BlazeVOX 15 Fall 2015
BlazeVOX 15 Fall 2015
BlazeVOX 15 Fall 2015
Fall 2015
GH
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Fall 2015
Table of Contents
Poetry
A.J. Huffman
Alex Archer
Barbara Barnard
Blackbird
Christopher Ozog
Dawn Tefft
Ed Makowski
Grace C. Ocasio
Heather Bowlan
Ian McPhail
Jimmie Ware
Juan Arabia
Lori Lamothe
Lus Leal Moniz
Marcia Arrieta
Matt Shears
Nicholas Knebel
Patricia Walsh
Robert Wexelblatt
Ronnie Sirmans
Sam O'Hana
Sean Burn
Stacy Mursten
Trevor Thinktank
Adam Mackie
Alexzandra Rose Etherton
Barbara Tomash
Charlene Ashley Taylor
Dana Curtis
Dilip Mohapatra
Geoffrey Gatza
Greg Larson
I Goldfarb
Jill Gamble
Joseph Harrington
Kelle Grace Gaddis
Louise Robertson
Mae Carter
Mark Young
Natasha Murdock
Olivia Deborah Grayson
PT Davidson
Roger Craik
Ross Knapp
Sandra Kolankiewicz
Simon Perchik
Sunayna Pal
Victor Eshameh
Fiction
Patrick Chapman Juniper Bing
Nick Nace from Vic
Alexander Beisel Delenda Est
C Davis Fogg Electric Jesus
Daniel Adler The Acheron
Erika G Abad Corners
Jamie McFaden Three Flash Fiction pieces
Christien Gholson Trinity-Sites Last Stand
Jessy Brodsky Vega White Thoughts
Josef Krebs Body of Work
Kristen Clanton Who are the Fantasy Girls?
Jingjing Xiao The Lives of Flowers
Text Art
Soil
hiromi suzuki
Frances the Mute / The Bright Continent (A Diptych) by Kristina Marie Darling
Frances the Mute / The Bright Continent is a love story shaped by the language of
absenceand haunted by the absence of language. In Kristina Marie Darlings
hands, the small ornaments of the quotidian are invested with a radiant significance
rustling beneath the surface of words. Only by traversing silence do we sing
perfectly, she reminds us, as if recalling and revising Keatss famously voiceless
lovers from his Grecian urn. For Keats, Heard melodies are sweet, but those
unheard / Are sweeter. For Darling, the sweetest music is that which is rife with the
uncanny.
Tony Trigilio
Fall 2015
GH
Fall 2015
IntroductionIntroduction
Hello and welcome to the Fall issue of BlazeVOX 15.
Presented here is a world-class issue featuring poetry,
art, fiction, and an arresting work of creative nonfiction, written by authors from around globe.
Fall 2015
Alexander Beisel
Delenda Est
Jim introduced them to the game eight years ago. When they were kids, really. And ever since, Adam
and Nate had done their best to beat him at it. The tradition was older than Elise and Jims marriage. Shed
never take that away from him.
Whats it called? Elise hated the game.
You know what its called, Jim said.
I can never say it right. She hated that he had something like this.
Casus Belli. Its Latinan act of war.
Elise watched as Jim unfurled a map across the kitchen table. He smoothed the folds with the palms
of his hands. Hed made it himself. Every location rendered in perfect detail. Each line drawn out with a
nib-pen. Black and red ink. Hed used cold-press paper and stained it sepia with teabags. Burned the edges.
It was systematically destroyed to make it perfect.
Map looks nice. Elise had showed him how. She was the artist. She didnt expect it to look so nice.
Jim always ignored her expertise. But with this hed followed her advice to the letter. It looked real.
Something youd see in a museum.
Jim didnt answer her. He centered the map under the kitchen light. When it was just so he placed a
twenty-sided die at each corner. Elise picked one up and rolled it across the map. Jim snatched it before it
landed on a clean facing.
You said you didnt want to play. Jim leaned on the table and turned to her. Hed make this face at
her. Purse his lips and shift his eyes to the ceiling. She thought it was cute before she learned to translate it:
I love you but youre pissing me off.
I dont want to play. Elise hated that face now. She hated that her husband could put so much effort
into something so fleeting. It was a gamelittle figures and dice and him a grown man. Hed take off work
and set aside a weekend a month to play it. And Adam and Nate did too. She hated those two. She hated
that once a month Adam and Nate took over her home. They stole her house and her quiet and her
husband. But that wasnt true. Jim gave himself to it. To them. To this stupid game.
Okay then, Jim said. Then let us play.
I just dont understand it. Whats the point? she asked.
The point is to conquer, Elise. Jim threw a handful of dice across the table. He smiled at the result.
It meant nothing to her. Shed seen empires forged by snake-eyes and armies routed by boxcars.
How? Its just a bunch of little figures and dice. Elise tried to disguise her curiosity. Shed played
before. Before they were married. She didnt understand it then. She didnt hate it then either.
Look, youve played before. Jim motioned to his miniature infantry line. Each player plays a
general from historyIm Marcus Atilius Regulus, Adam is Xanthippus and Nate is Hiero II. He said the
names like they were family members. As though shed remember them from her wedding. Their wedding.
Each player has an army, Jim continued, and you fight it out
But they dont actually fightyou just roll dice! She laughed.
Yeah, and the hat token in monopoly doesnt actually buy Boardwalk. Jim said. I love you but youre
pissing me off. Its a game and its fun and you said you didnt want to play.
I dont.
The doorbell rang.
Thats them! Jim shot up from the table.
Elise stayed in the kitchen. Her husbands toys were all set in rank and file. They were little Romans.
Painted soldiers all posed like they were in the fray of some important battle. She looked for the two shed
painted for him. She couldnt find them. He left the rulebook in his empty chair. It was open. There were
numbers and charts. Words she didnt understand. The opposite page was a splash-frame of Julius Caesar.
Beneath it, a quote.
In war, events of importance are the result of trivial causes.
Just like the game, she thought. No matter what you conquer, it all goes back in the box. She could
hear Jim answering the door.
Fellas! Welcomewelcome. Jim held the door open and let Nate and Adam pass into the kitchen.
They each wore backpacks and carried stacked boxes they kept in place under their chins. They set their
things down carefully. The kitchen looked like army camp now.
Hey guys. Elise hated Nate and Adam.
Elise! How are you? Nate was Jims best man at their wedding. Whenever he could, hed speak only
in movie quotes. At their wedding Nate explained to the DJ Im The Dudeso thats what you call me.
That or His Dudeness or Duder or el Duderino if youre not into the whole brevity thing. Jim would laugh.
He always seemed to know the movie.
Eliseyou look great! Adam was their officiant. She thought shed like him when Jim told her he
was a minister but an interfaith minister. When Jim first introduced them, Adam told her excommunicates,
homos, tranys, Ill marry anyone the church wont. And then he laughed.
There was a life before her, Elise knew. And she couldnt be a part of it. Never would be.
Jim walked slowly back into the kitchen.
Take a look at that map, fellas, he said. Adam and Nate were careful not to touch anything. They
didnt pick up the twenty-sided dice. They didnt move it from the light. Howd they know not to touch it?
This is fucking unbelievable! Adam said.
Really ties the room together.
Yupdont mind the sepiaits all going to be red by the end of this. Jim smiled. Adam and Nate
scoffed. She didnt think people really did that.
Red likeblood? she asked.
The three of them turned.
No. Like Rome, Jim answered. As if it were obvious.
Jim offered each of them a beer. They accepted and began unpacking their things. Jim stayed with his
coffee.
Elise watched as Adam and Nate opened their respective kits. Egg crate foam swaddled hundreds of
little toy soldiers. They had rulers and protractors and dice. Their backpacks were stuffed with books
marked Casus Belli.
Did you guys bring any clothes? Elise asked. Nate set a miniature chariot on the table and moved it
slightly to the left.
Clothes? He moved it back, deciding it was fine where it was. Adam answered in a way the other
two seemed to accept readily.
What for? he asked. Are we going out? He pulled a foam sheet from his box. There was
something underneath it. Oh! Did I send you guys the pictures of this? It was a miniature war-elephant
complete with a turret and archers. He held it under the light for them to examine. Jim and Nate marveled
at it.
Holy shit, man! Thats amazing!
Really nice, Dude.
Jim took it carefully from Adam.
Shityou even painted the archers eyes? Jim was stunned.
How long did that take? Nate was impressed.
Not too long, actually. Adam was lying. She could tell just by looking at it. It took days. He must
have used triple zero brushes. At least three layers of undercoats. Another twenty in highlighting. All under
that magnifying headlamp that mimicked natural light. He mentioned it to her once. Presents colors as
they would be seen in real life. She never used one. Her colors were in real life.
Eliselook at this. Jim offered the elephant to her. When she tried to take it he reminded her to
only look at it.
A lot of detail. And there really was. Hes an artist but not like me, she thought. He could paint
these little toys well but not in the way she could paint murals and portraits. She actually got paid for her
workhad people appreciate it and buy it and commission it. This was just a toy.
Nate used a straightedge to position his spearmen in a perfect line. When they were ordered to his
liking, he drew out a roster hed made detailing the statistics of his varied units.
Jimdid you decide on a campaign? Adam bent to the table so as to see Nates army at eye level.
Yessir, Jim said. Sicilian.
Which war?
First one.
Nate laughed. This aggression will not stand, man.
You fuckers are done. Adam motioned to his prized elephant. Donzo.
Elise looked at it one more time. It was marvelous on the table. It towered over the other armies. Fierce
and proud. And dangerous.
Whats the naval operation?
LateIm using Corvus. Delenda est, bitches.
Nate and Adam groaned. That meant something to them.
Alright, Elise said. Ill leave you boys to it. She filled a mason jar with water at the tap.
You working on your painting, baby? Jim didnt look up from the table. Too busy scouting enemy
deployment.
Yeah. You boys have fun. She left for the sunroom.
***
It was ordered chaos. The walls were papered with sketches and measurements. A six-foot canvas
dominated each corner of the room. All in various stages of completion. She set down the mason jar and
portioned out mineral spirits and liquin. She cut the spirits with water. HP Lovecraft watched her.
Shed been working on him since Jim showed her the authors photo. He had a face so strange it
needed to be painted. Shaped like pickle jar. That granite block of jaw. Shed never read his work but under
her husbands advice, shed incorporated writhing tentacles into the background to eat up the negative
space. Shed painted them pink. Jim told her they should be green. They were still pink. She turned on her
music and stared back at Lovecraft for a while. She dipped her fingers in the mason jar and smoothed the
bristles of her brush absentmindedly. It was ox hair. Strong and yet soft. She could see every brush stroke
shed make. Every hue shed blend. Every second it would take to make it perfect. Cobalt blue. Fast Light
Yellow. A jaundiced green. Something old and ruined before its time.
She set her old step-ladder before Lovecraft and climbed to the top, but she stopped before she could
touch the canvas. She could hear them over the music. She straddled the top step and turned away from
Lovecraft. She looked down at the step between her legs and absently painted little smileys on the wood
face. They were a jaundiced green.
***
Theyd been playing for four hours. The war was already being won.
Fucking right! Jim howled in victory. Run, you little bitches!
Adam groaned as the dice left his hand. They failed him miserably. Elise wandered into the kitchen
using a bag of chips as her excuse.
Did you win, baby? She watched her twenty-eight year old husband do his best Heisman as Adam
sank in his seat.
Fucking right, I did! Jim said.
Yup! Nate did his best not to laugh at Adams misery. Adams line folded and broke under one
cavalry elementone!turned and smashed into that lovely elephant of his and thats all she wrote.
They were just toys and dice. How could they know all that from a three and a one? What did it
matter? It all goes back in the box, anyhow.
So is the game over? She hoped it was. Though she knew better. Jim punched the air and praised
Mars Victricis. Adam answered for him.
Not even close, Adam said. Lilybaeum and Messana are still mine and Nate over here devoted his
entire season to what he calls a consolidation of the ground forces.
I told you, manits a defensive posture. Nate said.
Its a pussy posture. Adam laughed. Some tyrant you are.
This isnt Nam. There are rules.
The three of them laughed.
***
She closed the French doors behind her. Mr. Lovecraft was still staring at her. Shed fixed his
jawline and added a delicate sheen to his pipe. The tentacles were still pink. She was deciding whether or
not she liked them pink. The more she thought about it the more she realized they should be green.
The boys were still laughing and she could hear them through the glass. She turned her music up to
fifteen before deciding it should be an even number. Fourteen.
Oh thank you! Jim turned to his wife. Thank you for thatI thought you didnt want to play.
I dont.
Then dontstop fraternizing with the enemy and go to bed. I love you but youre pissing me off.
Good, she thought. She kissed him on the cheek and watched him roll one more pack of dice before heading
to bed. As she ascended the steps she could hear her husband forsake the gods that once loved him.
Im going to paint this fucking map red. With or without Mars help.
Nate and Adam laughed.
***
Elise woke early. She made her way down the stairs to find them at it again. Or were they still at it?
Have you guys been to bed yet? She moved for the coffee maker. It was fresh.
Nonot at all. Adam sipped on his own coffee.
How do you play that game all night? Elise poured herself a cup and brought it to her lips. She
didnt expect an answer from them. They were too involved. She took her kitchen into account. It was a
warzone. The miniatures were piled on every available surface. Field hospitals. The walls had succumbed
to still more maps and notes detailing the game. Dice littered the floor. Theyd gone rogue when someone
had thrown them across the kitchen in a fit of despair.
The boys looked like old men. Bags under their eyes. Heads hung low in exhaustion. Adam leaned
into the table. He might be winning by the look of him.
Hows it going?
Well, thanks to your sage advice, Adam said, Rome lies in ashes and Carthage is on the rise. Adam
exhibited the kind of energy that comes with an all-nighter. An engine burning up the last of its fuel before
sputtering to a dead stop. The last ditch effort of a metabolism run dry.
You burnt Rome? Elise asked.
Yes, he did. I love you but youre pissing me off. And its your fault, Elise. She walked to her
husbands side and rubbed his back.
Im sorry, sweetheart. She loved that he was miserable. Something so pointless and he was so
worked up. It all goes back in the box, honey. She watched as Adam took up his elephant and placed it at
the gates of Syracuse. Jim and Nate bowed their heads in resignation.
In the immortal words of Darth Vader Adam smiled. All too easy. Elise watched Nate and Jim
despair. It was the absolute power of arithmetic playing before them. She saw the savage delight in Adam
and the woe and fear in her husband. But not in Nate. Nate examined his notes before standing and
drawing up a handful of dice.
Fucking amateurs. Nate reached into his box and revealed another figurine, this one painted gold.
This is Sparta! Bitch. Nate placed the figure before Adams elephant. Jim howled in shock and
Adam sank back into his seat, beseeching someone named fucking Astarte.
What does that mean? She wanted it to end. She couldnt understand how there was still hope.
How there was still time. How anyone could see something other than futility at the siege of Syracuse.
Babyits the Spartans300, you know?
Oh. She knew the movie. She knew that the 300 were an immovable object. She knew that no
matter what came for them, they would never yield. They would die where they stood.
Are you going to finish your painting today? He actually looked at her when he asked.
What? Yeah. I think so. The mighty 300 would hold Syracuse against the war-elephants, against
the Sacred Bandagainst a million men if they had to.
They were staring at her.
What? she asked.
Everything okay? Jim asked.
Nothingyeah, Im fine. Are you three going to sleep today? After the war her husband would
come home a different man. Jaundiced. Ruined by time. Hed be lost after this. Will you guys take a nap at
least? Ill wake you up.
The idea washed over them. They all realized at once how tired they were.
Thats a good idea, actually. Jim knew what she meant.
Syracuse isnt going anywhere. Adam set his dice down.
No, its not, sir. No, its not, Nate said.
They laughed.
***
Nate and Adam slept on the couch together. They were too tired to be concerned with which parts
touched. Jim stayed in the kitchen with Elise.
I know its a mess, but Ill clean it up. He was hoping theyd have the conversation after his friends
had left. Elise was angrier with herself than she was with Jim. Why should she be mad at him for having
such close friends? What was the harm in him playing a stupid game? He could be doing far worse. He had
done far worse. Now that he was sober, what did she have to complain about?
I justI dont understand why its always at our place. Have it at Adam and Natesthey live
together. It would be easier there.
Its traditionthe winner always hosts the next one. Plus theres more space here and would you
really let me disappear for a weekend?
I dont care! Why would I care? She would though. She knew it, too. Elise didnt like the idea of
him leaving if he didnt have to. Thats it, isnt it? You dont want to lose him to something else.
WhateverIm going to lay down. Wake me in a couple hours, please.
Jim kissed her and left the kitchen. Elise sat at the table and sipped her coffee. It wasnt as fresh as
she thought it was. Burnt. Must have been left on too long.
***
Mr. Lovecraft was such a strange looking man. She stared at him and the photo. The painting. Back
to the photo. Shed mastered it. It was exactly him in every way. It wasnt her fault he was shaped so
strange. The tentacles surrounding him were repulsive. Phallic and sticky things that looked as if theyd
tongue anyone who drew too close. And they were still pink.
Wow. Lovecraft? Adam asked.
Yup. Thats him. Elise said. She turned from the portrait and sat atop the ladder again. Adam was
looking straight through her. He walked towards the painting with his mouth open slightly.
Unbelievable, Elisereally. Its exactly him. They smiled at one another.
Thanks.
Is it done?
Not yet. I have to paint the tentacles.
What? Adam looked genuinely concerned. You cant! They look perfect!
Jim told me they should be green.
Fuck thatkeep em pink.
Elise smiled. YeahI just want it to be accurate, you know.
Adam examined the painting in the way he examined his army placements. He combed over it with
his eyes, careful not to touch it. He measured each brush stroke and fingerprint buried in the layers of pink
paint.
Accurate, he huffed. Were talking about Cthulu here. If anything, hed be angry that you tried to
paint him accurately.
What?
Takes Lovecraft two pages to describe snow and water. The Cthulu shows up and he says its
indescribable. Pink, greenits a color out of space. Adam smiled at her. You paint it how you want it.
Ill go wake up Jim. Is Nate awake? She climbed down from her ladder. She felt too close to Adam.
Ehhey, thanks for putting us up, by the way, Adam said. He didnt turn from the painting. He
stepped back to see it at a proper angle. I know were a pain in the ass.
I feel like there was more to that sentence, Elise said.
Nope. Were a pain in the ass. So thanks.
Elise smiled again and left Adam to his vigil for the elder things. Thats what she called them
anyway. She could never say the name right. Cthulu.
She passed Nate on her way upstairs. He lay on the couch and rubbed his eyes. He stared at book
titled, Tyrants of Syracuse.
the drunken, stupid rake shed married. He was something else now. No longer fierce and proud. No longer
dangerous.
She wanted him to touch her.
What are you up to? Jim said.
She saw the thing shed built and lamented it. She wanted to hurt. She wanted struggle. She wanted
bruises on her thighs.
Baby, not now.
She wanted him to notice her. If it meant she was just a thing to himshe wanted to be his. She
wanted be used and thrown away.
Elisecome on. The guys are downstairs.
Fine. And she knew she was.
***
She couldnt work on it anymore. It was finished whether she liked it or not. She smiled to herself. It
always seemed to end that way. She liked the idea. An artist had no say in the matter. A piece was done
when it decided it was done.
Mr. Lovecraft watched her clean her ox hair brushes. The tentacles behind him seemed to squirm
and fight against themselves. They were green now. He was right, she thought. She hated him for that.
The kitchen was obliterated. A war had claimed the lives of thousands and set Sicily ablaze. The
map was posted on the wall now. The statues and armies and navies had all been removed. It was
dominated by purple flag-pins. Jim stared at the map with his arms folded behind his head. He glared at it
in disbelief. Nate and Adam were packing their belongings.
Fall 2015
A.J. Huffman
Flying Blind
after Oppedette, photographed by Dieter Appelt
He wanted to be
like Icarus
and touch the sky, the searing face
of a star, but he was afraid
of the sun.
His own opalescence made him too easy
a target for its burning
rays.
Instead he built his wings in the cold
darkness of the caverns, modeled them
after bats
instead of birds. Weaving
them from clay and moss, he made them malleable
enough to manage
the dips
and tight curving
drops
that could never have lead
him anywhere
but straight
to hell.
Unblown Balloons
bounce around my imagination.
Flaccid almost-orbs, flattened
and docilely draped about
the fixtures in tragic portrait
of abandonment. I test
their individual boundaries,
stretching, tying appropriately placed knots.
Continued disappointment radiates
as silence. Not a single peep
or growl resonates from breathless
rubber bodies, now lying
in unanimated animal forms.
Blue
eyes flutter stutter force
themselves open. Raised
lids widen to embrace the
velvet cracked cluster covers
stretching themselves thin thinner
dissolving into graceful expanse of
sky reflecting in equaled depths.
Uncharted echoes bubble
burst belch erupt in
waves flowing with schools
of scales fins funny
faced faithful followers of tidal
pools overlook the natural thunder. Manmade Meccas for aquatic worship safely
contained. Sinewy bodies fan themselves like
feathers peacock proud prance preen
caw in ritualistic roar clutch for mate and maybe
youth all flashing back and by in blinking of
Fall 2015
Barbara Barnard
Fall 2015
Christien Gholson
4. Trinity-Site sifts through his cave, looking for the reality bone
I lift another empty whiskey bottle, swing it in a cool circle just inside the abandoned mine entrance, and let
go. The sound of breaking glass echoes off the walls. Shards fall through me. How long have I been here,
drinking, wallowing in self-pity?
I cut a petroglyph into the south wall. Its a replica of a human shadow made by the blast of thermal
radiation at Hiroshima. (No bodies were ever found near these shadows, only shadow remained.) It speaks to
me. It is not bitter, enraged, or even sad. (Because it has no connection with the body that formed it?) It is my
only friend now.
The irony is not lost on me. What are you looking for, friend? it says. Im trying to get back something I
lost, I answer. What have you lost? it asks me. I think on it a long time before answering. Its an important
question. I want to get it right.
Ive lost the mystery, I finally say. The mystery hidden in the eternal cycle: research, design, production. I
was a scientist, a mystic. Now I am a ghost in a cave talking to the replica of a shadow I made at the height of
my power.
Outside, a black hawk circles the sun. The hawks shadow skates across a small pool of rainwater sitting atop
a sandstone boulder a few yards from the mine. The water ripples.
5. Trinity-Site gives up on the idea of being the Last-of-Days-Angel and passes the baton
I have been walking along this desert rail line for days. It suits me, all this sage and black brush. The desert is
where I began my career, so its right and just that this is where I should end it. There is nothing more
pathetic in the eyes of the young than watching some old celebrity try to claw their way back into the
limelight. Lets face it: there are too many Last-of-Days Angels in the world now. They are all standing in
line, waiting for their chance to audition for nameless, faceless, low-level executives.
The world is running down slowly, too slowly. Two days ago, I walked past an old woman cradling a rag doll,
picking at the dolls eyes, and I thought this is my competition? Since then, its been prickly pear and
broken glass; wadded toilet paper where someone once squatted between the ties.
I believed for years that for any ending to last the conclusion had to be swift (and so merciful). This morning,
I watched a red-striped caterpillar crawl across lightning charred bark. It was a shock the juxtaposition of
red on black; so small, under such a vast empty sky.
Fall 2015
Dana Curtis
Schrdingers Moment
The true obsession has no name,
no pretty lights surrounding its mirror,
no ceiling fan to cool it down
in a dark bar after hours,
tasting cheap beer
and declaring it a perfect
sip of intent -- late, as if
woven into the stars -greet the dawn with a piece of chalk:
tracing one moment -- genius
of the forgotten
body -- we know all
we have to know -- sick vines
open that yawning receptacle,
variations on desire,
eyes shut and we find
Fall 2015
Dilip Mohapatra
CALLING
No one laments and sings a mirthless dirge
when the magnificence of the magnolia wilts
or the glow of the marigold
fades away
and lying in a heap in a corner
of the florist's shop
they wait to be stuck in bouquets
and strung into garlands
like the stiffs in a mortician's parlour waiting to be embalmed.
In their death they decorate the coffins and the palls
their lifeless smiles stay frozen on the wreaths
and on the garlands that adorn the gold framed photos
of the dear departed
passively partaking
the aroma of the joss sticks
and basking in the reflected glory
of the candles that burn so very benevolently.
Like the mendicants scoop
holy water from the holy river Ganga and offer the same back to her
they perhaps live their lives only to die one day
and make an offering of their very own deaths to the dead
and add colour to many other dark and colourless deaths.
PHASED OUT
I distinctly remember
when in class seven
the water colour that I made
for a children's art competition
and which had won the third prize.
The highlights were the dark fringes
of the coconut frond
that slightly encroached into a
luminous full moon hanging
on a somnolent grey sky
undeterred by a thin film of
clouds floating over
the silhouette of a range of hills
while its reflection shimmered
over a flowing stream
interrupted by a black blotch
of a coracle paddled by
a lone traveller.
Now I open my window
to be faced by another window
and I crane my neck to
get a glimpse of the magnificent crescent
but a disc TV antenna stares back at me.
Not to be deterred I venture out
to the open through the phalanx of
tall buildings till I reach
the bridge on the local river
that is almost dry and that waits
for the monsoon rains in the
catchment area to fill her up occasionally.
And here also I have no joy
but to be satisfied with
a diffused translucent patch
behind the thick curtain of smog.
THE ONSLAUGHT
The glyphs from the graves
have raised their heads
and have come alive
like zombies and how
have they invaded
the inner recesses of our hearts
to depict our tears
our pains and agonies
our happiness and glee
our stoic silence
and our rolling on the floor
with laughter.
The colon followed by a hyphen
ending with one of the open
parentheses make us smile
and the other instead
shows our frown
while a zipper across the lips
makes us speechless
and the stuck out tongue
with a wink makes us smirk.
All our emotions
are encapsulated in
those mini faces
called emojis that abound
in all our net chats and responses
with the occasional
thumbs ups and downs
claps and clasped palms in prayers.
Fall 2015
Daniel Adler
The Acheron
It was before dusk in late winter and a golden light covered the forests and ancient hills that had been
home to fauns and nymphs before the construction of Eleftherios Venizelos International. On the subway to
Akropoli, where I walked to my hostel, I passed pools of golden light that fell between shutters into the
cobbled streets. Behind those windows, Greeks laughed, danced and drank wine, older men carried their
wives on their arms, and the smell of roasted lamb mingled with the salt of the sea. Perhaps it was the
adrenaline of arriving in a new place, perhaps the infectious joy of the Greek people, but I felt very much
alive, despite the Aegean wind that forced me to turn up my collar.
Above, the Parthenon reigned over the ancient city; its regal lights illuminated the rocky Acropolis
like a sculpture stuck in the sky for all to gaze upon. For thousands of years it had represented a sense of self
for these people, a reassurance about who they were and how they had suffered in solidarity to overcome
and create a pinnacle of civilization, a democracy capable of both art and war. It is strange to look at a place
and understand that it is not living, that it is rock and dirt and none of it conscious, and yet feel somehow
that there is nonetheless in any land sacred or fallow an energy that shapes and forms it into what it is.
Perhaps it is an accumulation of history. Time imbues every land with a difference that the
conscientious observer can feel. Sometimes it is the presence of animals, sometimes humans, sometimes it is
the absence of life, a prehistoric emptiness, that we feel, as in the American West, where the ruins of time
have changed the landscape from a tropical playground into a barren desert. The Acropolis had for
thousands of years been a site of human suffering and glories, and remained such an acme of humanity that
still it made me and, I imagined, the Greeks around me, feel very much at home, as though the city were the
same size of twenty-five hundred years before. If a hundred humans stood arm to arm, each representing a
generation, we would stretch back to when this temple was built, a hundred lives traced directly backwards
through time would lead us to that era when families anointed stones with oil before setting out on journeys
and prayed to half-mortal creatures and gods who lived on mountaintops, who decided the fates of men
while wishing to be part of their world. I had longed for that era when I was younger, and now here at the
foot of the Parthenon, I partook of it by associating with the land those ancestral feelings of worship and
reverence that had stayed with it for so many centuries.
Around the block in my hotel, a Greek girl with thin arms welcomed me with a broad smile, teeth
that stuck out slightly but did not detract from her beauty. I paid my board and she handed me the key to my
dorm. Casting a side-look at her slender body as the elevator doors dinged open, I stepped into the mirrored
box and pressed five with a sense of relief from having reached my long-awaited destination.
Once I placed my bag near a lower bunk in the twelve-bed dorm, well-lit, spacious, with an affixed
bathroom and a window that looked north into a garden, I took the elevator back downstairs to the kitchen,
where a handful of young people were cooking and drinking ouzo. I paused in the doorway, recalling the fun
of hostel life as a young man in my twenties.
My first time in Athens my friend from New York, Karl, came to meet me in late February of that
year. He was also traveling in Europe, had come from Berlin, where it was minus twenty. He had been
staying with a young Spaniard named Antonio who had caught a chill. Together in their drafty apartment
Karl had tended to him for the month he was there, bringing him blankets and keeping the wood heater full.
The winter deepened and by the time Karl was ready to leave, the Spaniard was coughing up blood. Karl
assumed he wouldnt make it to spring. He told me about this and I laughed, thinking that he was joking,
but now I recalled how serious he was about most things, how like me, people often thought we were joking
when we were most serious, and I sent a flare of pity out to Antonio, wherever he was. Karl and I had gone
on to have the time of our lives; he was there with me when I first visited the Parthenon and together we
toured the rest of Athens. At that time there were riots against the Germans and graffiti that called Merkel a
Nazi and advocated leaving the EU stretched across gray downtown buildings. One evening, over a dessert
of strawberries and feta, a girl from our hostel asked us if wed heard about the riot in Syntagma Square. We
shrugged and Karl suggested we participate in it. I agreed. We walked down the street to buy a bottle of ouzo
and came back to the kitchen, where our hostel-mates were already gathering for the evening. We shared
the liquor and a couple of hours later, when it was empty, left for a bar with beers in our hands. At a corner,
Karl placed his empty beer bottle in an overfilled trash can. It fell with a clink and rolled in a circle around
its perimeter. He bent and set it upright. Thats no way to start a riot, I yelled. I picked it up and threw it
across the street. It shattered, scaring a Greek couple. Karl laughed; the others jeered. I kicked a cab as it was
going past. Within a couple of years after our return to the States, Karl and I drifted apart. I didnt miss him
much. He found a girlfriend and moved in with her. He stopped doing the things he said he was going to do.
I shook my head. Seven years had passed since my first time in Athens, and I felt much, much older. Instead
of meeting the other hostelites, I walked around the corner and down the block to a souvlaki place.
I had to get up early.
When I arrived at the village of Glyki the next afternoon, it was a couple of shops selling cheese and
olives, a few houses and the Acheron flowing darkly below, as it had been doing for millennia. Remote river
of the Ancient World, whose shores were the banks of Limbo on which flies and wasps chased those who
could do neither good nor evil, today this river is just forty miles long, and no Charon I could see ferried
souls across its banks. This stream was the boundary of the Greeks known world, the green waters flowing
slowly between canyon walls and rocky shores, all quiet except for an occasional birdcall and the waters
warble. A breeze picked up from the north, and I buttoned up my jacket, not knowing what else I had
expected.
A drone rose behind me, and I turned to see five or six wasps. Farther upstream, a crowd of nearly
naked people pushed and shoved, the smaller ones splashing into the cold water, trying to escape from a
swarm of black insects hovering around them, from which the stragglers buzzing around me must have
come. There came a rhythmic plashing and I turned to see a man in a longboat crossing the shallows, its
bottom scraped the rocks as he came ashore, calling in Greek to the herd running from the stinging insects.
He was tall and sickly-looking, his limbs gangly yet sinewy, strong. His face was sallow, and his gapped teeth
showed as he heckled the once-ambivalent. But they were not people; their bodies were transparent and
light; they floated, weaving and ducking, hollering, their shouts of fear echoing sharply along the river. They
stepped in the shallows and into the ferry, lips pursed, eyes big, some panting in relief.
A man in a white toga and sandals appeared out of the corner of my eye; behind him, another in a red
robe. Both had aquiline noses, wide brows and crowns of laurels. The togaed man turned to his companion,
pointing across the river. They waited until those lonesome souls had filled the boat and then the togaed
man began to converse with the ferryman. They also sat in the boat, toward the bow. Forgetting myself, I
called, Can I come too?
They looked up at me. The man in white called a phrase in Latin, and I cursed myself, wishing I had
been a better student. Though I imagined myself in their tradition, a possible third in their descent to the
underworld, time and my own ignorance had made it so that we could not understand each other. I
summoned the little Italian I knew and tried again, Posso venire?
The man with the red headdress looked sharply at me and said something to his guide, who
conferred with him, avoiding my eyes, but the boat was already drifting backward. Charon stood,
maneuvering his oars, swiveling his craft in the slowly-flowing river. I thought of swimming up beside them,
trying to climb in, but I was afraid that if I entered the waters I might remain there, my neck tilted back,
forever stuck in an attempt to breathe over the wavelets. Instead I stood, watching them cross the shallows
and disembark on the cliffside bank, the robed men wandering off together while the ferryman herded the
feathery bodies in the opposite direction. I was alone again.
How many others had come to this shore, hoping to see Charon? How many had he ignored? I felt
guilt for neglecting my Latin, being unable to utilize my learning when I had needed it most. Above all, I
wondered if my attention to the intervening knowledge from Dantes time to my own had been for naught, if
I had instead paid more attention to the classics, Virgil might have allowed me to join him and his disciple
on their descent, to walk through that walled garden with the Ancient Greats, or if now because of the
advances in science and technology, the list of men neither happy nor sad who competed for a position in
Limbo, were too many and I was yet another, born into a different tradition altogether. And yet while Dante
was born of a different tradition than Virgil, they at least spoke the same language, had the same culture. No
matter how badly I wanted to be part of what my predecessors had created, I would never be able to; my
pantheon of scientists and explorers had too little in common with theirs, more had passed between my
world and Dantes Christian one than between his era and Virgils pagan time. For me, both mens
worldviews were intangible no matter how badly I wanted to participate in them: I was literally from a world
that did not exist to either, an America still two hundred years away from being discovered for il Poeta; I was
as foreign to them in my present as the civilization of Atlantis was to their past. How vain of me to think that
I could sit in the same boat as either of those greats!
The rustic beauty of limestone cliffs and Ioannian forest was all that existed of that lost world of the
Ancients. I could only approximate the past through feeling the land; I had to do more, to experience
products of beauty made by men from their times in order to know how they lived, thought and loved. No
matter how much I thought I knew or felt of that Attic wilderness, only remnants of it remained in my
century, where the closest approximations of those forgotten eras were the curved handles of Greek hydriai,
the straight nose of a Roman marble, or the vaulted arch of a Florentine doorway.
Fall 2015
I Goldfarb
Promised Land
for IJ
Terre promise
Sous ta peau je vois couler
les sources des fleuves-mres
au-del des collines hautes de ton visage
les vallons interdits font vivre
tels fourmillements telles peuplades
Mose den haut jtreins
toute ta carte
terre promise terre refuse
Promised Land
Beneath
your
skin
see
flowing
process not structure
disorder self-maintained
rhythms first felt in the blood
linking river to river
the garden forever encircled
the sources
of the rivers
maternal
At that moment she stood in the center of the universe. The sun illuminated her like a pyre. Her mouth was
open to speak. Beneath her clothing her body was infinite. I was reduced to a point.
No description of the universe could endure as long as that moment.
Beyond
the high
hills
of your face
the valleys
forbidden
nourish
Moses
from above
I embrace
the map
entire
land
promised
land
to which
space of
openness
windblown scent of lilies
footfalls of far caravans
sun-flashes at the horizon
refused
imaginations blasphemy
in vision too nearly possession
only ineffable absence
inspires the sightless singer
Else would cease the knowledge beyond time that death and life signify. I taste yet now too much the
sugared wine. The sole sign exceeds the fragility of the promise.
ii
All language writes itself a Madeleine
I learn to live from moments without life
to see by odors sightless memory
of roses shut unbloomed within your album
or love in sacrificing human hearts
to my insouciant muse so rich in time
whose love-tales all reproachful of my own
I have no heart to voice
Where immobility is permanence
absence surrounds her person like a night
I would not dare a closer view of it
changing the little that in time we must
with what new song could I recompensate
the ceaseless retrogression of the muse?
ii
No more nostalgia the present
is equally gone with the past
we have grown older not closer
nor farther but across the ocean
face to face in recognition
Belongings not for us nor separation
this nameless being-fors our authenticity
iii
In the solemnity of old desire
no longer knowing physical from moral
I ask of you no token of consent
still less acknowledged reciprocity
exchanging words or silence
awaiting or receiving
our distance is our presence
iv
A cabin in the woods beside a lake
the well-worn idyll of the Suisse Romande
know I what populates your solitude
the petty comforts of your intimacy?
I would know all these things and yet renounce
all knowing but a postcard from afar
to know your landscape is to know the rest
v
Theres no love without irony
Madonnas stripped on bloody shrines
their pedestals ground down like bone
we burn what we adore
or else indifferent hearts conceal
a sacred precinct others might
call loveyou shake your head, you smile
Envoi
We sang the marvelous immortal flesh
as if it needed not our singing
regeneration's ruse deferred
in paeans of thanksgiving
Of love's young opera the music
fades but in the words
we hear the music
Fall 2015
Ian McPhail
I saw a roasted duck fly along a lemonade urine sky falling apart like meat off the
Bone
it made no sound except for the explosive releases of gas used to power its flight
it farted splintered bone it farted the body parts of babies
the smell was of
the notion that I would die in the haze of golden music note, without timbre,
I could not determine what time of the day it was
I was upside down I think
the duck long out of sight was its strategy BBQ
I ran away to my home and found sanctuary
in the bomb news
The world was at it again
gray eyes
small pan face
high temp cheek low temperature
I like you with your glasses on
They keep the calendar together
in mathematical flux
landscapes of lenses
pointed diamondly
at heat quasared
death
sure sugar
look
look
boy egg
for breakfast boy
a crap shorty
fling forever
a linoleum shit hoot!
dancer in the hay
boy barn
chicken
boy egg
for breakfast boy
a crap shorty
fling forever
a linoleum shit hoot!
dancer in the hay
boy
barn chicken
Fall 2015
Jamie McFaden
Dead weight is heavy, but drunk weight is fucking lead, Tiffany says as she carries my 23-year-old
sister, Reese, through my parents living room like a bride. When they make it to the yellow-tiled bathroom in
the hallway, Reese spews the Blue Motherfuckers and Liquid Marijuanas into the toilet. I think of the word
azure and fingerpaint, but am rattled back into the moment when I hear the next thing Tiffany says.
Top or bottom?
Mumble-moans from drunk baby sister.
Pants or shirt? Tiffany asks, as if this makes the best sense in the world.
It must, because Reese pats her jeans. Tiffany yanks them off with the kind of precision that only four
years in a sorority house can teach. I place seasoned oyster crackers and a plastic cup of water beside her. She
looks like shes eight years old, lying there, now passed out in just her underwear and a sweater. Im pissed that
we had to leave the bar to take her home early, so I plan on leaving her there like that for our parents to see in a
few hours.
She whines like a puppy in her boulder-heavy sleep like she always has. My mind goes back to thirteen
and staying up late with Tiffany to watch Sleepy Hollow. Scared shitless, we couldnt sleep after the movie
ended. So we found the ink daubers my mom and grandma used at Knights of Columbus on Wednesday nights.
Reeses little face became our Bingo card, spotted with blues and greens. Even our teeny-bopper bitch squeals
did not wake her.
That night, I felt guilty and rubbed off the dots with a soap-and-water washcloth.
This night, I yank her up by her arms and drag her to her childhood room. Dont care if I leave a bruise
on her. I place a black bucket on the floor and tilt her head towards it.
I feel bad for thinking Reeses inevitable hangover is well-deserved and tell myself I wont say anything
to our parents about how she nodded off on a barstool and had to be carried home.
But Im not sure I trust me.
Half-Here
Mom was just some pretty bartender with an ass shaped like a pumpkin. Dad was just a coastguardsman
docked in a town that only had draft beer available until 1am on Saturday nights. They went home together after
Mom closed the bar. Now Im here. She says hes a lousy drunk. He says shes been a slut since birth. I dont
know whos more right.
Ive seen Mom drink her share of Jim Beam. Her eyes fix on the TV while the ice melts in the Beam
and Diet Pepsi she clutches in a Tom and Jerry jelly jar. She stirs one finger in it slowly, doesnt hear me when I
ask if I can have one of her Diet Pepsi cans. She looks so happy in the glow of the television. Much happier
than when shes trying to figure out what breakfast to make the Wednesday morning man in the oil-spotted blue
jeans sitting across from me at breakfast. They must all be mechanics, these guys who have cheesy scrambled
eggs and buttered toast with us. I dont talk to them much. Instead, I trace the pattern of the wood lanes
streaking the breakfast table. I like that they all seem to end at a dark knot that swirls at my side. Mom tells me
to quit it and answer the man sitting at our table. I never know their names, but she calls them all Baby.
And Ive seen Dad bring his share of women home. They have high-pitched giggles, some louder than
others, but they all seem to have the same pair of high heels. Ones that clack clack along the linoleum all the
way back to the bedroom. I call these women one-timers. Dad says I better never bother them. If the house
catches fire, I know stop, drop, and roll then 911. They dont stay for breakfast. They dont ask me stupid
questions, either, which I like. They grind cigarette butts down into the brown ashtray in the hallway bathroom
that we share. I study the lipstick prints on the filtered side. Once, I discovered a purple kiss mark smudged
between the tip of the filter and those double green rings. I mustve missed Miss Purple Lips. Sometimes they
come in after Ive fallen asleep. When I grow up, thats what color Im going to wear on my lips.
I think since Mom and Dad met fast and did it to each other so fast that I must notve gotten time to
grow the way other kids do. Im only half-here. They talk at me, and their words sorta float through the air.
Stinky and fluttering, the way the liquor boxes spit ashes as they burn in the burn barrel out behind Dads
trailer. But being half-here, you can get away with more stuff than if you were all the way here. I try to be good,
but sometimes being bad just gets after me, so Ill steal a pack of sunflower seeds from the gas station at the
corner of Moms apartment complex. I swallow the shells so she wont know I took them. You have to grind
them down with your back teeth like a stegosaurus would so they dont jab you in the throat when you swallow.
I dont know if Mom would really notice anyway because a lot of mornings she has one of her bad headaches or
cries mascara spider legs down her face because last nights Baby wont let her make him cheesy scrambled
eggs.
If I had to pick, Id say I like it better when Mom and Dad act like what they say the other one is. Mom
just stares, and her eyes are like the living room fish tank when she sips her Jim Beam. And dads one-timers
never try to wiggle their fingers down the waistband of my pajama bottoms. Being half-here is alright. I just
wish I got to be called Baby once in a while.
In January of her senior year at college, Sophie discovered jagged bits of flesh blossoming from her
vagina. She rubbed her hand over the space in the shower, feeling the burls that had sprouted from front to back.
Her worst enemy in high school had contracted genital herpes from fucking the boys who returned home
from college during winter break. They came back wearing new clothes and listening to new bands, their
stamens full of disease and desire. Sophie found it fitting that a girl with such a mildewed personality now had
the twat to match. As if the ugly moved from her heart down.
Sophie didnt fuck those kinds of boys. Sophie had fucked only two boys. The medical student she loved
now, and the unfaithful professional mover she had loved for the first three years of college.
The month before she sprouted the lumpy flesh, a story ran on 60 Minutes about a Mexican man who
became a tree. The human papillomavirus wildfired from between his legs to the entirety of his body. The knots
covered his skin completely, transforming him into a living willow. His flesh-bark pained him, and he wept sap
as he spoke.
She told the boy she loved that she suspected she was now marred, expecting him to evaporate as she
spoke. His hand was smooth against her burrs, but he swore he didnt care. He told her that one out of four
people had it. That it would not turn her into a tree.
They sat together on a worn quilt, its threadbare surface barely separating them from the cold earth. In
the park, with tennis shoe scrapes and moss-covered trees filling the space around them, he asked her to move
in with him. She agreed under the condition that he go with her to the clinic to burn away the ridged buds. By
now, he had them, too.
They waited in the dingy room of the free clinic. The chairs were placed in rows so the patients could
get a good view of the video that played on loop about a guy who gave his girlfriend herpes. Sophie insisted that
condoms always be worn. Flesh against flesh had been enough, though.
The boy she loved held her hand, pressing his palm to hers and squeezing the bones in her fingers
against one another. She noticed a man in a sleeveless shirt and his girlfriend sitting a few rows in front of them.
The mans skin was yellow and his back muscles tensed through the thin, dirty cotton. When the video got to
the part where the guy apologized to the woman for infecting her, the yellow man wrapped his forearm around
the girlfriends neck. He yanked her close and held her there so firmly that from behind it looked as if they were
one misshaped form.
After she was scorched with chemicals for one long hour, the boy she loved bought her a green dress
and took her dancing. With every twirl on the hardwood floor, she scanned the ground for bits of her bark that
may have dropped away.
Fall 2015
Jessy Brodsky Vega
White Thoughts
White, perishable light flooded the bed side and penetrated the lids of my eyes. I sighed into the side
of my arm. A few minutes passed and there were no sounds in the morning of my room. A glance at the clock
told me that it was barely eight oclock. I snapped the sheets away from my chest and rolled out of bed.
Seemed like a Sunday. I looked about the room of disheveled clothing and peeling posters. No one with me.
The quiet resounding, heavy, I bent down and nudged the needle over a record in the player on the
floor with its long cord linked to the wall, then left the room. The hallway was dark, wood creaking as I
walked, and the bathroom to the sideglaring, gathered white. I peed with a sigh into the toilet.
"Yo," I heard from behind me.
"What is it?"
"Put some fucking clothes on. She doesn't want to see that." Freddy said, with his
girlfriend sprawled across the couch. He pulled the blanket over his red curls and her light swept buttermilk
colored hair. They giggled and murmured under the blanket.
I left the toilet seat up, brushed myself off, and returned to my room to sit and
close my eyes and recoil until the hour melted into something more reasonable.
He was so close to jumping on it. Just a few inches more. I was clenching my
hands open and closed.
"God damn it, James! Get on the skateboard before it rolls down the hill!"
James let the skateboard tumble away. I threw my head into my hands and shuddered.
