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Book Description
Winner of a 2007 American Academy of Arts and Letters, Rikki Ducornet is beloved as a novelist and essayist, but is known perhaps most of all for her work as a writer of short stories. In the tradition of Italo Calvino, Donald Barthelme, and Angela Carter, Ducornet creates modern-day fables filled with characters as complex and surprising as any in American short fiction. This landmark collection of new stories is generously illustrated by T. Motley, whose gritty, fantastical cartooning explores the same post-magical realism that has been the subject of Ducornet’s distinguished career.
About the Author
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Rikki Ducornet is the author of two short-story collections, five books of poetry, and seven novels, including The Jade Cabinet, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, The Stain, The Fountains of Neptune, and Phosphor in Dreamland, all of which are available from Dalkey Archive Press. In March 2008, Ducornet was given an Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She is also a visual artist whose work has been exhibited widely. |
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Praise
“Rikki Ducornet is linguistically explosive . . . one of the most interesting American writers around.”—The Nation“[Ducornet] writes like a stunned time-traveler, testifying in breathless fragments to exotic ages that have gone or never were . . . It’s startling and refreshing to encounter a writer whose work insists so relentlessly upon the magic of making tales.”—Robert Chatain, Chicago Tribune
“In the bizarre world of Rikki Ducornet’s fiction, laughter and terror hold hands in an uneasy truce and almost anything can happen.”—Richard Burgin, Washington Post
“It is high time that the U.S. discovered one of its foremost women novelists and accorded her the recognition that the ebullient quality of her imagination deserves.”—American Book Review
More Information
Also by Rikki Ducornet:Phosphor in Dreamland
The Complete Butcher's Tales
The Fountains of Neptune
The Jade Cabinet
The Stain
The Word "Desire"
In those years when I bounded about on all fours and on my elbows fled those I feared; when, in those lucent days I scaled trees fast as a cat and sailed the treetops as the squirrels do, spreading their wings of fur and flesh, I was, I assure you, a better creature for all that, my desires both innocent and private, and what’s more, easily assuaged. When I thirsted for blood, I killed a thing, a rabbit, say, a squirrel seized sleeping in its nest, a green snake, a rat fat from the leavings in the fields. There were none to balk, none to scold me, no one there to hide her face in dismay beneath her apron’s ample hem. I had seen plenty of bats and frogs but never a priest, nor had I heard the words nun, or needle or butter and bread—although they say I must have been acquainted with human speech because I was quick to learn a thing or two and this despite my ferocious attempts to stop them, to stop their constant jabbering. Like crowds of crows they were, blackening the mind with their needling and nagging until I could no longer bear it. In order to taste the food they denied me for days in their righteous need to have me tamed, I—although their porridge and chops were like dead leaves in my mouth and their drear puddings, plaster (I’d have preferred a fistful of fur or last winter’s bone black with frost and green with neglect)—I cried out from the cellar and up through the floor boards as best I could:
I repent!
—and this between my pretty clenched teeth. For, yes: in those days my teeth were pretty, and people would pay to see them, stealing a look when my patron, my master, would slide his fingers into my mouth to peel the lips way back. What fine teeth the Wild Girl has! See the pretty blush on her gums! I’d show my tongue, seized as it was between my master’s thumb and forefinger—as when in the wild one seizes frogs in their boudoirs of wet grass. If they wanted more, I’d bug out my eyes, the whites burning brighter than the sunlight in those yellow days before I was forced into the bondage of roasted meat and venomous alphabets and spelling books and needlework and hymns stinking of the frass of centipedes and roots boiled to pap!
I repent!
I cried up to them because I was hungry having for whoknowshowmanydays, chewed my boots in the fury of my banishment, the cellar darker and colder than the bunghole of a corpse. I chewed and recalled the taste of a hare’s crisp ear, its liver sweet as berries. You’ll burn for sure! They’d shouted it through the cracks as I clung to my knees to keep myself from gnawing my own fists; The Devil’s on his way right now to fetch you and set you on fire!
