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Stephen Dixon: 30 Pieces of a Novel

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Stephen Dixon 30 Pieces of a Novel

30 Pieces of a Novel: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The two-time National Book Award finalist delivers his most engaging and poignant book yet. Known to many as one of America’s most talented and original writers, Dixon has delivered a novel that is full of charm, wit, and humanity. In Dixon presents us with life according to Gould, his brilliant fictional narrator who shares with us his thoroughly examined life from start to several finishes, encompassing his real past, imagined future, mundane present, and a full range of regrets, lapses, misjudgments, feelings, and the whole set of human emotions. All of Gould’s foibles — his lusts and obsessions, fears, and anxieties — are conveyed with such candor and lack of pretension that we can’t help but be seduced into recognizing a little bit of Gould in us or perhaps a lot of us in Gould. For Gould is indeed an Everyman for the end of the millennium, a good man trying to live an honest life without compromise and without losing his mind.

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He goes to town next day. “I have some photocopying to do and I’ll pick up a good bread,” he tells his wife; “anything else you might want?” hoping there isn’t, since he doesn’t want to make a bunch of stops, especially if what she wants him to get is before the place he wants to make the call from, and she says, “Nothing I can think of,” and he starts to leave, then thinks of it and also what a fake he is, considering what’s getting him out of here, and goes back to kiss her and then leaves, stomach churning nervously, even youthfully in a way, hasn’t felt that feeling in his pit for he doesn’t know how long, a feeling like — well, churning, nervousness, and of course he’s been thinking of Sage most of the morning, but that could be because he was thinking of making the call and how he would do it, which means he didn’t give himself a chance to forget her. Does he really have the guts for this? he thinks in the car: the brains, no, but the guts? Well, he’ll find out, and stops at a pay phone against the side wall of the first service station in town, has three dollars in change; if the call’s more he’ll forget it: he’d have to get change from the guy inside, and besides, it doesn’t make sense if it has to be so expensive. Looks in the phone book attached to the phone stand for the Palm Beach area code — it isn’t listed but West Palm Beach is — and he dials it plus the Information number and asks for Ottunburg and spells it, “I don’t know the exact address but it’s there, in the heart of the city, and I think this Ottunburg’s the only one.” He’s told that there are five Ottunburg numbers, all at the same address — Nelson F., pool, cottages two and three, and the children’s phone — and he says, “Give me Nelson, not the pool or cottages but the main house,” dials, sticks two-seventy-five in when asked for it, and a woman answers and he thinks it could be the maid or cook or someone, what with the spread they must have, and says, “I’d like to speak to Mr. Ottunburg, please”—not sure why he asked for him; if a man had answered he might have asked for Mrs. Ottunburg, probably to give himself a little more time — and she says, “He’s not home; who’s calling?” and he says, “Is he at work?” and thinks why’d he ask that? since he’s not going to make another call and not just because he has no more change, and she says, “He’s on a business trip, may I take a message?” and he says, “Is Mrs. Ottunburg in?” and she says, “This is she, who am I speaking to?” and he says, “Then this is for you too, ma’am. Your daughter Sage — who’s fine, by the way, best of health, no problems — is having an intense affair with a fifty-eight-year-old man in Bar Harbor, Maine, I’m sorry to have to report to you,” and she says, “My, my, not Sage,” and he thinks, She kidding him or what? because she doesn’t sound serious, which even if he didn’t expect her to that much he didn’t think she’d be mocking and he says, “Yes, Sage, a waitress, I believe, at the Popover Palace or something there in Acadia National Park — I never get to those places because I can’t stand the crowds,” and she says, “May I again ask who’s calling, since this is quite alarming, sir?” and he says, “I can’t divulge my name, I’m sorry, and I have to go now,” and she says, “One thing I do know, though, is that you can’t be the man she’s having this affair with — Sage would never take to someone so gross,” and hangs up.

