tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-52341394777160261622024-03-13T16:05:18.168-07:00Bob's MagazineWhat I KNow About DeniseBobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.comBlogger135125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-76497899365294749812013-12-11T10:25:00.001-08:002013-12-20T04:10:39.957-08:00<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-26327421771847271732012-10-28T11:21:00.002-07:002012-10-28T11:21:20.174-07:00Here is a draft of Part I of a three part essay about Point-of-View I'm working on. I may get so involved in writing about first person narration I get no further, but I'd like to write about third person limited and third person omniscient as well. We'll see.<br />
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Bob Pope<br />
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<span style="line-height: 32px;"><span style="color: blue; font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif; font-size: large;">First Person</span><span style="color: #333333; font-family: Bookman Old Style, serif; font-size: 12pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">`TRUE!—nervous—very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you say that I am mad? The disease had sharpened my senses—not destroyed—not dulled them. Above all was the sense of hearing acute. I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell. How, then, am I mad? Hearken! and observe how healthily—how calmly I can tell you the whole story.</span><o:p></o:p></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;"> --Edgar Alan Poe, “The Tell-Tale Heart”<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">First person point-of-view is often taken for granted as the most simple, direct form of narration, a character in the story telling the story, but it is a multifarious point of view, often a sneaky one. One of Edgar Alan Poe’s major contributions to American fiction may be his extensive exercise of a first person point of view so unreliable as to be reliable. When it is absolutely clear at the outset his narrators are <i>mad </i>the narrative can hardly be called unreliable. We know perfectly well what to expect of them, particularly after all these years of having Poe to kick around. We can’t imagine what this voice looked like to readers before there was a Poe, before he sprang it on the world. We might want to call his narrative strategy an exercise in literary irony, since reader and writer know clearly the nature and degree of the narrator’s madness, but generally in irony the speaker does not share this knowledge. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">Even Poe’s narrators seem to know they are mad, or that their actions at the very least have the appearance of madness. The speaker of “The Tell-Tale Heart” admits his mind is diseased, but he claims he is not actually mad because his senses are acute and he hasn’t lost his ability to spin the story. This much we can grant him. If he defines madness as the withering of the senses and a loss of the ability to tell a story, he is not mad, merely diseased. His murder and mutilation of his kindly employer does in fact have a motivation: he didn’t like the look of that eye. In fact, the eye became a fascination, an obsession that attracted him and repelled him at the same time. He had to see it every night and had to kill the old man to silence the obsession that threatened his sanity. Once he smothered the fellow, cut him up, and buried him beneath the floorboards, he certainly had no more problems with the obsession of the eye, but now he had the problem of his guilt for the murder, and this guilt he could not silence except through confession.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">Since all of his actions grew from motivations we can trace to the end of his tale, he judges he is not mad, but understands that his mind is diseased. It is the disease that made him prone to obsession, and the intensity of the obsession led him to an extreme action to stop it. What could be more logical, and, therefore, not mad. His distinction is this: my mind is diseased but I am not mad, and I can prove this by the definition of terms and the clarity of my motivations. If this might qualify as an extreme Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, I think we can agree that he is saying true, for who would call OCD madness, though it may produce intense and distressing behavior? This narrator makes distinctions that prove he is not mad, by his own definition, and the degree of his unreliability is only that his argument does not convince the reader, who generally believes that though he can tell his story, though his senses are alert, and though he can explain his motivation for his acts, the whole picture we get is of a madman. We are not there to condemn the accused to a certain term in jail or to death; we are only present to hear his story.