James had long dirty blond hair and as I stared at him now, hopefully in a
menacing, threatening way, he began to tie it backwards with a hair band. He lit a Marlboro 27 from his
golden pack of cigarettes and rubbed his rough, blond speckled chin.
"What is your problem, Dylan?"
I sighed and tried to calm myself by breathing slow but my heart beat all the more rapidly. I reached
down and picked my beanie hat off the ground and smoothed it down over my head. James stared at me
with his cigarette drawn to the side of his mouth, squinting and smiling.
"Get your damn skateboard and lets go. Can't even do a simple trick."
He laughed and stepped towards me, dragging his cigarette in and out of his mouth. He let the
cigarette drop just a bit and blew a circle of smoke between my eyes.
"Shit," I seethed and pushed him back.
He stumbled backwards but the ends of his boots caught him and he laughed. I couldn't help smiling.
The acrid smoke came into my lungs and gathered around my clothes, scenting me as it liked. I threw my fist
at him and surprised, James fell back to his elbows on the ground. The cigarette still dangled innocently
from his mouth. I stood as a shadow covering him.
James slowly got to his feet and his face was serious, the jaw set tight. He was several inches taller
than me, above six feet, and much broader in the chest. He dropped the cigarette to the ground and crushed
it under his boot. "I'm not going to go on with this because I would fuck you up much worse than you could
do to me. But you're lucky that wimp fist of yours didn't actually hit me."
I laughed with an exuberant "Hah!", the only kind of laughter I seemed capable these days of
compelling. "One day you should try me. I really hope to find out. It's my most sincere wish. A fair fight with
the honest James."
James grimaced. "Fucking mad cat you are. Stop that clown laugh. I don't know if I can deal with it for
another year."
I slapped him on the shoulder. "I wasn't really going to hit you."
James shrugged and began to walk ahead. I kicked my board down to the ground and rolled ahead of
him.
Walking down Middle Path, I dug my hands into my pockets and stared towards my feet. I was
kicking up neat little pebbles to the grass. At the end of the path stood historic dorms, stretching their
buttresses as far into the clouds as they could.
I had told no one where I was going. My suite-mates were asleep. It was probably seven thirty in the
morning. No one here would question if I'd spent the night in my bed or been in my room behind a locked
door for weeks. Boarding school had been a bit like that. I'd disappear and reappear and no one would notice
and nothing would change whether I was around or not. At the boarding school, there were skinny black
gates shooting several feet above ones head in every direction. On the college campus, there were no gates.
Fields stretched for miles. I couldn't see roads, but I could smell the pulsation of the open world. The tilled,
nearby fieldsthe old, unadulterated clusters of trees outside the path, cleared away only in certain,
intentional areas so as to suggest to the student that he or she had stumbled upon a secret enclosure.
"I. .. don't know. Just where I'm going," I sang. "But I gonna try ... for the kingdom if I can..."
"Velvet Underground?"
I turned around, startled, wrung silent. A boy stood behind me with long, white blond hair tied back
to the nape of his neck. His face was stark, pale and plain, pierced by large, blue eyes.
"Ralphy!"
Ralphy smiled and it made his pale face seem wider and more impossible. He stretched his hand out,
but I hugged his broad body close to mine.
"Jesus, how long has it been?"
Ralphy shrugged. "Three years. Not since you graduated."
"Hah!" I bellowed and slapped him hard upon the back. "I'd forgotten ... your mom called my mom.
Told me you were going to go to school here."
Yup.
I stepped back and crossed my arms and gave him another once over. "How funny. I was just thinking
of our boarding school."
Ralphy's eyelids twitched. "Why?"
I smiled. "You grew up a bit. Have you picked your classes and everything?"
He nodded. "Course, man. I just picked random ones though. I don't know what I want to be or
anything."
Yeah me neither.
Ralphy frowned. His mouth was too wide, his face glowing in youth.
"But you should already have a major... "
"Hah!" The dark pupils, stark, circled by such light irises, darted back and forth. I thought of my own
eyes, unable to discern so plainly, tiny and dark as coal. My mother said they pressed into my head, literally
and figuratively deep. Mothers always find ways to compliment flaws. "Yeah, Ralphy, I have a major. I'm
doing English."
"Oh, that's cool. Will you be a journalist or something?"
I turned away from the historic buildings, back to the little town and my little white house in the
distance. "Maybe. What are you doing up so early Ralphy?"
"I wake up early these days but I got some last minute things to do too."
I looked at him from the corner of my eye, wondering if he would smile again in that naive, simple
way. He did and I laughed until my back buckled and I was slapping my hand across my knee.
"Man Dylan... "
"I wake up early too," I said.
Ralphy chuckled into his hand and looked me over. I let him and uncrossed my arms. "Are you on
crack right now or something?"
"Hah!" I started walking down the straight path. "I wish."
Gonna miss this place, the coffee shop," Freddy said, settling back into his seat and stretching his
arms back.
"Will you shut up, jack ass. You have a whole year here still. Trust me, you won't miss it by the end,"
James snorted.
"Well, not all of us can be super seniors," I said.
James punched me in the arm and I recoiled, a smile plastered to my face. I lifted up and walked
away from the table to a counter and began reading a paper hanging on the wall about the local distribution
of apples.
"You want to order?
A freckled girl behind the counter was blinking her almond shaped eyes in my direction.
"Yeaah," I drawled. "Could I get green tea in a ceramic cup?
She turned around and I went back to reading the paper on the wall. A woman, or rathera girl
stepped into my sight. The text upon the wall became a blur. She had brown hair which rested upon bare
shoulders and a white hat pushing the hair further down. I stepped back and hit the napkin and milk stand
behind me.
The girl of dark hair glanced my way once and then turned away. She had a wide face though it
narrowed towards the chin with a delicate, sloping nose, and a full bottom lip. Her eyelashes brushed her
cheek as she looked down at a menu. She glanced back at me and her mouth curled down in a sort of
indignant frown. A white skirt flowed loosely around her thighs and she wore knee high socks.
"Hi," I said.
She looked up at me, her eyes steadying. "Hey," she said quietly and returned to her menu.
"Green tea!" The freckled girl handed me my drink and I took it, retreating as slowly as I could.
I wanted to take the knee high socks girl with my tea and sit her down next to me at the table. But I
kept her there. When I sat down, Freddy kicked me in the shin.
"What?" I said.
"Stop staring at freshmen girls, you fuck off."
"I thought I restrained myself," I said.
"What?" Freddy asked. James shook his head.
Right on the path, adjacent to the music hall, sat a bench older than the others. It tilted to the right
and one of its peg legs was sinking into a hole. Every year that I'd come back, it was more rugged and
weathered, more spent, but still allowed to sink and sink, buckle and wilt. When I sat upon it, the wood
creaked and when I lay and arched my back, it bent with me. Across from it was an oak tree planted by some
class a hundred years ago. Now the tree stretched way overhead, towering over the bench, and forever
shadowing it.
If I was a painter, I'd paint it. I'd note the colors of it and the bends and the ridges. But looking down
at my hands, they weren't soft enough. The ends of them were bitten and flattened from stabbing typewriter
keys. So, that was my affliction. But there was so much beauty in the tree. One medium couldn't possibly
cover it. My dearest typewriter...!
Someone waved at me but I was too apart to notice who it was. The sun beat down and pounded into
my chest. Class would be starting in a few minutes.
"Wait, wait! I'm in the rotation too!" Rachel stuck her tongue out and flattened her eyes.
"You look like a fish," I said.
James knocked into my shoulders.
Rachel jerked her shoulders back and made a "hmph" sound. She laughed like a child princess and
giggled when she wasn't laughing. She couldn't sit in silence. I wondered what she was doing in my house.
James moved behind her. He wrapped both legs around her waist and situated himself so his knees
touched hers and his arms dangled from her shoulders.
"Hey!" she protested, beaming.
I passed the bowl to her and she had James light it for her.
"Blow harder, girl! Harder! Suck it in."
She coughed once the tip was removed from her mouth and shoved the bowl into
James' hand. He sucked hard and passed it along.
The door opened and a buoyant "Hey" bounded through the room.
"Gretch!" Rachel jumped up from James' lap and hugged her friend.
She turned to all of us with a furred boa strangling her neck and lifted a foot, well shrouded in thick
animal hide, to the table.
"Hey baby," she said.
Gretchen's blond hair was dried in an almost dread-locked style, though without
all the products, it would have been completely straight, dead as straw. Her face was
freckled but delicately, softly. She had green eyes and a wide cherry mouth which smiled at me now
wrongly, falsely sweet.
"Hey babe."
She moved past me and went to the kitchen to fix herself a drink. The bowl was
passed to me and I lit it, swirling the end of the lighter around the ashes, and sucking the petals of smoke
into my lungs.
When she returned a few minutes later, she carried a handle and some glasses
before jumping in the rotation.
I poured myself whiskey and sat back to drink. The group kept on talking,
Gretchen as well. I watched them all as if they were part of a live portrait, singing to me. Gretchen's eyes
trailed my way every once and a while and I focused only upon her. She had short eyelashes which rounded
her green stone eyes. I wasn't sure if the conversation had finished, but the bowl was cashed and I had drunk
the whiskey. I lifted up, snatched Gretchen's hand, and pulled her away from the group.
"Dylan!" she cried, though she understood me. We meandered into the hallway and I kissed her
reddened lips. She pressed me into the wall and lifted my shirt up. I undid my belt and my pants slipped
right down, always having been too big.
I knocked the door to my bedroom open and we collapsed inside.
Bright, white light again flooding my room. I never closed the curtains. No one
ever walked by early enough to catch me sleeping.
It was very quiet. The sun moving achingly slow upon the twisted sheets. She was gone. On my back,
I reached my hands up toward the ceiling fan, swirling as slowly as possible through the spaces between my
fingers.
Gretchen never stayed the night. It had been two years and I could count on my fingers when I'd
woken up and she was next to me.
A sudden pounding made a calamity against my door. I gripped the covers and glanced at the door.
"Dylan? Dylan?"
I turned over on my side and reached my arms out to the center of the room.
Maybe I couldn't feel pain anymore. I could just toss myself down the hill, all the way down, and nothing
would happen.
I stood up and was stretching when my shoulder was tapped and the shock of it sent more palpations
through my body than the fall. I tripped again and landed on my knees.
"Oh God. I'm sorry. I just caught your hat and ... "
My hair was too dark, too long. I couldn't see anything. I stared and blinked and blinked, willing
feeling to return to my body.
The person bent like a peasant girl, crushing her skirts with one wayward hand. She took my hat and
placed it on my head, parting the hairs.
"Hey," I said. She looked back at me, a bit wide eyed. "I know you," I smirked.
She didn't say anything, but her full lips began to spread. "You fascinate me."
Her eyes narrowed. "What?"
I reached out a hand to her. She stood up, brushed herself off, and stared for a
moment. Then she gave me her hand and lifted me upwards. Or rather, I lifted myself
up by the warmth of her palm.
"You completely fascinate me."
"Well ... " she said. "You fascinate me."
"Hah!" How wonderful. "Do I? Are you a freshman?"
She cocked her hip out. She had another skirt on, a long one. Her shirt sloped loosely around her
neck, the circular cup of a bone necklace lying upon the hard, flat expanse before the small swell of breasts,
lower, hidden.
"What do you think?" she asked.
"Oh!" I said. I shook my shoulders out. My whole body tingled. "I think you're a freshman."
Her hip faded back to its usual line. "Aww, how did you know?"
I dragged my hand down my face to the stubble along my chin. "I knew... Alice?"
"Yes." Her skin was so rich in color. I couldn't place the color of her eyes. "Dylan. What grade are you
in?"
"Oh, I'm a senior."
"Oh," she said, looking a bit abashed and so I took her hand, and she swayed a
little. "Well, it's nice to officially meet you."
I let her hand go; it seemed as light as a dandelion, and sat back down squarely upon the pavement.
She brushed hair from her eyes and glanced towards the granite where I'd fallen.
The wind had begun rushing so fast that the trees were lurching around us. Alice kept
her hands gathered in her skirt and lowered her head. I let the winds blow over me, wishing for nakedness or
perhaps a softer ground.
"Here, give me another shot."
"Yeah," Freddy said, "me too."
James poured the liquor down so it cascaded over a row of glasses.
We each picked up our share and tapped glasses, smiling broadly, and tipped our heads back. Hard
rushes and I shook my head as a chaser in the end.
The door opened and Gretchen and Rachel waltzed in. Gretchen had exchanged a
fur wrap for a coat but she tossed it away to show off her orange dress again.
"Are you guys drinking?" Rachel cooed. She snatched the handle away from James who pounced on
her and took it back. They both erupted into laughter.
"Are you drinking?" Gretchen asked.
I turned to her and nodded. "Yes, Gretchen."
"How much have you had?"
"Eight shots?"
"Eight! You knew I was coming over though."
"So?''
She slapped me behind the head and I looked to Freddy who raised his eyebrows.
"Are you going to keep hitting me?''
"Are you going to get drunk every night?"
"Maybe. I only have one year left. You have two. You can take it slower."
She took the shot glass from my hand and slammed it on the table. "Well, I wanted to spend some
time with you tonight!"
"Get drunk and we can spend some time together." I batted my eyes at her and met her gaze until she
turned away.
"Let's go into the other room," she said.
"You're sober as hell."
"I'll sober you up."
She dragged me away, not even to my room. We were in the hall. She knocked me on my back,
straddled me, and then pulled me up so I'd kiss her.
"You taste of bitter, bitter alcohol," she hissed.
"Hah," I murmured, but there was no joy in it.
She pushed me down and bit my lip.
"I love you," she said.
"Yes?"
"I'll never let you go," she said.
I lay my head on its side. "Oh, no?"
"Dylan!"
I turned back to her but only to show her one eye. "What?"
"Look at you, look at you." She brushed hair away from my eyes and raked her
hands down to the splatters of hair on my chest. "Such dark brilliant hair. I can't look away from your face."
"I love your face too," I said. Her freckles seemed smudged tonight. She'd
applied too much blush. Her cheeks were reddened dully.
"Will you kids come back over here?" James called.
"Pulleeeesseee darlings?" Rachel begged. "Before I drink everything. Hey
James, I have my first test of the semester tomorrow!"
"You do?" He gasped. And they laughed, making sounds on the couches.
"Where's Dana?" Gretchen called from my lap.
"She's coming over," Freddy answered.
"And it's easy to think nothing really matters here when all you're encouraged to do is languish about
and think. You're not accountable for anything. You're young and strong. Not old and muttering over your
regrets, or starving for that matter. You're just a fucking kid and you love it here. It's no wonder you don't
want to leave."
"How do you mean I don't want to leave?" I asked.
"Dylan, it's your fantasy to stay here forever. That's obvious," Freddy snorted, from the side. "When
does this path end?"
"I do want to leave. Of course I want to leave. But I'm not so young and stupid that I don't realize we're
in a paradise here."
"Ah man, come on," Freddy said.
James smiled and bending his head lit a cigarette.
My head was splitting. The day had faded so quickly. First, we were back in the
house and then it was night and Freddy or James had turned the lights on.
I sat down and I lay my head back and then I thought I was dreaming, but they
had taken me out and it was close to midnight, after midnight. I couldn't even see the
stars anymore.
The room I was in was so hot that my skin was ready to peel straight off. I
wondered where Gretchen had gone. I wondered where Freddy and James had gone off
to.
People came up to me and I smiled at them and slapped them on their backs or
they ran into me and spilled their drinks upon my feet. Apparently, I was holding one as
well because I remember it tipping and trailing down the side of my pants. Steady. The
room pulsated. People were dancing everywhere.
I couldn't breathe. My throat felt constricted. I thought I smelled smoke and
followed its scent to the door. Once, I bounded into it and again and again until it creaked open and I fell to
the ground, soaking in fresh dirt and air.
People stood above me, dragging cigarettes from peach-kissed mouths. I lifted
myself up.
"Who the hell"
I pushed past one kid, tall and skinny in the dark, and walked up the wooded hill away from the
party.
I must have had a jacket at one point though it seemed to have disappeared and I walked through the
brisk night in nothing but a red polo and cargo shorts. I jerked my hands in my pockets and threw my head
back.
Where were the stars?
More kids laughing up ahead. There were two of them. A girl and a boy. The boy
walked with his head tilted towards the girl and his hands at his sides. The girl swayed
back and forth and held a cigarette between thin fingers. She tried to hand it off to him but he refused.
I began walking faster, the cold biting at my skin and pushing me to start running. As I passed them, I
heard my name delicately pronounced.
In her white hat again, huddling under a coat too big for her tiny shoulders walked the girl who had
worn the knee high socks.
"Hey," she said, sucking with pink lips from a barely lit cigarette. "I don't smoke, Dylan. Someone just
gave this cigarette to me. Do you smoke?"
"No," I said and reached back and took it from her. I sucked in a line of smoke from its end and then
tossed it to the ground and turned my back to keep walking.
At the edge of the woods, there was a drop down to a gravel road and across was a dry, twig lain field
that stretched out before lower class dorms.
I could hear the crunch of boots in the leaves through the woods and I waited there for her.
"Goodnight Alice, I'll see you later," her companion said.
"Goodnight."
"Hey" she said coming up beside me and I grabbed her at the waist and kissed her tobacco laced,
vodka soaked mouth.
"Oh," she said.
"Where do you live? Over this hill?"
"Yes..."
I took her hand and dragged her down to the road. She kept my pace a little behind as I headed
across the field to the locked tight door of a red brick building.
"This your dorm?"
"Yeah," she said.
"I want to come home with you," I said.
"Okay," she said, her eyesclearly blue nowlowering.
I picked up her chin and shoved my mouth against hers and with my eyes open, I saw her eyelashes
flutter back.
"Inside," I said.
She turned the key and let us in upon a brightly lit, blue carpeted hallway. We wandered down to the
end and she pushed upon a door to a room that had two twin beds on either side, desks between them. Her
bed was the one shoved up beside the window with a dull green comforter and little lights strung round it.
"Turn these off," I said and she yanked the cord from the wall. "Down," I instructed.
And she lay herself down on the bed and then lifted up on her elbows. Her mouth was open and her
eyes wide.
I smiled in the dark and her eyes trailed down to my teeth. I took my pants off and my shirt and
kneeled upon the bed. She rose up to kiss me and I took her clothes off of her.
"Let's get under these covers," I said.
Daylight had begun to break outside the window in a steel grey.
She made the sounds of a resisting animal yet completely yielded to me. I turned her around and had
her that way and her hand dangled off from the bed.
In the quiet of the rising sun, which brightened as a whole in a glare, I brushed back the hair from her
temples and ran my hand down her cheek along her chin.
"You shouldn't cover up your pimples with makeup. Just let them show," I said.
"All right," she breathed.
"You're very beautiful," I sighed into her hair. "I'm glad your roommate isn't home."
"She has a boyfriend."
"And you?"
"No. Do you have someone?"
I grazed my hand down to the small swelling of her hip and her soft belly. "No."
"Girls must often be letting you in their bedrooms."
"No," I said and laughed in a snort. I turned her over.
"And you? Fucking many boys?"
She turned her head away. "No, I've only been having sex about a year," the girl said.
"Ah," I said. "Yeah, I can tell. You need to learn to relax and not think too much. I want to see all your
unconscious movements."
She studied me with her large eyes and half-smiled.
A mere handful of hours later, I walked with her to the cafeteria across from her building and we sat
at a table before the window that was long and slick with sunshine and she ate a large plate of french toast
with coffee. I ate plain buttered toast.
"You shouldn't drink coffee with milk. It'll turn your teeth yellow. Black coffee is better."
"Really?" she said. "But I do drink it black."
"I'm only telling you."
"You must never come over here to the freshman cafeteria," she said.
"No. Why should I?"
On a path which sunk down into a branch of the library and continued on through the little excuse
for a town, she paused at the crest.
"Goodbye," I said, and raised a quick hand to her before returning it to my pocket, and I turned
toward the little white house.
An arching room at the top of the school's most dated building, of wood paneled walls, thick rouge
carpets, and stained glass windows was furnished with tables of the period made of sturdy, thin wood and
carved legs. There was an open path in the middle between the rows of tables leading from one pinnacled
entrance to the other and I saw Alice standing at the far end.
"You follow me around don't you?" I called out.
"Stay in bed like that, it's fine." I reached down and shoved off my pants and tore off my coat and shirt.
"Don't follow me anymore. I know where you are and I will come and find you when I want you."
"When? How often?"
"When I can or when I want to." I kissed her lip hard and bit her. "Or maybe this will be the last time."
"Why do you say that?"
"Because it should be. Get on top of me."
She rose up from the bed and drew from her shoulders a long night shirt. Her nipples were very dark
in the moonlight, new and subtle and dark. She straddled me and began to rock slowly.
"You don't know how to have sex."
She sighed and began to detach.
"No. I'll try...and teach you. Justbe slow and don't think," I said and leaned my head back and
sighed. "That's fine... that's good."
The nearing of Christmas brought the pronouncement of white lights upon the trees that overlooked
Middle Path and out my window was the pale granite under gaze of the moon and the darkness of
uninhabited woods behind.
My door was thrown open as I hit a key on the typewriter. I drew a paper from its metal reel.
"Hey Gretch"
"Well who the fuck is she?" she asked in the doorway. "Are you telling me we're through?"
"I'm through with everybody." I turned to her. She was in a long brown coat and had her hair matted
to the sides of her face. "Look at you," I murmured.
She stamped forward and ripped the paper from my hands and tore it up and began kicking my
clothing and throwing it and bent to grab the heavy type writer and I shouldered her down to the strewn
about clothes, to the hardly seen or felt wooden floor.
"Stop it," I said. "Stop it. Behave. Stop."
She was crying unseen tears that had left her cheeks run in black lines.
"Go home. Just go home. You'll see me again. Don't be so drastic."
Gretchen rose when I released her and left the room without looking back.
I stood for a while with the fan starting to whir above me, its string having been pulled suddenly in
the thrashing. Then I bent and lifted the typewriter and brought it to the top shelf of the closet. I began to
pick up the clothes.
"Man, you want a hit?" James asked, his face disfigured behind smoke.
"No," I said walking through the living room as I shrugged on my coat and opened the door to the
cold.
"You sure?" Rachel's thin, high voice followed.
I stepped outside and began walking towards Middle Path where the trees were sighing in the wind
and to the dully lit pathway and its small pebbles, passing its rooted benches and rushing people, their heads
down, their cheeks cold. Then I turned off the path abruptly and slid down a hill with my knees bent, the
leaves crumbling and spinning as I descended to the hard ground of a parking lot.
Ralphy was there leaning against a black car.
"Hey," he said and pulled open the door.
"Hey." I sat down on the passenger side.
"Well where do you want me to drop you off?" he asked.
"By the train station."
Ralphy looked at me with his boyish, bright eyes. "Really, man? What about graduating?"
I brought out a hunk of cash from my pocket and spread it in my fingers.
"I'll come back."
He took me to the lonely track, perched on top of a hill, the sliver slip of a moon yellow and star
flanked. A flat roof reached over the platform, a dangling orange bulb hanging from its expanse.
"You want anything? A joint?" Ralphy asked.
"No. Thanks," I said and handed him a twenty. "For the gas."
"Okay. Hit me up when you come back."
"Sure," I said. "Take care Ralphy."
I got out of the car and walked up to the platform. Ralphy's black car backed up and I watched its red
taillights shimmying up the road.
The wind whistled through the darkness of the woods and shook the tops of the clinging on leaves. I
leaned against the brick of the station and crossed my arms and closed my eyes. The train came swiftly by
and sighed in its stopping, a narrow door jutting open. The inside was lit in stark yellow against the
backdrop of night. The warm red cheeks of strangers and their spread open newspapers, closed bags, and
whispering children awaited me to join their slowly moving procession. I came forward and handed the man
holding open the door my ticket.
"To the big city," I said and smiled wide.
"Be there by morning," the man with a long mustache answered gruffly.
I climbed the steps, sat my bag down by a window, and the the train gave a lurch. The platform upon
which I had stood and its single orange light became a shrinking square in the night with the inky sky above
and the silent, undriven road beside that meandered through the small towns and then the light flattened
and was gone as the popping of man's thin filament in that fragile bulb.
Fall 2015
Joseph Harrington
Fall 2015
Josef Krebs
BODY OF WORK
It was later that night and the church bell was sounding the hour as
Mann climbed into the car he had intended to discard for winter along with
his cigarettes.
surrenders to a bath.
It was a different
part of the night right now; it was the blue-black-and-white period, the
warm-streaked-with-chill time.
his initial stroll had been terminated and examined the nearby stationary
vehicles and the windows of buildings across the way.
was unobserved, he parked the car and climbed out.
niche and looked down over the barrier.
or tide.
#
Satisfied that he
His eyes opened and above him was the large plaster circle.
Some
light was penetrating thick ochre curtains covering the closed windows
that stretched from ceiling to floor in front of his now tilted head;
daytime had started all over again, much to his disgust.
Why disgust, he didnt know.
first conscious feeling of the day.
he knew, but he had read somewhere that he had, that in fact everybody
dreamed every night, though most people often refused to recall.
He
believed that he slept too little to dream, plunging into and bursting out
of deep sleep without stopping in the subconscious shallows long enough to
put any dreams together or let them take him apart.
He could be wrong,
No thought
The papers on it
were neatly organized in his mind but would seem an ill-assorted mess to
anyone who cared to break into the room.
sharpen lead.
he was able to start his day proper, but this was all part of the process
by which he filled a few empty sheets.
If he was lucky.
that point where smell of singed rubber roused him from his reverie long
enough to take coffee pot off stove and pour himself cup of deep-brown
bean drainings.
Familiar as ever.
It was
eye-enclave climbed out onto cheekbone, rolling softly down hill into
mouth.
Taught.
Mann climbed barrier, dropped down into the mud, not being quite so
careful, coming close to landing on prone figure.
beyond recovery ever since it had left his foot on earlier impact with the
mud but he went through the ritual of searching, spending several minutes
hunting on ground before taking the next unenviable and inevitable step
back to the body.
Crouching beside it, he reached out and took hold of the hand that
was reaching away from him.
to warm it with his own and instead picked up that other hand, a lifeless
limb that lay across the corpses heart as though death had caught this
person in a last profession of faith.
position and took it in a brotherly embrace, pushing his hands under its
arms and down the back to its belt.
around the chest of corpse and tied a lasso with slip knot.
Gathering up
remaining rope he looked about him for something that could serve as
weight.
for Mann to do but remove another shoe, this time from the other fellows
foot.
Mann tied shoe to the free end of the rope creating a makeshift
bolas and, giving himself enough rope to get sufficient swing, began a
slow pendulous arcing of it that rapidly developed into a circling which
in turn became an expanding spiral.
loose rope into the sky.
As
it passed the upright pillar, shoe, finding itself at the end of its
tether, dropped and doubled up about post and in momentum began to swing
around it and into a new inward-moving spiral before quickly coming to a
halt at that apex.
A push.
The hefty dead fellow fell forward and rope was pulled
dead weight up without loss of too much skin from its face.
Mann then
dragged cadaver into back seat of car, untied rope, put in boot, clambered
into front.
Starting cars engine, Mann moved them off into the light mid-evening
traffic whistling near-forgotten tune.
away from the damning evidence of his own lost shoe which would
undoubtedly have been found during a police search of the area surrounding
the body and eventually, inevitably, been traced back to Mann.
Since he
couldnt remove the clue from the bodys proximity, hed remove the body
Not
hand was pointing, probably indicating that the man should stop at side of
the road.
Officer
battered hat essential in long London autumn, he set off, locking door in
hole behind.
not nearly enough really to give him any exercise when he ascended but,
unlike those un-elevatored parts of Paris, the distance from ground floor
to apartment was not measure of a mans poverty.
would burn off excess tension left over from his labor.
Lovers argue,
writers walk.
He headed for his favorite destination:
usually overhead in apartment above.
The River.
Lovers argue --
out and down to the river and walk along a bank in peaceful excitement
that rose like ozone from its mothers pores.
Wasnt it
much more likely that this elderly heavenly orb was cooling off for the
night rather than restlessly moving elsewhere to tirelessly light someone
elses day?
Constantly changing.
Moving in
Too wound.
And he
was heading down to River and that, too, was moving every which way whilst
seeming to be still or lazing its way down to Sea in orbit around the sky
and land.
In truth, it was moving all over the place, pulled by the Moon
which in turn was being pulled about by the rushings of liquids in the
body of womankind and the arguments of lovers.
Soon he reached the riverside, his step being quick and jittery, his
insides soaked in caffeine and adrenalin of a writer in heat.
His mind,
glow of a days work well done, burning off remaining chill of his
morning.
start the day, the night for some being the day but in disguise and visa
versa.
Mud flats shone brown-grey khaki, not yet reflecting the lights of
The lights of vehicles moved along the length of it, dim lights in the
half-light of the setting sun.
was an arm, outstretched towards the water, vainly trying to reach the
source of all life but failing to in its deadly deathly deadness.
Mann looked at it in its muddy grey brownness and it seemed to fit.
Little waves slipping back from it, lapped against the docked and empty
police riverboats across the way on the other side.
called, Jemima the other.
undeveloped masts fingering up, pointing from star to star as the hulls
rocked from this side to that, cradled in the lapping, slapping waves.
He
stood upright, forearms aching from their contact with railings, stretched
himself easingly, and moved on rubbing absentmindedly.
#
May I see your registration and license, sir?
Mann took documents from inside pocket and handed over.
Policeman
He smiled.
out this morning and changed it but . . . stupidly, didnt bother to check
. . . afterwards.
Its a danger to
Fine.
The deathly pallor of the body sat shrouded in shadow but its
slumping spoke honestly of lifelessness.
Policeman took a closer look.
Hes sopping wet!
He fell into the pond.
In a garden.
At a party.
Different fathers.
The policeman wrinkled his nose, maybe catching the odor from the
river-soaked clothes, and retired a little way.
Well, youd better get him home quickly then.
the lights as youre on an errand o mercy, but you cant drive any
further.
Hell be lucky if he
deserves . . .
Oh, thank you.
The policeman
Again.
#
He lit
Mann
opened window to get rid of memory but in doing so allowed the city to
lurch into room.
breached.
His instincts led him to the door from whose hook he lifted a grey
tweed jacket that he dutifully pulled upon himself.
heart through the door but held too long to handle making it hard to let
go.
He moved
(Accept the
He hurried through the chill and felt cold coming on, or at least
a slight fever.
apart.
And stopped.
the river had receded disclosing its stomach and messy resting place.
He
climbed barrier and, not so much leapt as lowered and let go, to slip, to
fall, to land deep in ancient silt.
Mann could not be certain having dropped a good twelve feet from objective
to avoid landing upon it.
and trudged to the head of the body, careful to maintain tenuous balance.
Leaning forward over empty face he padded hand over each breast before
moving inside jacket.
no money, credit
Mann
It
took many attempts and tears on flesh and clothes for Manns hand to reach
iron post of balustrade.
eventually scrambling made a shoe drop off, allowing toes to find hold so
Mann could pull himself up over lip of rivers barrier.
Accepting loss of
shoe, Mann limped away from encounter, a little bowed and cowed.
#
With corpse over shoulder and smile on his face, Mann gave a last
wave to the policeman and closed front door.
floor, thought, thought, crossed to window and cautiously looked out onto
street below.
Mann
Tub had once been part of a bathroom but Mann had developed a
dislike for enclosing self in such small space and seeing no reason for
the division had knocked walls down.
the bather and watched while level of water rose around it.
Body floated
a little because of gasses accumulated in guts and stomach but Mann got
most of river dirt from its clothes by hosing down and forcing it under
several few times.
Pulling plug, he went over to refrigerator and, while bath water
drained away, began to empty contents onto floor.
Mann was carving a piece of wood while the girl leaned on his bare
shoulders.
She stood there, behind him, telling him how to carve, what
his next cut should be, what she saw in the wood.
right hand slips, cuts into palm of his left hand and blood begins to pour
from wound, trickling rapidly up wrist and arm, defying gravity.
She
takes gouge from his hand and sticks in her own left palm and returns it
him and takes up previous posture, leaning on his back.
She continues
instructing him; he resumes his carving, getting blood all over his tools
and wooden doll he is cutting out.
chest from his shoulder.
just a feeling.
Or maybe an idea.
Not a thought,
bed, he padded over to fridge, pulled open door, and stood for time
holding handle frowning.
dressed.
#
It was later that night and the church bell was sounding the hour as
Mann climbed into the car that he had intended to discard for the winter
along with his cigarettes.
before, it was all good and flowed without any pressure from writer, he
wrote through day and most of the night that followed and in morning he
read aloud all that hed written and it still sounded good.
He sat down
to work with joyous heart and did so for the next two months.
Three months later book was published.
His previous manuscripts had elicited fine collection of rejections
from some of the . . . most highly thought-of publishing houses in England
as well as a less impressive collection from less well-established firms.
But this manuscript was accepted by the first editor he had sent it to and
had thereafter sold briskly.
His second book was equally well received and the third and forth.
Yet the sudden success did not go to writers head.
He continued living
second refrigerator, for he was soon tired of eating the contents of tins
and found that birds nibbled at whatever he left on the window-sill to
keep fresh.
Fall 2015
Juan Arabia
Paul Verlaine
Someone left his life on the mountain
to fill with light the room.
Like moonfog its his song
to those strangers that in the wound
build themselves. Left behind: the civilized blush,
the bourgeois pen that with trickery guised in mist
the reality of the sordid flavor;
the irruption of the blue-eyed king
translates Blake who disclosed in hell
what the sea and the lion have of eternity.
He unravels intense leaves of woods.
I.
Well, we unloaded the cart:
Just a few bottles of wine and Rimbauds poppies.
We grew up without realizing so, and now we wait on the road.
At least we were close to people and their land,
Even though all of our habits were corrupted.
In the beginning, the town was light-blue,
The sun woke us up and left us giddy after noon.
We were the shiny grapes of summer,
With our peel we stripped the wind bare.
II.
Its not hard to understand
That the eternal needs to spill blood.
They are only surprised of what they darent do:
And I find the sea, I see my face
In the lizard mirror
And though the night is cold
I wont die for being here.
Although they postpone the communion,
I can kill God, writing Hes dead
On a chair.
Fall 2015
C Davis Fogg
Electric Jesus
Baby Jesus big blue eyes, clicked wide open like those of a ventriloquists dummy on opening night.
They swung from side to side scanning this new and puzzling world that he was supposed put straight or at
least save from its own foibles. He was an unwilling captive in a huge painting of the nativity scene, rimmed
with blinking Christmas lights that seemed to float magically like a space ship over the altar. Jesus diaper
was dappled with many brilliant white Christmas lights. A hundred tiny points of electric stars twinkled in
the painted midnight-blue sky surrounding the scene. Mary and Joseph gazed with glowing love and
amazement, oohing and aahing at their little surprise. A stern guardian angel, massive wings folded,
kibitzed. The large, glistening six-pointed star of Bethlehem hung in the sky guiding the three magi who
were late for the gig. The smelly animals did what animals do. A life-size carving of Jesus on the cross
loomed above the serene picture. His head was down on one shoulder, soulfully looking at his infant self
thinking: Mini-me, you dont know what youve gotten yourself into.
La Parroquia is a massive seventeenth century church, dominating the central square (El Jardin) of
San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. It was gussied up for Christmas, with the usual wreaths, flowers and white
ribbons decorating its walls and pews. Extra platoons of votive candles gave a warm glow to the cavernous
interior. The long altar was strewn with a lush carpet of a thousand blinking white Christmas lights inviting
the parishioners that would soon fill the church for the joyous celebration. Strands of red, green and purple
lights edged the alter, flashing and streaming like the Times Square ticker tape when the stock market has
run amuck.
The congregation filed in for the dusk service. There were kids, barely kept under control; a number
of gringo worshipers were interspersed with the Mexicans. A few wandered in and out, choosing to get a
small dose of religion and then get on with whatever they were to do for their celebration at home. The
priest was accompanied by a somewhat competent electric guitarist belting out O Come All Ye Faithful in
a wavering, breaking, falsetto voice.
Tired of being a prisoner to convention, and wanting to get on with the jobwalking on water, water
into wine, multiplying the fishes and so on, Jesus decided to bolt. Hopping over the side of his crib, he
slithered down the green spiral-lighted cross on the altar, hopped off the altar, diaper lights flashing, and
landed on the chancel floor on his hands and knees. Raising his head like a turtle and gooing and drooling
as only a baby can, he lined up escape routes.
Startled by the Hollywood histrionics, the priest fell to his knees spilling red wine all over his white
Christmas vestments. An altar boy fainted while another chugalugged the second chalice of wine. The
electric guitarist broke into O Holy Night with a samba beat. In the meantime, half the congregation
weaved, chanted, prayed prostrate or whizzed around their rosaries at the latest of miracles. The other half
panicked and headed for the exits. Sensing bedlam, Jesus skittered on his by-now-well-packed diaper down
the center aisle, throwing off sparks like a Fourth of July sparkler. He rushed through the heavy, carved,
oaken doors and tumbled down the centuries-worn granite steps onto the cobblestone entrance to the town
plaza. He ended his routine with a standing finish, arms stiffly out, Olympic style. He was precocious.
Having only associated with angels, beasts and people in funny white ghost outfits, Jesus took his
time in sizing up the twilight scene. The square was thronged with residents, kids, families, vendors and
tourists, some taking in the sights, others staking out their places for the midnight fireworks. A mariachi
band played Silent Night. Crawling through the crowd, he was almost hit by a couple of hundred bobbing
and weaving colorful balloons strung onto sticks carried by over-fed vendors. Four tourists, looking up at
the magnificently lit church tower tripped on him, and a kid dropped hot taco sauce on his head. Three lean
dogs of the street came over, took a smell and licked his face. Uggh. Jesus miraculously crawled his way
under the forest of legs and feet toward the Promised Land of the relatively peaceful town garden. Hoisting
himself up on his legs again, he toddled up the garden stairs and streaked like hell toward the relative calm
of the street in back of the square.
He no sooner sat down to rest and rethink his game plan when a jolly deep-throated Ho, Ho, Ho
with a Spanish lilt split the air just behind him. My God, my Father, Mom full of grace, what now, Jesus
thought. Slowly, a creaky oversize wooden farm cart, pulled by an old, wise, donkey, clattered in from the
distance. It carried a man dressed in a red suit with fuzzy white beard, a floppy hat, and bundles of festively
wrapped boxes in the back. The driver said: Stop. The stubborn donkey, with half the world under his belt
and a cold-infected nose that blushed red-red, stopped dead in his tracks almost throwing Santa over the
front of the cart. Jesus flashed Hi with his lights, trying to appear politically correct and friendly to this
traveling circus.
Santa said: Christ, I never expected to see you here. Todays not your day. Its mine. I have to
sprinkle presents among all of the little urchins throughout the world in honor of your birthdayremember,
the naughty and nice stuff is out the window because, in todays PC world, everyone is supposed to be
number one, el-primo, gets a ribbon and a trophy, and passed with honors in school. So my load has
doubled. By the way, Im on piecework pay, so disappear. Come back tomorrow.
I didnt ask to be here my friend. As a matter of fact, Mom and Dad werent expecting me. They
hadnt a clue and I guess didnt know about safe sex. And if that wasnt enough, I fell out of the nest with a
wet diaper and a bundle of battery-driven electric firecrackers dragging down my rear.
Whats a baby like you doing alone during Mexican Midnight Madness anyway?
Parents are blitzed. Catatonic. Just came to Bethlehem, coach class on the redeye. Cramped, no
food, and the service sucked.
Anyone else who can look after you? Ive got to get on with my job, keep the little brats happy, and
get paid.
Maybe Grandpa
Whos Grandpa?
You call him God down here.
Call him. Use my cell.
Bzzz.bzzz. bzzz. beep. This is God. Leave a message at the sound of the beep. Im sorry because of
the high call volume that I cant answer your call. But leave a message and Ill answer your concerns and
prayers every Sunday, Friday, or six times a day as the case may be. Often, however, you can find the
definitive answer your prayers and concerns in the FAQ list on our help line: 1-800-HERESGOD.
Fall 2015
Grace C. Ocasio
JACK PETERSON
One day, you rescued me from a boy prickly as pine cones.
He struck me with the spike of his hand,
tore my adolescent skin.
I startled when your breaths erupted as snorts.
You strode in front of me like the Minotaur,
hedged me off from the gargoyle the boy became.
Weeks after that bullys attack,
no amount of lotion or cream
could subtract the tracks on my face.
Six months later, I spotted you,
ambling up the front door of a neighborhood girls house
Saras. One year older than I with skin the color of flan.
The next day I witnessed how a neighborhood boy,
midday, shouted, Nigger lover
in front of Saras home.
I could only remember how you collared that mishap-boy,
waved me on, yelled, Go home, as if Gullivers Travels
and Jane Eyre kept me from dialing you on my minds phone.
I could never quite command my mind
to conjure you straddling Sara,
your bronzed hands gripping her sheets.
CICELY
Your braids intricate as baskets woven
by Charleston womenfolk,
I forgot how you wore youth bright as sequins.
Eight-year-old black girl
sporting two thick plaits, I treasured the gift
of your hue, exotic as jacaranda.
You, regal as a snowy egret.
I spotted you in subtle gowns
on TV award shows.
The night of the Oscars,
when your name wasn't announced
winner, for Sounder, my heart slammed shut.
At nine, I marveled when,
as Miss Jane Pittman your hands enacted ritual:
right hand baptized oak with a cane,
left hand arced
as if set in prayer
like an Anglican priests.
Years shot up between us, like weeds.
Still, I claimed you as kin
even as some later roles you played stumped me.
As matriarch in Mama Floras Family,
you said, Harm will come to him,
repeating a long-ago lovers warning.
I squinted into the set, the logic of this lovers taunt
lost to me. Youd adopted an accent as distant
to my adult ears as the River Thames.
Fall 2015
Kristen Clanton
When Audrey pulled open the steel door, one that looked like it belonged on a meat freezer, and walked
into the black box of St. Clares, she couldnt tell the difference between people and furniture: everything and
everyone was made of black leather and silver studs, scrawny Sids and puff-faced Nancys, their dark shapes of
lace, leather, and chains vibrating against the black walls veiled in electro-bright graffiti, Social Distortion, the
static soundtrack, set to two girls scissoring on a gigantic TV.
David said Saint Clares on Friday night was where hed be. He said, Bill Murrays son hangs out
there, his long, greasy hair fuzzed up against some American porn on the screen.
Audrey knew not to ask David to meet her at the airport; she knew that wasnt very cool. And she
thought the image of herselfriding in the back of a shiny black car, traveling the bridges and tunnels into the
dark, distinct beat of the city was ideal. It was like the opening scene of Rosemarys Baby, set to that lowhung melody, far below the floating, suspended view of the city, where God and the angels were watching. It
would be a time machineher direct trajectory out of dull and dusty Biloxi. Like Kim Novack in Vertigo,
maybe, all blonde hair, tight-lipped and held together, a wild-eyed lie. The Audrey she was vanishing before she
walked through a green fog and into another image of herself, in another city.
But David didnt let it play like that.
When Audrey asked, Can I get your address? Well meet at your place?
Thats too easy is what he really meant when he said, Better to throw you to the wolves, his laugh
shallow and plain.
It didnt much matter to her. The thought of another summer in Biloxi the pock-marked animals in
baseball caps and cutoffs, their facial hair wiry like catfish, clawing at her relentlessly behind the bowling
alley was suffocating. The motel rooms, air molasses-heavy and cigar-sweet, the tediousness of slow dancing
to the alarm clock radio, smoking all that weed and never feeling anything. She thought David was probably
right, even though it would ruin the image she had of herself. With his plan, she would have to drag her heavy
suitcase into St. Clares, which was evidence of her absolute novelty, her immaculateness in the face of that allencompassing city. It was embarrassing.
Though all that foresight was for nothing. When Audrey got to St. Clares at one am her blonde bob
newly blunted around her face, the heavy black eyeliner she applied on the planeno one really saw her get out
of the taxi, except for maybe some faceless dude puking in the street. And when she pulled open that meatpacking door, she knew she wasnt as impressed as she was supposed to be.
A girl at the bar screamed, Id just die! before she and her friends took shot after shot of whiskey,
which the bartender kept pouring. The girls looked like Edie Sedgewick, but with big hands and thick necks.
They looked like girls from Minnesota, from Kentucky; they looked like girls whod say they had no homes to
go home to. And the bartender was the used-to-be good girl from that one modeling reality show; she once
dated and dumped Andrew WK. She was the redhead from Kansas, covered in cupcake and cream-puff tattoos.
David said she was cool, but the way she scowled at the Edies, Audrey knew she couldnt ask to keep her
suitcase behind the bar. So she dragged it behind her, pretending it was the stranger, not her. Audrey moved
through the bar lethargically like she imagined the girls in magazines would do her black-netted legs the
rhythmic pendulums that matched the beat of the bodies still scissoring on the screen. She pretended she wasnt
looking for anything.
When Audrey finally saw David leaving the bathroom behind a pudgy, hairless man, and a woman with
leathery skin, she could hardly believe it was him. He was shorter than she thought a man should be, and he
didnt look much like the photos shed seen. Maybe older, his nose and belly more defined behind his long
black hair and Bauhaus tee-shirt. His cheekbones and chin sharper, black eyes harsher; the angles had all
changed. Audrey thought maybe it was an illusion the strangeness of the other two, the hairless man, dressed
in puffy, checkered pants and rubber shoes, the vinyl halter top on the leather-faced woman that made David
so far from what she imagined.
I thought you were into the Devil himself? Audrey smiled and put her arm around him in a strange
half-hug, as she tugged at the Silver Star of David and meat cleaver charms hanging from a rope around his
neck.
Its supposed to be ironic. David half-smiled, his black eyes wild. He nodded at the hairless man, his
hairless arm around the leathery woman, and they both turned to the bar. Theyre gonna get you a drink.
Who are they?
Raouls a molecular gastronomistgotta restaurant in the Bowery. And Genie makes films, has for a
while. Thats one a hers. David nodded at the two girls on the TV, their narrow hips still pressing in halfcircles.
Audrey laughed. "Pretty tame," she said and looked at the cocktail table, every surface covered in empty
tumblers and swollen ashtrays. Before she could think of what to say, beyond How old were those photos you
sent? Raoul and Genie returned, bearing six shots of whiskey between them.
Its all shell pour after midnight, Raoul said, tilting his hairless head toward the bartender as he set
three shot glasses in front of Audrey.
