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BOOK: The Sugar Frosted Nutsack
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Friday: 10:00
AM
Eastern

Ike
’s Funeral: Live Coverage”

 

A small group of mourners attends
Ike
’s funeral:
Hadassah Lieberman
,
Barry Bonds
, SAG president
Ken Howard
,
Andrew Cuomo

Several eulogists wistfully remind the thin trickle of mourners (basically
Lieberman
,
Bonds
, SAG president
Ken Howard
, and
Cuomo
) that
Ike
“never congealed into the comprehensible” and “liked the bodies of women who didn’t like their bodies” and was “perpetually flinging himself toward his fate.”

And they reminisce about how
Ike
used to sit at the kitchen table in the early morning, not writing letters or composing narcocorridos, but making lists—lists of which celebrities he thought should be guillotined, which should go to the gulag, which should be rehabilitated, etc. This was also called
Ike
“going into the forest to gather wild garlic,”
Ike
“soaking in his own marinade” or
Ike
“drinking his own bath water.”

Excerpts from the Eulogies


Ike
is on a bus headed uncannily for the abyss—such is his largesse, his desire to share his death wish with others, i.e., his brothers, who dig his maudlin quest for martyrdom and queue up to join him literally loin-to-loin in stardom, his weary one-way ride to his last stop, his long-awaited suicide-by-cop, much ballyhooed in Bollywood and headed straight for the vicinity of infinity.”

  


Ike
’s eyes roll back in his head as he’s ravaged—the conquistador as comestible, like Magellan devoured by cannibals and savages.”

  

“Those moaning, self-flagellated phantasms, having all their apocalyptic orgasms, those marathon sessions of seizures, those deathless, mirthless masturbators, so provocatively posed in their marble pantyhose.”

  

“This was just the aristocratic, autoerotic attitude of those whose hot buttocks were the pure products of the imagination of the God who’d invented the platitude.”

  


Ike
—marionette, umbilicated to his Goddesses, murmuring in a language garnished with umlauts.”

  

“His birth as an object of divine desire, and his death—the Goddesses sated—supine and on fire, hated by his neighbors.”

  

“This shit’s retarded. It’s
The Ballad of the Last of the Severed Bard-Heads
. ‘It’s not toasted, it’s Pop-Tarted,’
Ike
boasted to all his drug-addled, big-dick bards (the Ultra-Penis Committee) from the Upper Peninsula and Jersey City.
Denken und Dichtung,
that high-pitched drone. ‘It is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known,’ he says, quoting
Dickens
, quieting down
Colter Dale
, quaffing Dewars, getting tight, looking radiant in night-vision goggles and a ‘tight T-shirt’—‘TTS’ on the Missouri license plate, which has a light-blue gradient and says ‘Show-Me State.’ He hates celebrities and all their wealth, and he flexes his biceps and he flagellates himself. He secretly ate flanken, like an Inquisitor and a Marrano both wrapped into one, which is why it says that ‘suicide-by-cop sounds fun.’”

  

“The quintessential heroic visionary, quiet and quick to violence, brainstorming with mice and swans in Paranoid Park, near a man-made hill. ‘Remember,’ he says, without moving his lips, even keeping his Adam’s apple still, ‘when all the old, decrepit waiters at
XOXO
’s Dantean
Hooters
were summarily shot to death by Mossad sharpshooters?’ And some weird little guy whom one of the mice glimpses out of the corner of his eye—some fat little spy on a bicycle path, snapping photos—hunches over to laugh like
Quasimodo
getting a Gatorade bath on the sideline. And
Ike
, like stone, like a scrimshaw statue honed out of white whale bone, cataleptic but analytic, and incredulous at his own indigenous Jersey City perspicacity, thinks to himself, Once I get all my guillotines deployed and rendezvous with my producer,
Fast-Cooking Ali
, let’s see who calls me paranoid and the inducer of a folie à famille.”

  


Ike
dreams of surprising
La Felina
in a Korean sauna, or the subproletarian wife of some bard, or coming upon any matronly lady marbled with lard, sweating in a place that’s sweltering, any place where there’s no tradition of air-conditioning or adequate ventilation, where there’s a draconian prohibition on deodorant and showering, like a women’s penal colony on a former coffee plantation, where the rich aroma of large, self-pleasuring women is overpowering and intoxicates Mossad sharpshooters in guard towers, and where even a hydrocephalic moron can get a hypertrophic hard-on lasting more than four hours.”

