Articles liés à Vision Quest: A Wrestling Story

Davis, Terry Vision Quest: A Wrestling Story ISBN 13 : 9780910055796

Vision Quest: A Wrestling Story - Couverture souple

 
9780910055796: Vision Quest: A Wrestling Story
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I
Both Dad and I are pretty sure Shute is going to grind my body into the green surface of our David Thompson High School wrestling mat. We work hard to put that thought out of our minds, though. I don't wrestle Shute until after the first of the year, when the weights come up two pounds and I move down from the 154-pound class--where I'm already lean--to become probably the world's hungriest 147-pounder. I've got two weeks yet. We also put it out of our minds because today is my birthday and Dad had our 1941 DeSoto reupholstered in the original mohair. He presented it to me this morning in celebration of my eighteen years and my upcoming high school graduation. Still, he couldn't forget my impending doom. After he caressed the leather armrests, rubbed up the bristling new fabric, and spun the big old steering wheel with one finger, he noted that Carla will be able to drive me around in style and solid comfort after Shute breaks all my bones. Carla is my girlfriend. She lives with us.
Carla loves the DeSoto. Today we eat our lunch in it. She spreads a red and white checkered tablecloth over the backseat so she won't drip yogurt on the mohair. I sit in front, manning our Sony portable cassette recorder, playing the Beatles' collection and the Stones' Hot Rocks, eating raw carrots and celery and hard-boiled eggs, turning to pure protein before her eyes as she hands me another carrot. I'm down to 150.
Carla climbs in front and rubs the dash and window moldings with a waxed cloth Dad brought her from the store. Dad's in the car business. People in the car business call their places stores now. The name has gone through phases. When I was a little kid playing park league baseball Dad would say he was going to the garage. And then when I was in junior high playing Pop Warner football he'd say he was going to the lot. But now it's store.
I see Belle walking our way as I finally open the car door to head for my English class. The wind blows hard and for a second my eyes hurt from the cold. "Hi, folksies!" yells Belle, slipping and nearly falling on the icy sidewalk. Belle, you crack, don't do any dope in our car, I think to myself, nodding at her.
Belle is the gum-freeze queen of David Thompson High and Carla's best friend after me. She's wrecked a good share of the time, especially at school. She's usually holding dope and I would hate to see her nabbed for it with Carla. It seems that most of the administration and teachers and kids take Belle's space travel for the effervescence of school spirit. I suppose it's because she's a cheerleader and beautiful. There's really not much chance of her getting caught around school, but I still worry.
Belle is friendly and funny and a good person. She's never done me wrong. The chance of her getting Carla in trouble is the only thing I don't like about Belle. I sound like a parent. Carla wouldn't like it if she knew I felt this way. There's probably nothing to worry about. Carla is down on chemicals and down on dope in general, and she's afraid Belle is overdoing it. I doubt Carla would allow Belle to do any dope in her presence.
I'm smiling big and thinking about friendship as Carla waves good-bye with her waxed cloth. I'm also being careful not to fall on my ass. If I'm going to have my coccyx broken, I'd rather Shute did it than this transient and impersonal patch of ice.
Coach Ratta passes me in the gym door. "What do you weigh?" he asks.
"Fifty," I reply. I stop for a bit. We always leave out the one hundred.
His eyebrows rise. "Can you beat Kuchera?" he asks, eyebrows coming down. He knows I can. What he doubts is that I can make 147 without losing strength.
"Yes," I reply, thinking how much I like Kuch and how badly I can munch his body, and wishing we didn't have to wrestle off for the spot, but not wishing too hard because it will only be for this one match.
"We'll see," Coach Ratta says. He's sure I'm losing strength.
Coach and most of the team and a lot of other people at school were pissed off at me for deciding to graduate a semester early. I'll miss a couple league matches and the district and state tournaments. But Doug Bowden, our number-two guy at 154, is undefeated in his junior varsity matches and is going to put a lot of varsity guys on their backs once he gets the chance. I thought about this before I made my decision.
Coach isn't mad anymore and neither is anybody on the team. Dad figured from the start it was okay as long as I was sure. And Carla thought it was a good idea, especially since I'd be working full-time and earning money to help Dad. It worries my mom a little, but that's her nature.
Senior English is a good class. We read novels and short stories and we write essays and discuss. Gene Tanneran, our teacher, says we must articulate with both pen and tongue, so he grades us on class participation.
Gene continually brings up his two favorite subjects for ridicule, Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew. I figure the two sonsabitches aren't worth my time. Gene and Thurston Reilly, who is editor of the school paper and wants to be a muckraking columnist, get the biggest kick out of Nixon's "Checkers" speech, in which the big dick swears that the guys who contributed to his slush fund never asked him for any special favors, points out his sweet wife's respectable Republican cloth coat, and vows ardently never to return Checkers, the lovable cocker sent to him by a Texan who must have been a real dog-hater.
Gene shows the film once a month and he and Thurston just howl. I thought it was funny the first time, but now I think it's sad. The way I see it, if people ever saw or heard that speech and were still dumb or evil enough to vote for the bastard, they deserve everything he'll ever do to them.
Gene's also got a record of Agnew's speeches. He figures Agnew should be public enemy number one for making parents hate and fear their own children. Gene loved it when I told him my dad thinks I'm a good guy and Agnew is a flaming asshole.
Tanneran wrestled in high school and college. He asks me what I weigh as we walk out of class. "I'm down to fifty," I say. "Fat city!" Gene exclaims, savoring the irony. "You're gonna make it!"
Revue de presse :
“Honest and funny and altogether true to life . . . about people so thoroughly decent and attractive that one wants to reach out and embrace them all.”–Jonathan Yardley, Sports Illustrated

“Move over, Rocky. Here’s Louden–in a sunny and deft novel for lovers of wrestling, wit, and hang-loose talent.”–Kirkus Reviews

“The novel is most memorable for clearly evoking, much as Judy Blume does, a certain stage of growing up.”–Publishers Weekly

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