Taty Went West - Softcover

Singh, Nikhil

 
9780998705903: Taty Went West

Inhaltsangabe

Taty is a troubled teen running away from home. She quickly finds herself kidnapped by a malicious imp in the dinosaur-infested Outzone. While confronting demons of her own, Taty finds herself in a chaotic world full of evangelizing robot nuns, Buddhist punks, and the ominous Dr. Dali. Nikhil Singh has created a truly unique universe with a bold, petulant heroine one can't help but cheer for. Called “a hallucinogenic post-apocalyptic carnival ride” by Lauren Beukes, Taty Went West is told with bold swagger and otherworldly imagination by one of Africa's most promising new writers. As Billy Kahora, managing editor of Kenya's Kwani Trust, says, “Savvy, ultra-modern, Taty straddles the mediated realities of our own continent and the groundbreaking possibilities of our ongoing universal imaginaries.”


Nikhil Singh is an artist, writer, musician and film-maker. They have fronted the critically acclaimed South African art-rock bands, The Wild Eyes and Hi Spider, as well as released a plethora of solo albums under the moniker, “Witchboy." They have recently written and directed a feature-length film, Trillzone (2014), which was commissioned by the South African National Arts Festival as part of a J.G. Ballard symposium. As an artist, they have illustrated the graphic novels, The Ziggurat and Salem Brownstone, which was longlisted for The Branford Boase Award. Their work has also been featured in Pictures and Words: New Comic Art and Narrative IllustrationDazedI-D Online, Creative ReviewThe Times (UK), Mail & Guardian (UK), The Independent (UK), Rolling Stone (SA), GQ (SA), and featured as part of the COMICA festival exhibition at the ICA.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Nikhil Singh is an artist, writer, musician and film-maker. They have fronted the critically acclaimed South African art-rock bands, The Wild Eyes and Hi Spider, as well as released a plethora of solo albums under the moniker, “Witchboy." They have recently written and directed a feature-length film, Trillzone (2014), which was commissioned by the South African National Arts Festival as part of a J.G. Ballard symposium. As an artist, they have illustrated the graphic novels, The Ziggurat and Salem Brownstone, which was longlisted for The Branford Boase Award. Their work has also been featured in Pictures and Words: New Comic Art and Narrative Illustration, Dazed, I-D Online, Creative Review, The Times (UK), Mail & Guardian (UK), The Independent (UK), Rolling Stone (SA), GQ (SA), and featured as part of the COMICA festival exhibition at the ICA.

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Taty Went West

By Nikhil Singh

Rosarium Publishing

Copyright © 2018 Nikhil Singh
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-9987059-0-3

CHAPTER 1

The Zone


THERE HAD ALWAYS BEEN STORIES of lost cities in the jungle. Descriptions of vast structures hidden behind impenetrable veils of steaming foliage, their once-great plazas and floating pyramids now the haunt of monkeys, shades, and folkloric spiders. Many such places must have existed in the trackless quadrants of the Outzone. Much of the jungle was still unexplored with only two highways leading into the lower portion of the Zone — the old colony, long since abandoned and declared lawless. One of these passages came in over the hot, carbon wastes while the other became a coast road.

This tarmac strip hugged the wild shoreline and was the most common point of entry from the cities of the Lowlands. The coast itself was dotted with seedy port towns, the largest of which was Namanga Mori at the farthest tip of the old colony on the threshold of the jungle. Before the colony had broken down, Namanga Mori had been a thriving center of trade, ferrying jungle produce from the deepest regions of the Outzone. Now it was decrepit, populated by smugglers, sleepwalkers, and those who came staggering out of the trees looking for work. The Outzone was a place where people went to escape. It was large enough for anyone to lose themselves in, a feverish sanctuary for those seeking to escape their lives or memory. In this way the jungle became a forest of dead time, a necrotic wonderland, a province of waking coma where time itself had grown sickly and died. Travelers called the Zone "the Land of Strangers": the place where anyone could escape anything and where the lost things lay.

CHAPTER 2

Heading West


THE PIGGY BANK BOUGHT HER a bus ticket to nowhere fast. But it felt like nowhere slow. When Taty was on the coach staring out at an unreeling landscape, everything seemed pre-recorded. She was reminded of films she had seen as an infant.

