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n the Water , '' the writer admits : `` Perhaps saying that I love my country is not true . I often loathe it . '' -0- The youngest of the so-called `` Boom '' writers to emerge from Latin America into international prominence during the '6 0s , Vargas Llosa , now 58 , is one of the few to reject the fantastical style o f magic realism . His masterpiece , the 1981 epic `` The War of the End of the W orld '' based on a 19th-century uprising in northern Brazil is as solidly built as anything by Stendhal or Tolstoy , the masters with which it deserves comparis on . Nearly all his other fiction is set in Peru . `` Aunt Julia and the Scriptw riter '' is a marvelous comic tale of a young man married to his aunt ( at 19 , Vargas Llosa wed 32-year-old Julia Urquidi , his uncle 's wife 's sister . They were divorced nine years later ) . These books and many others , plus countless articles , were written during a period of self-imposed exile that began in 1958 , when the writer received a scholarship to study in Madrid , and lasted for mo st of the next three decades . But if exile , as Paredes Castro says , is a defi ning characteristic of the greatest Peruvian intellectuals , it doesn't fit into the basic resume of politicians in Peru or anywhere else . Compounding his trou bles as a candidate was his political identity . Just as he 's one of the few re alists among Latin American writers , he 's also one of the few who are not left ists . To his enemies , this usually gets translated into : He 's not a democrat . `` If you 're a Latin American writer , '' Vargas Llosa complains , `` you 'r e immediately labeled . If you 're not a revolutionary , you 're a reactionary . '' Ronald Wright , a Canadian who has written extensively about Peru , is one o f Vargas Llosa 's most caustic critics . `` He either was running as an ego trip , or he was trying to gain material to write about . '' Wright cites an anti-Va rgas Llosa slogan he saw emblazoned on a wall during the campaign : `` Peru is n ot a novel . '' Even the writer 's wife has questioned his intentions . She once told her husband he was drawn to the presidency less for idealistic reasons tha n by the prospect of `` writing the great novel in real life . '' There you have it : isolated by his artistic temperament , alienated from the left , full of t he sort of despair and yearning for his country that politicians learn never to express , and criticized for impure motives . The surprise isn't his failure to be elected ; it 's that he got , in the end , 34 percent of the vote . Fujimori instituted financial reforms , but in April 1992 he closed the Congress and the courts and suspended the constitution . The fact that these actions have been ge nerally popular hasn't changed Vargas Llosa 's mind . His basic argument : Destr oying democracy in order to improve the welfare of the people is a horrible idea . `` What is happening now in Peru is that you have economic reforms , which ar e good , and at the same time you have monstrous crimes , terrible abuses in hum an rights , '' he says , specifically referring to the abduction of nine student s and a teacher in July 1992 . Suspected of being collaborators with the Shining Path terrorists , all 10 were shot in the back of the head , their bodies throw n into an unmarked grave . Anne Manuel , acting director of Human Rights Watch/A mericas , confirms that `` the situation in Peru after Fujimori 's self-imposed coup has worsened dramatically . Hundreds of people are being accused of terrori sm and imprisoned for life based on little or no evidence . '' `` Torture withou t inflation ? That 's what we want for Latin America ? Human rights crimes with open markets ? We have the right to demand from Latin America the same standards that the United States expects from its own society and its own politicians . ' ' Maybe , for his sake , it 's better he lost . He 's told that everyone intervi ewed for this story , no matter how withering his opinion of Vargas Llosa person ally or politically , said he was a great novelist . A delighted laugh . `` A gr eat novelist ! This is already something , you know ? '' WASHINGTON Mario Vargas Llosa , who has been Distinguished Writer in Residence at Georgetown University this past semester , and his wife Patricia rented a fur nished town house on the edge of the university . Besides some books , the only personal touch is some family photos . There 's a particularly charming snap of the couple and their three children : Gonzalo , who works with the United Nation s in Pakistan ; Alvaro , Op-Ed page editor for the Miami Herald 's Spanish-langu age edition ; and Morgana , a student at the London School of Economics . No suc h happy photos exist of Vargas Llosa 's own childhood . His just-released autobi ography `` A Fish in the Water '' reveals that underneath his suave air was a ha rdscrabble , semi-desperate youth . His father , Ernesto Vargas , abandoned his wife , Dora , when she was five months pregnant with the boy . For the first 11 years of Mario 's life he believed his father was dead . Later , when the couple reunited , he merely wished it . Sometimes Ernesto beat his wife ; every so oft en he beat his son . The paradox is , if Ernesto hadn't been so opposed to his s on 's literary vocation writing was something homosexuals did ; besides , how co uld you make a living at it ? Mario wouldn't have persevered . `` He sent me to a military school because he