Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Roberto Bolaño: The Redhead


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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/79/Flamingo_National_Zoo.jpg

American Flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber), National Zoo, Washington, D.C.: photo by Stevehdc, 2007


She was eighteen and she was mixed up in the drug trade. Back then I saw her all the time but if I had to make a police sketch of her now, I don't think I could. I know she had an aquiline nose, and for a few months she was a redhead; I know I heard her laugh once or twice from the window of a restaurant as I was waiting for a taxi or just walking past in the rain. She was eighteen and every two weeks she went to bed with a cop from the Narcotics Squad.




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Lesser flamingos (Phenicopterus minor), Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania: photo by Charles J. Sharp, 2004



She watched him from the bed ... She smoked Camel Lights and maybe at some point she imagined that the furniture in the room and even her lover were empty things that she had to invest with meaning ... Purple-tinted scene: before she pulls down her tights, she tells him about her day ... "Everywhere is disgustingly still, frozen somewhere in the air." Hotel room lamp. A stenciled pattern, dark green. Frayed rug. Girl on all fours who moans as the vibrator enters her cunt. She had long legs and she was eighteen, in those days she was in the drug trade and she was doing all right, she even opened a checking account and bought a motorcycle.





File:Lesser-flamingos-flying.jpg

Lesser flamingos (Phenicopterus minor), Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania: photo by Charles J. Sharp, 2004

Roberto Bolaño: The Redhead (excerpts), from Antwerp, 1980, translated by Natasha Wimmer, New Directions 2010

7 comments:

  1. Antwerp reminds me of those Japanese compressed paper pellets that you’d drop into a bowl of water and watch them blossom and grow into multi-hued flowers. Bolaño composes, condenses, compresses and then drops Antwerp into the imagination of the reader. The story that flowers in the reader’s mind might or might not resemble the one running in Bolaño’s head as he boiled in all down, but I like to think he accepted that risk. Or even desired it. When I read Antwerp, the mind quite often added its own extensions and over-lays to his descriptions.

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  2. confieso que no he leído este autor...gracias por traerlo!

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  3. Cream of Tartar

    If I had a dog I would call it home
    to my house if I had a house.
    If I had a job
    and a man who loved me
    I’d have a house and some kids.
    And the dog’s name would be Cream of Tartar.

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  4. Mark Klett’s West


    We passed Shiprock going fast. The light, perfect.
    Later, it was what I studied, wrote about
    because that is what had happened the whole time.
    Out there, the view. Bird’s eye.

    How dusty and hot it was. Loneliness a huge friend.
    The Flatirons, later. Their dull mirrors holding the sky.
    I learned that this was food, better even, in the west.
    Maybe our paths will cross again, he said. That was cryptic
    like the West. His body on the bed. Holding a gun?
    Just the shadow. Not like that. But, the west.
    How would it ever happen again? A story like that?

    It took me three days to stop thinking.
    Go figure.
    Go figure out the west. Go for a jog, take a shower.
    Appreciate the water. That rebus of desire.

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  5. The Telephone

    Sometimes she calls us
    when she’s drunk. Her voice
    is golden syrup music. It never stumbles.
    She doesn’t ask a lot of questions, then.
    She has all the answers to our letters.
    They unwind from her mouth like flowers
    unfolding in special time-lapse Nature Shows.
    Speeded up. Small monsters going to overtake
    the earth. The title of one particular show
    could be called “How Flowers Bloom.” In it,
    she brushes her hair and the longer
    she brushes it the curlier it ravels
    and the closer it becomes to the time to hang up.

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  6. O.K., Who Gets To Be Jim Morrison?

    Could it be me with my white sunglasses I take off
    in my car near Yermo? In the desert I learned how to drink
    and the drink was taken in small increments
    and then larger here in the desert. That’s all I can say
    for now. It seems like such a waste. Which it is. A fragile
    busy waste. I’m in Yermo and there’s nowhere I can’t see.
    I hate what I’m doing here.

    Or could it be him with his t-shirt and golfing visor
    neutralizing his body. He’s sick of the relationship
    and all I can do is listen to the crawl that is steady.
    It avoids the corners of his mouth.

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  7. The 80s Denise & The 90s Denise

    Wherever we went in Eugene
    we walked. She was my friend.
    We were creep magnets
    it was decided. When the bear
    showed up on the Rogue,
    it was not a bear, but the man she would marry,
    with his head in his paws, gazing at us
    from across Bunker Creek. He was in Snakepit,
    went to Bolivia, threw a mean softball. Corine
    hated him. I took up the slack.

    We stayed through Reservoir Dogs
    when she was pregnant with Ted.
    I grabbed her hand
    when it was time to push,
    a breath of air inhabiting
    her screams, herself as a mom,
    changing inside out and round about
    a little louder and longer
    than when she sang for Runtmeyer.

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