The blog of author Dennis Cooper

The Seven Godlike Books of James McCourt *

* (restored/expanded)

 

Readers of this blog know I don’t tend to love American fiction the way I do the French variety. There have been and will continue to be exceptions to my literary Francophilia, but, generally speaking, I guess my preferences are on the table. The American writer James McCourt is one of the biggest of the aforementioned exceptions. His writing and mine don’t have that much in common, on the surface at least, and yet there’s no other living American novelist from the generations earlier than mine with whom I feel more kinship and whose work inspires in me a deeper affection. When he wrote a very positive review of ‘God Jr.’ in the Los Angeles Times Book Review last year, it was one of the greatest honors I’ve ever received. McCourt is that rarest of contemporary American authors — a true iconoclast, a devoted high stylist, and a holder of the unfashionable opinion that prose is a natural extrovert and beauty that deserves the brightest polish, the best accessories, the most extravagant costumes. McCourt’s work has been described as a marriage of Ronald Firbank’s meticulous, delirious camp and Don DeLillo’s maximalist historiography, which wouldn’t be too wildly inaccurate if McCourt weren’t a whole lot more mischevious and uninhibited than DeLillo. If McCourt’s voice happens to strike one’s fancy, there are few more potent language based drugs. Still, his reverential but modestly sized following shows that his books are not everyone’s idea of an island in the sun. Far too many of his books are out of print. The internet is not exactly chock full of McCourt related goodies. He doesn’t even have a Wikipedia entry, bewilderingly enough. Building a Day in tribute to his work was no picnic, and you won’t find any youtube or McCourt fan site links below. For a writer as inebriating, fanciful, and entertaining as James McCourt, mine is an awfully straightforward tribute. But don’t let that stop you from investigating his work if you haven’t already. — DC

 


James McCourt on the Hours Leading Up to the Stonewall Riots, March 9, 2013


James McCourt Discusses His Wild Days at Max’s Kansas City, March 9, 2013


James McCourt on the Opera Fanatics on the Standing Room Line at the Metropolitan Opera


James McCourt on Stalking Jack Kerouac in 1957. March 9, 2013.


James McCourt on the Everard Baths, March 9, 2013


James McCourt on His Upcoming Memoir, March 9, 2013.

 

_________________

THE INTERIOR LANDSCAPE OF JAMES McCOURT
BY WILLIAM MOSES HOFFMAN

Sitting in James McCourt’s living room in Crossmolina, County Mayo, Ireland, while the prehistoric smell of a peat fire filled the room and the sun set over the mists of the nearby mountain Nephin (Gaelic for “holy”), talk of divine visitations was perfectly in order.

It also seemed natural that the New York-born author of the tales in “Time Remaining,” published a few months ago by Knopf, would be living in Ireland for at least three months a year. Where else could an Irish-American cross between James Joyce and Bette Midler have found the spiritual nourishment to plumb his unconscious for a monumental vision of drag queens and opera divas from the ‘40s to the age of AIDS?

And for whom else would I have Aer Lingused across the ocean and spent six hours on the slowest train this side of Toonerville during the Emerald Isle’s monsoon season? Only for James McCourt. For years, writers, editors and a steadfast core of followers have indulged in his extravagant maximalist style, luxuriating in the bizarre architecture of McCourt’s constructions. In “Time Remaining,” a mere mention of the Bristol Hotel in Vienna is transmogrified into: “What a magnificent hotel the Bristol is. Louis Quatorze is supposed to have said–at Versailles–that the mark of a man of quality is his indifference to cold, heat, hunger, and thirst–and if that weren’t enough to make any man decide to be a woman, a night–with or without love–in the Bristol in Vienna would. And I spent two nights there. Of course, reflecting, there has never been anyone on earth as far out as Louis Quatorze, except Mae West, and just as surely as she was never a man, he somehow, irregardless, as the girl said, was always a woman.”

McCourt’s densely packed prose, like James Joyce’s, unlike much contemporary avant-garde fiction, actually means something. Meaning less ness, the rage of the recherche literati, gets short shrift in McCourt novels. The flutter of a drag queen’s eyelash can change the course of history. McCourt is a writer’s writer, a favorite of the literary elites of both coasts because he has never commercialized his interior life. For an author of maximalist style, he is a personage of minimalist pretensions. He shies away from sensational publicity and has spent most of his life in total concentration on his work. He is not, however, everyone’s cup of tea. One of Americas’s foremost poets, Richard Howard, says of McCourt’s work that “the brilliance of such baroque assemblages has not been readily assimilated by the post-Hemingway crowd, though gradually, I think, his mastery of a poetics of pleasure (from allusion to alliteration, every device buzzing and blinking, wheeling and whirring) has gained him the stature that is his.”

McCourt has always been fearlessly himself, mocking left, right and center. His characters are often politically incorrect, infuriating some members of the gay and feminist communities. In “Time Remaining” the protagonist, discussing the AIDS epidemic, insists that “everybody knew all along . . . it was kamikaze sex. We knew it was dangerous work when we took the job. That’s why we went about it the way we did, in bomber jackets and headsets and stoned to the hair roots; to suggest anything else now in the evening is a lie.”

Tired as I was from the long train trip, I perked up over a cup of Barry’s Mauve Label tea. I asked about the brazen Odette O’Doyle, the semi-transvestite-prima-ballerina, World War II-vet protagonist of “Time Remaining.”

“Was Odette a backward Virgin, too?”

“I didn’t see Odette in a vision,” McCourt replied, pouring more tea with the simplicity of a Zen master. “She had her origins on the standing-room line at the Old Met in the early ‘60s.”

Not a baseball team, and not an art museum, the “Old Met” is New York’s original Metropolitan Opera, on 39th and Broadway. This shrine was torn down in 1966 and replaced by its present, more mundane, incarnation at Lincoln Center. The Old Met was more than a mere theater: It was the Vatican of an international religion of opera, whose principal rite of communion was diva devotion. Opera fans, or worshipers if you like, were beyond fanatical. “It was like the cult of Isis in ancient Egypt,” McCourt plained, brushing back a lock of his Celtic-colored hair from his eyes. He was one of the high priests of the order.

He depicted this voluptuous world in his 1975 tale “Mawrdew Czgowchwz” (pronounced Mardu Gorgeous), copies of which are now as rare as a 1934 Lou Gehrig baseball card. The eponymous heroine was a 3 1/2-octave Czech super-diva, or “oltrano,” of Irish origins. In keeping with McCourt’s practice of linking the characters of his books, Odette is one of her most loyal fans.

