Andres Neuman

The Things We Don't Do


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       PRAISE FOR THE WORK OF ANDRÉS NEUMAN

      “Good readers will find something that can be found only in great literature, the kind written by real poets, a literature that dares to venture into the dark with open eyes and that keeps its eyes open no matter what.”—Roberto Bolaño, Between Parentheses

      “Traveler of the Century doesn’t merely respect the reader’s intelligence: it sets out to worship it. . . . A beautiful, accomplished novel: as ambitious as it is generous, as moving as it is smart.” —Juan Gabriel Vásquez, The Guardian

      “Rarely comes a novel that blends poetry, history, philosophy, semantics, politics, a murder mystery—and love, that too—with such skill.”—Elif Shafak

      “A deeply erudite but wickedly entertaining novel, with passion as well as reason in the mix, this tour de force from the Argentinian-born prodigy matches charming plot-twists with mind-stretching dialectic.”—Boyd Tonkin, The Independent

      “We come to see how lives are built out of passing detail, the flicker of small incidents, the intervention of literature, and the trace of forgotten things. Talking to Ourselves is both brilliant and wise, and Andrés Neuman is destined to be one of the essential writers of our time.”—Teju Cole

      “Neuman is one of the rare writers who can distill the most complex human emotions with apparent effortlessness. . . . Andrés Neuman has transcended the boundaries of geography, time, and language to become one of the most significant writers of the early twenty-first century”—Music & Literature

       ALSO BY ANDRÉS NEUMAN IN ENGLISH TRANSLATION

       Talking to Ourselves

       Traveler of the Century

      Copyright © 2014 Andrés Neuman

      c/o Guillermo Schavelzon & Asoc., Agencia Literaria

       www.schavelzon.com

      Translation copyright © 2014 by Nick Caistor & Lorenza Garcia

      First U.S. edition, 2015

      All rights reserved

      The story “The Things We Don’t Do” was first published in The Paris Review (Issue 213, Summer 2015).

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: Available.

      ISBN-13: 978-1-940953-19-9

      Neuman, Andrés, 1977-

      [Short stories. Selections. English]

      The things we don’t do / Andrés Neuman; translated by Nick Caistor; translated by Lorenza Garcia. — First American edition.

      pages cm

      1. Neuman, Andrés, 1977 - —Translations into English. I. Caistor, Nick, translator. II. Garcia, Lorenza, translator. III. Title.

      PQ6664.E478A2 2015

      863'.64—dc23

      2015009601

       Design by N. J. Furl

      Open Letter is the University of Rochester’s nonprofit, literary translation press: Lattimore Hall 411, Box 270082, Rochester, NY 14627

       www.openletterbooks.org

      contents

       A Chair for Somebody

       Barefoot

       Juan, José

       My False Name

       THE LAST MINUTE

       Bathtub

       Poison

       Man Shot

       The Laughing Suicide

       Outside No Birds Were Singing

       A Cigarette

       THE INNOCENCE TEST

       The Innocence Test

       Mr. President’s Hotel

       Monologue of the Monster

       Embrace

       Clothes

       After Elena

       END AND BEGINNING OF LEXIS

       Piotr Czerny’s Last Poem

       The End of Reading

       The Gold of the Blind Men

       The Poem-Translating Machine

       Theory of Lines

       End and Beginning of Lexis

       BONUS TRACKS: DODECALOGUES FROM A STORYTELLER

       Dodecalogue from a Storyteller

       New Dodecalogue from a Storyteller

       Third Dodecalogue from a Storyteller

       Fourth Dodecalogue: The Post-Modern Short Story

      My name is Marcos. I have always wanted to be Cristóbal.

      I don’t mean I want to be called Cristóbal. He is my friend; I was going to say my best friend, but I have to confess he is the only one.

      Gabriela is my wife. She loves me a lot and sleeps with Cristóbal.

      He is intelligent, self-assured, an agile dancer. He also rides. Is proficient at Latin grammar. Cooks for women. Then eats them for lunch. I would say that Gabriela is his favorite dish.

      Some