Rafael Yglesias - Only Children

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Only Children: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The critically acclaimed novel from a master of contemporary American fiction — now available as an ebook A loving satire of new parenthood and its attendant joys and blunders The Golds and the Hummels live in the same wealthy Manhattan neighborhood, but as both couples prepare for the arrival of their first child, they share little in terms of parenting philosophy. The Golds plunge into natural birth without bothering to first set up a nursery. The Hummels schedule a C-section and fill out hospital admissions paperwork weeks in advance. Both couples, however, are grappling with the transformations they know parenthood will immediately bring.
Set in a milieu of material excess and limitless ambition,
skewers new parents who expect perfect lives, but also offers an intimate look at the trials all new parents face as they learn how to nurture.
This ebook features a new illustrated biography of Rafael Yglesias, including rare photos and never-before-seen documents from the author’s personal collection.
With insight and candor, Yglesias recounts five years in the lives of two yuppie couples, to whom parenthood occasions typical tribulations and discouraging self-assessments. Byron’s birth exacerbates the problems between Diane and Peter Hummel (she’s a Yale-educated corporate lawyer, he’s a wealthy fundraiser for the arts). While she foolishly tries to be super-mom, wife and professional, she also puts pressure on Byron to excel, attempting to enroll him in an elite school and forcing him to play the violin. Peter withdraws from them both after Byron’s presence activates long-dormant memories of his icily aloof mother. Investment counselor Eric Gold, obsessed by the humiliation of his father’s business failures, frantically pushes himself to produce substantial earnings for his wife Nina and their son Luke. Her imagined inadequacies torment Nina, especially when she cannot soothe Luke, whose colic makes him infuriatingly uncontrollable. This is a vivid description of how rearing a first child can conjure up neurotic fears, which must be resolved before parents can nurture their offspring. Yglesias has abandoned the cynicism that infused Hot Properties; this new novel is deeply felt and thought-provoking. $75,000 ad/promo; Doubleday Book Club main selection; Literary Guild featured alternate.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"The joys of Motherhood. Are they all one great lie?" In carefully orchestrated, parallel stories of two New York couples and their sons from birth through age five, Yglesias explores this and other contemporary parenting issues. The story moves carefully between the Golds and the Hummels in a sort of literary counterpoint that becomes more staccato in the second half of the book. Educated professionals with good incomes, both sets of parents have excellent intentions but are crippled by emotional "baggage": they are adult children ("only children") themselves. The children are unusually bright, but their development, like their parents’, is impeded by complex psychological issues. Yglesias writes with insight, showing how true adulthood comes with self-awareness, pain, and understanding. Definitely recommended.Ellen R. Cohen, Rockville, Md.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Publishers Weekly
From Library Journal

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Eric Gold, the first to realize DNA Technology was the IBM of the future, profiled in Barron’s—

He took Luke from Nina. Luke fought his grip, his arms up, his body wriggling like a slippery soap in his hand, the feet kicking at his stomach—“No! Daddy! No! Daddy! Hurt! Hurt!”

Eric felt tears yawn in his eyes. It was so dark Nina and the doctor couldn’t see them. Nina got out of the examining chair. He tried to drown out Luke’s pleas.

Eric Gold made a bold investment four years ago, buying nearly 2 percent of the outstanding shares in DNA Tech at an average price of nine. The stock has since split five times

Eric got into the chair and lifted his head back, away from Luke’s butting head and wild arms.

“Hold his arms,” the doctor said. What was that in her hand? A swab, she’s going to swab his eyeball.

Eric grabbed the little arms, put them against Luke’s chest, and folded his thick arms on top, pressing hard to keep Luke still.

I’m holding my son to be at the torturer’s mercy.

“Daaaa! Daddd! Daaayyy! Hurt! Hurt!”

Eric Gold, Wizard of Wall—

The doctor came right at the eye with that thing—

I have to hold him still. She might pop his eye out if he moves.

Luke’s muscles went stiff and he screamed out everything, even the soothing fantasy in Eric’s head.

“It’s okay! It’s okay! It’s okay!” someone shouted over and over. “It’s okay! It’s okay!”

The doctor moved away, studying the swab. “There was sand still in there,” she commented.

Luke screamed, “You’re hurting me, Daddy!”

“I’m just holding you, Luke. The doctor’s done—”

“You’re squeezing me!” Luke yelled.

“You’re holding him too tight,” Nina said.

I am, he realized. He let his muscles go. Eric had pressed Luke hard enough to push him inside his own heart.

I’m out of control, Eric thought.

“There was a lot of sand in there,” the doctor said. “It must’ve really hurt. How long ago did this happen?”

“Five or six hours,” Nina said.

“Brave baby,” the doctor mumbled.

“It’s all out now, Luke,” Nina said.

“Go home!” Luke said in a lonely whine, an abandoned pet.

“I need to look—” the doctor began.

Luke pushed at Eric’s looser net of arms. “No! No!”