“Time Remaining” is set on Aug. 11, 1991, during the midnight train ride of Odette and her old friend Delancey, a performance artist, from Pennsylvania Station, in New York City, to Bridgehampton, on the eastern tip of Long Island. Monopolizing the conversation in more than 200 pages of near-monologue, Odette celebrates her adventures depositing the ashes of eight departed friends–all drag queens, all dead from AIDS–into various European bodies of water.

The cast of characters in “Time Remaining” numbers in the hundreds. Among the more notable are not only Odette, but Vana Sprezza, wife of an Italian condom king, who complains that “my husband had all my male lovers murdered–and all the horses they owned . . . so I’m a lesbian now. Much better for everybody.” Of Cuban emigre/drag queen Mercedes (Benzedrine) Bustamante, Odette reveals that the staff at Bellevue Hospital in New York “let her have her straitjacket as a souvenir, which she took home, cut the sleeve-ends, dyed pink and covered with sequins to wear as a halter to cocktail parties.”

“What is the meaning of all the drag queens in ‘Time Remaining?’ ” I ventured, sipping tea, staring longingly at the first of many slices of home-baked cakes, tarts and trifles. The visit was to be one long temptation. McCourt, like most of the other people I met in Ireland, was on the slim side, yet he was always cooking.

“Drag queens are a devout and ritualistic folk,” McCourt said as he moved the enormous manuscript of his new novel from the coffee table. “They can tell us about acceptance. They start by defying convention and end up by accepting it, but on their own terms. Spiritually speaking, they are like Hasidim. In every purse is the Dead Sea Scrolls.” He returned to the stove. “We’ll eat soon.”

McCourt’s range is astronomical. “He assumes his readers are as observant, as amusable, as learned, as exuberant, as generous as he is,” says Susan Sontag, “And . . . he has perfect pitch.” “Time Remaining” moves encyclopedically from world history (Odette has a fling with British spy and traitor Donald MacLean in blitz-torn London; the funeral of Judy Garland on June 26, 1969, sets off the Stonewall riots in Greenwich Village and marks the beginning of gay liberation in America), to double-barreled art criticism (“all (Jean) Cocteau did was steal things from people”), to politics (“Tell me . . . how did the idea of yearning to breathe free translate so quickly into the compulsion to freebase?”)

The locations encompass New York, Los Angeles and half of Europe, as well as an obscure gay bar, the Floradora, in Queens. “You’re the only person I’ve ever met who knows about the Floradora,” I remarked to McCourt. “When I was a teen-ager, I used to take the GG train at 63rd Drive to 74th Street and Roosevelt Avenue and sneak in with a fake ID.”

“Remember the sisters who ran it?” he reminisced, pouring more tea.

“They played sax, piano and drums,” I said. “They looked like the three Fates.”

“They were !” said McCourt.

 

_______
The books

Mawrdew Czgowchwz (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1975; New York Review of Books Classics, 2002)

Official description: Diva Mawrdew Czgowchwz (pronounced “Mardu Gorgeous”) bursts like the most brilliant of comets onto the international opera scene, only to confront the deadly malice and black magic of her rivals. Outrageous and uproarious, flamboyant and serious as only the most perfect frivolity can be, James McCourt’s entrancing send-up of the world of opera has been a cult classic for more than a quarter-century. This comic tribute to the love of art is a triumph of art and love by a contemporary American master.

Blurbs:
‘Bravo, James McCourt, a literary countertenor in the exacting tradition of Firbank and Nabokov, who makes his daringly self-assured debut with this intelligent and very funny book.’ — Susan Sontag

Mawrdew Czgowchwz is a Zuleika Dobson of the opera world. James McCourt is an ecstatic fabulist, robustly funny and inventive, and touchingly in love with his subject. His novel is both special and precious, in the most honorable senses of those words.’ — Walter Clemons, Newsweek

‘The reader must be prepared to follow the silver-tongued writer through an outlandish landscape, unquestioning. Reason would be out of place here. She would upset the ecological balance of a rich and delicate world.’ — John Yohalem, The New York Times Books Review

from the Introduction by Wayne Koestenbaum:

To call Mawrdew Czgowchwz the great novel of the opera queen is less accurate than to call it the great novel of the gay virtuoso gabber—that creature of lists, parentheses, digressions, apostrophes, opinions, and contradictions. Oscar Wilde belongs to this tribe of loudmouths. So do Dorothy Dean, costar of Warhol’s Afternoon, and Charles Nelson Reilly, game-show stalwart. Although McCourt does not hesitate to connect connoisseurship to what a sociologist might call a “gay fan-base,” his novel skimps eroticism, despite its romantic ending, and despite the prose’s nonstop orgasm. Rapture is reserved for the voice of its heroine and its plural narrators (Rodney, Jameson O’Maurigan, Mother Maire Dymphna, and others contribute to the polyphony). Energy’s displacement from eroticism to music has nothing to do with the “closet” or with prudishness, for music is not a code for sexuality: rather, music is a sexuality. …. McCourt’s genius lies in his ability to weave the highest styles of twentieth-century literature and music with the gutsy vernacular of men/women (like Candy Darling and Myra Breckinridge) who modeled themselves after Jean Harlow and died in the process.

McCourt’s subsequent works go even farther into the lunatic fringe, the only place where I feel at home. To the reader who enjoys Mawrdew, I highly recommend McCourt’s other novels, Time Remaining and Delancey’s Way, and also his short-story collection, Kaye Wayfaring in “Avenged.” It is not pejorative to call a work of art “minor.” Deleuze and Guattari, in Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature, claimed that Kafka himself was a minor writer, and more important for being minor. Robert Walser, too, is subaltern: a writer’s writer, with the melancholy of music’s minor keys. Like other noble practitioners of that strain of modern literature (an elect galaxy including Firbank, Schuyler, Butts, Cavafy, Pessoa, and Rhys), James McCourt has the gift of not assuming that writing is a way of being polite, accommodating, or sociable. Although his novels give comic delight, they also are willing to perplex their readers, and to suggest, in their language’s bejeweled barbed wire, that pleasure is beyond our capacity to understand, and that we turn to literature not to see our desires made lucid, but to see a reflection of our transports at their most difficult.

