Gordon Lish - Collected Fictions

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Collected Fictions: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In literary America, to utter the name “Gordon Lish” in a conversation is like adding hot sauce to a meal. You either enjoy the zesty experience, one that pushes your limits — or you prefer to stay away. It’s Lish who, first as fiction editor at Esquire magazine (where he earned the nickname “Captain Fiction”) and then at the publisher Alfred A. Knopf, shaped the work of many of the country’s foremost writers, from Raymond Carver and Barry Hannah to Amy Hempel and Lily Tuck.
As a writer himself, Lish’s stripped-down, brutally spare style earns accolades in increasing numbers. His oeuvre is coming to be recognized as among the most significant of the period that spans the transition between the 20th and 21st centuries. Kirkus Reviews wrote of his last collection that “Lish…is still our Joyce, our Beckett, our most true modernist.”
This definitive collection of Lish’s short work includes a new foreword by the author and 106 stories, many of which Lish has revised exclusively for this edition. His observations are in turn achingly sad and wryly funny as they spark recognition of our common, clumsy humanity. There are no heroes here, except, perhaps, for all of us, as we muddle our way through life: they are stories of unfaithful husbands, inadequate fathers, restless children and writing teachers, men lost in their middle age: more often than not first-person tales narrated by one “Gordon Lish.” The take on life is bemused, satirical, and relentlessly accurate; the language unadorned: the result is a model of modernist prose and a volume of enduring literary craftsmanship.

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Thinking of you first, and then, only then, of myself.

So I couldn't do it.

But so okay, so tough shit.

But I tried, didn't I?

So how about now you go do something for me for once in your life!

Let the publisher know if you know anything about me from where I told you and when.

Because there is always the chance you know more about me than I know about myself.

There's got to be somebody who must!

As anyway concerns there and then.

Because maybe then I was even worse off then than I am if you look at me now.

But maybe I wasn't.

So pay attention.

This is serious.

This is between you and me.

Fuck the publisher.

Don't worry about the publisher.

I'll worry about the publisher.

Leave it to me to deal with the publisher.

You just worry about getting me the information.

About me in 1954 in Miami Retreat.

Also, I need to know what you think about you waiting for me in a bed.

You think it's easy for me to ask?

How many people would come right out and ask?

You any idea of what it must mean for me to ask?

I mean, it must mean I am just as worse off now as than at that time I was or at least as bad.

Listen, I just had this thought.

You know what a near-death experience is?

It's life.

No shit.

So what's this worth, a smart thing like this?

It's pretty good, a smart thing like this.

So there's more where it came from, es vero?

Do us both a favor and write the people publishing this book. Tell them you are waiting for Gordon Lish to come lie down with you in your bed. Or for him to let you come lie down with him for him in his. Then guess who won't have to depend anymore on him sitting himself down in this chair anymore to keep himself feeling rescued from himself.

But all in bad faith.

P. S. I'm adding this on as a P. S.

The same goes for White Plains.

Think in terms of the year of 1954 and of the year of 1955 as far as also the place in White Plains. Which for your information was what I was all set to call this book, but then they started acting like they were going to sue me for it and then the next thing was it was the whole United States.

Anyway, don't forget my bed.

WARBIRD

REASON CALLING THIS WARBIRD IS because somebody on the phone with me today thought I was saying warbird when I was saying something else. But reason am writing anything to be called anything is because there's this debt I think I am developing to this fellow Jon Cone, who has a magazine he calls World Letter . How I got myself into this thing with this Jon Cone and with this World Letter of his is not going to be possible for me to catch you up on because all I can seem to get the drift of is of me once trying to put one over on him and then of him figuring out that what I was once trying to do vis-à-vis him was exactly what I was actually trying to do vis-à-vis him and then of his — you know, of this Jon Cone's — writing me a letter to me about it and of him saying to me so — like, hey, you fucking bullshit artist, come on, man, okay?

So the thing I did today was pick up the phone today to call Jon Cone to try and pull some more wool over Jon Cone's eyes, figuring if I don't call but instead of calling write a letter to Jon Cone and give Jon Cone something from me in writing to him, then he might get this kind of a lawful like armlock on me and later on like come back at me with it and crush me with it in the law courts like I'm some type of schnook or some thing.

So I called.

No letter.

Didn't write.

Didn't get it down there in the old black-and-white.

But got the wrong number, it looks like.

Got a person who answered like this.

"Hello?"

And I said is Jon Cone there.

And the person said, "What?"

And I said Mr. Cone, is there a Mr. Cone there.

And the person said, "Who are you looking for?"

And I said I am looking for the editor of the magazine called World Letter , okay? I said is this the magazine called that? I said because this is the telephone number which I am right this minute reading off of Mr. Cone's stationery to me.

