Frears | Goodlord | E-Book | www.sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 218 Seiten

Frears Goodlord

An Email
1. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-1-914236-44-0
Verlag: Rough Trade Books
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark

An Email

E-Book, Englisch, 218 Seiten

ISBN: 978-1-914236-44-0
Verlag: Rough Trade Books
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark



Taking the form of one long email addressed to an estate agent, Goodlord is a fictional memoir of habitation, a genre-defying novelistic text that beautifully evokes the people and places of our lives--the spaces of work, those that may or may not be 'home', sites of trauma and ecstasy. Showing all the control of voice one would expect from a poet of her rare skill, Ella Frears has created a book that is as funny as it is harrowing, and beautifully skewers the contemporary housing crisis while questioning the fundamental desires, drivers and disappointments that lie at the heart of our obsession with 'property'.  

Ella Frears is a poet and artist based in London. Her collection Shine, Darling (Offord Road Books, 2020) was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection, and the T. S. Eliot Prize for Poetry. Ella has been Poet in Residence for Tate St Ives, the National Trust, Royal Holloway University physics department, John Hansard Gallery and the Dartington Trust's grade II listed gardens, among others. In 2023 she was a Creative Fellow for Exeter University's environmental history department. She is currently RLF fellow for the Courtauld Institute of Art. Ella hosts Tears for Frears on Soho Radio.
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Weitere Infos & Material


Dear Ava,

It’s not your fault this caught me like it did –

– the name disturbs me most. As though

we’re meant to pledge ourselves, to call our faceless

landlord or , and I should – should I? –

feel graced, or blessed to live under this roof?

Oh Ava, I was snagged on it.

To tell the truth a thread came loose,

I should explain:

picture me in this little flat you rent us, lips

parted, blowing my coffee’s meniscus into waves – soft

at first, then crashing up the mug’s insides

and over,

yes, the sheets will surely stain,

and I was thinking of the old gods, Ava,

and ships they sank without notice, without malice,

I was reading an article, just the top, peeking

over the paywall; the surface-foam of current events

lifted with a teaspoon,

, I said.

, he replied.

I like my men bitter.

It’s been a while since we’ve – well,

we did have thrush –

– see, Ava,

the article spoke of basements being built across the city

,

I think that was the gist but

what intrigued me most was the idea that

once they’d dug – what – three floors down?

the digger was too big to get back out,

cheaper then, it said,

to dig a little grave and bury it there – imagine!

Thousands of diggers entombed across the city…

you must have many questions but I only read the tip

of it,

it struck me though,

and I thought about the summer’s day

a surveyor friend, well, more-than-friend,

let me climb into a digger’s little cab and pull the earth

from deep inside a trench,

a thrill!

Perhaps you’ve also tried,

I made a joke, a good one,

about burying a body, then my phone rang –

my uncle had died.

All those diggers sealed in concrete, underground,

so sad,

and then your email, Ava,

and though it was a Sunday,

that soft buzz is like a siren’s call – I couldn’t help but tap

the icon,

I was in bed.

Did I mention that? Lazy, you might think, but

I’d had this dream…

I was wandering through a house I visit

often, though I’ve never actually been.

The Big House, I call it.

The grand construction of my sleep.

It’s funny,

but I’ve never dreamed of here – this little flat – though

it’s – what, nine years now? –

you’d know.

I suppose these boxy multi-purpose rooms don’t suit

the architecture of dreams.

The Big House has winding halls, and grounds,

and countless rooms that shift,

shall I show you around?

Might be nice to take a tour yourself, no?

Come on in,

observe the polished concrete floors, the

big bay windows, and that view! The stars and planets

swimming – the universe in perpetual bloom,

and inside, my previous day unfolding

like a fern,

look there!

You might think that’s my granny on the carpet,

in child’s pose, but things change in the peripherals,

stare directly and you’ll see she is in fact

a rotisserie chicken.

Ava, speak to it,

it might speak back! And tell you all about

its chicken life, that ended in

my kitchen –

that reminds me,

Re: my previous emails about the oven, Ava,

how we have to stick a chopstick through the back

and manually spin the fan like cranking an old car to

make it work,

all those emails to your office…

the dodgy lock,

the rising damp,

that swollen crack across the worktop – Ava, I can’t bear

to press it!

Though it’s begging to be pressed

and no reply until this email, Ava,

that closed compound, enough to

make me housesick, how I hate it!

Hated him too, first time we met

that surveyor more-than-friend

it was winter,

I was queueing at the cinema, lost

in thought, I was thinking about dogs – the extra things

they see and smell and hear beyond our reach…

He wanted to get by, I hadn’t seen,

and so he moved me with the rolled-up newspaper

in his hand.

Startled – shifted – I looked at the paper

rolled-up tight, then at his eyes, cold, already locked

ahead and moving past me and I was sure, that in that

moment, I had thought so deeply of dogs

I’d transformed.

Ava, please don’t stress, I know pets aren’t

allowed here – honestly,

I’ve never even known a dog.

Once when I was walking home I saw

a small, quite fluffy dog beside its owner.

As I passed I met its eye and thought,

I heard my brain annunciate the words, my mouth,

of course, was closed.

The dog began to bark, tugging on its lead,

gnashing its tiny teeth, growling…

The owner was shocked,

Is there a digger under your house, Ava?

Hard not to think of them like buried pets.

Not dogs, but diplodocuses their arms like long necks,

raised.

Thousands of machine graves.

That uncle – my uncle – was an impressive man,

bodily I mean, broad and tall. A brick. A house.

His wife was mean and small.

They put his coffin on a gurney,

I guess to save his friends the struggle.

It looked odd to me,

I much prefer the carrying of men by men –

the gravity.

My uncle’s small, mean wife wore lace.

She’d paced about the house waiting for the hearse as

though about to go on stage.

The cemetery was on this steep, steep slope,

ankles buckling in their black-heeled shoes.

The greyest sea beyond, the houses far below.

Everything to the side of grief. Even the sun

beside the point, you know?

The priest was young, I’d watched him

kiss the book and thought the kiss a little wet for death.

Anyway,

the undertaker almost lost the gurney

to the slope.

I willed it, I confess!

To speed past your small, mean widow and her

ghoulish friends, and shoot over the edge, to make one

final joke, refuse the grave they’d dug for you,

take flight –

now there’s a death!

Do you believe in ghosts?

You must, Ava. I don’t.

And yet I have seen two.

Seen one, heard another.

As a child, whenever I had a fever, I’d hallucinate:

clocks, where no clocks were, the hands spinning

at a weird speed, too fast but also sort of… lagging.

It’s common, I’ve heard, in children – maybe you used to

see things too.

Sometimes I’d see the ceiling gently falling in,

a train hurtling towards me – much too fast… and yet

too slow.

During one especially bad night, my mother called

a doctor. He asked to speak to me, she handed me the phone.

He asked. He had an accent, maybe

French.

, I whispered.

, he said,

‘Darling’ – I know!

No doctor’s ever been as tender since!

Thing is, Ava, it worked. I never saw the train, or clocks,

or ceiling

coming down again.

That doctor’s voice became a talisman of sorts, you see –

do you? – where I’m going with this…

whenever I was overwhelmed, I’d feel that weird

speed push me forwards, drag me

back,

and I’d play

his voice

inside my head,

and everything

would settle,

Ava,

do you

understand,

for years

I comforted

myself with ,

,

and then

offhand

one day

I told the story

at a dinner

that my mother

was also at

and after, quietly

she said,

,

,

,

,

,

,

Ava, what the fuck.

Better for me to say he was...



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