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">The whole game is so transparent that our most honest response to the joke Poe is having with us would be laughter—and, of course, Poe does have quite a macabre sense of humor, as he demonstrates through all of his stories. He’d like to be terrifying at the same time, of course, and that for the groundlings, but prefers the exquisite game of first person narration that goes directly between writer and reader, even after he’s been long dead himself and speaking from the grave. We might be tempted to say Poe is speaking to us through the persona or mask of his narrator but the communication is more direct than that. We hear Poe, catch on to what I am calling his game, and hear the voice coming through the mouth of the narrator at the same time, but no single part of the experience is the whole, and the whole is what we have to understand to continue if we are to appreciate his artistry long after the childish weirdness of undead corpses has worn off.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">The same game is played by Ring Lardner years later, but without the same effect because the images he draws for us are too much the subject—we are laughing at these American types he holds before us, but he doesn’t tease us with real sex, real death; we leave his stories with a happy sense of having understood all. Still, he and many others got this method from Edgar Alan Poe; he works it well, and for the humor of it, but without the highest reaches of art to which Poe aspires and occasionally reaches.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">This is a beginning. Poe stands at the door of American literature, particularly of the American short story, and one of his foremost gifts was his first person narration—the heart and soul of his fiction. A much more practical, durable use of first person narration can be explored in Herman Melville’s “Bartleby the Scrivener,” where extremes of character—even madness—are reserved for the subject of the narrator’s tale. Poe’s obsessive narrators always tell a story of something which has occurred to them fairly recently or as it is happening. At the end of “Ligeia,” for example, the narrator screams as the willful spirit his ideal woman takes possession of his dead wife’s body and rises before him at the vigil. At the close of “MS Found in a Bottle,” the writer/narrator shoves his manuscript in a bottle, corks it up and throws it overboard as the ship swirls into the vortex, a little like the flush of a toilet. We may imagine reading the manuscript on the beach where the bottle has washed up, or later, as we actually do, in the quiet of our homes, but the narrator—the one we believe has written these lines, died shortly, perhaps seconds, after he sent the bottle on its way. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">Melville’s narrator has time to tell his story in reflection, like Wordsworth recollecting lines in tranquility. This structural variation is a form of first person used by many writers, perhaps most notably in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s <i>The Great Gatsby, </i>where<i> </i>Nick Caraway tells the story of Jay Gatsby. In an interesting sidelight, the title of such a story or novel generally names or refers to the subject character, throwing narrative light on this other right from the start—though, of course, the story must finally be owned or at least contained by the narrator. The title of David Gutterson’s recent novel <i>The Other</i> refers to rather than names the subject character; this in a novel that poses as a biography of the other, the subject character, here an eccentric friend. Unlike Poe’s first person narratives, in this form the unusual or abnormal behavior is reserved for the subject rather than the narrator, who is usually closer in norms to the imagined reader. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">In “Bartleby,” the lawyer-narrator lets us know from the outset that he is not even a terribly ambitious lawyer; he is responsible with money rather than adventurous, and he likes to make his dough the easiest way possible. He tries to be as accepting and decent as possible putting up with the eccentricities and foibles of his small labor pool, at the expense of some personal convenience or exasperation. The narrator here is not actor but receiver of action; he tells not his own but the story of the behavior of his strange new hire. After a short period of stellar work, Bartleby shuts down, unable or unwilling to undertake those tasks required to keep the office profitable. Yet the narrator’s compassion grows as he understands more of his plight or condition: Bartleby has no life outside the office. He lives and eats there, sustaining himself on ginger nuts. