"J. D. Chandler - Post-American School" - читать интересную книгу автора (Chandler J D)
Post-American School
Post-American School
By
J.D. Chandler
Jim played the guitar without thinking about it. His fingers plucked and
stroked the strings absent-mindedly, keeping time with his voice as he
spoke.
"Yeah, I met this guy, Andy, in Montana, up near Glacier Park. I told him
about Butte and said that I wouldn't mind living there."
Jimmy wasn't singing, just talking, in a kind of lazy, low voice. Salvador's
tail kept the beat against the bare wood floor. Music just seemed to follow Jim
around. It just seemed to like him.
"So what happened?" I asked, knowing the answer, but enjoying his way of
telling the story.
"He moved to Butte. He's been living there for about a year. You've seen the
postcards about his landlord, Bob, who was kidnapped by aliens who took him to
Disneyland for three days and then dropped him off in Reno."
"Oh, yeah." This had been a one of the long-running sagas we had been getting
in the mail over the last couple of months.
"He's coming out to visit."
James changed rhythm, suddenly as if he had just noticed that he was playing
the guitar. Now he was doing a steady reggae beat. I liked that beat for
painting. Jimmy knew it, too. I always tried to paint in that rhythm. I felt it
made my canvas more alive.
"He's coming to Seattle for a few weeks before heading back to New Jersey. I
guess he's had enough of Butte."
"how much could anybody take?" I stepped back from the canvas for a look.
"I think I could stay there for a long time."
"How come you live in Seattle then?" I stepped back up to the canvas, a
little more brushwork on the shadow and it'd be done.
"Good question." Jimmy didn't have anything to say for a while after that.
Neither did I. I just painted. Jimmy just played. Pretty soon he began picking
at a song he had been working on for a long time. He was stuck on a verse and he
kept singing two lines over and over, looking for the next line to fall into
place.
"He came from the land of the oil man,
Went to Washington to do what he can "
The line eluded him, but it felt good to be creating in the same space with
him. My painting was finally done. I got that feeling in my hands, telling me it
was time to put down the brush and see if it could breathe on its own yet.
"What do you think, James?"
He stopped playing and sauntered over to the easel. Guitar still hanging
around his neck he slowly rolled a cigarette while he looked at my painting. He
put the cigarette in his mouth and lit it, inhaling the smoke and letting it out
with a long sigh. He passed the cigarette to me and I did the same thing.
When I was done I handed the cigarette back. "You know you are the final
judge on whether or not this stuff is art. I count on you for that."
He dragged on the cigarette, rubbed his chin and narrowed his eyes, adopting
the look of a shrewd art critic.
"I like it."
I took the cigarette out of his mouth, took a long hit and then put it back
between his lips. He walked back over to his chair and continued playing. I
looked at the painting for a little while, trying to reconcile the physical
reality with the perfect vision I had while I was painting. If only I could be a
great painter, I thought. It's discouraging to see so clearly and paint so
badly.
I shook my head and walked over to the couch. Jimmy passed me the cigarette
once as I sat down. Jimmy was playing an old Steve Miller song, mangling the
lyrics like he always did.
Really love your peaches
And I love your tree.
Lovee Dovee Lovee Dovee
All the time.
One of the these days I'm gonna make you mine.
I blew smoke rings for a while and listened to him sing. Then I handed back
the cigarette. It was almost gone now. The cat climbed up my chest and butted
his head against my chin and then settled in on my lap as I stroked his fur.
"You know, James, I'm thinking of writing a story." Jimmy had stopped singing
and was strumming softly now.
"Oh, yeah?" he said, changing tempo again. This time getting into some funky
blues.
"Yeah. It's about a man who loses his hands in an accident. He doesn't really
miss them at first, except for the inconvenience, and he learns to use his hooks
pretty well for brushing his teeth and cooking and stuff like that."
"Uh huh," Jimmy said, creating background music for my words.
"The he meets this woman. After a while he loves her, but he's afraid to
touch her because his hooks are so hard and cold and unfeeling. He becomes
obsessed with visual images of his hooks ripping her flesh. He is so scared, he
cuts himself off and refuses to see her any more."
