• Complain

Andrew Sullivan - Waste

Here you can read online Andrew Sullivan - Waste 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: Dzanc Books, 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.

Andrew Sullivan Waste
  • Book:
    Waste
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    Dzanc Books
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2016
  • Rating:
    3 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 60
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

Waste: summary, description and annotation

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

Larkhill, Ontario. 1989. A city on the brink of utter economic collapse. On the brink of violence. Driving home one night, unlikely passengers Jamie Garrison and Moses Moon hit a lion at fifty miles an hour. Both men stumble away from the freak accident unharmed, but neither reports the bizarre incident. Haunted by the dead lion, Moses storms through the frozen city with his pathetic crew of wannabe skinheads searching for his mentally unstable mother. Jamie struggles with raising his young daughter and working a dead-end job in a butcher shop, where a dead body shows up in the waste buckets out back. A warning of something worse to come. Somewhere out there in the dark, a man is still looking for his lion. His name is Astor Crane, and he has never really understood forgiveness.

Andrew Sullivan: author's other books


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

Waste — 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 "Waste" 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

Andrew F. Sullivan

Waste

To Ed and Shelley Sullivan,

This has nothing to do with you.

You aint never been no virgin kid;

you were fucked from the start.

Patrick Stickles, A Pot in Which to Piss

Larkhill, Ontario, 1989

1

The drill whirred twice before the battery died.

Useless. Mastercraft aint worth shit. Gimme DeWalt any day.

The two figures loomed over the body in the middle of the woods. Their shadows hid amongst the trees. Their beards were full of sweat and old smoke. One leaned down and slapped the body across the face.

Connor, you dumb shit, open your eyes. Connor!

Connor Condon always hated his name. He hated the concussive force of those two Cs crashing out of his mothers mouth every time she was pissed, back when theyd lived in his grandmothers apartment. The sound chased him from room to room, rattling the dusty shelves and weaving its way through porcelain bears to find him hiding under the pullout couch he shared with his mother.

We need you to wake up, and dont you dare puke again.

It wasnt until sixth grade that Connors name truly became a curse in the outside world. The new bus driver, Marlene, believed she had to take attendance. Her tongue seemed far too big for her mouth when she drawled out his name through pierced lips.

Tommy, just slap his face to wake him up. One good slap.

All Connor heard were titters of laughter from the backseats. The bus drivers massive tongue had mangled his name somehow. Kids stopped sitting beside him. Connor Condom. The name followed him for years, hunted him down hallways and trapped him in bathroom stalls, kids breathing down his neck, asking if his father was a Durex or a Trojan.

Probably would have been easier if he was wearing clothes.

A Thursday. It was a Thursday in tenth grade when they pulled the plastic bag over his head on the bus. The driver was too busy navigating a left-hand turn to see Connors face slowly turning purple as the bag pulled tighter and tighter. Connor remembered now that there was a green Chevy stalled in the turning lane. Before he passed out and smashed his face against the window, he noticed there was a receipt for Kmart in the bottom of the bag.

Did you bring extra batteries, Al?

For the next week, they had Connor in the hospital, measuring his breathing and brain activity every hour. They drained fluid from his brain on the second night. Connor did not remember that week. Two weeks later, he emerged with a new learning disability, a severe lack of hand-eye coordination, and a constant migraine. He walked home from the hospital.

This happened before, remember? Theyre on my belt, if youd take three seconds to look somewhere other than your own dick. Slap the kid again.

Astor Crane never called him Condom. He didnt offer him lube at the bus stop or ask him why all his relatives eventually ended up in the sewer. What he did offer was a smoke on the roof one night after he found Connor pitching pigeon nests at the supers car five floors down. Hours later, in Cranes apartment, Connor sat and watched Eddie Murphy on bootleg VHS, unable to stop talking about pigeons. Crane just nodded along as he chopped plants on the coffee table, asking questions and laughing in the appropriate places. Astor asked if he wanted a job.

