Selasa, 21 Juli 2020

[PDF] Download Stateway's Garden: Stories by Jasmon Drain | Free EBOOK PDF English

Book Details

Title: Stateway’s Garden: Stories
Author: Jasmon Drain
Number of pages:
Publisher: Random House (January 21, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN: 1984818163
Rating: 4,5     17 reviews

Book Description

Review “About Chicago, Jasmon Drain knows a thing or two. He writes about a housing project so grim that those who move in dream of leaving. Stateway Gardens as a community is long gone, destroyed by gentrification. But the residents and their buoyant dreams are documented, celebrated, honored. I bow to this writer in gratitude.”—Sandra Cisneros “The only fireworks in Jasmon Drain’s subtly rendered, beautiful debut are the ones his young characters watch explode in the distance from the public housing project they live in. These are patient, profoundly compassionate stories about the small shocks and flickers of transcendence in ordinary Chicagoans’ lives. Told in hauntingly spare prose reminiscent of Raymond Carver’s, Drain’s stories take a moment to sink in. Once they do, they don’t leave you.”—Sam Graham-Felsen, author of Green “These interconnected stories bring us close to an area rarely represented in our literature and art: the project housing of Chicago. It captures the pain, cruelty, and moments of magic that can only come from living in poverty in America. Jasmon Drain’s fierce eye projects images and characters that will stay with you long after putting the book down. A devastating knockout of a debut.”—Fernando A. Flores, author of Tears of the Trufflepig “Characters seek soft shelter in these powerfully felt, interconnected stories. . . . Capturing an intricate portrait of Stateway Gardens (a real place that was razed in 2007), Drain mines the idea that life in the projects could be both a thing to escape and something to nurture, a matter made more critical by the ticking clock of gentrification. . . . A deep, vibrant collection.”Booklist“This bold outing vividly encapsulates a chapter of Chicago’s complex history.”Publishers Weekly Read more About the Author Jasmon Drain is a 2010 and 2011 Pushcart Prize nominee. He grew up in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago, and currently resides in the Kenwood neighborhood. Read more Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1B.B. SauceFound on Ogden and Central ParkThey told me that I was the smart kid, very smart from what I understood, able to walk sturdily around our apartment when I was just over nine months old. The family, in jest, said I used those legs to observe and learn anything I could. Stories were that I held a fork the moment my hand muscles were strong enough to balance it; I used the bathroom while standing, barely capable of seeing over the toilet, and whenever I was quiet, which was often, I was attempting to learn something new. I believed only a little of this. However, my mother used those smarts of mine to her advantage every instance she could. Because although I was younger, I did the older-boy chores—the ones my brother, Jacob, should’ve done. As a reward for his complaining about everything, she left him home alone for hours some of the times she went to work. Said she could only take so much of his mouth.She worked at the corner store on Ogden Avenue and Central Park, the West Side of Chicago, at least an hour bus ride from our South Side Stateway Gardens projects. At first, Jacob was the one who always went to work with her ’cause he was supposed to be the grown one and I’d have to be with Mother’s friend’s niece Solane. Every day he came home and talked constantly about how uncomfortable being at work with our mother made him feel. Said he saw stupid people doing stupid-people things while trying to teach him stupider lessons. Even at nine or ten, and me six, he sounded younger when he talked. His stories were hardly elaborate, nothing close to the exaggeration that eventually floated in his language once we were older. But Jacob’s lack of detail about the store made me eager to travel to work with my mother on that Western Avenue bus. He just had to be hiding something good.“Put your jacket on,” she said to him. “We’re heading out in a minute.”“I don’t wanna go, don’t make me, I don’t like it there,” he replied. My brother always spoke in sentences that made it seem like his brain and tongue were fighting each other for leadership.“We go through this every time. You’re going with me.”“Why do I have to?”“ ’Cause you’re my young and pretty son,” she replied with a small smile. “You make me look better.”Jacob folded his arms as he sat on the double-mattressed bed in our room. “It’s dumb, I don’t never ever have fun there.”“Life isn’t about fun. It’s about money.” Mother’s voice was so potent whenever she said the word money that it could have bruised your arm. With the force she used to snatch him from the bed, the bruise would be there anyways. “I didn’t ask for your input,” she continued. “Put the damned jacket on.”