It was claustrophobic aboard the yellow-windowed old coach, surrounded by strangers in the droning dimness. Every driver's announcement was preceded by the intro of that old "If You're Going to San Francisco" song, and the screening facility was broken. The interior was heavy with the stench of sweat and jungle chicken. Taty held her nose for most of the way, disembarking at the edge of the jungle where the road branched out into the Zone. She found herself on the verge where the route left the Lowlands, gazing out at the distant rises of greenery and watching the coach slug away down the highway as she sang the lyrics of her current favorite pop anthem quietly to herself: Just a girl from a small town running wild ... To her left foliage-choked valleys winked like lazy eyes within the distant dips and swells. To her right flexed the long, golden biceps of the beach. A warm, dark sea swelled and retracted beyond the blurry shore, fuzzing up the air with haze. Fields of rushes shimmered within the curtain of this obscurity, a hairline clinging to the edges of lagoons.

Taty followed the coast road into the Outzone until it got dark and then slept in the wreck of an old car. It was a busted-up shell of a thing crouched in on itself like the husk of a beetle. She had discovered it along the way partially engorged by vines and left the road to investigate. When the back seat was found to be somewhat still intact, she decided to linger. The night was stuffy and sticky. She could at all times hear the sea moving behind the stage curtain of the trees. A lull of singing insects carried in haunting waves through the dense, black heart of the mangrove. Already she was starting to erase things, tapes and memories, tiny little lines of pencil. Erasure came easily to her, and she didn't give it much thought. She had recently turned sixteen, and things were shifting radically. The decision to run away from home had been taken, and it was too late to turn around now. She was stepping lightly into the framework of a brand new universe without so much as looking back. And there was a special kind of strength in this. But it was easy in this gloomy Eden, which was so different from the clear-cut provincialities of the Lowlands. Although she had heard a hundred stories about the Outzone, it was the pop songs that had finally cemented her decision. She had been listening to the In with the Outzone album that was on all the radios in the hive that summer. Her favorite holo-pop singer, Coco Carbomb, had recorded most of the music in the Outzone with some local character they called the "witchboy." The pair sang about a wild place filled with crazy parties, pleasure tech, and high adventure. It seemed as good a place to run to as any. When she heard the song about a small-town teen running wild, it struck a chord. She downloaded the song directly to tape and would listen to it on repeat, sullen-faced in the knowledge of what she was about to do.

No one could have suspected her true motives or the strength of her conviction, yet lots of girls her age must have shared the urge to escape the locked-down routines of the Lowlands: the subterranean suburb bunkers, the regimentation, and factory food, all those sky malls. Almost anything that blew out of the lawlessness of the Outzone was quickly elevated to fable in such sterile quarters. But now that she was finally here, the reality of the Zone turned everything she had heard about it to lukewarm gossip. The music, however, lingered, becoming even more potent in its native element. She remembered all those times trapped in the 'burbs, staring out of a bubble window with the volume turned all the way up, fantasizing about the tropical realm that In with the Outzone described. It was to these escapist moments that she returned when it finally came time to run. Because, by now, she truly believed that it was in the Zone that she would finally be able to leave behind — and indeed, forget forever — the terrible thing she had done. Even now, so far away from home, she could not even bring herself to think about it. Out in the jungle, strange birds called. Their voices looped out into space, and she imagined that they were speaking to her in an ancient, long-forgotten language. Calling to her from just beyond the tree line.

Taty awoke before dawn and watched the sun split like a ripe melon over the world. She was listening to tapes on her Walkman(r) when light started creeping through the meshwork of densely knitted trees. And she felt quiet and still within that spectral light. She clawed off her heavy metal headphones, cut the tape, and listened to the immensity of the wild jungle she had heard so many stories about. Soon she was out on the road again.

