Bruce Wagner - Memorial

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Memorial: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In his most profound and accomplished book to date, acclaimed author Bruce Wagner breaks from Hollywood culture with a novel of exceptional literary dimension and searing emotional depth. Joan Herlihy is a semi-successful architect grasping at the illustrious commission that will catapult her to international renown, glossy de cor magazines, and the luxe condo designs of Meier, Koolhaas, and Hadid: the incestuous cult of contemporary Starchitects. Unexpectedly, she finds her Venice Beach firm on the short list for a coveted private memorial — a Napa billionaire's vanity tribute to relatives killed in the Christmas tsunami — with life-changing consequences. Her brother Chester clings to a failing career as a location scout before suffering an accidental injury resulting from an outrageous prank; the tragicomic repercussions lead him through a maze of addiction, delusion, paranoia — and ultimately, transcendence.
Virtually abandoned by her family, the indomitable Marjorie Herlihy — mother, widow, and dreamer — falls prey to a confidence scheme dizzying in its sadism and complexity. And unbeknownst to Marj and her children, the father who disappeared decades ago is alive and well nearby, recently in the local news for reasons that will prove to be both his redemption and his undoing. Spiraling toward catastrophe, separate lives collide as family members make a valiant attempt to reunite and create an enduring legacy. To rewrite a ruined American dream.
Deeply compassionate and violently irreverent, "Memorial" is a testament to faith and forgiveness, and a luminous tribute to spirituality in the twenty-first century. With an unflagging eye on a society ruptured by naturaland unnatural disaster, and an insatiable love for humanity, Wagner delivers a masterpiece.

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LAXMI said they should rent go-carts because they had a lot of ground to cover before getting to the elephants, some of it uphill, and she didn’t want Chess to be uncomfortable. Much better than the tram. He was surprised at how easy it was; for 20 bucks, anyone could trip around on a handicapper scooter. Even a fucking terrorist. There wasn’t paperwork to deal with (all they needed was your John Hancock) because evidently the San Diego Zoo had already been sued by some pioneering class-action gimps who said it was demeaning for them to sit there signing full-on legal disclaimers before being allowed to ride. That’s what the person who gave them the single-page form said, anyway. Still, it was refreshing that you didn’t need a doctor’s note. They could only go so fast but were actually pretty smooth and efficient. And Laxmi was right — no way would he have made it walking.

Once they got going, Chess looked at her as if to telepath, This shit is getting weird. She vanished in a puff of hippiegiggle.

Laxmi zigged and zagged and had a grand ol time but Chester was self-conscious as he steered, feeling a touch of the paraplegic, wishing he had a military outfit so it would at least look like he’d survived some roadside blast in Fuckistan, but the hiking pedestrians that they slowly overtook didn’t seem to give a shit. The pair was invisible as they navigated sundry paths and This Way To The Reptile House tributaries. He took more pills. He wanted to make sure to have a little something in his stomach so they stopped at one of the multicultural shacks for some Mex (triggering another series of McBurro riffs). The nascent panicky mindset that the pain might never end was almost as bad as the pain itself, that he was now one of those people —or at least in the process of getting his membership approved — on the torture rack till the end of their days.

The Inderal lasted 24 hours and was used primarily to quell the fear of public speaking; another shriven skull the witch doctors said to throw in the cauldron. One of the brainiac medicos Chess saw at UCLA told him there were lots of new “management stratagems.” He rattled off a bunch of meds and the eager patient went home and did his search engine thing. Scared the shit out of him. There was something called Pamidronate, for sucky bone cancers like Paget’s disease, but you had to inject it. That really freaked him — that the guy’d even mention it, unless he was showboating. Is that where he saw Chess heading? Shooting up some exotic cancer drug in the bathroom at JAR (for brunch)? Who knew: maybe these types of injuries did eventually lead to the Big C — what used to be laughable, myth and folk wisdom, had hardened with Sweeps Week logic into unassailable doctrine in the clinics’ hallowed halls. Made perfect sense. People weren’t enrolling in medical school because of DeBakey or Albert Schweitzer — they were being recruited by House, Grey’s Anatomy, and CSI. There were antiseizure drugs for stumpers and something called gabapentin for the neuropathy that went with renal failure or diabetes. The whitecoated putz looked at Chess like he was a fool for not having already gotten his epidurals; the needles they used were Tommy Lee — gauge. The “epi” delivered morphine or bupivaicaine directly to the spinal cord, so you didn’t have to do that zombified painsoaked stiffwalk anymore, but all Chess thought about was a 1st-year student hitting a nerve and infecting him, botching the very procedure little old ladies sailed through. He saw himself on a zoo scooter 10 years hence, his own motorized pushcart, covered with KEEP IT GREEN stickers and cannabis logos, diapered, wheeling through Whole Foods for fish oil and Centrum—

