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Authors: Chris Fuhrman

Tags: #Fiction, #Religious, #Literary, #Literary Criticism, #Women Authors

The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys

BOOK: The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys
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PRAISE FOR
The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys

“Heartbreaking yet hilarious … By marrying the earnest to the ridiculous, Fuhrman captures the sublime intensity of adolescence.… This book … can be compared to many of the classic coming-of-age novels.”

—Publishers Weekly
(starred review)

“The freshness of Chris Fuhrman’s novel comes from his ability to squeeze out of a time of transition universal evocations of rebellion against growing up…. Fuhrman provides his story and characters with enough originality to keep the narrative clipping along and his reader totally absorbed.”

—Chicago Tribune

“Sad and beautiful… captures wonderfully the vulnerability and overdone cynicism of adolescence.… there is an edge to the irreverent humor in this book … distilling the mix of innocent and corrupt, sacred and profane … into a poetry of the quotidian.”

—Philadelphia Inquirer

“The moral of the story … has so much gravity and grace.… This is the real thing, writing done with everything on the line.… The death of Chris Fuhrman is an incalculable loss to this generation of writers. We should be glad to have his testimony.”

—Boston Globe

“The author’s real triumph lies in his ability to plumb wild young minds, to reveal the ardent, romantic hearts that beat within wisecracking boys. Their wild, unselfconscious beauty permeates the book…. We may never know what a loss [Chris Fuhrman’s death] was. Who knows how many other brilliant, beautiful, heartbreaking books he might have written?”

—Boston Book
Review

“Here’s a book for anyone who wants to be reminded, with humor and compassion, of what life was like, as Francis puts it, ‘back when things could still happen for the first time.’”

—The
Atlanta Journal

“A rollicking story set at a Catholic school in Savannah, Georgia… develops a series of sometimes hilarious vignettes on rebellion. [The] antics are not mere games, but life-affirming acts of defiance.… Imaginative and delightful.”

—Los
Angeles Reader

“Delightful debut… conceived with the most artfully humorous language.”

—LIT:
Chicago’s Literary Supplement

“Fuhrman is especially successful in capturing the awkwardness of first love and the fierce, blind loyalties of pubescent boys.”

—Kirkus Reviews

“This book deserves many, many readers. … a memorable, funny, and poignant depiction of a glorious boyhood chased down and brutally terminated. … A story as odd, vivid, painful, splendid, and sad as adolescence itself.… Fuhrman’s posthumous debut invites wistful speculation about the sort of career which might have followed it.”

—Commonweal

“One of the most strikingly original novels of recent memory.”

—Creative Loafing

“Fuhrman’s only novel shows him to have been a writer of enormous talent and skill…. This novel… is a portrait of the real Savannah. Smart, funny and beautifully rendered, this book deserves a wide audience.”

—Knoxville Metro Pulse

The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys

A Novel by Chris Fuhrman

Published by The University of Georgia Press
Athens, Georgia 30602
© 1994 by Chrisanne Fuhrman
All rights reserved
Designed by Erin Kirk New
Set in 10.5 on 14 Berkeley Old Style Medium
by Tseng Information Systems, Inc.

The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence
and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines
for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.

Printed in Canada

08 09 10 11 12 P 11 10 9 8 7

The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition of this book as follows:

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Fuhrman, Chris.
The dangerous lives of altar boys : a novel / by Chris Fuhrman
viii, 187 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN 0-8203-1632-6 (alk. paper)
1. Boys—Fiction.
2. Catholics—Fiction.
3. Savannah (Ga.)—Fiction.

I. Title.

PS3556.U3245 D36 1994

813’.54—dc20    93-41113

Paperback ISBN-13: 978-0-8203-2338-1
ISBN-10: 0-8203-2338-1

British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data available

“Thirteen,” “The Usual Gang of Idiots,” and “A Priest with a
Girlfriend” were first published in
Columbia: A Magazine of
Poetry & Prose,
no. 17 (Fall 1991): 201-30.

ISBN for this digital edition: 978-0-8203-3585-8

This book is for

the FUHRMAN family

for CHRISANNE

and for the gang

Contents

Thirteen

The Usual Gang of Idiots

A Discipline Problem

What Happened to God

Where the Wild Things Are

A Priest with a Girlfriend

Did You Think I Was Tame?

Southern Gothic

Precipitation and Anchovies

Shopping on a Budget

Rebels of the Blessed Heart

Pets

Food Chain

A Test of the Emergency Broadcast System

Welcome to Horrible Movies

Another Color

Bwana Tim

Banshee in the Woods

Underground

Not Approved by the Comics Code Authority

The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys

Thirteen

By eighth grade, Jesus Christ had been bone meal and rumors for most of 1,974 years, but we were only thirteen. We were daredevils, gangsters. I had a girl’s name, Francis, and a hernia.

