Lost Memory of Skin

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TheMachine
Posts: 9
Joined: Sat Dec 31, 2011 12:12 pm

Lost Memory of Skin

Post by TheMachine »

Great book have any of you read it?
http://www.amazon.com/Lost-Memory-Skin- ... 0061857637

It is about people like me -- outcasts, on the fringe of society, marginalized, etc.

I actually am reading the ePub version I downloaded on my iPad (from dropbox opened it in iBooks). Here is an excerpt (via: http://www.npr.org/books/titles/1408209 ... in#excerpt):
It isn't like the Kid is locally famous for doing a good or a bad thing and even if people knew his real name it wouldn't change how they treat him unless they looked it up online which is not something he wants to encourage. He himself like most of the men living under the Causeway is legally prohibited from going online but nonetheless one afternoon biking back from work at the Mirador he strolls into the branch library down on Regis Road like he has every legal right to be there.

The Kid isn't sure how to get this done. He's never been inside a library before. The librarian is a fizzy lady — ginger-colored hair glowing around her head like a bug light, pink lipstick, freckles — wearing a floral print blouse and khaki slacks. She's a few inches taller than the Kid, a small person above the waist but wide in the hips like she'd be hard to tip over. The sign on the counter in front of her says Reference Librarian, Gloria . . . something — the Kid is too nervous to register her last name. She smiles without showing her teeth and asks if she can help him.

Yeah. I mean, I guess so. I dunno, actually.

What are you looking for?

You're like the reference lady, right?

Right. Do you need to look up something in particular?

The air-conditioning is cranked and the place feels about ten degrees cooler now than it did when the Kid came through the door and he suddenly realizes he's shivering. But the Kid's not cold, he's scared. He's pretty sure he shouldn't be inside a public library even though he can't remember there being any rules specifically against entering one as long as he's not loitering and it's not a school library and there's no playground or school nearby. At least none that he's aware of. You can never be sure though. Playgrounds and schools are pretty much lurking everywhere. And children and teenagers probably come in here all the time this late in the day to pretend they're doing homework or just to hang out.

He looks around the large fluorescent-lit room, scans the long rows of floor-to-ceiling book-lined shelves — it's like a huge super­market with nothing on the shelves but books. It smells like paper and glue, a little moldy and damp. Except for a geeky-looking black guy with glasses and a huge Adam's apple and big wind-catching ears sitting at a table with half-a-dozen thick books and no pictures opened in front of him like he's trying to look up his ancestors there's no other customers in the library.

A customer — that's what he is. He's not here to ask this lady for a job or looking to rent an apartment from her and he's not pan­handling her and he's for sure not going to hit on her — she's way too old, probably forty or fifty at least and pretty low on the hotness scale. No, the Kid's a legitimate legal customer who's strolled into the library to get some information because libraries are where the information is.

So why is he shaking and his arms all covered with goose bumps like he's standing naked inside a meat locker? It's not just because he's never actually been inside a library before even when he was in high school and it was sort of required. He's shivering because he's afraid of the answer to the question that drove him here even though he already knows it.

Listen, can I ask you something? It's kinda personal, I guess.

Of course.

Well, see, I live out in the north end and the people in my neighborhood, my neighbors, they're all like telling me that there might be like a convicted sex offender living there. In the neighborhood.And they tell me that you can just go online to this site that tells you where he's living and all and they asked me if I'd check it out for them. For the neighborhood. Is it true?

Is what true?

You know, that you can just like go online and it'll tell you where the sex offender lives even if you don't know his name or anything.

Well, let's go see, she says like he asked her what's the capital of Vermont and leads the Kid across the room to a long table where six computers are lined up side by side and no one is using them. She sits down in front of one and does a quick Google search under con­victed sex offenders and up pops the National Sex Offender Regis­try which links straight to http://www.familywatchdog.us.The Kid stands at a forward tilt behind her shifting his weight from one foot to the other. He thinks he should run now, get out of here fast before she clicks again but something he can't resist, something he knows is coming that is both scary and familiar keeps him staring over the librarian's shoulder at the screen the same way he used to get held to the screen when cruising pornography sites.The librarian clicks find offenders and then on the new menu hits by location and another menu jumps up and asks for the address.

You're from Calusa, right? What's your neighborhood's zip code?

It's ... ah ... 33135.

Any particular street you want to look up?

He gives her the name of the street where his mother lives and he used to live and she types it in and hits search. A pale green map of his street and the surrounding twenty or so blocks appears on the screen. Small red, green, and orange squares are scattered across the neighborhood like bits of confetti.

Any particular block?

