Joseph McElroy - Women and Men

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Women and Men: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Beginning in childbirth and entered like a multiple dwelling in motion, Women and Men embraces and anatomizes the 1970s in New Yorkfrom experiments in the chaotic relations between the sexes to the flux of the city itself. Yet through an intricate overlay of scenes, voices, fact, and myth, this expanding fiction finds its way also across continents and into earlier and future times and indeed the Earth, to reveal connections between the most disparate lives and systems of feeling and power. At its breathing heart, it plots the fuguelike and fieldlike densities of late-twentieth-century life.
McElroy rests a global vision on two people, apartment-house neighbors who never quite meet. Except, that is, in the population of others whose histories cross theirsbelievers and skeptics; lovers, friends, and hermits; children, parents, grandparents, avatars, and, apparently, angels. For Women and Men shows how the families through which we pass let one person's experience belong to that of many, so that we throw light on each other as if these kinships were refracted lives so real as to be reincarnate.
A mirror of manners, the book is also a meditation on the languagesrich, ludicrous, exact, and also Americanin which we try to grasp the world we're in. Along the kindred axes of separation and intimacy Women and Men extends the great line of twentieth-century innovative fiction.

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She had it almost, her day-load cleared/vacuumed of words words shitfall of them coming down to one point alone. And if the phone’s being answered across the city at the answering service by the sassy and (Grace would swear) long-tongued black sister, baby’s breath friend workshop-assistant Maureen stormtrooper might still enter here using her own key coming to show Grace her newly done velvet head and Grace was with herself in her Body Room and could not be turned by Maureen even if Maureen stood right over there stretching on the chromed chinning-bar lintel at the threshold looking into this all but furnitureless space and fully mirrored nest of the abundant Body Room reserved for the Goddess, the outer entrance hall beyond and behind with its bakers dozen soft silver (painted/plated) cunts for workshop women’s clothes to be (H.O.A.) hung on arrival.

But Maureen can’t come here yet. The dayful was coming up to one point alone, and Grace would not quite bear down, she had the idea, the whole thing of it this time not spurred or oiled by thoughts of other hands or a little big toe working her over or the soft line where someone’s tan began.

How did it happen? Was it a Body-Self breath loose from words dragging at it? Her unlocked pelvis called aloft, and, in the old faith that so linked-up her lower back to her knees, but many knees getting ready globally to come together and take over, and her shoulders to her waiting voice and non-metallic (because non-carnivore) scent of her coming into its own (for women according to scientist Maureen smell and taste more truly than men), Grace had it all before her and she saw she had had it.

But say what it was.

What else but a bunch of lives who, in contact with your Body-Self love, are right here feeling you’re taking too much time: and then’s when you might accelerate or (even with yourself) fake coming, or just get up and go answer the phone, the door, the letter that’s easier to answer you think than holding yourself so dear you can flirt with yourself in the almond-oil bathtub and never forget the power not to be judged Good or Bad but waiting, which our female history has too often grabbed, so it is up to us, as if we were not our history, but—

Say that again, Grace. .?

A dayful bunch of lives turning each day secretly a great minute and a little year, secretly same shape but all you can do is know it, you can’t put it down, it’s the tip of the yelp, the coastline of your receding—

Your what, Grace. .?

A bunch of lives she has—

What, Grace. .?

Internalized. All her people, like she’s some newspaper. A friend’s gone-to-seed body. A suddenly-out-of-the-closet friend’s busted husband. Or faraway milk bottles with an upper stripe of cream hundreds of miles (years) west clinking cold moist rounded potential weapons in your forgotten dreams where there were now red-and-white waxy containers of homogenized if you’re into dairy products, which is a small outline of the larger, it comes to her.

Is it the shoreline of our mind, our consciousness? Is that what you mean, Grace? Who was it said, "the yeasty sea"? Some man putting in man-hours on words.

Goddess be with me but she feels others, like angels trying to get in on her act, trying to catch up, speaking like her language, speaking her, but angels are special, aren’t they?

Dayful bunch of a black dude on the street in an alligator hat murmuring, "MAma" as Grace swung past in alligator-booted breeches.