Genie shouted, Heres ta Audreys first night in tha city! the missing teeth in her mouth creating
dragging sounds around every syllable.
May it be deviant as all hell. Davids wolfish face centered between the pulsing projections of where
the two girls met on the screen.
Audrey laughed before she tipped the shot glasses to her lipsone after the other, after the other, in the
same way shed seen the Edies at the bar maneuver their whiskey.
Get her two more of these, and a bump before we hit the street, David said. He pulled a sack of
tobacco from his pocket and quickly rolled a cigarette.
Ill go easy on her tha first go-round.
Not too easy, Raoul mumbled and slapped an invisible fly against his hairless head.
David smirked, his long tongue licking the paper, and stood up from the table.
What about my suitcase? Audrey asked, hoping hed give it to that mean-mouthed redhead behind the
bar, but David didnt say anything.
Genie and Raoul followed behind Audrey, behind David, who led them all into the tiny red bathroom of
St. Clares. After Raoul locked the door, Genie pulled a small mirror and a brown vial from her halter top;
Audrey had seen both of these things once, a year before, during Homecoming on a riverboat in Biloxi.
Alright girl, on Friday nighths, we play Queenie. I play tha queen, and whenever I give outta gift, I
getta sign a devotion in return.
Audrey nodded. After all that whiskey, she thought the room could be the tiny scarred heart of the city,
the walls and floor covered in graffiti, all the lines of green-scum plumbing moving in and out of the walls so
easily.
For tha first round, ya have ta show us ur boobs.
Audrey shook her head. Can I just get a cigarette?
It doesnt really matter, David said tapping ash into the toilet. Theyve already seen your nudes.
Audrey grimaced and looked at the checkered floor; her boot stomped out half the face of a bug-eyed
alien, a gigantic penis between its teeth.
Loosin up, said Raoul. Youre face wasnt even in em.
Come on girl, be cool. I bet ya sent thosth same pictures ta otha dudes.
This was true. She had first sent them to Tom, before that homecoming cruise, and since then, she had
used them a few times at Pee Wees Grocery for free booze.
You said you were up for anything. David tossed his cigarette in the toilet. With his teeth, he pulled an
elastic band from his wrist and haphazardly knotted his long hair on top of his head. That lone ritual was
enough for Audrey: suddenly, David transformed into who she had so long anticipated seeing.
Audrey pressed her lips together. In her best fantasy girl voice, one she had refined behind that Biloxi
bowling alley, she said, Oh baby, I was just playin. As she spread her legs, one boot on the alien and the
other on Jamie likes it rough, she slowly pulled up her dress.
Hot damn, Raoul said, shaking his head. You got us a live one.
David stared at the tattoo on Audreys hip. And theres that blue rose.
With her dress hiding her face, Audrey smiled with abandon. She had long believed that anyone worth
knowing recognized the blue rose as the mysterious omen in Twin Peaks, her favorite television show. Audrey
wanted to be the harbinger of all that fantasy and shadow the blue rose gave her something to live up to.
In the street, no one really said anything. Audrey knew shed remember that moment as the image she
wanted of herself: blonde and young and sexy, walking to some party. That would be the image of her first
movements in the city. She forgot the airplane, the shiny black car, everything that happened before that walk
through the Bowery, the skeletal buildings, infinite in their ascent to the sky, but fractured and weak, bombed
out and black looking. She wanted to feel that rawness, lick the walls.
Audrey was lost in her daze-dark dream, the reckless liberty she knew was moody and forthcoming.
Nonetheless, the romanticism of becoming invisible within the city lost its luster when juxtaposed with the
immediate knowledge that she was alone on that dark street. The space and shadows were swallowed up by the
weight of the needless shops, still advertising things that had long been missing. Audrey saw her lone image
reflected in a storefront window, the glass fractured, jarring. Audreys reflection split at her waist, her face. The
opposite directions were more menacing than her dream. It was then Audrey knew she was probably into
something deep it was then she remembered she had forgotten her suitcase down the street, in the black box
full of Edies, ex-models, Danzigs, and teen queens but she kept going.
Audrey ran the block back from where she had come, back to Genies slump-shouldered shape leaning
into a large steel door, her heavy tapping echoing in the street as David and Raoul kicked at the concrete. A
small peephole slid open, big enough for a newspaper or the neck of a gun, and Genie mouthed a single word.
As the locks shifted in the door, David put his arm around Audrey.
I left all my things back at St. Clares. She thought his skin and clothes were made of cinnamon and
smoke, and she leaned further into him, as if against a great wind.
Babyll get it, David said, and pulled her into a small passage that led to the party: black-walled with
one black table, one black chair.
Audrey could hear the music playing on the other side of the door, which matched the beat of the
blinking red light in the hall. The flashes between blackouts and red-toned everything made Audrey feel a little
vertigo. She was on a sinking ship, not knowing which direction was air, not knowing if the world beyond that
hallway had capsized beneath the sea.
Age of consent, said the doorman, which was also the name of the song playing at the party, the red
light matching the hook and the beat.
Wont you, please let me go? Audrey smirked, reciting the New Order lyrics as she handed him her id.
The doorman drew two black Xs on Audreys hands and slipped an orange band on her wrist, which had
Genie written all over it. You aint got long.
Out come the wolves! Raoul yelled, and the doorman let them in.
The warehouse looked exactly like St. Clares, and mirrored the black distortion of the city Audrey had
seen, though the movie screens were multiplied, all projecting the same image simultaneouslya young,
blonde, Catherine Deneuve tied to a tree, in the opening scenes of Belle du Jour. A series of men in white
uniforms tore her red riding jacket, her dress, and whipped her harshly. Beneath the suspended screens, the
dance floor was framed with what looked like torture machines some sleek oak and steel, others all ropes and
greasy wheels. Most of the girls on the dancefloor were costumed in lace, their bodies matching the pace of the
music and Belle du Jour. It was like walking through a museum of dioramasstrange stage plays, like the Civil
War reenactments in Biloxi.
Audrey stared at the scene distractedly, thinking about how all that beauty made Raoul and Genie even
greater oddities. Raoul was punching his arms in the air, howling between the melody, and Genies wood-soled
platforms pounded loudly, completely off beat, on the polished concrete. Their peculiar parade went on until
they reached a monstrous red curtain suspended from the rafters. In the dark, red-flashing warehouse, Genie
pulled a velvet loop that parted the screen, revealing a backroom.
Secret gifts. Genie smiled, the folds of her leathery skin matching the heavy red curtains.
This looks familiar, Audrey said. The room was exactly like the Dark Lodge in Twin Peaks: a black
and white zigzag pattern replaced the polished concrete, and though the red curtains were heavier, they
obscured every wall, every escape, muffling the music in their thick flesh. Audrey felt static, absolute, like she
was role-playing her own dream.
Genie owns us all now! Raoul laughed, pulling Genie to the dim border of the room, which was
patterned with wire-framed beds, each shrouded in red gauze. On the beds were girls Audrey thought were
glamorous and beautiful, all melded together in varied stages of dress and drug use. The girls were heavenly,
smiling and whispering, sharing mirrors and syringes as their most secret diaries.
The best rooms are bleeding hearts, Audrey said cryptically, in the way the Twin Peaks prom queen,
Laura Palmer, spoke in those slow lullabies she recorded before she died.
Theres nowhere to be alone anymore. David led Audrey to the bar, its black lacquer a shiny skin.
Two well whiskeys, doubles, he said to the bartender.
You know, Im named after Audrey Horne, and though it wasnt wholly true, she was actually named
after Audrey Hepburn, like most every other girl with the same name, Audrey didnt believe that fact matched
who she was becoming. Unlike Hepburn, the skinny fawn, Horne was a cult icon; she was the doll-faced beauty,
the real teen queen of Twin Peaks.
Audrey Hornes my dream girl youre more of a Laura Palmer.
Hows that? Audrey pressed her hands against the bar, slowly tracing its knots and grains with her
fingers.
Beautiful and menacing, but easy you could convince a man to do anything.
Nothin menacing is easy. Audrey smiled and finished her drink.
David rolled another cigarette and signaled to the bartender for two more doubles. Things that are
menacing are the easiest, ever heard of Baudelaire?
Is he directing a new movie? Audrey said, jokingly.
He died in the 1800ssex and drugs, the original rock n roller. Baudelaire worshipped women, but he
only made it with the Lauras cause he wanted to keep worshipping the Audreys.
That should be on a tee-shirt. Audrey took the cigarette from between Davids fingers and put it to her
lips.
Point is, the Audreys could be anybody, theyre statues in museums. But the Lauras are mysterious.
Easy girls have secretstheyre the living fantasy.
Wild lineId almost believe it.
It goes both ways. David leaned into Audrey, pulling his cigarette from her lips and biting her on the
cheek. Audrey moaned softly.
Youve got her good, the bartender said to David as he set down two more whiskey doubles. David
smirked, put a twenty on the bar, and handed Audrey her drink.
Its about time to join the party, David turned to the line of beds canopied in red, and pulled at
Audreys hip so Audrey went.
Audrey was pulsing; her clothes were somewhere, missing on the patterned floor, and if anyone in that
backroom was watching, she didnt care. She was vibrating for that raw wonder, her body humming, fascinated
by Davids roaming and static movements. As a magnet navigates iron filings into Rorschach figures, she felt
every part inside her shift and pull, spread thin then quicken, anxious to meet every part of him.
The heaviness of Davids body, that encompassing, suffocating feeling of being absorbed between mattress and
skin, when gravity bears down, annihilating all autonomy, made Audrey feel like she was rocketing blindly into
the darkness. She was looking through the opposite end of the telescope: each part of her body was its own
universe that needed comprehending.
Staring down the dark well, into that fuzzy dream of ecstasy, she could feel herself beginning to break
inside that bright-light spectacle. Her body propelled through it all: Davids face, his shoulders and hips, the
red-gauze canopy and velvet curtains, the rafters and roof. She was living within the suspended dream, feeling it
tilt, shifting with anticipation. Finally, Audrey burst open in splendor, full petals, soft and beautiful, like the
magnolias she swore were glass-vased, blossoming on the bedside table. Her orbit was complete. Audrey was
finally in the universe she had been seeking: dark rooms and shadows, gloomy love, mysterious and incomplete.
But as fast as Audreys reverie began, it was distorted beyond all recognition. Audrey focused her
whiskey-dim skull on the shifting mattress. She had grown smaller, and so had the bed. Being thrown so far into
the void, the compression, the steady root, became smothering. At that moment, nothing made sense to Audrey.
She couldnt remember movies or names, songs or placesall she recognized was Raoul.
Thats right baby, ride it till its dead. Raouls body was slick, thick-skinned like an elephant. Pinning
her arms from behind, Raoul held Audreys jaw tightly, pushing her face, her eye-line, to the end of the bed,
where Genie was standing, camera in hand.
Shes so wet, ya can both get it in. Genie laughed, but all the sounds were suffocated, snuffed out by
the velvet curtains.
Im gonna need a minute between takes, David said, pulling up his pants.
Genie passed him the mirror and vial. Well do a few just with Raoul.
It was no longer romantic, no longer risky. Raouls hands were stronger than all of Audrey, and she was
the traveler: the mark within the suspended nightmare, still too stunned to scream, to fight her way out and
leave. I thought you liked me.
David fixed Audreys hair, pushing the wild strands behind her ears. Baby, nothing in life is free, just
make it easy.
Audrey started to cry, the tears heavy and full, turning her cheeks pink.
David sighed. You have toyou cant get out of here without Genie.
Put her bra back on so I can cut some new scenes. Genie flung Audreys bra on the bed. An keep her
head steady its hard ta see anythin.
No. Audreys whimper was muted beneath Raouls hand.
Come on girl, ya only came here fa one thing, Genie said.
Raoul laughed. Should I get the leash?
Audrey couldnt feel anything, see anything. The mattress and curtains, the backroom and warehouse,
every part of the city was spinning, and Audrey was hurtling beyond it all; she alone was being buried beneath,
and absolutely nothing remained of who she used to be. She tried to cower; then, she tried to shake loose the
weight of Raoul. But no part of her could move or scream. No part of Audrey could leave the physical world, so
her spirit attempted to do the only thing it could, and Audrey became a blank, blacked-out machine, one that
tried to spare itself the chance of remembering anything.
Sometime later, in some other place, Audrey woke to an absolute stillness that terrified her more than
what had come her way before. There was a plastic clock over the sink, ticking the seconds slower than they
should be, the time on its face only matching the hellish heat of the day. Audrey knew she was laying on
someones kitchen floor, the linoleum marred with severe gouges, and what Audrey assumed to be her puke,
which was also the only thing blanketing her body, the rest of her still nude. Audrey traced the linoleums
diamond pattern with her fingertips before she thought about being brave, tracing her own face, searching for an
escape. Her skull stuffed with cotton, puffed and swollen shapes she couldnt feel beyond the burden of
surfacing from the blacked-out consciousness which she came. She had seen that floor before. The repeated
images were sensory: Audrey imagined the taste of her grandmothers homemade breakfasts of beignets and
orange marmalade, taking shelter in the long-since memories of her childhood in Biloxi. An animal playing
dead on a busy street, Audrey knew she had to get up; she had to leave.
Using a leg of the kitchen table, Audrey slowly pulled herself from the floor. The movement was
dizzying: the shock of pain she felt in her abdomen and legs, crippling. The kitchen floor bowed and creaked,
and every step she took made her feel like she was sinking. There was one window in the kitchen, leading out to
the fire escape, but there was no way to reach it. The July sun bleached the surface of everything it could clutch
within the window frame, but the panes were nailed shut. Audrey was caged and kept thinking: this is a tomb,
this must be what a tomb is like.
She kept chanting it over and over again, like an incantation that would take her far from there: stripped
bare and new. She could walk into another light that would transport her into the space of her memories. Where
God would turn the telescope around, and look at her, down there, locked deep in a circle of hell. Hed realize
she wasnt ready; she was too young to be buried, and his hand would break through the sky, the trees, that
apartment building, and pluck her up easily, tell her the things she needed to know to keep going, and put her
back down in Biloxi. Maybe at her grandmothers kitchen table, in the middle of a Bridge game, and then
Audrey could act just like nothing had changed; that she never had to leave, that she had never, ever felt the
necessity to go looking for anything. She could forget about the things she learned behind the bowling alley; she
could forget the empty catastrophe of the world beyond Biloxi, and just pretend, for years, that she had never
left God or her grandmother.
Audrey prayed for these things as she crept towards the front door, its brass locks stacked atop one
another, mocking her from down the hall. Their laughter only became louder with the static click, click, click, of
each turning knob, each face, hurrying for escape. Audrey heard those locks still laughing as she hobbled down
the stairs, clinging to rails, still naked, still too terrified to look down.
The streets were filled with facesblack and redblistering beneath the heat. The ghouls, their hellfire
and sway, were amplified by the holiday. The whole city was in that street, laughing and screaming, lighting the
skinny tail-ends of Black Cats and Bangers, comets and Jumping Jacks exploding with great, violent barrages of
energy. The air was dense and smoke-heavy; there were no shade trees, just the crumbling buildings, American
flags hanging from the windows, bending into the street. The sun melted the pavement, the concrete, and every
step Audrey took on her bare feet was daunting. Audrey knew she was sinking further into hellshe was
descending into another place, one that was even more menacing, and God wasnt coming.
But Audrey was sure of what could save her. Her mind had never been purer. She searched for the shiny
black car that brought her there, that giant beetle on its back: the precursor to every vicious rendering she had
seen. Audrey knew if she could find that car, she could begin again. She knew if she could open that gleaming
black door, she would see herself sitting there on a leather bench seat, and if that could happen, Audrey could
leave, bright-eyed and beautiful, fully encased in the belief that she was within a world of her own creating.
Fall 2015
Jimmie Ware
Covered Expressions
Storms behind her eyes/She fights to be heard/Struggles to be liberated
Oppression must be abolished/newly written scripts must rectify injustice
Brave are the tongues that shatter silence
Fear no longer resides in the lost corridors of hopelessness
She continues to gather and educate the women/Unity/ the most sacred order of the day
Garments flutter as she scurries through broken stones/Dust on the hem of her native attire, no matter
She is pregnant with purpose/Never abandoning her quest for wisdom
Beside her sits a woman with child/Dismal expressions momentarily erased
Glimmers of optimism prevail/Sipping water/thirsting for freedom
She/Glorious giver of life /Fighting daily for her own/Contemplating the destiny of her unborn
Thunder beneath her skin/She turns another page/lowering her head only to gain knowledge
As bombs burst
In fresh air
As I am Eve
She is within me
Glorious in my evolving state
Moan for Lisa
Not for me
I am no lazy Susan
Never confused I am
She who defies convention
She who refuses to ride side saddle
Unmoved by your ever increasing momentum
Time is unfriendly and unforgiving
Yet I welcome his challenge
Fore warned by Mother Nature
I shall endure
My inner smile overshadows
Your disbelief
My thighs bear witness to your weakness
Unable to make the great escape from ecstasy
I am indigenous for there are raging storms
Beneath my skin
My hips hold treasures
I am explicit yet demure
Untamed and gentle
My lines curve with the ebb and flow
Of ethereal mysteries
I am not your sacrificial lamb
My natural ability commands respect
I am woman, human, whoa man!
Deliver me from those who marinade in ordinary madness
I am not your every day melancholy maiden
I am brighter than the northern lights
You cannot turn away my essence captivates you
My purpose stems from deep within
I challenge you
Behold the Nubian Queen!
Unique and unafraid
To color outside the lines
She speaks to you in Picasso-like hues
She comprehends Lady Days blues
You will engage Freudian thoughts to compensate
She is poised
Honor her in your fleeting moment of clarity
Being shamefully awake and blissfully ignorant of her power
Your mind holds her image tightly she cradles your emotions
She is closer than she appears and you are unable to
Deny the realism of feminism
You are spell bound until
Mercifully she sets you free
Black
You dutifully tell me its not beautiful /as if
You consistently inform me its not/a gift
My skin is sun-kissed
Resume dismissed
My amazing experience/Not a good fit?
I am eloquent and driven
Still I struggle for a livin
Im not Maya but I know that caged up feelin
Perhaps you too need a good healin
Im that warrior child nearly gone wild
Bohemian style/ you cant take my/ smile
I love my kinky red hair/dont stop/ dont stare
Dont YOU dare!
I pay for my own healthcare
Not on welfare life, not so fair
Still I care for those lost out there
I remember when hip hop was good
Now its too hood and I wish I could
Turn back time when unity was so fine
We stood shoulder to shoulder
Like that Greek guy with the boulder
Because Black was the thing to be
Now our young ones must know our story
Sacrifices made for her-story
Mercy, mercy me
Ah, the art of survival
Follow the tribe or the Bible
How did Queens, regal works of art
Become no more than body parts?
Nightmares pipedreams
Addiction closer than it seems
One paycheck away from
No place to stay
Stressed to the max
Monkeys on our backs
How can we relax?
Merely stating facts
Raising daughters
Troubled waters
Targets on our sons
Smoking guns
No more James Brown/ So long Motown
Just the tears of a clown/no sound
How can we turn this thing around?
We cant seem to get on track
Is it pride we lack?
Lets get back to the magnificence of being
Black
Fall 2015
Louise Robertson
Blue
Homer did not
have a word for
it. Neither
did Ovid or any of those
guys. So the
sky this morning
grew pink and
purple. What did
they say
of the
hydrangea,
of the baby
slow to breathe? Did they
say it was some kind
of green, some
kind of bruise,
some kind of a dye being
rinsed out
by cold hands
ringing it pale
and paler and paler.
Twitter
I have now
friended William
Shakespeare and WB Yeats
and Oscar Wilde's accounts on
Twitter. At first, I
thought I'd see
great writing in
140 character installments
or maybe a path
I could wander
down, see pieces
of poetical watches in the
powdery dirt. I could
pick up those tiny
gears with their tiny teeth
and think up a great machine
of words that might even keep
time or at least make
that tick-tick noise.
But no. Turns out
they mostly re-tweet cat pictures.
Right now Shakespeare
is astonished at unfortunately
spelled tattoos. Shares link.
Oscar Wilde
posts dream Disney
wedding pictures.
But Yeats, whom I've
always disliked for
being partly Romantic
and only partly Imagistic,
posts about the water
and the soul, just as I'd
expect.
Shakespeare especially, you
oughta be ashamed,
having been the ink
in many an unfortunate
tattoo. Fortunate ones,
Not a Muse
I have dated a few musicians
and exactly two poets. They
have all the lip and spit and finger
you might expect from these people.
They have muscle in their tongue, have
practiced the languages of eye
and breath.
Whenever they write about me,
they somehow get my name to rhyme
with "too late" or "fun in bed,
but moody." Fair enough. Because I am in fact
often exercising my poetic ligaments to craft
a piece about them and their
body with the intent of getting
the tone of their sinew
and the slope of their intellectual jaw
just right.
Here is my ode to a 20 year old
who couldn't look me in the eye. Here
is what middle age looks like with its paunch
and brow and fist. Here is how I say
their names and rhyme them with
"never around" and "likes it when I don't
move." I have dedicated
poems to specific erections, their
tight, their curve or straight, their
earnest pose. Or not so earnest. Not
so tight. Do I really have to tell
you that by erection I mean something else?
So don't write songs which catch my
weak chin and need of solitude. Or don't write
them as if I am unaware of my height,
my sweat, my curl up and sleep. I am
sick of hearing you
count the many ways I can't be loved.
Fall 2015
Adam Mackie
Madhouse
It is now clear to me that there was no difference between ourselves and people living in a madhouse; at the
time I only vaguely suspected this, and, like all madmen, I thought everyone except myself was mad.
Leo Tolstoy, Confession
In a saddle, everyone else is in
Sane, I think, I think and, therefore, I am
Mad, to see myself in the mirror, damn
It, the light destroys everything that lives
To glorify heroes and syllables,
And words of obfuscated poetry,
As this verse, here, conjures up plural Zs,
There, on a map, I point to capitals,
Prepositions, adverbs, even pronouns,
Being levitated so detestably
In context, only for synecdoche,
My mind, thinking clich and description,
Burked by a madness of name-breathing nouns:
I leave this house worse off than I found it.
Groundwater
For Michael
Whos like God? A question implying
an answer: No one, shadows, everyone
created in ones own reflection,
within those actions always acting
renders an argument arguing
against a darkness disguised as self
predicting a science of whats felt
through a shattered image ascending
the possibility thats floating
underneath two levitating feet
where nothing above groundwater rests.
Fall 2015
Marcia Arrieta
frayed dreamer
who understands
missing/found
buttons & threads
continue to wander
in the crosscurrents
red poppy blooming
interplay asylum
cereal boxes, soup
Bronte, Dickens
Dostoyevsky
Hardy, Woolf
beyond characters
language
almost
surreptitiously
an expression
subversive
extended
a certain
wilderness
temporal
tenacious
parallel
movement
golden trout
spirit bear
unrestricted, unlimited
the nobility of
rhetoric
Wallace Stevens
transcribe
the language
of the pine
outside
the
circle
within
the
wind
arrows
into
clouds
extract
outline wings on glass
a narwhal floats by
arctic dreams prodigies in ethereal
the Mobius strip is made of mixed media
the Pyrenees & subfields
on the subway
clockwise
indirect
merely these
stations
statistics
bricks
stones
corresponding
prisms
nests
matters of
concrete
perches
nets
asphalt
swords
in the space
of
dandelions & fireflies
*
the communication wires are crossed
across continents
or maybe ranches & farms
*
it is a mystery where they lead
we know nothing really
splendor is a word rarely spoken
perimeter homespun
or
the art of
The worst thing that can happen to an artist is to become a bore.
to become complacent.
Dean Young
thunderstorm
chance
exquisite
primitive
Fall 2015
Mark Young
aubade
ill
logical lines cross the
street
to follow
them would
mean
__________
a
dynasty
of drosophila
die off whilst
the screenplay is being
treated
"given the choice of two evils
I would pick the one I don't
know"
something like that
some like it
hot
is / to be / rewritten to reflect
The upright ridge of
hair made things
easy for. Distinctive or
prominent, given to
a number of
guests & held
in a public
manner. Gorilla warfear. Gratifying. But
only to those who were
affected by some terminal
payment. The remainder
signed their names
to a petition. Reluctantly.
Fall 2015
Matt Shears
from Dear Everyone
lather up. Some salacious inventories
are organizational mediations? Why
lament the talisman? Consider magic
in Chicago, beyond the Global Village
or Cubism or Futurism or militarism.
All too true. Ordinarily, the flesh wound
focuses the attention. Ive transplanted
matching pairs, emptied the attic. Dust
gatherers at the road show. Nymphs lift
scattering dandelion seeds. Interference
just never tugged the heartstrings.
when the first one died. Sense blanks
on positions. Impositions refract
phases gathering context. Get the picture
or history repeats itself. Everything
endeavors to the cadaver, or leaves
for posterity. The homesteaders believed
or wagons, barrels, trailers, chrysanthemums
churns and corn husks or scarecrows. No,
further investments? The valueless
demand conference calls. Privacy is
untranslatable. Painting is untranslatable
being writing. Along the highway of the past
truncations, deletions. Down on the ground
of love. When the calls came in
Fall 2015
Nicholas Knebel
ascension
well play airplanes into the night
with bodies vehement
shaking / arms outstretched, arms rigid
arms: planks of wood while our bodies fly
light crashing into steam
flittering in from the hall where I stand steam
rising
and Ill stand here and try
to bottle your love into words like wine is
bottled poetry like love on lips
of wine on lips of light before: steam
rises, the water
overspills the
kettle / almost puts out the flames
below before
I can turn it off.
and our weight, our ambition, our struggle through the ocean turned smoke
to the place before here, snakes wrangled in bushes constricted
ever present in the fight against history
for survival
and for survival, well offer words soaked in paper, well offer our bodies in
the type of light when one lover turns on the lamp
light dim in the previously opaque room,
and lover slowly embraces lover
with arms longed to touch
light / to touch / light increases, shining, resplendent like
the distance of sunset when viewed from points of removal
with summertime drinks in lemonade pitchers on the patio while the lovers kiss
wrap themselves standing
near the bed until it cannot be deciphered where endings and beginnings start or finish
wrapped in the night,
our bodies fly.
cobwebs
in dreams, I scatter over roof tops
of my history, a slept-in-only-once hotel
on the outskirts of bustling London, the seismic force of urbanity kept at bay by
curtained windows, glass enveloped
in grey haze. Upon reentry to sleep, I fly back
across the ocean, to New York
where even at night noise permeates our lives. then, to escape to quiet,
I eventually fly West
to where I grew up in an old home in Wisconsin,
and by perching on the rooftop of the neighbors house, ours is clearly visible / in the moonlight,
the bones of it all look tired, worn-down, rickety
as if a mouth had eaten candies wrapped in regret, then decided
to lick the well-worn siding bordering the field
to the right
weeds long overgrown, swaying in rhythm to a steady sibilance, pointing to
the gnarled tree
that has always signified home even more than
the building we called by that name
the tree, veined and bulbous, wormed with branches that point to the sky
offered freedom from
the grand clock that struck loudly every hour, even into the night,
the looming shadows and gothic halls.
I can see my younger self now hiding under the long wooden dining room table
the annual holiday party. the house no longer feels the same,
we may never have belonged there anyway anyway,
years later, curtains drawn close for the final trick,
a disappearing act. slammed doors. words shouted in the night
but, dampened, please,
mustnt wake the children.
Fall 2015
hiromi suzuki
soil
the forest was felled
the well has dried up
the summer will probably not come
I hear your merry voice
through the tunnel of drainage channel
gushing out from the spring
Fall 2015
Robert Wexelblatt
A Comedian
Imagine, he said, a horseradish layer cake.
It took some time to conjure that up, then
a little more to get the point, nearly.
We guessed he meant you can make something
sweet out of whats bitter, or that looks sweet,
that the best jokes are going to bite back.
We thought he was an alchemist who
could transmute leaden pain to something bright,
yellow. We forgot alchemys a cheat.
Bitter battles against bitterness he
fought, always victorious. We never
once suspected that he could lose the war.
Fall 2015
Ross Knapp
London
That odd combination of the literary, rich history, hard cemented castes, financial flocks of rats, dreary rainy
streets, a Mecca mega church of cosmopolitanism, yet still some hints of the introspective repetitive rhythmic rituals
of a vast history; a right time for waking, a right time for taking tea, a right time for brunch, a right time for lunch.
Still, to some extent, that same old outdated imperial ethos of only one prim and proper time for everything under
the sun.
Fall 2015
Alex Archer
A Cycle of Being
by Alex Archer
in a
world
no more
laundry
drifts
in the
wind
no more
waft
of cham
ber pots
no more
steam
of hors
es in
bugg
ies
(except
in
Penn
syl
van
i
a)
can you spare me
something
to eat?
said a thousand
times a day
to the same
faces
only in
different
suits
Sleep Clinic
i am sitting
in a
coffee shop
(again)
my sleep
doctor said
"I'm not sure
what I can give you"
as the sun
waltzes
through the
sky (only
it's really
standing still)
and the
oceans
are guarding
the moon
and the
bathhouses
drip
drip
drip
with boylove
stains the
sheets
drift in
the wind
like Victor
like Stan
oh
but you can't
drift through
the door
with that smile
sitting on
your face
begging
me
to
spread
your legs
and
come
inside
.
Birth
i
am
si
t
ing
in
a
cof
fin
in
a
to
mb
in
a
wo
mb
in
a
wo
man
in
a
wo
rld
(ex
ca
vate
diss
olve
a
che
lo
ve)
.
Fall 2015
Sam O'Hana
Inosculation
Some of the finest examples are found
in private collections; or amid the back o beyond
like a tripwire in the troposcene, or outcrop in the overpass.
Others, like colophons dont like showing
on the review copy of lifes parade, as a langourous
langoustine sketched by chuckling Ashbery.
And these imbrications slot back into my mind,
a chef reminded the waiters
art is the only twin that life has.
At times its gruesomely intimate, like finding
yours was not the only one to leave heat
on the subway handrail, this discoverys epigraph is
Ladiez and gennelmen, while my dopamine is held up
by the trains dispatcher.
In Shenzen factories, luthiers would weep if
they had the language, instead its express train
cante jondo that hitches up its jeans and mumbles
to itself, Lucero, Alvarez, Rodriguez, Cordoba
I spill through the barriers into a Home Depot;
an assistant says Donnelly & Spahr are in aisle four,
while epoxy and air conditioners are on a three day loan.
Third Rail
At first, and now seemingly forever,
thousands picked up on it.
Terror, trembling, a woodblock
chuckling or set of castanets
as moments when you lose reception
or catch coat-tails in chomping doors.
By the time we reached a nearly-there
chorus on the intercom, no here-I-am
fitted apparel or diligent pair of eyes
could keep to their own coasts.
Clattering, and shucked plastic seating
smooth as a flume
wave and wear our fabrics,
gauntlets and slats of hair wish
as amulets against the crumpling
pressure on pressure, we are vacuumed
from myths of instant death,
its a convincing 625 volts and 950 amperes
that push our bloodless knitting on forever.
Paper Trail
After breakfast that
chuckling had subsided
into slander
and our behaviours were to
be tended in the breakbeat
allotment of nods.
A saucepot huddled up to
a print-out of Broadway.
Water lay in bed,
talking about oil.
Then with a crunch,
a slobber,
time-management heaved
itself up the chart,
peaking, with a cool-down
at 6.56am.
News Chant
A migraine upon on slow walkers and library book
defacers, a nagging lethargy for non-tippers and
hypochondria on channel-hoppers. Here is the news.
Tottenham estate hackers can end deadlock with
ice fishermen of Baffin Island; both must accord,
dig their own weak spot, and harvest at the ingress.
Alcoholics who wish to sidestep the refrains of
vodou mambos, drink deeply from the
Gulf of Gonve, then gargle with coral and grits.
Tobacco addiction is a curse put on the children of
Bear Valley combatants who crushed the Yaquis,
last of them to be subdued; no cure is yet sexy enough.
In East Village carrels, the sestina ends four feet
up against the sonnet and a mid-morning
french-press drives a spike in the open form.
Down the swirling streets, a violent month
takes its stand. Without warning,
children squeal and scarper in Dodgeball, AI.
Hunger, like an in-law, can be tackled
without mercy, ninety seconds on high
holds it at bay until the insurgent regroups.
And, though it spewed not from olive-wood
despatch boxes or are hacked out in scratchiti,
a fact remains fat-free; no sustenence, satiation.
Forget these lines and be cursed to lose your
swag, may you never get enough antioxidants
and this colophon turn to tweets in your hands.
Fall 2015
Stacy Mursten
Retail Hell
Instantly assaulted by sound so large,
The electronic static vibrations
Rattling the clothes on hangers
Hung from metal bars,
Like that of a prison,
Burning in eternal flame
Overbearing,
Like the tyrannical lighting
That sees every inch of me,
Everything I strive to conceal
Under layers of makeup,
Like war paint.
And I remember when
This activity of overeager consumerism
Was actually fun.
Three prepubescent girls rush past me,
Each wearing different colored crop tops
Sporting different slogans,
YOLO,
Eye Candy,
Drop Out.
And these are the words
That youth identifies with,
And a red-faced demon,
With deep-set creases,
Much too old,
Who does not appear to be
Anyones dad,
Passes them by
Holographic Girl
How can you see the world
Thats constantly flitting past you
With your blue eyes perpetually cast downward,
And your face is always illuminated
By the iridescent glow of technology
Surrounding your head like a halo?
And youre so lit up
But I cant even see you.
And your eyes, when I see them,
Arent dilated but pixilated,
Completely comprised of
Moving pictures,
Ideas,
People who arent real,
And none of them know you,
Or care,
Or ever will.
With your blue eyes perpetually cast downward
Upon this window to somewhere else,
Do you ever fear
That youre missing the point?
That youre missing out
On the real world,
On the people who want to know you
On human connection?
Could you please awaken
And live in this realm of reality?
There is so much for you
Here.
Collapse
I come out here and unravel
Blowing out my worries
In wispy strands of smoke
That waver up into the treetops
And hover for a moment
Before disappearing into nothing
And in my altered state
Among the birds and mud and grass,
I imagine things being different -That every fiber of the human race
Became contorted into something
Else.
I envision the gray and twisted corpses
Reanimating back to life,
Like in those scary movies
Society obsesses over.
And just maybe this preoccupation
With a concept derived from horror
Stems from a deep longing
That perhaps we all share
But remain unaware
Of, things and values to change.
For whether we realize it or not
The world is truly
In a state of collapse.
And just maybe
We all long for
Those lost abandoned things that truly matter
Survival, family, love -To take precedent over
All the mess and filler
We stuff our lives with,
Like the products we consume
That eventually make us sick.
For when survival is assumed
We lose sight of whats important.
Fall 2015
Stephen Nelson
Fall 2015
Sunayna Pal
Evening walk
I was out on my daily evening walk
Enjoying the fresh air and the green
The route was the same I took everyday
but there was always something new to be seen
I had just come up the stairway
I saw a big fat black cat
I found it strange to see it,
I wondered if it was domestic
I was stunned by its presence
but it was unaware of me
I thought cats had sharp ears, this one didn't.
It didn't hear my footsteps nor the twigs I broke
Just then its ears got alert and it turned back
Swift was the moment and before I knew it,
It ran back up the woods
I felt insulted, It didn't even say a hi.
I was stunned to see it there
More was I at my thought power
Just yesterday had I wondered
if this place had wild animals
It felt amazing that I got to see one today
For a brief second though
Anyway, I continue my walk
To see what else was in store.
Fall 2015
Susan Foster
no surprise that he's always depressed, paranoid, or hallucinating when he's constantly in some sort of drug
induced haze. The heavy medications the doctors prescribed him for his schizophrenia only make things
worse because he abuses them to get high. He will take anything to try to get high. I've seen him taking too
many allergy pills, drinking too much cough syrup or even trying to take a handful of Advil, as if thats going
to do anything anyway.
The day he was diagnosed with schizophrenia was just another day to me. He had an unruly temper tantrum
brought on by drugs and alcohol just like he did every weekend. The only difference was that this time my
mom ended up taking him to the emergency room to be evaluated. She was probably afraid he would
overdose this time.
Throughout my childhood I saw my parents, especially my dad, using drugs and abusing alcohol nearly
every weekend. I'd even seen my dad get arrested when he got too out of control on several occasions. For
my mom, it was more recreational. She would just do a little here or there at a party maybe. But my dad had
a real problem. He even tried to hide his using from my mom. If me or my brother told on him about it we
knew there would be hell to pay. Every other weekend my mom had to work. I dreaded those weekends
because we would be left alone with my dad. He spent most of his time sitting on our front sun room with a
beer and a bottle of rum.
My little brother and I would spend our days and nights out riding our bikes around the city. No one
checked in on us or wondered where we were. We mostly just canvased the neighborhood looking for cans
and bottles to return to the redemption center. We would take empty grocery bags and collect up as many as
we could find. Then we'd use the money to buy candy with. We had a lot of good times in those days.
My brother and I stuck together back then. When we were young our parents were constantly dragging us
off to parties with them and basically leaving us to fend for ourselves in a strange place. Then when we got
older we took turns lugging our drunken dad to bed when he'd had too much. We would have been lost
without each other. It's a real shame that we don't talk today.
Growing up in that house was the farthest thing from easy. I couldn't tell anyone about my dad's problems
because I had been sworn to secrecy. No one had any idea about the things I had to deal with at home. I
spent my teen years baby sitting a forty-year-old and keeping an eye out for my little brother too.
If Only You Were Lonely
When I was fifteen I watched TRL on MTV every day after school. It was my routine since I didn't
participate in any after school activities or hang out with friends. I would come home, pop some microwave
popcorn, and drink chocolate milk while watching TRL. That's when I found the band that would change
my life. To this day I am forever grateful for them.
My favorite videos on the countdown were from Ne-Yo, the Jonas Brothers, and Fall Out Boy. But one day I
saw a new video from a band wearing all white suits. They weren't pretty to look at like the Jonas brothers,
they weren't even comparable to Pete Wentz or Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy. On top of their painfully
average looks, the music was too harsh for my liking. The melody was harder than what I was used to and
they even screamed in some parts, something I had never even heard of before. I hated their video so much
that I even muted the tv when it came on. After a few weeks of seeing them on the countdown I got too lazy
to mute the tv every time they came on. Soon enough the song grew on me, it more than grew on me
actually. I was hooked. The band was called Hawthorne Heights and they saved my life.
A few days later I went out and bought their new cd. Although I had gotten really into the song they had on
TRL called, Saying Sorry, I was still really into Ne-Yo too. In case you're unaware, Ne-Yo is an R&B singer
and Hawthorne Heights is an emo pop-punk band, the two could not be farther apart from each other but
yet, I liked them both. Ne-Yo and Hawthorne Heights both had CD's coming out on the same day. I spent
what felt like hours standing in the Walmart electronics section sampling the two CD's. It was back when
Walmart still had the old sampling devices with the dirty old headphones that probably everyone in the
county had worn. Major decisions were made that day, and I eventually went with Hawthorne Heights'
album, If Only You Were Lonely. I don't even like to think about what my life would be like right now if I
had gone with the Ne-Yo album instead.
Soon after, my mom finally got a computer with internet at our house and I started a myspace account.
Myspace was the way to track bands back in 2006. I followed every move Hawthorne Heights made. My
username was even [[I
I had been invited to join a Hawthorne Heights fan page on Myspace, which I accepted. As soon as I
accepted the invitation the page leader (who I assumed was a girl at the time) starting arguing with me
because of my screen name over who loved Hawthorne Heights more. To them, it was playful banter, but it
really annoyed me. After a while I just started ignoring the person, I figured she was just a crazy fan girl.
After a few days of not responding to the page leader I got a friends request from a boy. The boy was kinda
cute, he had long shaggy black hair, typical of guys in the pop-punk scene at that time. In fact he actually
resembled the singer from Hawthorne Heights, the only one who was actually mildly attractive. After
looking at his page I saw that he too was a big Hawthorne Heights fan so I accepted his request. Once I
accepted the request he started messaging me. It was then that I found out that he was the fan page leader, it
wasn't an annoying fan girl after-all.
The boy was 17 and was from Tennessee. I lived in New York, so that seemed like a long ways away to me.
Back then I had a lot of friends from all over the country and world that I met online. We talked on AIM and
myspace but that was about it. They didn't really know me so I could talk about anything. Sometimes it's nice
to have anonymous friends. That's how my relationship with this boy started out. We talked online for a few
months. He was the first and only person I ever talked to about my dad. Soon we started texting each other
and eventually talking on the phone or web cam chatting.
He became my best friend, really my only real friend. Sure I had friends at school but they didn't know the
real me. Having a best friend made life with my dad a little more bearable. We connected on everything, but
especially on our love for Hawthorne Heights.
Hawthorne Heights songs are mostly about love, long distance relationships, and crappy parents. The songs
just spoke to me. After I started learning more about the band I found out that the singer, JT Woodruff('s)
dad was also an addict and severe alcoholic, he had actually drank himself to death when JT was a kid.
Because of this JT had adapted a lifestyle known as straight-edge. I had never heard the term before, but
found out it meant someone who refuses to ever do drugs or drink alcohol, they don't even smoke cigarettes.
As soon as I found out about that, I knew it was the lifestyle choice for me. I vowed to never let drugs affect
me again, either directly or indirectly. It was so satisfying just to know that someone else out there made it
through the same problems I was going through then.
You Can Only Blame Your Problems on the World for so Long
Nine years later, here I am still listening to Hawthorne Heights, and married to the boy I met online. I
became only the second person in my entire family to graduate from high school and am now getting ready
to graduate from college with honors.
Right after I turned 18 I made the hardest choice I've ever made and moved four states away from my family.
I had no idea what was waiting for me in Tennessee. I had known my boyfriend for four years at that time
and we'd met in person several times. He had even lived in New York for a few months at one point, but I
had never met his family. I didn't even know where I was going to live or if I would be able to find a job. It
was the scariest thing I ever did. On a mild June day I quit the job I'd had at McDonald's for the past 13
months, packed up my Olds 88 and drove half way across the country with only about $500.
I like to think that I would have found my own way out of the darkness even without Hawthorne Heights
and my husband, but I'm really not sure if I could have. Hawthorne Heights lead me to him and he showed
me a world outside my own. He gave me a way out. I don't think I would have found the courage to up and
move if I didn't at least have him waiting for me somewhere.
My little brother is twenty now and he still hasn't found his way out. After living through the crap we grew
up dealing with, Greg has still chosen to go down a similar path as our dad. Now he uses drugs and alcohol
in the same way and hes unhappy with his career choice. He didn't have many options though after he
barely finished high school. My brother and I are sort of estranged now. We talk maybe once a year for
about five minutes. He blames me for leaving him, and maybe hes right. I moved out of that house a week
after my 18th birthday and I haven't really looked back aside from occasional visits over the summer to see
my mom. Maybe I didn't handle it the right way. Running away probably wasn't the best option, but to this
day I can't think of a better way to handle it than to just not be there.
My mom hasn't handled the situation well either. She's found herself addicted to gambling and food. She's
gained what I guess to be around 100 pounds in the past five years. Her only happiness comes from food or
being at work. She loves her job as a nurse. I keep begging her to move down here with me but she won't
leave my dad. She doesn't think he can survive alone, and he probably can't. But it kills me to see her
suffering every day.
Growing up in situations like mine is never easy. Kids who grow up in poor homes with a drug addict for a
parent have to work ten times harder than most of their peers. I've seen a lot of kids, like my own brother,
who didn't make it, or at least haven't made it yet. But it is possible. If you have the drive to break the cycle
you will. You just have to work at it. You can only blame your situation for 10% of the struggle. The other
90% is your attitude. If you have a positive attitude and outlook on life, you can get through anything.
Fall 2015
Timothy Collins
Trembled
there were holocausts
in Africa maybe that
was it that night at
the carnival the air
trembled
where have the gypsies
gathered in this life
infinitely misunderstood
I want the music to
take me to the arctic
dream chamber
swinging off the power
lines like ski lifts
Opera Eulogy
my friend said
its only the
wind that rustles
the leaves
the border where
the vigil meets
the town
Love at the
desk maintains
the rest
surrounds
the end of history
a great opera eulogy
the unlighted star
somewhere between
a promise & a
scar where the
world was created
survived Death
thru a promise
now theres
no free will
to drink the
whole Western
River for the
blessed consummation
Detheburgher
inverted neoprimitive (converted)
dressed up as scapegoat
give me industrial
strength paint thinner
says the first century
christian martyr
I burned the paper bridges
its just hope & dread
afraid of the strangers
and afraid to be a
stranger
detheburgher
to see her in
a perfect world
Condemned
the stars are
watching me in
this dumb canyon
light contrives
with darkness
teeth grow
the gravedigger
moseys on stage
pockets in hands
this place needs
to be condemned
blindness cured at
a deserted boardwalk
then this obsequious
effeminate troll
brings me a new
plague from Time
En ngre blanc
He loves to
let the script
steep in a
bitter draught
to be meek
yet unable to
serve in this
world staring
at the floor
with negro
angels
between rising
and falling theres
a grotto where
you must lie
and listen to
the river go by
culling the
nectar from
a selfimposed doom
youre ashamed
and dont know why
Rimbaud typed his
manuscript threw it
in a closet and left
Capacity Disaster
spin quest mid direction
wreck glycerin intestine
insulin infection check
pin pool section trek
inspection flex bin tool
neck reflect stool joint
point paralysis parallel fist
slick gel disk analysis twist
prick esophagus pick blister
splatter tick task blaster
gastric click mono tracker
flick nasty monitor master
flask gas capacity disaster
janitor matter ligament plaster
planet pigment plasma bladder
asthma dragnet vent hazard
parliament paid pain shatter
detain brake garment grade
torment crane shake decade
drain torpedo shook arcade
tripod train hook grenade
shock remain block blade
trade frame lame barricade
tock main insane stockade
rocket raid stock invade
socket knock aid tame shade
Fall 2015
Jingjing Xiao
My knocks echo in her apartment door. She the receptionists said it was a woman moved in perhaps
a week ago, into the apartment directly above mine. If I could climb back to my apartment through her window,
I may be able to grab the photos and some cash.
