• Complain

Richard Ford - The Lay of the Land

Here you can read online Richard Ford - The Lay of the Land full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2006, publisher: Alfred A. Knopf, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

The Lay of the Land: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "The Lay of the Land" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Richard Ford: author's other books


Who wrote The Lay of the Land? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

The Lay of the Land — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "The Lay of the Land" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Contents KRISTINA Are You Ready to Meet Your Maker Last week I read - photo 1

Contents KRISTINA Are You Ready to Meet Your Maker Last week I read - photo 2

Contents


KRISTINA

Are You Ready to Meet Your Maker?

Last week, I read in the Asbury Press a story that has come to sting me like a nettle. In one sense, it was the usual kind of news item we read every a.m., feel a deep, if not a wide, needle of shock, then horror about, stare off to the heavens for a long moment, until the eye shifts back to different matterscelebrity birthdays, sports briefs, obits, new realty offeringswhich tug us on to other concerns, and by mid-morning weve forgotten.

But, under the stunted headline TEX NURSING DEATHS , the story detailed an otherwise-normal day in the nursing department at San Ysidro State Teachers College (Paloma Playa campus) in south Texas. A disgruntled nursing student (these people are always men) entered a building through the front door, proceeded to the classroom where he was supposed to be in attendance and where a test he was supposed to be taking was in progressrows of student heads all bent to their business. The teacher, Professor Sandra McCurdy, was staring out the window, thinking about who knows whata pedicure, a fishing trip she would be taking with her husband of twenty-one years, her health. The course, as flat-footed, unsubtle fate would have it, was called Dying and Death: Ethics, Aesthetics, Prolepticssomething nurses need to know about.

Don-Houston Clevinger, the disgruntled studenta Navy vet and father of twohad already done poorly on the midterm and was probably headed for a bad grade and a ticket home to McAllen. This Clevinger entered the quiet, reverent classroom of test takers, walked among the desks and toward the front to where Ms. McCurdy stood, arms folded, musing out the window, possibly smiling. And he said to her, raising a Glock 9-mm to within six inches of the space just above the mid-point between her eyes, he said, Are you ready to meet your Maker? To which Ms. McCurdy, who was forty-six and a better than average teacher and canasta player, and whod been a flight nurse in Desert Storm, replied, blinking her periwinkle eyes in curiosity only twice, Yes. Yes, I think I am. Whereupon this Clevinger shot her, turned around slowly to address the astonished nurses-to-be and shot himself in approximately the same place.

I was sitting down when I began to read thisin my glassed-in living room overlooking the grassy dune, the beach and the Atlantics somnolent shingle. I was actually feeling pretty good about things. It was seven oclock on a Thursday morning, the week before Thanksgiving. I had a happy client closing at ten at the realty office here in Sea-Clift, after which the seller and I were going for a celebratory lunch at Bumps Eat-It-Raw. My recent health concernssixty radioactive iodine seeds encased in titanium BBs and smart-bombed into my prostate at the Mayo Clinicall seemed to be going well (systems up and running, locked and loaded). My Thanksgiving plans for a semi-family at-home occasion hadnt yet started to make me fitful (stress is bad for the iodine seeds half-life). And I hadnt heard from my wife in six months, which, under the circumstances of her new life and my old one, seemed unsurprising if not ideal. In other words, all the ways that life feels like life at age fifty-five were strewn around me like poppies.

My daughter, Clarissa Bascombe, was still asleep, the house quiet, empty but for the usual coffee aromas and the agreeable weft of dampness. But when I read Ms. McCurdys reply to her assassins question (Im sure he had never contemplated an answer himself), I just stood right up out of my chair, my heart suddenly whonking, my hands, fingers, cold and atingle, my scalp tightened down against my cranium the way it does when a train goes by too close. And I said out loud, with no one to hear me, I said, Holy shit! How in the world did she ever know that?

