R. Hernández - An Innocent Fashion

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An Innocent Fashion: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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“Writing in a fervently literary style that flirts openly with the traditions of Salinger, Plath, and Fitzgerald, Hernández is a diamond-sharp satirist and a bracingly fresh chronicler of the heartbreak of trying to grow up. Honest and absurd, funny and tragic, wild and lovely, this novel describes modern coming-of-age with poetic precision.”
—  The literary love-child of
and
, this singular debut novel is the story of Ethan, a wide-eyed new Ivy League grad, who discovers that his dream of “making it” at leading New York City fashion magazine Régine may well be his undoing. When Ethan St. James graduates from Yale, he can’t wait to realize his dream of becoming a fashion editor at Régine. Born Elián San Jamar, he knew from childhood that he was destined for a “more beautiful” life than the one his working-class parents share in Texas — a life inspired by Régine’s pages. A full ride to the Ivy League provided the awakening he yearned for, but reality hits hard when he arrives at Régine and is relegated to the lowest rung of the ladder.
Mordantly funny and emotionally ruthless, An Innocent Fashion is about a quintessential millennial — naïve, idealistic, struggling with his identity and sexuality — trying to survive in an industry, and a city, notorious for attracting new graduates only to chew them up and spit them out. Oscillating between melodrama and whip-smart sarcasm, pretentiousness and heartbreaking vulnerability, increasingly disillusioned with Régine and his two best friends from Yale, both scions of WASP privilege, Ethan begins to unravel.
As the narratives of his conflicted childhood, cloistered collegiate experience, and existential crisis braid together, this deeply moving coming-of-age novel for the 21st century spirals towards a devastating truth: You can follow your dreams, but sometimes dreams are just not enough.

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I let her words wash over me like a cool wave. It was happening. I lifted my head and announced, “We’re rolling.” When nobody moved, I repeated a little louder, “We’re rolling,” as my body tensed up and then relaxed. A waterfall of excitement rushed through me. Madeline squeezed my knee and leaned forward to let her bra fall finally away. With the side of her forearm draped over her naked chest, she reached for her silk blouse.

I couldn’t control my body. Indian-style, I crossed my legs. I rubbed my palms together. I rocked forward and back, forward and back. Madeline and Dorian were so still, they could have been sleeping. I swallowed. When I couldn’t take it — my legs were cramping up, I needed to move — I reached for the sofa’s velvet arm and pulled myself up. My hands waved fresh air into the room from the window. It always happened like this, rolling on ecstasy — you took a pill or two, waited for something to happen, then— bam! — it was happening, and you were inside it, and pretty soon you were on your feet shouting, “ Guys! Let’s go on an adventure!

Eyes flickering, Dorian stretched both hands toward me from the sofa. I pulled him into my arms. He fell onto my chest and wrapped his arm around my waist, then the three of us strung together and stumbled out into the late afternoon. Dorian led us with his guitar. Madeline hopped onto his back. We waved to Jack Dockendorf, and Cathleen Kwon, and Master Phillips from Pierson College. We waved to a man on the Skull & Bones stoop, and we waved to Oliver Munn.

“How was your summer?” Oliver asked.

“You smell divine,” Madeline replied. “Here’s a song about the freckle on your lip.”

And we made one up.

Except for Ted Hamilton, who gave us a knowing look and said, “I told you! What’d I tell you?” nobody asked us if we were high. We were simply how they knew us to be.

Soon the sun began to set, and we turned pink around the edges. Dorian was still carrying Madeline, and when we got to the center of Cross Campus the sprinklers had turned the grass spongy and wet.

Wanting a turn on Dorian’s back, I tugged on Madeline’s leg. “You’re hogging him,” I said. Then I pulled too hard and the three of us tumbled onto the grass and didn’t get up again.

The rest of the night we just stayed there. Friends were summoned through phone calls and wild gestures across the lawn, and by around eight o’clock the whole courtyard was alive, all of us laughing and playing guitar and massaging each other’s backs. We glowed in the light from the vaulted windows. Someone brought a bubble machine. A security guard named Maureen popped a floating sud on her nightly patrol and said, “Isn’t that nice?” while everyone passed around a thermos filled with iced Earl Grey someone had brought, and dipped their fingers into a pomegranate.