 

 

Kaye Wayfaring in Avenged (Viking, 1985)

Description: It is October, a peak fall day. Kaye Wayfaring sits on a rock high in the Ramble of Central Park, smoking raw Luckies, considering impetus.

Impetus is what she will need to plunge into Orphrey Whither’s ”Avenged,” ”based on a Diderot tale already once brought to the screen as ‘Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne’ (Robert Bresson, director, France, 1944),” of which the harried unit press agent had written in the release for the first day’s shooting, ”another dimension is revealed in the geometry of human lust,” continuing, ”Never before has desire so bruised, so scalded so cruelly.”

Kaye Wayfaring, ”two-time Oscar nominee (for ‘We Are Born, We Live, We Die’ and for ‘Way Station’),” sits, broods, smokes, considers ”Avenged.” H. Q. P., ”that seasoned, trusted metropolitan arbiter and public scold,” had ventured to write of her: ”So on , so forth ; vivid and particular. No actress in these past two weary decades has displayed so deft a form. Wayfaring does deliver – in the Sullavan-Stanwyck-Lombard tradition, with offhand, odd resemblances to, among others, Irene Dunne, Frances Farmer and, eerily, Jeanne Eagels. Kaye Wayfaring is something of a navigator. Impetus is her concern.”

Click the image below to hear Hilton Als read James McCourt’s “Kaye Wayfaring in ‘Avenged'”

 

 

Time Remaining (Knopf, 1993)

Official description: From the author of Mawrdew Czgowchwz … and Kaye Wayfaring in “Avenged” … – two wildly brilliant, moving, electric stories of gay life in New York during the last twenty-five years. The first story introduces Delancey, performance artist and, in his words, “one of the sole survivors” of a band known as the Eleven against Heaven. Delancey’s recollections of four decades in the flamboyant New York wilds – spirited, defiant, festive, bright as paint (or acid) – are filled with the force of longing and the melodrama of remembering.

Delancey’s prologue sets the stage for the title story, “Time Remaining,” in which the formidable Odette O’Doyle – semi-retired transvestite ballerina, veteran of foreign wars, and polymath recorder of the stories of valiant lives – assumes the spotlight. On a midnight train to Long Island’s South Fork, Odette reports on his just-completed mission: he has deposited the ashes of eight of the former “Eleven” in various rivers, canals, fjords, and harbors of Europe. Through the ceremonies of time, travel, ritual re-enactment, and eternal return, this renegade celebrant officiates at something very like an Irish Catholic wake. He recalls a glittering chain of outrageous adventures and a terrible history of decimating disease and death while conducting a private service of reconciliation and renewal.

Time Remaining is a moving, defiantly hilarious solemnization of life and love in the age of AIDS.

Review: ‘I Go Back to the Mais Oui,” the first of two stories offered here, presents a summation of 40 years of gay life in New York by protagonist Danny Delancey, thereby providing a context for the much lengthier “Time Remaining,” which follows. In that piece–a novel, really–Danny is joined by Odette O’Doyle, an ancient, wise, all-knowing drag queen who has lived through those 40 years. As they ride the midnight train across Long Island, Odette unbeads his pearls, dropping story after story from his personal epic. And what an epic! McCourt presents us with an encyclopedic view of gay New York, from high to low culture, from Frank O’Hara, Judy Garland, and the Everard Baths to ACT UP and the Clit Club, leaving no queer stone unturned. For some, Odette’s discursive, anecdotal, manic soliloquy may be off-putting. But taken together, these brilliant stories add up to a life, one full of wit and anger, courage and love.’ — Library Journal

Excerpt

Etc:
* Podcast: James McCourt interviewed about ‘Time Remaining’ on NPR’s Bookworm
* James McCourt reviews The Collected Stories of Noel Coward

 

 

Delancey’s Way (Knopf, 2000)

Review: Few literary writers take on Washington, D.C., probably for fear of stumbling into tired satire or overblown intrigue. James McCourt is undeterred by these risks, however, and successfully avoids them. Delancey’s Way presents a whirl of D.C. players and hangers-on in an elaborate, at times paranoiac, portrayal of the city that smacks of Marcel Proust and Don DeLillo. Delancey’s Way derives its energy from its carnivalesque language. The scenes, whether set in a cab from Union Station or a masked ball at the Library of Congress, entail characters discoursing to one another in lively harangues. As the novel progresses, one character after another goes gonzo, spewing references both classical and kitsch, and sprinkling every fourth sentence with foreign phrases. The reader—or listener—becomes an awed witness to these wild and virtuoso verbal performances. In response to a comment from Ornette, the jazz-playing redactor of race, Delancey thinks, “Where that came from I couldn’t have told you”—and then realizes he’s not writing this story, it’s writing him, and that’s just how things happen in D.C. — Review of Contemporary Fiction

Review: “Sometimes this book is funny, and sometimes it’s very funny. What it is, is an acidic romp through the political high and low roads of Washington, where the President is known as POTUS and Hillary (sometimes) as FLOTUS, with a wacky cast. The book is dense with allusion–political, literary, filmic, operatic, mythological, and more–uncommon in today’s watery literary scene. The writing can veer from plain to stream-of-consciousness to labyrinthine. Thus, the same page can yield “Clinton is a masochistic hick out of Dogpatch turned high toned sadist,” and “Clinton as Clint Eastwood–the quintessential Quantrill’s Raiders personality.” — Library Journal

Etc:
* James McCourt profiled and interviewed about Delancey’s Way by Patsy Southgate

Excerpt:

I never went to bed early in my life.

Until a minute ago . . .

You might have known it would all start out that way.

The first sentence I heard in my own head on the Metroliner to Washington. I’d put down Democracy (you know, the novel of Washington by “Anonymous” turned out to be written — depending on your politics, or your psychic — by either Henry or Clover Adams), gone to the back of the club car and from the window watched the tracks seeming to issue in two steel ribbons from underneath the train, then returned to my seat, a permeable signifier full of metaphoric dread, and succumbed to a little nap, tired of others’ voices and of my own plans.

No systematic chronicle, I told myself as I drifted off, but more a rambling disquisition, with copious historical discussion and many anecdotes.

