Alternative Remedies for Loss

Alternative Remedies for Loss

by Joanna Cantor
Alternative Remedies for Loss

Alternative Remedies for Loss

by Joanna Cantor

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Overview

An Amazon Best of the Month Selection for May 2018

A slyly funny coming-of-age novel about a young woman fumbling her way into the mysteries of loss and the travails of adulthood as she tries to make sense of a vanished mother's legacy.

When 22-year-old Olivia learned that her mother had only months to live, she pulled up roots, leaving Vassar and her career plans far behind to be with her mother for her last days. And yet, just four months after her mother's death, everyone in Olivia's family already seems ready to move on. Her brothers are settled comfortably in careers and families of their own; her father has already started to date again, inviting a woman named June on a family trip. Still reeling from the loss, Olivia looks for a new start of her own, throwing herself headlong into Manhattan's fast-moving media world, where she is alternately demeaned by bosses and pursued by men.

But as Olivia tries to piece together an adulthood without her mother to guide her, she makes a shocking discovery: a secret romantic correspondence her mother had with a man who only signed each letter “F.” As she tries to untangle the mystery of F, Olivia will journey halfway across the world, to an ashram in rural India, on a quest that will reconfigure everything Olivia thought she knew about her family and her own place in an increasingly complex world.

A profoundly moving and keenly observed contemplation of the debts we owe to the past and the ways we discover our futures, Alternative Remedies for Loss is the rare sort of book that can break and mend your heart in a single and unforgettable read.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781635571721
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 05/08/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Joanna Cantor holds an MFA from Brooklyn College. She was awarded a Vermont Studio Center Fellowship. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and dog.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

On the flight to New Delhi, Olivia slept through landing and woke to announcements she didn't understand. She had the feeling of being dragged out of a different, preferable world, but she couldn't remember what she'd been dreaming. The air on the plane was warm and thick with bodies. Across the aisle, her brother Ty and his girlfriend, Christina, were checking seat-back pockets and peering into the crevices beneath the armrests.

"You missed breakfast," Ty said when he saw that Olivia was awake. "Not a tragedy. I think those were authentic Indian croissants."

"What I would give to be able to sleep like that on a plane," Christina said. It was the first time Olivia had seen Christina look even slightly disheveled. Her hair was tangled and she was still wearing a pink neck pillow.

"What's your secret?" Christina asked.

Olivia had taken two Xanax at the beginning of the flight and another one when she woke up somewhere over the Middle East. She wasn't sure how else anyone could expect to sleep on a plane. While she was considering her response, Ty retrieved her backpack from the overhead bin. Then they were moving slowly forward, and it was a game to take the smallest possible steps but remain in continuous motion, to pace herself exactly right.

They caught up with the others — Alec, the eldest, and his wife, Holly; Max, their father; and June, the woman Max was dating, whom Olivia did not plan to acknowledge. The pacing game ceased to amuse her. She rested her chin on Alec's arm and slipped into semi-dreams. There was drool on her chin, and then there was a uniformed man with a moustache, asking, "What is your business in this country?," and everyone was quick to say they were not there on business, which Olivia was fairly certain was not what he was asking, but either way, they got their stamps. And then they were at baggage claim, collecting the luggage — so much luggage, among the seven of them. Olivia wanted to curl up on top of one of the large suitcases, but by this point her brothers were heckling her, pushing her back and forth between them, determined to keep her awake.

Their guide appeared, holding a small sign that said HARRIS. He had been waiting for them at immigration, he explained hurriedly, but they must not have seen him. His name was Akosh. He was wearing a thin red tie, circles of sweat under his arms. Akosh brought them small plastic cups of tea, milky and sweet, because it was morning in India.

Outside the terminal, in heat that felt like a creature draped around their necks, they confronted an eight-lane circus of tour buses and jeeps and small green-and-yellow vehicles that looked like golf carts. Akosh tried to convince them to wait indoors while he fetched the drivers, but to her family's credit, no one retreated to the climate-controlled limbo of the airport.