That was five years and endless baggies ago.

And now Connor was here, somewhere in the woods with major head trauma and three broken ribs. Theyd busted through the front door while he was in the bath, soaking his feet and playing the drum on his beer belly. Connor didnt see any faces, only thick gray hair and long beards like ZZ Top. Hed puked on the way down the stairs, chunks of it sticking to his chest hair. A purple horseshoe from the Lucky Charms hed had for dinner lodged inside his belly button, half digested. One of the men was carrying a drill. Connor could feel the hundreds of pine needles collected in his leg hair. Tiny cuts from the rocks and roots hed been dragged across as they pulled him deeper into the trees.

Astor wasnt here to help him now.

Connor, we arent supposed to kill you outright you know that, dont you, you little hairy gash? Stay still, now.

The two stood over Connor. Snow began to fall. One of the grey beards leaned down, his vest covered in dandruff and snow. Connor reached out to grab his hand.

Tommy, you got the goddamn drill or what?

Snowflakes fell into Connors eyes, but hed lost the ability to blink. He felt them melt one by one down his face as the drill buzzed and buzzed, ploughing through the patella and deep into the meat behind his kneecaps. Little eruptions of purple and yellow spurted from his flesh. The sensation did not touch his brain like pain, just in scents that no longer made sense. The beards smelled like burnt meat, his own blood like apricots.

We havent killed you, have we? Thats not allowed. Only our second non-screamer. Thats impressive, but dont start thinking there is a light at the end of this bleak-ass tunnel.

Connor could no longer see. Too much snow built up over his eyes.

Here it is. You crawl out of here alive, consider all your debts repaid, all your capital returned to you, and all our apologies intact, signed, sealed, delivered. The man on high says you are in the clear. If you dontwell, you take that up with whoever you want. I gotta piss.

Connor heard them stumble off. He tried to close his eyes, but the muscles did not respond.

There was no moon. Connor lay there in the dirt and the pine needles, trying to connect each thought to the next. His jaw clicked as he tried to speak. Snow gathered in his hair and in his wounds, turning the flakes pink. Each breath was animated by the cold. Connor did not try to crawl. The holes in his knees filled with melting snow. The vomit on his chest was frozen tight against his skin. Somewhere in his brain, dead cats and grandmothers and rainbows collided. He lay dreaming with his eyes open, his mother pouring red wine into giant vats of diet cola, broken girls in veils dancing in circles around his body in the snow, the black night a backdrop for hallucinations that crackled like busted televisions.

He would be buried in snow. He would drown slowly as flakes melted on his lips, trickled down his stubborn tongue, and filled his lungs with fluid. Connor did not worry about these things. Sliding in and out of consciousness, he prayed the newspaper would not print his full name for the world to see. Nameless, faceless, half eaten by dogs, suffocated in a plastic bag until every brain cell began to fail, Connor Condon would take all these things, as long as no one misspelled his name in the obituaries, as long as his gravestone remained untouched, history slowly fading on locker doors, birth certificate eaten by mice, every trace of him erased.

2

So they find this kid, right? Whats left, cause its probably been months. Hes frozen solid.

Jamie Garrison was barely listening, but the little skinhead just kept talking. Moses Moons head was covered in angry ingrown hairs fighting to push through the skin. Two hours listening to the kid shoot bullshit while they hosed down the prep room and rolled the waste bins full of fat and trim outside. Donnie would be opening the butcher shop in the morning. He would find a mistake no matter what they did, and Jamie would blame Moses.

Nothing tried to eat him?

One of the streetlights in the parking lot was busted. Moses stood shivering in the cold, his toque barely covering his head, ears bright red. Frost beaded on his pants. Jamie tossed his keys from hand to hand, watching his breath rise up to the flickering light.

Maybe a bear, I dont know, all right? Can we just get in the fucking car, J?

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Waste»

Look at similar books to Waste. 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 «Waste»

Discussion, reviews of the book Waste 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.