• Complain

Olja Savicevic - Adios, Cowboy

Here you can read online Olja Savicevic - Adios, Cowboy full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2016, publisher: McSweeney's, genre: Prose. 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.

Olja Savicevic Adios, Cowboy
  • Book:
    Adios, Cowboy
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    McSweeney's
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2016
  • Rating:
    3 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 60
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

Adios, Cowboy: summary, description and annotation

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

A gritty, breakneck debut novel by a popular Croatian writer and poet of the countrys lost generation. Dadas life is at a standstill in Zagreb shes sleeping with a married man, working a dead-end job, and even the parties have started to feel exhausting. So when her sister calls her back home to help with their aging mother, she doesnt hesitate to leave the city behind. But she arrives to find her mother hoarding pills, her sister chain-smoking, her long-dead fathers shoes still lined up on the steps, and the cowboy posters of her younger brother Daniel (who threw himself under a train four years ago) still on the walls. Hoping to free her family from the grip of the past, Dada vows to unravel the mystery of Daniels final days. This American debut by a poet from Croatias lost generation explores a beautiful Mediterranean towns darkest alleys: the bars where secrets can be bought, the rooms where bodies can be sold, the plains and streets and houses where blood is shed. By the end of the long summer, the lies, lust, feuds, and frustration will come to a violent and hallucinatory head.

Olja Savicevic: author's other books


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

Adios, Cowboy — 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 "Adios, Cowboy" 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

Olja Savicevic

Adios, Cowboy

EASTERN

Stranger, the law does not protect you here.

Graffito, Main Jetty, Split, Croatia

1

SUMMER 2009 CAME TOO EARLY. This meant that ferocious heat had been building up ever since the beginning of May: the spring roses were expiring in the parks and stone troughs.

At the end of July I packed all my belongings, abandoned the borrowed apartment where I had lived through several lost years and set off for home.

My sister met me in the kitchen of our old house with her suitcase already prepared for her departure. During our conversation lasting an hour and a half, she got up from the table four times, once to pour me some milk and three times to go to the bathroom. Finally she came back with her lips colored bright pink, which surprised me, but I didnt say anything. She hadnt used that color lipstick before. While she was talking to me, she sent several text messages, and then finally she stood up, straightened her skirt, and set off along the lengthy corridor and down the stairs. Ma was lying in her room on the lower floor, surfing channels.

They said goodbye briefly, at the front door, I heard their voices, and I watched from the balcony as my sister disappeared around the corner, behind the bakers house. For a moment she was an unreal apparition in a real scene, a simulation. I finished the cold coffee in her cup with its smudge of pink lipstick.

Before she vanished, my sister had told me something of her daily ritual with Ma over the past month. It was precise and simple: they rose early, always at the same time, and spent at least twenty minutes over coffee. Then, before the sun was too hot, they set off on foot, one behind the other, along the main road to the cemetery. In summer, the thin strip of earth beside the road, barely wide enough for two narrow feet, turned to dust. Between the road on one side and the brambles, groundsel, and unplastered houses on the other side of an imagined pavement, dust rose up, getting into your eyes and throat and between your toes in your sandals.

Dyou know some folks eat earth? my sister asked my mother as they trudged through the dust, beside the main road. Its called geophagy.

But Ma responded tangentially, as she so often did these days: Dust to dust, better be buried in earth than immured in concrete.

Death dont bother me none, my sister broke in. Fuck death. You can get used to it too, Im sure.

Course it dont bother you. Ma was offended. She shook the dust out of her clog and strode on, chin in the air, with all the dignity of a future deceased person, one step ahead of my sister.

After they had washed our grave and cut the rotted stalks off the flowers, they would make their way down to the beach with a more sprightly step.

Its calm and quiet as a microwave, my sister had remarked as they passed through other peoples gardens and desiccated orchards.

At the beach, Ma took squashed pears and bananas out of the paper bag in a plastic bag in a Tupperware box and offered them, with her famous Hollywood smile (which ought to make any normal person feel a bit better, observed my sister). But she thought Ma used to just pluck that expression out of a folder or the big straw basket she toted around wherever she went. And it seemed to her that sometimes Ma would produce that smile, the ace from a sleeve of mass-produced expressions, at the wrong moment.

