Read The Best Book in the World Online

Authors: Peter Stjernstrom

The Best Book in the World (9 page)

I
t wasn’t the first time this week that Detective Chief Inspector Håkan Rink had stood in front of the large noticeboard in the incident room. It was almost entirely covered with little bits of paper in various colours. Each colour represented a different type of ‘note’ as it is called in police jargon: crime scenes, clues, testimony and so on.

It was late evening and the team had gathered together to listen to an art historian tell them more about Salvador Dali’s driving forces. The crime scenes contained increasingly obvious signs that the serial killer was inspired by the surrealist
twentieth-century
painter.

‘Thank you for not going home to your dear families just this evening,’ Håkan Rink started off. ‘When we capture Serial Salvador, not only your own families will thank you – the whole country will show its gratitude. Sweden is cowering in terror. We see how the fear acquires new and nastier ways, such as bomb threats against museums with avant-garde exhibitions and the persecution of experimental authors and contemporary artists. Indeed, people vent their anger at culture in general as if it was culture that was to blame for how society has become harder. But I am still convinced that culture is a mirror of society – not the other way round. Let me welcome Alf Linde, one of Sweden’s foremost experts on the surrealist movement.’

The ten or so police officers in Rink’s team gave Linde a short but friendly round of applause. Linde was very old and looked as if he himself could have been around when the Dadaists were transformed into surrealists under the fanatical command of the author André Breton in the early 1920s. When he spoke, there was a quiver under his chin like that of a turkey.

‘Thank you, Håkan. Yes, in this case it does rather look as if the
murderer is busy creating a reality mirror of art. Very strange. To the best of my knowledge, this is the first time a murderer has copied an innocent artist. I am therefore also convinced that if you are ever to catch him you must become deeply familiar with Dali’s art. Understand it with your subconscious mind.’

The colleagues in the team nodded gravely at each other. That seemed sensible. They already know something about Dali, but definitely needed to learn more.

Now he must be concise, Titus thinks, and puts the brakes on his frenzy for a while. It would be a piece of cake to spew out thirty pages about Dali. His enormous waxed moustaches alone were worth a couple of pages. Did Serial Salvador have the same? No, that would be too simple.

Alf Linde handed out copies of a hand-written page and chuckled aloud to himself: ‘Here’s Dali in a nutshell; here’s Dali in a surrealist nutshell.’

Against the simple
 
For the compound
Against uniformity
 
For differentiation
Against equality
 
For rank
Against collectivism
 
For individualism
Against politics
 
For metaphysics
Against nature
 
For aesthetics
Against progress
 
For permanency
Against mechanisation
 
For dreams
Against youth
 
For mature Machiavellian fanaticism
Against spinach
 
For snails
Against film
 
For theatre
Against Buddha
 
For Marquis de Sade
Against the Orient
 
For the Occident
Against the sun
 
For the moon
Against revolution
 
For tradition
Against Michelangelo
 
For Raphael
Against Rembrandt
 
For Vermeer
Against primitive objects
 
For over-cultivated objects
Against philosophy
 
For religion
Against medicine
 
For magic
Against mountain regions
 
For coast
Against figments of the brain
 
For ghosts
Against women
 
For Gaia
Against men
 
For me
Against time
 
For soft clocks

Then Alf Linde talked for just over an hour about Dali and his art. Why he distanced himself from the other surrealists, how he became so extremely successful commercially, and how he eventually buried first his wife Gala and then himself in the cellar of his surrealist mansion in the middle of the Catalonian town of Figueres. It became a museum of his life’s work and one of the most remarkable tourist destinations in the world. Naturally with sky-high entrance fees.