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">His emptiness haunts the lawyer, who attempts to help Bartleby in as many ways as he can think of until, finally, in his impotence, he moves out of his office, thus abandoning the copyist to others who will find him haunting the stairwell. When Bartleby is at last removed to The Tombs, he dies refusing help, refusing food, and refusing hope. His story is over, but not the narrator’s. The lawyer still contains Bartleby and the lessons of his sad Scrivener. We see how his world has both contracted and expanded to include a conception of humanity that includes those of such limited personal resources that they cannot find within themselves an ability to compromise with the world enough to accept the limits, perhaps the confines of our existence, or even to scratch up a will to live. In the lawyer’s sadness, we hear that he is better for having loved Bartleby enough to accompany him to his grave, and, as the last man standing, it’s finally his story to tell and own even though it’s traveled under the flag of a story of Bartleby. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">This form of first person narration is closely related to another. As the lawyer tells the story of his strange employee and reflects upon it, writers like Frank O’Connor—in his “My Oedipus Complex” or “First Confession” or a host of others—take the subject character to be the narrator’s younger or earlier self. The adult narrator looks back on an experience he once had as a child, mixing and alternating an adult voice with the voice of the child that was him or her. Generally we hear the adult voice at the beginning and ending of such a story, though somewhere in the middle it may be obligatory to remind the reader that the teller is essentially an adult looking back. But this form doesn’t have to reach all the way back to childhood, though this might well be the most common use. Normally, the time span between present telling and past events is wide enough for the narrator to have undergone personal changes since the original and remembered time period. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">This form of first person can also cross a shorter span, so that we see what has happened in the recent past that has led to the narrator’s present condition. The essential property of this form of first person narration is that a narrator reflects on events of his or her past life, not necessarily events of childhood. In Eudora Welty’s “Why I Live at the P.O.,” the narrator tells the reader why she now lives at the Post Office, where she has worked since Papa-Daddy got her the job. In prose that emphasizes the sound of her voice, she tells the grievances against her sister which drove her out of the house:<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">I was getting along fine<span class="apple-converted-space"> </span>with Mama, Papa-Daddy and Uncle Rondo until my sister Stella-Rondo just separated from her husband and came back home again. Mr. Whitaker! Of course I went with Mr. Whitaker first, when he first appeared here in China Grove, taking "Pose Yourself" photos, and Stella-Rondo broke us up. Told him I was one-sided. Bigger on one side than the other, which is a deliberate, calculated falsehood: I'm the same. Stella-Rondo is exactly twelve months to the day younger than I am and for that reason she's spoiled.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">At the conclusion, we learn that she now lives at the Post Office because her own home is not big enough for her and her sister. It’s a comic tale filled with details of Southern family life that are terribly funny, told as much to hear these details and this voice as to explain why the narrator now lives in the Post Office. Still, that’s the shape it takes. As she still lives there as she tells the story, we may assume the time span since her moving out of her family home has been brief enough that the resentments are fresh.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;"> I mentioned Ring Lardner earlier, and this form is almost standard for him. The voices of his fiction may not be a rich as those of Welty, for he is principally a humorist, but they are pretty good for what he wants. In “The Golden Honeymoon,” the speaker’s voice is everything, and the details of the story only confirm what we have guessed about this little man and woman of Middle American life:<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">MOTHER says that when I start talking I never know when to stop. But I tell her the only time I get a chance is when she ain't around, so I have to make the most of it. I guess the fact is neither one of us would be welcome in a Quaker meeting, but as I tell Mother, what did God give us tongues for if He didn't want we should use them? Only she says He didn't give them to us to say the same thing over and over again, like I do, and repeat myself. But I say:<b><o:p></o:p></b></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">"Well, Mother," I say, "when people is like you and I and been married fifty years, do you expect everything I say will be something you ain't heard me say before? But it may be new to others, as they ain't nobody else lived with me as long as you have."<a href="http://mayhem-bob.blogspot.com/?view=classic" name="683995" style="-webkit-transition: color 0.3s; color: #009eb8; display: inline; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue Light', HelveticaNeue-Light, 'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; outline: none; text-decoration: none;"></a><o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">These passages—every one of them—underscore the most significant feature of any first person narration: what carries the day is the sound of the narrator’s voice, even if that voice comes in the guise of a madman or a child. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;"> Yet if you have ever heard the voice of pain and delusion that can come from the mouth of someone tormented by mental illness, or the halting, incomplete voice of a true child, you know that there is a certain amount of literary interpretation going on. The child must be more sophisticated than is usual to tell a lengthy story, particularly if the child tells the story of his or her own recent past, as does Holden Caulfield in <i>The Catcher in the Rye</i>, at the end of which the young man may be said to have grown up. Perhaps it is not only the events of his narrative that make an adult of him at the end of the novel but the telling of his reflective tale as well, the ordering of the events of his life. One of the extreme pleasures of this novel for young readers is Salinger’s attempt to maintain and contain the voice of an American adolescent throughout the novel, only to emerge with the voice of an adult at the end. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;"> In “A Long Day in November,” Ernest J. Gaines had a young schoolboy tell the story in first person, as if the story is occurring as we read it, though we know from the act of reading this cannot be so. Even if our willing suspension of disbelief allows us to accept that a child is actually telling this story, and that the day just falls into a natural order, we must take a leap of faith to accept that the story happens to him as we read it; still, that is exactly what the reader must do in order to appreciate the story. This is convention. The story the child tells is entertaining and well ordered not because the day just happens to fall that way, but because we know the story is really being told by Mr. Gaines masquerading as a child for our delight and to provide the meaning of the story which grows out of editorial order. But for my money, the story works and lives before us as if we were immersed in the eyes and ears of the boy narrator, with the scene happening all around us as we go, closing the gap of time in the traditional reflective first person to the immediate present. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">We have not yet exhausted the possibilities of first person narration, not by a long shot. In both Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels and Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, we see yet another way in which first person can be used, particularly in longer work. Here, both Gulliver and Hank Morgan tell their own respective stories, bringing us up to their present conditions, but what strikes me as unusual is that at times the narrator’s seem to be different persons with different purposes. In both texts, the narrator at select moments becomes the spokesman for the author’s social, political views, while at others the narrator is just plain silly, breaking up the narrative with nonsense, jokes, and bawdy detail. These narrators have at least three identities: their own, their writers, and the buffoons who prance and preen before us to distract us from the seriousness of the tale. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;"> At the same time, we see more purely literary forms of first person, as at the start of Edith Wharton’s short story “The Eyes,” which sounds in voice something like Henry James’s introduction to <i>The Turn of the </i>Screw, and in method much like Faulkner’s first person plural point-of-view in “A Rose for Emily.”<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">We had been put in the mood for ghosts, that evening, after an excellent dinner at our old friend Culwin's, by a tale of Fred Murchard's—the narrative of a strange personal visitation.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">Seen through the haze of our cigars, and by the drowsy gleam of a coal fire, Culwin's library, with its oak walls and dark old bindings, made a good setting for such evocations; and ghostly experiences at first hand being, after Murchard's brilliant opening, the only kind acceptable to us, we proceeded to take stock of our group and tax each member for a contribution. There were eight of us, andseven contrived, in a manner more or less adequate, to fulfil the condition imposed. It surprised us all to find that we could muster such a show of supernatural impressions, for none of us, excepting Murchard himself and young. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">And speaking of Henry James, that man could have the first person narrator fade out at periods in which he merely reports scenes: what he sees, what people say. The first person narrator virtually disappears into what I might call first person objective narration. Though the main character tells the story, all we experience for some rather extended passages may be objective in the way that a play can be said to be objective; we have no interpretive voice between us and the action. We see it nakedly, as we might in a dramatic, third person scene. That is one of the wonders of first person, that all of these perspectives can work individually, together, or side-by-side. I might even add here that in the stories in <i>Dubliners</i>, such as “Clay,” James Joyce may tell the story from a third person limited perspective, in which he has access to the senses and thoughts of a character the tale follows, but the nature of his stream-of-consciousness method is such that the narration leaves the control of the narrative voice and enters the mind of the focus character for extended periods before returning to third person limited, effectively interweaving third and first person points of view.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;"> These are masters of first person narration, just as there are masters of detective fiction or lyric poetry—or third person narration. Charles Portis’ <i>Dog of the South</i> should be studied by anyone interested in what is possible with first person narration in a marvelous comic excursion. There are so many more I could mention, but let me end this excursion with a last look at the thoughtful, sensitive first person narrator of James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues.” Here we see a narrator caught up in a vision of leaps across the boundaries between him and his brother Sonny, who he has never completely understood all his life:<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">I read about it in the paper, in the subway, on my way to work. I read it, and I couldn't believe it, and I read it again. Then perhaps I just stared at it, at the newsprint spelling out his name, spelling out the story. I stared at it in the swinging lights of the subway car, and in the faces and bodies of the people, and in my own face, trapped in the darkness which roared outside.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt;">It was not to be believed and I kept telling myself that, as I walked from the subway station to the high school. And at the same time I couldn't doubt it. I was scared, scared for Sonny. He became real to me again. A great block of ice got settled in my belly and kept melting there slowly all day long, while I taught my classes algebra. It was a special kind of ice. It kept melting, sending trickles of ice water all up and down my veins, but it never got less.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: 'Bookman Old Style', serif; font-size: 12pt; line-height: 32px;">We hear in this passage a voice of meditation, hoping to contain and express a revelation that has changed his life, and end the story in an image in which the two brothers become one soul in the “very cup of trembling.” In all of these cases, we follow the voice of another human being through to its final understanding or revelations, not matter how high or low his or her mentality. We ride the voice the surfers ride the waves—except on the inside.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-64623140523748390262012-07-28T09:18:00.002-07:002012-07-28T09:18:33.170-07:00<span style="background-color: white; color: blue; font-size: large;">My novella "What I Know About Denise" appears in the latest issue of <i>The Conium Review. </i>You can order it either at the journal's web site or on Amazon--the two links below:</span><br />
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<a href="http://www.coniumreview.com/store.html">http://www.coniumreview.com/store.html</a> <br />
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<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Conium-Review-Fall-2012-Vol/dp/0982595638/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1343492113&sr=1-2&keywords=the+conium+review">http://www.amazon.com/Conium-Review-Fall-2012-Vol/dp/0982595638/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1343492113&sr=1-2&keywords=the+conium+review</a>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-63840833780120589412010-12-28T10:52:00.000-08:002010-12-28T12:37:43.737-08:00Images in Ice: An Exhibit in Three Parts<div align="center"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRox406ZZBI/AAAAAAAAA1c/aJt9sQQFqzo/s1600/_DSC4125a%2Balt%2B4132%2B4126a%2Bbw%2Bsmall%255B1%255D.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 200px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5555807942660940818" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRox406ZZBI/AAAAAAAAA1c/aJt9sQQFqzo/s400/_DSC4125a%2Balt%2B4132%2B4126a%2Bbw%2Bsmall%255B1%255D.jpg" /></a><br /><span style="font-size:180%;color:#000099;">-1-</span></div>My friend Jim <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">Shirey</span> sent me the photograph above as an email attachment, with the note that he hoped I was still alive. I am at present, but do not want to be overconfident. I was excited to see another of his amazing photographs of nature, this one part of his ongoing fascination with images of ice and called "ascent of the frost spirits."