School and church occurred right down everybody’s street at Blessed Heart, the two buildings joined at the shoulder by a glass bridge. My best friends, Tim and Rusty, were serving Mass that Sunday, kneeling on each side of the priest in their cassocks and wayward purple socks. I watched from the farthest pew, beside my mother. We’d been late again. To see the altar, I had to rock side-to-side behind the orchard of shifting heads.

Father Kavanagh was praying, his Irish mumble amplified by the PA system into the voice of God. He pinched the Host out of the chalice and raised it like a man admiring a silver dollar, Tim’s cue to shake the bells. He thrashed them, brass clashing brass so harshly that heads flinched. Kavanagh flung Tim a thunderbolt glare. Tim stiffened his face.

Jesus hung crucified on the pink marble behind them, rolling up plaster eyes.

The bell signaled that the bread wafer in Kavanagh’s fingers was now the flesh of Christ. You’re supposed to be amazed, but
I was an altar boy too and had suffered Mass about three times a week for the last two years. It was no more mysterious or astounding to me than delivering newspapers had been. We called this the Magician’s Assistant Syndrome. We were something like atheists by then.

Gathered behind a microphone to the left of the altar were two men with beards and guitars, an obese guy hunched over a piano, and a woman dangling a tambourine. They were there to make music for what the church was calling, in those days, a Folk Mass, an attempt at timeliness which I considered as pitiful as an adult using teenage slang.

Kavanagh raised the wine chalice in front of his face, gold cup haloed by steely hair, and turned it into Christ’s blood. Tim rang the bells again, reasonably. I stopped listening. Some numb part of my brain answered the prayers for me.

Marjorie Flynn was kneeling in the pew ahead of me. Her wicked brother Donny was in my eighth-grade class. Margie had grown steadily beautiful all year without alerting the popular boys, and I’d been falling in love with her although we’d never spoken. I only knew that she’d been an honor student and shy and that last summer she had sliced her wrists with a razor blade. Something in her life was more important, more terrible, than anything in mine.

Margie wore a sleeveless white silk dress so fresh and pretty it caused my stomach to ache. She was pale, but rosy around the eyes, nose, and cheeks, as if she stayed indoors all the time, crying, an image I found appealing.

The rear doors of the church were open, and a honeysuckle breeze came in and proved itself on Margie’s hair. She wore it curly and wild. All the other girls wore their hair straight, rolling it around orange juice cans or ironing it somehow. Margie’s looked careless, gorgeous.

Across the aisle Melissa Anderson, head full of bows, spread the fingers of both hands and admired her nails. Our athletes
bloodied each other’s noses over this specimen, that year’s May Queen, as if I cared, and she certainly never wasted a thought on boys like me. But for Margie I would’ve done anything, though she didn’t seem like the type to require that. I wanted to protect her from something, anything. I bowed my head and inhaled, trying to smell her, but the aromas of church interfered, incense, flowers, and perfume.

Beside us, the windows caught sunlight and thickened it into burning colors, stenciling the carpet with sacred symbols in reverse and the names of dead patrons thrown backwards. Serpents and winged lions and unicorns fell from the glass, sprawled in the aisles. The dragon window was my favorite. I knew the air bubbles in every jigsaw pane. Saint George, in armor, had sunk a lance into the dragon’s belly and rested his booted foot on its back. I pitied the dragon, but I envied his slayer’s heroics.

In an elaborate, blood-spattered daydream I rescued Margie Flynn from an alligator that crawled out of the pond across the street. She tore a strip from her hem, baring her thighs, to clean my wounds.

Meanwhile, Father Kavanagh had arrived at the part where he told us to “offer each other a sign of peace” and you shook hands with people you ordinarily ignored and said, “Peace be with you.” I began praying for Margie to turn and take my hand, godless convictions suspended for the moment. I angled slightly towards my mother to appear unconcerned. The old man on the other side poked my arm, and I was obliged to pump his soft, damp hand while he stared at my mother.

I turned back, and Margie was glancing at me, then the old man reached over in front of me and caught Mama’s hand and petted it, grinning. There would’ve been an awkward, desperate stretch to get to Margie. She turned forward. My heart flattened. Then Mama gave the old guy a shame-on-you wink and retrieved her hand. She touched Margie’s shoulder, and then they
shook. Margie’s eyes bumped mine. She held her hand out to me, her wrist fragile as a swan’s throat and crossed with a thin white scar which caused that pain in my sinuses like I was about to cry. I took her hand. She looked away. Then she looked at me, and our eyes locked, and the tiniest smile possible passed over her face, barely entering her eyes. My mind drained. She said, “Peace be with you,” then my name. I watched her say, “Francis,” and liked hearing it for the first time in my life. Her hand in mine felt like something radioactive.

BOOK: The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys
4.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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