Memoir, A Novel by Stella Kelly
67 pages
English

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67 pages
English

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Description

This is a novel about true love in a time of fake news. Stella Kelly retreats to Berlin to rescue her academic career by writing a seminal text. Increasingly and unaccountably anxious, she instead writes her memoir. Stefan Selbst, the iconic German artist, had transformed Stella''s life before his death. Now she is afraid and in hiding in Andrea''s flat. Living in her past, she seeks the comeback that depends on the book she is failing to write.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 29 novembre 2019
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781528968546
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0175€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Memoir, A Novel by Stella Kelly
Stephen Morris
Austin Macauley Publishers
2019-11-29
Memoir, A Novel by Stella Kelly Copyright Information © Chapter One Memoir Chapter Two The Politics of Make-Believe Chapter Three Evidence into Action Chapter Four Stefan Selbst Chapter Five Family Chapter Six Neil and Noah Chapter Seven The Illusion of Government Chapter Eight In Government Chapter Nine The Absence of Symmetry Chapter Ten Noah Chapter Eleven Providence, Not Progress Chapter Twelve My Real Name Is Katja
Copyright Information ©
Stephen Morris (2019)
The right of Stephen Morris to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with section 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers.
Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.
ISBN 9781528936071 (Paperback)
ISBN 9781528936088 (Hardback)
ISBN 9781528968546 (ePub e-book)
www.austinmacauley.com
First Published (2019)
Austin Macauley Publishers Ltd
25 Canada Square
Canary Wharf
London
E14 5LQ
Chapter One