<br /><br />Jim uses his camera to pick up spirits in nature. I put this <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-corrected">photograph</span> up as wallpaper on my laptop so I could look at them and think about them as I worked on a story I've been writing. At first I found myself thinking of the central figure as Queen Mab, who, according to Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet," brings us dreams. I thought also of Diana surrounded by her nymphs in a line from Keats' "Ode to a Nightingale." The speaker has allowed himself to be carried away on the wings of poesy, seeing in the night sky "haply the Queen-Moon is on her throne/Clustered around by all her starry fays."<br /><br />Then the central figure began to change, or show her many dimensions: an insect self, even a Virgin Mary self inset in the lower portion of the figure, and back again to her whole and truest self. I told Jim that I loved the photograph though it scared me a little.<br /><br />What, I asked myself, has he caught in his lens?<br /><br />He sent me another email, with the following two photographs attached, which he introduced as follows: <em>well, if the frost spirits scare you, try these on for size.</em>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-88862356904105902222010-12-28T10:49:00.000-08:002010-12-28T16:11:00.904-08:00<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRo6nt2WIHI/AAAAAAAAA1s/ZRJ-QWwuNds/s1600/DSC_3331a%2Bsmall.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 266px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5555817544311775346" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRo6nt2WIHI/AAAAAAAAA1s/ZRJ-QWwuNds/s400/DSC_3331a%2Bsmall.jpg" /></a><br /><div align="center"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRo6erGiqAI/AAAAAAAAA1k/OUTuzwxuNRI/s1600/DSC_3622%2Balt%2Balt%2Bsmall.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 266px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 400px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5555817388955576322" border="0" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRo6erGiqAI/AAAAAAAAA1k/OUTuzwxuNRI/s400/DSC_3622%2Balt%2Balt%2Bsmall.jpg" /></a><br /><span style="font-size:180%;color:#000099;">-2-</span></div><div align="center"></div><div></div><div>I had to admit these impressed me in a strange way, especially the first one. Lisa Sarkis said it reminded her of a painting called "The Scream" by Edvard Munch. I thought so myself, but it also looked a little like the mask used in the movie "Scream," though much more forlorn. It now seems to me that the primary identity is the forlorn spirit captured in or finding expression or traveling through the ice. The second one I leave entirely to your imagination (alien). </div><div><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>In a longer email, I wrote to Jim:</div><div><br /><div><div><em>...whatever madness possesses you enters through your eye in these photos. I don't even know whether they are photographs so much as visions. You once called them portals, and I think you're further than that in these. You are not looking in through a portal, you are all the way through the portal when you are taking the picture...I don't know how you capture these things, but the first step, I'm pretty sure, is seeing them. I will be looking at them for a while to come. </em></div><em></em></div><em></em></div><div><div><br />Jim wrote back, referring at one point to a scrape with cancer:</div><div></div><div><br /><em>i have gone partially through the portal. being close to death has that effect if you are open to it. this makes me really curious about death. will things come to me and ask what took so long? will they ignore me? do these questions even make sense in the context of death? will i retain enough worldly consciousness to know if these questions are answered? am i going to eat my sandwich before the dog laps it up? the little bastard is eying it already.<br /><br /></em></div><div></div></div>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-3236376878965276102010-12-28T10:43:00.000-08:002010-12-28T12:16:10.622-08:00<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRo94MLlxeI/AAAAAAAAA10/ImpG6N0tGb4/s1600/IMG_7141a%2Bsmall.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 267px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5555821125866735074" border="0" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRo94MLlxeI/AAAAAAAAA10/ImpG6N0tGb4/s400/IMG_7141a%2Bsmall.jpg" /></a><br /><div><a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRowAAu3bRI/AAAAAAAAA00/dMR7bynPWT8/s1600/IMG_7155%2Balt%2Bsmall.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 300px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 400px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5555805867069631762" border="0" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/TRowAAu3bRI/AAAAAAAAA00/dMR7bynPWT8/s400/IMG_7155%2Balt%2Bsmall.jpg" /></a></div><br /><p align="center"><span style="font-size:180%;color:#000099;">-3-</span></p><p>These final images Jim just sent me, saying he had caught them earlier in the day. </p><p>In the first, it seemed to me the spirit of man and fish moved through ice together, though what the relationship of man and fish might be, or how and why this happened, I cannot and do not want to say. In the second, I find myself thinking of Elizabeth Smart traveling with her cruel and delusionary abductors, though I am certain you will see better images. Why such an image would be caught in ice, I cannot say, so I am almost certain I must be wrong...unless these images are spirit photographs themselves, moments of our lives captured in the frozen waters.