thought that was a good antidote against literature , and he gave me through this experience the raw material for my first novel wh ich was so successful I was able to become a writer . '' After that , when it ca me to his own children , he knew just what to do . `` I renounced any kind of au thority with them , '' he says blandly . `` My wife took total control . She was the authoritarian , so they love me ! I was the most stupidly passive father in history , so terrified was I that they could feel about their father the way I feel about mine . '' WASHINGTON Right now , Mary Chapin Carpenter 's favorite song is one nobody has written yet . `` Off the Road Again . '' After `` 18 months of being out there all the time touring , '' Carpenter is taking serious time off for the first tim e in five years . Actually , when her tour ended in November , she was just goin g to hibernate through the winter and stir awake in the spring . But in January Carpenter decided `` no more in '94 . '' `` I feel like I 'm just starting to ge t used to it , '' she said last week over coffee at an Alexandria , Va. , cafe . `` Now it 's great to call a friend on a Saturday night and be able to go out a nd have dinner , as opposed to ` Well , I have to work tonight .. . and I 'm acr oss the country. ' ' ' Carpenter seems to have reacted to her success with a lev el head . For instance , wearing jeans and a sweat shirt , Carpenter still looks more the down-to-earth singer-songwriter than the star whose latest album , `` Come On Come On , '' has sold 2.2 million copies and produced seven hit singles , including the No. 1 country hit `` He Thinks He 'll Keep Her . '' `` That noti on of people changing is imposed on you by other people , '' scoffs Carpenter , though she concedes that `` there 's elements of my life that have changed , and obligations . '' For one thing , she now lives in Northern Virginia , convenien t to National Airport . Carpenter , who recently set a record with three consecu tive Grammys as top female country vocalist , did just buy a house in Nashville `` I was going down so much and hotel stuff was getting kind of old , '' she say s . `` It 's an experiment like a second home so it 's not like I 'm just workin g down there but this is where I live . I feel like I have the best of both worl ds . '' Carpenter 's producer and longtime musical partner , John Jennings , has moved down to Nashville full time . `` There 's just so many things you can do when you 're touring , '' Carpenter explains . `` This is the year to do a lot o f things I haven't been able to do . '' Right now , she 's keeping mum on detail s . Meanwhile , Carpenter 's new single is titled `` I Take My Chances . '' Of t he seven singles from `` Come On Come On , '' have gone Top 10 and two Top 5 . T his is astounding , since the album has been out 97 weeks and remains in the Top 100 . `` It 's got great shelf life ! '' says Carpenter , as much with amazemen t as pleasure . As for the album 's double-platinum status rare in country , eve n rarer among women artists Carpenter can only say : `` Unbelievable . '' Provin g that time off is not a synonym for vacation , Carpenter will soon start on her new album , due out at the end of September . It will feature all originals , r eflecting some of her `` free time . '' Only one song is old `` Stones in the Ro ad , '' which Joan Baez cut for her last album after hearing Carpenter 's studio recording . At the request of Columbia Records , citing confusion , Carpenter a greed to separate Mary and Chapin , hyphenated all her 36 years . `` But they ha ve visiting rights , '' says their surname . `` God bless people who don't proof read . I know they 'll get back together again . '' Carpenter concedes , though , that the punctuation has been `` the bane of my existence . One writer in Ohio wasn't sure , and put hyphens between all three names . And when your own recor d company doesn't know what the deal is , you know you 're in trouble ! '' WASHINGTON Firms that tap into an estimated $ 105 billion a year in fees for co unseling federal workers on retirement planning , sensitivity training or estima ting the costs of proposed regulations might have a tougher time getting work un der a bill introduced Wednesday . Del . Eleanor Holmes Norton , D-D.C. , propose d legislation that would shed light on what she calls the `` shadow government ' ' of contractors and make it tougher for agencies to disguise costs by replacing civil service with consultants . It is the sort of thing that will unnerve Belt way Bandits the disparaging nickname for corporations , think tanks , experts an d mom-and-pop consulting practices . The firms are often founded or staffed by f ormer feds . Consultants include the proverbial smooth-talking expert who borrow s your watch and charges you $ 50 to tell you the time and specialized groups th at provide complex and necessary data at a lower cost and with less political sp in than the government . The General Accounting Office recently said about half the contracts it studied could have been done better or at less cost by federal employees . Consultants can save taxpayers a bundle by rounding up experts to do quick , accurate studies without creating a permanent bureaucracy that qualifie s for benefits and lifetime pensions . But they also can be costly by marketing services that aren't vital to the national interest or that indulge the pet proj ect , peeve or fantasy of a division chief or political appointee who may