I never went to bed early in my life. Until a minute ago. Two lies, a sentence and a phrase, in the forced conjunction (or dual emphasis) of which there arises a tensile ambiguity — between the stronger and the weaker force — that sparks narrative. Always a forced conjunction, a duality, since what is a true sequence (this/that) if not an uninterrupted flow of conscious-radical-unconscious ideation-pulsation, lasting from the moment of birth until the moment of insanity and/or death? Nothing.

(cont.)

 

 

Wayfaring at Waverly in Silverlake (Knopf, 2002)

Description: After skewering Clinton-era Washington in Delancey’s Way (2000), McCourt, stylistically rambunctious and metaphysically inclined, descends on 1980s Hollywood and rejoins diva Mawrdew Czgowchwz (the subject of his first novel) and movie star Kaye Wayfaring, Mawrdew’s daughter-in-law, mother of twins, and the focus of an earlier short story collection. In this set of interlocking tales, each a droll riff on one of the seven deadly sins, Kaye, who misses her dear, departed friend, Marilyn Monroe, has just flummoxed everyone by appearing in a wildly successful rock video and is now working on a movie about an Irish pirate queen. Such story elements are deeply embedded within a fizzing hubbub of witty conversations spiked with Hollywood trivia and mysticism that morphs into jousts, reminiscences, and philosophical disputations to form a scintillating montage not unlike those of novelist Paul West. As for McCourt, all his canniness and irony can’t conceal his love for Hollywood and its obsessions.


Blurb
: ‘In Wayfaring at Waverly in Silver Lake, his hilarious deconstruction of the Hollywood signs, James McCourt is, as usual, erudite, recondite, and absolutely right.’ — Fran Lebowitz

Excerpt:

As out beyond long tinted windows Los Angeles lay gleaming in the bright air, while in the studio commissary the televised women’s Olympic marathon neared culmination on the multiscreen background wall, Leland de Longpré, Hyperion Pictures’ controversial new chief of concept evolution, was speaking words of caution and concern to the chief of publicity over lunch.

“Vanity of vanity, all—”

“But I didn’t say ‘vanity,’ ” the chief of publicity, purposedly attuned to words, objected. “I said ‘pride.’ And please don’t tell me they’re the same thing, because even if I don’t know exactly what vanity is, I do know what I think it isn’t.”

“True enough,” the strategist allowed (managing, his lunch partner thought, to sound both affirmative and not). “The Dodgers, it must be said, brought to Los Angeles a cohesive focus, enforcing a civic pride that had never been provided by the self-serving motion-picture industry. I’ve even heard it said the Dodgers in effect brought to bear on their adopted city the mysterious assimilative pride of Brooklyn—never to be confused with the exploitive vanity of Manhattan—thus creating, principally, but not entirely, through the Jewish factor, the atmosphere for the construction of a new civilization in what had been a desert.”

“As a matter of fact,” the publicist continued, boldly staking out his own territory, conceptually speaking, “whenever I’ve heard the word—‘vanity’—all I’ve thought of really is a piece of set decoration—one of those boudoir units with big round deco mirrors. Jean Harlow had one in Dinner at Eight.”

“It would seem clear,” Leland continued, relentlessly, “that vanity is not, all said and done, to be confused with devotional intensity. Devotional intensity is not vain; quite the opposite.”

(cont.)

 

 

Queer Street: Rise and Fall of an American Culture, 1947-1985 (W.W. Norton, 2003)

Official description: Beginning with the influx of liberated veterans into downtown New York in the golden age before McCarthyism, Queer Street tells the explosive story of gay culture in the latter half of the twentieth century. Coming out himself in the “buttoned-up/button-down” 1950s, McCourt positions his own experience against the whirlwind history of the era, summoning a pageant of characters that includes Harry Hay, Judy Garland, Tennessee Williams, Gore Vidal, and Truman Capote. In a learned but lively voice, McCourt highlights the major events of the period: the landmark eruption at the Stonewall Inn, the AIDS crisis that brought an end to a century of bathhouse culture, the ascendancy of the Christian right, and finally the social acceptance of gays that paradoxically marked the demise of queer culture.

Review: ‘The book is less a memoir or a social history of the neighborhoods and meeting places of old gay New York than a thick scrapbook of the distinctive gay cultural styles, sensibilities and forms of literacy that reached their apogee in postwar New York and Los Angeles, where the plays, songs, films and stars that constituted so much of the gay métier took shape. Drawing on his preternatural command of that postwar gay cultural universe, Mr. McCourt brings a learned queer eye to the oeuvre of gay icons ranging from Bette Davis, Judy Garland and Holly Woodlawn to Luchino Visconti, Douglas Sirk and Ronald Firbank (a fey novelist of the 1910’s and 20’s whose style Mr. McCourt’s may most closely resemble), as well as Susan Sontag’s famous 1964 essay on camp, the riches of opera and the cultural poverty of the standing-room line at the new Met compared with the old.’ (Read more) — The New York Times Book Review

Brief excerpt:



“I hate to be a pill, to piss on smoldering embers, no matter how warming, but the facts are these: it was neither Larry Kramer’s hysterics, the courageous reporting of the New York Native, Everett Koop’s blinding-hot moral flash or anything else that turned the tide of AIDS recognition in America and of AIDS research funding by the American government. It was nothing less or other than Ronald Reagan’s sentimental – goddamnit – feelings for a fellow guy he just happened to like a whole hell of a lot from their Hollywood days, a guy called Rock Hudson who came down with the goddamn thing. And if you don’t think them’s the facts, go look them up. As our story winds down to a close, darlings, in the year 1985, rather than cut AIDS funding by ten million, Ronald Reagan – or more probably Nancy, as Ronnie was already, courtesy of Alzheimer’s, more and more lunching out, though not in public – was upped to one hundred million, and, get this right please, a 270 percent increase in AIDS funding. You see, darlings, all that heaven allows written on the wind by tarnished angels is an imitation of life.”

Etc.:
* Podcast: James McCourt interviewed about Queer Street on NPR’s ‘Bookworm’
* A profile of James McCourt from Time Out New York

 

 

Now Voyagers (Turtle Point Press, 2007)

Description: Now Voyagers
is James McCourt’s long awaited sequel to Mawrdew Czgowchwz. Like his earlier novel, Now Voyagers delights in the whys and wherefors of celebrity and is a tribute to the triumph of art and music; love and humor. ‘Tragic wisdom, we discover, can also be le gai savoir, and James McCourt has made a real specialty of transforming intricate wisdom into no more than discerning frivolity, no less than divine frenzy; as he puts it: a running-neon paradigm of the quintessence of diva-dienst! For the purposes (if that is not too grandiose a word) of such fiction, fun is fun, but folly a kind of fate. How I envy Mawrdew’s new readers, though remaining helplessly content as a repeat defender.’ — Richard Howard

Visit Turtle Point Press

Excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

There was a time,” she then said, “time out of mind.”