Not gonna happen…

THEY found their way to the enclosure. He used to come with Joan and his mom. Laxmi thought it so cool that Marjorie was “into Ganesha.” She said there was no way elephants should not be in the wild, and Chess concurred, after mulling over the double negative (his brain wasn’t working too well), realizing she meant they shouldn’t be caged. They stared in silence at a family of pachyderms (that Fleetwood Mac song “Tusk” went idiotically through his head), cute and anciently weird and even spooky to apprehend, before disgust at their voyeurism washed over. The couple was still high, seized by intense reefer outrage re captivity that quickly segued to melancholia.

Laxmi said there were a thousand myths about how Ganesha was created. While her husband Siva was away, Parvati created a boy from her “scurf”—the flakes and scales of her skin — so he’d keep away nettlesome visitors and guard her bedroom door. When Siva came home, Ganesha didn’t know who he was and wouldn’t let him in. Siva cut off his head. Those gods don’t fuck around, huh. When he realized it was his own son he had decapitated, Siva freaked and restored the kid to life by giving him the head of the creature closest by: a white elephant.

Soon my body will be a white elephant — scurf’s up!

They stared at the hairy beasts, tripping from the vantage of their go-carts. Laxmi giggled that Ganesha was the guardian of the anus —she actually read that in some Bodhi Tree book — and a man’s cock represented his trunk. Jesus, thought Chess, the motherfucker guards everything. Was Laxmi trying to tell him something? He flashed on his Viagra stash. She said the reason she loved Ganesha more than any other god was because he’d transcribed a famous poem by breaking off a tusk ( fuckin Fleetwood Mac again and those dumb drums and horny USC cheerleaders; Jesus, that was 30 years ago ) and dipping it in ink. Chess told her he thought that was far out. I’m really starting to talk like her. Soon I’ll be a vegetarian. A Viagratarian. That’s why she kept a statue of the elephant on her desk or in her purse, wherever she did her journaling. She said Ganesha gave her “writing ch’i.”

THEY turned in their scooters and smoked more weed in the car. Poor little Dumbos. Ratty, dusty, and dry. On display. They were gods and people didn’t have a clue.

“Did you know,” said Laxmi, “that elephants communicate? I mean, they talk, but it’s subsonic. They can die of heartbreak. And they go crazy in captivity, they always say it’s this thing called ‘musth’? You know, this male hormone thing? And that’s true, but it’s triggered. Musth is like this testosterone secretion that makes them very aggressive. It’s stinky and drips into their eyes and mouth.”

“I can relate.”

“It has something to do with ketones? My dad used to tell me about all this. He’s really very knowledgeable about certain things — I mean, he’s not a complete pig. Like if you blow into their trunks, they’ll remember your scent for life. Did you know that when they die, the whole herd lingers over the carcass? My dad didn’t tell me that, I already knew it. Chester, it is so sad and so sweet. They mourn. And the heads of the tribe are female. It’s a matriarchy! There’s like this 70 year old female who’s running the show! I love that! That’s why it’s so sad to see them in cages…and they mate for life? You knew that, right? They are so special. They can feel the whole world through the bottom of their feet — that’s how they wound up saving all those people in the tsunami. They could feel the waves coming—”

Chess felt a wave, and leaned over to kiss her.

She kissed back.

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