All around Olivia, people seemed to be hustling in slow motion, their jerky movements suggesting speed Olivia did not see, though perhaps, still Xanaxed, her brain was slowing everything down. Several men crouched behind a tour bus, changing the tire, while cars lined up behind, honking rhythmically and incessantly. The smell — burning rubber, tropical sweat and incense, spices and urine, cows and their shit — was everywhere at once. Teenage boys, their yellowed shirts revealing triangles of hairless chest and stomach, rushed at her family, offering rides and trinkets, and Akosh spoke harshly to them in a guttural tongue, flipping them away with the back of his fingers.

Alec's hands were on Olivia's shoulders. "We're going," he said, and Olivia saw that everyone else had followed Akosh into the rotary.

They had been at dinner in the city when Max first proposed the trip. "I promised your mother I'd take her this year," he'd said. It would have been their thirty-fifth wedding anniversary. "Olivia thinks we should go anyway."

"I didn't say that." Olivia stabbed at a shrimp. It was Memorial Day, and the evening was warm, but the wait for an outdoor table had been over an hour, so they settled for sitting near the doors that opened onto the terrace. The restaurant was large and full of overdressed groups cackling over shellfish platters. It seemed an odd choice for their small, somber gathering: Ty, Christina, and Max. Olivia's mother had died six weeks before.

"Olivia and I are going this summer," Max said. "I think the whole family should come."

Olivia hadn't realized this was an actual plan. It was true that the day before, Max had found her flipping through notes she'd made about the trip she and her mother had wanted to take. Max had leaned over Olivia's shoulder, studying her messy scrawl. "We should go," he'd said.

Ty glanced at Christina. "This summer could be tough. Christina has the bar at the end of July."

"August, then," Max said. "Before Olivia goes back to school."

"It's the monsoon," Olivia said. She was pretty sure that was true.

"There are cars. There are umbrellas."

Ty looked unconvinced.

"I've always wanted to go to India," Christina said softly, surprising them all.

"I thought you wanted to do something relaxing after the bar," Ty said. "Like the beach."

"I took an Indian history class in college," Christina said.

"I'll call the travel agent," Max said. "I think this could be good."

On the way to the hotel, Akosh reminded them of the itinerary: they would spend two nights in New Delhi, then travel to Agra to see the Taj Mahal. They'd tour Rajasthan for five days before returning home.

After they'd checked into the hotel, a splashy high-rise with dramatic flower arrangements and pools of water in the lobby, and after showers and a breakfast of omelets and coffee at one of the hotel's restaurants, Akosh herded the Harrises and Christina and June back into the jeeps for a shopping expedition. Shopping, he claimed, was a very good first-day activity: it defeated jetlag. "And you can dress like the local people," he told them.

Olivia didn't like the feeling that Akosh was being patronizing, though she could hardly blame him. Clearly they weren't going to blend in with the locals. She'd read about guides making deals with shopkeepers, receiving some sort of kickback when they brought tourists there. But when Akosh took them to the first store, which was large, with separate floors for men's, women's, and home goods, he didn't even go inside with them. He would take lunch, he explained, though it was only eleven, and collect them in an hour.

Max, Alec, and Ty had no real interest in outfitting themselves, but their presence seemed to rattle the other female customers, all well-dressed Indian women, so they retreated downstairs to their own department, June in tow.

Back at the hotel, Olivia had tried to combat her grogginess with a couple of strong cups of coffee, and now she had the not unpleasant sensation that she was swimming on land. Her legs and arms were weightless, and there was a moment of surprise each time her sandaled feet made contact with the red tile floor. Christina was handing her clothes to try on that were the color of autumn leaves. They made her think of crayons, of that coveted color burnt sienna.

