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Welcome back to Satisfaction for Insatiable Readers.
Today, we're joining Rachel's Random Resources for a stop along their current tour featuring a curious story that is getting rave reviews throughout the blogosphere. It features the story of one young man's life, the good and the bad, put under the proverbial microscope for what seems to be a rather eye-opening journey through the pages. Curious? Well then, let's get to it! Today's title in the spotlight is...
by
Neil Randall
About the book...
Nine stories
One artist
The whole world against him
The Nine Lives of Jacob Fallada is the story of an outsider, a lonely, misunderstood young artist who chronicles all the unpleasant things that happen to him in life. Abandoned by his parents, brought up be a tyrannical aunt, bullied at school, ostracized by the local community, nearly everyone Jacob comes into contact with takes an instant, (often) violent dislike towards him. Like Job from the bible, he is beaten and abused, manipulated and taken advantage of. Life, people, fate, circumstance force him deeper into his shell, deeper into the cocoon of his fledgling artistic work, where he records every significant event in sketches, paintings and short-form verse, documenting his own unique, eminently miserable human experience. At heart, he longs for companionship, intimacy, love, but is dealt so many blows he is too scared to reach out to anybody. On the fringes of society, he devotes himself solely to his art.
Nine stories
One artist
The whole world against him
The Nine Lives of Jacob Fallada is the story of an outsider, a lonely, misunderstood young artist who chronicles all the unpleasant things that happen to him in life. Abandoned by his parents, brought up be a tyrannical aunt, bullied at school, ostracized by the local community, nearly everyone Jacob comes into contact with takes an instant, (often) violent dislike towards him. Like Job from the bible, he is beaten and abused, manipulated and taken advantage of. Life, people, fate, circumstance force him deeper into his shell, deeper into the cocoon of his fledgling artistic work, where he records every significant event in sketches, paintings and short-form verse, documenting his own unique, eminently miserable human experience. At heart, he longs for companionship, intimacy, love, but is dealt so many blows he is too scared to reach out to anybody. On the fringes of society, he devotes himself solely to his art.
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~ ~ ~ EXCERPT ~ ~ ~
This scene pasted below is taken from
the third chapter of the novel. The idea for this chapter was
inspired by a true-life story a good friend of mine told me many
years ago. One evening, he was due to meet his girlfriend at a pub in
town; she’d been out all day celebrating a friend’s birthday.
When he arrived, he found her in a hell of a state – drunk,
slurring, could barely stand up. Such a state, in fact, he had a real
struggle getting her out of the pub on his own. As he propped her up
on a nearby bench and looked up and down the road for a taxi, a
spiky, confrontational couple appeared out of nowhere. Instead of
offering him assistance, they started to make pointed insinuations
about the nature of the situation. They didn’t like what they saw –
a defenceless young woman sprawled out on a bench, barely conscious,
‘off her face on God knows what’. Things quickly got out of hand.
They accused of being a sexual predator. They accused him of spiking
his own girlfriend’s drink! The whole scene escalated until they
actually called the police.
There was something about the
story I liked – the level of misunderstanding, the well-meaning
couple getting the wrong end of the stick, my friend’s undoubted
innocence in all of this; his exasperation. And I always had it in my
mind to use it in a story one day.
To put the extract below into
context, Jacob had just been barred from a coffee shop he used to
regularly frequent, because the proprietor was tired of him sitting
at a prime window seat table for hours drawing in his sketch book.
This was as real blow for Jacob. Because he didn’t have anywhere
else quiet to work on his pictures.
Of Christians and Cannibals
…Once outside,
Jacob felt a gloomy depression set in. Reluctant to return to a home
that wasn’t really his own, he decided to roam the now-dark
small-town streets, to collect his thoughts, to focus his mind on
finding a new location to conduct his artistic work in the future,
somewhere remote, removed, where he wouldn’t risk coming into
contact with nasty little people and their almost pathological
dislike for him.
Lost in impotent thought, he was
about to cross the road near the churchyard when
he heard a pitiful moan.
Curious, he
turned around and peered into the shadows.
Sprawled
across a wooden bench, head lolling to the side, limbs splayed, as if
suffering from injury or illness that required immediate medical
attention, was what looked like a young woman.
Jacob walked
over to investigate.
He was right.
In her early
twenties, with dark tangled hair, much of it covering her face, the
prostrate female wore a short, figure-hugging dress and high-heeled
shoes. Due to the awkward angle in which she lay slumped, the dress
had ridden up, revealing the tops of her shapely thighs and a hint of
lacy black underwear.