I’d sipped my tears, the piss that in my banishment was the only thing that warmed me; once I yelled at them with all the fury in my heart: Let me go back, then! Back to the woods! And I will drink squirrel blood and play with the bright beetles and bubbles in the stream. What business? I offered, rationally—or so I thought—is it of yours? For you see I was not yet broken; I would not repent. I would not kneel as they said I must to kiss the cold brass cross as bitter as the corpse of a spider. I could see no purpose in it, nor the sense of forcing my feet into those boots, the clothes that fisted up between my legs, the baths, the bath brushes, the combings, scourings, parings: I could not see it! A needle plied over and over into the white cloth, the prayers, the supplications, the answering to a name they claimed was now mine. What need, I’d asked, for a name? When all the creatures have but one name, the same name that bounds through the air like dust motes and rain?
Marie! They’d spit at me as nails are spit from the mouth of a carpenter, Marie—Angélique Leblanc! As though to call me Mary and angel and the white could tame me and keep me safe like a lock of dead hair in a box. Hah! As if they could do that! But then in the cellar I grew hungry, see: I grew peevish. Chained like a parrot to a post I grew weary and, to tell the truth, fearful for my mind. So at last I called up to them, humble, yet loud enough to be heard:
I repent! I repent! Yes! Yes! That’s it! I do! And if the little Jesus will have me, I’ll marry him quick as Jack and Jill go tumble; I’ll beg our Father for forgiveness, see?
They listened, their ears to the floor, and then they discussed my case. I could hear them pace, back and forth, back and forth as foxes do above the dwelling of a hare. They’d let me stew—for my own good—yes, stew, they whispered (my ears are very, very sharp) in her (ugh!) own juices.
Ah. So that was it. Well, I was hungry, and I’d be slavish—I no longer cared. Prithee I’d said, Prithee! I’ll wed Jesus, I’ll let him suckle my tits, I’ll grovel before his little manger as the worms grovel deep in their muddy realms; I’ll polish the silver and stir the porridge and ply the needle (like the prig you wish me to be); I’ll eat my pudding with a spoon and thank the Lord for it—although it is meat I want, raw and smoking, the taste of it purple on my tongue. Wind me up! And I’ll perform for thee like a toy of tin upon a wire. I’ll dance for Jesus, poor boy! Tugging at his nasty nails that pin him to that strange tree of his as a crow is nailed to a barn wall; I’ll do a jig; I’ll curtsy and run about in circles in imitation of the toy monkey my patron’s daughter loves to set spinning on the kitchen tiles. How I loathe those toys of hers; I see no purpose there; I see purpose only in fat marrow bones, the soft throats of mice, mice I once throttled in a trice (those are my patron’s words). Oh, I’d eat clay over pudding any day.
I once told my patron how much I admired his little daughter’s throat. How to see the blood rushing there behind the ear stirred old memories. And when he blanched I reassured him—and the child so quick to weep!—reassured them both in those dulcet tones they’d taught me: Oh! But I have found the Lord and He has shown me another, a better way! The way of roasted mutton and mittens and mattresses and bedroom slippers; the way of Light and Love! Your dear child, the precious poppet, the angel, the dove! Is safe with me, fear not, Master! Fear not, my doll, my rosebud, my little mouse! See? And lifting the bright cross from my bosom I dangled it in the sunlight before her face until she grew jolly and laughed. Then, to press my point and with the money I make showing myself to strangers—for I sit in the parlor on Wednesday to speak to pious ladies about the woods and my onceuponatime life in the trees—I leapt from my chair and running into the lane bought her sweets from the vendor who was ringing his bell and calling out: Honey drops! Chocolate drops! Three kinds of berry drops! Bright red cherry drops! So tightly did I clutch my coins the palm of my hand was bruised black.


