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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…she had night-thoughts and day-thoughts, night terrors and daydreams — bright and dark and shiny, she could reach out and grab them like at carnival, manipulating the machine that picked out prizes with a small steel claw. Get whatever she wanted: sights and sighs and sounds and smells overwhelming: secret joys and languid stillness.

Restoril in peace.

She looked forward to the narcotic of bed and pillows, because then came a different kind of grab bag, where geegaws surfaced, without needing to pick and choose.

This night, before floating to her sumptuously fractured cornucopia, her grifter’s gallery and frangible frangipani, her ganged-up flowery recrudescence, she lifted the book from her nightstand while the helpmeet watched cable in the living room, and read about the Australian missionaries, a family called the Staines, Christians who’d been burned alive by a mob in a place in India called Orissa, Orissa, where even Jesus had been, and she

LXXIII.Joan

wanted to go back to visit the old man but there was just too much to take care of. She and Barbet already agreed that after what her partner was calling “the Freiberg fiasco,” Joan would take an immediate “sabbatical.” (That’s what she was calling that. ) Mercantile Road tugged at her but there simply wasn’t time. She was incubating a baby. (She did have time to order online, Tummy Rub from Mama Mio — which supposedly erased stretch marks — plus Resilient Belly Oil, Cellex-C, and Basq’s lavender/pear-scented Sweet Dreams.) She still hadn’t told anyone except Barbet and Pradeep, hadn’t even been to her gynecologist, though she’d come close to telling Marj because she thought it would make her happy.

She needed to get a few things straight with Lew. Joan didn’t want to bring in a lawyer — yet — but had sought advice from a honcho, a friend of the former consul’s, in the Bay Area. Knowledge was power.

She decided not to inform her brother about Raymond Rausch. Chess was too volatile right now; she didn’t want him racing over and scaring the old guy. Besides, he was acting weird. She wasn’t sure what was wrong but aside from that he was way stoned, all the time. He reeked. The nurses were pointing fingers at each other for taking money from the kitty without leaving receipts, and Joan soon put it together — Chess was the culprit. She didn’t have the energy to confront. He would never do anything to hurt their mom but she didn’t exactly trust him either. He was fairly grandiose and continued to speak of a pending “7 figure” settlement related to his back injury. She thought of asking her brother if he needed a loan but didn’t have the energy for that. No, bad idea to throw Father into the mix. Let Chester keep seeing Mom (who really did enjoy his visits), smoke his ganja in the backyard, fuck his hippie girlfriend, and swipe his petty cash — more than that, Joan didn’t want to know from. At least this way, she could keep half an eye out.

AN attorney from Guerdon LLC called to say he wanted to discuss a “personal matter” between Joan and Mr Freiberg. She haughtily said that if it was related to the maquette fee, “you can contact my partner, Barbet Touissant, at ARK, in Venice.” The lawyer told her it was a “separate, personal issue,” and she hated the sound of the words in his mouth. “You listen,” said Joan. “If it’s so separate and personal, have Mr Freiberg call me himself, understand?”

She almost added motherfucker but hung up instead.

(Probably a good thing, she thought.)

( But, man, that pisses me off. )

She was so rattled, she called Lew’s private line.

(Every therapist Joan ever worked with told her not to act on impulse — her Achilles’ heel. Even Pradeep compared her to Sonny, from The Godfather. It was her ferocious and unyielding nature to go off on people, her weakness and her strength. Barbet once taped a Chinese proverb to her G5: “If you are patient in one moment of anger, you will escape 100 days of sorrow.”)

“Hello?”

“It’s Joan.”

“Hello sweetheart.”

“One of your attorneys just called.”

He was in a jovial mood.

“Did he slap you with a maternity suit?

“Look, Lew, I don’t want to deal with lawyers, OK?”

“Fine by me.”

He sounded like he meant it.

“I don’t know exactly how we’re going to do that, Joan, but I like the concept.”

“I want to have this baby — you know that.”

“It’s yours to lose,” he said, both wry and cruel.

“I’ve had 3 abortions and 3 miscarriages in my life and I really don’t think I’m going to get another shot. So I’m going to do everything I can to keep it.”

“They were just trying to arrange a blood test, or whatever they do. For the paternity thing. You don’t object?”

“Of course not. I was already on that, I just got busy with my mom.”

“How’s she doing?”

“Much better.”

Both of them sighed, and could hear each other breathe.

“It’s yours, Lew. I know that it’s yours.”

His tone grew serious but not unfriendly.

“We just need to be sure, Joan. I need to be sure. That’s the only reason he was calling.”

“I’d appreciate it, Lew, if the next time, you’d pick up the phone. Is that too much to ask? Would that be so painful?”

He laughed. “Everything’s painful.”

She didn’t feel like sharing his whimsy.

“Just call and tell me who I should see: who, where, and when. I don’t want to hear it from an attorney. OK?”

“That’s fine, Joanie.” He laughed again. “Now may I please, please leave the principal’s office? Please?”

“I’d prefer it to be someone down here — because of my mom. I don’t want to have to get on a plane.”

“Got it.” Short pause. “Look, darling: I just don’t want to be a new daddy. I have 3 already and it’s gonna be awhile before I do my Tony Randall/Larry King thing.” Short pause. “How does that grab you?”

“I don’t need you for this one.” Short pause. “I’ve decided to go in another direction,” she said, throwing his own words back at him. “I’m going with Santiago.”

When he heard that he roared, and she laughed, and that broke the ice.

“Do you want to have this conversation now?”

“Love to.”

“If it’s mine, I’ll give you 5,000,000, straight up. Which should more than amply cover his or her education, lifestyle, whatever comes down the pike. That offer will come in the form of a contract, so eventually you’re going to have to deal with one of my guys. I’ll make it as painless as possible. But I do not wish to be named, Joan, in any private or public context. A breach of that would negate any and all agreements. I have my reasons, and I expect you to honor them, as I’ll honor yours. So: if it turns out to be mine, I will write you a check for $5,000,000 straight up but in turn, you will have to sign a confidentiality agreement stating you will not disclose the child’s patrimony until he or she is twice the voting age. I will also make you sign—”

“Ask me to sign,” she interjected, with astringence.

“Ask you to sign,” he assented, “an ironclad rider stating in explicit terms that this child has no claims, nor do you, in any way, shape, or form, upon my present or future estate, or assets related to Guerdon LLC and myriad holding companies. Another thing. If you’ve already spoken about this (I don’t begrudge you that), if you have brought up my potential paternity to, say, a close friend, or Barbet, I would politely yet firmly request that you inform them, at the right moment, that the blood test came back revealing otherwise. They will believe what they will believe but you will stick to your story, on and off the record. I don’t care who you say the father is, we can even provide you with an entity — I just don’t want it to be me. Does all that sound reasonable?”

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