Jimmy was playing something sad and low-down. Maybe it was "Mustang
Sally."
"So, in the time they've spent together the woman has fallen in love with him
too. At first she was scared and a little repulsed by his hooks, but as she got
to know him, as he allowed her little peeks into his heart, she came to
understand his gentleness and his pain. She even began to have fantasies about
his hooks caressing her. The cold steel gradually warming against her skin and
exciting real passion in her."
Jimmy was getting into it now, his music becoming a soundtrack for the movie
I was producing with my words.
"She's thinking one way about his hooks and he's thinking another way, but of
course neither one can talk about it. The subject of their feelings for each
other just never comes up between them. They avoid it like some nasty secret
they share."
The cat is purring like an engine as I massage him. My hands keeping time
with Jimmy's music.
"When he refuses to see her anymore, she's really hurt. She thinks she has
done something wrong, or that he just doesn't like her anymore. She feels so bad
that she moves to a different neighborhood so she doesn't have to see him every
day. Her passion for him smolders under its ashes, leaving her dissatisfied and
vaguely unhappy until it finally dies out from lack of fuel.
"Meanwhile the man sits alone in his apartment looking at his hooks under the
light at his kitchen table. He realizes that even before he lost his hands he
was afraid to touch people. His flesh and blood hands had been as utilitarian as
these hooks, used only for brushing teeth and pouring cups of coffee. The
realization makes him cry."
Jimmy finished the music and started rolling another cigarette. When he was
done he handed it to me and I lit up.
"What do you think? Will it make a good story?" I asked as I exhaled and
handed him the cigarette.
He took a deep hit and smiled.
"Why don't you write a story about a man who doesn't paint, because he's
afraid to feel what he sees?"
Jimmy handed me back the cigarette and we smoked for a while in silence while
I thought it over. I looked at my painting. Maybe the beauty in art is the
imperfect realization of a perfect vision. I smiled.
"Good idea," I said.
Jimmy started playing a very happy, fast tune. I got my sketchbook and pencil
and started sketching him and Salvador.
"You know, I think I like Butte better from Seattle."
I knew what he meant.
Post-American School
Post-American School
By
J.D. Chandler
Jim played the guitar without thinking about it. His fingers plucked and
stroked the strings absent-mindedly, keeping time with his voice as he
spoke.
"Yeah, I met this guy, Andy, in Montana, up near Glacier Park. I told him
about Butte and said that I wouldn't mind living there."
Jimmy wasn't singing, just talking, in a kind of lazy, low voice. Salvador's
tail kept the beat against the bare wood floor. Music just seemed to follow Jim
around. It just seemed to like him.
"So what happened?" I asked, knowing the answer, but enjoying his way of
telling the story.
"He moved to Butte. He's been living there for about a year. You've seen the
postcards about his landlord, Bob, who was kidnapped by aliens who took him to
Disneyland for three days and then dropped him off in Reno."
"Oh, yeah." This had been a one of the long-running sagas we had been getting
in the mail over the last couple of months.
"He's coming out to visit."
James changed rhythm, suddenly as if he had just noticed that he was playing
the guitar. Now he was doing a steady reggae beat. I liked that beat for
painting. Jimmy knew it, too. I always tried to paint in that rhythm. I felt it
made my canvas more alive.
"He's coming to Seattle for a few weeks before heading back to New Jersey. I
guess he's had enough of Butte."
"how much could anybody take?" I stepped back from the canvas for a look.
"I think I could stay there for a long time."
"How come you live in Seattle then?" I stepped back up to the canvas, a
little more brushwork on the shadow and it'd be done.
"Good question." Jimmy didn't have anything to say for a while after that.
Neither did I. I just painted. Jimmy just played. Pretty soon he began picking
at a song he had been working on for a long time. He was stuck on a verse and he
kept singing two lines over and over, looking for the next line to fall into
place.
"He came from the land of the oil man,
Went to Washington to do what he can "
The line eluded him, but it felt good to be creating in the same space with
him. My painting was finally done. I got that feeling in my hands, telling me it
was time to put down the brush and see if it could breathe on its own yet.
"What do you think, James?"
