Brock Clarke - Exley

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Exley: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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For young Miller Le Ray, life has become a search. A search for his dad, who may or may not have joined the army and gone to Iraq. A search for a notorious (and, unfortunately, deceased) writer, Frederick Exley, author of the “fictional memoir”
, who may hold the key to bringing Miller’s father back. But most of all, his is a search for truth. As Miller says, “Sometimes you have to tell the truth about some of the stuff you’ve done so that people will believe you when you tell them the truth about other stuff you haven’t done.”
In
as in his previous bestselling novel,
, Brock Clarke takes his reader into a world that is both familiar and disorienting, thought-provoking and thoroughly entertaining. Told by Miller and Dr. Pahnee, both unreliable narrators, it becomes an exploration of the difference between what we believe to be real and what is in fact real.

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“What are you doing?” M.’s mother finally asks.

“I’m reading A Fan’s Notes, ” I say.

“What do you think?”

What I think is that the book is trash — trash and, indeed, trashy —and not at all suitable for a boy M.’s age. But then again, I’ve only read twenty pages — unlike M., I was never an advanced reader, and perhaps the book gets better. Besides, M. has told me his mother also thinks the book is trash, and I don’t want her to think I’m “sucking up.” So I say, “I think this Exley needs a mental health professional.”

She laughs — laughs! — but before I’m fully able to glory in the sound, she says, “Wait a minute, I thought you said you already read it.”

Oh , I think, what have I done! I almost lie again and say, I have already read it. And now I’m rereading it . But I am a terrible liar — my mental health professional has properly diagnosed me as such — and I am sure M.’s mother will hear the lie, even over the telephone. “I lied,” I whisper. “I’m sorry.”

“What did you say?”

I say it again and then curl into a ball on my couch and prepare to be assailed.

“I can’t remember the last time that happened,” M.’s mother says, but her voice isn’t angry: it’s full of wonder, with a little sadness around the edges, too, like night’s horizon beginning to threaten the setting sun.

“The last time someone lied to you?”

“No,” she says. “I can’t remember the last time someone admitted lying to me and then apologized for it. Thank you.”

“Well,” I say, feeling suddenly “suave” again. I even uncurl myself. “You’re very welcome.”

Part Three

Things I Learned from My Dad, Who Learned Them from Exley (Lesson 3: What People Want to Be When They Don’t Want to Be Anything Else)

My dad didn’t own anything and didn’t want to own anything. He and Mother had an argument about this once. They had an argument about this more than once. But I’m thinking in particular about the time they had an argument about my dad not wanting to own the Crystal, or at least the building it was in.

This was around dinnertime. We were in the kitchen. My dad was making dinner and I was watching him when Mother walked in. She had a huge smile on her face. “Tom,” she said, “how would you like to be the proud owner of Eighty-seven Public Square?” Then she handed him the newspaper; I could see that it was opened to the classifieds. Mother was smiling. I mean, really smiling, like she was trying hard to show us all of her teeth. She looked weird, but happy, which I guess is what I mean when I said she looked weird. My dad didn’t seem happy, though. He didn’t look at her. He picked up the newspaper, pretended to read it (his eyes moved left to right and back again really fast, like an old typewriter in the movies, and no one whose eyes move like an old typewriter in the movies is really reading), then dropped it on the counter.

“Tom, come on,” Mother said.

“What’s Eighty-seven Public Square?” I wanted to know.

“That’s where the Crystal is,” Mother said.

“You’re going to own the Crystal?” I asked my dad. I couldn’t believe it. I don’t know how old I was then, exactly. I wasn’t old enough to have started reading books I wasn’t old enough to read. But I was old enough to have been to the Crystal many times with my dad. Old enough to know it was his favorite place. “That’s your favorite place!” I said.

“See?” Mother said, still showing us her teeth.

