. Better?”

“Better.”

“Stardust, then.”

The park near our house had shuffleboard courts. White sandblasted stone. Dad centred the egg on the court and waved me back to the jungle gym. He lit the fuse and ran with hands tucked over his head: gait of a soldier running down a foxhole.

“A carbonized imprint,” he said after the detonation. “Magical, isn’t it?”

The shuffleboard court was framed with colours, shapes, patterns or their raw inklings. A solar system in miniature: every manifestation of life, insect and beast and plant and forms long extinct or as yet undiscovered helixing into each other, nameless in their complexities. Limbs and stalks, broken angles, conchial whorls, geographic forms that struck as unnatural only as they existed beyond my understanding. The arch of a swan’s neck thinned into an umbilical cord shot through with emerald threads spidering into beetle-legged strands which in turn shattered into violently-coloured orbits. Such designs must exist, invisible, all about us. When the powder in that egg ignited, powerful chemical magnets drew them out of the air to imprint them, recklessly, on the stone.

Who else but a wizard could conjure a sight like that?

LieutenantDaniel Mulligan is attractive if horsetoothed. He smiles in a manner that — were his lips to skin back to reveal the pink beds his teeth are buried in — might be wolfish. A horse-toothed wolf?

A corkboard-panelled room at the Niagara Regional Police headquarters. Terrazzo tiles scuffed with shoe skidmarks. It’s not difficult to envision them being made by a stave-gutted plainclothesman pivoting on his brogan to smash a telephone book into a poor perp’s skull. Lt. Mulligan picks at a wart on his index finger. Distressingly, it resembles a nipple. A finger-nipple. A… fipple? When I think of his hands upon my body — as I’ve been doing since he came in — I now picture spongy growths like toadstools popping up every place he’s touched.

“The woman. Tell us what she looked like.” “Us?”

“The constabulary working this case.”

“I’m a case?”

Mulligan smiles.

“You’re a good Samaritan. Yes?”

He sets a folder on the table. Patience Nanavatti

on a label affixed to its tab. Cleat-shod music-box ballerinas spin pirouettes up my spine.

“My permanent record?”

He flips it open. “Says here you peed your pants in grade five gym. Kidding. That whole ‘permanent record’ stuff, it’s bullsh — malarkey. If everyone left that kind of paper trail, paper-pushers would get biceps big as grapefruits shoving it around.” His laugh indicates the paper-pushers of his acquaintance are shrivelled of arm. “You’re nervous.”

“Trying to remember if I peed my pants in grade five.”

“That’s not germane to the investigation.”

He directs my attention to a wall-mounted TV. “Security tapes. Took awhile to get clearance — big conglomerates.”

Footage: iron greys wash into gauzier greys. Spots of polar whiteness. Humanoid shapes move herkyjerk: the world’s most tedious nickelodeon show. The woman is a dark, jagged, lumpen apparition ghosting through the frame.

“That’s her.”

“Right, we’ve ascertained as much. What we’re interested in, Ms. Nanavatti—”

“Patience. Please.”

“Details, Patience. The description you gave the onsite officer… you told him”—reading directly from the page—“ the perpetrator seemed to be enveloped in malaise . He’s also transcribed your claim she didn’t have an evil heart.”

“She was confused. Or ill.” Tapping my skull. “You know…”

“Descriptions such as ‘having the eyes of a hunted animal’ aren’t valuable from an investigative standpoint.”

“She looked… like she could use a friend?”

Mulligan rubs his forehead as if a toothy determined something were trying to tunnel out. His pleading expression softens the contours of his face. More handsome than the last guy I dated. An indemand sessional musician, he said. He performed the guitar riff that plays over the Seven-day Forecast on the Weather Channel. He couldn’t come inside me. Retarded ejaculation; I looked it up. A phobia based on insecurity. Fear of losing control. Or of infection, which seemed more likely: he told me he’d slept with a groupie “on tour,” afterwards spotting a pubic louse drowned in the bus toilet. A tiny banjo with pincers, he said. We worked on it. We’d have sex and when he was close I’d get out of bed and stand in a corner so he could masturbate. Next I sat in bed while he jerked off. We worked all the way up to him spurting on my tummy. Soon after finishing inside me the first time — he wore two condoms — he moved to Portland to join a jam band.

“Are you an artist, Patience?” Mulligan asks. “What is it you do for a living?”

I hand him a glossy leaflet out of my purse. A naked woman, red-haired and busty. Pink stars over her nipples. A large pink star over her crotch. EZWhores-For-Fone! 1-976-SLUT (UK: 976-SLAG)! The Original Phone Sex Maniacs! Fetish Cellar! Sissy Training!

Imagine attending a dinner party at an acquaintance’s home and using the washroom but instead of the bathroom door you mistakenly open the door to a closet full of mannequin parts. The look on your face at that moment is the same look Lt. Mulligan wears right now.

“I’m only an operator,” I tell him. “I facilitate caller interactions.”

He slips the leaflet into his blazer pocket. “Ah.” “The woman had brown eyes.” Brown is the most common shade and nothing about the woman was remarkable. “Dark brown.”

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