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| "A sublimely frisky novel….[Fountain at the Center of the World] reads like what you’d get if Tom Wolfe clambered inside the head of Noam Chomsky--it eloquently and angrily scorches a lot of earth…. The talismanic Catch-22 of the anti-globalization protest movement, the fictional complement to Naomi Klein’s influential treatise No Logo.... As ferocious as a jar of freeze-dried Paul Krugman columns.” —The New York Times Book Review |
| " … [a] spirited attempt to reconcile the larger forces at work in the world through fiction. Could this herald a resuscitation of the English “literary political novel”, almost dead in the water since the best work of Malcolm Lowry and Graham Greene? [Newman] has … taken a rare risk for our mortgage-panic, leather-sofa era, to remind us how the personal is political – and vice versa." —The Independent |
| "The Fountain At The Centre Of The World is perhaps the first novel to really explore the human story behind the placard waving and polemics of globalisation … it is fiction that tells a truth about a world that is only too real." —The Ecologist |
| "It's like bootleg Chomsky … The Fountain at the Centre of the World is a serious and intelligent book. It's a novel that confronts everything that is wrong with the world and demands that which is right, and it therefore makes a lot of British fiction seem rather tender-minded in comparison." —The Guardian | |
The Fountain at the Center of the World A Novel
Robert Newman
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| Paper | 6 x9 | 339 pgs. | ISBN: 1-932360-11-5 | List: $14.95 | 02/1/2004 | Available on Powells.com, Amazon.com, from your local BookSense store, and bookstores everywhere!



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About the book: Police across Tamaulipas, Mexico's north-eastern state are hunting Chano Salgado. A reclusive young widower and political apostate, Salgado goes on the run after he is persuaded to blow up the pipelines of a sluicing operation sucking the local groundwater dry. Meanwhile, Evan Hatch, a London-based flack for an "issues-management" PR firm, is dying from leukemia. Hoping to find a donor, he tracks down his long-lost brother in Mexico (from where he had been adopted at birth) while en route to the WTO meeting in Seattle. Chano, desperately needing to cross the border, finds his brother (Evan) first, and steals his passport. In the third narrative strand, Chano’s young son, Daniel, himself given up for adoption in Costa Rica, is also looking for his father. Traveling to Mexico, he is forced to flee when the police take him hostage hoping to force his father turn himself in. Squirreling himself away on a freighter, he is rescued by a UK refugee organization whose activists fly to Seattle with him to participate in the protest hoping to reunite him with his father, who, masquerading as Evan, is about to give a speech to the European Roundtable of Industrialists…
This author is on tour: For full details go back to our home back and click on "Events"
Feb 21 and 22: The Bowery Poetry Club, NY, NY. Feb 24: ABC No Rio in NY, NY Feb 27th: CBGB Show with Greg Palast and Jeneane Garafolo Feb 28th: Casco Bay at Space, Portland, ME Feb 29: A-Space sponsored event, Philadelphia, PA March 1: Brian MCKenzie Center, Washington, DC March 2:Chop Suey books, Richmond VA March 3: Madstone Theater,Cary, NC March 7th: Zeitgiest, New Orleans, LA March 8: Alamo Drafthouse, Austin, TX March 11: Fort Gondo with Subterranean St. Louis, MO March 12: Quimby’s Bookstore, Chicago, IL March 13: U of M at Ann Arbor with Shaman Drum, MI March 15: Divison Arts Collective, Grand Rapids, MI March 18: Arise! Infoshop in Minneapolis, MN March 20: Reading Frenzy sponsored event, Portland OR March 22: CSUS, Sacramento, CA March 23: Modern Times, SF March 25: Cody’s Books, Berkeley
From the book:
Chano stands alone in a perfect cloud. For a moment everything is invisible. There are no more streets, no shops, no banks, no cops. Only hanging white curtains of gas-cloud falling softly, thickening like snow. All is quiet inside this perfect whiteness. Chano takes a few tentative steps further into its pure silence. He finds that the cloud hosts a museum miscellany from that other world, the world outside the thick, white gas-fog. How odd it is, he thinks, to come across a dark-blue mail-box here, like a symbol in a dream! He walks on through silent blank suspension. Not quite silent: he eavesdrops on coughing, spluttering, crying, the private scrabbling of bodies on intimate concrete. Two people with their arms still linked appear out of the mist, stagger into him and go by. All is sheer blank again, and then in the cloud - a sapling. Here, thinks Chano, a little tree, here! And yet it could be on a winter field in Peru. Passing the sapling, he touches a branch and plucks a leaf from its bendy twig. Chano stands over a curled-up body in the mist at his feet. A billow rolls between them. He crumples the leaf in his palm. He breathes heavily, gas singeing his nostrils, its spiky air scraping his throat. He crouches. Lower down the smoke is less thick. He can see him clearly now. Here in this strange other world, in the calm center of chaos, in this place where it seems he alone can walk, time has bent and warped. For so much does his son now look like he looked once before: steam all around him, curled-up, crying, coughing, spluttering, wailing, and as if abandoned. Chano strokes the damp hair. My baby, he says in a slow, quiet voice, Daniel. Daniel forces an eye half-open. In-rushing torrents of pain blur a petrochemical haze. He sees a face floating above him. The lips smile. The voice says: What have they been doing to my boy? The apparition teleports from Daniel’s view. The side of Chano’s head is clubbed. A soldier’s leg steps over the crumpled figure who stroked his hair and called him Daniel. He screams as a gloved hand seizes neck and jaw, dragging him forward onto his knees. In green goggles Monica throws herself, rolling into the steel shin-guards and tumbles on top of Daniel in a heap. The grunt brings down the butt of his stave on her ribs, then turns away. A long-distance swimmer dragging herself out of the sea, she stands. She reels, at first away and then towards Daniel. She drags him along the ground until she’s holding more sleeve than arm. She hauls him up into a three-legged race until both fall into the recessed doorway of a bank, where Monica cradles Daniel’s head in her lap. A bespectacled medic in a green bib pours water from a one-gallon bottle over their faces to sluice the oleoresin-capiscum. Daniel splutters, hawks, heaves. The crudely-drawn red cross swims before his vision a moment before she presses a wad of cotton to his eyes, clamping Daniel’s own fingers over it. The bespectacled medic stands up holding the plastic gallon jug. A shot rings out. In one smooth movement, as if she’s pushed herself over with the heel of her palm, she clutches her head and falls. Another shot booms. A rubber bullet hits the medic’s back but she still clutches her eyes with both hands. The gallon jug rolls into the street. Monica bends over Daniel’s body as a rubber-bullet ricochets around the three-walled doorway like a supersonic, rock-hard squash ball, cracking the glass door to land, spent, in the frozen crook of Monica’s arm. Slowly she puts out a hand to the quarter-inch hard-nosed shell. Robocop marches towards the prostate medic. Stands over her, takes aim and shoots her twice more in the neck. Robocop turns, picks up the gallon jug and empties the water onto the street. Robocop stamps it flat with a big black boot. Robocop turns his plexi visor towards Monica and Daniel. Studies them. Thinks about it. Sets off to protect some place else.
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