Averting his
eyes, Jacob crouched in front of her, spying an empty bottle of vodka
mired in a pool of thick vomit. In the past, he had heard about this
kind of drunkenness, read newspaper articles about disenfranchised
young people who regularly sought oblivion through excessive alcohol
intake. He knew, therefore, the dangers associated with
binge-drinking, choking on vomit being the most perilous.
“Are you all
right?” he asked, covering his nose as the harsh stench of sick hit
his nostrils.
She didn't
respond—not in coherent words, anyway. She shifted slightly,
mumbled, and raised a shaky hand, as if trying to bring Jacob's
attention to something directly behind him. But when he turned his
head, all he saw was the empty pavement and adjoining roadway bathed
in street-light orange.
“My name’s
Jacob Fallada,” he almost shouted, as if talking to someone with
impaired hearing. “I really think you should get home now. Would
you like me to hail you a taxi?”
This time she
didn’t respond at all.
He darted
another look over his shoulder, hoping that somebody much better
equipped to deal with the situation might be passing. But all he saw
were the same empty pavements and bright orange street lights.
Resolved to
help, to not leave a poor defenceless young woman to a dubious fate,
he shook her shoulder, swept the thick matted hair from her eyes and
lightly slapped her face. But again, she barely responded.
“Right, I’m
going to try and help you to stand up now,” he said, grabbing her
under the arms and lifting her up from the bench.
Incredibly,
her rubbery limbs responded. With one of her arms draped over his
shoulders, one of his clasped around her waist, supporting the
majority of her weight, he managed to walk her over to the side of
the road.
But before he
could even look up the street for an oncoming taxi, a sharp,
challenging female voice rang out from the shadows of the night:
“What do you
think you’re doing?”
Both startled
and overjoyed at this development, Jacob slowly shuffled himself and
his drunken ward around to where that voice had emanated from.
“Thank God.”
He singularly failed to mask his relief as a man and woman made their
way over to them. “I was just passing through town when I found
this young woman sprawled across a bench. I think she’s had far too
much to drink. I—”
“You didn’t
answer my question.”
For a second
time that evening, Jacob blinked in confusion, puzzled not just by
her words but confrontational tone.
“What?”
“No, you
didn’t,” said her companion, a hulking, dangerous-looking
individual with a shaven head and monstrous biceps bulging through a
tight leather bomber jacket. “What are you doing here, in town,
now, with her?”
“Erm, I’m
just a local artist out for a stroll.”
“You what?”
he said, stepping forward, puffing out his considerable chest.
“You’re an artist, are you?”
“That’s
right,” said Jacob, adjusting his somewhat precarious hold on the
woman, being careful not to lose his grip and send her crashing to
the pavement. “A few minutes ago, I found the young lady here, on a
bench, semi-conscious, moaning and groaning. And I wanted to make
sure she got home unharmed.”
Even though
Jacob felt as if he had just described the situation clearly and
unequivocally, the couple looked far from convinced.
“I don’t
know, Steve,” the woman turned and said to her companion. “I
don't like the look of this. She’s completely off her face, out of
it, don’t know which day of the week it is…And look, her dress
has been pulled right up, you can see her knickers.” She knelt
before the young woman and tugged her dress down to cover her
underwear. “I bet this bastard got her into this state. I bet he
was planning on—”
“What?”
cried Jacob. “Don’t be so ridiculous!”
“Is that
what you did, pal?” said Steve. “Took advantage of that young
girl in some bar, did you? Slipped something into her drink, a Mickey
Finn, while she nipped to the toilets, then dragged her out here?”
“No! Of
course not. I—”
“Shut it!”
shouted the woman, glaring at Jacob over her shoulder. “Not another
word out of you. If he opens his mouth again, Steve, wallop the
bastard.”
“With
pleasure, Gladys, with bloody pleasure.” And Steve stepped in
between Jacob and the pavement, blocking any potential escape route.
Gladys stood
and straightened, put a hand on the drunken girl’s shoulder, and
spoke slowly and loudly into her ear.
“Are you all
right, love? Had a bit too much to drink, eh? Don’t worry. We’re
here now. We won’t let anything bad happen to you.”
Nudging Jacob
out of the way, Gladys took hold of the drunken girl’s arm, and
carefully sat her down on the church wall.
“What’d
you think we should do?” asked Steve.