  

“The jubilant blaze of masochistic martyrdom and orgasm, like some fabulous hissing centripetal fireball of molten marble, forms a high-pitched, accelerating vortex of seizures and spasms that pulls this clique of masturbating Goddesses from the Large Hadron Collider into
Ike
’s sugar frosted nutsack, like a highly concentrated, coruscating cascade of hypothetical particles, these Goddesses who are masturbating to naked photos of
Ike
, even though they say they’re just reading the articles, into
Ike
’s sugar frosted nutsack, where, like an interlooping troupe of parasitic worms or writhing embroidered runes, they agree to synchronize the oscillations of their original orgasms, so as to produce ever more seizures and more spasms.”

 

This final section the mourners chant backward, in memory of
Ike
having “continuously pulled himself out of his own ass, inside-out”:

Smsaps erom dna seruzies erom reve ecudorp ot sa os, smsagro lanigiro rieht fo snoitallicso eht ezinorhcnys ot eerga yeht, senur derediorbme gnihtirw ro smrow citisarap fo epuort gnipoolretni na ekil, erehw, kcastun detsorf ragus S’
eki
otni…

 

In an interview after the funeral,
Hmm Uh
, the Goddess born of hawked-up phlegm and risen from the lowest-of-the-low to become the single most influential Goddess in the pantheon (“that moaning menagerie”), is asked whether
Ike Karton
and
Meir Poznak
(seemingly so different—
Ike
austere, taciturn, inscrutable;
Meir
flamboyant, loquacious, explicit) could, in a sense, be considered one and the same person (since they abet each other’s fates with such uncanny reciprocity). The divine celebutante answers, “Hmm…uh…kinda, I guess.”

 

Experts were abuzz recently over a video that was posted online purportedly showing
Ike Karton
and
Meir Poznak
as teenagers at the Newport Mall in Jersey City: both boys were wearing black pants, identical padded and oversize cargo coats, and matching brown fur hats. The date of the video is unknown, although judging from the horses tied to posts and the honky-tonk piano version of “The Ballad of the Last of the Severed Bard-Heads” that’s audible every time the doors of the saloon swing open, it appears to have been shot in the late 1870s.

 

 

Saturday: 3:00
AM
Eastern

The Sugar Frosted Nutsack 3:
Hmm Uh
(Rig Diva):
The Fitted Cap”

 

The most enduring legacy of
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack 3:
Hmm Uh
(Rig Diva)
—which is what most experts now consider to be the authentic title of the epic—may well be the fitted cap.

This unique, custom-fitted cap (95% wool, 5% cotton) features a gleaming “textured” white crown and visor—a
trompe l’oeil
corrugation (think super-close-up of a Frosted Mini-Wheat, abstracted into a scrotal topography). Embroidered (raised) over this glittering, puckered white dome (signifying, of course, “the sugar frosted nutsack”)—and foregrounded in such glaring contradistinction that they seem to float over it, like 3-D—are the words “
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack 3
” in a shade of dazzlingly vivid, preternatural blue (think Gatorade Frost Glacier Freeze or Frost Cascade Crash or Pine-Sol Sparkling Wave). Embroidered below, in an equally vivid, man-made shade of red or pink (think Ajax Ruby Red Grapefruit Dish Liquid or Pepto-Bismol), is the subtitle:
Hmm Uh
(Rig Diva)
.

Beginning on the underside of the visor and continuing to concentrically wind around the circumference of the inside of the cap, inscribed in the tiny, maddeningly meticulous hand of
XOXO
himself, is the looping, recursive epic in its entirety, with all its excruciating redundancies, heavy-handed, stilted tropes, and wearying clichés, its overwrought angst, all its gnomic non sequiturs, all its off-putting adolescent scatology and cringe-inducing smuttiness, all the depraved tableaus and orgies of masturbation with all their bulging, spurting shapes, and all the compulsive repetitions about
Freud
’s repetition compulsion…

…culminating in the final words of the epic (as
Ike Karton
peers deeply into the fiery eyes of his lover/doppelgänger/killer,
Meir Poznak
, in which, of course, he sees the reflection of his own fiery eyes, in which are reflected the fiery eyes of his lover/doppelgänger/killer,
Meir Poznak
, which again, of course, reflect his own fiery eyes, etc., etc., etc.…two fiery orbs becoming smaller and smaller and smaller with each mirrored iteration…receding into the infinite depths of this
mise en abyme
…of course, like the red taillights of a bus receding into the farthest-flung depths of a fathomless distance…disappearing into the scintillating somethingness of the nothingness that never was…),
Ike Karton
’s cryptic dying words, which are, of course, “One size…fits all.”