Holly already had ten or twelve scarves draped over her arms. "For the girls," she explained. It was unclear whether she meant friends or employees. Holly was British and a model turned actress. Alec had met her in Los Angeles, where he was an agent. She was tall and thin and head-turningly stunning, with dark hair, nearly translucent skin, and light blue eyes. She was snobby but in a funny way, and the Harrises had been quickly won over, not least of all Olivia, who could recall with pleasure each time she and Holly had been mistaken for sisters.

Christina emerged from the dressing room in a lavender tunic and ballooning white pants. A saleswoman explained that these were the traditional salwar kameez outfits. To wear them properly, you added a dupatta, a long, wide scarf draped over your chest.

"Try some things on," Christina urged. Olivia liked the way she looked in the clothes Christina picked out for her. She stood in the fitting room wearing only a tunic, making what her mother had called her model faces — narrowing her cheeks and pouting out her lips.

"I love this," Holly gasped, and Olivia stepped around the curtain to see. Customers stared at her bare legs as Holly fondled a river of turquoise. Akosh had been right — they were entertained. Her mother would have loved this store for the colors alone. Olivia wanted to capture it somehow, but pulling out her camera here, while the other customers went about their business, didn't feel right.

When she came out again, wearing her own clothes and carrying the two outfits she had chosen, June had reemerged from the men's department. She was wearing a white silk jacket and standing in front of the three-way mirror. She adjusted the yellow scarf around her neck.

"That looks nice on you," Christina said.

Olivia made a mental note about Christina.

"Not very practical for this kind of trip," Holly said, glancing at Olivia. There was no need for any kind of jacket in India, except perhaps a waterproof poncho. Outside, the clouds were gathering. August was the middle of the monsoon, as Olivia had thought.

"It is late in the season," June said. She sounded disappointed. She turned sideways, still looking at herself in the mirror.

"Well, it's not exactly trendy," Holly said, relenting. "You'll wear it next year."

"Might as well stock up while my dad's paying," Olivia said.

June stiffened. Christina looked embarrassed too, as though she were implicated. Holly's eyes crinkled at the edges as they did when she was about to laugh.

June carefully removed the jacket, avoiding their gaze.

The men came back upstairs, carrying shopping bags and looking slightly uncomfortable.

"We talked each other into it," said Alec.

"This is going to be good," Holly said.

"Holly prefers me in a suit," Alec said, draping his arm around Christina, who seemed a little scandalized by Holly's sarcasm. "I'm the working stiff and she's the gorgeous actress, and she doesn't want anyone to forget it."

"Not true," said Holly. "I'm the one who got you to stop wearing Brooks Brothers on the weekend."

Olivia walked outside, leaving her bundle of Indian clothes behind. The clouds were very dark and a breeze raced through the humid air. She leaned back against the storefront and watched people pass. Stylishly dressed Indian women, some wearing saris and others in Western clothes, strolled along the covered walkway carrying shopping bags. There were men in suits and a smattering of foreigners as well. Three women walked by in burkas. Past the walkway and the road there was a grassy roundabout with a fountain in the center and children playing.

It was Eleanor Harris, Olivia's mother, who had wanted to go to India. She'd started practicing yoga around the time Olivia went to college, and as she became more serious about it, she began pestering Max to take her to its birthplace. But Max hadn't been interested in this more adventurous type of travel. To him, summers were for Europe or maybe Cape Cod, winters for the Caribbean. Finally, Eleanor said she would take Olivia, the year after Olivia graduated from college.

Last January, Eleanor's doctors had diagnosed the brain tumor: a high-grade, inoperable astrocytoma. In February, the first week her mother was really too sick to go out, it was Olivia who brought up the trip: Where will we go, when we go to India? They'd been lying in bed together, making fun of daytime television. Olivia pulled a map up on her laptop, and Eleanor, disinclined to mope, was immediately game.

They had looked at flights from New York and decided they would fly into New Delhi. The next day Olivia bought a few guidebooks, one with pictures and another with Bible-thin pages, and she read them, or tried to, while Eleanor looked at the pictures.

