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 began to walk. Just before turning the corner to Robertson she looked back to see Cora, distressed, standing on the sidewalk— the neighbor called out to her but Marj couldn’t hear and besides, quickened her pace.

Within 5 minutes she was on a bus, heading for Long Beach as she

LXXXI.Joan

came home from visiting her dad, the caregiver was frantic.

After tearfully admitting to the possibility she had napped during Oprah, the RN said that her mother had somehow managed to “slip out.” Upon realizing “the client” was gone, she became distraught and went looking for her. Joan asked if she’d bothered to notify security; she hadn’t, and was tormented afresh by her own incompetence. Joan picked up the phone. The staff said they would immediately alert the police in case Mrs Herlihy had “wandered off-site,” and begin to check ladies’ rooms, pool and cabana areas, and the hidden fern-choked nooks that were plentiful on the grounds — everywhere they could think of.

Joan thanked them, then saw the envelope under the door — a message from the hotel operator, saying “Cora Ludinsky” had called.

She retrieved the voicemail informing that Marj was back in Beverlywood. The neighbor hadn’t left a number and Joan didn’t have it in her Treo afterall ( of course ) but it didn’t matter, she jumped in the car and went right over. On the way, she phoned the detective who had helped with the fraud case; he said he’d do what he could. Of course when she got there, her mother was gone, and Cora didn’t have much to add, except the disquieting reference to “Lucas.” No one was sure if she’d flagged a cab or gotten on a bus or was just meandering — in a follow-up call, the detective thought the latter a more likely scenario, that she was out there confused, and someone had most likely given refuge, and was in the process of contacting authorities — so Joan canvassed the neighborhood until it was pitch dark. She even stopped at Riki’s and the young man said yes, she’d been in, not too long ago, to buy a ticket. Cora said that Marj was wearing a stylish green coat, and Joan was positive it was the Jil Sander she bought for her that 1st week she’d come home from the hospital. Mom liked to wear it when they ate at the subterranean hotel coffeeshop. She passed that on to the detective.

Joan and Barbet had plans to go to Locanda Portofino for her birthday — a supershitty day to turn 38. (She hadn’t expected her father to remember, and chided herself for even having the sappy, babyish thought that he’d send flowers and a 6pack of Diet Coke.) They wound up meeting at Kate Mantellini’s because the restaurant was sort of between the hotel and the old house; that way, Joan could feel halfway in her skin. There was nothing to do for now and at least she had the gut feeling Mom would soon be found. The detective had his “eyes and ears out there” and was waiting for a high-priced PI colleague to return his page. Joan awaited that callback as well — she’d already emailed a picture of Marj and there was no reason the PI couldn’t get started right away. She told the detective to give his friend a number—$25,000, as retainer fee — and he said that was way too high but Joan insisted. She knew it guaranteed action. She needed someone who would knock on doors if it came down to that.

She dumped all this on Barbet and he was an enormous comfort. He brought a gift, an iPod with the complete downloaded audioworks of Trollope and Dostoevsky (unabridged). Even her favorite, Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita, was on there, bless his soul. A feature allowed you to fast-forward narration without distorting the text, a kind of “speed listening.” (She couldn’t wait to zip through The Idiot .) Barbet managed to get her laughing, and Joan needed that because she was beyond hysteria. She was beyond beyond. He started riffing on Kate Mantellini’s, which was actually designed by Thom Mayne.

“I know,” said Joan. “Did you see the thing in the Times today where Mayne ass-licked El Zorro ?”

“The Phaeno Science Center, in Wolfsburg.”

“Will the shiteating never stop?”

“Not as long as there are anuses. Would you look at this restaurant? It’s like a house in Vegas, commissioned by one of the boobs who hit it big in Blue Man Group. This waterhole’s so fuckin ugly. Are those boxers carved out of metal? Is this supposed to be, like, a postmodern sports bar? I mean, whuh? Look, babe, consider yourself lucky. You could have fucked Ground Control to Major Thom, and be about to give birth to some illegitimate Ichabod Crane Pritzkerfetus who needs anger management. Some bitch-slapping toddler with close-cropped hair and a mean streak who’s destined to do yoga with Saul David Raye and eat strawberry salsa à table, at Table. ” He pretended to masturbate then looked around, shivering with disgust as she cracked up. “Even the people here. Realtors and loser comedians with trust funds. The feng shui makes your flesh crawl — the ambience! The whole experience is…it must be like the aftertaste people get when they go for chemo. That Writers Guild crowd trickling in from Doheny; they go see movies for free or listen to Bill Maher ‘in conversation’ with Ariadne Huffington”—he was so bombed (he’d had a head start) that’s what he called her—“for the hundred-thousandth time. The vibe here is so creepy. Don’t you think? A nouveau riche sports bar with Major Thom’s usual warm, fuzzy edges — the poor waitresses must get impaled when they turn the corner into the kitchen! At least you didn’t get impaled on a Thom Mayne hard edge. At least you had the sense to be inseminated by a Jew billionaire!”

Her partner knew the paternity issue was conversationally off-limits, but what the hell. He never believed her one-night-stand Geek Squad story anyhow. “Entre rien” (as Barbet put it), he suddenly asked if she wanted to join him next week at the Airport Hilton to “experience” an avatar called Amma, Mata Amritananandamayi (“Say what? ” said Joan. “Amma means mother,” said Barbet), popularly known as the Hugging Saint. He said that someone tried to stab her not too long ago in Kollam, where the Big Wave hit, and Joan riposted, “You’re nobody till somebody stabs you.” She was actually surprised to hear Barbet was even interested. He said wryly, “Why not? Everyone can use a hug. Especially after a fucking memorial reject. Besides, I have ulterior motives.”

“Don’t you always?”

“One of our pretentious potential Buddhist clients said I should go.”

“Ah. Is there such a thing as an unpretentious potential Buddhist client?”

Barbet smirked, and said it might give ARK the edge in getting “the job.”

What job?” she said. “What are you talking about?”

“Some temple in Taos.”

“Been there, done that. Haven’t we had enough faux Buddhists for a while?”

“Well, that ain’t my faux. Anyway, Lew Freiberg isn’t a Buddhist.”

“I hate fucking Buddhists,” said Joan. “I’d rather get raped by a Getty conservator than be invited to another Steve Ehrlich Zen brunch. There are no American Buddhist people of color.

“What are you, the ACLU now?”

“They’re rich and they’re white and all they do is spend thousands of dollars making precious little pilgrimages to Dharamsala or wherever so they can write 4th-rate prosepoetry ‘essays’ about their cushy, cosmic adventures for Tricycle, or Travel + Leisure. They all suck the Dalai Lama’s 12 inch dick. Legends in their own luminous minds. Oh! And they love to talk about ‘sitting’—you know, my meditation practice can beat up your meditation practice. ‘Just sit’—that’s the big famous phony Buddhist motto. Just sit —on your Prada meditation pillow. You know what I say? Just shit. Take a big shit. That’s what I say.”

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