Edward Aubyn - Lost for Words

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Edward St. Aubyn is “great at dissecting an entire social world” (Michael Chabon,
) Edward St. Aubyn’s Patrick Melrose novels were some of the most celebrated works of fiction of the past decade. Ecstatic praise came from a wide range of admirers, from literary superstars such as Zadie Smith, Francine Prose, Jeffrey Eugenides, and Michael Chabon to pop-culture icons such as Anthony Bourdain and January Jones. Now St. Aubyn returns with a hilariously smart send-up of a certain major British literary award.
The judges on the panel of the Elysian Prize for Literature must get through hundreds of submissions to find the best book of the year. Meanwhile, a host of writers are desperate for Elysian attention: the brilliant writer and serial heartbreaker Katherine Burns; the lovelorn debut novelist Sam Black; and Bunjee, convinced that his magnum opus,
, will take the literary world by storm. Things go terribly wrong when Katherine’s publisher accidentally submits a cookery book in place of her novel; one of the judges finds himself in the middle of a scandal; and Bunjee, aghast to learn his book isn’t on the short list, seeks revenge.
Lost for Words

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Complacencies of the peignoir, or power shower: which word cluster would get her?

‘Okay, I get up now,’ said Didier, taking control of his rejection, pushing aside the bedclothes and picking up his shirt from the floor.

She gave him what he wanted, rolling over and raising herself enough to lean against his back.

‘That was so nice,’ she said, kissing him on his shoulder.

‘What does it mean that I’m your ex-lover when I have just come inside you?’ said Didier.

‘It means you got lucky,’ said Katherine.

‘Maybe I get lucky again,’ said Didier, turning towards her and lunging with his mouth.

Katherine allowed herself to be kissed.

‘I have a friend coming in twenty minutes,’ she said, with regret and impatience.

‘The next man!’ said Didier. ‘ Fais attention! One day air-traffic control goes on strike and there is a terrible accident!’

‘You can stay, if you like.’

‘I’m sorry, but voyeurism is not my taste,’ said Didier.

‘He’s just a friend,’ she said, getting off the bed and switching on the bathroom light. Katherine was bored by jealousy; she had been bombarded by so much of it, there hadn’t been time to find out if she had any of her own.

‘What does it mean, this superposition of two impossible categories: lover / ex-lover…’

Katherine turned on the shower, missing the conclusion of Didier’s penetrating enquiry. By the time she got out, he was fully clothed and sitting in the armchair in the corner of her bedroom.

‘It creates the space of pure paradox, like the ephemeral emergence of a particle from the quantum vacuum — the vacuum which is not a vacuum!’

‘Sorry, but have you been talking while I was in the shower, or did you just start up again when I came out?’ she asked.

‘In the end, what difference does it make?’ said Didier.

‘Well, if I missed a chunk, that might explain why I have no idea what you’re talking about,’ she said, letting her towel drop to the ground.

Didier fell silent.

Putain ,’ he finally managed, after she had stepped into her knickers. ‘This is what it is like to be Actaeon: you know that you will be torn apart by the hunting dogs, but you don’t care!’

‘I don’t think he did know,’ said Katherine, emerging from her T-shirt.

‘Of course he didn’t know!’ said Didier. ‘But we know, because we do not live in the myth, but in the knowledge of the myth. Evidently, the collective unconscious has become the collective self-conscious!’

The doorbell rang.

‘Just in time,’ said Katherine, doing up the button on her jeans. ‘I mean I got my jeans on just in time.’

‘Do not worry,’ said Didier, following her into the hall. ‘My narcissism is not offended, in fact it may be gratified by the idea that this interruption was “just in time” to save you from my theories!’

‘Hi, Sam,’ said Katherine to the hazy image on her entryphone, pressing the buzzer to let him in.

‘You pay me the compliment of resistance,’ Didier continued. ‘There can be no resistance without the fear of penetration!’

Katherine took Didier’s head in her hands and gave him a long slow kiss, knowing that even he had to stop talking while her tongue was in his mouth. She only broke away when there was a knock on the door.