The day began to blur as the heat rose. The sound of the sea tantalized her with a promise of coolness, but as much as she searched, no beach path marked the almost-solid walls of jungle. Rather than enter the tangled labyrinth of vegetation, she simply trudged on. By late afternoon the charm of adventure had drained away, and fatigue lay heavy upon her. She spent another mosquito-haunted night in the rough. Her sleep was broken by the distant whooping of dinosaurs. She stayed up till dawn in a haze of fear, stepping back out onto the road as soon as the sun came out. She had been walking for almost two days now, eating stale chocolate cookies and resting now and again on the side of the road. In that time she had seen only two vehicles pass. One was an overloaded jungle chicken rig stacked high with the corpses of man-sized gilas. The lizards were part of the staple diet of the Outzone inhabitants, often referred to as "jungle chicken" due to the flavor of their firm, white flesh. A man with a painted face was driving, but he barely glanced at Taty as he passed. The other vehicle was battered beyond description and almost ran her over. Nobody else seemed to want to enter the jungle. And so the road gleamed starkly before her, a sanitary incision across the flank of some inebriated behemoth.


It was approaching late afternoon when Taty heard the sound of another car. The light was by now heavy and orange. The sound of the sea had dulled out to a distant ebb. Taty stopped in the middle of the highway and glanced back over her shoulder. Heat waves had become disturbed by the passage of the distant car. These oiled around against the embering light, distorting the sun in their churn. A mounting bass hum suggested that the car was moving fast. Taty stopped and stood, observing the noisy speck approach in a heat drunk fashion. She was too fatigued to move, or perhaps she assumed that the car would simply barrel by like the others. The hum swelled to an engine roar, and the car didn't so much as slow as stop on a dime. It screeched to a neat, contained halt, its massive bulk vibrating gruffly beside her. She found herself staring at the hot wall of a towering chassis. Dull, black paint flaked in parts. The weathering showed sea rust and bullet-pocked metal. Barbed wire had been twined around the heavy bumpers, left to oxidize. A sharp-nosed teddy bear was tangled up in it like a kooky kamikaze.

"Where you going, Sugarplum?" a smoky voice inquired.

Taty glanced up to see a plump, pale woman smoking slyly down at her from the driver's window. One of the smiling woman's hands was draped over the sill, and Taty noticed that it was large and paw-like. The fat fingers terminated in black raptor claws that stroked around constantly, dislodging tiny fragments of paint in slow circulations. Taty gazed back down the highway, lifted an arm in response, and pointed. Her finger seemed to describe an area where the chalky highway tapered out into invisibility, becoming gradually swallowed by the looming mass of the jungle.

"That way."

The woman brushed back a fringe of bottle-black hair, revealing an intricate tattoo. The shocking patterning sprawled out over her rounded cheek and forehead, radiating from her staring kohlrimmed eye. It completely dominated the entire left side of her dolllike face, lending her a schizoid quality. Taty found that there was a strange mystique to the tattoo, a quality that was difficult to place immediately. It captivated her attention, allowing the woman the freedom to inspect her. Sensing that it was perhaps the sort of distraction a predator might employ, Taty snapped up to meet whirlpool eyes. The woman exhaled smoke while she studied the girl.

"Death is very quick. She is also very quiet."

She breathed out more smoke, her statement somehow drawing the various sounds of the jungle into focus: clicking and whirring, distant calls of birds, and the rummaging of animals.

"If we come by this road later, will you still be walking?" Taty considered this, the dream of her day suddenly intruded upon by an unforeseen gauze of reality.

"I ... I don't know," she murmured.

The passenger door popped open a moment or two later, almost of its own accord. Yet Taty lingered on for long seconds, observing the unspoken offer of a ride in a state of dreamy indifference. She and the massive motor car formed an unmoving tableau against the darkening jungle. Frozen, as though within a film still.

CHAPTER 3

The Insect Christ


TATY HAD LEANED HERSELF OUT into the slipstream, staring up at grey and turbulent recessions of cloud. Somewhat bipolar industrial power electronics blared out of the bass-heavy speaker system, flickering between piercing feedback and whispery white noise without any warning. The crucifix was the first thing she had noticed upon entering the car. It dangled heavily from the rearview, swinging like a pendulum. The face of the Jesus figure had been broken off, replaced by the severed head of a large jungle insect. It was a comical — though inexpressibly perverse — image.


Later they were sitting in a lapsed silence, rocketing through the pre-dusk dimness.

"My brother ..." Taty faltered. "He died."