BACK BAY • READERS’ PICK

Reading Group Guide
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack

A novel by

  

Mark Leyner

A conversation between novelists Rick Moody and Mark Leyner

Rick Moody:
So, I think it’s twelve or fifteen years since your last novel, correct?

Mark Leyner:
I don’t know exactly. Some gaping period, some inexplicable period of time.

RM:
The obvious question is: Why did it take so long to write
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack
? Part of that has to do with what you did instead for a while. But from the point of view of fiction writing, did you do other things because you felt like the form wasn’t amenable to you after the last novel?

ML:
When you say,
What took so long?
—that’s a beautiful way to phrase it, because I like to think of it now as some sort of necessary exile that resulted in this book. But some of the reasons for taking that break were aesthetic, and some were practical. I had done a number of books then, starting with
I Smell Esther Williams
and ending with
The Tetherballs of Bougainville
. And I thought at the time that I had thoroughly explored a series of issues about writing fiction, and I wanted to take a break because I wasn’t feeling a kind of urgency or avidity about it anymore. When I say “explored,” I don’t necessarily mean I worked from a more primitive exploration in the first book and then peaked with the most sophisticated in the last. I’m not even sure that’s the case.

But when I started publishing, I was woefully naive about the career of a writer. I didn’t know you had to put a book out every couple of years to renew your membership in the club of writers. I just thought you did it because you were overtaken by a burst of enthusiasm about venturing into certain places. I wasn’t thrilled with the idea that this is what you have to do to make a career. And then my wife and I had a kid, and I started to think things through more practically. I had a little bubble of public attention at that time, and I already knew that wasn’t going to last forever. So there were two factors simultaneously: one was a certain fatigue with this automotive model of putting out a book each year or two, and the other was the desire to try some other things that might be lucrative, like journalism or teaching. I mean, I could go on about why I didn’t end up doing those things, why I didn’t teach, if you’re interested.

RM:
Well, what I’m really curious about is how this book called to you out of the silence. Was part of the twelve years thinking about how to write this book?

ML:
To some degree I live like a kidnapping victim: just someone who is blindfolded and put in a trunk, and then the car stops and I’m let out. And if you look at any one period of time in my life, it seems like there’s some plotted trajectory, but it’s much more sporadic and random than that.

I think that a lot of the time was spent—again, some of this is very mundane—a lot of that time was spent working with other people on various things, like going back and forth to Los Angeles and working on all sorts of movie projects, some completely misbegotten and futile, some not. Different things like that, but all very collaborative projects.

I’m a very shy person who took to writing because I like being by myself, and in those years I found myself in a life that required such a degree of social activity that, eventually, it pressed me back into just wanting to be by myself. Certainly being confined within one’s thinking is one of the subjects of the book, you know, living within the universe of your own cognition. I wrote this book in such isolation. I had never written anything like this before. I didn’t show a sentence to anyone, from the beginning to the end. I didn’t do readings. All of those things can be comforting. You’re writing and you flash a little of it to someone and they appreciate it, and you think, OK. But I didn’t want that kind of comfort this time. I believed I needed to be steeped in the real, intransigently pure, lone wolf world of this book, that it would make this book such a strange piece of work if I had to just finally, truly trust myself about it the whole way through. It changed the taste of the book for me. And I love that so much more than any other thing—the feeling I get when I’m most involved in working, when writing this book. I feel the most vivid sense of being alive I have as a human being. And that’s what I had been away from for a long time, and it really did feel like a ridiculous exile, but one that was necessary when I look back on it.

RM:
Is there a way that the financial success of a book like
Why Do Men Have Nipples?
makes possible a book as uncompromising as
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack
?

