• Complain

Lee Johnson - Nitro Mountain

Here you can read online Lee Johnson - Nitro Mountain 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: Alfred A. Knopf, 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.

Lee Johnson Nitro Mountain
  • Book:
    Nitro Mountain
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    Alfred A. Knopf
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2016
  • Rating:
    4 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 80
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

Nitro Mountain: summary, description and annotation

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

An astonishing, even shocking debut-darker than a bad night in hell-that is written with both humor and heart by a writer with abundant and scary gifts and consummate skill. Set in a bitterly benighted, mine-polluted corner of Virginia, follows a group of people bound together by alcohol, small-time crime, and music. Theres Leon, a hapless bass player who can embroil himself in trouble just by getting out of bed in the morning. And his would-be girlfriend, Jennifer, whos living with Arnett, the towns most dangerous thug-and hoping Leon will help poison him. And theres Arnett himself, a psychopath for the ages-albeit so charming and deranged, so strikingly authentic, that he arrests the readers attention at first sight and holds it fast. His mirror image, a singer-songwriter named Jones, has his own moral issues, though at least hes to be a good man. The bright if battered soul who pulls us through this story is Jennifer, struggling heroically to survive the endemic hopelessness and violence that have surrounded her since birth. Relentless? Yes. But nothing remotely gratuitous: only the pain and misery that inspire so much of the music these people love more than life itself.

Lee Johnson: author's other books


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

Nitro Mountain — 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 "Nitro Mountain" 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

Lee Clay Johnson

Nitro Mountain

To East Hundred

1

We were sitting in my truck in front of the diner she was working at. Greg, her boss, had everybody convinced he was a genius.

Hes really smart, Jennifer said. You know what he told me yesterday while I was in the kitchen? I rolled down the window and let in cold air. She took face powder from the glove box, bent the rearview at her face and dusted her nose. Headlights came flickering from way behind us. You dont even care, she said.

I care, I said. Id like to kick his ass. The headlights were getting closer.

Yeah, right. Remember when you found that wounded squirrel?

I turned to see a lifted Tacoma with an aluminum hound cage in the bed rush past. Barks and bays twisted around us and then away as the taillights took the next turn.

It was a baby. It was lost. It found me.

You cried when it died.

That was a while ago, I said.

Youve never even been hunting.

I fish.

Catch and release.

I catch and keep, darling, I said, reaching for her jeans.

She knocked my hand away. Choosing not to hunt around here was tougher than doing it, given all the shit people talked if you werent waddling around in orange come deer season. Dont mess with Greg anymore, I said.

Aw, look, its jealous. She petted my arm.

Hand to chin, I pushed my head sideways, to the point of pain, and held it there until my neck cracked. She wasnt even going to kiss me. When things got like this between us, I had a habit of hurting myself in front of her. See if shed say something.

She hummed to herself, checked her watch. Dont be here when I get off, she said.

How else you gonna get off? I said.

Were done. Im leaving.

Please, I said. Dont.

She walked to the diner without looking back, smoothed a hand through her hair at the door and made sure she looked good before going in. She did. It was the end of November and the sun was barely cracking the sky. Clouds scattered above the northwest mountains. It got dark so early these days, and it never got all that light.

The town was shadowed by hills. One road this way, one road that way, and their unfortunate intersection was the main square with a brick courthouse that had seen nobler days. The Bordon post office, the library, empty storefronts and a couple shops that hadnt gone under yet. And then the abandoned Dairy Queen, my sisters apartment complex and this diner. North of town off 231, toward Nitro Mountain, were the gas station and the Foodville grocery store. Sprawl, if you could even call it that. Then the country opened up. My folks place was out there. All the roads and houses seemed to be crushed beneath the foothills, on the verge of burial. West of everything, mountains scraped the sky. At night you could see a red light on top of Nitro Mountain.

South of town was a tiny church with a homeless shelter in the basement. I worked there part-time for cash, morning shifts that involved standing behind a desk only a foot away from so many crises worse than mine, or just running around and handing out towels and soap. It was a strange thing for me to be doing. I always felt closer to the other side of the desk.