“Call the
police, nothing else for it. If we hadn’t have come along, God
knows what would’ve happened.”
Jacob rubbed
both hands up and down his face. He knew exactly what these people
were accusing him of but had no idea how to convince them otherwise.
“Look,” he
said. “I was merely trying to help. I just wanted to make sure she
was all right. I—”
“I bet you
did,” said Gladys, jabbing a forefinger in Jacob’s direction.
“See it on the news all the time—bloody date rapists. Bet you
would’ve loved to have gotten your hands on a semi-comatose girl,
wouldn’t you, eh? Don’t have to worry about consent or getting
knocked back then, do you? Huh! Your kind disgusts me.”
“My kind?”
“Yeah, your
kind—scruffy, grubby perverts, sex
fiends, paedophiles.”
As Gladys
listed further undesirable elements she now associated with Jacob,
two young women walked over to the side of the road. Both wore
stylish trouser suits, as if they had just left the office after a
late meeting.
“What’s
going on?” the taller, darker-haired of the two asked. “What’s
happened?”
Gladys stepped
forward.
“We just
caught that piece of shit over there”—again, she thrust an
accusing forefinger in Jacob’s direction—“about to sexually
assault this poor young lass. Looks like date rape, that he slipped
something into her drink and—”
“Wait just a
minute!” cried Jacob. “You did nothing of the sort.” He turned
to the newcomers. “Five minutes ago, I, very innocently, walked
past a bench in the churchyard and saw the young lady there”—he
hitched a thumb over his shoulder—“in clear distress. I tried to
speak to her, but she was far too intoxicated to respond. Concerned
for her welfare, I attempted to hail her a—”
“Cor!”
spat Gladys. “You’ve got your cover story off pat, ain’t yer?
When me and Steve got here, he was all over that vulnerable girl, her
skirt was up round her neck. He were like a wild bloody animal.”
“That’s
simply not true,” said Jacob, bewildered by these blatant untruths
and baseless accusations.
“It does
look pretty bad, though,” said the shorter, slighter, softer spoken
of the two women. “I mean, what are you doing out here, at night,
on a park bench, next to a woman who’s clearly been drugged in some
way? Who are you? What do you do for living?”
“A living?”
said Jacob, struggling to take all of this in, to understand quite
how he’d got himself into this awful position. “I’m an artist.”
“An artist?”
she said, doubtfully. “Everybody says that, don’t
they?—especially those from the deviant classes. And you do hear
about this type of thing a lot these days: men drugging women in pubs
and clubs, bundling them into the back of a taxi, and taking them to
some seedy flea-pit, dark alleyway or convenient
churchyard to subject them to all kinds
of abominations.”
“Exactly,”
said Gladys, nodding enthusiastically. “I’m just glad we came
along in the nick of time.”
“Look,”
said Jacob, resolving to put up a full defence of himself. “I’ve
done nothing wrong. I can assure you.” Again he addressed himself
to the two young women. “When they walked over, I wasn’t
attacking anyone—far from it. I was—”
“Only
because we startled you,” said Gladys. “Jesus! He had his prick
halfway out of his trousers, didn’t he, Steve?”
“Yep. Looked
that way to me.”
Jacob was too
appalled to speak, to even attempt to refute such a preposterous
claim.
“So, what
are we going to do?” asked the dark-haired woman. “We can’t
leave him alone with her. We’ve got to do something.”
“Call the
police,” said Gladys. “Wait until they get here. Tell them what
we saw. Then let them deal with him.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About the author...
Neil Randall is the author of seven published novels and a collection of short stories. His work has been published in the UK, US, Australia and Canada.
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UP FOR GRABS...
(3) Copies of The Nine Lives of Jacob Fallada
(UK Only)
*Terms and Conditions –UK entries welcome. Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below. The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then Rachel’s Random Resources reserves the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over. Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time Rachel’s Random Resources will delete the data. I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
*Terms and Conditions –UK entries welcome. Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below. The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then Rachel’s Random Resources reserves the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over. Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time Rachel’s Random Resources will delete the data. I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
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Special thanks to Rachel of Rachel's Random Resources for the chance to bring this tour to you. (THANKS!) For more information on this title, the author, this tour, or those on the horizon, feel free to click through the links provided above. Be sure to check out the rest of the tour as it makes its way through the blogosphere...
Until next time, remember...if it looks good, READ IT!
Great giveaway, good luck all & thank you for the chance xxx
ReplyDeleteLainy http://www.alwaysreading.net