Add one cassette-ful of herself: it’s in her knapsack, her live-recorded speech — Her, live: we mean last night’s gig by a figure in the history of her time: Grace Kimball, her shaved, velvet-headed, get-in-touch-with-your-pelvis-headed-thigh-high vision of all women gathering underground turning their slow and oh yes constipated struggles into self-auras available freeze-dried they’ll come to life centuries later, be reconstituted like orange juice — will it work for carrot? — tho’ once taught not to believe in own existence by the same guys (doer-dudes but with a little help you know closet self-crucifiers—) who could make your asshole cream in its own unrefined sugar so you’d never know it can think for itself:

While a burglar breaks into Maureen’s little baby’s breath apartment while, down on Twenty-third Street, she is doing kung fu in a second-floor plate glass window, and, having swiped Maureen’s stereo tape deck (stamped with the local police precinct’s owner-ID imprint so if the cops catch up to the unit they can quarantine it in their widows’ and homeowners’ domestic reserve) and swiped her checkbook (she knows it by heart, stub by stub), and swiped by mistake her American Express credit card bill and Maureen ’s florist bill for standing order of baby’s breath as well, this paternalistic burglar the following day takes responsibility for delicate, power-seeking Maureen by paying her Amex with one of her own checks she has instantly stopped payment on yet burglar-boy pays her florist bill with his own cash —so her fatherly florist phones up, oh honey he didn’t want her paying that bill, that one was on the house he thought he had told her last week and she should never never send cash through the mails; so Maureen winds up less mad at the thief-god than at the overweight florist who will lust after her pussy-willow head which receives more load than she can handle some days which is the problem with all women uniting down the ages.

"What will happen has happened" stands out on the soft page of the large Sketchbook. .

Suicide alert for Cliff; his hands and fingers deeply touching to me when they touch the wood they will cut, shave, turn, and mold like something soft. "Words, words, words," Cliff my old friend says so honestly — all that page-boy hair, and at the down-corners of his talker’s mouth a tiny curve of self-destruct if not in ever-ready potential for flesh-surplus between hip and rib-cage:

firm at fifty, unloading the white Cadillac still panicked him, old friend, he owned it too long, once garaged in Maine, driven to Nova Scotia, paraded through Ontario and two Shakespeare plays — postcards to prove it: stolen, she recalls, in Mackinac, Michigan by the son of a lighthouse keeper on an island in Lake Superior; returned like at the end of dreams Cliff’s had about it with a full tank of premium; driven to New Orleans where Grace joined him for the Alcoholics Anonymous Reunion Hop (what a pair!)—

to dance in the street at Mardi Gras surrounded by Ham and Romance junkies which we didn’t realize they were because they had kicked booze and some even pleasure anxiety—

now selling the grand old white Cadillac gave Cliff a huge grant of time free of that moving space/furniture he had had to worry about, like making meals for members of a family in one dream he had about the car, changing their oil, greasing their bearings, fly to Maine instead, rent a compact, put in a phone call, clean break:

but now another suicide alert: what is at stake? is it serious? Cliff thought what did it was standing in line at lunch-hour at the Motor Vehicle Bureau to get owner-transfer forms when he didn’t need to: not that he’s ready for the flight deck at Bellevue where they wouldn’t let him have his carving knives though the bedposts aren’t exactly made of maple there, must ask Cliff if maple is too hard to carve:

she had told him she didn’t want to eat at Nippon Nosh tonight, was going to jerk off and talk to whoever came out from within

me, Goddess or her adopted loves and children through energy-abundant roof or through door, though knew my periodic cluster would send me uncaused something greater later and I said Cliff better jerk off the way I showed him, preferably with someone. I did not add (though felt enough the Goddess to) that Cliff has carved enough cunts for one month and it was turning into work (Manhattan cottage industry). Who was it said suicide is the white man’s disease? "Brother," I would say to Cliff. Brother? What about "Sister"? "You’re a good man, Sister." Now Cliff complains this friend Dave he’s keeping from me can’t go on

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