James Marlon - John Crow's Devil

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John Crow's Devil: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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, a Marlon James character says repeatedly, and Marlon does just that. Pile them up: language, imagery, technique, imagination. All fresh, all exciting. This is a writer to watch out for.”—Chris Abani, author of
, winner of the Hemingway/PEN Award
“This is the finest and most important first novel I’ve read in years. James’s writing brings to mind early Toni Morrison, Jessica Hagedorn, and Gabriel García Márquez.”—Kaylie Jones, author of
and “Marlon James spins his magical web in this novel and we willingly suspend disbelief, rewarded by the window he opens to Jamaica (and a world) rarely portrayed in fiction.”—Elizabeth Nunez, author of
winner of the American Book Award
This stunning debut novel tells the story of a biblical struggle in a remote Jamaican village in 1957. With language as taut as classic works by Cormac McCarthy, and a richness reminiscent of early Toni Morrison, Marlon James reveals his unique narrative command that will firmly establish his place as one of today's freshest, most talented young writers.
In the village of Gibbeah-where certain women fly and certain men protect secrets with their lives-magic coexists with religion, and good and evil are never as they seem. In this town, a battle is fought between two men of God. The story begins when a drunkard named Hector Bligh (the "Rum Preacher") is dragged from his pulpit by a man calling himself "Apostle" York. Handsome and brash, York demands a fire-and-brimstone church, but sets in motion a phenomenal and deadly struggle for the soul of Gibbeah itself.
is a novel about religious mania, redemption, sexual obsession, and the eternal struggle inside all of us between the righteous and the wicked.

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EAS AND W ST SAME M GICK. SOLANUM S TH KEY. TO SECR T FL G T. I HAVE FOUND THIS T TH ALL O V R THE W LD. TO LEA E PLANE FOR ANOTH IT MUST BE B R E W ED. A BR W OR A TEA FROM TH SOLANU, OTH W SE KNOWN AS BLA CH D CALLALOO.

“Jesus Christ!”

The book slipped from her hands and fell. She bent down to pick it up but his hand got there first.

“Lucinda.” He stared at her for several seconds, his brow knotted in a frown and his lips pressed so firm they disappeared in his beard. “You see anything in here written for you? Do you?” He held it up and looked at her. She looked away. “If you can’t mind your own business …”

“Y-y-yes sah. Yes, Apostle.”

“Good. And another thing.”

“Apostle? Apostle?”

The Apostle winced, sucking air between clenched teeth as he shut his eyes tight. He grabbed his head with both hands and swayed left and right.

“Apostle?”

He spun away from her, staggering and swaying. York still clutched his head with both hands, groaning louder and louder. His legs buckled and his heels stomped hard on the floor. He reached out with his right hand as if to grab something unseen and staggered toward Lucinda’s desk. York groaned, bellowed, and sucked air through gnashed teeth. He lurched into the desk and hit the edge with his knee.

“Goddamn to Hell!”

“Apostle?”

“Go.”

“Apostle, you sickly?”

“GET OUT!”

She left without her handbag. He threw himself into the chair and buried his head on the desk. Had she stayed behind the closed door, Lucinda would have heard what sounded like sobbing.

Outside, the night burnt with cow flesh.

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Sometimes Pastor Bligh bolted upright in the bed, cried out, and fell back into sleep. Other times it seemed as if he was beyond sleep, adrift, yet on the bed, with only ragged breathing to signify life. The Widow never slept for long. Hours were spent watching and mapping her fear to the rise and fall of his chest.

At two in the morning she stumbled out of the armchair beside his bed and the cold bowl of soup flew from her hands. Bligh had been yelling for minutes. His eyes were wide open, seeing nothing. The room was blood. Something had gripped him. The Widow thought the Devil. The Rum Preacher pushed himself to the headboard with one hand, blocking his face with the other. He stopped screaming and collapsed. She hated him. Her spirit rose and fell with his and she hated him. Because of Bligh, the Widow’s heart was undoing her. They had struck a deal, heart and mind, and now heart was cheating out. It had begun by tricking her into doing things like adding more sugar to the limeade and looking at old dresses in red, yellow, and blue. She wished she could punch a hole in her chest and yank the frigging thing out. The Widow had grown accustomed to death. The routine of death; the mossy, mothy grayness of it. God had taken away every man who had unfroze her heart.