</p><p>Jim wanted to clarify something about his 'seeing' the images in ice:</p><p></p><p></p><em>by the way, i cannot see these images in the world until i process them. the colors are too muted. so i am taking a picture of what is inside the door and seeing it later. later, the door has changed, so i can never go back.</em><br /><em></em><br />When I asked him if I could post these on my blog so others could see them, he said: <em>go for it. they are my gift to the world.</em>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-12839281610932837882010-09-07T06:23:00.000-07:002010-09-07T19:59:53.566-07:00<span style="color:#660000;">Katie Sabaka/"Storms"<br />Brian Sabin/"A mother sits crying..."<br />Maria Paxos/"Solitude"<br />Alexis Pope/"Coughing Up Petals" </span><br /><span style="color:#660000;">Joshua Friedt/"The Girl with the Ridiculous Headband"<br />Michelle Sinsky/"The Edge of the Park"<br />Rachel Stone/"Dead Letters"<br />Janell Brownlee/”Caught”<br />Cheryl Evans/"The Lady on the Bus"<br />Seth Hepner/"The Rat"<br />Sarah Oser/"Stuck in a Moment"<br />Karen Pavlisko/"Lola"<br />Sarah Dravec/"Absolution, Resolution"<br />Curt Brown/"They Brought It Up in Trucks"<br /><br />Go right to any of these by looking in the Blog Archive at the bottom of the page and clicking on the writer. </span>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-88694162552163283972010-09-07T06:20:00.000-07:002010-09-07T11:41:17.140-07:00Katie Sabaka<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">Storms </span><br /><br />The boy peered out his living room window, watching the sky morph in color and shape. As he had walked home from school the sky had been a bright, clear blue but the dark clouds had gathered quickly, following him down the sidewalk to his house. The boy leaned in toward the window till his nose touched the glass. Storm clouds and the setting sun gave everything outside an eerie, orange glow.<br /><br />A loud sigh filled the room. The boy looked to his mother as she turned over and buried her head deeper in the couch cushions. She was asleep and unaware. She had always been the type that preferred a glass of wine and a long afternoon nap over the nagging responsibilities of a kid, a house, a life.<br /><br />A flash of lightning drew the boy’s attention back to the window. The rain began to fall slowly, a sprinkling haze. The wind picked up and the boy watched as the neighbor’s empty trash can rolled and tumbled down the road. Then without warning the sky opened and torrents of rain crashed down. The rain blew sideways beating against the window pane in an unending percussive beat.<br /><br />Headlights pulled into the driveway, shining through the window and momentarily blinding the boy. He blinked rapidly and involuntarily leapt to his a feet, a surge of adrenaline pulsing through his veins. He quickly made his way to the small, dull-yellow kitchen.<br /><br />The front door slammed and in an instant the boy had secured himself in the cabinet under the sink. It was a small space and his legs tangled with cleaning products and the cold, wet sink pipes. The boy could hear his heartbeat pounding in his ears and he took a few deep breaths to calm himself.<br /><br />It began as a muffled disagreement, a small skirmish whose accusations were drowned out by the pouring rain. But then the shouting began. It grew louder till screaming words cut through all other noise.<br /><br />The boy could only make out a few words and phrases that reverberated off the walls but he couldn’t seem to understand what was actually being said. To him every shout felt like a sharp stab ripping through his stomach. He wrapped his arms around his middle tightly, attempting to protect his insides from the onslaught of words.<br /><br />Soon the screaming was accompanied by a scuffle of violence. The boy winced at the noise of something large and metallic crashing to the ground. Next came the sound of breaking glass or perhaps it was ceramic? Maybe it was the blue lamp that sat on the end table or was it a window?<br /><br />The boy decided it must have been a window because the sounds of the storm felt suddenly more intimate. He swore the howling wind was whipping right outside his thin cupboard door. His mother’s unintelligible sobs were mixing with the sound of the beating rain. Something, most likely a fist, banged against the wall and the vibration traveled all the way to the boy’s hiding place.<br /><br />The boy squeezed his eyes shut. He wrapped his arms around his legs and drew them in closer to his chest. He could feel a small insect crawling up the side of his leg but he didn’t dare make a move to swipe it away. No, the boy sat completely still and waited for it to stop.