"That's nice."

"What is it you do?"

"We collect."

Taty glanced sidelong at the fantastic moonscape of the woman's shadow-drenched profile. A long cigarette dangled off glossblack doll's lips, coiling out a blur of smoke. This blur extended as the day drew on, filling the car and smudging Taty's day.

"Miss Muppet's the name, sister."

Taty fell asleep watching the crucifix. Its swaying lulled her while the world blackened. She awoke dazed, somewhere in the night. Miss Muppet sat like an ancient statue fixed behind the wheel, under-lit and bathed in violent music. Taty scuffed off her sneakers, crawled over onto the vast back seat, and slid instantly into a restless slumber.

She awoke again deeper into the muggy wash of a tropical night. They had stopped on the side of the road, and a troubling stillness filled the car. A dim glinting along the metal of the windows cut slim shapes out of the blackness. She could hear the rumble of the sea and the close clicking of a palm tree. Warmth swelled in ambiguous shapes above and beside her. She found herself drifting in and out of sleep. It was almost too hot to breathe. Something heavy and pale shifted beside her in the blackness, and she found herself mumbling out loud.

"Mommy," she slurred.

The utterance surprised her in a distant, unforeseeable way. It came to her that this was the longest she had been apart from her state-medicated mother. When she was contemplating running away, Taty didn't imagine she would miss her mother at all. Who could miss the housebound ghost that saw imaginary white rabbits in the corners of rooms and often failed to recognize her own daughter? Yet now, in hindsight, Taty's feelings were altogether different. It had been difficult for her growing up with a mother who often appeared to be living in another reality. The robots made sure her mother didn't stray and kept her doped up, but everyone would still worry about her falling through open windows and the like. Despite this, the woman drank heavily, lapsing into chaotic, almost schizoid behavior at the slightest provocation. The various conditions she suffered from and the treatment they necessitated created a constant state of tension. In the last few years, however, Taty's feelings had turned to irritation and even rage. She knew that it wasn't right to feel this way. She made every effort to be charitable and accepting, only to find herself coming up short when her mother started hurling crockery at her or bawling like a baby. Her father, for the most part, absented himself, entrusting his kids to robotic care — a well-worn tradition in the Lowlands. The man always seemed to be away on assignment buried deep in subterranean bases, available only as a hologram or in the form of presents, easy enough to dismiss. The abandonment of her long-suffering mother, however, seemed all of a sudden an invitation to calamity. Taty wondered whether she had made a mistake. Here in the hot darkness beside a stranger, she fantasized about returning home. She began to imagine that the authorities and her family could forgive her for what she had done. The cold fact was that, if anyone in the Lowlands discovered the truth of what had happened to her little brother, she would be medicated alongside her mother. There could never be any acceptance or understanding of her actions. Not in that machine-hearted wasp hive. The course she had taken was the only one open to her, and she had to be brave about it. The longing she felt for a mother who wasn't always drunk and delusional had been with her for as long as she could remember. But now that the suffocated umbilicus had finally been severed by her own hand, she felt desperate for comfort. The emotional charge drew her reflexively to the stranger. Her eyelids grew heavy before she could contemplate the full import of the situation. Sleep washed down like the sound of the sea, drowning her quickly.

Taty sat up abruptly to find herself alone in the bright, white light of morning. She noticed immediately that the crucifix had disappeared. Fresh sea air knifed in through the open windows, gusting hair into her eyes. She scuffed it aside and glanced around. The jungle had fallen away to reveal a vast, barren seascape. The highway had elevated, straddling the edge of a bony cliff. This precipice overlooked the wild, dark sea. She rubbed her eyes and crawled blearily out onto the windy tarmac. Miss Muppet was nowhere to be seen. Taty peered around before walking to the edge of the cliff and gazing down at the distant rind of the beach. After a moment or two, she could clearly discern a tiny black blot on the grand arc of sand.


(Continues...)
Excerpted from Taty Went West by Nikhil Singh. Copyright © 2018 Nikhil Singh. Excerpted by permission of Rosarium Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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ISBN 10:  190976261X ISBN 13:  9781909762619
Verlag: Jacaranda Books Art Music Ltd, 2017
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