Memoir
I knew he could not be my father when he mocked me for being a vegetarian at the age of seven and confirmed me as one for the rest of my life. Until his death and beyond, he refused to accept he could not be my father. That is why I never believed anything he told me. Adoption or differences have themed my life of writing. Now that I approach with trepidation the idea of writing outside the academic sphere, I pause on the word, memoir. It should be brief. Not an aide-memoir or a memorial. A stab, I think, at a personal review.
Already, hesitantly, I feel an inner editor jousting with my super ego (for want of a better construct) to get on top of all this. Why not just write a novel? So, in as far as this is my own account of my life, it remains highly imagined. I don’t want to write a novel. I do want to get over my academic style. That might take a while.
Walking this morning before I began the memoir, I passed two elderly people. The first touch of autumn—it was a little fresh and the early morning sun glinted with warmth through the still thick canopy of nearly turning chestnut leaves around the square. The elderly couple were clutching hold of each other. It was not the desperation of love but its consequence. Dependence—hard to decipher in their concentrated look of walking together. I could not distinguish who was dependent on who. Or perhaps the dependence was mutual, and their mental and physical afflictions neatly balanced across their lives. That has not been my experience.
The couple, that dependence, I have denied myself in terms of partners and children. Not that I have been without adult companions, a husband and a friend. Or children, Noah, the adopted and largely estranged boy I began to raise. It has been a choice. Yes, I think that is correct, a choice not a consequence of the sequestered life of the thinker and writer I imagined myself to be, to have been.
Estranged and divorced does not mean a complete cutting off from these dear loved creatures who were at one time an occupation and now a fond—if troubled—source of memories. That is so much the case that only a few weeks ago, I sat down with Noah, my adopted son, and Neil his adopted father and my divorced husband. They wanted to have lunch, although the meeting was at my request. My terrible loss of appetite meant I should have preferred coffee, but I gave way to their preference. Momentarily and unusually, I was anxious they would not wish to see me unless it was on their terms. So much has recently changed in how I see the world.
The restaurant in London was modern, slick and stylish. The menu—the usual combination of the novel and the possibly inedible. I simply chose the dishes I thought would be the smallest and least flavourful. Whatever happened to the salad? When the chargrilled baby gem lettuce appeared, my instinct was to ask how it had been washed. When I told Neil, he grimaced and half smiled. He agreed and at the same time, didn’t wish to puncture the atmosphere of stylish dining that attracted Noah and helped him to feel secure with his divorced parents and useless adopted mother.
I had wanted to meet to let them know that I was on my way back to Berlin. I shall be there soon and intended to complete this memoir during a prolonged stay there across the difficult winter months. The wind was taken out of my sails completely. Neil announced he was having treatment for an as yet undiagnosed but apparently neurological condition. He told me this in a sanguine way and appeared to find the personal drama one way of coping with what must be a terrifying situation. Clearly, Noah knew, and the matter had been discussed. Noah was simply being very adult in the way that when you are a still young, the terrors of age and disease are as remote as war and lawlessness.
I questioned Neil. I believed him when he told me there was little more to say as he was still at the stage of tests. He believed he was receiving excellent treatment and had been referred to a specialist London hospital. This much we all took in our stride as my attention was removed from the cleanliness or otherwise of the baby gem lettuce. I now cannot remember what else I ate at the lunch. Probably very little of what had been served.
Neil dropped his fork as he helped himself to some potatoes. It fell on the linen tablecloth in front of him. Noah swiftly picked it up and handed it to his dad. I looked until Neil acknowledged my unspoken question that this was a symptom. Noah explained on his behalf that his dad now often dropped things, missed his step and occasionally stopped in mid-sentence having forgotten what he intended to say next. Noah spoke like one of my students at the start of a viva trying to control the questions that would test the extent of their knowledge. Neil added he was beginning to have some difficulty reading. His concentration failed, and the words blurred. His driving licence was suspended.
I wondered and still do. If I hadn’t met them for lunch to tell them I was off to Berlin for the autumn and winter whether I would ever have found out about Neil’s illness. They both seemed very ready to speak about Neil’s condition. That is what they both called it, I forgot. A condition, like the state of maintenance of a building or of a country. They spoke about it, if I recall correctly, to the exclusion of all else. It overwhelmed all other topics of conversation. There was no need for me to speak unless to offer nods of sympathy and a genuine—if shallow—sympathy. No one asked me anything. I mentioned I was off to Berlin. They simply accepted the information. It was nothing surprising. I have lived there on and off for more than twenty years and have an honorary academic post.
I asked Noah about his work, his training now that he had finished his degree. As ever, I am slightly hazy about what exactly he does—to do with the law, at least I am sure he did a law degree. He said he might take some time out to care for his dad. His firm was very sympathetic. Of course we were all very sympathetic, are sympathetic.
So let me get it off my chest. What about me? I can feel Noah’s disapproving six-year-old stare as he silently chastised my need for attention. I am sure I left to get away from that silent critical treatment. Heavens, no wonder he is a lawyer.
The reason I am going to Berlin is that I am not well. My symptoms may not be as dramatic as Neil’s. I have lost my appetite. I have lost weight and now have almost to force-feed myself to maintain a reasonable appearance. My clothes nonetheless hang off me. My confidence is shattered—not good for an academic—and I am experiencing increasing and irrational feelings of anxiety. I feel a numbness in my fingers and in my toes and have spasms of intense pain across my feet and legs. Sciatica, the GP suggested. She suggested some form of allergy or something to do with my age. She seemed mightily unconcerned. Watch and wait, she said, or she could refer me privately, but there was nothing to warrant any further treatment on the NHS. Sometimes, you just have to adapt as you grow older, we all do, she heart warmingly admonished in the expectation I would vacate her consultation room.
Yet I feel I am dying. Not with the all the rational diagnostics attendant on Neil’s symptoms. Just that I am curling up, packing up, clearing off. So that is why I am off to Berlin, and that is why I am having a go at this memoir, and for now, abandoning my latest academic work, Providence, Not Progress . Having consulted with a doctor, I consulted with friends. They were more or less sympathetic according to their own take on the situation. One sent me flowers. Another told me there was a lot more hope with cancer these days. Is that the only thing the middle-aged die of, unless it is at their own hand? Others clearly thought me deranged or self-obsessed. No one had any thought as to what I could do about it. My London friends, as I shall call them, proved largely useless. This is another reason for decamping to Berlin. More academic, more artistic, more left wing. I hope for better things.
Andrea, visiting from Germany where she continued to lecture—I have long since given up the podium to younger, brighter women—was indeed helpful. In her view, it was simply the continued conspiracy of my marriage. I had been lured to lunch—although it had been my idea to meet—in the false expectation that Neil and Noah would in any way be interested in my health and my debilitating symptoms only to

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