A FEW HOURS LATER, WE WERE ALONE AGAIN IN OUR UNBREAKABLE trinity.

Dorian saddled up to me and wrapped his white arms around my neck. “Your turn,” he said. “You’ve been touching everyone else all night.” I laughed and said okay and laid back with my head on his knee, face toward the night sky, legs extended on the wet grass.

A few feet away, Madeline also lay down and recited from memory a line by William Blake: “The heavens laugh with you in your jubilee. my heart is at your festival. my head hath its coronal. The fullness of your bliss, I feel — I feel it all. ”

Dorian took off my glasses and placed them beside me. I blinked and looked up at him. His blurry hands descended upon my forehead, and above them I could vaguely make out his hair, blending with the dark sky. His fingers pressed into my skin. My blood rushed to fill every imprint they left, and soon my whole face was warm, tingling like a vibrating guitar string. He put his thumbs over my eyelids and gently stroked in an outward motion. He moved so slowly I thought he might have been distracted by something else.

“Isn’t it amazing,” he whispered, “that two people can be so close — that one would let the other touch the most sacred part of them?”

I asked him what he meant.

“Your eyes,” he said. “They’re the most important thing to you, and so vulnerable — yet I’m touching them, and you trust me completely.”

He caressed my lashes, and I didn’t flinch.

“Do you remember how we met?” he asked.

I smiled at the memory of him with his sketchbook, asking to draw my portrait. “Of course — you made me take off my glasses. I was so nervous.”

“You shouldn’t have been. You know I’d never hurt you, right?”

I yawned, eyes closed under his fingers. “You’re so beautiful, Dorian. ”

He leaned over, and I felt a lock of his hair tumble over my face. “No,” he said, his cool breath on my cheek, “you are.” I heard the saliva bob in his throat. “You are so, so beautiful.”

I tried to open my eyes, but he cupped them with his hands, one on each eye.

“Don’t look,” he said. “Just keep them closed, and say that you will always love me.”

I smiled and grabbed his wrist — tried to pull his hand away.

“Please,” he insisted. “It’s important to me.”

I ran my fingers up the length of his wrist. “Of course I love you, silly.”

“You always will?”

“Yes.”

“No matter what happens?”

“What’s going to happen?”

“Nothing,” he promised. “Nothing’s going to happen.”

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IT REALLY WASN’T DORIAN’S FAULT. IT WASN’T ANYBODY’S fault, but it definitely wasn’t Dorian’s. I knew Dorian hadn’t come into Régine to ruin my life — he was too pure, too good. He was too much like me. I didn’t even blame anyone for choosing him over me: this was just the world we lived in. I knew that when they told him he got the job, his first reaction would be joy, unbridled joy — he wouldn’t think about salary or being on the masthead. He’d think, Wow, my first job! Everyone will be so proud! And I’ll get to see Jane every day — and Ethan! Wait — what will happen to Ethan? I knew how bad he would feel, I just knew, and I couldn’t bear to see the look on his face, so — I just stood up and left.

I remembered the assistant who’d also just stood up and left, abandoning her expensive python bag on her desk. Maybe she too had left to tumble off a roof, and maybe in fact, she eventually did.

“WELCOME, MR. ST. JAMES!” HORACE, EDMUND’S DOORMAN bellowed. “You’re all wet. ”

Edmund’s roof was black with hardened tar. Rainfall never seemed so much like suicide — every raindrop jumping off a cloud, with a long plummet to the earth.

I knew my life wasn’t bad — not if you looked at it from a certain angle, if you thought the important things in life were food and a roof. If you thought about things that way, then sure, I was a fool and selfish, because other people had much worse lives than I did.

It wasn’t really about that, though. It wasn’t about Régine , either.

What are you so scared of? ” Dorian had asked me once, and I think that’s what it was about; although, right then, I wasn’t scared of all the normal things. I wasn’t scared of what would happen if I tumbled a hundred stories, the rain kissing my back. I wasn’t scared of hitting anything on the way down — a satellite or an open window or a gargoyle — or crashing through a windshield, all the glass twinkling around me. I wasn’t even scared of the most likely thing: hitting the concrete, a surface so hard that the entire city had been built upon it.

I didn’t know why, but I wasn’t scared of those things.

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