White Oleanders
Essay by review • March 2, 2011 • Book/Movie Report • 1,487 Words (6 Pages) • 1,270 Views
The Russian Chronicles of Young Poets: Today we have a very special guest with us. Her name is Astrid Magnussen, the daughter of Ingrid Magnuseen, the poet that was recently released from prison on a life for murder charge. So Astrid how has your life been, and what have you been up to.
Astrid: Well I've been well. Seen better days though. I now live with my long time boyfriend Paul Trout in a small apartment in Berlin, Germany were he sells his art. He is a comic book illustrator and writer.
TRCYP: Wow so you've been pretty busy. Before this interview you were talking about all the places you have been lately.
Astrid: Well when I was old enough I left my last foster home in L.A. to New York to find Paul. We lived in a small apartment there in St. Marks, then to a squat in South London, after that an un-insulated barge in Amsterdam and then Senefelderstrausse and now Berlin.
TRCYP: Wow! So do you have a place were you want to go next?
Astrid: Somewhere where I can be warm. Like Italy or Greece. I hate these cold weather places.
TRCYP: Wow! So what exactly are you doing right now? Are you still following your artistic career?
Astrid: I'm actually not working right now. I'm kind of slacking so I can expand my artistic horizons. And I have actually been using what resources I have in my house to create a sort of "museum" of all the foster homes I've been in. I use them and little knick-knacks from around the house. When I sell them it will be like releasing those bad parts of my life. But I haven't been doing any sort of paying job.
TRCYP: Well could you tell us about your foster home life? The people you loved and hated. And maybe how you felt when your mother was in prison. How'd you feel when she got out?
Astrid: (laughs lightly) Well let's start with the last two questions. When my mom was in prison I had mixed emotions growing up. From about 12-15 I worshipped my mother and couldn't wait for her to get out. But as I got older I realized she was only playing me like some kind of game. When she got out I really didn't care because I was an ocean away and she couldn't find me if she tried. Foster homes, wow, haven't thought about that question in a long time. Well my first foster home was a trailer house in a wash. I lived with my foster mom, Starr and foster dad, Ray and her four kids: Davey, Carolee, Owen, and Peter. This was the normal trailer park drama. Starr was a recovering alcoholic that went to AA meetings and church with a very fake preacher. Ray was her hippy boyfriend. She always accused me of sleeping with him. He taught me how to play chess. He smoked pot and drank cheap beer. Davey was the geeky kid I hung out with and we always caught lizards and he told me such interesting things. Owen and Peter were the typical little kids, always playing in the mud and eating worms. Carolee was a great teenager. She loved making her mother mad and always ran out in the middle of the night to go meet her dirt biker boyfriend. One night her and Starr got in a big fight and she left, we never saw her again. I had to leave this house because Starr finally caught me sleeping with her man and shot me in hip. Great family life huh?
My second home was with a lady named Marvel. Her husband's name was Ed and they had two toddlers who were Justin and Caitlin. This house was a common suburb--happy blissful place, until you shut the door. Marvel was a Mary Kay makeup sales woman. She dyed her hair a different color for every different season. I found a friend there named Olivia Johnston. She was a prostitute. She showed me what it was like to live life not worrying about anything but expensive vases and cashmere sweaters. She also drove a red wine-colored corvette. I had to leave that house because I got plastered and slept over at the "whores" house, which was strictly off limits.
So I got kicked out and went to a place I hated. The foster mother was named Amelia. She was an interior decorator and only did foster care for the money. I demanded to be let out of that place because she never fed us and all the girls hated me.
The next place was defiantly my favorite the whole time I was growing up but also the most tragic. It was with Ron and Claire Richards. Claire was probably the only lady I ever thought of as my mother. She was a beautiful blonde actress and Ron was a
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