He knew it — didn’t he? — that it wouldn’t turn out right but was somehow worth the risk, or he didn’t know it but somehow sensed it; maybe that’s what the stomach pains were about, the nervous churnings: a warning not to make the call because he’d be embarrassed by it after, for it was crazy, really too crazy, and the call could be traced — he hadn’t thought of that before — people have the technical means now, the caller’s number showing up somewhere on the phone called, he’s read about it, remembers seeing in the article a photo of a little box like an electric shaver with numbers in a narrow window, and telephone operators have been using this equipment for years and the very rich would probably be the first home customers to have the device installed, not only because they could afford it, though he doesn’t know if it costs that much, but also because they might think that since they’ve more money to lose than other people they’re more likely to be the targets of cranks and criminals and solicitors over the phone and so on, but it was a public phone he called from — he’s in his car now, heading for a local produce stand that sells good bread — out of view of almost everyone, including the service station attendant inside, so he’s sure nobody saw him by the phone and there must be a dozen cars like his of the same color around the area, and even if someone did see him, just about no one around here knows him — he’s a summer renter who comes to town now and then just to buy a few things they can’t get at a big supermarket somewhere else and use the library and have his car serviced once a summer at the other station and maybe every other week a pizza and things at a restaurant with his wife and kids — and it was exciting, making that call, more in the expectation than the doing, and gutsy in a way, so he got that out of him … got what? Just proving he can do it, stupid as it was, but we all occasionally do stupid things, don’t we? or something like it — well, maybe not, and not at his age, but no harm done in the end, he’s sure: the mother will speak to Sage, maybe even today, maybe even use his call as an excuse for calling her, if she needs one — they might be very close, talk on the phone several times a week — and Sage could say “What man was he referring to? I know no fifty-eight-year-old man except one of the cooks at the restaurant, and he’s gay and I think is even married to his mate — anyway, they both wear the same wedding bands,” and her mother will believe her, that’s the kind of relationship they have, he could almost tell when she said, and now he’s sure it was said cynically, “My, my, not Sage”: absolute trust, honesty, et cetera, between them, daughter confiding in Mom and even Dad for years; Sage could then talk of her boyfriend — he’s sure she has one, it’d seem that every pretty girl at every summer job away from home like this would — saying she’s taking every precaution regarding birth control and disease, but about that silly call: “Don’t worry about it, Mom, I’ve had things like this to deal with before, you know that,” and her mother will say, “The price of being so beautiful. Remember what your granddad used to say to me — it doesn’t apply to you in this situation, so it isn’t a criticism, it just popped into my head—‘If you got it, don’t flaunt it.’ Do you know, I don’t think I know what the actual dictionary definition of the word ‘flaunt’ is — do you, my darling?” and Sage will say, “Why, though, are you telling me this?” and her mother will say, or could, could: “As I said, I don’t know; it just came to me, and it probably means wave, wouldn’t you think? — flutter, flap,” and Sage could say, “By the way, Charlie sends his love,” meaning her boyfriend, a waiter at the place, and her mother could say, “And give Charlie my very best and tell him to always be exceptionally good and, if the situation ever calls for it, protective of my lovely daughter,” and Sage could say, “Mommy, I can very well look after myself, so I don’t have to tell Charlie that. Besides, if he isn’t good, in all ways, out he goes,” and her mother could say, “Still, insist on the best treatment possible — you deserve it — but give as well as you get … oh, I am sounding trite today and not truly giving you your due … goodbye, my dearest,” and Sage could say, “One more thing. Who the heck could that man be who called you, and how would he know how to reach you? He must work here — someone who’s made a move on me or something and I told him, or said with a look, ‘No chance.’ I better find out. A person like that could do a lot of damage before the truth’s found out. You said he had a mature voice. Do you mean like an older man’s?” and her mother could say, “Yes, I think so, but I seem to forget now,” and Sage could say, “No, no older man would do that. It has to be one of the jerky boys here, acting old but doing it convincingly. Two of them are studying to be actors, but they’re too nice and sophisticated for that and we like one another, so I know it can’t be them. Maybe one of the busboys who has a crush on me — a couple do, or look as if they do — and he spoke to you in a faux older man’s voice. Or someone not even from here — why didn’t we think of it? Possibly from school, a fellow who has a grudge against me for some reason — a grad student, even — and he knows I’m here and probably having a great time. That’s most likely, and I think I’ve a good idea who it is. Good, I’ve solved it for myself, so you don’t have to be concerned about hiring a personal bodyguard for me,” and her mother could say, “The thought never entered my mind. Both your father and I know you can take care of yourself. But you can understand why a parent would get somewhat worried over such a call, though I gave no hint of it to that ugly man.”

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