The door opens. She looks like my little cousin. The smile is a small bloom of blood against her skin,
the color of cherry blossoms. Its at least midnight, but she still wears a lab coat with her hair pulled into a strict
ponytail. The woman grimaces and slams the door. Too late, I realize how I must look, doubled over like a
question mark around my camera, drenched in rain and smelling of drink.
When I rap against her door the rhythm is hollow, slow, steady like the quieting beats of my heart. Light
continues to spill from the seams in the wall, and there is no sound trail of her footsteps leaving. I picture the
young woman on the other side, her back pressed against the door, the two of us standing less than three meters
above the plainclothes one floor below.
When I speak as loudly as I dare, the murmur is still too loud. It blows like a foghorn through the haze in
my head. I rest my head against the woodwork,
I live on the second floor. Im a reporter. The media police are outside my apartment.
My little cousin was still too young to understand death when we first met. She ventured onto the
rooftop garden of my familys seventh floor apartment, distracted by the cherry blossom tree, while our parents
spoke. We kept goldfish in a bathtub on the rooftop garden, and my cousin found the green nylon net sitting in
the holes for the faucet. It seemed innocuous enough, the most unlikely murder weapon, so I had left it there last
weekend. My little cousin chased my goldfish around the bathtub with the net. To exercise the goldfish, she
said, and her parents stopped to take photos because that was so cute.
The next morning half my fish floated belly up on the waters surface. I had to clean them out, scoop
them all into a cooking pot to flush one by one down the toilet. My father called hers because I was crying with
rage. She had just watched Finding Nemo. Oh, good, my cousin said, My cousin no longer needs me to
exercise his fish. All toilets drain to the sea, where fish are free and may exercise freely.
My father wisely decided to never pass her words to me. I did not find out until she told me herself,
many years later, after the bathtub had been stocked, restocked, and her uncle, my father, had grown old and
moved away.
Why? I cant hear footsteps. The second floor hallway remains empty, except for my neighbors
question hanging in the air.
Im a photojournalist. I write about female infanticide, I say, and hate the way it sounds. Female
infanticide. So clinical. I dont want to disappear. I say.
The door clicks open. Im familiar with your work. The woman says. The Lost Girls, she murmurs
in softly accented English before she switches back, Yes? I nod. She seems interesting. It is unusual that she
would know, when most doctors work for the government here.
The neighbor tosses me a towel from across the room. She has perfect aim. I dry my camera bag, drape
the towel around my shoulders, and lean against her window. The window has no ledges, only faint decorative
marks etched into the concrete, and I can see my window box two meters below.
She turns to me, sees her towel draped like a headscarf, sighs, and crosses the room in four steps to
towel my hair dry. Her fingers are surprisingly strong through the fabric. Perhaps shes a surgeon. Perhaps she
works with her hands.
Youre unlikely to escape the police if a cold catches you first. The doctor smirks. She doesnt have a
TV, so her couch faces outside. I can see her reflection in the window.
Thanks.
I press the play button on my camera and scroll through the photos of the lost girls, smiling faces on the
family altar, picture frames gathering dust on office desks, lockets worn over the hearts of friends and lovers.
The woman looks over my shoulder. The textbook on her desk shows an anatomical model, skin peeled away to
reveal blood and muscle. I have those photographs, too, tucked away in a folder I wont scroll to, not because
the pictures disgust me but because I sometimes stare for too long. Years ago another journalist caught me at an
abortion, taking pictures with my camera, trying to get the right angle and the right lighting on the glistening
little corpse still tucked in its unconscious mothers arm.
We are alike, doctors and photojournalists. We capture life when we can, and when we cant, we make
death pristine, clinical, beautiful and terrible both.
Are you a doctor?
Her hands stop in their motions, stilling against my hair. She flashes a smile at no one. The smile is an
instinctive upwards twist of her lips, directed at no one in particular.
I am studying to be one.
I take out my camera, rub the dew off with her towel and flips through the photos until I find the picture
I am looking for, a picture a father sent me of a girl in a school uniform laughing at something offscreen as she
approaches the camera in a soft shower of pink cherry blossoms. I give her the camera.
She was, too.
She skims the photo and returns his camera to me. I zoom out to the icons, flips through a few more
until I find another, a framed yearbook photo of a young women in a cap and gown set between burning
candles.
So was she. The camera passes between us back and forth until I show her the last photo in the series
and the first I took.
She looks like you, the woman observes quietly, and falls silent. She looks towards her anatomy
textbook, Do you keep all your photos on your camera? She asks.
And on photo paper, in my apartment. Ill back them up when I relocate.
Her hum is neither agreement, disagreement, nor support.
We are on the third floor. Two floors below an ever-shifting stream of cars speed by. One floor below
the police search my apartment.
Before my cousin left for America the summer of the Olympics, she shouted into the phone at me the
only English sentence she knew, Give me freedom or give me death! She had a heavy, sharp accent. She
heard it in a movie, and I dont believe she understood. I didnt tell her that. I told her about my girlfriend, who
hated our athletes hideous uniforms because they were bright red and yellow, like eggs scrambled with fresh
tomatoes: delicious, and terribly ugly.
Four years later the Olympics moved to England. Our uniforms were no less garish, but my girlfriend
and I had broken up. My cousin never answered my calls. She was too successful, too busy with college. My
family excused her, for she was a prodigious student preparing for medical school in the Ivy Leagues on the
other side of the ocean.
I drove by our old apartment and found the cherry tree on our former rooftop garden, in full bloom,
grown tall and strong without me, and I felt a bitter little twist in my heart.
..
I had seen many doctors before, visited them as a patient, knew of them as my relatives, surveyed them
at the abortion clinics, but the woman in the third floor apartment is the first doctor I observe in her natural
habitat. When she is satisfied with the dryness of my hair, she returns to her book. She reads with both arms
braced around it, hands supporting her forehead, absolutely motionless except for the slow rise and fall of her
chest.
Someone knocks on the door. She rises with military efficiency. Her eyes flicker away and glance me
towards the closet. I slide in and shut the door. Its empty, except for a few dark items.
Its late, and the voices are so soft that I cannot tell who is speaking. I catch the conversation in
snatches, Excuse us, doctor
wiped photos found in his apartment
retrieve sensitive information from his camera
return in two hours
good
The door shuts. My neighbors measured steps retreat into the apartment. Ten minutes later she knocks
on the closet door.
I think theyre gone. You can come out now. She takes the towel, Would you like some coffee? She
asks, Help with the hangover.
I thought it didnt, but I accept.
Youre the doctor. I say.
I am. She smiles, a bitter little motion. Outside, a streetlamp washes the darkness in a triangle of light.
Dust motes drift through it, like golden cherry blossoms falling.
My cousin and I, we went stargazing in July, under a summer sky. She reappeared suddenly the summer
she graduated from college, and she stuck to my side the entire season as if she had never left, the younger sister
I never had in a country that only allows one child per family.
I had gotten into photography in graduate school, and we drove out beyond the light pollution into the
highlands where it was winter all year long. My friends stayed in the car, turned on the heat, and shut off the
lights. My cousin followed me into the cold and took long exposures of the night sky. I insisted a dozen times
that she return to the car before she caught cold. She refused and waited until the last photo before she asked if
she could try. I put the camera carefully into her smaller hands, showing her which buttons to press. She stilled
with surprise as I handed her the thousand-dollar camera.
The photo was terrible she tilted the camera too far and a red glare obscured the stars. I printed it on
expensive photo paper, framed it, and kept it on my desk until the summer when she disappeared for the last
time.
I am suddenly, inexplicably tired. I cant seem to keep my eyelids raised. It is by lying sideways on the
doctors couch that I realize something is off about the doctors apartment: it is empty. There is no furniture
except for the couch, chair, table, and lamp that I also have downstairs. These come with the apartment.
Nothing identifies this room as the room which belongs to the young woman except for the single medical
textbook lying on the table.
A prop. I murmur.
No. She smiles kindly, out of reach at her desk, I am going to be a doctor next. She shrugs, In a
few months Ill be someone else.
Her fingers brushes over my eyes, the doctor shutting the eyelids of a patient who passed. Her small
hands are strong, but gentle. It strikes me then, a lightning realization that shocks me awake for a moment, that
the government cant possibly keep all the people whom they disappear.
Her reflection is framed in the window. She stands behind the sofa and gazes down at the flow of cars
outside. There is a coldness about her.
You remind me of her.
I beg your pardon? Her gaze shifts to my reflection.
First photo. My little cousin.
I shut my eyes and dream of her, of endless fields filled with infant girls and stolen brides.
I was away when she left my city for the last time. I called my father, who was with them, and asked
him to pass the phone to her. The conversation had me reciting the usual questions, asking if she had fun,
whether she enjoyed her visit. Within ten minutes, my little cousin had roped me into taking her into the
highlands that winter, to take photos of the fat, white snowflakes, which fell like petals even after the cherry
blossoms died.
As a medical student she understood why I liked photography, she said, because it preserved things and
made permanent that which does not last. She found it dangerous my tendency to capture the wild and the free
to make it last.
It was a foolish, petty thing. We disagreed over it until we shouted at each other, and finally it was I who
slammed the receiver shut and, when she called, refused to reply.
Our arguments raged like wildfires before they burnt out, but time grows forests over the ashes. I never
said sorry, because we never spoke of it again.
The sun is rising when I wake. The girl is gone, along with the mug and her medical textbook. In the
center of the space where it sat sits my camera. I check my photos and find they have all disappeared. While I
slept, the last image of my little cousin was replaced by a photo of a plane ticket with my name, bound for
America, like the flight my cousin missed years ago except I would not miss mine.
There is a shout downstairs. Three plainclothes officers scurry about below, running in circles around
the apartment complex, trying to catch the photos that fall like cherry blossoms from my window box. The wind
sets them free into the mid-morning traffic. A car stops in the commotion. A driver snatches up the photo that
has been caught on his windshield wiper and flings it away angrily, into the air.
The photo of my little cousin falls lightly to eye level, and I reach for it but the wind picks up and sends
it sailing, past the flow of cars, into the sky, and I cannot follow. I watch it fly from me and I count the steps
that take her away. It dips behind a truck. I stop in the middle of the street, between honking cars, and step back
onto the curb to wave down a cab and rejoin the flow of traffic.
In the last four years my cousin has become a myth that our family tells. At first her parents told us
stories of her to keep her real, to keep her alive, but my aunts took her canon and made it bloom. As with all
flowers, it bloomed and then it wilted. My cousin became more the brilliant doctor and less the girl who tried to
exercise goldfish, until she was no longer herself. I did not do not know what she was is? but sometimes
I still delude that a little of her had been given to me.
The last time we spoke was through video, before she disappeared, before when she was supposed to
leave for America. My cousin complained that her parents wanted her to drop med school and settle down. She
refused. Her life was hers to give and to take, not theirs. Then she vanished from our capital, where the old
Olympics stadium still sat, rotting, the day before her flight.
I wonder still if she had fought for her freedom with her hands or her heart. In my heart, I believed that
she would have won because I knew her as the girl who withstood the cold of the highlands at night to take
photos with me. But in my mind I know that the world is cruel, that she had caught a terrible cold that left her
bedridden for weeks afterwards.
The last time we spoke, my cousin plucked a flower from a tree behind her on the other side of the video
feed. The flowers were unresolved in the video background, but in her hands I saw they were cherry blossoms.
Her small hands gently brushed the petals, and then she crushed the flower between her fingers until it bled,
staining her fingers with shiny sap.
I dont like cherry blossoms. Did you know? she murmured as she tore it apart, petal by petal.
I think theyre beautiful, but too short lived.
Fall 2015
Alexzandra Rose Etherton
Ardent
With enough investment of
your energy
adoration can become
yearning to be adored
We exchange
love like it has a price
I would like to hold you
Every you
I want to hold all those
of you
that
I love
I want to
remember some of you
Be surprised by some of you
Most of all
I want to be
comfortable with most of you
When you feel
everything
for a person,
you are giving
yourself
reason to feel nothing
for anyone in the future.
Your Metonym
Companionship
comes to me
like water from hole in a boat
quite unexpectedly
then slowly
until it fills my entire vessel
I am forced to be
within its entirety
Lying to please others
What does it say about you
And your inner thoughts
if they are not nice enough
for other people
When I have bit
my tongue
then
asked to voice what I think
I have found
blood will come out
more
often than words
It concerns me that I can
look at a large storm
forming
on my long walk home
Think that I have suffered
worse
I normally do not
quiver
Not with fear for the future
but in fear of the
past
Knowing I have suffered worse
and can't go through any more of the
same.
Male Haze
There are other
things
I could be doing
other than
stripping
I had swum well
forever
even as a very little
girl
in the sapphire
haze
of swimming pools
I lost those skills
breathing
techniques
some things from
school I still use
upper body strength
on the pole
equations
and math
formulas
percentages for the
house
bouncer and
bartender
I could be
swimming
like when I was
a little girl
swimming beside
her
like a whale calf
with its mother
safe
from danger
what makes me stay
in a demanding job
like this
Fall 2015
Blackbird
Crow Tree
It is time you came back home Old Sam,
come on home to crow tree,
where the crows are thick,
like overripe melons on the vine.
And sink your feet in the quicksand
of honeysuckle and southern pine.
I thought I would make it in this world,
I thought I would do just fine,
but little birds can never fly
when their wings are wrapped with twine.
Alone I sit inside my house.
I rock both night and day.
I stare at the walls, and at the ceiling too.
There is no other way.
And I sit atop the highest branch
in that weather-beaten tree,
and caw at the moon,
when the sky grows dark
while Old Sam answers me.
So come back home to crow tree
to the hoodoos that are there.
They will bind your legs and your hands to it,
and no one ever cares.
(Port St. John, 2014)
The Lost
So pure they were of heart, the essence of all
that was true.
The innocent ones who dwell no more in the land
that was known as Middle Earth. Plucked out too soon like a child that was
taken at birth, like a child taken at birth.
The Balroy chased them all, all of them
into the western sea.
And now they are just a memory, only a memory.
Some say that they followed a star west to the
realm of Valinor.
But then others will tell you that their legs
fell off while traveling north in the sea.
Guided they claim a light from afar.
They seek out eternity, in search of eternity.
(Port Saint John, 2003)
Fall 2015
Charlene Ashley Taylor
Lost in Translation
Hay una constelacin sobre sus sbanas enormes
Suficientes para acoger un cadaver de gigante
Alguien me dijo que
No sabemos
aqu, en occidente
Lo que es un gigante
Pero enseguida ri y de su boca salieron rosas,
Llenas de espinas recorriendo los tallos,
Para llegar a mis pies
There is a constellation on his huge sheet
Enough to welcome a giants corpse
Somebody told me that
We dont know
here, in the west
What a giant is
But then he laughed and of his mouth came our roses,
Full of thorns covering the stems,
To arrive at my feet
Clam
Here is Clam, lathering his saline tongue over a rough grain of sand. Savoring this small token of the beachs
love. Never would this creature have experienced such comforting dryness under normal destinies. Yet, here
he is; a tiny, crystalline statue inscribed with the details of a life that he would never have known otherwise.
Clam reads the Braille with his tongue, smothering and tumbling it around; making love to the ocean in his
own way. Just as the ocean cradles Clam in its vast, sinuous arms, Clam envelops his lover. Many twentyfour-hour cycles chased themselves across the earth, and yet for Clam they passed like a few flicks of the
tongue. And with fresh taste buds, Clam temporarily stops lapping to realize his lover has metamorphosed
without his admission. Here, sleeping in his bed of flesh is this rock, this mature mound silken with age.
Rock is impassive, Rock is cold, Rock yields not even a hint of the flavors that used to describe Clams world.
Clam shudders, shaking off the layers or long-dead guilt. Expelling dust and crumbs and remnants of stale
love with every tongue-scraping slide against his shell. All that remains of the relationship are the imbedded
lines of old tales sand used to tell. This too Clam would soon shed, for every time he shifted he could feel
these tattoos writhing within and throughout him. This gesture, which was intended to dissolve the past,
simply made those days more prominent. Just when it seemed that Clam would never feel relief from the
daily abrasions, Rock was gone.
Peaches
shadows drool in my garden
like milk and honey
smearing beneath the skin
and swimming through the rock
like eggs to eat a rose
bitter with diamond petals
I tongue the smell of rust
and watch the water moan
ripping hair from my throat
but I do not scream
as the lather licks my forest red
the blood on the moon
sweats quick up my dress
like a peach boiling juice into rain
it shines raw above me
and burns my bed bare
Grapefruit
I sang to you hot and hollow,
a distant rhythm.
My own pulsing howl at night.
You flew to flush my face,
beating heat between wings.
My own cicada summer.
You were my own sweet and sour
seasonal hybrid. My own
acidic forbidden grapefruit.
You shed your shell
held back your peel,
with juice in ripples.
My own
fingers sticky with sap.
I gripped your skin,
tough with moist tart.
Dripping again and
again. Shaking, you jerked away.
I drag you back to lick the bark bare,
scratching to silence the fire alarm.
My own fight for the burning feed.
Fall 2015
Greg Larson
Back Dimples
There is a line of back skin showing
between her tight pink tank top
and her black leggings
as she climbs the Stairmaster.
I can see the dimples on her lower back
undulating with each step
and envision my thumbs in each indentation
grabbing for dear life
grabbing for something that cant be caught
in her exposed slit of skin.
Fall 2015
Jill Gamble
Fall 2015
Victor Eshameh
weakened
hopelessly
iii dilemma
iv strong
v nonoperational
vi steadfast
vii conjurer
viii talkative
ix nightmare
x glorious
xi Revolution/determination
i
ii
Fall 2015
Patricia Walsh
Cave Canis
Inspire yourself, a dog's bite of a sentence,
that serves to magic the doorways shut,
a catalogue of errors serving purpose.
Nobody want the fight the good fight anymore,
sated with staring into a boxed machine,
for hours on end, entertained somewhat.
Wait for the ships to come in. It is only then
you will find if the cat is still alive
uncertainty poisons you otherwise.
God did create all manner of things,
a rotten hierarchy to go and multiply,
male intervention reigning supreme.
Plagiarise beauth, a sawn-off manifesto,
that aims to chill sorrow skin-deep
this is our world, a wreckage binding.
The break of the day betrays its promise.
A gallery of small things, a keepsake
for what it is worth, a decree of a sample
Oxygen for your enemies is paramount
enough to burn all semblences of poison
natural selection garottes your greed
Sleep while you can, a glorious failure
Rotting secretly, a dying inbred
trying to communicate a dire need.
Infinity
"You cannot divide by zero"
I write my own jokes, too.
A big fat nought, gibes amiss
Miss the target, shred the opposition
seated in front, baiting my life.
"You can eat yourself slim, you know".
Gorge on the good things in life.
Temperatures dropping in a private oasis
skinning wind your only reward.
Brave the cold, since you have to.
"You're intelligent, but you don't work".
Rip out my brains and
give it to someone who needs them.
Cold storage for independent reference
future genius is standing by.
"Don't mix paper and plastic"
recyclable ideals catch on, for the better,
as long as you abide by the function
sleeping the sleep of the just,
sated by righteousness, a godly heart.
"There's always someone worse off than you".
Wipe clean the record collection, resurrect the iPod,
and burn the earholes with preferred music.
Stand-offing boredom, watching through windows
the burning adventure of genuine life
Broken Devil
Silence! My sisters and I
measure perfectly your transgression,
hunting furtively your future mistakes.
The steel wheel remains, nondescript
an accomplishment, fuelling your feat
crows' indefinite feet spay a miracle.
A secret-keeper, a division bell,
chimes to inform us of misdeeds
committed by morganatic tua
rituals of sorrow, self-inflicted wounds,
taking the fall for eternal sunrise
war-torn classroom, a blossom rent.
Flest upon flesh, a zero-made hour
death abounds in its influence of silence
lapping up the gods' cream in the last days.
Sorrow-bound, unexploded, fine.
Other women upstairs, tend to your need
feeding sparrows like tomorrow didn't exist.
Dream of Celtic twilight, blind, a dark place
miseltoe crumbs litter the carpet
like banned confetti, pointless, obscure.
Some matriarch you were. Files are missing
cover up your crass mistake, a longing
to weave shadows, a dark water.
So what if you're broken? Rumour has it
to the very marrow your unease lies
a dead thing, season's ritual gone.
A house of flesh still lives, autonomous
Your face is tomorrow, a peroxide bump
a hard place and a rock, resting awhile
Unexploded
Loaded information, in my right hand,
makes no difference, as you found out.
The warpath paces itself, following and
fires on all cylinders, a privy to anger.
The loss creeps down my spine
through to my fingers, prompting to
declare all and eradicate doubt,
but I buried my talent, afraid of retribution.
It made no difference in the end. Hurt pride
and a bruised ego, gobbles up the peace
we once shared, confidentiality aside
over pre-bought pints in each other's faces.
Rolling cigarettes is an acquired joy
the smoking area comfortably lit,
heated discussions abound, secrets ready
to explode, say nothing, diffuses all duties.
Clocks go into reverse, for the time of year,
shadowing the past, a death of sorts
a syringe of truth went very amiss,
side effects hit the fan, to mildly say.
Kiss me first, a safe valve.
Historic breakups are no fault of mine
if I say so, which I won't
regrettably, I protect my sources.
Murdering doubt, rampantly so.
The silence breaks over chaste coffee
retributions scream hard, an angry alarm
natural causes are no longer an excuse.
Rituals of the broken pulverise your fate.
A stone boy with a limp to his name
vaulting through death, a binding oblivion
returning to form with a dream that matters.
Fall 2015
PT Davidson
Poem 2430
this
poem
has
no
margin
for
error
Poem 3004
this
poem
is
only
going
to
say
this
once
Poem 3538
this
poem
was
written
before
a
live
studio
audience
Poem 2614
this
poem
is
a
victim
of
circumstance
Poem 3385
this
poem
should
be
seen
and
not
heard
Poem 2911
this
poem
is
not
normally
like
this
Fall 2015
Natasha Murdock
Empathy Porn
Imagine his thick dick/
in my mouth,
his rugged abs, his cum/
on my face, no blemishes,
imagine everything you hate about yourself
perfected
imagine his cock taking me from behind/ hes young
& good & great hair, hes a throbbing member/ right up my ass,
hes a/
moaning, asking, begging for
more,
imagine him
Loud & unexpected
imagine him giving it/ oh giving it/ as long as I want it,
hes never finishing/ first over and over again I want him
anyone, really, but not you, not you downstairs
working, not you downstairs rocking the baby,
not you downstairs folding laundry, imagine anyone fresh
& new & hot & ready & telling me I like it & pounding me
real good/
harder, harderclearly not about you
I do it for mefor me
sorry
the wasteland
breeding / Lilacs out of the dead land -t.s. eliot
blown-out / big&floppy / hallway / loose / gaping / wide-set / beef-curtain / baggy / black hole
c-section yeah but there was still a whole hand up there
like a crime scene like a kidnapping like a hotel sign no vacancy like a pancake/no butter like do not walk no
turn on red literally like no double coupons like after a short commercial break like dont touch that dial like
some forgotten jelly fish swallowing itself
now you're a milf as in no I will not take off my shirt
after six weeks, exam, speculum, etc. this may hurt a little, a little pressure
okay, okay, looks great
from derivative
sometimes I do what you tell me to and I like it but its still what you ask me to do so I am being what you
want me to be and I get confused like when I like you to tell me to bend over the kitchen stool and show you
my assI do it. I bend right over. I spread my cheeks. I show you the parts of me even Ive never seen. You
tell me to tell you I like it and so I tell you I like it & I like it. I like it so much that later, the next day, I ask you
to tell me to spread open, to tell me to like the way your big hard cock slides right in. I ask you to tell me and
so you tell me to ask you & I ask for it. I ask for it & I like it. Like you tell me to. I am so wet.
Fall 2015
Sean Burn
someone who in the midst ov others silence, uses his own voice
(fundaci joan mir, barcelona)
make a nest ov salt on a stool / push egg tender into this denting ov grain / sweep off all but the smallest
scattering needed to keep egg balanced on end / use a careful paintbrush in this / one childhood trick ov
mine // now cast this in bronze / yu have a miro sculpture
*
dream a red rung ladder
the balance awkward off
caress this flight ov birds
these touchpaper nights
late hyacinths blood
these fields ov toil
jazz these stones pollen
alone & un-gunned
newspaper fragments
forever threatening war
black lithograph ov birds
beaking their correlates
where sickles & rims
are found inflamed
savage
salvage
arrow like whale
balancing air
on the flense
ov her tail
the scavenging
brainstorm stolen
isolates fireworks
the consoling
constellation
a string ov yellow
eggs on the rebound
the ultramarine line
the carmine sun
not boxed in
beguile the colours
down kiss & drink
& lose an eye
in the blink
ov a market
coming ov rage
ascend
the ladder
ov ribs
the heart is
the blue star
& the green
*
a rake leans against ochre railings / theyre fighting over tools in the sandpit / axe heroes all / strut / give uz yr
gauzy shadow boxings / lure wings against forearm / the allure ov ascent / & then some
*
can i sit?
these legs
are not getting
any younger
pearl earring
sags in this heat
bird beaks are
currency here
the gloves
missing a digit
paint bombs
far beyond
thresholds
hands dont
so much fly
to constellations
but are
brief asterisks
ov life flung
lung gaspings
lines black
az the moon
red az the sun
split my lips
smiling
bring me air
bring me air
spiralling
no longer
wary & weary
but great
gobbeting tears
ov ecstasy
big mouthings
the stars get bent
on the anvil ov sky
sign to the manifest
the weighing ov colour
*
sparrows dust-bath
ahead the storm
at heads ov the storm
leaves & loaves
all uz feathereds
wearing scrubs
raise glasses to the frac
turings ov water in mouth
clouds refracting munificence
sandbags gaffer-taped row by row
& we're on top this hill
- some deluge
how
bone vowels fall
so many explosions
when we sleep it will be az sparrows
- the winners here
agiling beyond our scope
*
& the untitled
inky explosions
so much
jackdawings yack
seen off those
blinded in
soapy chat
we yr shadows
outliving yu
get up close
rolling
roiling
there are no palls ov smoke
in this dry day
teardrop
rolling
roiling
dignity/in
to be trodden on
this constant passing
ov dray horses
the clip-clop thigh boots
seeing beyond & thru
these other lifeforms
also twisted & blistered
into pursing lips:
pursuing but is it art?
skewed & skewered
poses among the roses
a brief receiving in negative
black where light shone
this the perfect storm
the perfect storm
& so much spew
poised to soar & sear
this totem ov shoes
these feet for a wheel
jailbirds revealed
in the streets
the spine over & over
riding shotgun
*
talk is sometimes cheap
paint cheaper
bells cry out
television remotes
require a hefty deposit
we are not screen
*
cigarettes for nipples
anarchy for mouth
smokers play the long game
needing three double espressos just to wake
*
so easy to lose
beyond all proportions
off all rails
kick in just kick in
some poor sods head
boot it up to a heavy heady mush
yu cd kick a kids head in
one instant thats all it takes
but unwilling
to unearth civil war
one moment ov transgression
so precarious this shelf-life
never turn yr back on
fascism ready for the grab
subvert skin for we are all
blood beneath
we are all daughters ov ubu
*
by blue star
by reflex ov eye
by cold chair
by black gravel
by bronze sting
by eyes ov volcano
by the secret life ov
a box ov matches
a vox ov marches
democracy is more
than each five years
a peachy torn cemetery
the pain ov laying
an egg w/ corners
gargantuas symmetry
& yr sense ov
encircling worth
shadowy fatigue
the spinning top
searches for a feather
the feather searches for a churn
the onion wears a thimble for
the threading ov the lights
bird is a length ov wire
c/oiled for flight
fights downstream
the pollution ov light
& orange is
a rarity circling
the hand grab
the blood-thirst
a lithograph ov truth
in black white yellow
red blue green
the grave goods
trampled to dearth
we are split infinitely
between the desire
to kick heads in
& the offering ov
a helping hand
why cant we be
sunbirds all?
the dust-bathing
ov uz feather
spread to the wind
poised to soar?
posed to soar
yu have to graft
unscrew this
*
one last coffee / melted wax has chrysalised multitudinous wine bottles / someones signed themselves stack o
lee in the toilet for hombres / & i used to have tennessee three singing / still have dylan singing that blues / &
the sixties play over the speakers / cymbals on splash / a shirt to be worn lightly / knife grinders on overtime /
sparks flying towards the light / the loveheart i am handed reads crazy
Fall 2015
Lus Leal Moniz
Headless cigarettes
Leaving home just hoping to have another pointless day
And be bright in this empty place
Where goals dont exist
And be brilliant
Where everything is vain
And be astonishing
Being nothing
Nicotineless cigarettes just for being smoked
Headless cigarettes
Painless drinks
Drinking without forgetting
Just having sex
Just walking
without a trail
Just breathing
Leaving home returning the same, dining and sleeping
Awaking and leaving home again
Just to exist
only dreams
Socialist
dreams of equality
Liberal
dreams of freedom
Democratic
dreams of fraternity
Nothing but money instead
Health is nothing
Education is nothing
There is no opportunity
In the motherland of civil rights theyre equally stupid, equally dumb, equally soldiers of terror
They are the capital of the free world
They are the Capital
They are the market and the guns
They are the Capital
The stock and the new suns
They are the Capital
And what are we?
We the clever no ones
The poor
The hunger
The floor crumbled by their feet
Intellectually tired
Intellectually sick
The garbage countries
Full of risk
Were only allies
With nothing to win
Only infantry
With nothing but death
Only slaves
With nothing but handcuffs
With the right to talk
But without the media
Fall 2015
Barbara Tomash
INNERMOST:
midnight horizon
restory as a seismograph
free in rhythm and tempo to fly back when released
as a hawk
an account
given by a singer in solitary
speaking aloud as a grooved track
magnetization of fine wire to kick back
when fired
or as in solitude
a dialogue
to move from the last toward the first word
repose
twias a trailing vine with red berries : initiation : anesthesia & semiconsciousness : as a constellation : as a world lighted by more strands
being twisted : round and round in the water : in which boys rotate lightly
idly flutter the eyelids mingle by interlacing : also : twice-told : sunlight &
its airglow [Rare] : the ends of used rope symbolizing rebirth
Fall 2015
Christopher Ozog
Rafters Of Time
Even
Nostradamus
Couldn't have
predicted,
That your
seismic heart,
Would quake
into one
last release.
A wheeze
into Obscurity,
We thought you
Would renew,
We thought
You were non-fiction,
We thought fan
Fiction was silly,
We thought
You penned
One last sequel.
A short story
Was all it took,
When you
became a fable,
That never
Boomeranged
Back to us.
Wasted Pasts
We Dined with
decayed Ruins,
And watched the
Years swing
By,
like a pendulum.
A frenzied fall
Into frailties
Vulnerable
Ensemble &
Down The
Rubbled chute,
So we could
Retrieve the
Archived
Caskets of
Golden aged
Souls underneath
The Ball room lights,
Where Victorian
Phantoms united.
Guzzled down
Aged wines of
Yesteryear,
As time
traveled
to the past,
& Revived those
Anecdotes buried
With our kin.
Danced with
skeletons,
and surveyed
the royalties.
But time was
a minority,
and in a second,
sobriety intervened.
Slapped to the present,
those ghosts
forever vanished
into uncertainties
Blackened night.
In a mind
that split
a sigh,
a seizure
froze time.
They stuck
to the clouds,
but sometimes
their shadows still bare a crown.
Golden Years
The way this mother
in central park,
carries her children
into adulthood,
and grows into
this great dane
that soldiers on,
and enlists
in rife's trench hole,
seems to know
that one day,
it's time for this
decrepit turtle
to climb back into
the apparitions
mouth,
and get
swallowed
by the morgue
that declares
each inhabitant
of the world,
a time capsuled
boomerang.
You watch these
years evacuate,
as life slowly
decomposes,
your spirit
sinks beneath
the soil.
You're
no wandering
youthful blaze
scavenging
for the spotlight,
you no longer
reign like a
thunderstorm
rains
in the forest,
replenishing
watered souls.
You are a
puddle that
forges on,
ever so slightly,
until these
windows
start to close.
we know this
terminal cradle
will be one day
stripped of it's youth,
and robbed for the
reapers throne,
and you will
canon into
time's wormhole,
and turn to dust
just like the rest.
but once eternities
safe has broken,
and the years
depart,
you'll always
be searching
for that
grandfather clock,
that never
phones back.
Fall 2015
Heather Bowlan
Birthday
Ive lived 32 lives
and in each one Ive been a panther.
I startle myself awake each morning
with my baby-cry.
I hide in trees, the poplar, the white oak,
mark the clearings
and the wild things too in love
with the open to leave it.
Then in the gloaming
I let my all-over cloak down,
rasp at each corner with my sandy tongue
until it seals itself over
every inch of skin.
I leap into the valleys dark corners,
look out from the overhangs veined
with the bloody memory of copper,
find the deer and timber-rattlers.
Shake them awake. Let my eyes go green
in the hunters way. Watch the stars
like candles, marking time.
Tall Tales
The summer comes when the swing
on the Japanese maple breaks, and that fall
the bees sting one by one until the nest wont hum,
no matter how many times we hit it.
When we run away, we find a fountain
in a flower shop three blocks down
and wish hard for a hat made of perennials, but the crones
running the joint are wise, they call the cops.
Customers stand around and whisper instead of buying forsythias
while we loiter by the orchids and count pennies greening
in the fountain water. We hate forsythias. Who remembers this?
We grew up in houses too big or too small,
in love with our dresses and grand displays
on staircases until our hair dulls its baby-shine.
Cue a few feet taller and we do so much to forget,
amphetamines and gin, but when the acid
kicks in all we see are white bears marching down the street.
They say you remember it wrong, your glass house,
you forgot the blue, the purple, the green.
Benediction
The first word of this aching morning:
surface. The second is blurred
even as it forms, but it could be sift, or bridge,
or pivot. I taste concrete.
As surely as if Id bitten my tongue
it wells up, begins to harden into another day
of not moving from this bed. Hair slick
as tarp on the pillow. If theres only the order
of the twisting streets in London and Pittsburgh
in the maps taped over the aging stains
and godawful paint on the walls,
and the thrum and moan of Nicos harmonium
buzzing on repeat through blown-out speakers
in the corner, that will keep me safe.
I say this to myself, never looking away
from the blank ceiling blotted out by pallid light
as though a few minutes before, a storms blind eye
crept in to force stillness onto my minds wild windings,
so full of solid and broken lines theyre leeching
out of my skin. My eyes open against
the labyrinth that bends and tangles outside the door.
Fall 2015
Vernon Frazer
Killing the Message
revelation caught
a private moment
suppressed
compassion
to
swallow the whole
factory
factotum or no
big cigar left
behind the leaning back
each broom seated contempt under their own assembly wickets
a baffled montage
in search of
aching couriers
Career Moves
r
ls g
al ot
eb sl
ey me
i
ng t
ki e
in th
cl to
in
impression strand
chromed through instant remix
palatial seizures
disengage
dispatched
APPLAUDING
THE RISE
OF SMOKE
TO POWER
un
sr
t
en
a
crime
against
the nuance
breathing down
the vaunted corridor
am
ok
amid
regurgitation fits
denying
empathy
in
g
ilot rent
cop eter
ter
ent e d
de
terg elag ne
-de fus
i
non the
er
the red
yc
i
a
gl
rep
tentative
fencers
r o
te r y
ut b
sh em
on nt in
ag ge ta
w er s
et
its surcharge
-1-
to
po
tr
a
ne
ve rt a
ce
r
ss sing sho
ity
cr re
ch ud
e
ar
ts
stigmata in arrears
left unclaimed, no beverage
filter applied
largesse
determined
a
cataleptic
diction
as leverage plies
gored
sufferage
ignored
suffering
no tart reply
tending to conciliate
the implication
of its tactical eyeballs
grim
ey
mon h of
earc
in s ocket
ap
dinero man
ill
m
a b n the
o
ing ue
n
r
tu esid
st r
f la
)
eyeballs linked time
into a clamorous shot
Appending
the righteous
joke they empower
an upending
cornered
tra
-2-
a cumbersome veneer
N
M
wafting slowly
the stick
of benched glue pits
avenue triage
against
forced retention
g
lin
p
m ed
tra ew
re n
S
R
O
D
A
T
A
M
(
))
N
9
I
NT
s
al
en
utt g
d
b
re kin tion
e
s
r stoc ten
a
o
re
fh
al
o
e
e
a d se
pin
sh our
ac
E
T
DIS
k
dar c
i
mag ent
er g a
t
e
d
tr
m an k
am o
ge t
a
nd igh
e
p d r ing
p
A ne er
tur rpow ion
t
e
n
v
e
o nt
i
E
R
O
patio flakes
n
oo
ing he
n
n
t dy
e
ck ver
a
i
sh
o
th
a chronic
detergent
attuning
to motion
-3--
CANNED
ENIGMA
carom glance
gly
ce
r
ha
sh
or
the ing
ve
-n
ots
de
nie
ine its d
de
ter
ge
nts
of
an emotion
detergent
attuning
to chronic
MATADOR VENEER
a career
as a motivational seeker
-4-
Fall 2015
Maureen Coleman
Almost as far back as I can remember my dad was in and out of the hospital. There were a variety of
health problems and a number of surgeries; totaling roughly 13 hospitalizations in 12 yearssome long, some
short. He was steadfast in his desire to continue living as he always had and would draw the lines as to which
treatments he consented to and which he didnt; allowing him to maintain some sense of control over his
deteriorating body. He survived scares with his heart, skin cancer on his left forearm, and a disease that affected
his brain and was usually not caught until after death. In between all of those issues, he lost a toe, then a foot,
then one leg, then the other; each loss of limb coming with its own oozing-puss, foul smelling infection. His
kidneys had started to fail, but he refused dialysis. He seemed to be unstoppable, a sort of unbendable steel or
unbreakable wall. Because of all this, the debridement surgery scheduled on the below-the-knee stumps that
were left after losing his legs seemed like a minor occurrence, but my dad seemed to know something that
everyone else didnt.
The surgery went off without a hitch. He was moved from the recovery room to the post-operative unit
on the 5th floor, arriving there alert and oriented. He smiled and joked with the nurses and was a pain in the ass
to the phlebotomists who would wake him up for blood sugar checks and lab work at all hours of the night. In a
serious tone, he tried on numerous occasions to talk to me starting out with things like, I want you to know
something or Your mother is going to need help or Ive got this feeling that, but each time I cut him off
saying, Stop talking. Right now. Your implication is that youre gonna die and thats not happening.
The day after surgery, he became incoherent at times and would drift into a deep sleep-like state. The
doctors came and talked to my mom. They told her that his body was not clearing the anesthesia given for his
surgery. She was a nurse and knew what that meant. She called my sister, Marion, and me, beckoning us to the
hospital. By the end of the next night, my dad was completely out of it, talking nonsense in a slurred voice
whenever he wasnt lying there unconscious.
At one point I grabbed him by the shoulders, tears streaming down my face, and shook him violently;
repeatedly screaming for him to wake up and telling him that I loved him. For just a second and for the last
time, he opened his eyes and with a perplexed look on his face he stared at me rather incredulously and said, I
love you too, Mo.
Then the unsinkable ship sank, the unbendable steel bent, the unbreakable wall broke and he was gone.
_________________________
I sat quietly on a stool at the island in the kitchen and watched my dad as he stood at the stove checking
on the Litl Smokies making sure there was just enough maple syrup on them to make the mini-hotdog
imposters taste good. As good as theyre ever gonna be, he muttered under his breath. He went to the
refrigerator and pulled out the deviled eggs that my mom had whipped up for him before going to work that
night. Next he put the chips, dip, cheese, deli meat, and rolls out. The final step was the most important to him
as it included the essential ingredients required for a successful poker game: spiced rum and Coke.
It was about 7:00 p.m. when the other players started showing up. This card playing Motley Crew
consisted of Kenny, a close friend/longtime gambler who eventually lost his house because of his habit; my
Uncle Louie (who wasnt my real uncle); Dave who was a family friend/my dads anesthesiologist; Charlie,
who was about 68, 280 lbs. with hair down past his ass and an inability to not give me a big squeeze when he
arrived, which despite his imposing appearance was always welcomed and enthusiastically returned; and finally
there was sometimes a man named Tim whom my dad knew from baseball card shows and who couldnt pass
up any chance he had to tell people how impressed he was with me because I knew what the pituitary gland was
when I was in 4th grade. They started their evening the same way they always did: picking at the food and
making drinks. By 8:00 p.m., they had all taken their designated seats and placed their money in front of them
in rows by denomination like players gearing up for a long game of Monopoly.
Following their settling-in routine, the first cards were dealt. The bets were always minor, but the
laughter ringing throughout the dining room where they sat huddled around the table was majorespecially my
dads. He loved when this small clan of wannabe poker pros assembled together for a night of camaraderie.
Like reckless rebellious teenagers, all of them held the understanding that they would break the rules they were
given by the women in their livesJimmy, I mean it, no smoking in the house! Louie, you better keep your
shit together and stay away from the liquor! Charlie, dont you come back here if you lose all that money!
By roughly 10:00 p.m., Id still be posted up by the island in the kitchen, watching intently as they threw back
drink after drink before upping the antes and lighting yet another round of cigars to add to the smoke that hung
heavy and gray all around them before slowly creeping out the now open windows into the cool night air.
The games were friendly, but filled with biting sarcasm.
Screw you, Jim! I had to wait a half hour for you to decide to fold. So, if youre gonna take your sweet
ass time, then Im damn sure gonna take mine.
Take all the time in the world, Louie, but know that its gonna end the same way: you losin all your
cash!
This small group of friends was so in synch with each other and each added something to that table, but
it was my dad who brought the most vibrancy to the room. It could have been the liquor or perhaps the relaxed
atmosphere but as those nights wore on, his endless jokes and teasing seemed to shine brighter and roar louder
at that table than most days.
Come on, Kenny, just bet already or do you need to go remortgage the house again first? You better not
be laughing, Charlie! We all know if you dont lose your money at cards youll piss it away on junk thats
gonna make you a fortune one day!
For just a little while, it was as if there was no diabetes, no pain. His personality, beaming smile and the
sparkle in his eyes combined to be his ace up his sleeve and with a simple sleight-of-hand he was always the
winner at that table.
_________________________
My dad was an old school Irish guy from the Bronx who had a work ethic like no other; sometimes even
holding down four jobs at a time like when he was a shipping/receiving supervisor at a local lumber yard; drove
a truck for Polar Cup selling Italian ices; aided a private detective firm by participating in fake thefts from
department stores in order to test their security; and had a booth at a flea market where he sold overstock and
rejected items from shipments, which he purchased from contacts made through his shipping/receiving job. At
some point he must have realized that his mouth and strong attitude would continue to get him in trouble at
times and so he decided to become his own boss; eventually owning two bars in New York by his late thirties.
The one he held onto the longest was the Pot Belly Pub where there was a sign on the wall that always read
Free Drinks Tomorrow. Its also where my mom met my dad. Seven years after divorcing his first wife and
marrying my mom, my parents ended up in Virginia where my dad eventually opened a new businessa
baseball card store. My dad hired friends and family to give them their first crack at working. He would take the
oddballs and misfits that came in under his wing; giving them jobs anywhere from cleaning the display cases to
sorting cards in an effort to help give them a sense of purpose, something he knew everyone needed in their
lives. To make use of and some profit from the pinball machines he purchased from one of these
nonconformists, he organized pinball tournaments with cash or merchandise prizes. He sold single cards,
plaques with everyone from Mickey Mantle to Bo Jackson displayed prominently as their centerpieces,
gold/silver/bronze replicas of cards that came with certificates of authenticity and sealed sets of cards from
Topps and other manufacturers. Even though he would talk and laugh with anyone who came in, he wouldnt
put up with any bullshit, which is why those sealed sets of cards from Topps became an issue on some random
Saturday.
I was standing behind one of the display cases sorting cards as instructed by my dad that day when a
man walked into the store, milling about for a few minutes while other customers listened to my dad describe
how to take care of their cards. Once those customers left, the man who was walking around looking for
nothing, came up to the counter and started a conversation that couldnt be taken back and was most likely
cause for regret for years to come.
Hey buddyyou think its ok to rob people? Because thats exactly what you did to me and youre
fuckin wrong if you think Im not gonna do something about it!
In his typical fashion when confronted (yes, there was a typical fashion due to the aforementioned
mouth and attitude), my dad smugly tilted his head, crossed his arms, and smirked before he responded, Why
dont you go ahead and tell me what the hell youre talking about?
The man went into a high-pitched rant about how he had bought a set of Topps baseball cards from my
dad and that all the money cards from that set were missing. Not getting much in the way of a response at that
point, the man screamed,
Dont you think about tryin to bullshit me neither! You know what Im talking about.
My dad turned around and took down another set exactly like the one the man had supposedly purchased
and calmly explained to him that the sets came sealed from the company and if he had a problem with what
came in that set, he should call Topps directly.
This was clearly not the answer the man was looking for as he immediately launched into a diatribe
filled with veiled threats and expletives. Other customers had filtered in and were cautiously walking around the
store, occasionally stealing glances at the exchange taking place between my dad and the irate customer. My
father stood firmly in his place behind the counter, never flinching or gesturing in any way beyond an amused
half-cocked smile until the man finally shrieked, Im not leaving this goddamn store until you do what I say
and give me my money back!
With that, my dads smirk disappeared and his arms unfolded as he walked around the counter towards
the irrationally angry man who was still screaming, What?! You think youre going to intimidate me? Huh, big
guy?! You think youre tough!?
By now my dad was in front of the customer and an icy glare had overtaken his otherwise vibrant green
eyes. Then that boyishly mischievous smile returned to his face and he grabbed the man by the back of the neck,
dragged him to the front door which he flung open with one hand while simultaneously throwing the man
through the doorway with such force that the former shit-talkin redneck tripped over the sidewalk and fell into
the middle of the road. Before closing the door and allowing the man to scamper off with a severely bruised
ego, my dad yelled, No, you piece of shit, I know Im tough.
___________________________
My relationship with my dad was complicated. His health had been in a state of decline since I was
eight. He was often irritable, in pain and obsessed with the idea that he would be dead by fifty-eight because
thats how old his own father was when he died. It was at least in part because of this obsession that he
purposely kept all of his children at arms length. He felt that if he never got too close to any of us it would be
easier for us when he died. I tried and tried and tried over the years to get to know him, but was constantly
pushed away with heart-breaking insults and belittling comments.