He stopped playing and sauntered over to the easel. Guitar still hanging
around his neck he slowly rolled a cigarette while he looked at my painting. He
put the cigarette in his mouth and lit it, inhaling the smoke and letting it out
with a long sigh. He passed the cigarette to me and I did the same thing.
When I was done I handed the cigarette back. "You know you are the final
judge on whether or not this stuff is art. I count on you for that."
He dragged on the cigarette, rubbed his chin and narrowed his eyes, adopting
the look of a shrewd art critic.
"I like it."
I took the cigarette out of his mouth, took a long hit and then put it back
between his lips. He walked back over to his chair and continued playing. I
looked at the painting for a little while, trying to reconcile the physical
reality with the perfect vision I had while I was painting. If only I could be a
great painter, I thought. It's discouraging to see so clearly and paint so
badly.
I shook my head and walked over to the couch. Jimmy passed me the cigarette
once as I sat down. Jimmy was playing an old Steve Miller song, mangling the
lyrics like he always did.
Really love your peaches
And I love your tree.
Lovee Dovee Lovee Dovee
All the time.
One of the these days I'm gonna make you mine.
I blew smoke rings for a while and listened to him sing. Then I handed back
the cigarette. It was almost gone now. The cat climbed up my chest and butted
his head against my chin and then settled in on my lap as I stroked his fur.
"You know, James, I'm thinking of writing a story." Jimmy had stopped singing
and was strumming softly now.
"Oh, yeah?" he said, changing tempo again. This time getting into some funky
blues.
"Yeah. It's about a man who loses his hands in an accident. He doesn't really
miss them at first, except for the inconvenience, and he learns to use his hooks
pretty well for brushing his teeth and cooking and stuff like that."
"Uh huh," Jimmy said, creating background music for my words.
"The he meets this woman. After a while he loves her, but he's afraid to
touch her because his hooks are so hard and cold and unfeeling. He becomes
obsessed with visual images of his hooks ripping her flesh. He is so scared, he
cuts himself off and refuses to see her any more."
Jimmy was playing something sad and low-down. Maybe it was "Mustang
Sally."
"So, in the time they've spent together the woman has fallen in love with him
too. At first she was scared and a little repulsed by his hooks, but as she got
to know him, as he allowed her little peeks into his heart, she came to
understand his gentleness and his pain. She even began to have fantasies about
his hooks caressing her. The cold steel gradually warming against her skin and
exciting real passion in her."
Jimmy was getting into it now, his music becoming a soundtrack for the movie
I was producing with my words.
"She's thinking one way about his hooks and he's thinking another way, but of
course neither one can talk about it. The subject of their feelings for each
other just never comes up between them. They avoid it like some nasty secret
they share."
The cat is purring like an engine as I massage him. My hands keeping time
with Jimmy's music.
"When he refuses to see her anymore, she's really hurt. She thinks she has
done something wrong, or that he just doesn't like her anymore. She feels so bad
that she moves to a different neighborhood so she doesn't have to see him every
day. Her passion for him smolders under its ashes, leaving her dissatisfied and
vaguely unhappy until it finally dies out from lack of fuel.
"Meanwhile the man sits alone in his apartment looking at his hooks under the
light at his kitchen table. He realizes that even before he lost his hands he
was afraid to touch people. His flesh and blood hands had been as utilitarian as
these hooks, used only for brushing teeth and pouring cups of coffee. The
realization makes him cry."
Jimmy finished the music and started rolling another cigarette. When he was
done he handed it to me and I lit up.
"What do you think? Will it make a good story?" I asked as I exhaled and
handed him the cigarette.
He took a deep hit and smiled.
"Why don't you write a story about a man who doesn't paint, because he's
afraid to feel what he sees?"
Jimmy handed me back the cigarette and we smoked for a while in silence while
I thought it over. I looked at my painting. Maybe the beauty in art is the
imperfect realization of a perfect vision. I smiled.
"Good idea," I said.
Jimmy started playing a very happy, fast tune. I got my sketchbook and pencil
and started sketching him and Salvador.
"You know, I think I like Butte better from Seattle."
I knew what he meant.
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