“I want to go,” I interjected.“I didn’t ask you if you wanted to go.” Her body moved with such swiftness in my direction that I thought she was going to grab me as well. “Go over there and sit down, Tracy.”“Please, Mother?” I asked. “Can I go?”“Stop talking to me.” She pointed her finger to a seat.“I promise I will be good.”She lifted her arms into the air, rolling the sleeves of her shirt to the elbow. I noticed the light skin on Jacob’s arm turning red from where Mother had held him. She always made certain to never strike anywhere near his face, didn’t want to leave a mark. Mother wheezed after removing her hand from his arm, and huffed like a big-bellied crocodile finishing a water buffalo.True, I was my mother’s smart child, but Jacob was the handsome one with the precious button nose and eyelashes that flapped like dove wings. He had one of those faces that made you feel guilty for making him frown in even the slightest way.“Get up, boy,” she said, trying to remain in control. “Get. Up.”“I’m not going anywhere, you didn’t have to hit me.” Jacob folded his arms again.“Stand up. Now.”Even though he was so young, the deepness of his voice made you believe puberty occurred during his infancy. The only things he inherited from our mother were her temper and height. He stood against the bed while she stared him down, right fist balled as if he planned to swing without compromise, and said again, “I’m not going.”“Maybe you could take me, Mother?” I said again.She turned to me slowly, like her body was on an out-of-practice swivel. Judging my mother’s figure you would never have assumed she had kids. Neither her shoulders nor hips were wide at that time, and she was nothing close to physically imposing. Yet with those teeth clenched, both Jacob and I knew fear.“You’re too young to go, Tracy,” she said. When she turned to me, her eyes were no longer bulging and the frown had softened. Her hands, which had been shaking, steadied and began to relax. “You’re not ready.”“I could help you count money or something.”“I just think it’s too early for you to be going to that store with me.”When Mother turned to look at Jacob, red bruise on his arm swelling by the second, she knew there was no choice: Take me or go alone. Mother hated to be alone, hated it more than anything, if even for a brief moment. She wouldn’t eat by herself, slept with three to five pillows stacked next to her, and sometimes made Jacob or me stand right beside her in the bathroom whether she was brushing her teeth or sitting on the toilet. Going to work was no different.I think that was one of the few times she favored my dirty skin and much wider nose over Jacob’s.“Maybe you can do something useful while you’re there,” she said after pausing for a while. “You are my smart child.” And she began introducing me as just that.We turned the corner on Ogden Avenue that morning, walking with a holiday pace. Mother never took being on time to work seriously. In her opinion, nothing was more important than the way she looked. That was her moneymaker. For example, if she was to be at work at ten in the morning, she began prepping at six-thirty. She spent hours using Lynda Carter’s Maybelline mascara, hoping it got her eyelashes close to Jacob’s; she applied an even coat of brown lipstick that ironically helped her cheekbones jump; she used a brush resembling something for painting a wall to apply powder. And as we walked past parked cars, sometimes twelve or so on a West Side block, she employed windows on the passenger sides of fancier vehicles to check the shine of her large forehead and make sure there were no smears of blush on her cheeks. Mother had one of those open faces, hair always pulled back revealing her features; it was the kind of face that helped plastic earrings compete with diamonds. I guess the reaction she garnered from West Side of Chicago men made it all worth it. She continued to stroll like the thoroughbred horse she was: legs tight, white-and-blue skirt tighter, and pointing her nose in the air.On Ogden Avenue, there were hardly any cars flying down the street and the traffic lights didn’t even work. There were numerous brown and green dumpsters on the curbs, most of which were overflowing and crowded with flies. The street smelled like our building’s incinerator. None of this seemed to bother my mother. She had to have had invisible nose and earplugs. Because the men that we passed walking down the street, some of which were missing at least one tooth and held accessory-like bottles of liquor in their hands, looked her up and down in the way I would a mag-wheeled Huffy. They said things like “What’s up, bricks?” and “Hey, sexy momma” and “I’d love to get with that.”“Don’t grow up and be like them,” she said to me without turning her head. “No woman wants a man with no money and nothing in his hand but a drink.”“But what if I don’t have any money?” I replied.“You will.”“How do you know?”“You’re my smart child.” Read more