“So to begin,” he replied, “at the beginning alike of the story and its solemn telling. Only what we’re actually up to here in this stately room as the hour of the wolf approaches is more in the nature of the good old Invocation in Medias Résumé. And so far from our topos being of a time time out of mind, we’ve got it on both our minds big time and why not, so? Aristotle says. After this comes the construction of Plot, which some rank first one with a double story. That’s us front and center, right down the line.

“But yes, for the listening world the standard model of the universe of fable always kicks in with Fado, fado, once-upon-a-time, Il y a, Es war, ci-fu-all requisite portal tropes of children’s stories, of creation fables, of foundation protocols, and the sonorous sagas of the impossibly valiant. Nice to know we’re in with the right crowd, anyway, so far as posterity goes-although enforst, parfit, whilom, and eftsoons we must forcibly abjure, lest we tip our hand too early and queer the pitch altogether. How does that sound? Yawpish enough, think you, for the general populace?”

“You’ve captured my attention-but the story is you always have.”

The clock of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower four blocks away on Madison Square had just struck eight familiar tones, signaling the half hour, in this instance half past eleven on the signal evening of June 16, 2004. In the front parlor of 47 Gramercy Park North, two old friends had sat down together at an old walnut oval Sheraton table to regroup their forces: S.D.J. (The) O’Maurigan and the woman once known (as she would have it, but in truth known still to the knowing world such as it was) as Mawrdew Czgowchwz, oltrano diva of the twentieth century, lately registered in the civic directory as Maev Cohalen, MAPA, psychoanalyst at New York’s Center for Modern Psychoanalytic Studies and psychotherapist for the cadets and teaching staff at the Police Academy on East Twentieth Street.

The friends, elected affinities and denizens both of the night and the city, had just come in from an evening at Symphony Space on Upper Broadway, having participated in the boisterous Bloomsday centennial reading of James Joyce’s Ulysses. (He had enacted Simon Dedalus from “The Wandering Rocks” and she Gertie MacDowell from “Nausicaa.”) Now, in their one-room preceptory they had begun the work of the midnight hour, the examination of a collection of tapes dating back forty-seven years to the nineteen fifty-six-fifty-seven theatrical season, and a dusty manuscript entitled MNOPQR STUVWXYZ, unearthed earlier in the day from what they called the press, a large mahogany cupboard on the top floor of the town house. Each looked to the other uncertainly, wondering what had they done, what were they about to do?

“Here,” he then said, “is a definite beginning, lest our plan be accused of lacking the most defining characteristics of a strategy-forethought, preparation, a definite objective in mind. A manuscript in the form of an extended telegram, entailing the allegorized matter of an epic fable, has been dislodged after many decades from its hiding place in an old cupboard, and the following story, correcting the fable and forging its corrected elements into a fragment of a history is, by many separate voices, told in full, or as nearly as can be. Ought to be enough for anybody is our feeling.”

“You hurried down that same evening of the sailing and had the thing dispatched shore to ship.”

“Yes, There was a time, time out of mind-the opening words of the offering we found uncanny, the offering called MNOPQR STUVXYZ, unpronounceable, but immediately recognizable and clocked for what it was, that sent us on a season’s merry chase after means, motives, opportunities, and mischiefs.

“The whole of it, entirely in majuscule. The longest telegram on record, dispatched from the Western Union office across Broadway from the old house, up the block from Longchamps. Shore to ship-although come to think of it now, Leo Lerman always called Manhattan itself a great ocean liner, so possibly ship to ship. And even now, understanding much that youth and ignorance caused me at the time to remark without comprehending, I find it hard to disentangle the … etcetera. Yes, there was a time, time out of mind … so there was.”

The woman who had been Mawrdew Czgowchwz, oltrano, took up the long telegram of the allegorical text (representing her as Mnopqr Stuvwxyz) she had first read another life ago (or so it seemed, without exaggeration) while crossing the Atlantic with her then companion Jacob Beltane, oltrano, on the Queen Mary in late September, nineteen fifty-six.

THERE WAS A TIME TIME OUT OF MIND IN THE SEMPITERNAL PROGRESS OF ITAL DIVADIENST AT THAT SUSPENSORY PAUSE JUST PRIOR TO THE ADVENT OF WHAT CAME TO BE KNOWN AS MNOPQRDOLATRY OR IN CERTAIN QUARTERS ITAL STUVWXYZCHINA WHEN THE CULT OF NIRVANA MORI FLOURISHED IN THE HOTHOUSE AMBIENCE OF THE CROSSROADS CAFE ON 42ND STREET ACROSS BROADWAY FROM THE VERY HOTEL WHERE IN THE GREAT DAYS CARUSO HAD IN SOMETHING LIKE THE SACRAMENTAL SENSE RECEIVED DESTINN WHOSE PALMY LOBBY ONCE ORMOLU MARBLE AND VELVET HAD BEEN TRANSFORMED INTO A VAST DRUGSTORE AND WHERE LATELY IN CARUSOS SUITE A PODIATRIST INSTALLED STOP THERE AT THE CROSSROADS CAFE IN THE SHADOW OF THE TIMES BUILDING NOVEMBER TO NOVEMBER FOR MORI WAS A DEAD CENTER SCORPIO THE GREAT WORLDS RAW CONCERNS WERE FLATLY IGNORED

The Crossroads Café: if Manhattan was a great ocean liner, the Crossroads Café was one of the places you could cross from first down to third-to social steerage. In that it resembled a chapel, didn’t it, and even if you think of it a swimming pool-other places on board for crossing up or down.

“Crossing up, crossing down: dress stage. Passing ships-there’s an idea, if not quite-”

“Original. It was a dark and stormy-”

“No, it was nothing like a dark and stormy night. There was a moon.”