‘And so you penetrate me instead,’ Didier concluded triumphantly.

Sam could tell that Katherine had just been in bed with Didier. Her hair was wet from the shower and he smelt ostentatiously of sex. Sam also knew that the grey-haired Frenchman was not supposed to be her current lover. Her openness to infidelity filled him with an optimism that her choice of infidelity discouraged.

Katherine introduced the rivalrous men and took them through to the drawing room. An image flashed across her mind of two rams flinging their heads against each other on a rocky mountainside. What did the girl rams do? Faint with pleasure? Clap their cloven hooves? Lean against some nearby boulders, with little tubs of mountain grass, discussing the battle?

‘So you got your novel in before the deadline,’ said Sam.

‘Yes,’ said Katherine, wondering what it would be like to go to bed with both of them at once.

‘Ah, yes,’ said Didier. ‘The famous Elysian. In France we have the Concour. It is completely corrupt, and for that reason the rules are absolutely clear. That is the paradox of corruption: it is much more legalistic than the law! But this Elysian, c’est du pur casino .’

‘I have an idea,’ said Katherine, determined to go ahead now that Didier had started talking. ‘Perhaps we should have a drink first.’

6

Although he could see almost nothing through his dark glasses, Sonny felt that he needed their protection against the phosphorescent ocean of clicking and flashing paparazzi that might well be churning restlessly, somewhere beyond passport control, awaiting his arrival. The gutter press would only be doing its vulgar and familiar work, feeding an insatiable public with images of an Indian grandee who had stooped to conquer English Letters with his masterwork, The Mulberry Elephant . He understood their hunger and was modestly dressed for the occasion. He had just squeezed back into the slate-grey raw-silk frock coat that the pretty little air hostess fetched for him from the First Class cupboard. Underneath his frock coat, he wore a long pale-peach shirt and loose white trousers, pinched at the ankle and finished off with a pair of his signature yellow slippers. As he left his seat, he draped his shoulder, carelessly but perfectly, with a folded beige shawl of a surpassing softness that could only be achieved by weaving together the almost non-existent hairs of several hundred unborn Kashmiri mountain goats. He had one of the genuine pre-war articles, not one of these fake things they sold on every street corner in Paris and Milano.

His shawl was not only proof against England’s loutish climate, it also spared him from contact with objects, like doorknobs and light switches, that could have been handled by almost anybody; murderers and butchers, moneylenders and lavatory attendants. It could also be called upon to wrap around materials abhorrent to his sensitive touch, like the slippery, effeminate plastic used in plastic bags.

For the first fourteen years of his life he had never even set eyes on a plastic bag. Confined to the palace and its magnificent grounds, more varied and luxuriant than the Botanical Gardens of Kew, filled with peacocks and cockatoos and herds of antelope, he would ride around with his tutors and his equerry and the rest of his entourage, one day on an elephant, the next in a pony and trap, never seeing other children and seldom seeing his parents, but wanting for nothing among all the delightful follies and spectacles arranged for his entertainment; the orchestras that struck up as he rounded a corner, or the famous battles re-enacted for his birthday. On an island in the middle of the Home Lake, a sadhu had been persuaded to take up residence under a baobab tree. With his body covered in ash and hair down to his waist, he meditated all day with imperturbable concentration. Sonny’s tutor encouraged him to test the holy man’s resolve by emptying baskets full of harmless grass snakes over his head, or setting fire to his loin cloth, only putting it out at the very last moment. What fun they had! And yet one day, when Sonny was fourteen, as he was galloping around his private racecourse, after winning yet another race against the Household Jockeys, he was suddenly overcome by a longing to go beyond the palace gates and see the city, which sometimes betrayed its presence as a faint smudge in the air, complicating the glorious sunsets which were such a talking point among guests at the palace. His father had forbidden him to leave the grounds, and Sonny spent many weeks planning his secret expedition and accumulating what he imagined was an appropriate disguise in which to move unnoticed among his people.

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