ML:
I’m completely irresponsible with money. If I have it, I just run through it as fast as possible. I don’t know if you had this feeling, but when I first started thinking about writing seriously, and thinking of myself as someone who always had a project like a poem to write or something, I would have been just euphoric to see my book in a bookstore. I couldn’t even imagine what that would be like. So I still feel that way, really. I love doing this, and I think that the further I got from it, the more I eventually loved it when I came back to it. It’s so amazing to me that text—this kind of uniform grid of little glyphs, these black things—can provide such a phantasmagoric experience to someone deciphering them. I mean, it’s just so mind-bogglingly wonderful to be a part of that.

A funny thing happened to me in Los Angeles. Maybe three years ago, I had been working on this movie and I think I was there to help with the sound mix or something. I was coming back and I was walking to get my car. I was staying at this funny hotel in Culver City, it was a hotel where all the Munchkins had stayed when they made—

RM:
I was just there. I know that hotel. It’s crazy. It’s like a ghost hotel.

ML:
Yeah! And they have all those pictures of Munchkins on the wall. And I’m small, so there seemed to be something meaningful to me about being in the Munchkin hotel. I mean, I’m not that small. And I’m a strong Munchkin; I work out. So I was walking to get my car, there had been some construction there, and I’m crossing the street in the morning, it’s like seven o’clock, to take this car to LAX, and I get hit by a car. And I mean really hard. I don’t know if you’ve ever been hit by a car but it’s a kind of stunning thing. Time does slow down a little and you have a moment to think,
What the fuck was that?
It’s so violent, you can’t imagine—it’s unimaginable. So for a second, you just think,
I don’t know what that could’ve been.
Then you say,
Oh, that car hit me.

I saw that accident as Los Angeles saying,
Enough of you
. And it was mutual. I really do think of the world as a kind of cryptogram, a word I notice you use in your wonderful piece about Artaud that I adore. I am very hermeneutical. I’m interested in trying to tease out significance from everything. So I came back after the accident, and I couldn’t really walk and I was in bed and I just started reading. I read
Moby-Dick;
I read a beautiful book,
Jude the Obscure;
I read
The Mayor of Casterbridge
.

RM:
I love that book.

ML:
I thought,
This is what I love doing.
It sounds trite, but it was a signal event in my life. So I lay in bed thinking about this.

When I was a little boy, I saw that movie
Mothra,
which I talk about in the book. In the movie, there are these two little girls. As an eight-year-old boy, I thought about that endlessly—I have to be honest—what that would be like to possess them in my room. In benign ways, I would be nice to them but they would still be mine.

RM:
Maybe we should explain
Mothra
for those at home:
Mothra
is an installment in the Godzilla series, and it involves a very large caterpillar-like thing that can be summoned by two Japanese damsels who are kept in a tiny little cabinet, sort of a cabin of wonders.

ML:
Or like a little terrarium.

RM:
And they open it up, and the two little girls are standing there, and they sing.

ML:
There’s a song they sing. You can get it on YouTube. My memory of it is that they weren’t little girls, actually; they were miniaturized little Japanese pop star girls with sleeveless ’60s dresses. But I became really fascinated with that idea of just having little ones to play with. This is not far from an incipient ambition to be a writer, to want to have little helpless creatures you can do things to.

RM:
We’re actually dancing around the subject of the book in some ways because it’s hard to talk about. But let’s try to touch upon it briefly. A part of what you’re saying is that a novelist is sort of a puppet master, let’s say. And what’s immediately apparent to someone who’s read widely in the classics is how the contour of
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack
is very much like the mythical narratives of Ovid or Hesiod, or the Old Testament or Mahabharata or something like that. Was that point of origin completely conscious on your part?

ML:
I think that one of the things that makes this book unique is its even mix of what seems absolutely spontaneous and things that seem rigorously worked and analyzed. I always find that fascinating about mythology. Sometimes myths seem like something a kid made up to entertain an adult: Oh, there was this bird, and it had one lead wing, and one wing made out of popcorn, and the popcorn wing was eaten by people who just came out of a movie theater, which just showed the origin of the universe. Myths have that improvisational quality to them. But they also have a graven quality, a quality of having been hammered out of timeless verities. So I really like the interplay of both.