“Just to look! With this. See the light.” The doctor held out the tool. “I’m going to shine it on you. Not touch.”

“It doesn’t hurt anymore!” Luke yelled.

“What?” the doctor said.

“He says it doesn’t hurt anymore,” Nina said, doubt in her voice.

“I’m sure it doesn’t. I put an anesthetic on. Last him for, oh, a few hours. But I couldn’t see if he has a scratch. I need to look again. I won’t touch.”

“No, no, no, no, no.”

Eric thought: Tell Luke it’s okay. Take charge. But he had nothing left. Luke had been in terrible pain for hours while in Eric’s care. And then Eric had practically crushed Luke, held him helpless while he suffered. It was nothing, it would be forgotten, anyone might have made the same mistakes — but it wasn’t Eric’s idea of being Daddy. He felt the ache of tears in his eyes, stinging to be free. I can’t even do this right.

If these two women find me in tears, I might as well spend the rest of my life in bed, under the covers.

“Come on,” the doctor said, coming in again with the penlight. “Roll your eye up. I won’t touch you.”

“Hold him, Eric,” Nina ordered. The bitch, she’ll be remembered as the angel of mercy. I, the monster.

The screaming started again. Hopelessly, Eric tightened and shut out everything except modifying his grip to be firm but not painful.

Eric Gold, the Wiz—

“Daddy! You’re hurting me! You’re hurting me!”

“Yeah. He’s scratched his cornea. If he was a grown-up, I’d put on a patch. You’ll have to put drops in every four hours.”

“Oh, no” escaped from Nina. “For how long?”

“Three days.”

Eric loosened his grip. The weekend. The wonderful weekend. I get to spend my weekend crushing my son in my arms while Nina drops things on his naked eye.

If I’d acted faster, maybe he wouldn’t have scratched it.

“How’s the baby?” the black woman asked Eric as he carried Luke, calm now, already half asleep, out of the examining room.

“He’s okay,” Eric said.

She smiled. “But you ain’t, right?”

12

MINE. I get mine violin. My friends can’t play with it. Do not belong to anybody else. Mine.

Byron felt the case, smooth and bumped, soft-shaped and hard. Daddy smiled. Mommy was at the metal stand, stick man, clean and new. Grandma and Grandpa were on the couch, still as chairs. Old. People get old and die, Mommy said. Hair get white, skin get mushy, bones get old, and people die.

“Oh, it’s so cute,” Grandma said. “Like a real violin.”

“It is real!” Byron told her with everything, all his body.

Daddy laughed. Grandpa too.

Don’t believe me. “It is real! It is real!”

“Shhh,” Mommy said. “Now show them the right way to take it out of the case.”

“There’s a right way?” Grandpa said.

Byron knows. He flipped up the locks. They made a satisfying noise. Open. The violin shone in its green bed, shaped to hug itself. Nothing else could go in there.

“Oh, it’s so cute,” Grandma said, and she laughed. “My friend Paula must see this!”

Watch Mommy to see I’m okay. Hand under neck — so smooth and hard — other hand under its belly. Where do my feet go?

“Byron,” Mommy warning. “Rest position.”

Mistake. Put it at your side. Laser gun.

“Is there a bow?” Grandma said.

“Yes!” Byron let go with one hand and pushed the case so Grandma could see the bow — stuck onto the top, held by little belts. He pushed so she could see, but the case spun on its lumpy underbelly, spun and spun around on its funny stomach, spun right off the coffee table!

“Whoa!” Grandpa caught it.

“Byron!” Mommy hard. “You’re not holding—”

Quick, quick, back to your side. “I wanted to show the bow!”

“Mother, you’re messing him up,” Daddy said to Grandma. But he smiled.

“Don’t confuse me,” Byron said to Grandma.

They laugh again! Why? She made me do it.

“Is it broke?” Byron asked.

“No, no, no,” Daddy said. He showed the case. The bow was still there.

“I want the bow,” Byron said. It was so special. Bent, but not broken, with its loose white hairs that weren’t loose and weren’t hairs.

“You’re not up to the bow yet. That comes later,” Mommy said.

“I know!” Not what I asked. Want the bow. “Just hold it!” he said.

Mommy didn’t answer. Mommy pointed to the music book. Little feet with scarves hopping up and down the ladder. Notes. I can read music. Well, a few notes.

“He can read music?” Grandma loved that.

“A few notes,” Mommy said.

“More!” Byron answered. “I know all these!” He showed with his finger.

“Byron! You’re going to drop the violin!”

Back at your side! Watch Mommy. “I know all these!”

“They’re just two notes, Byron,” Mommy said. “You know a lot, but not all the notes.”

Mommy pointed to the first note, G, first string. “Play position,” Mommy said, and gestured to the drawing of feet the teacher had made.

“Look at that!” Grandma said, noticing the ghost feet. Byron stepped into the invisible shoes and brought the violin up. The black thing, the rest, dug into his skin.

“More under,” Mommy said, and pushed.

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