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Antoine Volodine - Bardo or Not Bardo

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Antoine Volodine Bardo or Not Bardo
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Irreducible to any single literary genre, the Volodinian cosmos is skillfully crafted, fusing elements of science fiction with magical realism and political commentary. Nicholas Hauck, One of Volodines funniest books, takes place in his universe of failed revolutions, radical shamanism, and off-kilter nomenclature. In each of these seven vignettes, someone dies and has to make his way through the Tibetan afterlife, also known as the Bardo. In the Bardo, souls wander for forty-nine days before being reborn, helped along on their journey by the teachings of the . Unfortunately, Volodines characters bungle their chances at enlightenment, with the recently dead choosing to waste away their afterlife sleeping, or choosing to be reborn as an insignificant spider. The still-living arent much better off, making a mess of things in their own ways, such as erroneously reciting a Tibetan cookbook to a lost comrade instead of the holy book. Once again, Volodine has demonstrated his range and ambition, crafting a moving, hysterical work about transformations and the power of the book. Antoine Volodine Minor Angels Writers J. T. Mahany

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Antoine Volodine

Bardo or Not Bardo

I. LAST STAND BEFORE THE BARDO

The hens were chattering peacefully behind the wire fence, as usual, when the first gunshot rang out. Some of them shook their crests, others paused their graceless march, freezing a grayish leg off the ground, unable to make up their mind about stepping in grain and excrement, others still continued clucking blithely. Pistols were of no concern to them. Knives, yes, maybe, but Makarovs and Brownings, no. Then a second detonation rattled the quiet of the afternoon. Someone came running and collapsed against the henhouses fence, whose structure was poorly suited to such a trial and so quickly deformed. The posts bent, a row of perches fell apart, and, this time, the whole brood of poultry was overcome with hysteria. The disorderly hens mostly reds and whites, but two or three black ones as well dispersed loudly. The injured man was clinging to the wire web. He wanted both to move forward and remain vertical, but that wasnt quite happening. He hobbled slantwise, indifferent to the cackling, primarily preoccupied with what sounded like approaching steps. His pursuer was catching up to him, a fast-walking man, preceded en route by a zigzagging hen, all helter-skelter, wing stumps akimbo. The killer reached the wounded man and wordlessly stared at him for an instant, as if he was wondering what he was doing there with a target that was already hit quite hit, even then he shot him a third time, barely even aiming, before setting off again and disappearing.

The targets name was Kominform.

Now, among the decreasingly agitated birds, there Kominform was, triply pierced and about to die. He was bleeding. He had been a revolutionary communist, he had demolished the henhouse when he fell, and, next to its bent-over door, he was bleeding.

No one had witnessed the execution, though it had taken place in an ordinarily rather lively locale, behind the library of a vast Lamaist monastery, where a century before, monks still practiced martial arts, and which today was dedicated to vegetable growing and farming. But, that afternoon, everyone was gathered elsewhere. Novices, lamas, and guests were currently sitting on the poorly-cleaned and not-very-comfortable cushions in the large prayer room situated in the north-western wing, opposite the vegetable garden, to participate in one of the years most important ceremonies: the blessing of the Five Precious Perfumed Oils. A small summer breeze conveyed the calls of conches and the rings of gongs. There were also the echoes of collective prayers. At that distance, it was impossible to tell the sincere professions of faith from the routine.

The day was splendid.

For several seconds, the situation remained unchanged, then an old monk closed a door behind him somewhere in a corridor, came out through the back of the library, crossed through a patch of beans, and hurried toward the scene of the crime.

He was a hoary religious man, in a faded indigo robe. His body was wizened in its twilight years. He jogged toward the henhouse, as quick as his breath and his skinny nonagenarian legs would let him. Confined to the lavatory due to intestinal troubles, he wasnt able to make it to the ceremony. He had heard the detonations, and foreseeing some mishap hastily wiped and dressed himself, and now he was running.

As he often did, he was talking aloud, to both himself and hypothetical coreligionists.