It became clear to me at an early age that my dad saved up his largest doses of being angry, bitter, mean,
vulgar, and violent especially for me. The emotional pain this dance with him caused me was only amplified
every time I heard someone say that the real problem with our relationship was that my dad and I were too
much alike. That comment, like the one that my father and I were oil and water and therefore just could not mix,
did nothing in the end, but get me as pissed off and angry at the world as my dad.
When I was around 12, my dad and I got into an argument over nothing Im sure, but the scene that
played out set the stage for a war between the two of us that lasted for the better part of a decade. Ill never
remember what it was that started that fight, but I do remember that because our arguments were happening so
frequently I felt well equipped to handle the sparring with words that was unfolding. Little did I know when it
started, I was not yet even close to a worthy opponent; the true extent of how drastically ill-prepared I was
became clear at the end of our exchange. I concluded my showing by storming up the stairs to my room when I
heard him say in a measured tone, Maureen, let me tell you something.
I spun around on my heels at the top of the steps and looked down at him defiantly.
Ill piss on your grave when you die.
All expression left my face and I stood there shell-shocked, while he turned and walked away.
_____________________________________
My mom would often remind me that my dad was in constant pain and I should try and understand how
that affected his mood and reactions. My ability to feel empathy for him waned every day because he was an
insufferable asshole. Our fighting over the years intensified, but up until I was 16 it had never turned physical.
There was always a prelude before the outburst of screaming and yelling, offering my sister and my mom an
opportunity to retreat to other areas before it came. By 16, I felt that I had grown into that worthy opponent that
I was not when I was 12, but again in an unmistakable fashion, he proved me wrong.
I had just gotten a bowl of cereal with my sister and we were heading back upstairs when I heard my dad
faintly call my name from the basement. Before I could swallow the mouthful of Fruit Loops down and
respond, he was upstairs. I was a little stunned at his sudden act of agility in getting up the stairs that fast, but
quickly became transfixed by the look in his eyes. It was like that of a caged rabid wild animal. I dont
remember if he said anything before he grabbed my throat because I was mesmerized by the unexpected rage
and violence that stared back at me. I know now after a few emotional and painful discussions with my mother
the particulars of what was going on while I was frozen in that tranceterrified, unprepared and helpless.
My mom was in the driveway unloading groceries when she heard a commotion coming from inside the
house and came running into the kitchen to see what was going on. When she stepped into the room, she was
confronted with the scene that I was lost in: my dad holding me up by my neck, feet not touching the floor. I
remember seeing her come through the door out of the corner of my eye and hearing her screaming at him,
although I dont remember what she said. Then he let go of me and I feel into a heap on the floor. My mom
dropped to her knees beside me as I was coughing and gasping and then as abruptly as hed come, my dad
headed back to the basement; sneering, snorting and slinking off, cussing the whole way down the stairs.
__________________________________
My dad wasnt always a good father, but despite that there was really no question in my mind that he
loved us; always wanting to know more and more about our day-to-day lives as he grew older, but never giving
up much information about his own past. Perhaps he thought it didnt matter or no one usually asked because of
his aversion to providing personal details, but it always seemed to take him by surprise when his youngest, me,
would approach him in the garage while he sorted sports cards or in the kitchen while he cooked one of his
famous breakfasts and ask an endless barrage of questions about his life. This especially rang true when my
fourth-grade self approached him one morning asking questions about his favorite things: favorite food, favorite
movie, favorite color, and eventually favorite song.
Hmmfavorite song. That brings back memories. My favorite song is Riders in the Sky. Guy named
Vaughn Monroe sang that back when I was kid. Damn, I havent heard that in ages. Doubt I could even find it
anywhere now.
Most likely, he thought this conversation was made up of the mere frivolous ponderings of my
elementary mind. He had no idea that everything he said, even then, became central to my life. Every bit of
information I was able to pry from his mind was a way for me to get to know him even while he tried to keep
his distance.
About a month later, it was Fathers Day. The evening would be spent just like every other Fathers
Daya nice meal with the whole family at his favorite restaurant which changed every year, but also stayed the
same (he was a real sucker for buffets with not-the-best-but-not-the-worst food). My mom picked my sister and
me up from swim practice and we met him at his store. He hopped in the car and started the beginning of what
would have been his dramatic retelling of the day when my mom quickly shushed him, telling him that I had a
special surprise this year. She pushed in the cassette tape and cranked up the volume. As the deep, mellow voice
of Vaughn Monroe filled the car, I stared at my dad without taking a breath, just waiting for a reaction. He
smiled and said in a softer voice than Id ever heard him use, I cant believe it.
I leaned forward and kissed his cheek as a tear fell from his eye.
__________________________
Much by his own doingeating boxes of powdered doughnuts and drinking 2-liters of soda in one
sitting my dads body was slowly deteriorating from the effects of diabetes. He was angry with himself, his
loved ones and the world almost every day. His mood swings kept everyone on edge, but didnt stop us from
loving him. My mother was constantly saying, I hate that we have to walk around on eggshells, but thats just
how he is.
As the years passed and the sickness spread to the point of lost limbs and failing organs, he spent most
of his days in the basement that had been remodeled to be handicap friendly after his second amputation
surgery. The remodeling resulted in a practical apartment with an entryway into the house that didnt require
stairs. His prosthetic legs and willpower left him perfectly capable of handling the stairs most days, but then
there were other days, days where the stumps that never healed oozed with infection and kept him wheelchair
bound. Even on those days though, he put on a brave face and would tell us he was fine before getting frustrated
by our concern and yelling, Leave me the hell alone!
At night when the house was quiet and dark and he had removed his prosthetic legs, he would lie in bed
and drift off to sleep to the sounds of the TV. When he slept, he lay perfectly still occasionally letting out a
snore. Each night he was able to sleepreally sleepa peaceful look would creep over his face and make it
evident that for just a little while he was able to escape the cold, hard, everyday world in a way that only dreams
can provide.
He didnt know that most nights there was someone watching him. I couldnt help it. I would stand in
the hallway with my head peering slightly in the doorway for five minutes, ten minutes, an hour or however
long was needed to comfort me in knowing he was still there, still alive. If his breathing slowed even for a few
seconds, I would want to go shake him awake or bring him back to life, I was unsure which it was, but I never
did.
Nights when he couldnt sleep, my ritual was interrupted in an almost wordless exchange. He would see
me peer into the room and say, I see you there and I dont know what youre doing, but just come in.
I would sheepishly round the corner into his room and then stand staring at him. He would offer up a
half-crooked smile and then motion with his hand for me to come next to him. Id crawl into the king size bed
and snuggle up to him. He would spend the rest of the night flipping through the channels while I lay there with
my head on his shoulder.
Fall 2015
Ed Makowski
Daniel Scooter
A friend of mines
girlfriend
was always getting talked at
by men
while waiting for
and sitting on
the bus. At first
it felt nice
But after every day
trying to read a book
or during telephone conversations
it got old. My friend
didnt mind that other men
found his woman attractive
but it bothered him
that she was uncomfortable,
an unintended hostage,
going about her every day.
When the snow melted
he came home one day
with a brand new scooter.
Her favorite color. Said,
Lutheran Country
I remember the only
black teacher I ever had
before college
Forgot about her entirely
until the other day
somebody mentioned Mardi Gras
She was at our school
as a student teacher
only a few weeks
but it was the most fun day of 3rd grade,
learning about Fat Tuesday, the
binge and excess and
dropping and stomping on doubloons
while listening to music
and dancing, and eating
beignet donuts, then the Ash Wednesday
Lenten cleansing of
going back to other teachers classes.
The last time I saw her
Id left class for the bathroom
and she was trudging down the hallway
crying furiously, too engorged with anguish
for me to ask what was the matter
her high heels clattering unrhythm
I stood my hands hanging at my sides
as she walked past our
hanging book bags
Now I remember her and think
She could have been
any one of those details
young or Southern
or from Voodoo New Orleans
or beautiful or black
or full of song and dancing,
Warning Shot
The rattlesnake evolved
portions of its tail
to possess hard scales
attached to muscles which shake
50 times per second,
alerting other animals
who they do not desire for lunch
of their deadly venom
After centuries of this
arms-length alert
and humans responding
with shovelheads, shotguns,
and machetes,
snakes with operational rattles
are leaving the gene pool
and snakes with non-functioning tails
are procreating.
When those snakes rattle
their tails have no voice
and they strike
in silence.
Humans took a creature
kind enough to warn us
and made them more
dangerous
to ourselves
Tadpole
My six year old told me
that my dad is a tadpole.
He told me precisely,
Your dead dad is a tadpole.
My father wasnt a very humorous man
and I dont have a lot of humor
about a person
who I took
many times to the bathroom
but never fishing.
I responded
with irritation
that I had no idea
what he was saying
and he explained
that my dead dad is a tadpole
in a river
waiting to
turn into a frog, who will
hop into the forest
so we can pick him up
and hold him
and pet him
and give him kisses
the next time were in the woods
looking for a deer
to catch
together
64
Fall 2015
Roger Craik
Fall 2015
Geoffrey Gatza
words spoken movingly of loss
Spending sleepless
nights summoning
the dead, I wonder
where
the other
has gone
have
gone
I am
tired
Life is
exhausting
without you
The towels
are still
under your
pillow.
I smell
them
and
imagine
you
are
still
here.
No area
of our lives
are unaffected
by
your
death.
Fall 2015
Dawn Tefft
when your brother calls to say his fists are turning into thieves
and your niece is a sweet collection of thrushes and wrens
you should take notes so that you can understand the curve
of his reasoning
you must accept that indeed you come from a long line of wounds
return to your village and open up The Book of the Mumbling Dead
reading is
your last good way of saying your name without it hurting
your name: all the flowers that are edible
after all you come from a line of chefs
open to the page lined with
there are always
already and only
three true outcomes:
the fox to the hare, the splinter to the sea, and the unsure thing
eventually you will understand the voices of the sand in the rocks
and theorize houses as an attraction of bricks
there are so many things that don't make sense
like the timid girls wandering onto the private beach
like your body, irresolute and shaped by food
if you can accept your deceased
Fall 2015
Simon Perchik
*
You teach this rag how, fold in
its corners, edges, to close
and afterwards wood is everywhere
lies down inside you
as if there is still a place
no longer rising to the surface
though all dust is patient
smells from dried-up riverbeds
one above the other
the way these shelves
were left behind to bathe you
with roots and harbors
you teach this rag
time, cover each board
lowered slowly into a floor
that is not years later
for the first time its brightness
turning to footsteps and further.
*
Not the paper you write on
yet your arms are warmed
the way each mother all night
*
Always more stepping-stones
scented with the slow bend
in a river burning itself out
they tire easily
are lying on the grass
winding things up
though sometime the sound
comes from the small rocks
breaking off for the dead
then left where snow is expected
from your shoulder and hers
there is so little room
and she is just one person
turning back a long time
without anything to lose.
*
You approach from above
expect the sun
at your back, the sink
blinded by spray
the way every stream
is born knowing how
scrapes bottom
till its stones ignite
explode into oceans
then islands broken apart
for the skies still following
a rain thats not here
youre used to this
the same cracked cup
rinsed till its glaze
cools and its safe
to dry your arms
the floor, the walls.
*
This dirt still mimics sweat
lies down alongside, unsure
your lips would quiet it
though the finger that is familiar
probably is yours could be enough
has already learned to point
in time it will silence
even your shadow
without pulling it back down
as sunsets passing by
no longer some shoreline
unable to stop for these pebbles
struggling to rise together, take you
by the hand and without a sound
recognize the gesture.
Fall 2015
Nicholas D. Nace
from [Vic]
CHAPTER XXIX
The Spanish Prisoner
How much less in them that dwell in houses of clay, whose foundation is in the dust, which are
crushed before the moth?
(Job 4:19)
perfection parts that are not only subordinate to others but imperfect in themselves
these are questions that never can be explained and might be useless if known on
this subject providence has thought fit to elude our curiosity satisfied with granting us
motives to consolation
in this situation man has called in the friendly assistance of philosophy and heaven,
seeing the incapacity of that to console him has given him the aid of religion the
consolations of philosophy are very amusing but often fallacious it tells us that life is
filled with comforts if we will but enjoy them and on the other hand that though we
unavoidably have miseries here life is short and they will soon be over thus do these
consolations destroy each other for if life is a place of comfort its shortness must be
misery and if it be long our griefs are protracted thus philosophy is weak but religion
comforts in an higher strain man is here it tells us fitting up his mind and preparing it
for another abode
when the good man leaves the body and is all a glorious mind he will find he has
been making himself a heaven of happiness here while the wretch that has been
maimed and contaminated by his vices shrinks from his body with terror and finds
that he has anticipated the vengeance of heaven to religion then we must hold in
every circumstance of life for our truest comfort for if already we are happy it is a
pleasure to think that we can make that happiness unending and if we are miserable
it is very consoling to think that there is a place of rest
thus to the fortunate religion holds out a continuance of bliss to the wretched a
change from pain but though religion is very kind to all men it has promised peculiar
reward to the unhappy the sick the naked the houseless the heavy-laden and the
prisoner have ever most frequent promises in our sacred law the author of our
religion every where professes himself the wretch's friend and unlike the false ones
of this world bestows all his caresses upon the forlorn the unthinking have censured
this as partiality as a preference without merit to deserve it but they never reflect that
it is not in the power even of heaven itself to make the offer of unceasing felicity as
great a gift to the happy as to the miserable to the first eternity is but a single
blessing since at most it but increases what they already possess to the latter it is a
double advantage for it diminishes their pain here and rewards them with heavenly
kiss hereafter
but providence is in another respect kinder to the door than the rich for as it thus
makes the life after death more desirable so it smooths the passage there the
wretched have long familiarity with every face of terror the man of sorrows lays
himself quietly down he has no possessions to regret and but few ties to stop his
departure he feels only natures pang in the final separation and this is no way
greater than he has often fainted under before for after a certain degree of pain
every new breach that death opens in the constitution nature kindly covers with
insensibility
thus providence has given the wretched two advantages over the happy in this life
greater felicity in dying and in heaven all that superiority of pleasure which arises
from contrasted enjoyment and this superiority my friends is no small advantage and
seems to be one of the pleasures of the poor man in the parable for though he was
already in heaven and felt all the raptures it could give yet it was mentioned as an
addition to his happiness that he had once been wretched and now was comforted
that he had known what it was to be miserable and now felt what it was to be happy
thus my friends you see religion does what philosophy could never do it shows the
equal dealings of heaven to the happy and the unhappy and levels all human
enjoyments to nearly the same standard it gives to both rich and poor and the same
happiness hereafter and equal hopes to aspire after it but if the rich have the
advantage of enjoying pleasure here the poor have the endless satisfaction of
knowing what it was once to be miserable when crowned with endless felicity
hereafter and even though this should be called a small advantage yet being an
eternal one it must make up by duration what the temporal happiness of the great
may have exceeded by intenseness
these are therefore the consolations which the wretched have peculiar to themselves
and in which they are above the rest of mankind in other respects they are below
them they who would know the miseries of the poor must see life and endure it to
declaim on the temporal advantages they enjoy is only repeating what none either
believe or practice the men who have the necessaries of living are not poor and they
who want them must be miserable yes my friends we must be miserable no vain
efforts of a refined imagination can soothe the wants of nature can give elastic
sweetness to the dank vapour of a dungeon or ease to the throbbing of a woe-worn
heart let the philosopher from his couch of softness tell us that we can resist all
these alas the effort by which we resist them is still the greatest pain
death is slight and any man may sustain it but torments are dreadful and these no
man can endure to us then my friends the promises of happiness in heaven should
be peculiarly dear for if our reward be in this life alone we are then indeed of all men
the most miserable when I look round these gloomy walls made to terrify as well as
to confine us this light that only serves to show the horrors of the place those
shackles that tyranny has imposed or crime made necessary when I survey these
emaciated looks and hear those groans o my friends what a glorious exchange
would heaven be for these to fly through regions unconfined as air to bask in the
sunshine of eternal bliss to carrot over endless hymns of praise to have no master to
threaten or insult us but the form of goodness himself for ever in our eyes when I
think of these things death becomes the messenger of very glad tidings when I think
of these things his sharpest arrow becomes the staff of my support when I think of
these things what is there in life worth having when I think of these things what is
there that should not be spurned away kings in their palaces should groan for such
advantages but we humbled as we are should yearn for them
and shall these things be ours ours they will certainly be if we but try for them and
what is a comfort we are shut out from many temptations that would retard our
pursuit only let us try for them and they will certainly be ours and what is still a
comfort shortly too for if we look back on past life it appears but a very short span
and whatever we may think of the rest of life it will yet be found of less duration as
we grow older the days seem to grow shorter and our intimacy with time ever
lessens the perception of his stay then let us take comfort now for we shall soon be
at our journeys end we shall soon lay down the heavy burden laid by heaven upon
us and though death the only friend of the wretched for a little while mocks the weary
traveller with the view and like his horizon still flies before him yet the time win
certainly and shortly come when we shall cease from our toil when the luxurious
great ones of the world shall no more tread us to the earth when we shad think with
pleasure on our sufferings below when we shall be surrounded with all our friends or
such as deserved our friendship when our bliss shall be unutterable and still to
crown all unending
______________________________
The information in this email and any attachments may be confidential and privileged. Access to this email by anyone
other than the intended addressee is unauthorized. If you are not the intended recipient (or the employee or agent
responsible for delivering this information to the intended recipient) please notify the sender by reply email and
immediately delete this email and any copies from your computer and/or storage system. The sender does not authorize
the use, distribution, disclosure or reproduction of this email (or any part of its contents) by anyone other than the intended
recipient(s). No representation is made that this email and any attachments are free of viruses. Virus scanning is
recommended and is the responsibility of the recipient.
Fall 2015
Kelle Grace Gaddis
Chasing
Speaking of rainbows, todays was magnetic. Of course,
absent the rain shouldnt it be called a hallucination?
We fell over ourselves trying to get to the end of it.
The gold! You cried, Is utterly unverifiable, like Don Quixote,
except he chased windmills. I stuttered into numbness
wanting to say, Im here! in spite of the lie in it.
Something was not right about today, rainbows, or plain-bows,
arent supposed to set people on edge, yet this one did. At the closest point, you were red, a deep-hearted, open-veined
geyser. I was orange, not a spray-tan snafu, but naked,
moist, like a skinless peach. Oh how the others squealed! Their empty hands holding tight to leprechauns, delirious,
drunk on green and blue charging like donkeys in an indigo dream. Until we fell, spilling our serpents, crawling after
spare change, choked and empty things,
discarded wrappers, broken bottles, evaporated quixotic arches of ephemeral glee. There's not enough left in us to say
Goodbye. So, we lay here in the melting sun, remembering as if we were together, having left without saying a word.
Disparate Thoughts
Later well learn that the dogs foot was caught and bleeding in a trap.
For now, a murder of crows has captured my attention as they swoop at the grey-eyed goat thats eating whats fallen
under the apple tree.
Beyond the evergreens, workers have put tape around the trunks of trees,
soon well see the cars we hear rolling on the road.
I stand over the sink looking out the kitchen window, steam from the dishes obscuring your form as you walk the drive
to get the mail. Youll gather that waste of advertising and our bills
and youll come back with a letter written in your brothers hand, news from Ireland, some good, some sad.
After a bottle of wine well laugh and call ourselves country sophisticates. But, in this moment
Im alone and dreads invisible hands have entered my chest.
It is reasonable to believe that everything will be all right, even as tears fall, even with you disappearing from view,
even as I place my hand on my heart to make sure that I am alive.
Hung-over
My last glass went down
on the top note of Il Dolce Suono Lucia di Lammermoor.
From there I fell upward to the cat cloud
my mouth fur-thick, thick with furI can't even say it.
For a second the sunlit tabby arched high,
reaching for invisible stars,
I ask, Why daytime?
This diva's done, consumed by fire and sun,
over here, adrift on sweat island, miles from any ocean, Im
still looking for that note. I hear myself say, "Can't be no place"
and imagine that sky-cat's claws in motion, kneading
the air into tendrils of vapor, distilling breakfast like a good kitty.
Such a pity that I don't make sense anymore,
praying to an empty glass,
in case God helps those that fuck themselves
Fall 2015
Thomas Osatchoff
SHAKE THE FRAME
After cake thrown in face
Sitting in trembles
like a human
who resembles
a railway track
aware of itself
an animal become
super average:
severage to leverage;
reassemble an ensemble.
If only he could
affect her somehow.
If he could bow
a cold beverage
to her equator lips.
Sips of pleasure
is all between
pain dips between
a bland dinner
while the rain
treasures down
vanity stains into lumps
our wall-paper skin
pulled thin again through
our true eyes from inside.
Wanting to lie, fall, jump
into a deep lake. Baikal,
he didnt want to
shake her as much
as he needed to hide
well something below
the shaking of the frame
of their earthquake scene
underneath going by
sewerage to tip its mean
out toppling through
itself a lean mixture
of its own ridge sort
(sifting fixture)
of salt and pepper.
Shaking the shaker
untilwere able
to have our cake
and eat it, too.
NO PRAISE
1
You may always count on our dog to shake off the water.
I didnt always count on every breath in thanks. Still cant count on not one word from tanks
praise. Hearing the rank-less wind as it says be afraid to matter don't be afraid of how
it matters. Breaking the shut window through your open palm after thinking of how sure we were, how
it saysshatters intoyou're the only onethere are manybut you're the only one. Now
nothing to steer but steer itself. Across radial nerves cut. And grass on the golf course. Toward
as much as could be a daughter. How you carried that tray. How it reflected almost all the light. Trying
to cut through the bright bought pain then caught hot in numb fingers fishing for forms through water.
Sprinklers near the green. Then in the shower: sought you clean while wondering about climbing the badder.
How there's been a lot bad stuff happening. Not really worse because it's always been like that
but our hysterical representations making it seem so sometimes and maybe even actually
sometimes too how who's house was it was destroyed by that hurricane hit Louisiana or was it elsewhere
on Christmas Day? There's been a lot of hurricanes lately. But always, really. Many images of them
making us pay. The rates are what we believe them to be. Silly paces that never stay. Baking in the kitchen:
you're wearing lace and making silly faces; cats and dogs and frogs are falling from the sky
over the hills from crying stars remaking your face from far away. I stare at the aura left in your place
like it's the only diamond. Asking why as I swing at it up the fraying stairway like a broken fairway.
The crime on my mind, the gunshot. Got you different than how the grass is cut by a loud machine
but also the same. You had escaped through the sieve shiver of life. Our dog didn't shake off the water.
2
And even the moon is not certain. Floating in the pool. Distil it to will you otherwise, steal
the bent of your fingers touching me from a disordered red Pluto that lingers near the for real.
It came swiftly to me just then like a MiGunlike that old deciduous tree. The fold realization that Id be less
affected to see actual animals flying in the sky. Even if they were falling on spinning logs like the sky were a river.
Someone said no one could blame her as your keys kept smiling deliciously, jangling judiciously in hands
impossibly juggling everything like rubber bands. Even the leaves moving like keys in landfill time trying
to unlock the mystery of the list free from grocery store misery;
buying together every easy hard time piece of history
such a school of fish cannot still stand. How you walk like swimming. How you walk like my wish
carrying that plate of delish with trimmings and beverages. Still waving to me to stop my start. Your laughter.
Your hands: crafters from and of whats not. The photo of the event like a heart attack shouting your name
over again. This power never spent. Stronger than the most powerful drug of all: the raise and fall leverages
of praise shaped like our days. Shaped like sticks and what rabbits eat. Wilted, it's some averages sort
of insidious dry religious non-selective slaughter (the frame for sure that caused it all)heart like the chamber
for the bullet unravel. To claim pure againpray like a spool loosening. (Check to see how only the impossible is
certain.) If not to stop . . . to delay. Stay there. In the wreck, pray whatever be there to make choice care. Unmake
lairs. Unknot one word moist. Not one world. Not one word of praise. Every bone cracks. I don't need friends
to fray around my neck; I need my curl. I send myself soldering for the tree of life like an ancient fern from what might
have been. Call it seen what it is from isn't. Averting hurting. Cull it a wish full of it. Interstitial, make a call to a voice
thats sure through the screen on the phone again. All things springing unsewn from your scream as it genuflectsI stand
up to go deftly back in time by making it a relay. So that nothing could ever be late. To understand
the whys of these effects rippling through these shy textures, to understand the whys
of these effects rippling through these wise textures by conflating our story into no longer dealing fates
armored with sandbags to block the cries with help from the guise of locally fabricated steel armor plates.
More like a dog shaking off the water while we're getting wet and laughing in the freshness. In the new nude
an echo: nothing is impossible; nothing is a fossil. Nothing certain. And even the moon is not. Curtain. Fine.
CADRE
Lit unlit people and the white crow writ rest are dressed pellets and a framework
is a tightly-knit group of zealots looking for rest. The rest are depressed
pellets can also be small and hard balls of food, medicine, etcetera.
Something small youre glad or sad to see like a small come-get-her-rah!
metal object that is shot from a gun by a person feeling tall or small.
Doesnt matter but the pallid patter. Around the moot nest, viewing it:
Something like a tiny equestrian sun (both good and bad) originally compressed.
Dressed up like your friends in such a way that it suspends awareness to make
a trained professional who has not confessed. Whose being to hold depends
on if it can be sold. Get to the crest. Work harder! Go farther. Circuit dont short-circuit.
Burp it up to behold best and be bold but dont shirk it. Wear your bluet proof vest.
Compadre? Got your caught to tryst in? You can say God what a day. Thats okay
and litwhat we meant is flower proof not bullet proof. Blue not blew. So its okay
to bend because its okay if you blend in with the sky to belong to the same crew to mend
from some recommend. But the only scent for the rend of our vacuum is fruit perfume.
Fending from the sand, sucked up.
Theres so much money to be made in places like Iran. To have lotus, tulips.
For friends, there is nothing wrong
about wanting to move along faster to a world gone from snow, rain, heat, darkness.
Who gets their shoes fixed anymore? Amid offers of payments for acceptances . . . .
Your feet so soft, delicate and gentle: protected by the color of night. Your mouth
made for eating light
pinkish yellow things, roses. Prunus persica
the name of our winning horse from Persia. Persisting personas to cures youre
going down along the stony path to swim in the salty azure. Malty head like a pillow
filled with powder down hatched to a new noble crown no matter the weather.
What is a better way to describe what happens when glass breaks? How is glass made?
Why bother with the tombs false indemnity? Blade tongues. Grit, as it absorbs
bits of lords, our skin. Fades. I bite into yours to fit. Apple of my pores.
Fruit to suit like I bite into your black boot to wound it me. Broken teeth roots lost to the desert.
I try to bite into work but it bites into me like the greatest sea we fight to be.
It has no pod to plea from except the one from which we are coming to be. Quit,
yes we dont. See beneath. Have a heart. Blind orbs knewing it. Peach pit.
Heres a riddle: how to make a smoothie without a blender? Another kind of tender.
Outlasting repeated wolf attacks. Caspian old, gasping. The lip of your lily.
Imagine frost on your teeth in a bowl beneath somewhere.
Fall 2015
Lori Lamothe
Reading
at the Peabody-Essex Museum
On the other side of glass
a band plays marching songs
and the leaves
flicker green fire.
The poet tries to ignore what everybody else
isnttries to fasten our attention to the words;
drapes cadence
over the chandelier,
the podium, the folding chairs.
But its spring and the world shines like a new puzzle
each window pane a promise
that this is the year
were going to solve everything.
Fall 2015
Erika G Abad
Corners
Another break up to explain to another therapist, Cyn thinks as she buttons her camel coat. Break
ups tend to happen in the winter. After the holidays. Before Valentines DayGerri, Lisa, Ella and now Rhea.
As she slips her black leather gloves over her hands, she asks herself, was it the four letters in their
names? was it the snow seeping in through their shoes? These questions and their probable answers distract
her from securing her keys, her phone, her wallet and her purse before she gets to her front door. So she
turns around. Fuck time. She needs to be safe. So again, she checks the stove: touches each turned knob and
recite the date and the time; replugs then unplugs the hair straightener; empties purse and pockets until keys
are found. She does it again and again until she can, by memory, recite the status of every key, every knob
and every empty outlet.
At the door, she grabs each set of keys in either hand and tells herself, Today is Tuesday, January
twenty-third, eight a.m., and I am wearing my camel coat which, she adds looking down at her feet, match
the color of my uggs.Making sure to put each image in each crevice where anxiety wants to leak from she
explains to herself, and my purse holds my phone in the secret zipped pocket, right next to my wallet and I
am putting my keys in each coat pocket and I will hold them in between locking the door and unlocking my
car.
She repeats, Today is Tuesday, January twenty-third, eight a.m, once the front door is locked,
unlocked again to check the back door and then relocked. As she walks down the stairs of her building and
out to her car, she recalls how her past girlfriends reacted to her morning routine. Gerri would grumble at
Cyns effort to diffuse her own tension. Lisa never saw it. Ella, though, would wait outside and let her do it by
herself. Rhea would stand to the side and sigh, pursing her lips and smiling through the frustration using
high-pitched insincere forms of encouragement that Cyn would barely tolerate.
Cyn gets to the car relieved that she made it to her car without turning around because of what other
memories were lining up in her head. That, that morning, she didnt have to worry about someone elses
pity. or frustration. or passive aggressive impatience. In the end, none of them understood what she needed
to feel safe, secure and stable. She usually found that days after those relationships ended. Things returned;
messages deleted; unwanted gifts from them donated. Easing out of the parking, at least she has her senses
about her to differentiate between what Rhea did wrong in comparison to the others.
Despite the delay of rewalking her morning exit routine, she arrives to her appointment early. She
sits in her car, watching the moving cars go ahead of her and contemplates rereading the exchange she and
Rhea had before Cyn cancelled the moving truck. Cyn reabsorbs the words, the defeat that finally gave her
the release she gets at the end of every messy relationship. Rhea asks for change. Change that challenges
Cyns safety. Safety is the word she uses when trying to explain what she needs before she moves in closer
and deeper, which is why she insists on space and time. Time that translates into walls for Rhea. Rhea uses
walls to not listen, to ignore where Cyn is and where Cyn needs to stay until she can move. Rhea then writes
Cyn pushes people away for not being there right when she says they need to be there. Rhea forgets; Rhea,
like always, forgets the why behind Cyns feelings. Rhea wants to bypass, to contain, control Cyns shouts
and cries and explains about the why she pushes, the why she walks away. Rhea wants to heal and fix and
file away the childhood where bathroom corners were the safest corners for Cyn. She wants to bubble wrap
and ship out Cyns sorrow and suspicion of flashbacking to bedroom corners that were the most dangerous.
Bedroom corners that needed lights and warmth and sweet smells to get Cyn to open up, to lie down, to love,
to reluctantly yet hungrily love. Wounds and holes still unraveling inside her, pulling and leaking the more
she tries to love. Rheas words sting, even as she rationalizes the need, the survival strategy of pushing away
before she loses. Cyn wants it to stop, needs it to stop but doesnt trust how.
Walking out the car, she remembers the last sessions conversations. The ones about Rhea wanting to
move in together . The ones where Cyn wanted to do what was right, what was courageous and optimistic.
The ones about Rhea wanting the stories no one else wants. The ones where Cyn still did not know how to
share those stories, the stories that kept her heart and her body from braiding what fears and feelings they
contained in a way that could be held, warmed and melted away. The ones where Mina, her therapist,
wanted more for Cyn, wanted joy and hope and possibility, The ones where Mina, her experienced therapist,
didnt push or cry or frown or reach out to pick Cyn up from the shattered pieces she would sometimes
become. Cyn knows that much in each sessionthat her messiness could be hers.
Messiness with no reason- but trying to make sense of the pain and evade the possibility of a more
deeply punctured soul-flesh. Messiness only corners could cushion. In what they softened, Cyn, with time,
could come out of corners like love. But if wrenched, jolted from their refuge, Cyns defenses would emerge
swinging, clawing to another room, another building, another city. Those consumed corners keep asking her
to move, to seek more solace, to unravel more scars, to crawl without the claws that scratch out others who
couldnt keep more scars from coming.
Cyns shared those stories in all sorts of rooms with social workers and psychologists and
intervention workers. This time, though, she reflects on how, in all those conversations, in all the attempts to
get over and grow more, she still doesnt know how to live or move without those claws, without her arms
swinging out for the temporary cuts of space that cocoon her from the loss that wanting more than bruises,
shouts, more than broken glass and the scars words and unwanted hands still left. Not enough to look for
love without the smell of stale beer or the dark eyes or stretch marks that others would say told them love
me more than I love myself. Love me more than you love yourself so she holds them at arms length till what
they would, whatever they at the time, let her know she could be enough with or without them. Blinking
back into the present, darting her eyes between the cream-colored walls on either side of her, she finds her
preparation to tell the Rhea story reveals truth she doesnt want to admit. Rheas words remind her she is not
enough yet; not enough because more is wanted and expected, the more that keeps, still, so many who were
there longer and deeper, away.
When her body meets the crimson-framed frosted glass door of office 307, Mina Thermopolis LCPC,
her gloved hand knocks the door. She takes in a deep breath, trying to find another way into letting Rhea go
that doesnt end in her worthlessness. The door opens before she can.
When dark-skinned, curly long brown hair streaked silver Mina opens the door, Cyn is already
holding her leather gloves in her hand, smiling through what she has already accepted for herself. Hello,
Cyn says as she unbuttons her coat, how are you?
Mina steps to the side, giving Cyn room to enter the office, and answers, Im doing well, how are
you?
Cyn takes in a deep breath. Her eyes sweep the closed door to the kitchenette where Mina brews her
tea, the warm canary walls of the closet size lobby before Minas teal walled therapy office. Walking in to
the sea foam green room, whose windows fog opposite the cold winter air outside, Cyn hangs up her coat,
sits in the arm chair closest to the door as Mina follows and sits at the armchair in front of her desk. After
Mina sits down, Cyn begins, How am I, Cyn repeats, now thats a hard question to answer, and after
filling her chest with warm dry air adds, did you read the emails? Cyn meets Minas gray eyes wanting her
words to direct the day. .
Mina nods, beginning, Yes, she adds as Cyn looks down, I can see Rhea was trying to see what she
could do to keep going and you werent. You were having two conversations.
Mina waits for Cyns eyes or words. Theyre at the point of their working relationship where seconds
of silence contribute to important conversations.
As the pause becomes more pregnant than Cyn can stand, she nods. She nods because she agrees so
she says, I need to know I can hurt people, adding with a sigh, and I know that giving her what she
wanted would mean she thought that it wasI was okayand so I didnt. I wanted her to make sure she
knew that there was no going back. Cyn stops there. She looks to Mina for direction.
Minas eyebrows furrow in that way that lets Cyn know she is not making another judgment. An
expression that says no, no staring game today. Cyn changes her focus from Minas eyes and stares out at
the window wondering if the predicted snow would fall. She breathes in the foggy window, remembering
how, as a teenager when left alone, shed put her fingertips to the frost of her bedroom window, wondering
why poreless glass could turn water into ice despite the heat against it. When Cyn sees, from the corner of
her eye, Mina opens her mouth to begin asking, Could you elaborate on that? Cyn meets her eyes again
and answers.
What I mean is, Cyn takes a beat. She has let Mina look at her eyes too long. Eye contact makes her
leg twitch. What I mean is, Cyn then turns to focus on the lamp hood reaching up above between the
window and Mina, is that when I get scared; when I get paralyzed by whats going on, when too much
happens all at once, I need someone I can push away.
Mina softens her posture and, pulls out the printed exchange, Could you elaborate on that?
Cyn takes in another deep breath, remembering the routine. Panic sets in and I gotta get out of it
faster than, than when I was five, Cyn pauses, when my cousin came into me the first time; or when I tried
to get him to stop, she swallows and offers, or when mywhen others didnt stopand the only way out is
to grab on to something or fight back, right? So I begin reaching, and I know I need a healthy reach. I know I
need an available reach. So I reach but if I reach and land on the floor, crawling. Crawling till someone
finally responds and when someone finally has time, she digs her nails in the arms of her chair as she
continues, I begin pushing with words. With unanswered phone calls. With crossed arms. With downwards
stares. I push with anything that will make them go away. Because I know I know I get there because no one
was there; no one could be there; no one wanted to be there because Im not important enough. So I push; I
push despite their persistence, despite their apologies, in apologizing for whatever else came up, I push
because, for me, for all the ways I have been blamed for being weak and being in need, I cant hate myself for
that, she takes in a deep breath as she says, so its easier to hateeasier to blame someone else for not
being there, for never being there, than it is... Cyn meets Minas eyes after answering her question; the rush
of water in her chest stirs something she cant and does not want to name, than it is to forgive them.
could love me fat. So I had to stop the Prozac, she says as she adjusts her sitting position, but then the
Welbutrin kept me from sleeping, from seeing anything clearly. Withdrawal or getting off of both was
another bit of crazy. Which is why I moved here couple years ago. Found a place where the crazy wasto
find a place where I could keep busy to keep the crazy out of me. To see if keeping busy and insured could
let me let others love me without needing too much or pushing too quickly.
I see, said Mina when Cyn pauses for a few beats to catch a breath in the middle of a reflection that
speeds up her talking. So you move to see if you can find others?
Yes and no, Cyn blurts, its more than that. Back then, when getting off meds or switching, Cyn
says trying to control her heart rate, I cried a lot; I cried and then all whoever was around had to do was hug
me and tell me their story. And then it got to the point that, to keep their attention, all I had to do was cry
and get angry. All I had to do was need. Because if I didnt need, then they wouldnt be there...but then, then
I began to get angry. Angry at myself for needing. Angry at myself for suffering, for so many things. Angry
because the only people I could keep really close, I mean, really close were the ones who, looking back,
would need to save me to keep me around, Cyn explains leaning forward, gathering forces from
remembering how asking others to let her give, to let her in would result in them pulling away.
Oh, Mina catches a glimpse of Cyns confusion, contradicting her inability to need with the hunger
to be needed, which she then thinks out loud to Cyn, So you dont want to need people who dont need
you?
Cyn continues speaking without really letting Minas question sink in, I couldnt listen; I couldnt console; I
couldnt be present in a way that was what they needed; from what I could see and feel. But they insisted;
they insisted that I neededI needed to let them in to listen and heal and save and at their time, even
though I could never. I would neverCyns voice trails off and she focuses her eye on a rip she catches in
the carpet under the long sofa.
Mina, catches on Cyns frustration, bringing Cyns attention back into their presentation situation in
the room as she asks, How did that make you feel?
The need to push, to get control, Cyn answered, the need to remind them that I was only good
weak or that I was tired of being on the sidelines; I was tired of not being around for them or because of
them. When I feel like being different is the reason they cant or wont love me...I push away because I need
to love myself. Because they wont. They cant.
I hear that you feel being different is the reason family, friends, girlfriends have not been able to
love you the way you need. I wonder if and when you have told them that, just like you told me right now.
I havent, Cyn answers almost shouting. She catches herself fails to keep the anger in, I try and
then they get confused and angrier and I cant get through to them.
You have talked a lot about how you have worked to change; how youve worked to move and be
more than you feel others see when they see you and come near you. What do you feel confuses them? How
do you know you cant get through to them?
Thats easy, Cyn answers crossing her arms, They tell me they give up; they walk away; they say
Im too much; they ask for what I cant give. And thats when it happens. Thats how I get to a bad place.
With no one to hold on to, with their anger, their hate, their grief I cant rest; because I am not good enough.
Then I get in that room again. Im pinned down and cant get out. Doing everything they asked but still have
to hide, still have to be ashamed. Still have to be ashamed of what I missed. Of what they didnt understand
about the voices or the pills or the aftereffects or the clothes or any of it. And when I feel that way, when I
feel Ive done what was asked but still have to hide and wait and beg, then thats not love. Thats not self-love
and when I am in a point in my life where nothing can make it or make me better, where who I am matters
less than what I do. I push. I push. I push until it does. And pushing leads to moving. Getting out. Switching
jobs. Switching cities. Switching states. I push until getting out has to, until getting out needs to be enough.
Until I can be enough for myself.
So you have moved a lot. I remember you telling me you have lived in a few places. That the last
time you had move across the country to here, right?
Cyn nodded blinking her eyes and clenching her jaw.
And then, Mina asks leaning towards Cyn who recrosses her arms, then what?
Then I find freedom; then I can build relationships with people who can need me as little as I am
allowed to need them; then I can do anything. Then I can love myself because I have time.
You have time for what?
Time, Cyn says feeling a tear slip down dangle on her chin, to just, she chokes on her words as the
tears line up under her eyes, because Id love to just
Fall 2015
Olivia Deborah Grayson
The Smoking Mirror Will Express Things As They Are
At 13, you will start hating your body;
it will be perfectly normal, horrible,
& spontaneous.
Fortunately, you will have your first
Cigarette on the cracked calcium
Carbonate of your bathroom floor-A Camel, that promises to never
Get on your nerves.
At 17, you will date a much older
Man to whom you will lose your
Virginity; it will sting, then pound,
Like a cymbal falling on your foot forever.
When you complain, he will say,
I've been trying to find a nectarine
in this town for approximately
290 Hours!*
There will be boys your age you want to kiss.
When you are 19, e.e. cummings
Will die: Lets live suddenly without
Thinking [!]*
You will switch to Tareytons because
You will be hungry for flavor.
Fall 2015
Patrick Chapman
Juniper Bing
Frost cracked on the street outside like a crme brle gone wrong. The forecast was for a sub-zero night, the kind of
weather that defeated armies. Jeffrey Bing did not want to leave his warm office but he had made an appointment.
In the lift to the foyer, he caught sight of a particularly ugly guy. Here was a fat loser in a pea coat and a tartan scarf
over a Louis Copeland suit. A morlock dressed as a womble. Jeffrey blinked at his own reflection and looked away. He
watched the numbers light up in sequence until the doors parted and he stepped out. There was no concierge. The
consulting firm Jeffrey worked for had signed the lease in anticipation of a new city quarter that was no longer
expected. From his sixteenth-floor cubicle, the view was of this buildings stillborn twin. He liked the austere beauty of
that skeletal tower, its floors but no walls giving it the aspect of something unearthed.
Jeffrey shivered as he left the building. He had taken the lift because there would be enough stairs later. He knew
he was not classically fit. Too lumpy, he over-existed. Smoking did not help him lose weight, though it had given him
the chest complaint that now sawed away at his innards.
The previous morning he had felt a little weaker in the abdomen than usual and he made an appointment to visit
Doctor Stone, who would not be surprised to see him, for Jeffrey was always popping around. Stone was himself a
man of considerable girth, and appeared to have both a scalpel intellect and a blunt manner. That could be tricky. The
doctor didnt do denial. He was a denial denier. Whenever Jeffrey grumbled up to his clinic, Stone would trot out the
customary advice to shed a few kilos but he seemed disinclined to lead by example.
Jeffrey got a tram to Mayor Street and crunched down to the clinic. There were no other patients waiting and the
receptionist told him to take a seat. After ten minutes, the doctor popped his head out.
Bing.
Jeffrey put down the copy of Irish Tatler in which he had been browsing the social pictures at the back. It was in this
column, many years before, that he had first seen Juniper. Now he looked for her there. These days it was the only
place he was likely to find her.
He got up and followed the doctor.
In the surgery, Stone smiled and shook his patients hand. Take off your coat and sit down. Theres a good fellow.
Without speaking, Jeffrey did as he was told.
Doctor Stone sat and called up Jeffreys record on the computer, studied it for a minute, then turned to him. Now
what can we do for you?
Chest infection, I think. Jeffrey was surprised to hear that his voice sounded like that of a well man. His throat felt
as though he had swallowed a very small jellyfish that refused to go down.
Doctor Stone looked smug. He rubbed his hands together and stood up.
Get up on there for me, he indicated the exam table.
Jeffrey did as he was told.
The doctor checked his pulse and shone a light down his throat, then into his ears, and listened to his breathing
with a stethoscope. This routine made Jeffrey feel properly inspected. Hed had to pull his shirt up and the doctor had
seen his stomach, its furry corrugations.
Chest infection, the doctor said, and sat at his computer again while Jeffrey got off the table and tucked his shirt
into his trousers.
The patient was relieved that there was actually something wrong with him.
Plus, the doctor continued, youre unfit. Otherwise, everything is fine. All the signs point to stress, except the chest
infection, which points to cigarettes. You can sit down again.
A cold mass settled inside Jeffrey as he sat.
Doctor Stone made out a prescription for antibiotics and cortisone. He wrote a request for blood tests. Tell me this.
Do you ever intend to have children?
No. This approach was new.
Are you going out with anyone?
Not that Im aware of.
Be serious. You might want to have children one day, right?
No.
Work with me here. What age are you now? Forty?
Thirty-four.
Right. So let me tell you this. Say you do have kids, if you dont give up the fags you wont be around to see them
grow up.
Jeffrey deflated a little. Was that another smug look on the doctors face or still the same one?
How much would you go through in a day?
Twenty, max. Jeffrey fidgeted.
Well, as I said
I should be around for my children.
No. They should be around for you.
Excuse me?
Doctor Stone leaned forward an inch. Let me put a little scenario to you. Youll meet some lovely woman and youll
have kids. Then youll work your considerable butt off to provide a home and education for the little rug-rats, so youll
never see them as theyre growing up. But then when theyre finished school and youre retired, then will you get to
see them? I dont think so. When you should be able to enjoy the company of your children, youll be only a photo on
the wall. Why is Daddy a Polaroid, Mammy? they will ask.
And heres the kicker. Here comes the bad news. Say your wife is still a relatively young woman, still relatively
attractive, right? Now, to coin a phrase, its a truth universally acknowledged that a youngish, good-looking woman in
possession of a small fortune in life assurance must be in want of a husband. So whats to stop some Johnny-comelately moving in and taking over everything youve built up? You see what Im saying here? Your wife wont be
sentimental about it, believe me. Shell soon be sleeping with some randomer in your bed as if you had never existed.
Hell get the benefit of everything you sacrificed for the sake of your family. And all because you didnt give up
smoking now. Doctor Stone sat back again and folded his arms like a genie.
Christ.
No, think about it. Sure, shell look back on you fondly but youll be dead. Its up to you. If you dont mind having a
short life, go ahead and smoke. But if you do, give up now.
Iwill.
That said, I suggest you dont give up until you really want to.