On a morning when Id shown up to help open the shelter after a night of playing bluegrass music and drinking blended whiskey, one of the old bums stepped to the desk to sign in, gazed through my skull, grinned and said, You look worse than I do today. And Im a dead man walking. He looked around. Somebody do math?

When things slowed down that day I grabbed a single-size bottle of mouthwash from the dental drawer and jogged upstairs to the employee bathroom. A few sticky blinks. The room rocked. I swished the shot of Scope and before spitting I checked the label for the alcohol percentage. Hard to read. Looked high. Not that bad. I swallowed and it made me feel better, and for that I felt worse.

Since then, I had promised myself never to stay out late before a morning shift. No matter what. Even if I was playing music. Even if the drinks were free. Even if my girlfriend had just left me. And there was the problem: I had a shift tomorrow morning at six and my girlfriend just left me. I needed to go get one drink and figure out what the hell had just happened to my life. I wouldnt be able to sleep if I didnt.

The last time Id been seriously drunk with Jennifer, she wanted to fight so bad that when I didnt raise a hand she hit herself right in front of me. I begged her to quit as she threw her fist into her face over and over again, then said, You coward, if you wont do it, somebodys got to.

We were guilty of the same strange cruelties, hurting ourselves to hurt the other, then crawling back and asking forgiveness. She often said I was too soft, and out of everything she called me, that hurt the most because it was true.

I drove to Durty Mistys, a bar on the edge of town where I sometimes backed up country bands on bass. It was a good spot to get shitty, and while driving over there I decided thats what I was going to do tonight.

The place was almost empty when I walked in. Id never come here just to drink. It was always with a band on a busy night. One guy sat at the end of the bar playing Nudie Photo Hunt. A picture of a woman in a small torn bikini appeared on the screen and then broke apart into little squares. He pieced her back together before his time ran out, otherwise he wouldve lost her.

I sat down and told the bartender I wanted something that would make me hard. He was a quiet guy who looked at me like he couldnt hear a thing I said.

Give the boy what Im drinking, the man playing Photo Hunt said. He turned away from the game. There was a Daffy Duck tattoo on the side of his neck and I recognized him from the shelter. He showed up every now and then, never to eat, never to do laundry or to get help printing a rsum. Just to look around, take a few books from the free library and leave. The books he took were often classics. Lots of tattered Greek tragedies. The occasional Charlotte Lamb romance. He didnt know who I was and I didnt bring it up.

Thanks, I said.

Try shutting your mouth more while youre talking. He picked his tooth with the snapped prong of a plastic fork, shook his head. Somebody do something, he said. Now.

The bartender poured whiskey, beer and pickled jalapeo brine into a blue mason jar. He mixed it with a soda straw, placed the jar in front of me and then backed it with a tiny birdbath of bourbon in the jars upturned lid.

Drink half the drink, the man said. Then shoot the shot. And then. He paused and considered the wall of bottles behind the bar. His pinkie and thumb winged out from his hand while three ringed fingers rubbed the tattoo into his throat. A small airplane made of beer cans hung from the ceiling on fishing line.

And then drink the rest of it? I said.

No. And then fuck the rest of it. He turned to the bartender, sucked his fingers and tapped the bone between his eyebrows. It sounded like wet wood. Who is this sitting next to me, Bob?

I dunno.

Has he been here before? He pressed the tattoo like he was taking his pulse.

Yeah.

How do you know?

I dunno.

Bob was right. I had been here many times, but I was always hiding behind my bass at the back of the band.

Does he know what we do?

Probably not.

What do you know? Do you know shit? Tell me what you do know, Old Bob.

You want another drink, Bob said. He had the eyes of a boy, and orange cracker crumbs at the sides of his mouth. His hair was caught up in a bad Elvis situation. Paper clips held some of it together.

The man stood up and started clapping. Thank God! Hallelujah! Fuck it. You know a lot more than we give you credit for. Ladies and gentlemen, he announced to the empty room, please give Bob the bartender a hand. He knows every fucking thing.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Nitro Mountain»

Look at similar books to Nitro Mountain. 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 «Nitro Mountain»

Discussion, reviews of the book Nitro Mountain 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.