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Jonathan Evison - All About Lulu

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Jonathan Evison All About Lulu
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Weakness has always been a concern for William Miller: growing up vegetarian in a family of bodybuilders will do that to a person. But William is further weakened by the death of his mother, the arrival of a new step-mother, and his irrepressible crush on his new step-sister, Lulu. As Lulu faces down her own challenges, William watches his life shift into tumult and despair. Once Lulu departs for college, Will goes into the world to find himself discovering Western philosophy, a cruel dating world, enduring friendship, and, ultimately, his true calling. Emboldened by his turn as a late-night radio personality, Will rescues himself from the self-image of weakness hed long wished to escape. This debut novel explores the fundamental difference between where we come from and the endless possibilities of where we may go.

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Jonathan Evison

All About Lulu

2008


PART 1: KEEPING THE PEACE

The World Is Made of Meat

First, Im going to give you all the Copper fi eld crap, and Im not going to apologize for any of it, not one paragraph, so if youre not interested in how I came to see the future, or how I came to understand that the biggest truth in my life was a lie, or, for that matter, how I parlayed my distaste for hot dogs into an 84 RX-7 and a new self-concept, do us both a favor, and just stop now.

My name is William Miller Jr., and my father is Big Bill Miller, the bodybuilder. Suf fi ce it to say, I was never called Little Bill or even Little Big Bill. I was always called William, or Will. I bear my old man no grudge for this. Sometimes the fruit does fall far from the tree, and sometimes it rolls down the hill and into the brook, and sometimes its washed downstream, or gets caught in an eddy.

My younger brothers, Doug and Ross, are identical twins. Moreover, they stuck close to the tree. They are the image of Big Bill: the aquiline nose, the blue eyes, the turgid smile. And, like their father, they are bodybuilderstireless self-improvers striving for physical perfection. Not me. If I look like anybody, I look like my mother.

In spite of my status as a ninety-eight-pound weakling and my total lack of athleticism, Im nothing short of an expert on the subject of bodybuilding. I grew up in gyms, primarily the original Golds Gym in Venice and World Gym in Santa Monica, just minutes from the Muscle Beach of my fathers youth. I know the muscle groups, the training regimens, the language, the poses. I can even tell you who won the 1979 Mr.

Olympia or the 1983 Mr. Universe, because I was there. I know a great set of abs when I see them (Frank Zane), or calves (Chris Dickerson), or traps, or pecs, or deltoids. I know the acrid odor of sweat-soaked rubber mats, the iron clang of clashing weights, the tingle of sweaty back skin ripped from vinyl, the heaving and grunting and chest pounding. And none of it holds any romance for me.

My earliest memories are of meat. Enormous lamb shanks mired in beds of hardened grease. Giant carbuncled sausages, reconstituted from the vaguest of mammalian origins, glowing garish orange in the light of the refrigerator. My infant brothers were consuming meat before their teeth broke. It was not uncommon to see them padding about the house in disposable diapers, dirty-faced and slack-jawed, gnawing on drumsticks or cold hot dogs the way other kids gnawed on binkys.

I became a vegetarian in 1974, at the age of seven. My father was outraged.

How can you not eat meat? The whole world is made of meat!

Birds, cows, dogs, cats, theyre all made of meat! Even fi sh are made of meat!

Well, then, my mother said. Youll have no objection to cat for dinner.

Big Bill. Its not that she outsmarted himI couldve done thatits the way she outsmarted him, the way she did everything, like she was dancing with life and let life lead, doing everything life did, only backwards and in heels. Nothing seemed to disrupt her balance or upset her equilibrium. She absorbed whatever came at her.

For weeks after my avowed vegetarianism, Big Bill insisted on heaping meat on my plate.

Its not meat, its sausage.

Hed plop it on my mashed potatoes, park it on top of my Jell-O, but I never touched it. If Id inherited one trait from Big Bill, it was his willfulness. And so I grew up on a steady diet of powdered mashed potatoes. Once Big Bill forgave me this eccentricity, he began to chide me about it, taunting me with pork chops, bonking me on the head with bratwurst at the dinner table.

You are what you eat.

I see, Bill, my mother said, with a wink for me. Youd rather your son be a bratwurst?

My father wasnt a bad guy, he just had a low threshold for weakness. Once, in the driveway in front of the Pico house, Big Bill and I watched a swallow with an injured wing mince and fl utter in semicircles, fl apping its good wing to no effect.

Whats the matter with it?

Hard to say. Something with the wing, I guess.

Watching the little thing labor stupidly with no possibility of success moved me for the fi rst time to a desperation separate and distinct from my own. Couldnt it see it was condemned to futility? Couldnt it resolve itself to the cold, hard fact that it had no future, t hat it was doomed, grounded, fi nished? The answer was apparently yes. Eventually, the bird gave up, spent and bewildered. Its little eyes went black as obsidians, as though the light no longer penetrated them.

What happened?

Cutting her losses, I guess. Shes beat.

How do you know its a she?

I dont.

She hardly moved at all after that. She just stood there dazed minute after minute like she was asleep standing, or shed made up her mind never to move again. But I knew there was life beneath those shiny black eyes, because I could feel her little pulse beating inside me as if it were my own, and I could see her tiny breast beneath her keel feathers puff out convulsively now and again like she wanted to throw up. Im telling you, I knew that birds helplessness.

What can we do?

Big Bill gave the bird a little nudge with the toe of his sneaker. It didnt budge. Not a whole lot.

The last thing that bird saw, or maybe she didnt see it coming at all, was the business end of Big Bills shovel. There wasnt much blood. There wasnt much of anything. She was just fl atter, and kind of twisted, and there was de fi nitely no life left behind those black eyes. Big Bill scraped up the remains and tossed them to the curb.

Life seemed at once fragile and inconsequential when you pulverized it with a shovel.

But cancer doesnt hit like a shovel. And while Big Bill continued to build his carcass up to world-class proportions, cancer began carving up my mother. It arrived in a terrible fl ash one rainy afternoon.

She came home from the doctors of fi ce and stood by the window deep into the night. Big Bill burnt frozen fried chicken for dinner.

In the night I padded down the stairs to the living room, where she was still at her post by the window. Tentatively, I approached her in the terrible silence, and she pulled m e fast against her. I clutched her about the waist, and she ran her fi ngers through my hair as she gazed through the window into the night.

A month later she took to wearing a blue knit stocking cap.

For almost two years she fought without ever remitting. Cancer wasnt content to take her all at once; it wanted her in pieces. It took her left breast, then her right. It turned her skin to parchment. She grew so frail and reedy that I was afraid to squeeze her. And yet, if it were possible to die gracefully of cancer, my mother achieved that.

It could cut her to ribbons and take her hair, but it couldnt make her ugly.

Her fi nal months were an exercise in endurance. She spent untold hours in the fog with Barney Miller and Fred Sanford. The sandman was never more than a slow drip away. But I remember her voice in those lucid moments when the fog burned off, and how it didnt seem to come out of her body, but out of the past. And I remember a certain pride in being spoken to like an adult.

Do you remember when you were just a baby, William?

Not really.

She smiled. I suppose not. But somehow I thought you might, somehow you were different. Like you already knew something, William, like you brought something into this world with you. Do you ever feel that?

I dont think so. I dont know what it means.

You never acted much like a baby. Not like Ross and Doug.

In my seven-and-three-quarter-year-old mind, there was something inherently ignoble about the condition of infancy, thus I took my mothers observation as high praise. I see it differently, now.

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