Customers Review:

I’ve been around these places growing up. I’ve never been inside of these buildings but after reading this story, I feel like I have. The writer Jasmon Drain, is absolutely brilliant when it comes to creating a vision in your mind.
Chicago’s Stateway Gardens was a real place. Construction on it started in 1955, with 1644 units planned in eight high-rise buildings. Original plans were for mixed housing but it quickly became an all-black development, housing over 3000 people. By 1984, the district in which it was located rated as one of the six poorest census tracts in the country and in 1988, Stateway Gardens and the nearby Robert Taylor Homes had 67 homicides, the highest of any district in the city. By the nineties, writes the author, living close to the city had become desirable and developers lobbied the city for the Gardens’ demolition. The last residents moved out in 2006 and the buildings were torn down in 2007. It’s not clear how much effort was put into finding new lodging for the people who were evicted.Six-year-old Tracy is taken by his mother to the supermarket where she works. It’s his first time and she doesn’t like bringing him because his skin is darker than hers. It’s the only time she takes him there as she moves through a succession of poor paying, often transient jobs and equally transient relationships with men. (“B. B. Sauce”) One of Tracy’s stepfathers is a professional musician. He takes Tracy on the road with him on weekend gigs –he plays guitar in a James Brown-type band—Tracy winds up listening in on his not so secret liaison with the bandleader’s wife. (Reaganomics, Left Lying in the Road”) Solane, trying to do everything right, finally hitches up with William, a young black man with a future, but he backs out after he learns she already has two children out of wedlock. His dream doesn’t include starting his glorious career burdened by two children who aren’t his own. A couple of months later, he has second thoughts and calls her, but she’s pregnant now with his baby. After he hangs up the phone he realizes he doesn’t even know where she lives in the projects. She’d wanted to hide her life there so she always met him at wherever the date was. (“Solane”) There’s another young woman, Solane’s sensible sister who babysits for her whenever she gets a temp job and has to leave her children unattended. There’s Tracy’s brother, Jacob. Tracy’s smart, Jacob’s beautiful, and that too scars his life: he coasts for too long and then, boom, in a succession of catastrophes and near catastrophes, he’s left with a permanent limp, no longer pretty, and no longer able to live the life he longed for.Nothing momentous happens in most of these stories but peeking around the edges of all of them are intimations of a life that leaves its participants diminished and scarred for life. There are elegiac moments but they’re soured by how impoverished they are when looked at from outside. Here’s an example: Comiskey Park was a block and a half away from Stateway Gardens and whenever a White Sox player hit a home run there, they’d launch a fireworks display “that rivaled those at Navy Pier on the Fourth of July. The noise of fireworks from the stadium was so loud that it drowned the sounds of almost anything: gunshots from one gang aimed at another, babies that may have been crying, bottles breaking, or anything else.” And while the fireworks raged over head, Jameel, Jacob’s thirteen-year-old friend, “would use the opportunity to break the closest car window in the parking lot, peel the steering wheel column’s skin to get it started, and seconds later the three of us were on our way.” This story, by the way, is about three young boys scaling a security fence and jumping across the rails, trying to avoid the electrified third rail, in order to cop a free rode on the El.Part of what makes these descriptions jolting is that they are so completely accepted by their narrators. Tracy knows that in his kitchen cabinet, all he’ll find is “a forty-two-pack of chicken and beef ramen.” Solane explains to William why they can’t get back together –she’s having an abortion instead: “You’ll leave, just like all men do. Women don’t get the choice to leave, to decide whether we want to be parents or not. We don’t get any choice. I’m a twenty-five-year-old woman with two young kids, no fathers, no husband present, no real career, and very little money … I have to accept my life for what it is.”All of the stories in this collection are worth reading but some are better than others. You don’t have the unity of viewpoint you have in Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg Ohio, but it has some of the effect of that iconic collection. Both books make it difficult to ignore the harm we do to others by not noticing them when they need us. No one should have to accept this.
STATEWAY’s GARDENTo be perfectly honest, this book grabbed my attention because I just finished binge-watching the entire series of SHAMELESS. SHAMELESS takes place in Chicago’s South Side, just as this book does. However, the South Side as portrayed in the book and on TV are two different places entirely.This book takes place in the real and true former Stateway Gardens which was public housing in Chicago. They have since been torn down, but this book brought the Gardens back to life. And what a life!These are short stories that are centered around character’s lives in the Gardens, particularly those of Tracy, his brother Jacob, and their mom who is only referred to as Mother. The two boys narrate their lives — past and present — living in the Stateway Gardens, introducing us to their neighbors, the problems of growing up here, and some of their adventures.It’s a tough life — the buildings are packed so close together, people are crammed inside in apartments, the neighborhood is rough and so are their lives. Money is tight, crime runs rampant, jobs are hard to find. I loved how the stories all blended together and jumped from Tracy and Jacob’s boyhood until their present life. Their struggles, their ambitions, their loves are all told beautifully.Author Jasmon Drain writes smooth as butter and doesn’t sugar coat life in the South Side. Here are some examples of the superb writing –~We pulled up to a reddish-brown brick building with wide and clean windows. It looked like a medieval castle you’d see in a movie, complete with a drawbridge and a dragon that blew ferocious fire at unwanted guests.~”You did a very good job with this one, son”, she said again, boosting my young ego. “Really, Mother?” I asked, pleading for more. She wasn’t the complimenting type; you had to drink all you could while the faucet was running.The stories are excellent. The writing is excellent. I know you will enjoy this book as much as I did.