I want to see this, Eleanor would say, pointing at a picture of a temple or a statue of a Hindu deity. And Olivia would look it up in the guidebook and they would study the map and figure out how to get there. It was disconcerting to watch her mother, a high school English teacher with a formidable memory, begin to lose track of details, asking Olivia repeatedly where something was located. It was hard to know what was tumor and what was medication; by a few weeks after the diagnosis, Eleanor was taking painkillers, first just at bedtime and soon around the clock. Max set an alarm at night so she wouldn't miss a dose.

Olivia sent her family the itinerary she and her mother had sketched out. It included five nights at an ashram Eleanor had wanted to visit, so Olivia wasn't surprised when the travel agent steered them in a different direction — flying into New Delhi, but ditching the religious sites of Bodh Gaya, Varanasi, and Rishikesh in favor of Jodhpur and Jaipur, more popular tourist cities.

Still, negotiating with the travel agent had been a healthy distraction. Her mother had died in April, exceeding the three-month prognosis by only days. Olivia was in a kind of limbo until fall semester. She was splitting her time between her family home in Rye, New York, and the apartment her father had rented near Sloan Kettering, the cancer hospital in the city, under the apparently optimistic assumption that her mother would be undergoing months of treatment. Most people she knew either already had jobs in the city or were traveling, though at least Kelsey, her best friend, had been around. Kelsey had taken a year off before college, so by the time Olivia got home from India, she would be back in Colorado finishing school.

Olivia pulled out her video camera just as the rain began to fall. Past the walkway, the drops were so big you could see them individually, or at least it seemed that way. She focused her camera on the roundabout and the kids and the fountain. The vehicles — cars and rickshaws — circling the roundabout interrupted the shot. She held the camera at chest level and tried to look nonchalant, and soon the passersby, fewer of them now and moving more quickly, walked in front of the camera too. The rain grew louder. The light was low and even, and she could picture how this was going to look, like a sort of mosaic, gray asphalt, green-and-yellow rickshaws, the intermittent green patch beyond, and darkness when people blocked the view. Everyone was seeking shelter from the rain in shops or flinging themselves into taxis. Soon there were fewer cars circling. She stood very still and kept filming. The children kept playing at the center of the roundabout. She saw one of them, a boy or a girl, she couldn't tell from this distance, extend their palms, face tilted toward the sky. When cars passed they sent cascades of water up onto the stone walkway. Her feet were soaked.

Then Alec was beside her. "Getting anything good?" He was carrying several large shopping bags.

Holly was next to him, wrapped in a new shawl. "I threw the things you liked in with our stuff," she said.

Olivia turned off the camera. "Thanks. Where's everyone else?"

"Waiting inside for the drivers."

"June made such a spectacle of paying for that jacket herself," Holly said. "You'd have loved it."

"Try not to take this so seriously, kiddo," Alec said.

"Why not?"

"No one with good sense would have come on this trip," Holly said. "It doesn't speak well for her judgment."

"Men are swine," Alec said. "They're helpless without women."

"Bears with furniture," Holly agreed cheerfully.

"Dad screwed up, but he organized this trip for you," Alec said. "He thought it would be nice for you, to go on the trip you and Mom planned."

"This isn't the trip Mom and I planned." Eleanor and Olivia had wanted to stay at ashrams and hike in the Himalayan foothills. They had not envisioned luxury hotels that might as well have been in Europe. They certainly had not planned on June.

THEY'D BEEN EATING Chinese takeout in the kitchen, a week before they were leaving for India, when Max told Olivia that he'd invited a friend to join them on the trip.

"A friend?" Her mind jumped between her father's closest friends, men she'd known her whole life. She couldn't imagine any of them suddenly deciding to join the Harrises' trip to India.

"June. She and I — have been seeing a bit of each other."

"You mean dating?" Even as she said the words, she felt certain he would laugh and say, of course not, he was not dating, he had meant something else entirely.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Alternative Remedies for Loss"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Joanna Cantor.
Excerpted by permission of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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