All up and down this middle section of seaboard (the Press is the Jersey Shores paper of record), there mustve been hundreds of similar rumblings and inaudible alarms ringing household to household upon Ms. McCurdys last words being taken inlike distant explosions, registering as wonder and then anxiety in the sensitive. Elephants feel the fatal footfalls of poachers a hundred miles off. Cats exit the room in a hurry when oysters are opened. On and on, and on and on. The unseen exists and has properties.

Would I ever say that? was, of course, what my question meant in realspeak, and the question everybody from Highlands to Little Egg wouldve been darkly pondering. Its not a question, lets face it, that suburban life regularly poses to us. Suburban life, in fact, pretty much does the opposite.

And yet, it might.

Faced with Mr. Clevingers question and a little pushed for time, Im sure I wouldve begun soundlessly inventorying all the things I hadnt done yetfucked a movie star, adopted Vietnamese orphan twins and sent them to Williams, hiked the Appalachian Trail, brought help to a benighted, drought-ravaged African nation, learned German, been appointed ambassador to a country nobody else wanted but I did. Voted Republican. I wouldve thought about whether my organ-donor card was signed, whether my list of pallbearers was updated, whether my obituary had the important new details addedwhether, in other words, Id gotten my message out properly. So in all likelihood, what I wouldve said to Mr. Clevinger as the autumn breezes twirled in through the windows off bright Paloma Playa and the nursing girls held their sweet bubble-gum breaths waiting to hear, wouldve been: You know, not really. I guess not. Not quite yet. Whereupon he wouldve shot me anyway, though conceivably not himself.

When Id thought only this far through the sad and dreary conundrum, I realized I no longer had my usual interest in the routines of my morningfifty sit-ups, forty push-ups, some neck stretches, a bowl of cereal and fruit, a manumitting interlude in the mens roomand that what this story of Ms. McCurdys unhappy end had caused in me was a need for a harsh, invigorating, mind-clearing plunge in the briny. It was the sixteenth of November, a precise week before Thanksgiving, and the Atlantic was as nickel-polished, clean-surfaced and stilly cold as old Neptunes heart. (When you first buy by the ocean, youre positive youll take a morning dip every single day, and that life will be commensurately happier, last longer, youll be jollierthe old pump getting a fresh prime at about the hour many are noticing the first symptoms of their myocardial infarct. Only you dont.)

Yet we can all be moved, if were lucky. And I wasby Ms. McCurdy. So that some contact with the sudden and the actual seemed demanded. And not, as I found my bathing suit in the drawer, got in it and headed barefoot out the side door and down the sandy steps into the brisk beach airishnessnot that I was really frightened by the little saga. Death and its low-lying ambuscade dont scare me much. Not anymore. This summer, in clean-lawned, regulation-size, by-the-numbers Rochester, Minnesota, I got over Big-D death in a swift, once-and-for-all and official way. Gave up on the Forever Concept. As things now stand, I wont outlive my mortgage, my twenty-five-year roof, possibly not even my car. My mothers so-so genesbreast-cancer genes giving percolating rise to prostate-cancer genes, giving rise to its anybodys guess what nexthad finally gained a lap on me. Thus the refugees sad plight in Gaza, the float on the Euro, the hole in the polar ice cap, the big one rumbling in on the Bay Area like a fleet of Harleys, the presence of heavy metals in mothers milkall that

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «The Lay of the Land»

Look at similar books to The Lay of the Land. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Richard Ford - Lord of Ashes
Lord of Ashes
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - Rock Springs
Rock Springs
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - Women with Men
Women with Men
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - A Multitude of Sins
A Multitude of Sins
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - A Piece of My Heart
A Piece of My Heart
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - Wildlife
Wildlife
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - The Sportswriter
The Sportswriter
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - The Shattered Crown
The Shattered Crown
Richard Ford
Richard Ford - Herald of the Storm
Herald of the Storm
Richard Ford
No cover
No cover
Richard Ford
Reviews about «The Lay of the Land»

Discussion, reviews of the book The Lay of the Land and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.