“I wouldn’t own the Crystal. I’d own the building, ” my dad said. He still wasn’t looking at Mother, or at me. He was now standing over the pot on the stove, stirring whatever was bubbling and smoking inside. “I’d own a building paid for by your money.”

“It’s our money,” Mother said, but more softly now, and with fewer teeth showing.

“I’d be a landlord, ” my dad said. “For Christ’s sake, I don’t want to be a landlord .”

“You don’t want to be anything, Tom,” Mother said. “That’s the problem.” She wasn’t smiling anymore. She stood for a while in front of my dad, waiting for him to say something back. But he didn’t. He kept squinting into the pot, kept stirring and stirring, like he knew what he wanted was at the bottom of the pot, and if he stirred long enough maybe it’d rise to the top. “I’m not the only one who can see you don’t want to be anything, you know,” Mother finally said, really softly, like she wasn’t sure she wanted anyone to hear. But of course my dad and I could, and of course we knew she was talking about me. Then she picked the newspaper up off the counter, threw it in the trash, and left the room. A second later, we could hear her stomping around upstairs, opening and slamming drawers and doors. “Mother is on a tear,” I said. This is something my dad said all the time: “Your mother is on a tear.” Except when I left off the “your” it sounded entirely different. Better, but meaner, which is what made it better. My dad could hear the difference, too. He laughed, kind of — it was a sharp, barky “Ha!” — and then said, “If I were you, bud, I wouldn’t let your mom hear you call her ‘Mother.’”

I didn’t ask why not, because I knew why not. I nodded and my dad went back to stirring again. He had a sad, thoughtful look on his face; I knew he was thinking about what Mother had said earlier. “I guess I could teach English,” he said.

Exley had been an English teacher, but I didn’t know that yet, although I’d seen my dad read his book a thousand times without really realizing what it was. “Well,” I said, “you definitely do read a lot.”

My dad smiled when I said that. He took the spoon out of the pot, put the lid on it, and then asked me how I’d like it if my old man suddenly became an English teacher at Jefferson County Community College. I said I would like it fine. Then he asked whether I thought Mother would like it, too, and I said I thought she would, although I wasn’t too sure. After all, she’d seemed pretty hopped up on the idea of my dad being a landlord, although she hadn’t said anything about my dad being an English teacher. My dad was happier now, however (he was smiling and whistling as he set the table), and I didn’t want to ruin that, so I just asked, “Why would you rather be an English teacher than a landlord? Is it because you like to read so much?”

“No, bud,” my dad said. “That has nothing to do with it.”

“Well, why do you want to be an English teacher, then?”

“Because,” my dad said, “that’s what people want to be when they don’t want to be anything else.”

If He’s So Famous, How Come I Never Heard of Him?

Every day, they switch up the order of the classes. Who knows why. Maybe to convince you that the class is not the same class if you’re taking it at a different time. Anyway, this was Tuesday, the thirteenth of November, 200–. I had study hall first. It was a good thing. Since I’d forgotten my backpack at school the day before, I hadn’t been able to do any of my homework. But I managed to do it all in study hall, so I didn’t have any problems that morning. I didn’t want any problems at school. I figured if I didn’t have any problems at school, I might be able to handle the problems I might have everywhere else.

After study hall, I went to social studies, then home ec, then earth science. But of course I wasn’t really paying attention to what was going on in any of those classes; instead, I was thinking about Exley and how I might find him. So far I wasn’t doing such a hot job of it on my own, which meant I needed some help. After earth science, it was lunch. I got my tray and my food. But instead of eating, I sat down at an empty table in the cafeteria, took out a piece of paper and a pencil, and started writing a list of Exley’s favorite people. I figured if I could find them, they might be able to help me find Exley. And while I was at it, I also made a list of Exley’s least favorite people. I figured if I could find them, they might be able to help me find Exley, too; I figured that maybe they’d keep especially close track of him, probably thinking if they always knew where he was, they would always know where not to go.

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