have a brother-in-law contractor or who may be looking for future employment . Norton says contractors are often invisible and unsupervised . Last week she proposed c utting $ 1.9 billion from such personal service contracts . The savings would fu nd full national and locality raises next January for white-collar federal worke rs . President Clinton has proposed a 1.6 percent raise , although government da ta indicates workers are due an across-the-board 2.6 percent national increase p lus locality adjustments that could range from 2 percent to 4 percent depending on hometown private salaries . Norton 's new bills would bar agencies from contr acting out work performed by employees given buyouts to quit or retire and would set up guidelines that agencies must use to justify retaining outside contracto rs . It would also assure an accurate headcount on contractors with its annual r eporting to Congress . If the latter becomes law , some agency is certain to hir e a contractor to count its contractors . -0- The Federal Retirement Thrift Inve stment Board says Tuesday 's Federal Diary item about the tax-deferred thrift sa vings plan underestimated the number of participants . About 75 percent of the e mployees in the new Federal Employees Retirement System and 44 percent of those under the old Civil Service Retirement System are contributing to the savings pl an . But all FERS employees , whether or not they contribute , have accounts tha nks to an automatic employer contribution of 1 percent of pay . The savings plan is now worth more than $ 22 billion , and the average CSRS contributors account is $ 10,092 . The average FERS contributors ' account is $ 15,043 , and the ave rage account for noncontributing FERS employees is $ 1,679 . Retirees cannot joi n the savings plan or contribute to it . But workers who have accounts when they retire can remain in the savings plan subject to age rules set by the IRS . BRUSSELS , Beligum Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev called Wednesday for the creation of a `` full-blooded strategic relationship '' between his country and the Western military alliance that was formed to contain its territorial amb itions . During a meeting with his counterparts from 16 NATO nations and Russia 's former Warsaw Pact allies in Eastern Europe , Grachev reiterated Moscow 's re adiness to join , with no conditions attached , the NATO program to enhance mili tary cooperation with its former enemies that is known as the Partnership for Pe ace . But Grachev emphasized that the partnership was `` not a complete answer , but only a first step '' toward dealing with the post-Cold War security environ ment in Europe . He said Russia 's status as Europe 's biggest nuclear power req uires a broader `` consultative mechanism '' with NATO that would encompass disa rmament , conversion of defense industries and global threats such as terrorism , nuclear proliferation and environmental pollution . While expressing some caut ion about Russia 's ambitions to create a special relationship with the Western alliance , NATO ministers warmly welcomed Moscow 's willingness to join the part nership program after months of ambivalent and contradictory statements . U.S. . Defense Secretary William J. Perry praised the `` historic nature '' of the mee ting with his Russian counterpart and said `` we are very pleased that he announ ced the unconditional decision for joining Partnership for Peace . '' But severa l NATO officials were less enthusiastic about Grachev 's proposal to expand the relationship into areas not covered under the terms of the military partnership . One alliance official said Grachev appeared to be proposing that Russia become a virtual member of NATO , something that would not be acceptable to most membe r nations . Before the session , senior NATO officials said they feared Grachev would make unacceptable political demands that would scuttle hopes for a Russian role in the partnership . But they said he gave everyone `` a pleasant surprise '' by producing a lengthy document that included a long list of projects , incl uding joint efforts at peacekeeping , technical training , military field exerci ses and strategic planning . `` It 's looking very good , '' said British Defens e Minister Malcolm Rifkind . `` Russia clearly wants to play a constructive role working with NATO on matters of common interest . But there will be no right fo r Russia to take part in NATO 's decision making . '' Germany 's Volker Ruehe sa id `` we are definitely on the right track . Parternship for Peace is a common p osition for everybody , but beyond that there is scope for a partnership between Russia and NATO . But it still needs to be worked out . '' The Russian defense minister gave no indication when his country would join the program , which was formally launched by NATO leaders in January as a way to satisfy demands from Ea st European countries for a closer security relationship with the West without f ully incorporating them into the alliance . A total of 18 countries from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have now signed up for the program . Grachev insisted that Russia is not seeking `` a warmer place in the sun '' than NATO ' s other partners to the east , but merely a relationship `` adequate to its weig ht '' as a nuclear superpower with territory stretching from Europe to the Pacif ic Ocean . `` Russia has an interest in wider forms of cooperation than envisage d in this program , '' Grachev