The Kid reaches down to the screen and touches the map on the block where he lived his entire life until he enlisted in the army and where he lived again after he was discharged. A red piece of confetti covers his mother's bungalow and the backyard where he pitched his tent and built Iggy the iguana's outdoor cage.

The librarian clicks onto the tiny square and suddenly the Kid is looking at his mug shot — his forlorn bewildered face — and he feels all over again the shame and humiliation of the night he was booked. There's his full name, first, last, and middle, date of birth, height, weight, his race, color of his eyes and hair, and the details of his crime and conviction.

Slowly the librarian turns in her chair and looks up at the Kid's real face, then back at the computerized version.

That's . . . you. Isn't it?

I gotta go, he whispers. I gotta leave. He backs away from the woman who appears both stunned and saddened but not at all afraid which surprises him and for a few seconds he considers trying to explain how his face and his description and criminal record got there on the computer screen. But there's no way he can explain it to some­one like her, a normal person, a lady reference librarian who helps people look up the whereabouts and crimes of people like him.

Wait don't leave, she says.

I gotta go, he says. I'm sorry. No really, I'm sorry.

Don't be sorry, she says.

No, I'm probably not even supposed to be here, in the library I mean.

He turns and walks stiff-legged than bursts into a run out of the door.
It is about people like me -- outcasts, on the fringe of society, marginalized, etc.
TheMachine
Posts: 9
Joined: Sat Dec 31, 2011 12:12 pm

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by TheMachine »

Here is a review:
http://www.startribune.com/entertainmen ... 28463.html
As the Professor interviews the Kid, and tries to help him, both men's stories begin to emerge, and the Kid's story, at least, begins to change. He is, we learn, the child of a promiscuous and neglectful mother, and, at 10, began to occupy himself with Internet pornography and never let up; his crime was arranging to meet a 14-year-old girl who'd flirted with him online. That he is a virgin makes his status that much weirder and somehow more poignant.

The Professor's life is, in many ways, a product of his own intellect. It has, we are told, "many distinct narratives." These narratives involve his work for various government agencies, some foreign, his political activism, real and assumed -- mole, spy, asset. How much of this is true we -- and the Kid -- can only guess. "If everything is a lie, nothing is," the Professor tells himself. "Just as, if everything is true, nothing is." It's a sentiment oddly echoed by the innocent and ignorant Kid, who late in the book remarks, "If everything's a lie, then nothing's true."

And there's the thing. Banks seems to want his characters to be types true to their monikers. The Kid, who knows nothing of culture, geography, history, current affairs, "is one of those people who have made up the mass of mankind since the species first appeared on the plains of Africa two or three million years ago."

The Kid, that is, is at heart a primitive. He is the story's id. And the Professor? The superego. How these two interact, through the incursions of outraged citizenry and catastrophic acts of nature, is interesting, a curious bit of choreography. But neither of them is altogether believable -- to a reader, or to Banks, who strains to give the barren emotional and intellectual life of the Kid the sort of reach and depth that have always made his writing so compelling.
LawL
Posts: 18358
Joined: Wed Mar 01, 2006 5:49 am

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by LawL »

In b4 Fuck Off Strangler.
Thick, solid and tight in all the right places.
4days
Posts: 5465
Joined: Tue Apr 16, 2002 7:00 am

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by 4days »

you're not an outcast <3

..you're just inadequate. there's nothing special about you at all - that sense of isolation you get is entirely normal. find yourself a nice high bridge, climb up onto the barrier, think about all the things you can't ever achieve (obviously not taking part in the space program, just things like having people that love you or holding down a steady job) then close your eyes and lean forward. you don't even have to take that big step, just lean forward and let gravity do the rest - and take your fucking ipad with you.
werldhed
Posts: 4926
Joined: Sat May 08, 2004 7:00 am

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by werldhed »

TheMachine wrote: outcasts, on the fringe of society
TheMachine wrote: I downloaded on my iPad
FuckOffStrangler
Posts: 10
Joined: Sun Jan 01, 2012 6:07 pm

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by FuckOffStrangler »

Fuck Off Strangler
[b][size=85]FUCK OFF STRANGLER[/size][/b]
brisk
Posts: 3801
Joined: Sun May 07, 2000 7:00 am

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by brisk »

:olo:
SoM
Posts: 8489
Joined: Fri Dec 03, 1999 8:00 am

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by SoM »

self owned :olo:
[color=red][WYD][/color]S[color=red]o[/color]M
Ryoki
Posts: 13460
Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2001 7:00 am

Re: Lost Memory of Skin

Post by Ryoki »

:olo:
[size=85][color=#0080BF]io chiamo pinguini![/color][/size]
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