‘In conclusion, I must tell you something about his inventions. Before Salvador Dali made his breakthrough as an artist, he sketched a number of innovations to earn his living. He carried out a bitter struggle and was regarded as an idiot by those to whom he tried to sell his ideas. Here are a few examples: dresses with false insertions around the hips and bosom to distract men’s erotic fantasies; false nails with mirrors; water-filled transparent mannequins with swimming goldfish inside to illustrate blood circulation; kaleidoscopic spectacles for motorists for when the surrounding landscape got too boring; tactile film where
cinemagoers
could touch the settings in the film. And so on, and so on. About one hundred of Dali’s inventions are well documented. What we can see today is that many of them have become reality in one way or another: the push-up bra; virtual reality spectacles; 4D cinemas, et cetera. Perhaps he wasn’t mad, just terribly before his time. But listen carefully now. The invention to which he devoted the greater part of his energy was the rotating pork sculpture. He bought large amounts of meat at the butcher’s and hung it on crutches that he placed on electric rotating tables.
Nobody knows what he wanted to achieve with the rotating pork. What do you think? Was he as mad as a hatter, or was he simply a misunderstood inventor?’

Truth and knowledge were the keys to Håkan Rink’s leadership. No frenzy to find positive images à la sporting clubs. No
group-dynamic
exercises fashionable for team-think in the commercial sector.

His police colleagues looked at each other, suddenly struck by the insight. They must search for Serial Salvador among inventor circles. Go through rejected applications at the Patent Office. Investigate misunderstood entrepreneurs and devoted
enthusiasts
who have not been given their credit. Dig among people labelled with odd combinations of letters to find those that have lost their footing. That is where they would find him!

Håkan Rink smiled contentedly to himself. Yet again, his simple and direct methods had borne fruit.

This time it was the FFI Method: FACTS are the FATHER of IMAGINATION.

After the evening meeting, the chief inspector treated his colleagues to some sustaining night food at the police station.

Håkan Rink’s Quattro Stagione, the pizza with four ‘seasons’.

Pizza dough

½ packet of fresh yeast: crumble the yeast into a large bowl

Add 200 ml lukewarm water and dissolve the yeast in the water

Add 500 ml wheat flour

Add 3 tablespoons of olive oil

Mix the ingredients into a pizza dough. Grease a roasting pan with olive oil. Cover the bottom of the pan with the dough pushing it out to the edges with your fingers. Cover the pan with a tea towel and leave it to rise for about 20 minutes while you prepare the sauce and the various toppings. Turn the oven to 250oc.

Pizza sauce

I tin of chopped tomatoes

2 tablespoons of tomato purée

2 teaspoons of white pepper and black pepper

A few drops of Tabasco

1 teaspoon of oregano

1 teaspoon of salt

1 crushed garlic clove

Mix all the ingredients for the pizza sauce, and taste. By all means sprinkle a little vinegar, sugar and pepper onto the mixture. Experiment a little! Let the sauce simmer a long time.

Pizza toppings

Prepare the toppings while the dough is rising.

Fresh, newly peeled prawns

Fresh, finely sliced mushrooms

Air-dried Italian ham

Mussels pickled in water

Pickled artichoke

Cut and grate the cheese: equal amounts of mozzarella, emmental and parmesan

When the dough base has risen for 20 minutes, spread the sauce over it and start with a layer of cheese.

Divide the pizza into quarters and add the topping in the following order: from ‘12 o’clock’ on the pizza and clockwise: ham is winter, mussels are spring, prawns are summer and mushrooms are autumn. If you believe in God, stick an artichoke in the middle. Push the topping gently into the sauce with you hand.

Bake in the oven for 15–20 minutes at 250°.

If you have used an artichoke, say a prayer.

Take a break from the ABC Method, and enjoy the best pizza in the world!

T
itus is sitting on the exercise bicycle at the gym. The sweat is running down the inside of his old bleached T-shirt with the Einstürzende Neubauten print that he bought in Berlin in 1983.