“That there was, waning from full, viewed from ship’s deck in Manhattan as well-shining across the Great Meadow in the Park. This night, though dark enough here on the street where you live, isn’t stormy, not yet. But then in New York lit up the way it is, on such languid summer nights how often come torrential rain and crashing thunder, too, like on the event-driven night of the first Bloomsday itself, when and while in the aftermath of old hurts new-enacted, two famously unlikely companions … but they’ve likely not yet gotten to Eumaeus uptown, so let’s bide our time in sultry air and set about our business, the drawing up of blueprints for a biosphere.”

“You wrote a poem about that waning moon.”

It was that cool, clear late September evening on the day they sailed away, when we looked up and saw Pagliaccio in the moon-on the wane from full to gibbous. The wan expression on him-that moue, the oval mouth, sad eyes. Who was it said, ‘Look at him-he’s singing “Plaisir d’amour” and he’s just come to “ne dure qu’un moment.”

“And on it went, detailing how the face in the moon, eyes, nose, mouth, is formed by the shadows cast upon the light-reflecting whole by the so-called maria, specifically the … but of course I don’t remember.

“And from there on to parallel imagined voyages across those seas whose names I don’t recall, to the voyage out of the second line, employing every sort of word Arisotle designated-well, there are eight of those, and I do, or could recall them and what they had to do with the words of ‘Plaisir d’amour’ in relation to the poet’s sorrow of the moment-but why now? More important surely to consider the ambiguity of Pound’s news that stays news in view of the two immediately available meanings of stay-leaving out the one that had to do with whalebone corsets. Stay as in ‘Linger awhile, thou art so fair!’ and stay as in stop any further thing from happening and let us have an end to news.”

“The poet is clairvoyant. ‘Ne dure qu’un moment’-and our moment had only just gotten under way.”

“Yes, well, it’s easy to make predictions, is it not-especially concerning the future.”

“Yogi Berra. We had a yogi on board.”

“And yet one insists there must be more to it all-pictura loquens-than tick-rock, Tag aus, Tag ein, E pluribus unum and ashes, ashes, all fall down. The cultured young cry out, ‘Do tell us about-we want to hear allabouteveryfuckinglastoneofem, Notes and queries, Q. and A., relating to the many consequential initiatives with which they became closely involved. The laughs the frowns, the upsandowns all first nature to them then and not in short, in long, the works. And unlike some in the city we do have all night.

“But unlike the authors of the long dispatch again to hand-who saw themselves, it seems, not as the bowler-and-stick vaudevillians they were, but as twin rhapsodes of mock-epic caliber, exuberantly flinging out their random paradoxical teasers as substitutes for Apollonian objects of contemplation, their fiery emotional effects as substitutes for Dionysian enchantment.

“For they were clever ones, as we soon discovered. Students of Comparative Literature no less, possessed, we saw at once, as we read through their unsettling text, of adroit, cool, and penetrating insight into theme, motivation, and character, keen in their primitive, exuberant ambition to get it.

“Fresh as paint their grasp of ideas introduced in Auerbach’s Mimesis, and wielding an altogether more subtle knife than those blades thrust into the hands of the slashers recruited by the semiotic vogue. Determined to represent by annotating the fluctuations of their attitudes, as well as what they perpetrate and undergo, men’s characters, and women’s, too.

“Cruising our ranks in unobtrusive fashion during the intermissions, then later at the Crossroads Café dissecting us all down to the bone as an experiment in adaptation and exploitation. And if as it turned out what they were not so good at as they were at allegory and the grand design was smoking out a tail, and thus did finally fall into our clutches, their like never did come about again on the line.”

“Don’t you think they wanted to be caught out all along? I always did.”

“That they made us making them? I suppose so, except that what they seemed to think they were up to the whole time was making us up. The crust!

“That said, we, all these years later making ourselves making them making us do not unroll our design in transparently allegorical fashion. Rather we allow them to unfold themselves as does life itself, which can be either tracked or lived, but never both simultaneously, according to both the uncertainty principle and the phenomenon of self-similarity. In this we are in our fashion true to our many darlings and also appropriately postcontemporary chaotic.

“We care little for plot or for the thudding sameness and strained expectation imbedded in it, seeking to reduce all experience to a carefully tabulated, weighed, and balanced succession of ratified incidents-one fucking thing after another, culminating in the uncovering and publication of the truth that will rock the world … right to sleep.

“For us such schemes have been weighed in the balance and found wanting, as were police reports and journalism for Sherlock Holmes. For in general it may be said of postmodern writing of serious intent that in it, the function of the narrator is just that, no less, no more-to fucking narrate, all right? To describe the fluctuations of movement. He is permitted speculation in time-slip chronicles solely on approximations of distance and duration, and of necessity, that he may be seen as anything but omniscient, on his own infirmities of character and intellect, especially those concerned with the illusion of self-determination, as they are the very ones that tend to support the more preposterous asseverations benighted readers have been encouraged to believe they have been vouchsafed as gospel, beware of the dog.

“Nothing reported concerning the fluctuations of gesture, no speculation on the motivation, or lack of same, in any character-so many spinning in an ever-narrowing gyre-may be confidently taken as read, merely as read about-candidates must write on one side of the paper only; this margin to be left blank for the examiner.

“That also said, in mitigation directly concerning the exercise of free will, and mindful of the conditions that must necessarily obtain in order that our narrator may competently answer the decorum of a legend, any and all remarks acknowledging the constant presence-in-absence of the distant, the strange, the far-out, and further typifications of the scarcely known must be accommodated-imprimatur, nihil obstat-so long that is, as no notion of roman à clef is entertained. We’re out for ummediated, unadorned truth here, and not for floods of spurious verisimilitude-dreaded analog to the symptom of flooding in a psychosis.

“And a good thing at that, given the tendency of tropes to mutate-indeed mutate into life itself, taking command of the text altogether, making its story their story-so that it may be said of certain texts not so much that they are lifelike as that the reading of them is like the experience of living. No book can live two lives, mar dhea.

“Because for the slab of a thing to be read as a true roman à clef, according to the latest postmodern formulation forensic multiples: a survey, they’d want to have more keys on their turnkeys’ rings than are turned clockwise on any given day up the Hudson at Sing-Sing-and that’s straight from the source, sparkling and bottled on the premises in clear glass.

“Moreover, we don’t care what people do-in fact they can do it in the streets if they like-alarums and excursions galore, fife and drum, and the monkey wrapped his tale around a flagpole. More power and good luck to them now there are no more horses likely to be frightened by them-certainly not the noble steeds of the mounted police. Our attitude will remain that of still, calm, tranquil contemplation with open eyes, gaze unaverted, a state which beholds the images boldly presented to it and declares ‘just so.'”

