One For My Baby
- ISBN: 9780006514817
- Description:
New novel about men, love and relationships by the author of the Book of the Year, Man and Boy. Alfie Budd found the perfect woman with whom to spend the rest of his life, and then lost her. He doesn't believe you get a second chance at love. Returning to the England he left behind during the brief, idyllic time of his marriage, Alfie finds the rest of his world collapsing around him. He takes comfort in a string of pointless, transient affairs with his students at Churchill's Language School, and he tries to learn Tai Chi from an old Chinese man, George Chang. Will Alfie ever find a family life as strong as the Changs'? Can he give up meaningless sex for a meaningful relationship? And how do you play it when the woman you like has a difficult child who is infatuated with a TV wrestler known as The Slab? Like his runaway bestseller, Man and Boy, Tony Parsons's new novel is full of laughter and tears, biting social comment and overwhelming emotion. From the Publisher A summary of some of the great reviews appeared to dateThe Observer "the same combination of self-deprecating humour and well-intentioned bafflement that endeared MAN AND BOY to millions of readers"; The Mirror "stylish, polished, complex and it really gets its teeth into the big issues of sex, love, family and friendship...get out the kleenex and get reading"; Sunday Times "will sell and sell"; Independent on Sunday "confident and accomplished...he makes the reader care...this is art shot through with humanity"; Mail on Sunday "will sell in millions" and The Times "subtle and intelligent...the success that greeted Parsons's first novel looks likely to be replicated by ONE FOR MY BABY" --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. Excerpted from One for My Baby by Tony Parsons. Copyright © 2001. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved 'You must eat the cold porridge,' he told me once. It's a Chinese expression. Cantonese, I guess, because although hecarried an old-fashioned blue British passport and was happy to call himself an Englishman, he was born in Hong Kong and sometimes you could tell that all the important things he believed were formed long ago and far away. Like the importance of eating the cold porridge. I stopped what I was doing and stared at him. What was he going on about now? 'Eat the cold porridge.' The way he explained it, eating the cold porridge means working at something for so long that when you get home there is nothing left to eat but cold porridge. And I thought - who did he share a flat with out there? Goldilocks and the Three Bears? That's how you get good at something, he told me. That's how you get good at anything. You eat the cold porridge. You work at it when the others are playing. You work at it when the others are watching television. You work at it when the others are sleeping. To become the master of something, you must eat the cold porridge, Grasshopper. Actually he never called me Grasshopper. But I always felt that he might. And I tried hard to understand. He was my teacher as well as my friend and I always tried to be a good student. I am trying today. But I can't help it - somewhere along the line I took eating the cold porridge to mean something else. Something completely different from its Chinese meaning. Somehow I got it into my thick head that eating the cold porridge means being in a time of suffering. Living through hard days, months and years because you have no choice. I got the cold porridge of the East muddled up with the bitter pill of the West. Now I can't tell them apart. That's not what he meant at all. He meant giving up comfort and pleasure for a greater good. He meant deferring gratification for some distant goal. Eating cold porridge now so that you will have something better tomorrow. Or the day after tomorrow. Or the day after that. It's got nothing to do with Goldilocks and the Three Bears. But I guess the concept of self-sacrifice is easier to grasp if you were born in one of the poorer parts of Kowloon. Where I come from, they don't really go in for that kind of stuff. Eating the cold porridge - to me it means enduring something that has to be endured. More than that, it means missing someone. Really missing someone. The way I miss her. But she is gone and she is not coming back. I know that now. I will never kiss her again. I am never going to wake up beside her again. I am never going to watch her sleeping again. That perfect moment when she opened her eyes and smiled her slightly goofy smile - a smile that seemed to reveal as much gum as teeth, and a smile that always made me feel as though something inside me was melting - I definitely won't see that again. There are ten thousand things that we are never going to do together again. 'You'll meet someone else,' he tells me, with all the patience that my real father could never quite muster. 'Give it time. There will be another woman. You'll get married again. You can have it all. Children and everything.' He is trying to be kind. He is a good man. Maybe this is what he really thinks. But I don't believe a word of it. I think that you can use up your love. I think you can blow it all on one person. You can love so much, so deeply, that there is nothing left for anyone else. You could give it all the time in the world, and I would never find someone to fill the gap that she has left. Because how do you find a substitute for the love of your life? And why would you want to? Rose is never coming home again. Not to me. Not to anyone. And perhaps I could learn to live with it if I could resist this ridiculous urge to phone her. Things would be more bearable if I could remember, really remember, that she's gone and never forget it. But I can't help it. Once a day I go to call her. I have never actually dialed the number, but I have come pretty close. Do you think I need to look that number up? I don't even have to remember it with my head. My fingers remember. And I am afraid that one day I will call her old number and somebody else will answer. Some stranger. Then what will happen? Then what will I do? It can strike at any time, this urge to call her. If I'm happy or sad or worried, I suddenly get this need to talk to her about it. The way we always did when we were - I nearly said lovers, but it was that and much more. Together. When we were together. She's gone and I know she's gone. It's just that sometimes I forget. That's all. So now I know what I must do. I must eat the cold porridge, and fight this overwhelming urge to reach for the phone. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
- Pages: 384
- Format: Paperback
- Genre: General
- Rating: Not yet rated
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