But
You have to want to, and when youre ready, heres a little plan to stick to. Doctor Stone clapped his hands
together. Make a list of the reasons youre giving it up. Lung cancer. Chest infections. Poor circulation in the wedding
tackle. Take out that list every time you feel like a smoke. Save up the money youd be spending on the fags for six
months, as a little incentive. Tenner a day? After half a year, when your physical addiction is gone, youll have a nice
tidy sum. Take that money and blow it on something for yourself. A new sound system. A weekend in Paris. An hour
with a very good hooker. Something fun. You have to treat yourself.
I thought thats why I was paying you.
The doctor didnt hear him. He was concentrating on his spiel. Then you can enjoy being more than a sperm
donor, and a lump sum when youre dead.
What else is there?
Doctor Stone smirked. Youve got me, there.
Jeffrey coughed and tasted blood.
The doctor watched him with mild interest as the rattle died down. He seemed to be waiting for a decision from his
patient.
Jeffrey sighed, straightened in his seat and pulled on the lapels of his jacket. Look here, doctor. None of what you
say is relevant to me. There was someone once but only that one. No one has touched me since, not intimately, which
is just as well. Women find me revolting, and theyre right. Men too. So Im sorry but the scenario you paint is one I
have no real interest in pursuing.
Jeffrey smiled uncertainly. Tears formed, uncalled-for, in his eyes.
Jesus, man. Doctor Stone put out a hand and almost took Jeffreys but hesitated then withdrew. He picked up the
prescription and the request form and gave them to the patient, who took the paperwork and folded it into his pocket.
They both stood up at once, moved by the same weary spirit.
Call me in a week or two after you get those tests done. The doctor said. In the meantime, get some exercise and
put some bloody elbow grease into it. Man up and lose the flab.
Jeffrey felt a new stillness. Theres something else. I think I want to talk to you about something else. I just
mentioned there was someone, once.
Doctor Stone frowned. Sorry, Jeff, but youll have to make another appointment.
But I really need to
Ask the girl on the desk, theres a good man.
Jeffrey nodded slowly then turned for the door and the doctor stepped in front of him to hold it open. Stone held
his other hand out to shake but Jeffrey didnt take it.
Outside, the pharmacy next door to the clinic had just closed. He stood in its doorway to light a smoke, so that the
wind would not thwart him, then he walked off slowly, determined to enjoy this final cigarette.
The chill in the air made his bones feel exposed like a sculpture made of X-rays.
At the tram stop a young couple, wrapped in fleeces, generated an aura of being newly in love. They held hands
and played casually with each others gloved fingers. Jeffrey regarded them with pity. One day, my friends, all this will
not be yours.
He got the LUAS to Spencer Dock and crossed the road. A slice of light, his office floated above in the dark. He
strode past it and over to the aborted apartment building. There he found a gap in the perimeter fence that he had
made two nights previously, when hed broken in to have a look around. He pulled it wide and squeezed in. Despite
the state of his chest, he ran wheezing to the door that he knew would give. Now he started up the service stairwell,
huffing all the way, one step after another.
Three times on his climb, he stopped for a breather, the air becoming icy in his lungs. It took him ten minutes to
reach the sixteenth level, where he wandered out into the frost-covered concrete floor of what would have been a
master bedroom. There was fluid in his throat now and a rising pain in his arm. The wind slapped his face and he
surrendered to the assault so that he no longer felt it. The exertion of his climb had dulled his perception. This room
had the city for walls but he barely saw it.
Jeffrey undid the buttons on his pea coat and shucked it off. That felt better. He dropped his tartan scarf. At the
edge of the concrete floor he stopped. Jeffrey looked over at his office and concentrated his vision but could see no one
there.
After shaking off one shoe then the other, he bent and rolled his socks down and tucked them into the shoes and
god, how the cold stabbed up his bare feet into his shins, how his body hollowed itself out.
The doctor had said to sit so Jeffrey did as he was told. He sleepwalked back into the almost-room and sat down in
the centre of it. His suit felt too thin against the icy air.
He could not feel his fingers any more. Nor could he now feel his lips, one lifting from the other, even as a word, a
weightless word released at last, evaporated through them. Juniper. The name hushed into the gloom of this
darkening city.
The sounds of night itself were becoming faint now. The sirens and bells faded, the shrieking of gulls flying level
with him grew distant, and the jagged music of the city softened into one brittle note that played out on the air and was
gone.
Fall 2015
Jennifer R. Valdez
Dara was overjoyed at the fact that Jimmy. Just asked us. To hang out. But I did not share her
enthusiasm. I was not about the play groupie for the night, especially considering I had a boyfriend.
Whats wrong? Dara asked, noticing my lack of zeal.
I think I should call Nate to see how he feels about it. I stepped outside to make the call and told
him about the invitation at hand. Well probably just hang out for another hour, I said. He surprisingly had
no reservations and told me to have fun.
Dara and I sat at the bar as the crowd dwindled down. Still no drummer. Jimmy came over to tell us
they were going to a bar called Fontanas down the street, so we made our way to the exit. Then I saw him.
Oh! Dara screeched. She wanted to meet you.
He looked at me, reached out his hand and smiled. Hi, Im Ben.
Jen, I replied, taking his hand. He had a boyish quality to him with his soft brown eyes and quirky
smile. He had curly dirty-blonde hair that he probably didnt comb. You could run your fingers through it
and itd be all the same. Tattoos peaked out from his sleeves and crept up his collarbone. I wanted to see
them all.
When we got to the bar, the band arrived with a trail of girls behind them. I told Dara we could only
stay for an hour. As soon as we grabbed a seat, Ben came to sit with us and started small talk. Dara and Ben
bonded over being Southeast London kids and I sat there mesmerized by his accent then joined the
conversation after he mentioned they had just performed at Coachella.
Im from Coachella, I said.
Really? What brings you to New York? Ben asked.
Grad school. Im getting my Masters at Sarah Lawrence in Creative Writing. Nonfiction.
No way, he said. Thats what I went to college for. I wanted to be a journalist.
We talked about writing and music and how we got to where we are now.
So do you ever think youll go back to California? he asked.
Well, it depends on a few things.
Like what?
Like if my work will transfer me.
And if what we talked about earlier happens, right? Dara asked.
flushed and we all laughed, nearly falling over. It was an epic snapshot, which Dara let Ben keep to
remember us by.
Just before Ben left we took a photo together and I wrapped my arms around him like we were old
friends. Dara and I jumped on the subway around 4am with nothing more than a good story to tell about a
boy well never see again.
Its a shame Jimmy turned out to be a slag, she said. And I think Ben kind of likes you. But you
have Nate.
Yeah. But Id take London over California any day, I said.
Dara looked at me in complete shock.
Im kidding!
Fall 2015
Ronnie Sirmans
Younger Addictions
Nightly Prayer
Fall 2015
Trevor Thinktank
what in the world what in the world what in the world what in the world what in the world what in the
world what in the world what in the world are wordsare wordsare wordsare words are words are wordsare
words what in the world what in the world what in the world what in the world what in the world what in
the world what in the world what in the world words are words are words arewords are
# Stanza 5# Stanza 5 # Stanza 5# Stanza 5 # Stanza 5, Line 3 , Line 3, Line 3, Line 3
But I still believe I still believe I still believeI still believeI
still believe I still believeI still believeI still believeI still
believeI still believeI still believe I still believe
I still believe I still believeI still believeI still believe I still
believeI still believeI still believeI still believeI still
believeI still believe
PagePage
PagePage
Fall 2015
Mae Carter
Learning Love
Dad palmed the fuzzed skull of his two hours
old daughter like he was picking the ripest
cantaloupe at the grocery. He cradled her head, listened
to the hear the thuds of her inner workings, sniffed, sniffed again,
full of a childs hunger for something immediate,
full of thirst for that too fragile body, the soft skeleton
still hardening, his chest full as a ripe fruit and
as bruised.
Apocrypha
The Black-eyed Susans planted last spring watch me through my bedroom window. They can see the bible
never opened, the erotica under my pillow for when the house falls asleep and night spreads its mercy. The
flowers see to the pit of me, see back to the time freshman year when Mary snuck into my room, rum on her
breath, to kiss me in the blackness, and we undressed, her nakedness a silver-blinding annunciation that
knocked me kneeling. Mary of the slight thigh and doe-down, Mary, her tongue to my clavicle, my calves,
her tongue unraveled at the root, her tongue finally unhinged, flex and velour muscle, mapping out
forbidden- Mary, the thrilling dark of her eye staring at me as if she knew me, as if she knew exactly what I
was.
Autopsy
To witness; to be present at the very end,
to drag a scalpel down your torso
to deliver your lung, to know that strange grey
fishs blind prerogativeto stay afloatto insert;
to interlace my fingers through the shipwrecked
lattice of your ribs, darling, to pull you to me like I never
could in life, to dive into your Challenger Deep, openeyed despite the thick bluing of your blood, to have; to hold
each organ to my ear, to hear your conchhearts last private
incantation which is a frenzied beating divorced
from my will, your will, oh to finally know you, to get close
enough to hear the last resounding of our love.
Insect
The new pastor talks and talks about gays
and pagans going to hell, about the overwhelming
love of God, about Gods far traveling
heart alighting in all believers.
There is a red carpet leading to the pulpit.
It is the straight path to Jesus heart.
To me, a heart is a winged insect, boneless,
bulbous, anyones to catch, thorax filmy,
slick as an eyeball, full of a bittersweet
juice that stains, sustains.
The night before baptism, I dream
I am walking the red path, the pastor
on his knees in the baptismal pool.
Im hungry, so hungry, for his manic
pulse. I take his chin, I bring him
to my face. His bitter coffee
breath fills my mouth, his quick
tongue, a furred moth, quivers
against my palate. I bite
down, freeing his tongue, hot clean blood
tar black and swirling wild
down my throat, filling my chest so that deep
in me something awakens, thrumming and
desperate for light. Under the water,
the pastors droning prayers a muffled song
to burst my fatted heart.
When he pulls me up,
I throw myself against his hard beating chest.
He pushes me away, I learn to hate.
Fall 2015
Sandra Kolankiewicz
Neck
Lets begin with the neck, how it has changed
front and back but still supports the head, bone
spurs momentarily stopping you at
times when you turn to look. Not about how
collum is not equal to cervixthat
on which your head is perched is not the same
as the neck of an organ. Or is it,
head the most confounding organ of all?
No wonder the flattened disks, collapsing
spine if this has been the sole path of thought
into and out of the brain, roadway for
peptides and insistent organisms
that arent supposed to be there. Oh, blood brain
barrier, how we wish authorities
would defend your borders, create some back
up line of protection when nature fails,
the narrow opening from shoulder to
stem like a flexible tunnel letting
our enemies in and secrets out as
if nothing is meant to stay in place, all
boundaries absurd, column held up just
by collar bones and sinew, muscles the
only reason you can hold yourself high.
Up the Only
Since the comet, I no longer stand the
taste of things, canned nor frozen, the street signs
written in Chinese or Arabic, up
the only direction, there being just
one top where the roads converge. So we keep
climbing, occasionally a face to
wave at, someone elses journey to the
same destination. More than anything,
we think of how wanting a baby to
carry would then alter the nature of
the days, as would a dog trotting beside
us, though we know neither. Even when the
mind is made up, we think nothing happens,
the day slow to rise, the night too far off
to make a difference. Thats when we know
someone put a stone in our shoe for us
alone, come to understand the stone is
all that matters. For this were verbose on
events that dont count, believe if we go
barefoot well somehow avoid the journey.
Well, Of Course I Am
Well, of course I am beautiful now even to
myself though that still takes practice: all
that forgetting becoming remembering.
When you hit it right, you express the
reason they build driving ranges one on
top of the other and charge by the hour.
How odd to have passed a week without
spending money though I just jettisoned in
on an express, embarking unto the
expedition of the most important question:
what has become of my lettuce? After all,
who else is expected to water but the one
who planted the seeds, and I have been
gone a week. Look. Lets switch
metaphors. After all, were in the 21st
century, and if you think anything can be
sustained, you live in a homogenous town
where the streets are even paved with
bricks. Your neighbors still care enough to
walk across the street to help someone.
Love Poem
I looked and
so you will
disappear.
Fall 2015
Susan Wiedel
Concetta
Sitting on my host sisters bed, I was excited to finally be able to Skype with my mom and my brother David. I
looked at the Andes Mountains through the bedroom window as I waited for the connection to reach New Freedom,
Pennsylvania. Notoriously slow and unreliable, the Internet made these calls to home rare.
When the ring, ring finally stopped, I turned my face towards the screen and saw my moms and Davids
faces in the warm yellow living room. I felt relief that they were in my presence again: their faces, on a computer
screen surrounded by the llama wool blankets on my bed, were a reminder of my life in the United States. I had been
living in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Although it felt good to see home, I did not want to be reminded that my six weeks in
Cochabamba continued to dwindle.
For the past three days they had postponed this Skype session for a variety of reasons: Mom had to work late;
David had plans with friends. We had some catching up to do. I asked about work. Busy, as usual, said Mom. An
accountant at a local accounting firm, my mom never had a shortage of work. David continued to spend most of his
days playing League of Legends with his friends. Not much seemed to have changed back home.
How is Aunt Concetta? I asked. One thing about going home that I most looked forward to was a visit with
Aunt Concetta. I had tried to see her during the week between the end of the semester and my flight to Bolivia, but she
window. I got up, closed the curtains, slapped the laptop shut, and buried myself in the pile of llama blankets.
I didnt even get to say goodbye.
www
Dr. Foerster's conclusion is that Italians should stay at home, and that conditions should be improved
so as to keep them thereIt should be a paramount policy of the Italian government to remove those
disabilities, social and economic, which have led to the depopulation of entire regions of Italy and the
ejection into a mainly unreceptive world of masses of predestined derelicts.Dr. Dino Bigongiari,
Professor of Italian at Columbia University
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the port city of Baltimore, Maryland was known as the Other Ellis Island. By
some estimates, Baltimores port claimed the second largest number of immigrants to walk off the boat. Poles,
Russians, Czecks, Ukrainians, Germans, and Italians arrived every year by the thousands. To most, Baltimore was the
beginning of the end, the first stop of many before reaching their final destinations; but for some Southern Italians
(especially Sicilians), Baltimore was the last stop. Vincenzo Frettita DAnnaAunt Concettas grandfathermade the
trip from the town of Cefal, Sicily to Baltimore in 1900, when he was just 18 years old.
Cefal, like Baltimore, was on a coast and therefore had a visible fishing industry, but thats about where the
similarities end. Looking at up-to-date photos of the ancient town, which is situated between turquoise water and the
edge of a behemoth rock, I feel as if I would be less inclined to leave than my Sicilian predecessors were. But the
Cefal of their day shares little resemblance to todays touristy, Mediterranean paradise. The agricultural industry that
the people of southern Italy so depended on could no longer support southern Italian families; drought, disease and the
misuse of land brought agricultural production almost to a halt. Animosity between the northern and southern regions
of Italy did not help matters. Not content with a divided nation, northern Italians had been attempting to unify the
country since the 1860s. The North, with modernized and industrialized economies, contrasted to the South, with
almost feudal-style systems of landownership and laborers that left little room for middle class growth. In order to
unify the Italian states, Northern Italians wanted to bring civilization to a South that to them was a perverse realm of
social disorder and moral degradation in which human existence cannot be conceived of according to the standard
measure of European civilization.
So instead of remaining in an Italy where their place of birth made them socially inferior and economically
paralyzed, thousands of Italian immigrants like Vincenzo DAnna decided to give life in the United States a go. Like
many other southern Italians, Vincenzo came to the Port of Baltimore in search of better economic opportunity, and
while other natives of Cefal also settled in Baltimore, no family joined Vincenzo on his journey.
Luckily, Vincenzo did not get caught up in the masses of predestined derelicts. On the contrary: he sold
produce at the Lexington Market, where he would chastise customers for squeezing his tomatoes too hard; he found a
wife, Rosaria Marguerite Glorioso (a first-generation Sicilian-American whose parents hailed from Cefal); he had,
with Rosaria Marguerite, seven sons and two daughters: Maria, Pete, Sam, Carmen, Joseph, Vincent, Angelo, Anthony
and Concetta.
The DAnnas lived in a row house at 503 W Mulberry Street, in downtown Baltimore. Although Vincenzo only
completed his education through the 8th grade, he was hard-worker who took pride in his work and became known as
the Tomato King in Maryland. Vincenzos success as a businessman allowed him to buy his own house (in 1930 the
house was worth about $10,000 dollars).
Less than a block away, at 515 W. Mulberry Street, lived Vincenzo Alascio, another Italian immigrant, who
arrived in Baltimore in 1910. Along with his wife, Minnie, who emigrated from Italy in 1908, he had three sons and
three daughters: Shaif, Anthony, Celia, Joseph, Theresa and Samuel. According to the 1930 U.S. Federal Census,
Vincenzo Alascio had no years of education and occupation; despite this, his industry of work was denoted as Fruit.
In large Italian families, frequent repetition of names is an unavoidable, albeit sometimes confusing,
phenomenon. (In fact, the more generations that separate you from your ancestors, the more confusing it gets.) So
Concetta (daughter of Vincenzo and Rosaria) is the aunt of my Aunt Concetta (who was actually my great aunt).
Two large Italian families with first-generation American children who live less than a block away from each
other on the same street are bound to cross paths at some point; and cross paths they did.
Pete DAnna grew into the body of a stereotypical swarthy Sicilian man: a full head of dark, greased back hair,
a strong jaw, and skin that appeared darker than it actually was because of his thick arm hair. With his brothers Joseph,
Carmen and Angelo, Pete worked as an executive at Mars Supermarket (named after the airplane the Mars Flying
Boat), which Joseph founded. Petes area of expertise was the produce department. In his time off, Pete enjoyed
spending time with women.
Theresa Alascio was very concerned with appearances; her clothing always reflected the style of the day. She
had attended school, but she was not the brightest flower of the bunch. By the age of 18, Theresa became the young
bride of Pete DAnna, and gave him their first child: a daughter named Rosaria. Four years later came another daughter,
Concetta. And a couple years later, a son named Vincent. Together they lived at 314 Greene Street, about seven blocks
west from their families on Mulberry Street, until 1948, when Theresa and Pete got a divorce.
www
My first memory of Theresa Grandmom DAnna is from my fourth birthday party. I sat at the oval wooden table in
the kitchen with my brothers; surrounding us were many elderly, unfamiliar faces. But the most distressing to me was
that of Grandmom DAnna; although she was in her 70s, her concern for looks had never faded. Her long hair was
dyed bright red; matching her hair were her lipstick and manicured nails; light-blue eye shadow dusted her eyelids; her
customary high-heeled shoes made her tightly-panted legs seem intimidatingly long.
As we sat there waiting for the cake candles to be lit, she thrust her face in mine, touched my hair and squeezed
my cheek. Up close, I could see her eyes slightly drooped with age and her slightly slanted smile. Disturbed, I began to
cry.
Her kids and grandkids were used to it. As children, they would get their cheeks pinched and their faces kissed
and their stomachs full of completely homemade pizza (hers was the best). All Grandmom DAnna wanted was to love
and be lovedand look good doing it.
For the last 30 years of her life, Grandmom DAnna went out dancing every week with her boyfriend Mr.
Howard. (She never married Howard after her ex-husband Pete died; as long as she remained unmarried, she received
his social security payments.) On weekends, Howard and Theresa would get all dolled-up and go to a big band club and
dance. At family weddings, Howard spun Theresa so that her body was parallel to the ground (a photo of them from
Theresas grandsons wedding verifies this fact).
She died of a heart attack at the age of 81. At her viewing, her bright red hair sat perfectly coiffed on her
shoulders; the shiny casket covered the bottom half of her body. As a four-year-old, I did not understand the situation in
which I found myself: an odd smelling room with that scary red-haired lady lying down in a box.
I did recognize her daughter (my great aunt) Concetta from the throng of well wishers. She kneeled down in
front of me and reached out her arms to me. Please give me a hug, Susan. She was my mom. Please, I need a hug from
you. Her voice slightly quivered and her eyes filled with water. I shyly retreated into the protective folds of my
mothers skirt.
www
As a little girl, Concetta grew up without a father in her life. As a young wife, Concetta lived in a once-but-no-longercomfortable house in the DAnnas Villaa house long neglected by her relatives and infested with ratswhile her
husband, Ken DeCrette, was in the service. After Ken returned home, he and Concetta bought a small one-story house
at 3456 Liberty Parkway. As a new mother, Concetta took in her father and two half-siblings, Pete Jr. and Patty, after
her stepmother tried to hurt them in a drunken rage (Concetta was only about 21 at the time).
I remember every second of it, said Patty, Concettas half-sister. It was a Thursday night. Before we went
over there, I was home with my father and my mothermy mother was an alcoholic. She was drunk at dinner, and she
threw a glass at my dad and then she pulled out a knife; he got us out of there. When we got to Cettas, The
Untouchables was on TV. The next day was my birthday, and John F Kennedys inauguration day, and it was snowing.
We went out that night in the snow. Saturday, I was supposed to have a birthday party at home, but Cetta had it at her
house and all my friends came over.
Ken, Concetta and their daughter lived in the small one-story house. After Ken and Concetta had three more
children, nine people (including Pete, Pete Jr. and Patty) were living in a two-bedroom house. Butting-heads were all
too common. Daddy tried to rule the roost, but that wasnt his job, remembered Patty. Daddy was tough; hed tell
Cetta what to cook, and if she didnt get it right hed yell and scream; they had had just about enough.
But they all managed to stay together. Pete expanded the tiny kitchen, and refurbished the attic and basement
into bedrooms and extra living space (as a child, I was unaware that the basement playroom was my great-grandfathers
domain back-in-the-day); he taught Concetta how to cook. Family dinners were a daily occurrence.
Concetta absolutely adored her father. She used to say, Nobody loves Daddy like I do; nobody loves their
father like I do. She admitted later on that she raised Pete Jr. and Patty for her father, to have her father in her life
again. Patty believed She would do anything for him, even raise his children.
According to Patty, Pete did not know how to be a father; he could not easily show affection for his kids. She
remembers him crying only twice. One night before we broke up as a family and my mother threw him out of the
houseshe threw his clothes out in the snowand I saw him crying when he had to leave us. The second time was after
he returned from the hospital where his eldest daughter, Rosaria, died of cardiac arrest.
Like her father, Concetta had a hard time expressing herself; even with her kids, it was hard for her to show her
emotions. Only years later, after her grandson Aaron died young of cancer, was she more outwardly loving; the latter
the sweet great-aunt who lived in the little white house on Liberty Parkwaywas the only Concetta I ever knew.
www
I knew Concetta as a woman with whom I shared some genes; I knew her as a woman who had my photograph on one
of her living room shelves; I knew her as a woman who gave me love that I didnt quite understand, and also happened
to make incredible pasta (that for some reason she called basta).
In most respects, Concettaand by default my Italian predecessors she representedwere strangers to me. My
dad never told me stories about his dance-loving Grandmom DAnna; Concetta never told me about the struggles of her
father or the achievements of her grandfather Vincenzo, the Tomato King of Maryland. So when I found myself
ambling around the massive Loudon Park Cemetary350-acres, to be exactwith my dad, looking for Aunt Concettas
grave, I felt out-of-place. The cemetery did not have a map or guide to help point us to her, and my dad could not
remember the graves location from the funeral. The grass had been cut recently, and it had rained earlier that morning.
We had been walking in circles, looking at graves, for the past 45 minutes. My gray canvas shoes had become green;
the multi-colored flowers in my hand had not yet wilted due to the gray moisture in the air.
I was beginning to give up; there is only so much death you can look at in one morning. Frustrated, I wandered
into another section of graves: nuns, priests, firefighters, and eventually servicemen. Each branch of the military had a
flag flying on a flagpole. Below them rested men and women distinguished by partially grass-covered plaques. Flowers
at my side, I perused the rows of names and dates. In the second row near the grassy edge, I was surprised to find
Kenneth Lloyd DeCrette, 1937-2003.
Hey Dad, I said. I found Uncle Ken.
You did? You found her!
what? I did not understand.
She was buried with Uncle Ken, my dad said. That is how most servicemen and their wives are buried. Did
you not know that?
I cleared some of the wet grass covering the bottom half of the plaque with my free hand. It read, Concetta
Theresa DeCrette, 1939-2014.
Fall 2015
BlazeVOX Interview with John Tranter on his forthcoming book Heart Starter
And the rhymed sonnets often take off from Rimbauds famous sonnet Voyelles,which deals with
the supposed colours of the vowels, though with a more variegated palette in my case. I mean, there
are millions of colours, arent there? Taupe, for example, and bisque, and cadet blue And I often
borrow his rhyme scheme. I should note that Rimbaud chose to sequence the vowels AEIUO, not
AEIOU as is usually the case in French and in English, perhaps to coincide with the Biblical quote I
am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end.
If you had to convince a friend or colleague to read this book, what might you tell
them?
I would say Youd be crazy not to read this wonderful book! It will change your life! Okay, if you
read this book, Ill give you a hundred dollars!
Tell me about the last literary reading you attended.
Gee, there have been so many, from Stockholm to Saint Marks Place the last one was at Sappho
bookstore in Glebe here in Sydney, packed with crowds of keen young people reading and listening.
It was like the old days: wonderful. Among many other good poets, I read a general selection of my
poems and people seemed to like them. When I choose poems to read out, I have learned (from my
experience as a radio producer) to choose ones that people will get at one hearing, because thats
the only chance they have to hear the poem. Some of my poems are quite complex and invite you to
look back through the printed version and think a bit about all the complexities and references in the
writing: they dont work at all at a reading, as people just dont get them. I have found that audiences
are sometimes shy; they dont always let you know how they feel. They usually just sit there. They
might be amazed and thrilled, or they might be bored to death and waiting for you to get off. You
cant tell.
That depends on the review. If its stupid, I laugh and laugh. I wish I could say I did as Liberace said
he did with bad reviews: he claimed he cried all the way to the bank. Alas, theres no money in
poetry, so I only go to the bank to withdraw my paltry savings. But if the review is clever and
considered and thoughtful and devastating, I feel terrible, and like most writers I remember the
insults for years. Isnt that awful? Imagine being that reviewer and knowing that something you
wrote made someone feel terrible for years. Youd shoot yourself.
Which writer would you most like to have a drink with, and why?
Frank OHara, I guess. I never met him, but I hear he was a wonderful gossip, and gossip is a natural
accompaniment to a drink. And Elizabeth Bishop, because I believe she was funny and clever and a
bit shy. And Barbara Guest, whom I met once, because she could be so beautifully ascerbic. And John
Ashbery Ive had a few drinks with John, and hes great fun and extremely intelligent.
What's the biggest mistake you've made as a writer?
Oh, becoming a poet. I should have been a banker, like T.S.Eliot, or an insurance man, like Wallace
Stevens.
What's the worst advice you hear authors give writers?
Write about what you know. Write dangerously. Join my creative writing class. God, theres a lot of
bullshit around. Is it getting worse, or am I imagining it?
What scares you the most?
Have you read Nineteen Eighty-Four? Do you think Im going to tell you? What do you think I am,
crazy? But for the sake of this interview, I might say that I am afraid of public speaking, as most
people are. I used to have a terrible stammer, and I am always afraid it might come back when I least
expect it, and humiliate me. And here I am, a poet, with hundreds of public readings under my belt! I
must be crazy!
I dont think I want the world to know anything particularly juicy about me. I could say that I was
raised in a harem by a pair of lesbians and had seventeen lovers by the time I was twelve years old
and I dont remember much about the experience because I was generally stoned on opium most
days, but none of that would be true. The reality involves an isolated farm in the Australian bush, an
agricultural high school, a few aborted courses at the University of Sydney and a year on the hippie
trail through Europe and Asia and lots of hashish, but that may not be entirely true either. As for
what the world wants to know, I really dont care: as long as they all buy my book Im happy. I could
say theres more mystery in a well-turned rhyme (Degas and gay bar, for example, or rescue and
fescue, both of which make an appearance in my book) than in a drug-crazed night in a transvestite
brothel, but that may not be quite true either.
END
Fall 2015
BlazeVOX Interview with Eileen Tabios
Awareness. Education. Mindfulness. So when an idea flits by, I am able to discern it and (if I like the idea)
then manifest it.
Where does this book fit into your career as a writer?
Nowhere. I have a lifenot careeras a writer.
(A life approximated by http://eileenrtabios.com )
If you had to convince a friend or colleague to read this book, what might
you tell them?
I might say, If you read my book, you will discover something about yourself.
Thats a statement, of course, that can be applied to any book. But since, as the author, I choose to answer
your question in this way, theres an added significance that might intrigue a potential reader.
Tell me about the last literary reading you attended.
It was a reading/panel featuring various Filipina writers. Each writer discussed or presented their works. Its
always satisfying to connect with other Filipina writers; many are writing wonderful works. But my favorite
reaction was from an audience member who expressed gratitude that I expanded the notion of Filipina
writer. She apparently had felt disconnected to the Filipina community as she herself was writing works
that didnt fit in with what many publicly-lauded writers were doing. So she appreciated my contribution
for encouraging her to continue her creative attempts her own way, with her own voice.
While I appreciate her response, her response in fact shows that what Im doing also doesnt fit with what
many would consider to be Filipino literature. Im used to that, though; a Filipino reader once said I or my
works were not authentically Filipino. But the more important point may be that what I am doing generally
isnt a replication of whats out there. And for a poet (or any artist) isnt that a good thing?
When did you realize you we're a writer?
Ive long loved words. In the beginning, though, I thought I was a writer as a journalist and journalism
indeed was my first profession. I didnt begin poetry until my mid-thirties. My mother, though, apparently
knew otherwise. She wrote an essay about methe last prose piece in AGAINST MISANTHROPYthat said
I, as a young child, was already interested in creating books. She said I made my first book at age fivea
visual narrative with the help of Crayola and generous use of stick figures. I discovered this essay among her
papers two years after her death. You can imagine my astonishment
Tell us about your process: Pen and Paper, computer, notebooks ... how do you write?
A few years ago, I began trying to do drafts of poems only in my mind. The risk, of course, is that I might
forget something when I finally write it down (whether by computer or paper is not significant to my
process). But Ive long thought that if the thought isnt compelling enough to survive the road from my
mental conceptualization to the actual writing, then its not compelling enough for me to chase the thought.
More recently, I created a poetry generator (part of my Murder, Death and Resurrection project). This
MDR Poetry Generator has a database of 1,146 lines. Its conceit is that one can randomly combine any of the
lines in any length between couplets to a long poem of 1,146 lines, and the result would be an effective poem.
Since I created this generator, Ive only written one new poem thats not crafted from its lines. So, to answer
your question, my current process of writing a poem may be one of pointing at various lines at random from
a print-out of the generators database. It seems to be working as its generated acceptances from various
journals, two published poetry collections and three other poetry manuscripts. At some point, of course
and I may already be thereIll stop relying on the generator for making new poems.
How do you handle a bad review of your work?
I initially thought to say, I try to learn from it. But, to be more truthful, I handle a bad review with sadness.
By the way, I havent received bad written reviews (most written reviews have been positive). Its just that
some of my books have received indifferencethat, of course, is the most negative review of all.
Still, any sad reaction goes away swiftly because Im usually well on to the next projects. An effect of being so
prolific is not over-dwelling on reactions (positive or negative) to prior books.
Which writer would you most like to have a drink with, and why?
Because I havent seen him in over a decade, the poet Eric Gamalinda who just came out with a luminous
novel, THE DESCARTES HIGHLAND. Also, hes Pinoy which means our drinks may just be accompanied
with pulutan (various Filipino small dishes).
What's the biggest mistake you've made as a writer?
According to me, none; all steps and missteps have been useful.
According to others, I have made mistakes. One is releasing more than one book each five years as that
supposedly limits a poets career. Another is when I transitioned from conventional to more experimentallyfocused writingthis is according to a poet-editor who stopped publishing my works when I ceased linear
narrative (about 15 years after this incident, Im looking at linear narrative today with different eyes).
What's the worst advice you hear authors give writers?
Dont publish more than one book every five years. Stick with accessible writing.
Just kidding. Id say the worst advice Ive heard are those that emanate from the advisors thought that his
experience and/or opinion is the general determinant for how things should unfold for other writers.
What scares you the most?
Exposure to others lack of compassion.
Where do you buy your books?
Direct from authors and publishers. Bookstores, especially used bookstores. Amazonyes, I sometimes
rely on them because I live in an area where there arent many booksellers.
Who are you reading now?
Tons of poetry review copies. I dont assign myself poetry books to review; I just try to read as widely as I can
and then review those that compel my reviewing attention (a list of such books is available at
http://eileenrtabios.com/with-the-community/selected-reviews-and-engagements/). As well, Im currently
reading TOMORROWS MEMORIES: A DIARY 1924-1928 by Angeles Monrayo and GIRL DRIVE: CRISSCROSSING AMERICA, REDEFINING FEMINISM by Nona Willis Aronowitz & Emma Bee Bernstein.
What is your favorite TV show at the moment?
I dont watch TV. But I Netflix- and Youtube-binge. Among TV shows, Ive binged on THE WEST WING,
HOUSE OF CARDS, SCANDAL, LIE TO ME, LEVERAGE, the cooking show CHOPPED (though I dont
cook), NUMB3RS, HAWAII 5-0, HOARDERS, DANCE MOMS, the real estate reality shows THE
PROPERTY BROTHERS, HOUSE HUNTERS (& INTERNATIONAL) COLLECTION, SELLING NEW
YORK among others. Im currently binge-ing on Alaska: love YUKON MEN and now am on ALASKA:
THE LAST FRONTIER.
Bonus Round:
What do you want the world to know about you? Make it juicy ....
My poems can make you wet: salivate, sweat, cry and
Having said that, I dont want the world to know anything about me except what they imagine/extrapolate
(correct or not) from my words. AGAINST MISANTHROPY is a perfect exercise for this because I believe if
you read it beginning-to-end, a profile surfaces that could define Eileen R. Tabiosyet itd be a profile
where the reader is as much the author as the one attached to the books bylin
Fall 2015
BlazeVOX Interview with Cornelia Veenendaal
Fall 2015
BlazeVOX Interview with Jeffery Conway
However, the added bonus was that I got to show clips of the film on this huge screen behind me. There was
like a twenty-foot Nomi right behind me! I mean . . . we have the best higher educational system in the
world. What could be more instructive for a group of undergrads and MFA students than a survey of scenes
from the greatest movie ever made? God, I would have killed to attend a reading like that when I was in
school. Wait, does that sound egotistical? So be itits the truth!
When did you realize you were a writer?
In my very early twenties, I moved into an apartment on Sunset Boulevard at La Cienega in Los Angles with
two friends. It was a cool, two-story, mid-century building with a swimming pool in the center courtyard.
The lore of the place was that Marilyn Monroe had once stayed there briefly . . . but Im not sure if thats
true. My bedroom was at the back of the building, facing a very steep hillside, or cliff, really, where rocks and
small boulders would tumble down at random moments. There was a huge Seagrams 7 billboard planted in
the lot next door that lit up the corner windows of my room. There werent any blinds or drapes included in
the deal, so Id wear sunglasses to bed. Shortly after I moved in all of my stuff (a foam futon, a framed Calvin
Klein poster, some bedraggled clothes, a candle, my New Wave records), I found a paperback copy of Death
in Venice by Thomas Mann on the shelf inside the closet. I had never heard of the book before; in fact, I had
little interest in books at that point in my life, I had always assumed that the coolest things were never in
books. But for some reason, I started to read Death in Venice little by little, soaking up every drop of its
gloomy atmosphere. Eventually I got to a page where a particular phrase had been underlined with what
looked like a blue pencil: some strange, rash, bewildered dream. I skimmed the rest of the book. It was the
only thing underlined in the entire text. I became fascinated, read it again and again, pondered its meaning,
its message. I wondered about the hand that had underlined it. Who was this being so moved by this cryptic
thought? What compels a person to make note of a particular string of words? I had never been aware before
that moment of the relationship that the writer and reader engage in when one agrees to write and another
agrees to read. Some strange, rash, bewildered dream. I wrote it large on my bedroom wall, painted the phrase
on a T-shirt, copied it over and over again on countless sheets of paper. It was my first obsession with
words. Not long after, I got a job at a Beverly Hills bookstore where expensive coffee table books were the
order of the day. But inside that Hunters Books on Beverly Drive I discovered a well-stocked, decidedly unbrowsed Poetry section. I found Love Is A Dog From Hell by Charles Bukowski and Live or Die by Anne
Sexton. Need I say more? Those two books changed my life, showed me me inside other writers lives. And
just like that: voilaanother writer is born.
Tell us about your process: Pen and Paper, computer, notebooks ... how do you write?
I write in different ways at different times: sometimes I write/compose right on my MacBook; sometimes I
write in whatever journal is current (with blank pages available), and I write a whole poem there (or I may
later transfer what I started in the journal into my computer and continue or finish the piece with the keys).
Occasionally I will write the first draft of a poem on a collection of Post-it Notes and eventually assemble
them in what appears to be the right order, and then type the poem on my computer.
How do you handle a bad review of your work?
With grace (I hope!), or at least with acceptance. One time when a reviewer wrote something negative (in
retrospect, and to be completely honest, the whole review wasnt bad, just a few sentences of it were), I
pulled out one of my favorite books, Powers of Ten: A Flipbook by Charles and Ray Eames. A few minutes with
that book helped bring my reaction back to right size. As you flip and watch, the journey begins one billion
light years away, with every two pages of the book representing a view ten times larger than the view two
pages earlier. You descend the dimensions of the universe, through our solar system, down to a park on
earth, then into the human body, its cells, DNA and finally a single proton. Powers of Ten shows us not only
the relative size of things in the known universe, but also our place in it. This book helps bring proper
perspective to all things, especially ones own egoand all with just a few easy flips!.
Which writer would you most like to have a drink with, and why?
Gosh there are so many dead writers Id like to hang out with for a bit, though Id have to wait till Im in
Spirit, which (Ive been assured by two psychic clairvoyants) wont be for a long, long time. Heres my list (in
no particular order): Charles Bukowski (though Id like him semi-sober for our sit down), Anne Sexton,
Frank OHara, Sylvia Plath, Raymond Carver, Jane Austen (I know, what can I say?), David Foster Wallace,
Emily Dickinson (though I bet that would be some fraught teatime), Walt Whitman, and Jacqueline Susann.
But if I had to pick one, a living one, Id choose Toni Morrison, because I think chatting with the person who
wrote Beloved would be, like, fantastic.
What's the biggest mistake you've made as a writer?
Mistake? I dont believe thats possible in terms of my writing. That may sound grandiose or flippant, but
its really how I feel today. Everything Ive ever written, even last weeks shopping list, seems like it was
exactly what I was supposed to write when I wrote it. When I first started yoga a few years ago, the teachers
would say Namaste at the end of each class. I thought they were saying no mistake, which I thought
beautiful and profound. I had never heard Namaste before starting yoga, but I was totally on board with
the concept of no mistakes. There are, really, no mistakes. Im kind of in love with reality at the moment.
So, no mistake for me as a writer. Ive always felt that the act of writing is intimately connected to my
spiritual growth. Benjamin Saltman, a professor I had in college for a senior poetry seminar, wrote on my
first manuscript of poems: I see a vibrant Spirit longing for union. Those words have always been my
compass, I guess, as I navigate and write my way through life on Earth. Im here to grow and learn, and
writing, however it comes, aids me in that quest.
Bonus Round:
What do you want the world to know about you? Make it juicy ....
(See answer to previous questiontalk about confessional!)
Fall 2015
BlazeVOX Interview with Anne Gorrick
some friends at MOMA during the time I wrote this book; I was hypnotized by a small show of Picassos
guitars - painted ones, collaged ones, sculpted ones. Its my favorite thing ever: working in variations on the
same form. I was also trying learn Johns cross-hatched usuyuki marking making at the time, and a
Cadmium listener gifted me with a bottle of handmade walnut ink, which made it into the artists book.
Where does this book fit into your career as a writer?
Its part of a long investigation into a particular strain of mysterious poetic forms that I am not quite ready to
give up. I play with them one more time in a manuscript of poems Ive been working on about different
perfumes: a block of text that hugs the right side of the page, with scroll-like text cascading on the left,
broken up by text that bridges both margins between sections. In some ways, I think I them as polyvocal
musical scores and have read the poems this way.
This book also closes the circuit on the texual and visual for me. Im not writer or artist. Im both, and the
book is both.
As for my career as a writer? I work in educational administration, and poetry has always been something
I love and could do all the time, but its not something I could ever afford to quit my day job for. So I sneak it
in wherever I can, which can get very tricky, difficult sometimes. The sense of not enough time is always at
my back.
If you had to convince a friend or colleague to read this book, what might you tell them?
Ive been pleasantly surprised with this book that friends who are non-poets are enjoying it too. Maybe the
color plates of the artists books help create an in to the work. Read it because your sensibilities of
curiosity and wonder are still revving, because the book is filled with text and art bodies, fields.
You might see a sudden long vista in a gallery of closed woods.
Tell me about the last literary reading you attended.
I just saw Bernadette Mayer and Clark Coolidge read, and George Quasha perform (with Clark Coolidge on
drums, Charles Stein on voice and David Arner on piano) at Bard College. I live nearby.
When did you realize you we're a writer?
I always was. It wasnt something I became. As soon as I acquired language I wanted to write it down. Ive
been writing seriously for a looooooong time. My parents are word game people - my mother is a Scrabble
goddess and my dad likes New York Times crosswords. So maybe its not so weird that I fell from their
tree. When I was six years old, I wrote my first novel, having filled up a college-ruled piece of paper with
writing. College-ruled paper was a huge thing to me when I was a kid.
Tell us about your process: Pen and Paper, computer, notebooks ... how do you write?
All of the above. The FOLIOS in this book were typewritten on an old green 50s typewriter, and then
transcribed onto a computer. The Chromatic Sweep section based on paint color descriptions was heavily
processed on a computer. I keep notebooks, a notebook of things I want to Google search to make poems out
of, lists, stacks of old books to make into new objects. Im fussy about pens. I like Muji notebooks. I like
fountain pens, but I dont use them. Im not particular about my writing space, and am glad not to overritualize it. Im often working on overlapping manuscripts, with a beautiful row of black document boxes
lined up on a shelf above my desk. My desk is an old, massive oak one that my husband used to rebuild
motors on when he was younger. Its very scarred, which is pleasurable.
How do you handle a bad review of your work?
I try not to believe the bad ones too much or the good ones. I just want to do my work.
Which writer would you most like to have a drink with, and why?
Im not sure he drank, but Id love to hike and chat with Vladimir Nabokov in the Chiracahua Mountains
chasing butterflies during June of 1953 when he was writing Lolita. I think it might have been a late spring,
so the butterflies were elusive. He stayed in Portal, AZ, where a good friend of mine lives now.
And I would definitely have a drink with Frida Kahlo. I DID have a drink at her house in Mexico City, but
she wasnt there anymore.
What's the biggest mistake you've made as a writer?
Im not gregarious enough. Im usually happiest writing, being outside, moving through the world, hiking,
biking (or it was tennis, running).
What's the worst advice you hear authors give writers?
I hate it when people say write what you know and be specific. Theres so little magic in that. I dont
believe that language is solely photorealistic and utilitarian. Why CANT language be like paint? Im
waiting around waiting to hear what language comes to tell me. Magic happens for me when I dont try to
control things too much. Could be a big mistake, but it is joyful.
What scares you the most?
Not doing the things Im scared to do, so I try to push myself.
Where do you buy your books?
I try to buy books from publishers first, then SPD, and then Amazon. I also buy a lot of used books, because
my appetites exceed my budget. Plus Im always finding things that are out of print.
Who are you reading now?
1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus by Charles C. Mann; poetry by Joy Harjo;
Bombyonder by Reb Livingston; Sun Stigmata by Eileen Tabios; Fire Season by Philip Connors; a book
about indigo dye; a book about plants of the Northern Chihuahuan desert; a book of images of the
architecture by Luis Barragn.
I always have a lot of things going at once. Clouds of books settle on me.
What is your favorite TV show at the moment?
We dont watch TV. When we asked our cable company to come out and remove the cable line, they said
they never got that request before. We do have a TV though to watch movies, etc. I am liking Girls, but
havent seen the recent ones.
Bonus Round:
What do you want the world to know about you? Make it juicy ....
Juicy hmmm. That would be about the juice. Im a little overly interested in perfume, which they call
juice. Being aware of scent is like being able to see another dimension and it makes the world so much
richer. At this moment, Im wearing Amber Noir by the Sonoma Scent Studio, a drenched liturgical scent.
Poetry is as much a sense to me as smell. A way of echolocating to find the edges of the world.
Fall 2015
Acta Biographia - Author Bios
Adam Mackie
Adam Mackie was born in Anchorage, Alaska, fell in love with Margaret in Upstate New York, and fathered
Noah and Hazel in Ft. Collins, Colorado. Mackie composes songs and poetry, as well as prose. He has
performed original, acoustic sets at coffee houses, received multiple honorable mentions for his formal
poetry, and published a poetic readers note in Ruminate Magazine. Mackie currently teaches college writing
at the State University College at Buffalo, and previously taught composition and literature at Colorado
State University. As an academic, Mackie published a dictionary titled A New Literacies Dictionary: Primer for
the Twenty-first Century Learner and co-edited a publication titled Ethics in Higher Education: A Reader for
Writers. Mackie has also worked as a journalist and editor, publishing numerous newspaper articles and
magazine features.
Alex Archer
Alex Archer is a freelance short story writer and poet from Los Angeles, California. Their work has appeared
in LitroNY and Offcourse. They attend Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where they are
helping to start an undergraduate writers collective. They currently live in (and wander around in)
Philadelphia with their camera. Their work has been exhibited at the Philadelphia Photo Arts Center and
the William Way LGBT Center. They have also lived in Bristol, England.
Alexander Beisel
Alexander Beisel lives in the New River Valley of Virginia where he teaches writing at Radford University.
When he's not writing--he's grading papers or else scouring dungeon depths and dolling out justice to the
foes of Pelor.