“Still and all,” she observed, “whoever they turn out to be, they should be doing something worthy of note to attract the world’s indulgent attention-something, indeed, besides vibrating.”

“Agreed, and with the proviso that we shall remain less interested in what they are up to just then than in what they are thinking of getting up to or remembering what they’ve gotten up to before, we don’t wish to stop them, or see them stopped.

“Not for long anyway. Only long enough to freeze-frame and cut into them, to examine in cross section their motives, means, and opportunities, to arrive at some sense of their origins beyond the bounds of sense-should anybody anywhere anytime wish to know just what’s going on-the accurate depiction of primal conflicts being ever better served by allegory than romance. And then, somehow, to reinstigate fluency from what has been halted.

“And in their own words, not in the words of avid narrative adepts whose accounts inevitably climax with hair-raising escapes for some-all colors and lengths of hair at that-leaving hearts beating out of chests all around the town, and for unfortunate others, catapulted bodies splayed at unnatural angles on outcroppings of jagged rock. Absolutely not. Our inspiration is drawn from Maupertuis and his principle of least action, forerunner of quantum mechanics.”

“In their own words.”

“A debriefing.”

“Had they a brief?”

“We know they did-to follow the lead of Mawrdew Czgowchwz.”

“Where to?”

“Where to. Well, in the end I see us all together at the Grand Hotel, each in his own room, reading the emergency instructions on the back of the door, prior to dressing for the coming occasion, then going down in the elevator to the lobby to await her descent down the great staircase to get into the limousine, us following along in taxis-”

“Not you, you always rode in the car.”

“Didn’t I just. In any event, surely to the opera house.”

“And what is she singing?”

“What else but Minnie, of course, her favorite role.”

“It was-still is. You know, in murder mysteries, I’ve always liked best the ones with everybody gathered in one place and they each and all have a motive.”

“Interesting projection.”

“Oh?”

“What else, when it was yourself up there on the stage slaying them all.”

“You’ve forgotten not for the first time either.”

“How neglectful not-for the first time either.”

“Like a serial killer.”

Etc:
* Podcast: James McCourt, Edmund White, Camille Paglia, and Alan Hollinghurst discuss gay literature and queer theory on NPR’s Bookworm

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! I’ll look for her book, thank you. It was seriously polar outside here yesterday, yow. We’re speaking with the possibly helpful producer guy this afternoon, so fingers extremely crossed. Yeah, it’s really the small talk that makes parties hellish, isn’t it. I guess too much huge talk could be a problem too, but … May love have done his FedEx on Crystal meth number and gotten your dad’s gift on his doorstep. Safe trip today and cozy arrival. Love explaining to my head cold that three days is a more than sufficient lifespan for a head cold and it’s time to die, G. ** Misanthrope, Trusting you were the embodiment of gingerly. ** Jeff Coleman, Me too. Oh well. No, I haven’t seen that Ulver thing, and thank you very much! I’ll heavily absorb it. ** NLK, Hi. The wife of the Bresson actor is a writer of fiction who publishes with my publisher, so, in that case, it wasn’t too hard to snag him. The woman who played Joan of Arc in Bresson’s film of the same name came as well, and I don’t know how that happened. Are you doing any holiday-like things or thing that hold any potential excitement of even a mild variety for you? ** _Black_Acrylic, ‘Happy as Lazzaro’ is really nice, especially the first half or two thirds of it. Cheers to you too! ** seb 🦠, Hi. Twine, okay. I would need serious technical help. I did actually make a short game a couple of years ago with Zac and some other people — an ‘explore a haunted house’ game that we partly made as prep for our film. It still isn’t finished. We need a little more money to make it playable, but we made a prototype and a walkthrough video that we showed at an event here. I think it’s kind of fun. Purposely very early 90s, early tech, blocky look and animation. We should finish it. I loved CD-rom games. I was late coming to the greatness of video games, and I started with CD-roms. With ‘Myst’, actually. I miss the wild experimentation back then. I actually did a post of my the favorite 90s DC-rom games a few years ago. I’ll find it. Here. Do you know any of them? Is the scripting of the scenes the hardest part? So, do you start with a concept or visual idea or … ? Other than an annoying head cold, the week’s ok so far. We’re doing the very final editing on our film. On Friday friends and I will eat our annual buche de noel, and that’s pretty much the extent of my holiday celebrations. What about you? ** Sypha, Hi. Yeah, I regret missing Golnoosh’s stint. I’m going to meet her for the first time next month, so that’s cool. Nice Ford/Lucas quote. Well, yes, get a Midgette to be you. That’s a good idea, and a highly NeoDecadent idea, may I add. ** Garrett, Hi. I do reread posts sometimes. Not as rule. Apparently someone on Insta accused my blog of being AI the other day. I weirdly or not so weirdly relate to what you wrote especially the nature of ‘making and wanting’. I read this shit, My current head cold isn’t making that terrible easy, but I am and do. Did you make art? You sort of did on my blog, but hopefully in a less transitory spot? Nah, no roses necessary, no ass that I can see. ** Jeff J, Thanks, thanks! I did a gig-like Butthole Surfers post ages ago. I should go find it. Doing a Sebadoh gig is a really good idea. I think to do a great Chic one would require including all their tracks they made for other people and that might be too much work even for me. Nile Rodgers is doing his Chic show here soon, I never saw them, and I’m wondering if I should go. If you want to go straight to heaven listen to Chic’s ‘My Feet Keep Dancing’. I love Jefferson Airplane. That’s another good idea. I think if I had to choose, my favorite Harry Mathews might be ‘The Sinking of the Odradek Stadium’. Great talking with you too. No, I missed Gisele’s piece. Next time. We’re talking to someone today who might or might not offer us a way forward re: the film. God, please. You are doing the surgery, okay. Man, obviously the most extremely ultra-best wishes and luck with that. If you get a spare, working finger, do check in with a progress report. Much love, me. ** tomk, Hi, Tom. Always thrilled to spread the greatness of Cheap Trick a little further. Luck galore getting through those last worky days. And then .., Xmas! Hugs, bud. ** Cody Goodnight, Hi, Cody. I still have a cold, but could be worse. Doable, mine too, so far at least. I loved ‘Happy as Lazarro’ while it was set out in the country and a little less when it moved to the city, but, yes, I liked it. That main actor boy is amazing. I’m guessing you’ll like those two films, maybe just because I do. Did you? Day of days, my friend. ** Steve Erickson, Maybe because the internet was still pretty primitive, I didn’t see much sign of Columbine fandom at the time I wrote that novel, just massive demonising of teens by the media and blabbermouths. ** Darby 😞🤧🧸, Hey, hey! No, I don’t know the Bath School Massacre. Our didn’t until now. It sounds extremely interesting. Of course I’m going to go scour what I can find of it. Crazy. I have a cold, so I feel fairly shit, but I’m functioning. I lost my wallet recently and didn’t find it, which is worse, let me tell you. It’s so weird when adults romanticise adulthood when they know full well that adulthood is as much of a problem as it is a plus. My advice: she’s being selfish, ignore that stuff. I’m hoping the hang out with your friends will relieve you of the false idea that you’re stupid and hopeless because that’s a phantom idea. My plans for today are to keep working on the final edit of our film and talk with someone who might help solve our financial problems (but probably won’t) and blow my nose a lot and eat cold sesame noodle that Zac very kindly made for me. You, other than your hang out? That was probably enough though? I am bringing a coat for sure because it’s fucking brutal cold here at the moment. Of course I think you’re kind. You’re a kind as kind can be. ** Right. Today’s restored post is so old that I actually wore a little text in it which I havant done in a billion years. James McCourt is definitely up there with the most under-recognised great American novelists, and I am always very happy to spread his word. Please give him and his stuff your all, whatever that means, today. See you tomorrow.