Their togetherness would come to an end with their return home, after lunch, when my sister would withdraw to her room upstairs till suppertime and try to get on with her own work, even though she was on holiday (shes a schoolteacher). Ma would then feed ginger Jill, settle down in front of the television, and announce: My serials starting.

Minerva, Aaron, and Isadora had decided to investigate the true identity of Vasiona Morales. She was a very dangerous woman who had to be separated from Juan.

In Mas eyes all serials are important, and equally so.

She would fall asleep in front of the TV, wrapped up to her ears, although at the time the temperature didnt fall below thirty even at night.

The day I left Zagreb, my sister told me she was terrified that Ma was going to overdo her sleeping pills she didnt stir under the sheet, she didnt even breathe, just occasionally farted in her sleep.

Shes dreadful, Ma said of my sister after shed left. She says terrible things. I dont get it, Dada. Thats what Im called Dada, thats the name my parents gave me.

When I accompany Ma to the highway, the heat rises from the earth: by seven its up to ones ankles. On dry mornings, just after midday, it starts grilling down straight from the sky. In town its worst around five p.m. the salt air begins to sweat and everything that moves passes limply through treacle, while the song of a million sounds is transformed into a steady, electric hum that hypnotizes.

Although shes perfectly upright when she sits or stands, when shes walking Ma rolls over the edges of a line. Cisterns and refrigerated-fish lorries hurtle past a few centimeters from her shoulder. Maybe theres just no place anymore for a non-driver in traffic, I reflect.

They should be shut up in pedestrian gulags, those idiots dont realize their lifes on the line, my sister said once, I think it was when we were driving in her ex-husbands turbo off-roader to Daniels funeral and some kids suddenly tore across the road.

Pedestrians have to be loved. Pedestrians created the world. And when it was all done, cars appeared, I said. Everyone looked at me as though I was nuts. It says that in a book somewhere, I added.

I was sitting in the back on sticky fake leather, surrounded by wreaths of palm branches that pricked my bare arms, among arrangements of chrysanthemums and bunches of blowsy roses with big red ribbons. The wreaths had mauve ribbons and names written in gold felt-tip.

So folks know whos sorry, my sister remarked, which was deemed inappropriate.

My, but were primitive, she then added, closing the window out of which she had tossed a still-lit butt the color of blood. Things like this prove it. Every loves weighed, see, the bigger the death notice, the bigger the advertisement, the more marble on the grave or gold on the cross. More cash, more love. Chucking money around. The more luxurious the vacuum cleaner he gives the young couple, the bigger the brothers love, sall the same. Theres no such thing as a poor relation, just a tight-fisted sod who doesnt love you, she turned to tell me.

I was sweltering among the prickly wreaths, trying not to crush the flowers and watching people picking cherries beside the cement works. They had ladders, caps, and blue aprons. They looked contented in their manual toiling. I wondered whether cement dust scattered over them as they pulled down the branches with their long-handled pincers. I remembered that dust as being like a soft carpet; it was an agreeable memory.

I didnt answer my sister and that provoked her to keep on talking, sentences that flew like projectiles around the absence of my reply. Her former husband, a peaceable and transparent type, soft and stiff, said: Okay, calm down, now.

As we walk along the side of the motorway, my mother is transformed into a mole alongside a poster of a pastoral center on which is written JESUS LOVES YOU, then into an extinguished glow-worm beside the discount store and into a minus sign when moving beneath a larger-than-life-size, washed-out poster of our very own Hero Not War Criminal, General Gotovina. We walk on in the dust beside the road by the petrol station, on a path barely wide enough for two narrow feet. The speed limit here is sixty, but people drive at least eighty and a little further on, the four-lane fast road comes to an end and drivers lose all sense of speed. Farmers in their tractors are known to come out onto the highway from one of the un-made-up side lanes and slow the traffic down to a crawl.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Adios, Cowboy»

Look at similar books to Adios, Cowboy. 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.


Reviews about «Adios, Cowboy»

Discussion, reviews of the book Adios, Cowboy 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.