A.J. Huffman
A.J. Huffman has published eleven solo chapbooks and one joint chapbook through various small presses. Her new
poetry collections, Another Blood Jet (Eldritch Press) and A Few Bullets Short of Home (mgv2>publishing) are now
available from their respective publishers. She has two additional poetry collections forthcoming: Degeneration from
Pink Girl Ink, and A Bizarre Burning of Bees from Transcendent Zero Press. She is a three-time Pushcart Prize nominee,
and has published over 2200 poems in various national and international journals, including Labletter, The James
Dickey Review, Bone Orchard, EgoPHobia, and Kritya. She is also the founding editor of Kind of a Hurricane Press.
www.kindofahurricanepress.com
Barbara Tomash
Barbara Tomash is the author of three books of poetry, Arboreal (Apogee 2014), Flying in Water which won
the 2005 Winnow First Poetry Award, and The Secret of White (Spuyten Duyvil 2009). Her poems have
appeared or are forthcoming in Colorado Review, New American Writing, VOLT, Bateau Press, Verse, Jacket,
OmniVerse, ZYZZYVA, Parthenon West Review, Third Coast, Five Fingers Review, Witness and numerous other
journals. She lives in Berkeley, California and teaches in the Creative Writing Department at San Francisco
State University.
Barbara Barnard
Barbara Barnard's poetry and fiction have appeared in such magazines as The Cimarron Review, New
Letters, Off the Coast, and Eclipse. Three of her poems appear in the anthology Songs of Seasoned
Women. She earned her MFA from the University of California, Irvine, and has taught creative writing and
literature at various colleges in California and New York. She is currently Associate Professor of English at
SUNY Nassau Community College.
Blackbird
Blackbird (PAW, 1956- ), the first of four children, grew up beside the Banana River. She adored Yeats and
Blake as a child, but the initial influence on her own verse was Poe. Later she was drawn to Plath. Today she
enjoys Tolkien. She also loves the nature writing of her grandmother. She is one course shy of a bachelor's
degree in art. She has collected data for the phone directory, and has also worked as a babysitter (as a teen), a
waitress, a floral arranger, a delivery truck driver, and a store clerk. She has three children.
C. Davis Fogg has written three business books, one, a classic, still on the market after 21 years. A
number of his short stories have appeared in literary journals. He frequently writes opinion pieces
and stories for Rhode Island and Boston Newspapers. He is currently working on a murder mystery.
He resides in Wakefield Rhode Island.
Christopher Ozog
Christopher Ozog is a 23 year old writer who resides in Ann Arbor, Michigan. His work has previously
appeared in Burningword, The Commonline, Crack the Spine's 2015 Spring Quarterly Anthology, and
HelloHorror. He currently edits Lavender Wolves Literary Journal. For more information, please visit
http://chrisozog.weebly.com/
Christien Gholson
Christien Gholson is the author of the novel, A Fish Trapped Inside the Wind (Parthian, 2011) and a book of
linked prose poems, On the Side of the Crow (Hanging Loose Press, 2006; Parthian re-issue, 2011). His latest
book of poems, All the Beautiful Dead, won the Bitter Oleander Press Library of Poetry Award, 2015 - to be
published in the spring of 2016. He lives in New Mexico, among the living and the dead. He can be found at
http://christiengholson.blogspot.com/.
Dana Curtis
Dana Curtis second full-length collection of poetry, Camera Stellata, was published by CW Books. Her first
full-length collection, The Body's Response to Famine, won the Pavement Saw Press Transcontinental Poetry
Prize. She has also published seven chapbooks: Book of Disease (in the magazine, The Chapbook), Antiviolet (
Pudding House Press), Pyromythology (Finishing Line Press), Twilight Dogs (Pudding House Press),
Incubus/Succubus (West Town Press), Dissolve (Sarasota Poetry Theatre Press), and Swingset Enthralled (Talent
House Press). Her work has appeared in such publications as Quarterly West, Indiana Review, Colorado Review,
and Prairie Schooner. She has received grants from the Minnesota State Arts Board and the McKnight
Foundation. She is the Editor-in-Chief of Elixir Press and lives in Denver Colorado.
Dawn Tefft
Dawn Tefft's poems are forthcoming or published in Fence, Denver Quarterly, and Witness, among other
journals. She has two chapbooks forthcoming: Fist and The Walking Dead: A Lyric. Her chapbook Field Trip to
My Mother and Other Exotic Locations was published online by Mudlark.
Daniel Adler
Daniel Ryan Adler has lived in Brooklyn, NY and Portland, OR. He is currently on sabbatical abroad, at work
on a novel about rivers.
Dilip Mohapatra
Dilip Mohapatra (b.1950), a decorated Navy Veteran started writing poems since the seventies . His poems
have appeared in many literary journals of repute world wide. Some of his poems are included in the World
Poetry Yearbook, 2013 and 2014 editions. He has three poetry collections to his credit, the latest titled
'Another Look' recently published by Authorspress India. The latest of his books titled P2P nee Points to
Ponder, is a departure from his poetic passion and is a compilation of his thoughts on various life and social
issues in point form, which may act as points on one's compass to help one navigate better on the high seas
of life. He holds two masters degrees, in Physics and in Management Studies. He lives with his wife in Pune.
His website is dilipmohapatra.com.
Ed Makowski
Ed Makowski lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. During the week he poets around a nature center and on the
weekends he's a doorman. Ed enjoys riding motorcycles, shooting arrows, rum, and hats.
Erika G Abad
Erika Gisela Abad Merced has had her fiction published in Outrider Review, and Read Vitality. Her essays
have been featured in The Feminist Wire, Black Girl Dangerous and Centro Voices. She can be followed
@lionwanderer531.
I Goldfarb
Born in the Bronx in 1940 and educated in the East, I Goldfarb spent most of his long professional career on
the West Coast in preparation for a second career as a writer. His K: A 21st Century Canzoniere was published
by BlazeVOX in 2015. A number of his poems from the Canzoniere and elsewhere appeared in the late
Kenneth Warren's House Organ.
Grace C. Ocasio
Grace C. Ocasio is a recipient of the 2014 North Carolina Arts Council Regional Artist Project Grant. She
won honorable mention in the 2012 James Applewhite Poetry Prize, the 2011 Sonia Sanchez and Amiri
Baraka Poetry Prize, and a 2011 Napa Valley Writers' Conference scholarship. Her first full-length collection,
The Speed of Our Lives, was published by BlazeVOX Books in 2014. Her poetry has appeared or is
forthcoming in Black Renaissance Noire, Rattle, Court Green, and Earth's Daughters. Her chapbook, Hollerin from
This Shack, was published by Ahadada Books in 2009. She is an alumna of The Watering Hole Retreat, a
Soul Mountain Retreat fellow, Fine Arts Work Center and Frost Place alumna, and member of the Carolina
African American Writers Collective. She received her MFA in Poetry from Sarah Lawrence College, her
MA in English from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Greg Larson
Greg Larson is a second-year MFA candidate in nonfiction at Old Dominion University. When hes not
watching baseball Greg likes to take the stairs instead of the elevator, he likes to eat pepperoni and sausage
pizza, and he likes to stay hydrated.
Gregs work has appeared in Ruminate Magazine, Bell Reve Journal, and Switchback. His college
memoir, Learn How to Not Suck, is available on Kindle or in paperback from Amazon.com
(http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00NR53IMC).
Heather Bowlan
hiromi suzuki
hiromi suzuki is an illustrator, poet, artist living in Tokyo, Japan.
A contributor of Japanese poetry magazine "gui" (Running by the members of Katsue Kitasono's "VOU").
Author of Ms. cried' 77 poems by hiromi suzuki (kisaragi publishing, 2013 ISBN978-4-901850-42-1).
Her works are published internationally on "Otoliths", "BlazeVOX", "Empty Mirror" and
NationalPoetryMonth.ca 2015.
hiromi suzuki's web site : http://hiromisuzukimicrojournal.tumblr.com.
Ian McPhail
Ian likes Chaim Soutine. Call him to talk about it... 716 715 5689.
Jennifer R. Valdez
I received my bachelors degree in Creative Writing from the University of California Riverside and my
masters in Creative Nonfiction from Sarah Lawrence College. I've been published with Bustle and the Metro
Newspaper and currently work as an Editor for Rewire Me, a health and wellness website based in New York
City.
Jamie McFaden
Jeffery Conway
Jeffery Conways books include Showgirls: The Movie in Sestinas (BlazeVOX [books], 2014), The Album That
Changed My Life (Cold Calm Press, 2006), and two collaborations with Lynn Crosbie and David Trinidad,
Phoebe 2002: An Essay in Verse (Turtle Point Press, 2003), and Chain Chain Chain (Ignition Press, 2000).
Current work can be found in the anthologies Dream Closet, Rabbit Ears: The First Anthology of Poetry About
TV, and This Business of Words: Reassessing Anne Sexton.
Jessy Brodsky Vega
Jessy Brodsky-Vega is a twenty-nine year old woman; she writes prose in the early morning. She recently
published a short story in Wilderness House Literary Review and is presently at work on a novel. In 2014 she
self-published and hand-bound 75 volumes of her earliest work with help from a grant, awarded to her by a
non-profit called Arts by the People. This volume, which had been written and stowed away since 2008, is
called "Diary of the Seduced" and was read at various events about town. She is married to a blues-folk
musician and they have two children. She lives in New York City.
John Tranter
John Tranter is Australias leading modern poet. He has won many Australian poetry prizes and has
published over twenty books, including *Starlight* (UQP Australia and BlazeVox Books, Buffalo, USA), and
*Heart Starter* (Puncher and Wattman, Sydney, and BlazeVox Books, Buffalo, USA). Hes the founder of the
*Australian Poetry Library* at <www.poetrylibrary.edu.au>, of *Jacket magazine* at <jacketmagazine.com>,
and of *JPR* at <poeticsrearch.com>. He has a WordPress journal at <johntranter.net>, and a static HTML
homepage at <johntranter.com>. All these sites are free.
Joseph Harrington
Joseph Harrington is the author of Things Come On (an amneoir) (Wesleyan 2011), a mixed-genre work
relating the twinned narratives of the Watergate scandal and his mother's cancer; it was a Rumpus Poetry
Book Club selection. He is the author of the chapbooks Goonight Whoevers Listening (Essay Press 2015), Earth
Day Suite (Beard of Bees 2010) and Of Some Sky (Bedouin, forthcoming), as well as the critical work Poetry and
the Public (Wesleyan 2002). His creative work has appeared in Bombay Gin, Hotel Amerika, Colorado Review,
The Rumpus, 1913: a journal of forms, Atticus Review and Fact-Simile, among others. Harrington is the recipient
of a Millay Colony residency and a Fulbright Chair.
Josef Krebs
Josef Krebs poetry appears in Agenda, Bicycle Review, Calliope, Mouse Tales Press, The
Corner Club Press, The FictionWeek Literary Review, and Burningword Literary Journal. A
chapbook of his poems will be published in November by Etched Press. Hes written three
novels, five screenplays, and a book of poetry. His film was successfully screened at
Santa Cruz and Short Film Corner of Cannes film festivals. The past seven years Hes been
working as a freelance writer for Sound&Vision magazine having previously worked at the
magazine for 15 years as a staff writer and editor
Juan Arabia
Juan Arabia (b.1983 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is a poet, translator and literary critic. He studied Social
Sciences at the University of Buenos Aires and is now the director and publisher of the House Publisher,
Buenos Aires Poetry <http://www.buenosairespoetry.com/> . In the course of his work he has interviewed
many poets including John Ashbery, Dan Fante and Robert Darnton; translated several works into Spanish
and collaborated on the production of several publications in conjunction with the Department of Modern
Languages at the University of La Rioja (Spain) and other academic institutions.
Jill Gamble
Im 40 years old (b. Oct. 15, 1975). I have two beautiful sons, Riley and Chad. For a number of reasons Riley
went to live with my sister when he was 19 months old and he has been raised by her. He is now 10. I am
raising Chad (who is 5 years old). Riley and Chad have different fathers. Even though I was not able to raise
Riley, both Riley and Chad are my heart and my soul. I am a sole practitioner (lawyer) and I do a lot of
criminal law and family law. I enjoy the courtroom work, particularly the big criminal trials. I also love to
run and have done quite a few marathons, including, Boston, New York, and Los Angeles. I have also
completed one ultra-marathon (50 mile trail race). I am currently training for the Canadian Cross-Country
Championships to be held in Kingston, ON at the end of November. I have always loved to read and write. I
am a huge fan of Margaret Atwood and Joni Mitchell (strong Canadian female icons).
Jimmie Ware
Jimmie Ware is a freelance writer and community organizer. Her poetic writings are published in several
print and online publications, including Vox Poetica, Clean Sheets, Open my Eyes Open my Soul which was
the brainchild of Elodia Tate and the late Yolanda King, daughter of Dr. Martin Luther King. No More Silent
Cries and F Magazine in Alaska also showcase her poetry. Jimmie is a dedicated mentor for youth, an
advocate for womens empowerment. Many of her inspiring writings stem from growing up in Chicago, her
southern roots from Alabama and her amazing adventures in Alaska. Connecting cultures is her forte. She
currently resides in Phoenix with her lovely adult daughter Mercedz-Nicole also gifted and creative soul.
Kelle Grace Gaddis
Kelle Grace Gaddis is the author of MyMyths (Jouissance Press, 2015). Her work has appeared in Knot Literary
Magazine, Shake The Tree, Entropy, Writing For Peace Journal, Blackmail Presses 37th Edition (2014) and Dove
Tales The Nature Edition(2015) and elsewhere. She is one of 4Cultures Poetry on the Buses contest winners
(2015), and the winner of Jouissance Presses Chapbook Contest (2015). She earned her MFA in Creative
Writing from the University of Washington, where she lives and works. Ms. Gaddis is also honored to be a
part of the official program of Lit Crawl Seattle in October, 2015.
Kristen Clanton
Kristen Clanton was born and raised in Tampa, Florida. She graduated from the University of Nebraska,
earning an MFA in poetry, and currently teaches English at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and is a
mentor for the nonprofit organization, The Seven Doctors Project. Her poetry and short fiction have been
published by Bicycle Review, The Birds We Piled Loosely, Burlesque Press, MadHat Drive-By Book Reviews,
MadHat Lit, The Mangrove Review, Midnight Circus, Otto Magazine, The Outrider Review, Ragazine, Quilt, and
Sugar House Review.
Lori Lamothe
Lori Lamothe's second poetry collection, Happily, is due out in December from Aldrich Press. Recent poems
appear in failbetter.com <http://failbetter.com> , Painted Bride Quarterly, The Literary Review, Saint Ann's Review,
Verse Daily and elsewhere.
Louise Robertson
Louise Robertson has earned degrees (BA Oberlin, MFA George Mason University), poetry publications
(Pudding Magazine, Crack the Spine, Borderline among others) and poetry awards (Mary Roberts Rinehart,
Columbus Arts Festival Poetry Competition among others). Her full-length book, The Naming Of, is
forthcoming this year (Brick Cave Books). She is active as a poet and organizer in her local Columbus, Ohio
poetry scene. Someone once said about Robertson that, underneath it all, she is kind.
Lus Leal Moniz
Lus Leal Moniz was born (1993) in Coimbra, Portugal. He is studying Economics in the University of
Coimbra. In 2014, he published his first book, "Sobre Linhas Tortas" (Lua de Marfim, Lisboa).
Maureen Coleman
Maureen Coleman graduated with an MFA in Creative Nonfiction writing from Sarah Lawrence College.
She is currently working on a memoir that explores her experiences with mental health issues and the selfdestructive behaviors she used to cope with them. Maureen currently lives in Massachusetts and makes
frequent trips to Walden Pond in an attempt to channel her inner-Thoreau. She remains open to the
possibility of living a secluded and simple life in a cabin in the woods pending there is Wi-Fi and that it
allows her to dodge student loan repayments.
Mae Carter
Mae Carter lives and teaches in New Orleans, Louisiana. You can most recently find her poems in Quiddity
and Lana Turner Journal.
Marcia Arrieta
Marcia Arrieta's work appears in Moss Trill, Fourteen Hills, Spillway, Wicked Alice, Altpoetics, Otoliths, Futures
Trading, Osiris, Eratio, Little River, and Posit. Her second book of poetry archipelago counterpoint is recently
published by BlazeVOX, while her first book triskelion, tiger moth, tangram, thyme was published by Otoliths
in 2011. She edits and publishes Indefinite Space, a poetry/art journal.
Mark Young
Mark Young is the editor of Otoliths <http://the-otolith.blogspot.com/> , lives in a small town in North
Queensland in Australia, & has been publishing poetry for more than fifty-five years. His work has been
widely anthologized, & his essays & poetry translated into a number of languages. A new collection of
poems, Bandicoot habitat, is now out from gradient books of Finland.
Matt Shears
Matt Shears is the author of Where a Road Had Been (BlazeVOX) and 10,000 Wallpapers (Brooklyn Arts
Press), His manuscript Dear Everyone will be available from Brooklyn Arts Press in 2016. He lives in Berkeley,
California, with his family.
Nicholas Knebel
Nick Knebel is a young poet living in New York City. He is currently in training to become a nationally
certified yoga teacher. In between writing and savasana, he enjoys reading, playing in the ocean, drinking
absurd amounts of tea, and spending time in Washington Square Park. Former publications include two
poems in Straylight, a literary journal published by his alma mater, The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.
He can be found online at his website, https://dreamsofadistantland.wordpress.com/ or through twitter
at https://twitter.com/vossnk
Natasha Murdock
Natasha Murdock lives in a tiny suburb of Phoenix, AZ. Some of her recent work can be found in Four
Chambers Magazine & The Cobalt Review. Currently, she spends most of her days chasing her newly
walking son & trying to get food out of her hair.
Nicholas D. Nace
Nicholas D. Nace is a poet and critic living in rural southside Virginia. He is the editor of two volumes of
essays devoted to the art of close reading: Shakespeare Up Close (2012) and The Fate of Difficulty (forthcoming).
His essays have appeared in The Burlington Magazine and The Book Collector among other journals. He is at
work on his first collection of poems, portions of which are forthcoming in Fence, Maggy, and LitHub.
Olivia Deborah Grayson
Olivia Grayson is the author of the chapbooks, Cat Lament and Being Female, although you may be more
familiar with her as the Beauty & Style Writer Olivia Neko (-- and other stealthy pseudonyms). Shes
currently working on a group of timeline poems to be published sometime in 2016. Olivia teaches expository
writing and fundamentals of critical reading at The Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City.
Patricia Walsh
PT Davidson
P.T. Davidson is originally from Christchurch, New Zealand (pronounced Noisyland), although he has spent
the past 24 years living abroad in Japan, the UK, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. His current posting
is at Zayed University in Dubai. His poetry has appeared in al dente, ulcer, Pre-Text and Otoliths. His first book
of poetry, seven, is due out soon.
Patrick Chapman
Patrick Chapmans books of stories are The Wow Signal (Bluechrome, 2007) and The Negative Cutter (Arlen
House, 2014). His seven poetry collections include A Shopping Mall on Mars (BlazeVOX, 2008), A Promiscuity of
Spines: New & Selected Poems (Salmon, 2012) and Slow Clocks of Decay (Salmon, due 2016). He has also written
an award-winning short film, a Doctor Who audio adventure, and lots of childrens television. In 2014 he
produced an adaptation of Ray Bradburys The Martian Chronicles for BBC Radio 4, featuring Derek Jacobi
and Hayley Atwell. This won Silver at the 2015 New York Festivals Worlds Best Radio Programs. With
Dimitra Xidous he edits The Pickled Body. http://thepickledbody.com/ He lives in Dublin, Ireland.
Robert Wexelblatt
Robert Wexelblatt is professor of humanities at Boston Universitys College of General Studies. He has
published the story collections, Life in the Temperate Zone, The Decline of Our Neighborhood, and The Artist
Wears Rough Clothing; a book of essays, Professors at Play; two short novels, Losses and The Derangement of
Jules Torquemal, and essays, stories, and poems in a variety of scholarly and literary journals. His novel
Zublinka Among Women won the Indie Book Awards first-place prize for fiction. Another fiction collection,
Heibergs Twitch, is forthcoming.
Ross Knapp
Ross Knapp is a poet, novelist, short story writer, multimedia artist, and music producer. He has an
experimental novel forthcoming and various poetry publications in Commonline Journal, Blue Lake Review,
Poetry Pacific Magazine, Indiana Voice Journal, Shot Glass Journal, Chicago Literati, and many others. He
currently divides her time between Brooklyn and Minneapolis.
Ronnie Sirmans
Ronnie Sirmans lives and works in metro Atlanta. His poetry has appeared in The South Carolina Review,
Gargoyle, and Hoot.
Sam O'Hana
Sam O'Hana is a US-UK Fulbright Scholar studying on the New School's graduate writing program in New
York. He can be found at @samuelohana and tangential-poetry.co.uk <http://tangential-poetry.co.uk>
Sandra Kolankiewicz
My poems and stories have appeared most recently in New World Writing, BlazeVox, Gargoyle, Prairie
Schooner, Fifth Wednesday, Prick of the Spindle, Per Contra, and Pif. Turning Inside Out won the Black
River Prize at Black Lawrence Press. Last fall Finishing Line Press published The Way You Will Go. When I
Fell, a fully illustrated novel, has just been released by Web-e-Books.
Simon Perchik
Stacy Mursten
Stephen Nelson
Stephen Nelson's books include Lunar Poems for New Religions (KFS Press) and Thorn Corners (erbaccepress). A Xerolage of visual poems is due out soon from Xexoxial Editions.
Sunayna Pal
Sunayna Pal, born and brought up in Mumbai and moved to USA after marriage. She has PG degrees from
XLRI and Annamalai University and worked in the Corporate World for five odd years. She quit it in 2009
and embarked on her heart's pursuits. She started Art with Sunayna (artwithsunayna.wordpress.com
<http://artwithsunayna.wordpress.com> ) to teach and sell art for NGOs. She is also a certified handwriting
Sean Burn
sean burn's third and latest full volume of poetry is that a bruise or a tattoo? is available now from shearsman
press. www.shearsman.com/browse-poetry-books-by-author-sean-burn
sean burn weaves a seamless integration of the experimental, the lyrical and the political invariably served
with large dressings of humour and with such blazing intent as no other contemporary poet, not even
benjamin zephaniah, is able to convey jeremy hilton, review of is that a bruise or a tattoo? tears in the fence,
no 60, autumn 2014
Trevor Thinktank
Trevor Thinktank works as a coal miner during the day while completing work on his dissertation, Deaths
Derivation and deviation through Magic: the Poetry of Heaney, Stein and Yeats. He lives in Cornwall but his
mind is in Oxford.
Timothy Collins
Timothy Collins is a poet, scholar and educator from Buffalo, NY. His poems appear in a number of literary
magazines and academic journals, most recently The Waggle and The Quint. His scholarship appears in
refereed academic journals. An article entitled "Wu-Tang Clan versus Jean Baudrillard: Rap Poetics and
Simulation" will appear in The Journal of Popular Culture this spring. He also is a frequent contributor to the
online music magazine, EQLZR.net. Poetic interests include: the beats, Blake, French symbolism, the
Language poets, and hip-hop.
Victor Eshameh
Vernon Frazer
Vernon Frazer's Selected IMPROVISATIONS is the most recent publication of his many books of poetry and
fiction. Frazer's work has appeared in Aught, Big Bridge, BlazeVOX, Drunken Boat, Exquisite Corpse, First
Intensity, Golden Handcuffs Review, Jack Magazine, Lost and Found Times, Moria, Otoliths and many other
literary magazines. His web site is http://vernonfrazer. <http://vernonfrazer.com./> net. Frazer is married.
NECTAR OF STORY
POEMS
TIM J. MYERS
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
p ublisher
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
INTRODUCTION
But when I return, I find an equal longing for some kind of bridge
between visible and invisible, between the story and my actual life. The
paradox of powerful narratives, even the fantastic kind, is that they're
usually so utterly practical, so mysteriously relevant to the world they
sometimes seem blithely to ignore. "If the world were clear, art would
not exist," Camus says; "Art helps us pierce the opacity of the world."
Powerful stories act in exactly this way. Barry Lopez praises the
Inuktitut word for "storyteller," isumataq: "the person who creates the
atmosphere in which wisdom reveals itself."
So I always find myself hunting for connections between real and
unreal. Talking animal characters, for example, make me wonder
about animal linguistics; a character who can fly must, to my mind, still
follow certain rules pertaining to the magic of flight. Part of this rather
strange and sometimes silly tendency, I'm sure, is the simple and
overwhelming pleasure it gives my story-making heart. But it's also
related, I think, to our modern spiritual crisis, resembling the problem
Keats faced in writing Endymion as he tried to combine myth and
psychology in the character of Apollo. The question can be stated
simply enough: How can we effectively blend our mythic and spiritual
traditions with our powerful modern sense of realism?
13
Leaf wrote words I've come back to again and again: "Fairy [s]tories,"
he says, deny "...(in the face of much evidence, if you will) universal
16
final defeat...giving a fleeting glimpse of Joy, Joy beyond the walls of the
world, poignant as grief."
A final note: These forms of the stories, on leftside facing pages,
are of course unsatisfying to me, given that they're only tight, hard
seeds--not the flowering trees I try to make them when I stand before a
group to tell. The "stories" in this book are really only departure
points, not to be confused with the wild, unpredictable, and charged
utterances that emerge when we're "beckon[ed] out of the visible"--that
is, when a good storyteller and a good audience come together for this
most spontaneous and social of rituals.
Tim J. Myers
17
NECTAR OF STORY
POEMS
20
I will not say the prophet was a coarse or venal man-but when the elders had threatened that virtuous woman-whose body even in clothing
awoke their lust, made them
sick with love-longing-when they threatened her unless she submit to them,
she refused, accused them in turn,
all was brought to the prophet Daniel,
on whose judgment Susannah was depending-and standing before him she recounted
how the old men, peeking hot-eyed through swaying ferns,
had watched from green shadows as she bathed,
white form in womanly fullness,
breasts, hips, eyes dark and beckoning
(though she thought she was alone),
and Daniel in his wisdom saw through the elders' lies,
rebuked them, confined them, restored to her
the esteem of the people. I will not say
he did less, nor
accuse him of hypocrisy or baser motive.
Only I find it worthwhile to mention
that as he turned to go,
he found himself suddenly possessed
by a vision of water streaming over
her shoulders, her nipples, water
dripping from the arch of a perfect lifted white foot-and for many days this shadowed him
with a sweet and continuous trouble.
21
22
23
24
At Night
25
26
27
28
Dangerous Things
to Please a Girl
Travis Cebula
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Selected Poems
my dearest Angel,
my one back
at home
few things are more
perilous, pitiable,
or lost
than
[I am]
a poet
who wanders
these streets
of Paris,
summer
alone
with only one
book,
one T.S.
Eliot, strangely selected
for company.
17
18
19
20
21
22
Hemingway.
Hemingway.
Hemingway.
when he liberated the Ritz Bar
23
he ordered
Seventy-eight dry martinis,
so the story goes,
and not one tarte tatin.
that was Paris during the war.
linger more.
I say
Guillaume was never the same
after wind.
and one day, Ernest
bought a shotgun.
so the story goes.
24
25
26
dear Angel,
I found
an electric
fan, 220 volts,
in the white cupboard.
now
the nights may be
lonely
but theyll be
cooler, too.
27
28
29
30
31
32
After the dooryards and the sunsets and the sprinkled streets
my dear Angel,
and I choose you
for my own,
I want to visit
so many other Sundays
with you.
they built fine benches here,
and a fountain with walls such
that ducklings might
never leave.
that they might never challenge
blue flowers in rows.
33
distant Angel,
heat and
heat. I have
opened all
the windows
on the night.
no breeze,
but Paris is
coming in
crowds of
smoke in
darkness, in
drums, and
this chorus
of green
bottles
thrown as
trash against
concrete. in
midnights
ash.
34
35
night-borne Angel,
shards of
wine bottles
embedded
themselves
in my boot
soles, the
same for
smoke in my
hair. and
well, Ive
been
dancing on
the shells of
these
shining
streets since
sunlight
sputtered
out.
36
37
no fear of rivers.
but try as I
might, with my
fountains and books,
in this lush
gardenthis
afternoon, this hill
as the light strikes
olives from
green to grey,
like Eliot, I am no
Englishman.
38
THE SLIP
GEORGE TYSH
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
THE SLIP
by George Tysh
Copyright 2015
Published by BlazeVOX [books]
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without
the publishers written permission, except for brief quotations in reviews.
Printed in the United States of America
Interior design and typesetting by Geoffrey Gatza
Cover and interior art by Janet Hamrick
First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-60964-217-4
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015937798
BlazeVOX [books]
131 Euclid Ave
Kenmore, NY 14217
[email protected]
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
The Slip
sometimes
set or whole
a quiet fear
wears
sleeves of death
dancers au pair
a piano
sounding
the song
we wish to hear
"All Mysteries"
rumbles
in evening air
of rain tracing
snow trails
to
which we turn
and ringing
interrupts the dance
17
"the separation
of movement from
steady rhythm"
an embryo
from an impresario
plowing
salting
and then no matter
"far from breaking
up the whole,
false
continuities are"
still there
a quiet fear
wearing sleeves
of death's
elegance
aprs tout
18
2.
open palm
above the cup
emanate waves
of oolong
peripheral
glimpse of wool
cap as letters
arrive
resisting the
impulse to move from a
state of lesser
to greater complexity
accidentally
a leg posed
on this narrow
plane of sun
we (incomprehend)
in the space
between words
tracing
steps
19
3.
20
4.
quiet rains
over nothing
and back to
solace
save the mode
water
falling on iron hills
a dragon sips
welcome peace
its icon arranged
on the bottle
a product
of a particular
malady
that thus
one may fear
the throes of
a "moist sweet"
muffled by clothes
or a distinct
teardrop
in underbrush
a hailstorm
through brambles
the sighing of
a penis
in some forgotten
hell
21
5.
what is it
of the untried
American
partner
that would lead
"at this evening
hour" to unseemly
delight
"I will leave
you by yourself
white dream," it
seemed to say
the words were
hardly out of
place in our
murmuring
and "shut the
closet to conceal
the strange, wraithlike
apparel it contained"
who would believe
"now, I thought"
these wrappings
this incessant
rain
of longing
and stirring
22
6.
"stepping forth"
(an angel
on a sidewalk)
from clouds
the notyet-scandal
of the thing
shown
its gai savoir
of
specters in heels
thrown
into illicit
becoming
as they undo the
"specimen dream"
23
7.
24
8.
abstraction
soaked
in vinegar
23 seconds
smoking weeds
of an illusion
rising with the sun
in showers
there is no
doubt
and floods
the heart
25
9.
"sophisticated women"
brush
unthinkable hair
and stare
wildly at calamity
as if playing with moss
"illusions are
more common than changes
in fortune"
says the lady
who "would stop you
as you went by"
and "continue painting
after the end of
painting" pink
lips and toes
26
Nothing by You
strange brew
smoky surface
and mahogany
depths
your
love-lone-liness
after midnight
to hear it
in my sleep
"We move with ease
from one to the other"
nothing by you
omitted without discomfort
that aerosol
in the face of
thought
(precisely
what occasions)
a persistent odor
of whatever you like
between women
this our doing
as night falls
into night
out
of
sleep
(gender, femmes, "race," etc.)
27
28
PATIENT WOMEN
LARISSA SHMAILO
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
Patient Women
A Novel by Larissa Shmailo
Copyright 2015
Published by BlazeVOX [books]
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without
the publishers written permission, except for brief quotations in reviews.
Printed in the United States of America
Interior design and typesetting by Geoffrey Gatza
First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-60964-201-3
Library of Congress Control Number: 2014957783
BlazeVOX [books]
131 Euclid Ave
Kenmore, NY 14217
[email protected]
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Out of the blackout Nora hears a voice: Dont die baby dont
die baby dont die baby dont die . . . .
Eyes rolling, head thrashing, her back arched on the
gurney, Noras scream rips out: Get the fucking needles
out of my mouth . . . .
What are they doing? They are pumping her stomach they
are giving her charcoal she is hooked to an I.V. again . . .
Which flight deck which tank St. Josephs. St. Francis St.
Johns . . . Oh Mother of God shes conscious shes conscious
shes still alive . . . .
Nora was never late; she either came on time or didnt
come at all. Her lover drinks a scotch he doesnt want and
waits for Nora to come, Nora who is never late. From the
window, he watches a young couple kiss; they are
seventeen, perhaps eighteen years old. He turns away,
suddenly uncomfortable, and starts calling hospitals.
Her lover finds Nora in St. Lukes. She is pissy and her face
is swollen. She recognizes him. She smiles, then grimaces.
11
12
Nora spent three days with the detectives from the 26th
Precinct before his body came up near the 14th Street pier,
looking for a bottle of scotch on the rocks.
Miss . . . miss . . . can you hear me? What day is it? Miss?
Miss, wake up . . . How many fingers am I holding up,
Miss? How many fingers?
In Mexico, in the mountains, I could see the rainstorm, thirty,
forty kilometers away. I saw it moving in the central
mountains, clearly defined and distant rain. Dancing rain. I
stood and watched it dancing.
14
15
16
17
18
The first and simplest stage in the discipline, which can be taught even
to young children is . . . the faculty of stopping short, as though by
instinct, at the threshold of any dangerous thought.
George Orwell, 1984
You
Who are on the Road
Must have a Code
That you can live by.
Graham Nash, Teach Your Children
Nora lied a lot: she told elaborate and peculiar lies. Nora
had an imaginary boyfriend who was twenty-six and beat
her; shed lost her virginity in the sixth grade; shed been
to the Woodstock festival and the Apollo Theater. Shed
experienced a lot for a thirteen-year-old white girl from
Queens.
Nora was born in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her family
moved to Middle Village when she was a year old. When
people asked her where she came from, Nora answered,
Brooklyn; Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
19
22
concentrating on Joey, who was thinner and coolerlooking than Nora. The red-haired man was especially
friendly today, asking her questions, and remarking how
mature Nora was. He asked her how old she was. Nora,
who was thirteen, usually said fifteen, but today told the
red-haired man that she was sixteen. To her surprise, he
invited her home for tea. Nora hid the book bags, and
went with the man to his apartment.
Nora could not overcome a feeling of disappointment
when she first saw the red-haired mans apartment. The
apartment was small and shabby, cramped and dirty
around the edges. When she used the bathroom, she saw
that the red-haired man lived with a womanthe
makeup, creams and tampons were too much at home to
belong to a casual visitor. She squelched her
disappointment and joined the red-haired man in the
living room.
Nora returned to the small grainy living room and sat on a
mattress draped with Indian cloth. The man poured her a
glass of wine and filled a pipe with hashish. Nora
pretended to drag deeply, but didnt inhale for fear of
coughing and acting like an idiot.
The man gently but firmly shoved Nora back on the faded
bed spread. He tried to tongue kiss her, but could not get
his tongue into Noras mouth. Nora tried desperately to
24
relax, go with it, as the man was suggesting, but could not:
whether it was the hashish or the wine, Noras teeth
clamped shut, and would not open.
The red-haired man made annoyed noises. Disoriented,
Nora staggered to the door, feeling clumsy and disgraced,
praying that Joey wouldnt somehow find out.
26
27
their faces were zitty, and their tits were too big. Girls from
Queens turned out like their mothers.
Some boys in a rowboat were calling to the boy in the
fringed jacket. Nora watched the long-haired boys stand
straight up in the rowboats, then belly flop into the lime
green algae. The boy in the fringed jacket explained to
Joey that his friends had dropped acid cut with speed. He
lit a thick joint and offered it to Nora, who coughed until
her face turned red. Joey politely interrupted a story about
Eric Clapton to wait for Nora to finish coughing.
Embarrassed, Nora ran to the lake and threw herself into
the water fully dressed. She heard applause and hoots
behind her. She swam, cold and embarrassed, thinking, I
have a pretty face, prettier than Joey but I am fat and my
breasts flop in my wet shirt. I am embarrassed: It is too much to
throw yourself into the water dressed in Central Park, it isnt
hot enough in May and my jeans and shirt and shoes take too
long to dry . . . .
28
29
30
East Third. We can stay there until we get the bread for
the bicycles.
Crowds of unsmiling office workers pushed out of their
offices into the subway. Rick panhandled, mocking the
people who gave him money with his servile tone.
You girls could work for a couple of weeks, he suggested
I know where to get papers easy. Most of the time, girls
like you dont even need papers to work. Nora was
uncomfortable, but was too conscious of her breasts
bobbing beneath her wet tee-shirt to notice much else.
Joey was in her element, grinning and greeting Ricks
remarks with a peace sign and a power salute. Nora
walked quietly, keeping a little apart, feeling as though she
didnt want to know where they were going.
They turned east on Fourteenth Street. The girls followed
Rick to the door of a large building, Salvation Army
Headquarters, waiting for him outside. After a few
minutes, he reemerged with blankets and a can of peanut
butter the size of a gasoline drum. Nora felt ashamed, as
though she had stolen something from a very old poor
person. Laughing too loud, she accepted a blanket from
Rick, wrapping it around her shoulders like a cape.
Still, Nora was surprised: apart from a small nagging
feeling of guilt, she felt pretty good, even excited and
happy. There was momentary remorse as they entered the
East Village and Nora saw the old, hobbling, wrinkled
31
32
35
worker in the loft, that night. He was gentle. Nora was glad
not to feel anything.
Nora was returning from the East Street Mission with food
for the pad when the Hells Angel Mario called her over.
Terrified, she crossed the street slowly.
Mario looked Nora over.
How old are you, kid? he asked.
Nora froze. She looked at Mario; the Angels bullish eyes
were bloodshot.
Twelve, she lied.
Mario closed his eyes and fell silent, lost in thought. After
a long moment, he opened his bovine eyes.
Can you go home, kid? he asked.
Nora was taken aback. Sure, she said.
The Angel held her cheek between his fingers and shook
his head sadly.
Go home, kid, he said. Go home.
The girls went home after a few more days. Joey called her
sister who said there was a thirteen-state All Points
Bulletin out for the runaways. This was standard
procedure for missing persons but the sound of it
impressed Nora.
36
Joey was determined to stay. Nora held out for a few days
but finally decided to go home. Joey felt betrayed and
disgusted.
Youll tell them where I am, she sneered.
I wont, I wont, Nora swore.
Panhandling the price of a token, Nora rode the subway to
Queens and walked the bus route hone to Middle Village.
38
40
42
LITTLE:
NOVELS BY
EMILY ANDERSON
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Preface
These little novels have been extracted from Laura
Ingalls Wilders Little House books. I erased
paragraphs, sentences, words and (occasionally)
individual letters from each of Wilders novels to
create an alternate series. Here and there Ive added
an s or an and, but I largely refrained from adding
letters and words, with the exception of footnotes. The
text appears in the order of the original books.
Erasure (or writing the negative space of the story)
reveals new aspects of a text and allows familiar
narratives to resonate differently. Part parody, part
homage, I see my process as parallel to that of Wilders
pioneer characters: like Ma and Pa, I appropriate the
resources I findin my case, words in a given order;
in theirs, sod, trees, stones, waterto reshape a
landscape. Writing this book allowed me to spend
time reveling in the imaginative possibilities Wilders
delightful and frequently troubling books propose.
Geoffrey Gatza observed that Garth Williams iconic
illustrations of Wilders novels merited a visual
response. While I collaborated with Wilders text, I
invited artists to work with Little House and/or my
writing and contribute images. The diversity of their
responses to these narratives helps me to see this
projectand the books Ive loved since childhoodin
new ways.
Whether their contributions took the form of
illustration or interruption, each artist approached
List of Illustrations
Table of Contents . . . Found marginalia
Little Woods . . . Found marginalia
Little Woods Drawings . . . Nathan Anderson
Farm . . . Adam Martin
Our Air . . . Brieanne Hauger
On Banks . . . Brad Farwell
Silver . . . Anne Straarup
Long . . . Brieanne Hauger
Michael Landon Laughs . . . Brieanne Hauger
Hold Me Now . . . Michael Robinson
Years & Years . . . Jen Morris
Cover . . . Abbey Scheckter
11
LITTLE
Little Woods
16
Chapter 3. Rifle
Dark ravines, calling and looking.
17
Chapter 4. Christmas
18
Chapter 5. Sun
19
20
Chapter 7. Snow
The sap boils.
The sap has boiled at last.
Keep the sap boiling.
Chapter 8. Dance
He blew his bugle & they braided snow.
21
Chapter 9. Town
Little leaf cups fastened across the rabbits.
22
23
24
NEW CITY
SCOTT ABELS
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
NEW CITY
by Scott Abels
Copyright 2015
Published by BlazeVOX [books]
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without
the publishers written permission, except for brief quotations in reviews.
Printed in the United States of America
Interior design and typesetting by Geoffrey Gatza
Cover Art by Vince Hazen
First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-60964-222-8
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015940922
BlazeVOX [books]
131 Euclid Ave
Kenmore, NY 14217
[email protected]
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
NEW CITY
Nebraska Fantastic
Nebraska Fantastic
I make a Nebraska mule
from a bucket of meth-size hail.
Think about the data and the line
and the big wigs that indicate
the Midwest and the West.
Out of sorrow,
entire wolves have been built.
This story is very scary
for the mountains and history.
I beef out my body.
I make a little heart
out of salt and an onion
peel and
pee on it.
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
Aaron Simon
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
13
SKY STORY
1.
I wont pretend to know the secret
its hard enough to think out loud
flying over the spotted coast
with no ideas of my own
Who said its harder
to give up love than life
the smallness and the greatness
like scattered parts of Icarus
that floated back to earth
Was it Cline
in a nod to the hpital
knowing one cant write with blood?
First do no harm
2.
Theres a lake in my imagination
only distinguished by its pinkness
I mustnt forget I didnt exist once
its the height of all sensation
But this is not my story
the airspace is controlled
small roads go to the lake
and those are real roads down there
My Titos Vodka is from Austin
Watsons Tonic is from Xiamen
14
15
BITTER HALF
The last word begins
like a poorly scored pill
I cant speak for you
cherry picking is one method
a frame within a frame
where the past is heavy with hidden costs
and you cant get out of the way
we dont need another hero
to return us to point A
the end of our transparency
is the beginning of composition
16
RAIN CHECK
for Bill Berkson
17
18
NUDES
More or less a vandal
I was turning a corner
wet with footnotes
couched between noons
You were there but not really
inside the lacuna
peeling tape from windows
readying a squeegee
We must talk before we write
or read in front of mirrors
commiserate with bodies
still learning to be naked
I don't like it either
especially on a Wednesday
after listening to voicemails
from a guy named Thad
Light crawls across my desk
then rests on my calendar
sensuality for some
a mere punch-card for you
19
VERTIGINOUS DETOUR
Like I was saying, we the profligate
deserve every break we get
even now, dodging a storm
while dining al fresco under the bridge
And the wind carries your napkin away
My greatest fear is our only hope
that someday well learn
to sit up straight without speaking
Do you recognize this language?
Your eyes havent changed
since weve been here
I see myself in them
I look like a pigeon
20
SOME HISTORIES
for Jessica Dessner
21
22
SKY STORY 2
Forgetting to breathe
in fluted light
she redacts the sky
high over the terminal
like a bronze bust of Mercury
grounded by design
What does she know
of takeoff and landing
where language becomes pressure
a story of clauses
both profound and inert?
This doesn't need to be rhetorical
fog gives the perfect cover
a classic disappearance
she'll make up the time in the air
23
HYPNIC JERK
The sensation starts
when I slice my thumb
opening a letter from Fannie
I don't know her
though she reveals the pain in anonymity
The thunder stops then it hails
the rent check bleeds
through my breast pocket
I'm lost in a roundabout
indecent to the naked eye
I pick up her tracks
outside the pharmacy
where a shrine has been extinguished
the natural world on index cards
reflected in oily puddles
What moves Fannie through the night
assuming she has substance
and are her words colorless when pure
like a fluorite?
24
TYPE VECU
for Genet
25
OPPOSITE SIGNS
Its necessary for me
to dislike certain people
the ascetic especially
I cant do much for them
other than set the record straight
De Chirico was an accomplished dreamer
a man among puppets
the only bright-side
of a dimly lit room
Space affords curiosity
when the past becomes providence
something to read in the evening
just before turning in
This strange iconophilia
flings me into despair:
Fire God and Wooden Boy
embracing under the moon
26
NINE
1-126
BY ANNE TARDOS
BLAZEVOX [BOOKS]
BUFFALO, NEW YORK
NINE 1-126
By Anne Tardos
Copyright 2015
Published by BlazeVOX [books]
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without
the authors or the publishers written permission, except for brief quotations in reviews.
Printed in the United States of America
Interior design and typesetting by Geoffrey Gatza.
Cover art: Found by Anne Tardos, photographer unknown.
First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-60964-226-6
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015945384
BlazeVOX [books]
131 Euclid Ave
Kenmore, NY 14217
[email protected]
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
Gertrude Stein
29
Friedrich Hlderlin
30
Baruch Spinoza
31
MARXIST BEAUTIFUL
NINE 12
Steve Carey
32
A.J. Muste
33
OBEDIENT DAUGHTERS
NINE 14
34
35
36
37
38
BIENNIAL: POEMS
MICHAEL JOYCE
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
Biennial: poems
by Michael Joyce
Copyright 2015
Published by BlazeVOX [books]
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without
the publishers written permission, except for brief quotations in reviews.
Printed in the United States of America
Interior design, cover design and typesetting by Geoffrey Gatza
Cover Art by Michael Joyce
First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-60964-215-0
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015937799
BlazeVOX [books]
131 Euclid Ave
Kenmore, NY 14217
[email protected]
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
4.3.12
To start with two lines then in black and white
and continue to see a way in them.
4.4.12
Across the street the dog barks at something beyond
the line demarcated by the invisible electric fence
4.5.12
How to ease these excitements of mind
the crow now gone mute, the morning empty
4.6.12
They talk after breakfast in the room below
while I have slipped away to this.
11
4.7.12
Seeking to widen the horizon that divides itself
between what is called the true and what the visible
4.8.12
ostre comes up the hill this morning in her holiday attire:
platinum hair over striped chemise, wobbly on high heels
4.9.12
In the blur the far-off figure
fading or coming into view
4.10.12
My mother died this day three decades ago,
how much more here can I be than this moment?
4.11.12
Still life: white brick rectangle of Breuers Ferry House
afloat against a backdrop of dark fir and cedar.
4.12.12
The patient blink of the cursor a mark now that the irrevocable
can be reversed by something less tactile than erasure was once.
12
4.13.12
settles despite complaint
poem (rain) against itself
4.14.12
Curiosity an irritation, the wayward, the way words
come to you and go away a narrative, a way to go
4.15.12
The space between seen differently each day, or so I wrote before
my assault makes the trapped wasp thrash between the panes
4.16.12
this awaiting, this
momentary calm
4.17.12
The first day of an illness as if setting out on a journey
hoping to meet yourself upon the way.