10 Comments

  1. Garrett

    Jeez, Dennis, don’t read mine if they’re too long for christs’ sake/ not worth it and I’m so sorry you’re sick. Its good you have someone to watch out for you but ouch on the cold weather and the film-stress. I’m crashing out now having just finished listening to Andy Heck Boyd’s “It’s A Wonderful Exorcism” (audio of “It’s A Wonderful Life” and “The Exorcist” played simultaneously; perfectly incandescent). Yes, art also occurred (not here but in the studio) I’m gonna lay off writing for a while-/ Please rest up if you can and please feel better and Be peaceful -XO g’night

  2. Bill

    Sorry to hear about the lingering head cold, Dennis. Hope you’re better by the time you read this.

    Just got back from Chiang Mai. It’s a relatively mellow place by big Asian city standards, Muay Thai studios every couple blocks not withstanding. Joe was kind enough to arrange a pickup of Heat Death; what a lovely book. He wasn’t well enough to meet, unfortunately.

    I have to admit I couldn’t get into Mawrdew Czgowchwz, but that was over 10 years ago. Time Remaining sounds like my thing, just added it to the to-read list.

    Bill

  3. David Porter

    Hi Dennis just checking in to say have a great christmas pal!!!! I hope you are keeping well!
    take care buddy! xxxx

  4. Tosh Berman

    With respect to “Wayfaring at Waverly in Silverlake,” is he talking about the street Waverly Drive in Silver Lake? I want to know because I live on Waverly Drive in Silver Lake.

  5. NLK

    Oh cool! Are her books any good? I love that Joan of Arc performance as well, maybe my favorite even in such distinguished company. Holiday-wise, I’ll be heading to Lyon this weekend for the lights but other than that I think I’ll be staying around Paris for activities yet undetermined, other than finishing a draft of a story and plowing through a promising reading stack of the new Glück, Malone Dies, and some French reading practice. I kind of prefer a lonely holiday anyhow, it’s nice to soak up the revelers and city bustle in silence. What about you? Any bûches catching your eye?

  6. Sypha

    Well, of these I’ve read Mawrdew Czgowchwz at least. Should get to Time Remaining one day as I know it was on one of your old Top 50 novels lists back in the day.

    Dennis, has the blog ever done a Batman day?

  7. _Black_Acrylic

    James McCourt is a new name for me because of course he is! I loved the extracts and his interview clips. If his work were to be made more widely available, that would make a fine Xmas present.

  8. Kettering

    Mr. Dennis– Oh no! You’re sick again. You know, some colds actually last sometimes upwards of 6-8 weeks; I wonder if this might be the same old one popping it’s head up again, perhaps? I know it’s weird, but have you ever tried Emergen-C or Immune-C or whatever those supplements are called? I don’t take anything but those, and only prn., but they actually really seem to help. None-the-less, I’m so sorry for everything you’re grappling with– Please, please take care and stay warm (is your place warm enough? I’ll send an electric blanket!)! –Mwxwaaa!!! -k
    P.S. I’ll be switching name soon after the holidays, but it occurred to me that I can keep the same e-mail (only you see it, right?), so you’ll know who it is, yes? I only do this because people from my job (which I finally quit Yaaaaayyyy!!!) tracked me and made a lot of fun (obvs my black hair is too morbid, my language too formal, my tiny, tiny, nearly not there lisp makes me sound ‘suprisingly dumb’ (yup, they actually said that behind my back– ), my clothes are like Where’s Waldo and my tofu lunch looks like a ‘dirty sponge’– I am literally quoting these people—so-called grown-ups who I tried really hard to be nice to bc it was a job– Anywho– So, you get why I’m changing-out (job and name)?– Okay, Sir, so be well, as fast as Michael Phelps swimmingly well! -k.
    P.S.S. I take none of these things seriously, so you know. They aren’t even close to knowing who I am. 🙂

  9. Steve Erickson

    Have you been able to see a doctor? There are a lot of mysterious respiratory bugs flying around so far this winter.

    SAW X is worth seeing for the gloriously Sadean scene where Jigsaw gets water-boarded with gallon upon gallon of blood.

  10. Corey Heiferman

    @Kettering your self-deprecating self-description sounds jaw-droppingly adorable. Your former coworkers must be into/jealous of you at some level.

    McCourt looks like very good stuff that I must get my hands on ASAP. Haven’t felt this way about an American book in a long time.

    I’ve been thinking about CD-ROM games lately. My programming teacher is a game designer and simple games could be fun projects. Have you heard of the TV game show Hugo? It was popular mostly in Europe in the 90s. Contestants would call in and push buttons on their phones to guide Hugo through a treacherous maze. Winners would get modest prizes in the mail. My friend told me it was popular in Israel. You hear the phone button-pushing tone every time the player makes a move.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAyPQEbL_14&ab_channel=DIEHUGOSHOW

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