And the person said, "I'm sorry, but there is nothing like any of that here."

And I said I just want to make sure you're telling me there is no World Letter and no Jon Cone there. So I said can I be positive that this is what you are saying to me — nothing like World Letter there, nothing neither like a Jon Cone there?

And the person on the phone said, "What kind of a shitbird are you?" The person on the phone said, "So is this what is calling me on the telephone, some kind of a shitbird on the telephone?"

That was the conversation to the extent that I am going to trouble myself to try and sit here and, you know, and begin to make any effort to establish it for you as a structure for you.

But, right, right, nobody said warbird, that's the facts of it, no warbird was actually said anywhere.

Just said all of that warbird stuff about warbird because I thought, you know, you might, as a title, go for it. So then you can see how after it was set up for us as the title of this, how then, how the next thing you know, how then it led to some other things about warbird right there in the first sentence of this right after there was warbird in the title of it.

Man, look at it, will you just look at it? — it's a downward spiral, this is, isn't it?

All this downward spiral of it.

You try to make it up to people, you get set to make it up to people, and then the next thing you know, there is this terrible spiral downward with them on account of the fact that you are always starting to spiral downward with people, and then once you start the downward spiral with them, it is all going to keep on going downward like this — namely, in like a definite downward spiral downward.

If only things weren't always so downward like this!

If only things were not rigged to always keep going spiraling so downward like this!

Everything wrongward and downish.

This Jon Cone and me, how come we could not have, the two of us, how come we could not have sailed right off of here up out from here at the outset from here to anywhere terrific?

Maybe soared right on up out from here — and then up some more upward from here, and then some more upward after that — and then, after that, ever upward from that — sailing — soaring — ever upward.

Terrifically.

Or upwardly.

And not like the way it really always is.

Which is like a letter you take a chance and go post to them like a warbird to them instead of feather back and get fluttered from the motherfucking world.

THREE JEWS ON THE WAY HOME FROM A CLASS WE TOOK A TAXI

Then call it a cab.

Fine, we took a taxicab. Don't tell me they weren't as Jewish as I am as Jewish, the two of them, the pair of them, in the back seat with me in the taxicab with me. We would have taken a subway, except who wanted to get killed? They kill Jews on subways. This has been the practice here for ever so long. It must be plain, then, that the others had never been on a subway, for if they had been, then how could they have got into a taxicab with me the night of my class Wednesday last? How indeed could have done they? Look, I think I have a concussion. My head, I believe it to have been concussed — at 84th Street and Park — where the taxicab I and my students were riding in collided with the planet Mars. Or with, lesserly, the moon. Or more probably upon the fenestration of a legion of marching Christians, it felt like. We were smashed. Firetrucks show up. Ambulances show up. The sidewalks are thronged (is this permissable, thronged?) — were athrong with cheering horses. Hordes, one imagines oneself to have said. Hey, if I have a head injury, if any of this evinces (evinces?) the vince of a head injury, then don't cry for me, Babylon! Nor Bayonne. They took us away on boards. Aboard boards. In the emergency room, the hue and cry was as follows: "These are Jews!" But a doctor cameth and applied salves. I was healed. My students were healed. He said, "You be the people of interpretation, yes?" There was acknowledgment. This was curative. He said, "Cab crashes phalanx of unclean, correctomento?" Acknowledgement — but in the nodding off of it of, hear something clink. Within. Take the fellow by the buttonhole, expressing to him alarm, saying, "My, you know, my head." "Ah," the man says, brightening, "you be bashed in it in, no?" "But my brain," I opine, "my brain, what of its concourse now?" There is smiling. My students, the nurses, the firemen, the administrators — Ma and Pa — they smileth and smilen. "We were three Jews on the way home from a class!" I allow, stressing the titular aspects of the matter. The telephone rings. The telephone is ringing. Everybody answers. "Hello," it states. "Duffy's Tavern," it states. "Duffy's not here," it states. "John Oakes speaking." "John!" I say. "Oh, God — thank God, thank Jesus, it's John!" I say. I say, "John, Jesus pal, there's been an efficiency, okay? We hit something. The tenses are changing. We were promising uptown and we hit something and now all the tenses are changing. Can you, you know, in your heart, can you possibly maybe make anything out of this for me as a person?" It states, "Like one fellow to another? Like one victim to another? Like one aspect to another? You mean like as in humanitarianly-wise?" But I had to hang up. Everybody was dying. It was like it had all of it — the pay-off — been postponed or something, but now — look out! — the gist was up. Except for me, of course. Except for me and for the one true, the one verdanto, church, of course.

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