She left him and went into the living room, making her way through the darkness. Through the window she saw the arched roof of Mr. Garvey’s house move. Not until one of them flapped its wings and flew did she see that there was a multitude of them and they covered his roof, shed, fence, and gate.

John Crows.

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Obeah was collective wisdom. The obeah man or woman was a dispenser of oils and spells, but also a collector of secrets. Ever since Clarence got the oil, Mrs. Johnson had to muffle her orgasmic screams with a pillow. Oil was responsible for the pregnancy of at least one of the Purdue sisters despite no known male inseminator. Poor little Elsamire, in a sudden fit of country madness, threw herself off a cliff in Port Antonio, and as her body slammed against the rocks, there was at least one once-jealous girl who knew that oil worked. Obeah was the suspected culprit, but nobody had ever seen it work that way. Nobody had ever seen it work in any way, for them is all good God-fearing people. And who is you fi ask that deh question? What a piece o cheek!

The Apostle made no mention of the calf or obeah. Rumors popped up at random, like bubbles in a brew. At the grocery, people whispered Rolling Calf . Unexplainable things were nothing new to Gibbeah. Only few remembered, and only faintly, that the Apostle’s arrival had gone unexplained as well. All this excitement was too much for Lucinda, who translated it sexually and whipped herself before sleep. In the morning the cow’s ashes were swept away by wind, leaving an almost perfect circle of burnt black.

The Rum Preacher leapt from his bed, his eyes white and infernal. He was screaming again. To the Widow, he seemed to say the same things over and over, but they were not words. They sounded like gargles or names hacked to pieces before they were spat out.

“Lucas! Lucas! Lucas!”

ROLLING CALF Part Two

Go down Emmanuel Road

Gal an boy

Fi go broke rock-stone

Go down Emmanuel Road

Gal an boy

Fi go broke rock-stone

Broke them one by one

Gal an boy

Broke them two by two

Gal an boy

Finger mash don’t cry

Gal an boy

Remember a play we deh play

The truck did late.

It did always late.

Late to come.

Late to leave.

Late to pick up the mash-up stone.

Late to go from where it come.

Usually is nuff of we that get the little day’s work which go to helping out round the house.

Grandmother did do it, mother do it.

And pickney do it too.

Them lay out the big limestone rock pon the side of the road and we pick up we hammer and commence to broking.

Finga mash, don’t cry. Remember a play we deh play.

We no know what them use the rock for.

Some say to make road. Some say to make rich white woman house. Nobody never ask cause country people take things as them be.

By the next morning the truck come and pick up what we broke up, but leave behind plenty, almost two hill of stone on the two side of Brillo Road near the bridge.

The truck did gone, but the Devil just come.

Yes sah! Word burst like fire pon dry grass say Mrs. Johnson making bun in the oven!

What you saying pon we earshole?

Yes baba! Rumor jump from her yard and race down the street and stop at Mrs. Fracas house, then Mrs. Smithfield house where it pick up two more story, then it hop and skip and jump from one yard to the next, then it race to the grocery shop where it bounce and bounce like American ball. And every time rumor bounce, the story pick up something new.

Well, everybody know say Mr. Johnson lose him nature ever since him come back from the war. Only thing him can do with it is piss.

True-true. Everybody know say that if she breeding, the baby better take after him mother hard or all Hell goin broke lose. If that baby ever look like the man who a dig her, then Clarence in some serious hataclaps. Then when even people who should know better start to say is really so, news bounce back say is not so. Is just sick she sick. Then news start bounce again, saying she kill the baby. Nuff woman, when them see say the blood stop run and them belly get sicky-sicky, start eat whole heap o green paw-paw to stop baby from borning.

That is nothing new, stillborn baby who mad say them never get born haunt plenty woman.

One time rumor say stillborn baby haunt Mrs. Smithfield so much that she have secret funeral round the back of her house and wash out her pokie with goat milk.

Then hi — everybody know say that when poor little Lillamae father mess with her and she start show that she eat green paw-paw. Mrs. Fracas say she see it, or she hear it.

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