He has started to appreciate these two-hour breaks all the more. When Astra had turned up with a gym membership card, he had just snorted at her. But she evidently knew what she was doing. Titus has a feeling that she always knows what she is doing. An alpha woman. Young, attractive, clever, independent and with just the right amount of pushiness. He couldn’t have a better editor. He has been lucky in that respect.

Titus likes his new life. It’s been going on a few weeks now. Not since his teens has he had such a long period without any alcohol at all. Sure, he pulls out his reward image now and then, but it’s more to keep it alive than because he really needs it. Like an amusing joke, a pleasant memory. For the time being, another form of energy keeps him away from spirits and cigarettes.

The book.

Writing gives him energy. He’s rattling along and he knows it’s going to be good. The book is easily accessible in its style, but heavy as lead in its themes. He throws in so many references that critics will be kept busy for decades trying to analyse his intentions. The characters around Håkan Rink are built up in such a deliberately slow and refined manner that the reader should feel obliged to read on. The breakthrough and unexpected turning points are planned down to the tiniest detail. At the same time, Titus is careful not to reveal too much to readers. That would be an insult to their intelligence. Too many details are for nerds and bores. My readers are here making history with me, Titus thinks. It is my readers who will fill the characters with flesh and blood. It is my readers who will create the details in the room. It is they
who will get involved, who will let themselves be amused and worried. My readers are the cleverest and the best, he says to himself, and pedals away for all he is worth on the exercise bike.

Titus doesn’t like the suburbs. He has lived all his life in the centre of the city and likes crowds and asphalt. The few times he has been on holiday abroad, it has only been to other big cities. There, he never runs the risk of suddenly finding himself without a bar within easy reach.

Of course, he has been in the countryside – but only in the safe context of a boozy midsummer party or similar event. Titus has always felt that nature shows off a bit, that as soon as he comes along it spruces itself up to an incredible degree and tries to seduce him with its birdsong and its smells, although what it really wants to do is entice him into the mud in a dirty forest pond. And suddenly he has been conned. He sinks slowly under the surface while the pixies scornfully laugh at him with the blue midsummer night sky in the background. No, the countryside is hell. Out there, you must be on your guard. Or very drunk.

The suburbs are not the slightest improvement on the countryside. People in the suburbs are farmers. Instead of tractors, they drive around in enormous estate cars. All they talk about is the weather, sports news and lotteries. The only difference from real farmers is that the suburban people have cheap blue suits instead of cheap blue overalls.

Now, Titus is forced to visit the suburbs. Well, forced is perhaps not strictly accurate. He has been given a chance to learn about therapy for free. It would be an abuse of his professional responsibility not to profit from the chances that pass his way.

FF, as Håkan Rink would have labelled it. Follow the Flow.

When Titus gets off the bus he is on the very edge of Stockholm. Beyond the roundabouts and viaducts he can just make out the thousands of detached houses, terraced houses, the blocks of flats, the playing fields with artificial grass, and the shopping centres. He shudders and thanks his lucky stars that he only had to go as far as no-man’s land and not the whole way, deep into suburban hell. Valhallavägen 1 and the roundabout at Roslagstull are
without doubt Stockholm’s precipice – another couple of metres and he would have risked falling over the edge and that would be the end of it.

Instead he presses the bell down by the entrance. It just says Dr Rolf. Strange that there isn’t any surname. What sort of doctor only has a first name? Has he come to a children’s hospital?

‘Yes, hello!’ a voice shouts over the intercom, loud enough to drown the roar from the roundabout which catapults the big silver-coloured suburban cars northwards.

‘Yes, hello!’ Titus shouts back into the microphone. ‘I have a free appointment for multi-therapy at 10 o’clock!’

‘Come inside, I’ve nothing to hide! Fifth floor. There’s a lift on the left!’

A short buzz signals that the door can be pushed open. Titus enters and approaches the lift. When the door shuts behind him, he finds himself in total silence. The feeling of being in the suburbs soon fades. This is going to be exciting, he thinks, and overcomes his aversion to lifts.