Hey! he shouted. Theres bandits behind the library! Armed thugs! Come quick! Theyre shooting everywhere! Theyve hit someone!

He went past the rows of beans, peas. Beyond that, the henhouse showed all the signs of irreversible disarray. The perches were knocked down. The sagging fence had given up the ghost. There were rents pointing toward the sky, half-pieces of slats, the top of the door. Everything swayed and creaked at the slightest movement. He had to get past a square meter of metal lace to see who was lying on the ground.

Holy doggone! the old man swore. I know him! Kominform! They shot Kominform!

He knelt down. Kominforms body was moaning in the scrapheaps grating noises. He let himself be manipulated, scrutinized. While he examined the wounds, the old monk gritted his remaining teeth. He kept his prognosis to himself.

His name was Drumbog.

Around Drumbog and Kominform, the hens were clucking, without a care in the world.

Hey! Drumbog shouted. Get over here! The killers butchered Kominform!

Nobody came.

Everyones over that way, for the Five Perfumes, said Drumbog. The monasterys deserted. Nobodys in the library right now either. . If I hadnt. . If I hadnt had to hole up in the bathroom. . Its always that fermented milk. . I cant digest it anymore, and I drink too much of it. . How are you with fermented milk? Homemade Mongolian yogurt? Goddamn it causes some bad diarrhea!

Kominform shifted.

That you, Drumbog? he asked without opening his eyes.

His dislocated voice didnt vibrate beyond his mouth. He couldnt be understood. He had a hiccup.

He shot me in the stomach, the swine, he said.

Hes spitting up hemoglobin, said Drumbog, having neither noticed nor deciphered Kominforms mumbling. Itd take a miracle for him to pull through.

In the lungs, Kominform continued. Im going to die. .

Kominform, can you hear me? said Drumbog. Can you hear me, little brother? Are you conscious?

Im hurt, said Kominform. They got me. . Old colleagues of mine. . Converts. . They work for the mafia now, for the billionaires in power. . Social democrats and the nouveau riche and the like. . Theres nothing worse than converts. .

The end of an iron wire had snagged the right sleeve of his coat and, whenever he tensed up a little to stammer, the fence started to creak. It was like someone writhing on a bad box-spring.

Dont wear yourself out, little brother, suggested Drumbog. Open your mouth. You have to let air find a passage through the blood.

That you, Drumbog? asked Kominform.

Yes, little brother, its me. I was on my way to the ceremony, the Five Precious Perfumed Oils, right? And all of a sudden I heard machine guns. .

Dont worry about me, said Kominform. Go. Dont miss the benediction. Go on. Leave me here.

His chest rose weakly.

He vomited blood.

The fence creaked.

Anyway, I dont have long, he continued. Im done for.

He clenched his jaw and went quiet. He hadnt been an adherent to communism to show off, he hadnt defended its principles to one-up prisoners. This was not the kind of man to weep in the face of death.

At that moment, the shells of dry vegetables cracked on the trail, the grass hissed. A hen fled, shouting in its avian dialect, put out from just almost being kicked. Someone was approaching.

Holy cow! Drumbog swore. The killers are coming back! Theyre going to liquidate any troublesome witnesses. Anyone would do the same in their place. . Its my turn next, youll see, Im not going to cut it!

His breath was short. A hint of sudden dread clutched his throat. The shrubs and folds in the fence hid the indignant hen from him, as well as the foot that had provoked its vehemence.

In the past, he continued, if an astrologer had told me that my fate was to end up full of bullet holes while up against a henhouse, with a revolutionary communist by my side, I wouldve laughed right in his face. . But everythings connected. . Cold yogurt, intestines. . The blessing of the Five Oils. . It was written. .

Whoever was walking down the path and stepping on beanstalks was now visible.

The surrounding atmosphere wasnt dramatic at all: the exhalations of summer, vegetables yellowing in the sun, gallinaceans enjoying themselves, pecking at the dust, grasshoppers, gong echoes.

Theyre coming, the old man mumbled. Theyre going to do me in. . Theres two of them, a man and a woman. .

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