One of the things that I really wanted to play with in this book was how incidents and phenomena that are completely incidental and trivial and fleeting can take on a kind of lapidary significance. And I think this is true in the mythmaking of families. In my family, there’s a story that’s endlessly told about an uncle of mine. At his shore house, my grandfather would make a pitcher of martinis every day, a pitcher of clear liquid—and my uncle came in one day late in the afternoon, hot and thirsty from playing tennis, and just chugged this pitcher, thinking it was water. And then his eyes rolled back and he just collapsed backward. Now everyone loves this story for some reason; it’s as if there are bards who will continuously tell this story at family gatherings. It’s a myth made out of an incident from an afternoon.

RM:
That actually leads me to a completely different tangent, which is—unless I miss my guess—Ike’s biography is very similar to yours. Is the sort of virtuosic and astonishing act of imagination that is the entire heavenly cast that you provide in
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack
compensatory for the fact that it’s the most autobiographical of your work?

ML:
Well, I can’t accept the premise of that question with any humility. Thank you. That’s a very sweet question. I think what you said is absolutely true. I think—whatever this means—that this is the most honest book of mine in a number of ways. I think this is a very generous book, but that’s not unusual. I have always thought of what I do as an enormous act of generosity, trying to give the reader the most amazing experience possible. Wouldn’t it be great if I could delight someone and blow someone’s mind in a completely unique way—wouldn’t that be wonderful? I’ve never understood various interpretations of what I do as being aggressively ironic or hermetic or elitist or any of the various things that people can say about it, because my impulse is just to give the reader enormous pleasure. It’s really shamelessly seductive and flirtatious. This book itself is an incantation of seductiveness, and it’s also honest in all kinds of ways. It’s honest about the kind of bedeviling thinking with which I am—for lack of a better word—afflicted, which is always to think that things mean more than what they seem, which makes life infinitely more complicated. And for there to be no outside.

I think as I’ve gotten older I’ve gotten less and less gregarious, much more solitary, more reclusive. And speaking in terms of the autobiographical aspect, this is a very honest book about being older, about death, about sex and the kind of women I find uniquely attractive. And it’s about the realization that at some point I’m not going to elude the captivity of myself as I once thought I would. And that’s good and bad. I’m just deeper in the catacombs of my own captivity. I can say without question that this is what this book is about to a degree.

RM:
So the structural recursion is emblematic of that?

ML:
Yes, absolutely.

RM:
I want to arrive at a summarizing question. Now that you’ve written a novel after this long silence, is it still possible for you to look back on what you’ve done before and see this as part and parcel of that endeavor, or does it belong in a completely new phase of Mark Leyner?

ML:
If possible, both. It’s important to me that my work be unlike that of anybody else—and that’s not important to everybody, but it’s always been to me. To an unusual degree in my work, this book is the apogee of that desire for originality, and in that way it’s not completely separate phenomena from the rest of my work. I haven’t started anew somehow. But I think it’s the purest version of what I do, and it’s the beginning point to move forward with my writing. With this book, I tried to write sentences that so destabilize the preceding sentences that a different kind of book is created and undermined line by line. I think that achieves something meaningful. I’m very aware of choreographing a response from a reader, almost in a medical way. It’s like saying,
Oh, we’re going to inject this now. Let’s see what happens.
Reading is just a series of micro-effects on the consciousness of the reader. I want my writing to require the kind of attention on the part of a reader that I hope is a hyper-vivid experience of reading, of being alive, of trying to contort your thinking to grapple with something. With this book, I was more acutely aware than ever of the mechanics of creating that kind of experience, and I think there are a lot more places to take that that I haven’t yet. I think there might have been a time when I thought that my work would become more conventional or narrative, and you can see in the books before—to the extent that any of those words mean anything to me—they sort of did.
The Tetherballs of Bougainville
certainly had more of a story than
My Cousin
. And I know now that I don’t have any particular stake in narrative like that. I have an enormous stake in pursuing this program to create as sensational a series of lines and paragraphs and texts capable of the most radical destabilization as possible. This is not any sort of kind of automatic writing. As you have written about beautifully, and people have written about Artaud, to me, this is the most rigorous, scientific thing I’m doing. You could say that this book is the culmination of what I’ve done. But in another way,
The Sugar Frosted Nutsack
is so distant from any other book I did in how stubborn, in how militantly, it is what it is. That’s been astonishing even to me.

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