4.18.12
desire destabilizes form in its longing
what flower shall I name as an instance?
13
4.19.12
Two women laughing at the intersection outside,
I go to the window but do not see them.
4.20.12
Add a parenthesis and the word, this, is
housekeeping, the house where I live
4.21.12
Weekend noise of machines contra naturam
retracing imperceptible margins
4.22.12
Begin with an article, an action follows
the stone amulets in my pocket I keep losing
4.23.12
A riddle is a form for this difference:
is what a fast slows a thing?
4.24.12
A carved stone bear, its back arched, an invoice, a blue cloth for polishing a screen. Yeats
as list maker, P. Muldoon. what life isnt dailywhat poetry isnt everyday? B. Mayer.
14
4.25.12
Such silence
le bien-tre
4.26.12
I think myself
alone here in my body.
4.27.12
Here the heart of things
is the heart of things
4.28.12
vagrant silk of the dreamers dissilience
issues forth from the hospital night
4.29.12
my resurrection spent
in stage business
4.30.12
Qu'est-ce qui s'est pass? marks that
which puts both itself and what is in question
15
5.1.12
a light rain garlands the lilacs
the girls once wove into crowns
5.2.12
grey Providence
a siren disappears into its own echo
5.3.12
maiden cellists lip coll'arco, smile suppressed,
whilst she waits to pluck the satyrs score
5.4.12
a week exactly after a walk-through of his own passing
he remarks his dead fathers birthday
5.5.12
the here, the the, this this, the mark of this inescapable rhythm that
Creeley and Basho both trod better long before
5.6.12
tell how far are
you here where you are
16
5.7.12
nowhere yet the lack of separation; I recall a photograph
placid pewter sea and overcast, horizons bead a solder flux
5.8.12
he bid me come
the man on the shore
5.9.12
in the parable the servant waits outside the kitchen in the shade of the thin tree in the courtyard
its dark pool already shrinking under the suns ascent, shadow swallowed into its vortex
5.10.12
last night and this morning
come differently to a man who has sons
5.11.12
abidance and collimation
inflected, interstitial light
5.12.12
It is not true to say I have walked back to smooth the stones along this path before going on
for here are neither path nor stones, nor a before or after moving
17
5.13.12
four copies of a journal publishing three poems arrive
where they lay on the table, crisp and as yet unread
5.14.12
as we sleep, houses and in storms, trees according to Transtrmer,
wander from their places, for a time distorting this platted village
5.15.12
he peers into the screen as if a well
your name scribbling itself upon its surface
5.16.12
ache of dawn follows the clamoring of birds
rain lingering, moan of a long train resounding
5.17.12
deformation itself a pattern discovered
dcollage and appliqu this much alike
5.18.12
stone drill rattles on iron treads
iron pterodactyl pecking bedrock
18
5.19.12
is this involute rhythm a form of me
or the metric of a studied symmetry
5.20.12
today we commence in sunlight
leon: tous se termine
5.21.12
emptied caravanserai
deserted carnevale
5.22.12
Taihao, fashioned from baby's first cut hair, Shuxu, Wang Xizhis rat whisker landscape brush,
Shanma, of mountain horse mane, Dong Langmao, winter wolf, good for forming chrysanthemums
5.23.12
a name in a poem Andrew said
carries great weight with it
5.24.12
in the morning Times comes word
American poetry has changed overnight
19
5.25.12
mourning
dove, dove, dove
5.26.12
not quite able to awake after stupid dreams
unable to fold a fabric squarely, still there on return
5.27.12
the faces behind the headlights along the highway at midnight remain
now that the early morning fog has dissipated, lovers gone home
5.28.12
cellphone as an ontological device, txt to&from a body not ones own,
in service of a constructed self, future a fleeting transcription, lost
5.29.12
alone with ones ambitions
as if in a room of strangers
5.30.12
distant motor ceases
finch song remains
20
5.31.12
a lone poppy this spring
not visible from here
6.1.12
the red of it
seen today
6.2.12
once long ago watching sky writing disperse behind a twisting bi-plane,
hand to brow a visor against the glare, Jones Beach windless below
6.3.12
empty thump of car doors as the church-goers disembark
then make their way in sunlight to enter the wooden ark
6.4.12
where have I gone I ask at the station
the platform is empty, sky threatening
6.5.12
draw a line from nowhere to here
then another, parallel, at a distance following logically from the first
21
6.6.12
a rail ticket to a far shore comes from SNCF in an email
I would be as a nun dedicating her morning to absence
6.7.12
wait quietly for
the hour to pass
6.8.12
sweeps the stone floor then sweeps it again
two separate acts for the one who attends
6.9.12
in her dream she says she discovers what seems an unknown fact:
that one can be with her and at the same time be somewhere else
6.10.12
where doubt locates itself is
what differs this from prayer
6.11.12
A day that begins backwards continues so throughout:
lines written on the previous day's account debit decollage horaire
22
6.12.12
Au lit like Proust, but in the wrong district and a century after, in a two star hotel
Plus heureux however, even waking at six to that number and its doubles
6.13.12
The tourists hurry along the Seine in the in-between hour through cold rain,
Notre Dame dark, bullies taunt one another between bank and bateau-mouche
6.14.12
Rabbi on a bicycle, son in a basket, along rue Saint Paul
Clack of heels on the cobblestone collonade of rue du Prvt
6.15.12
Wake again trying to recall
how to tend to one self
6.16.12
After a thump and the howl the plump woman in pink lay on the rainy pavement of Rue Rivoli,
the taxi driver argued his innocence in the night, the blond witness having crossed to shriek at him.
6.17.12
Dark-eyed Ariane, the utterly pure, presides behind the bar along Parmentier
squeezing orange juice and making caf crme for her quipe of brusque devotees
23
6.18.12
angry for another
anger for oneself
6.19.12
The afternoon an expanse between appetite and hunger
walking in the dust and sunshine of Brooklyn piers
6.20.12
upriver awaiting the boat to nowhere, the tide favorable,
offering brunch to the aging sailor and his bride
6.21.12
outside the heat
no escaping the heat
6.22.12
dream a damp cavern beneath a stone walkway through which chinks of sky and sunlight:
life, I knew, my heart filled with gratitude and loss in witness of even these few fragments
6.23.12
rakes wave pattern
adds back the sea
24
6.24.12
a day lost in the arithmetic
solstice as simple as that
6.25.12
A case of mistaken identity: Joe Goulds pages, not Joe Brainards, in Estlins notebooks
among the daily studies of Marion I catalogued that summer in the Patchin Place attic
6.26.12
it is impossible to ready everything
for where we are eventually going
6.27.12
river gilt in last nights twilight through a thin curtain of bamboo,
then just beyond the cedar fence a fawn haunch passes slowly below
6.28.12
the silence of animals
no different than this
6.29.12
staticky Telemann for two clarinets as I wait on hold
until a woman in Maharashtra wishes me good morning
25
6.30.12
for the djinn of vestibules
the day is a garden
7.1.12
In my brother's poem our mother celebrated New Year's on her birthday in July before we were born
Now 30 years after she died, she waves from en liten segelbt this sommarmorgon on Lake Malaren
7.2.12
Duncans question of where the sun is vis vis each poem
vivid here this Swedish morning, distant shore through trees
7.3.12
In the rossengrden the black-capped parus major flit among the columns
snatching crumbs among the woven reeds of wicker armchairs
7.4.12
What and by or to what are these birds called
who put the light to sleep these hours after midnight?
7.5.12
sommormorgon light floods the edges of the shades at four a.m.
and I don my sleep mask to return till drmmen maskeraden
26
7.6.12
the scent of a lioness lingers
among the sleeping fig trees
7.7.12
puts words before his desires, as on an altar
or the way the stitch domesticates the dithyramb
7.8.12
all night the rain in the cour intrieure upon the green tables
a Swedish perturbation spinning southward sur Lle-de-France
7.9.12
along the Gironde the mourning doves sing their low desire in Charentaise
as a choir of ten thousand hlianthes turn their faces vers le crescendo du matin
7.10.12
swallows swoop and twist in the garden courtyard after rain
the buzz of a moto unraveling the morning along the estuaire
7.11.12
Port-Maubert to Royon and back in a crooked line at 00:31 a.m.
the creatures in order: hedgehog, owl, hawk, two rabbits, two cats, lone fox
27
7.12.12
Think to draw a line, top to bottom, upon the travelogue,
then live on either side of the place this mirror describes
7.13.12
Friday le treizime
Bon chance everyone
7.14.12
Deux grands cigognes circle the bull en point in the field on the edge
of the marsh near La Grange des Marais this holiday morning
7.15.12
juste avant minuit
mugit le silence
just before midnight
the silence roars
7.16.12
Dome of blue serene above the reeds of the marais
at the end of the chemin yawns the rivers expanse
28
MY SECRET WARS
OF 1984
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
[envoi]
17
18
[A phrase of absolutism]
A phrase like "I advocate" does not imply the kind of absolutism
that is suggested by "I am". A tool / made out of thought. A
totalitarian dictatorship over my childhood is over, so now what?
A transition from middle to high school, from thirteen to
fourteen. A transition that crosses through the unknown X.
19
21
[Alphabetized to represent]
22
23
And suddenly somebody says, "Oh, it's got to be up there, and it's
Star Wars," and so forth, says Ronald Reagan. And the
experience of using it, which includes the experience of
understanding it, either as speech or as writing, is inevitably
active. And I fail to protect
from the night.
24
[Anywhere I walk]
25
[As a scholar]
26
[Between women]
27
[But if guilt]
28
29
[Closes]
30
31
[Each illustration]
32
[Electric dreams]
33
[Feminism defined]
34
RUTH DANON
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
15
I.
19
OUTWARD
1.
I would never build a house
on a steep inaccessible cliff
nor in a solitary desert
neither upon the eggs of
birds nor upon a field of
acorns.
I did not say this exactly. I said
I am alone. I am ashamed.
I said I am so thirsty I
want something to drink. And
I said there are small shells
crushed beneath my feet. And I
also said one simple thing.
(Never to go against the
grain.)
Think of this as a random series of facts.
The real trick is to say it out as flat
as possible. Really the trick is to estimate
from here, the journey outward.
20
2.
We begin at a fixed point,
deprived of light.
The tradeoff
begins at the limits.
Desire is a random fact.
Think of it. Desire
is interfering with me.
21
3.
I threw the china out the window
and the glasses and cups and all
the pictures of him I had
around the house. I laid out
the tarot cards and the tea.
I hopped on a slow boat, gave it
a ghost of chance to get there.
(All white stone is softer than red.)
22
4.
Consider the simple tools.
The ax. The ax
making its own handle.
(Never to go against the grain.)
I do
not understand you
or your alternatives
I said primly.
(I am pinching my pennies.
Eventually
this house must fall and fall.)
(Mousetalk)
23
5.
Under the old paint, brass
and glass, wood, the original
gleam. Light and air.
First
I strip everything.
Then
I paint the walls.
I have lost something I said
and I want it back.
I did not say it, but it is true
that doors should imitate the windows.
From whatever side
we take in light
we ought to have free
sight of the sky.
24
6.
I could simply start,
could count myself
lucky knowing
that everything tends
to a particular moment.
How to account for it
without falsifying the record.
Talking is talking.
25
7.
I can take
a hard line when I have to.
I is not a name.
A name not claimed
is no name. I will argue
the point since I have
no choice.
Something is there,
a boat in the water
just beyond the horizon.
You cant feel the boat moving
but somehow it gets there.
26
8.
A vision. The colors
of an attitude. The sea
rolling up. The boat
on its path. We are
neither of us
where we think.
You, the one who listens, you
are a steady customer
and you wait with your hands
cradling the cup of coffee.
Truth is in details.
Trust me, you said suddenly,
trust me.
(What am I building?
What house is this
that we must work
so hard?)
And that great stretch
of the water still to cross.
But heres this. Acute.
This certainty.
Every other possibility
has exhausted itself.
27
archipelago counterpoint
Marcia Arrieta
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
19
intermixed
nebulous insurgent
you dream your life
into invariables
tidal friction
astronomical friends
illegible
you plant trees
the days are void
in conversation
you find a postcard
Timeless Auras collages,
sumi paintings, paper sculptures
thereafter solemn
books become situations
at any moment you might disappear
intuitive
a thread will unravel
sword, shield, owl, rose
20
to some extent
*
the letters seem to be disappearing
*
my feet become the roots of the oak
*
i am looking for a satisfactory conversation & then a bit of silence
*
oblique seizures in an attempt for consciousness
*
the designs are in a shattered clock
*
bewilder imagine enclaves sober
*
there are gaps
*
a strange person made of bags stranded on the freeway encourages me to move on
21
outlaw
document walks stunned embankments cathedrals outside dust
exclamation displaced offshore wildfire contingent outline peace
nomad existence in the dunes in the castle bridges & windows
landscape paintings monasteries abbeys remember astronomy
architect
holes envision eclectic trees translucent isles rocks winds & calm
captured patterns designs thus preventing build the light infinite
reconstruct possibilities rethink mountains inside the square
cyclical motion the poetics the construction imagination memory
22
23
*
the light comes in slowly. gradually. not always.
subtle realization the surreal. dreams. desires. instincts. dramas. survival.
*
we go shopping for trees.
*
birds & thoughts.
the owl is hidden on the island.
*
the rim of the world.
a wireless grid.
*
travels within/
travels without.
*
through the empty corridors.
24
25
refraction ideal
Refraction of a Spherical Wave at a Plane Surface
Robert E. Wood
Physical Optics
the container of pink paint is upside down.
Suppose a spherical wave originating at 0 to be refracted at the plane
surface AB.
blue waves on canvas. yellow suns.
The evolute of the hyperbola is the caustic of the refracted wave, in this case
virtual of course.
the red paintbrush floats.
wave-front. radiant point.
concept time. concept space. unconventional.
26
letters
27
28
29
30
revolution
pensive chaos. love.
indeterminate.
we travel to the andes.
einstein speaks of how the starlight bends around the sun.
i wind a strand of hair around my finger.
you look for a yellow pencil.
squares triangles paths
around & through we must travel.
31
32
continual
rationals
irrationals
poetry
space
islands
iceblink:
a glare in the sky
over an ice field
imagine
sun
33
34
POEMS / C. KUBASTA
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Apparently, that high-styled, poufed & pompadoured poodle, who so easily dominates the
dog show industry achieves its blistering white with talcum powder. In fact, each and every
dog with a showy white patch has been so dusted.
Heres something: my fathers new wife makes him look sober by comparison.
Heres another: my seven-year-old half-brother desperately trying to get away from both of
them.
Im afraid he will ask me questions and that I will tell the truth.
At some point, I began calling my father Father. Like me, he appreciates the formality.
An appoggiatura is a little discord, little grace note, little descant impulse, off-key, before the
melody resolves into a main note. Apparently, its the reason people well up during songs.
In the appoggiatura, we long for resolution. Once resolved, we ache for the appoggiatura.
An apocryphal story: the time he put my little brother, two years old, into the tub, filled it
up, then went down to the basement to rip boards on the table saw [To rip boards on the
table saw? He cant build a birdfeeder. But sometimes you need to rip boards.]
My mother returned hours later, her boy upright and blue, cried-out; her husband barely
upright.
[This is just a story Ive been told; a story
13
Even the phrases we reach for using or mining our relationships imply attachments
turned to commodities, [ . . .]
an entire landscape of emotion turned
to hollow earth [ . . .]
everything weve ever seen
or forged
or felt.
Alcoholics are like wallpaper, nothing like the stories of books (the brilliant misanthrope;
the beloved broken thing).
Im full up.
A few years ago, I gave a guest lecture and invited my father. The Cinderella cluster, with
Cinderella and Donkeyskin and Thousand Furs. In each, a girl is cast out; redeemed. She hides
in rags, in cast-off pelts, in the skinned hide of a donkey.
In each, the explicit danger is a parent.
At lunch he said nothing: no bravado, no jokes. What is most him in me is the bravado, the
jokes. To be stripped of that is to be stripped of everything.
14
15
all of the things of this world I loved: stones and seeds, the long beans of locust trees, the
lacework of sycamore pods. I had hid my loving of, lest desire burn in my body
Elizabeth Parris, nine, the youngest of the original accusers but her father sent her to live
in town, among the non-elect
The rest had passed from playing with homemade wagons, to sewing and washing and
cooking, mostly in other peoples homes, until married, and then they played with
the scapegoating of Tituba was a long year of lessons
16
becoming flame, signaling to the Devil I was ripe as pepperberry, half-gone already
As for pepperberry
There are two varieties colloquially called this: Schinus molle native to Peru, and now found
often in Southern California. There are/were no pepperberries in Massachusetts.
Schinus molle looks like weeping willow
a girls unpinned hair fraught with brambles
though not evergreen and not hardy
thinned blood a lacework of cerulean blue delicate treachery of teeth
north of Illinois. Berries ripen in late summer
(the trials began early Spring, the timing all wrong)
and can be dried quickly to retain color.
17
When Mother caught me playing these useless games, she scattered my treasures, raised
her hand to strike, but Father stepped between. He said, She is doing the work of the Lord
on earth.
18
You say I knew, I must have known, there was no devil in that room.
19
Our names Children of the Lord in weeklies and pamphlets from Salem Town.
1696: The Reverend Parris, for encouraging local vendettas, for paying too much attention
to children, for cultivating strife to enhance his own station (these accusations from his
parishioners, and the leadership of his church)
(here the girls are still children, used and led astray)
Soon it would fall to them.
1706: Ann Putnams apology:
Though what was said or done by me against any person I can truly and uprightly say, before God
and man, I did it not out of any anger, malice, or ill-will to any person, for I had no such thing
against one of them; but what I did was ignorantly, being deluded by Satan
I desire to lie in the dust . . .
20
He sent me away. The Devil takes a seat where there are too many women under one
roof.
21
I will endure the knowing that Satan has fingers long and gentle, and he beckons me.
22
I could hang for this. For the smug one I had a fit beyond sense, drooling on the floor, they
bade her touch me, and relieve my torment.
23
24
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-60964-219-8
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015939196
BlazeVOX [books]
131 Euclid Ave
Kenmore, NY 14217
[email protected]
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
In Shakespeare's Hamlet, Ophelia drowns under the weight of her own dress. I had
never imagined before that plain white silk could kill.
A year and a half ago, I put on my best clothes. I boarded Flight 2682 to nowhere,
watched the clouds tremble and swoon.
I arrived in the heat of the day and finally, he met me at my door. All I could do was
stare. He looked me in the eyes and said, I'm so sorry.
*
That unmatched form and feature of blown youth
Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune and harsh...
When we first met, in a lush garden at the end of summer, I thought I would bear his
children. First the bouquet, then crisp white linens, and eventually, little silver spoons.
It is indeed expected that we accumulate these things. No one wants live in a strange
house, opening and closing the same empty cabinet.
A man is still standing with his hand against the doorframe. He clears his throat. He
stutters.
*
And I, of ladies most deject and wretched....
At first, I didn't quite understand the question. Define closeness. Define empty.
When he smiled, I felt my whole body grow colder.
*
13
The glass of fashion and the mould of form.... Blasted with ecstasy.
If a man turns his head in such a way, who or what is shattered?
In Hamlet, characters take knives to the heart, only to be survived by small fragments of
their former selves: a courtier, a soldier, a scholar.
We hear their footsteps in the corridor, never in unison. The floorboards swoon beneath
the weight of their many feet.
*
Th' observed of all observers, quite, quite down...
He would watch as I tried to make sense of train schedules. I wanted to be alone in the
church, so that I could ask something of the marble statue, the milky-eyed saints.
Even then, I searched for the right word. Alone with my thoughts, I felt as though I had
fallen asleep in a strange bed.
I looked out at the platform. It was always the same woman, boarding the same train.
*
When the chapel door closes, what will I be left with?
The dress was too heavy for me to carry. I set it near the altar, folded in a perfect square.
From the aisle, the window looked as though it had been repeatedly fractured. I wanted
to finish the ceremony. I wanted so badly to leave.
*
Th' expectancy and rose of the fair state...
In Hamlet, Ophelia loves without regard to her station. The daughter of Polonius, and
14
sister of Laertes, she is a young noblewoman reaching far above her magnificent,
ornamented, fully submerged head.
Throughout the play, many characters hint at the unsayable: a torn dress, an empty glass,
the same bells ringing in the distance.
But what does it mean to give one's consent? We are led and misled by those we love, an
expectant white backdrop shuddering in the distance.
*
The courtiers, soldiers, scholars, eye, tongue, sword....
After loss, we are survived by small fragments of our former selves. A neatly folded
gown, a heap of dead lilies, a silver earring.
In the film version of this story, Fortinbras, Horatio, and Osric are spared. We see in
each them some of Hamlet's features: the dark blue eyes, a cheekbone, a freckle.
What would it take to hold together the pieces? I undo the buttons on my dress. I pull
back the sheets. I try my best to sleep.
*
What a noble mind is here o'erthrown...
Was I the victim or wasn't I?
On the very last night, he tried to tell me I was pretty. He opened a book I had read, but
didn't understand. He read aloud from it.
I felt myself getting drunker. He kept telling me, drink.
That was when I looked out the window. I saw my crystal shot glass gleaming in his
hand. He quietly set another in its place.
The room grew colder and colder. I began gathering my things to go.
15
*
What does it mean to give one's consent? Throughout Hamlet, Ophelia keeps
misunderstanding the question.
No more but so?
Do you doubt that?
I do not know, my lord, what I should think...
We are led and misled by those we love, the same bells ringing in the distance. After loss,
death, and madness, she wonders how the world can look so much the same.
She enters stage left.
She exits.
*
That sucked the honey of his music vows...
If a man changes his mind, who will be sorry for you?
I try to call home from the airport.
But everyone there is so happy. My sister-in-law is finally pregnant.
I feel my dress grow heavy. I think of a lake.
*
16
17
I. OPHELIA
do you doubt that no more but so I shall th' effect of this good lesson keep as
watchman to my heart but good my brother 'tis in my memory lock'd and you
yourself shall keep the key of it so please you, something touching the lord
hamlet he hath, my lord of late made many tenders of his affection to me I do
not know my lord, what I should think my lord he hath importun'd me with
love in honourable fashion and hath given countenance to his speech my lord
with almost all the holy vows of heaven I shall obey my lord o my lord my lord
I have been so affrighted my lord as I was sewing in my closet lord hamlet with
his doublet all unbrac'd my lord I do not know but truly I do fear it he took me
by the wrist and held me hard then goes he to the length of all his arm no my
good lord but as you did command I did repel his letters and denied madam I
wish it may good my lord how does your honour for this many a day my lord I
have remembrances of yours that I have longed long to re-deliver my honour'd
lord you know right well you did and with them words of so sweet breath
compos'd my lord what means your lordship could beauty my lord have better
commerce than with honesty indeed my lord you made me believe so I was the
more deceived at home my lord o help him you sweet heavens o heavenly
powers restore him o what a noble mind is here o'erthrown the courtier's
scholar's soldier's eye tongue sword th' expectancy and rose of the fair state the
glass of fashion and the mould of form th' observ'd of all observers quite quite
down and I of ladies most deject and wretched that suck'd the honey of his
music vows now see that noble and most sovereign reason like sweet bells
jangled out of tune and harsh that unmatch'd form and feature of blown youth
blasted with ecstasy o, woe is me t' have seen what I have seen see what I see
no my lord ay my lord I think nothing my lord what is my lord you are merry
my lord ay my lord nay 'tis twice two months my lord what means this my lord
belike this show imports the argument of the play will he tell us what this show
meant you are naught you are naught I'll mark the play for us and for our
tragedy 'tis brief my lord you are as good as a chorus my lord you are keen my
lord you are keen still better and worse the king rises where is the beauteous
majesty of Denmark how should I your true-love know say you nay pray you
mark he is dead and gone lady white his shroud as the mountain snow larded all
with sweet flowers well god did you they say the owl was a baker's daughter
lord we know what we are but know not what we may be god be at pray let's
have no words of this but when they ask you what it means say you this indeed
la without an oath I'll make an end by saint charity I hope all will be well we
must be patient but I cannot choose but weep to think they would lay him i' th'
cold ground they bore him barefac'd on the bier you must sing 'a-down a-down
and you call him o how the wheel becomes it it is the false steward that stole his
there's rosemary that's for remembrance pray you love remember and there is
pansies that's for thoughts there's fennel for you and columbines there's rue for
you and here's some for me we may call it herb of grace o' sundays and will
he not come again but as you did command I did repel his letters and denied
21
Whatever Speaks on
Behalf of Hashish
Poems
by Anis Shivani
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Illumination
We hurt the pianos backbone, we revert to the nuisance of commuters on ischemic
trains. Fate, a novitiate marker of swollen blue feet in the petite morgue. Do you
believe in turtles shedding light? I was in a hammock, stranded in threads of sun,
numberless. One should welcome the positively dynamic chairs whose unseen thorns
we inhabit in a cerulean morning of surpassing ceremony, whereafter we proceed to
the seminar of abstraction where criture fminine occurs at last to the shifting glances
of open windows. Acrostic, make water heavy, turn in your canceled checks: lavish
with cartons of cigars, fine wines beloved of the caricatures of bestiality, trombones
splashing out a migraine of obsessive love, feet that got burnt at South Beach when no
one was looking. Everyone falls in love with their own wrong side. I will let you
through, this one time, but there is the broken turnstile, do you see the angry morning
come to a crest? Pornography is nothing if not the febrile curves of the sun in decline.
Or I should say a possibility of kidnapping, and the nose, curmudgeonly all through
the fascist years, is suddenly a delicate instrument of joy. This is a television of
bankruptcy. I am not getting through to you, it is impossible when you are listening so
intently. If you had been a spectator at the Black Death, you would have been
surprised at the sheer amount of noise: nostalgia for things unknown, unseen, for the
row of poets who stand condemned by the arsenals of democracy, their bald heads
itching from the tortures of summer. If you come to me in the best hours of the night,
but you never do After the death of the fly all noise ceases. The quiet extends from
the beginning of human history until the end. The age of the worker becomes opaque
through unequal tempo. To have been Lorca in the moment of surprise! To have
descended into Granada on the wings of sturdy morality, forever immune to petty
thievery! For being queer. For being a waffler. For the hyperbole of folklore. What can
I say about you thats new? Montaigne thought it is a matter of thinking things out,
like a porn star in retirement, looking back over the ups and downs of a career of
entente. The clerk in me clinches the argument through muscle strain. The sound of
the sparkling souvenir, supplement to human rights, every chalky supper changing me
imperceptibly into chamber music, a conscript outfitted for originality. Pest, your
perversions are insignia for rocks metamorphosed into black squirrels, agouti, pocket
gophers, the too soft colors of socialists in sitting rooms.
11
I.
December 31
bernadette mayer
how did you live through the bush years
i didnt win any prizes
but winter surprised like a second childhood
to the tenebrous nursery a decade late
wolf spoor kept woman awake
in the far cabin
snowy light falling mute
to the clomp of the bearish
moon oh its been all right
i know my length in meters
i have my magic marker
and you your forest
this line makes it a sonnet
15
16
17
Averroes
1.
Ahead of the moving company, whar your gwine,
aha, said Adam, my God I warm myself and our eye
has seen it. But the stomach, when shall all men good
be sudden fits of ague, now the mighty Centaur seems
to lead: the astronaut is going to find he was only
twenty dolphins ahead, sheer Africanity, aformosia
in common with consumers paradise of transistors,
food mixers, and but a faint struggle with servants.
If you look out my window at the superlatives of haze,
thrice does she sink down in deadly snows: all foods
are out of their wits, alleged rocks or minerals, yet
you draw not iron, not rhetorical names, but Adams
stylemy governor this morning, colonist of interests
as old as hydrocarbon, things intended to be heard.
To what is to be attributed the extinction of the mystic
orgies of the East? Grown together by adhesion of
voyages, under stones, dead leaves, eruption of fine
arts, abstinent bridegrooms, two of whom were curtailed in the handles. Cross a pike, water, provision
of epitome; representation of some parts of plaintiffs
demands; abrasive on the sea bed; the place where I
stop; seamen and carpenters employed all night to take
the average of opinionsinto which we return at death.
18
2.
Au pair yielding gold, ask aunty to come and cut it
for me, sometimes with the idea of instrumentality.
I have arisen to vigor, heroic aspiring, careless rage,
the eastern languages failing to express the vowels.
Why chew leathery beef in the aspidistral bliss, the
weed of life grows where air is hot and winnowed.
Machines of ostentation, a wooden beam, a missile
on land, on board ship, thus apocalyptic visions are
made to seem very trim and express: this polluted
chancellor, horrid blasphemer, another system of
telling fortunes, present in pure arithmetic. Barefooted predestination, bohemians at the Parthenon,
the alks built upon rocks, it was a cold dagger au
naturel. The likeness of stone weight youve seen
in the literature of amputation, whenever surfaces
become sore. By attrition of ceremony, the kindle
flames around the solar disk; practically every man
is an atheist, heir apparent to the throne. Sufferings
which fit me for future happiness, hang no weight
upon my heart, the design afterwards used as flag.
19
3.
Or quiet, busied in appeasing, grim appearance in
your favor, all the lines represent judges like the
lesser sort of birds eggsa phantom or apparition
to secure worldwide political appeasement. The
apartment has an elevator. These foolish things, a
tinkling piano, your phosphate of lime, animals
mimicking human form, ten days ration should the
moment come. There would be the semblance of a
general retreat from the apex. Can you ante up?
You pay as you enter, you whose business is to walk
in front, as an usher, an ant-eater, a bird of gray
plumage, the axle-tree of the antarctic. Lantern of
subtleties, I want arithmetic: sequence of numbers
in which popes power aristocracies of reason and
virtue. If she would apply to his request, she would
be set to liberty. A deaths head grins like an antic,
behind this drum are several vaults, hybrids, macroscopes, humiliation of fractured limbs. The doublemindednes of the word dux, burlesque writing
filled with nonsense, brave assassins stabbing in the
dark: this house is restored of hearth, of astral lamps.
20
dear foucault
imitation of discourse
twin trips to harmony gendered firewalls
water she said gurgling along canals
of intestines bees-worlds duped in
nephrous sentences balloon-like
sun-diagram in ruffian drums pinned
internet grapes yagodas bluish
and believable eyes
of butterblue taffeta
mimicry of unseatable guests
21
22
Gertrude Stein
The sash is not like anything mustard
Called to the telephone six times during this effort
If lilies are lily white if they exhaust noise
Horseshoe nails, pebbles, pipe-type cigarette holders
A blue coat is guided guided away
As stupid, as barbaric as successful barbarism demands
If the speed is open, if the color is careless
Ive done some discovering and some propaganda
A color in shaving, a saloon is well placed
Fingernails which, daily, she trimmed and polished
A winning of all the blessings, a sample not a sample
Paragraphs are emotional, sentences are not
Cough out cough out in the leather and really feather
Since her time, oily tides of kitsch have continued
A shawl is a wedding, a piece of wax
Ridiculous miniature alabaster fountains
23
24
A COLLECTION OF POEMS
BY K. ALMA PETERSON
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
BlazeVOX
Acknowledgments
Thanks to my circle of writer friends, who gave me, and these
poems, help and encouragement: Charisse Gendron, Cindra
Halm, Terri Ford, Kath Jesme, Maeve Kinkead, Cheryl
Ekstrum, and Rosemary Jensen. Thanks especially to Kath
Jesme for skillfully helping shape an unwieldy manuscript
into this book.
The author gratefully acknowledges the following journals for
previous publication, as follows:
"Sleight with Homage to Linen" and "Principle Trainer" from
IthacaLit online Spring 2015
"Coyote" from Thirty Days: the Best of the 30/30 Project's First
Year, published by Tupelo Press, copyright 2015
"Collective Sense of Sleep" from E.T.A, published by
Wesleyan University, 2014
"Divertimento" appears in Kestrel Issue 34.
Table of Contents
Part 1 ......................................................................................................... 13
Securing the Tent ....................................................................................... 15
Inelegant Human Form ............................................................................ 16
My iPhone Channels Sal Dali on Delray Beach ............................... 17
Dead Tree as Central Figure in Icy Dream ........................................ 18
The Great Moot .......................................................................................... 19
Impersonal Impersonation .................................................................... 20
Cat, at Length .............................................................................................. 21
Blue Bowl Ringing .....................................................................................22
Contortionist ............................................................................................... 23
Mind Reader ............................................................................................... 24
Florida ........................................................................................................... 25
Mabel, formerly Mary .............................................................................. 26
Sea Cow ......................................................................................................... 27
Stage Name (rocket) ................................................................................. 28
Canter ........................................................................................................... 29
Handler ........................................................................................................ 30
Wardrobe ..................................................................................................... 31
Reader of Second Thoughts .................................................................... 32
Walking on Stilts ........................................................................................ 33
Aubade ......................................................................................................... 34
Eastern (anything but) Standard Time ................................................ 35
From Shore ................................................................................................. 36
Trains Derail in Deepest Woods and We Take Positions We
Cannot Defend ........................................................................................ 37
Playing With Magic .................................................................................. 38
Chiropractor to the Clowns ................................................................... 39
City of Domesticity ................................................................................... 40
Boomerang ................................................................................................... 41
Principle Trainer ....................................................................................... 42
Triolet for Static Trapeze ........................................................................ 43
Florida Historic Hotel .............................................................................. 44
What We Dont Know Wont Become Us.......................................... 45
Separation, with Residential Shifts ...................................................... 46
Sleight with Homage to Linen ................................................................47
Alligator in Retirement............................................................................ 48
Part 11 ...................................................................................................... 49
Collective Sense of Sleep ......................................................................... 51
Seeing It Coming ........................................................................................52
Not Quite Quits .......................................................................................... 54
Silo in the middle of town: settled grains true enough ................... 55
No Tomorrow ............................................................................................. 56
Pastoral for One Mistaken ....................................................................... 57
A little rain, then. Less ............................................................................. 58
Dear Now-youve-gone-and-done-it,................................................... 59
Not a Muscle Moves Me Any Longer .................................................. 60
Ghost Work .................................................................................................. 61
No Clouds Passing..................................................................................... 62
Vespers ......................................................................................................... 63
Living Room ................................................................................................ 64
Once We Fly ............................................................................................... 65
Month of Sun Days ................................................................................... 66
Passage.......................................................................................................... 67
The Nomenclature of Pain ..................................................................... 68
Coyote ........................................................................................................... 69
With the Cold Moon Came .................................................................... 70
On the Long Life of Sound ...................................................................... 71
Clearing House ...........................................................................................72
The Salt Works of Random Chemistry................................................ 73
Divertimento .............................................................................................. 74
Investigations of a Made-up Mind ........................................................ 75
More of the Same Morning .................................................................... 76
Dame Fortuna, Id Know You Anywhere ............................................ 77
One of the Birds ......................................................................................... 78
Of Late the Prescient Palms ................................................................... 79
Span ............................................................................................................... 80
Dame Fortuna On the Limits of Gratitude ......................................... 81
Debate Among High Clouds .................................................................. 82
Part 1
15
16
17
refurbished
18
19
Impersonal Impersonation
Jars of jeers in my glove box
& the Buddha mask secured.
The din of many fenders bending.
In my sleep Im halfway down
Aisle 6, scanning sugared sneers,
frosted snorts, minted sorries.
No ideal retort exists. I rue
therefore I err.
Tomorrow I will box and sip
my skills set, sans instructions.
Tines and sporks included
in the picnic pack.
Appetite ships separately.
20
Cat, at Length
She outstretches
human in size
and attitude.
The furniture is hers to claw.
Im on the arm of the divan
absentmindedly
she touches
21
22
whats
Contortionist
In rehabilitation I sewed my hankering
between twelve layers of resolve. Blue as wonder
was the tug of sailfish on my line. Release me
back into the brine. In the historic village
fishing lines and lunch lines merged. Squared
might be a better word than cloned, my efficiency
expert opines. Ghostly holy is my third-rail charm.
I bet my last bitcoin on an internet evangelist
who turned out to be an avatar. A sympathetic
green-thumber reduced my dust-to-dust anxiety.
In yoga class I balance on one leg until the tide
comes home and the roosters chicken out.
23
Mind Reader
Couldnt door less. Prying
into soulless windows, crowbar
to the eyebrow valance
painless. Crows chortle uh uh
in amusement. Their muse
and mine canary on inside
the coal bin. Its been weedy
on the premises we whack.
A gardeners heart lies bleeding,
her whip in petals. Pity, its own
nemesis. Whichever chamber
dominates her morel ears
tips his tympanic sense of time.
They make a better stem
than system. Trusses constitute
a small component of the big
attraction. Say no more be done
about betrothal. Theres a catch
in every roof. Gutters clog.
I wear down at the melds. Hold
the handrail on ascent. I see
your lantern swaying.
24
Marine Layer
Kit Robinson
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
Marine Layer
by Kit Robinson
2015 by Kit Robinson. All rights reserved.
Published by BlazeVOX [books]
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without the
publishers written permission, except for brief quotations in reviews.
Printed in the United States of America
Interior design and typesetting by Geoffrey Gatza
Cover Art by Kit Robinson
First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-60964-229-7
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015948505
BlazeVOX [books]
131 Euclid Ave
Kenmore, NY 14217
[email protected]
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
BlazeVOX
Acknowledgments
Big thanks to Ted Pearson, Ted Greenwald and Geoffrey Gatza.
Some of these poems have appeared in Across the Margin, Annex Press,
Banqueted, Dreamboat, Ladowich, Memory is a Kind of Accomplishment,
Oversound, Poetry is Dead, Prelude, Sprung Formal, The Recluse and VLAK.
CONTENTS
Irish Beach ...................................................................................................................... 13
57 Varieties ...................................................................................................................... 13
Those Recently Met ..................................................................................................... 17
Running on Empty ....................................................................................................... 19
Marine Layer .................................................................................................................. 21
The Idea Takes Time ...................................................................................................26
10 Things ......................................................................................................................... 27
No Such Thing as Silence...........................................................................................28
Destroyed Work ........................................................................................................... 30
Transistor Radio ........................................................................................................... 32
Eventual Lispector........................................................................................................ 34
Turn on All the Receivers .......................................................................................... 36
The Corporation Yard ................................................................................................. 38
Construction Is the Love of Coffee ......................................................................... 40
Cloudy and Cool at the Car Wash ........................................................................... 41
Nights Flicker, Feelings Well Up .............................................................................42
In the Curvature of the Moment .............................................................................. 43
Several Seconds Later Another Letter.................................................................... 45
Neighboring Vessels ................................................................................................... 48
Signal Strength .............................................................................................................. 51
States of Mind Fit Together ....................................................................................... 53
Put a Notebook on the Nightstand .......................................................................... 54
This Written Record Is an Enclosure ..................................................................... 55
Rhythm of the Logs ...................................................................................................... 56
High Dudgeon ............................................................................................................... 57
The Something that Comes out of Nothing .......................................................... 59
Familiar Faces under Soft Lights ............................................................................ 60
Construction is the Noise of Spring ........................................................................62
Time is What We are Given ...................................................................................... 65
Relaxin at Yorkville ..................................................................................................... 67
Mistakes Are Normal .................................................................................................. 70
No Time like the Right Time ..................................................................................... 73
Dreams Are as Real as We Are ................................................................................. 75
Far Be It from Me .......................................................................................................... 77
The Turnstile of the Present...................................................................................... 78
Where Here We Grind ................................................................................................ 79
In My Guise .................................................................................................................... 81
A Transom Window .................................................................................................... 83
Marine Layer
IRISH BEACH
Satellite dish picks up signals
Part for the whole
Sound waves ocean jetliner
Similar to drink of water
Cleanses the Paleolithic
Local color is gray
Non-specific waves thru fog
Enter two bikes
The way south is strewn
Falls over onto the side of talk
Somewhere between landscape
Ampersand portrait
Art hugs the coastline
Car door closes on air
Chew on time
There is a football field of it
In every direction
Dark undersides of leaves
Psychological hummingbird
The clock strikes Great Horned Owl
Fog strokes the coast
Build local shake back into place
Hire contractors to write this
13
14
57 VARIETIES
Place short introductory paragraph here
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
Passages of light
As much time as you like
History unhooks
A truck bed is a sentence
What comes before goes before
No one likes this
The future is standing room only
Police your immediate area
It is exceptionally bright
Wind in the pines
Fatigue of nations
One thing Ive been meaning
Brilliant critters
The length of hose
Sail way out
Click mid-flight
17 things we do every day
Logical board feet
It is a far, far better thing
I spy with my little eye
Something beginning with
Concert e
Voices behind hedges
Duration inestimable
Walking the dog-eared copy
Could be happy here
Minding stakes
Man up and do the time
Girl is keen for travel
Light poem for
Who answers to
15
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
16
Unnamed sources
Is there a beginning, middle and
Barracuda Rackstraw
The quiet before the store
Implement or die
Piece of quiet
Boil the ocean
Explain behavior
Interlocking existentials
Can do altitude
A taste for the obsolete
Game show dinette
In this chapter the character does an about face
Waves when not looking
Cartier pigeon
Class dismissed
The swallow and the jay
The year approacheth
Waves crash far below
Nothing is known
The person is transparent
A vested interest in wheels
A load off
The whole list is only one item
The fractals bend in the wind
The rest goes without saying
The proprietress
The ceramicist farmer
People not otherwise encountered
Full of life of place
Landscape with hawk and sparrow
Roads pointing this way and that
Limits to what can be said or done
Such imaginary orange boundaries
Stand in for gaping fear
About face
The dawn tingles
Syllables drop like weights
Interior space is deep
Empty as eyes in a blink
Charged particles give off heat
Faster than thought
The community is cool
The road is narrow
The situation is normal
All fucked up
Yet perfectly fine
Well which is it?
18
RUNNING ON EMPTY
Lift the situation off its face
Under cycle not known at this time
Seriously didnt know that
Explore tree-lined grottoes
Wait, that cant be
Over the shoulder remnants tow a wake
Become ok
Lead underwater legions to the light
Not commenting on anything right now
Burrow into hole in time
Running on empty
The sky is beautiful
Goes without saying
When I see the glory
Become ok
Be along in a minute
Somebody bouncing a basketball one yard over
Why wait?
Each thing comes with its color
The life is full of them
Ellingtoniana
Allusions to the cresting of Harlem
Drum battles at 4:38
Morning is afternoon
Water on television
When did you become so strong?
Wait for plot to catch up
Bass player is mad cool
Music via window
Get your ticket at said station
19
20
MARINE LAYER
Marine layer
Top of the morning
Familiar ring
Lost in thought
A percentage of
Off and running
You hold the key
Time to go
They also serve
Stand and deliver
Chopping block
Time and time
Serious ladies
Arm around
When in the course
Open the gate
Swivel hips
Likely story
Dead by rights
Certain to impress
A nice feel
Built from scrap
Smoke at sunset
21
Imagine this
Nothing but space
Light emanates out
Captured in crystals
Too weak to hold
They break
Spilling everything
That hurts
Truth in fragments
On uneven ground
Your job
Repair the damage
A little today
The wide world
Come into focus
Light the lights
Gather here
Simply marvelous
Hi-de-ho
Clever comedians
This rough magic
Characteristic
On the cuff
Off the clock
22
23
Ecstatic angles
Mondrian floor
Cat on a homemade fence
Interruption rings
Cup-and-saucer tingle
Buzz-saw day
Like it or not
Nothing more important
Get to work
Sorting flames
Universal joint
Sky sail common
Sympathetic vibe
World full to bursting
Hands on deck
Much as like
Size fits all
Something missing
Too much of a thing
Good on you
Thanks a lot
See you in the middle
Biding our time
The breeze stirs
The leaves sway
24
Electric training
Think and be thunk
25
REED BYE
BLAZEVOX[BOOKS]
Buffalo, New York
BlazeVOX [ books ]
blazevox.org
21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
BlazeVOX
Table Of Contents
How it Begins, with Steps ............................................................. 11
Go to it, Every Detail ..................................................................... 12
One can Hardly Sit Straight Enough ....................................... 13
What is in the Wind ...................................................................... 14
Fire for Thought ............................................................................. 15
Hows the Flame? ........................................................................... 16
Greetings ...........................................................................................17
Coming to a Boil ............................................................................. 18
Say it was All Understood ........................................................... 19
So much Impulse Now Encloses .............................................. 20
Same Day ......................................................................................... 21
My Own Heart Certainly Sank .................................................. 22
Mind and Body ............................................................................... 23
Cutting Board .................................................................................. 24
Succession ........................................................................................ 25
This and That Met ......................................................................... 26
A Funny Cataract of Pattern ....................................................... 27
Soar Kestrel, Eyeing Fur .............................................................. 28
Summer 2014, Missing Anselm .................................................. 29
Yeah You Said That Did You Mean It .................................... 30
Soon but the End is Long ............................................................ 31
Flavors of a Single Taste .............................................................. 32
Keep on til You Make the End-Around ................................... 33
Cant Stay as Long as I Wanted ................................................. 34
A Joyful Strain A Wince of Pain ................................................ 35
In an Instant .................................................................................... 36
Point of Recognition ..................................................................... 37
In that Look She gets it Right ..................................................... 38
Washes her Hair............................................................................. 39
Increments and a Finale ............................................................. 40
Acknowledgments
Several of these poems have appeared in the following
magazines and journals: Denver Quarterly, Fact-Simile,
Summer Stock, Embodied Poetics, and Bombay Gin.
for Jill
11
12
13
14
15
16
GREETINGS
everyone associated with the pure present
A salutation!
So full and alive in the arteries
Whatever you do next will
climb continental shelves
to get back home
Come
indigo moon
lean out from your divan and lend
a floating light to each one
being washed up on the shore
As flares explore artifacts
raked from grasses, cast your glance
on tide pools
Blame and remorse stand delivered
in waves overlapping
These clans and countries you have known
17
COMING TO A BOIL
A veil, smokeproof
hanging in the midst
Is that a problem?
Yes, according to the soothsayer
No, opposed the poet
Think of it as brave
milk
where Heidigger comes from, lots of leaves
caught in his hair
so-going, finding a way
through
warp and woof. How else
sun appearing to be gone
stay eclipsed?
The rest aglowdappled leaves
exchanged for patience
Giving names a
desolation, through whose veil
things disperse
lids flapping up and down
18
19
20