said . `` What we suggest is not to limit the sph ere of partnership , but to enrich it with cooperation between Russia and NATO , not only in military areas but on other important issues . '' In calling for a new strategic relationship with the Western alliance , Grachev noted that many R ussians still fear the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as a hostile military alliance that treated Russia as an enemy . He said such `` bloc-oriented percept ions '' must be surmounted by enhanced cooperation or they would eventually trig ger a new arms race in Europe . In spelling out Russia 's new military doctrine , Grachev made clear to the Western ministers that Moscow still envisions the pa rtnership chiefly as a stepping stone to a new `` collective security system in Europe . '' He said Russia still regards the 53-nation Conference on Security an d Cooperation in Europe as the basis for this system , in which NATO would play a subordinate role . Grachev acknowledged that Russia wants to strengthen the Co mmonwealth of Independent States , the loose confederation of republics that cam e into being after the breakup of the Soviet Union . He said Russia 's military presence in some republics known as its `` near abroad '' should be seen in term s of `` peacekeeping objectives '' that pose no security threat to its neighbors . In response , Perry said any regional peacekeeping role should be carried out through a U.N. mandate and that `` Russia 's role should be kept compatible '' with goals approved by the U.N. . Security Council . NON-FICTION `` A VALLEY IN ITALY : The Many Seasons of a Villa in Umbria , '' b y Lisa St. Aubin De Teran ( HarperCollins : $ 21 , 224 pp . ) One of the grand d ifficulties accompanying books about people who find the perfect fixer-upper vil la in some gorgeous , flavorful but not too remote part of the world is that you must hate them with all your heart . The other , more interesting problem is : How they fit into the culture they invade and admire ? What do they give back ? Are their observations evidence that they travel with their own culture and expe rience keeping them afloat and apart like water wings ? Or are they porous and d ignified in their differentness ? Having heaped so many caveats on these obnoxio us pilgrims , let me now say that Lisa St. Aubin de Teran gets it right . Sure , she 's a bit of a poseur , `` instructed in the art of buying houses by Ted Hug hes , our Poet Laureate , who explained to me that first I should find the house I wanted and then I should buy it , and only later worry about how to pay for i t , '' and in our American culture delusions of grandeur , visions of loggias an d balustrades and cantilevered thises and thats can be off-putting . You 're sup posed to know your place and what you can afford and keep your ego in check . Li sa St. Aubin de Teran takes her two children ; 6-year-boy Allie , and 15-year-ol d future super-model `` the child Iseult '' with her to set up house in the Vill a Orsola in the little village of San Orsela in the Umbrian hills . Her Scottish painter husband comes later . She has patience and imagination and a wonderful sense of humor . She has a kind of courage and equanimity , and her observations of her own cast of characters is gracious and generous and respectful . After v isiting this long with her , it was hard to leave a compliment to any hostess ( or writer ) . `` VOICE LESSONS : On Becoming A Woman Writer , '' by Nancy Mairs ( Beacon , $ 15 , 166 pp . ) Where would we be without Nancy Mairs , vigilant ch ronicler of a woman 's life , a writer 's life ? We 'd be stuck trying to conver t the five hundred pounds a year Virginia Woolf told us we 'd need to write into billable hours , like immoral lawyers calculating backward , that 's where . It has been said already that she is fearless , can write about anything : depress ion , sex , adultery , religion and now , now writing ( in true life order of de gree of risk ) . Which means that these essays look more to the the stories writ ers write ( in particular , Virginia Woolf , Montaigne , and Hele ne Cixous , am ong others ) , the text , than they do to immediate life experience , as in Mair s ' other books . `` What has interested me particularly , '' she writes , `` is the crucial role that learning to decipher texts both my own experiences and th e works of other writers has played in my writerly evolution . '' Often asked , `` How did you find your voice ? '' Mairs responds : `` In the beginning was the Word . Not me . And the question , properly phrased , should be asked of my voi ce : How did you find ( devise , invent , contrive ) your Nancy ? '' This may se em rhetorical , out of context , but it relieves an enormous burden to find one 's voice , as distinct from others ' and from the experience of others ; a voice with some critical authority and a great deal of distance from real-life suffer ing a quest Mairs believes is uniquely male in nature . Having grown up believin g that men could fill emptiness in women , for a long time Mairs wrote , she tel ls us , `` out of yearning . '' Filling voids with men is replaced , as she grow s older and more confident ( with the help of other women , writers and friends ) , by filling voids with ideas , bringing the same ardor to this yearning as to the first : `` I could feel them in my flesh , quickening my breath , itching m Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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