When he reaches the fifth floor, the door to one of the flats is already open. He sees a hall that could well belong to a therapy clinic.

‘Next!’

A large and jovial man in a white coat suddenly appears from nowhere. He stretches his hand out towards Titus.

‘Hahaha! Titus Jensen, I presume.’

‘Quite right.’

‘I am Doctor Rolf. Ralf Rolf.’

‘Ralf Rolf?’ wonders Titus, who thinks that Ralf Rolf sounds more like a dog barking than a name.

‘Exactly! Ralf Rolf. But you can call me Ralf. Doctor Ralf Rolf or just Ralf, that’s me. Welcome!’

Titus looks around in the waiting room. Along one wall there are open empty chests full of theatre clothes and strange props all jumbled up together. Police uniforms, loose noses, wigs, dresses, coats of mail, theatre masks, fake boobs, and enormous Tyrolean short trousers. In the corner next to the chests is a room divider with an arrow and sign that says: Get changed here.

On the walls, Titus sees enormous framed poster-like images with black one-liners against a white background:

Hmm, thinks Titus, what a good idea. One-liners are philosophy in a concentrated form. An idea what won’t fit in a one-liner can never be understood by the masses. Naturally,
The Best Book in the World
must have the best one-liners in the world. He has already touched on that subconsciously, but can throw in even more into Håkan Rink’s dialogue. Ingenious abbreviations and one-liners, that’ll be what characterises the chief inspector’s language. A person who talks with abbreviations and one-liners wins Respect with a capital R.

And a capital R is something that is always on Håkan Rink’s mind.

‘Do you like them? I found them on Internet. On my own homepage, hahaha!’ chuckles Doctor Rolf with loud joviality, and puts his arm around Titus. He leads him into the consulting room.

‘Take a seat! But don’t take it home with you, haha!’

Titus finds them rather trying, people who are implacably jolly. It is as if they have a monopoly on good cheer. They smother everybody else’s attempt to be cheerful. Doctor Rolf is most certainly one of those people who starts a party by reeling off four or five funny stories, Titus thinks. It is so damned twentieth century to tell funny stories. And without a doubt he’ll be an expert on dirty stories too. Dirty stories are the worst sort of all funny stories.

Doctor Rolf sits down behind his large desk that is full of folders, prescription blocks, pens and a keyboard that looks a bit sticky.
A plate with a half-eaten Danish pastry explains that. Doctor Rolf is one of those people who munches away and makes a mess while surfing or working. Since all his attention is directed towards the screen, he doesn’t notice when he spills something on the keyboard.

Titus sits in the visitor’s chair on the other side of the desk. It is a bit low in relation to the desk top, and Titus feels small. Besides, the armrest is too high. And the armrests are too close to each other for it to be comfortable to have your arms inside them. It’s too cramped; he feels like a fatty in a doll’s chair. So he puts his arms on the armrests even though it makes his shoulders almost shoot up towards his ears. His fingers turn white as he firmly grasps the front of the armrests.

He does not feel at all comfortable with this visit. Doctor Rolf doesn’t seem a hundred per cent serious. Rather the opposite, in fact.

‘Yes, well indeed. Welcome, one might well say.’

‘Thank you.’

‘Right, you wanted to know a little about multi-therapy, is that correct?’

‘Yes.’

‘How much do you know?’

‘Nothing.’

‘Oh, I see,’ says Doctor Rolf, and indicates his serious intentions by pulling a little on the collar of his white coat.

‘Let me start from scratch. What is your problem? I mean, why were you curious about coming here?’

‘I don’t have any problems. I came because I got curious after a telephone salesman phoned me,’ said Titus, in a friendly tone.

‘Excellent! That is a good basic attitude. “I don’t have any problems.” One might think so. It is not entirely correct, but I won’t say that it is entirely wrong.’

‘No?’

‘Multi-therapy is based on an ancient philosophy. Everything that you understand as life and “the world” consists of events that are processed by your brain. Your brain is unique, so your picture of the world is unique too. What you perceive as green may be
seen as red by somebody else. What you see as right is wrong for another person. When you think “
nemas problemas
”, your fellow man may regard the situation as terrible.’

‘Mmm, yes…’

‘Experiences are nothing more than chemical reactions. Take what people call love, for example. Falling in love is about a bundle of hormones rushing around inside your body. There is no rational explanation for why a certain person attracts another. But what we do know is that we can influence the selection processes through conscious acts. By, for example, following norms and changes of fashion, our ability to attract increases. Adaptation is considered attractive because the opposite party understands that we have enough imagination to manage to support our offspring. Thus: our actions affect our hormones. A pair of modern jeans on a perfectly ordinary bottom gets more hormones going than does a pair of old-fashioned jeans on the same bottom. The act sets off a chemical reaction that creates the experience of love. It isn’t the bottom that gets the hormones going, it is the act. The choice of the correct pair of jeans, that is. The act itself is everything. Do you understand?’

‘Yes, I think so…’

‘Well, life is chemistry. You are a chemistry set. I am another.’

Doctor Rolf leans back and looks at Titus. Titus wonders where they are going. Doctor Rolf puts one hand on the back of his head and slowly pushes it through his hair down towards his brow. His fingers drip slowly down his forehead. The hand stops when it reaches his eyebrows. It rests there a while. Then he tugs a little at the skin of his forehead. His eyebrows go up and down, up and down. Then he suddenly lets go of his own head and continues:

‘You say that you don’t have any problems, don’t you?’

‘Yes…’

‘That is an interesting attitude. Most people who come here think they have problems. Serious ones, even. I usually tell them that they do
not.
But now the opposite would seem to be the case. Here is somebody who says he is without any problems.’

When Doctor Rolf says ‘without any problems’, he makes it sound like the exact opposite, like a condition that is very serious, indeed mortal. Doctor Rolf closes his eyes and emits a short snoring sound. Titus gives a start and tries to seem like an ordinary person.

‘Yes, well, without any problems – what does it mean: without any problems? I do of course struggle with some problems. Or have done in the past, one might say. But I don’t have any mental afflictions, if that is what you mean.’

‘No, of course not. I understand. “No mental afflictions.”’ Doctor Rolf pronounces his diagnosis slowly. Then he quickly gets up from his chair.

‘Yes, Titus. In that case, there is nothing I can do for you. Regrettably.’

‘Are we already finished?’ wonders Titus.

‘No, by no means! But if you don’t have any problems, I will then have to exhibit some of mine. You wanted to find out more about multi-therapy and so you will.’

‘Thank you, but I don’t know if that is necessary…’

‘Oh, but yes. Don’t be silly,’ says Doctor Rolf and turns on his best lecturer voice. ‘First, I shall tell you what it is about. Then I shall demonstrate how it can work. Thus: life is chemistry. Everything you perceive depends upon your chemical make-up. Everything you perceive
wrongly
also depends upon your chemical make-up. All qualities or singularities you have that can be interpreted as abnormal in the eyes of others can be altered with the help of chemical reactions. It is, for example, quite common that people take medicines containing chemicals if they feel excessively
persecuted
. People who are too happy may take medicine made from the chemical element lithium to deal with that affliction. And people who feel extremely unhappy may also take lithium. With enough lithium in your body, we will all feel good and be like each other. That is what they want. Or what their relatives want. Be that as it may: chemicals are far too clumsy according to us multi-therapists.’

Other books

Sketchy by Samms, Olivia
Highlights to Heaven by Nancy J. Cohen
Solo by William Boyd
The Spinster Bride by Jane Goodger
Mariah's Prize by Miranda Jarrett
The Cracksman's Kiss by Sheffield, Killarney
Final Grave by Nadja Bernitt


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024