<br /><br />He knew it would stop eventually.<br /><br />It always stopped eventually.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-64692736863290387352010-09-07T04:42:00.000-07:002010-09-07T04:53:51.477-07:00Brian SabinA mother sits crying on the front steps of her once quiet suburban home. Traffic screams past without so much as a passing glace from the drivers. Had anyone paid enough attention they would have seen the horrific state of the woman's clothes and emotions. She killed her husband today. Just a few moments ago.<br /><br />Less than a half hour ago, when she arrived home from work, she came in to find a nearly demolished interior. The lamp lay broken next to an overturned television whose screen was blank and cracked but still projected the sounds of the Oprah Winfrey Show. Her first instinct was panic. She didn't know if the children were safe. Their father—her husband—was recently laid off from work, so he should have been home to supervise them.<br /><br />A commotion from the back room instilled fear but an unselfish courage all the same as she raced to the room to investigate the sound. To her dismay, she walked in on her husband who had just finished killing their children. An instant rage overcame the woman but fear for her own life caused her to flee. As she ran for the garage—husband now in quick pursuit—he managed to tackle her and a struggle ensued. He clamped his hands around her throat which is when she realized that she might not make it through this encounter alive. Her only chance was to raise her knee into his groin and hope for the shot of a lifetime. Fortunately for her, she landed a perfect strike and he grimaced as he rolled off of her.<br /><br />She then made her way to the garage—scraped and bloody—to her son's pile of baseball equipment where she was able to take his aluminum bat, walk back out to her still reeling husband, and proceed to bludgeon him to death. For ten minutes she continued to swing until she could no longer lift the Louisville Slugger over her head--he'd been dead for nine of the ten minute beating.<br /><br />He lay on the ground, white t-shirt soaked crimson, and she walked to the front of the house, half-dazed, thinking about her dead children as well as the revenge she took on the man who took them from her. Sitting on the front steps crying, traffic screams past without so much as a passing glace from the drivers.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-57462273124439919192010-09-07T04:38:00.000-07:002010-09-07T09:05:59.401-07:00Maria Paxos<span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#000099;">Solitude</span> </span><br /><br />Well it’s another sleepless night for the young woman. By young, I mean a thirty something divorcee trying to hold on to youth as humanly possible. Every time she closes her eyes, all she sees is his face. This face of his has definitely gotten her into trouble. What on earth was she thinking? Did she think that a much younger man would be the answer to her lonely nights? She suffered a marriage with someone who treated her more like a roommate instead of a soul mate. This young man showed her more passion and zest for life then she knew how to handle. She liked the excitement the risk she was taking was worth the price she was later going to pay. Oh and she certainly was feeling that pain now, it’s been over a month and yet there he is in every thought, taunting her. He put an end to the love affair simply stating that he was way in over his head and that this relationship couldn’t possibly go anywhere. YES, he is correct but why wasn’t it her, the older more mature adult to make this decision? Instead she fluttered around like a little school girl thinking that perhaps this could work. Well why not, it works for Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher and they appear to be happier than most Hollywood couples? That’s it she rips the comforter off of her and gets up swiftly out of the bed. She needs to go outside to catch some fresh air, the cool early autumn night may help calm her nerves. Just wearing cotton pajamas and a t-shirt she takes a seat on her porch steps. She closes her eyes gently, takes a deep belly breath in, pauses and slowly begins to exhale. Her eyes open but have become misty from the autumn chill in the air. She is thinking that this may validate her to just start crying uncontrollably but she may not stop till daybreak. Just then she looks to the night sky and notices that some whimsical clouds break away and there in all its luminous wonder is the moon. It is a harvest moon, it has a shade of blue, she cannot peel her eyes away from its beauty. How amazing, how the sight of something so beautiful can literally take our breath away in an instant. She thinks for a minute who else might be out at this time of night, gazing into the same mesmerizing moon, perhaps also contemplating life’s greatest mysteries? Through the clouds a hawk makes his way dancing through the night sky without a care in the world. The bird is free floating and living for the moment, not worrying about what may come tomorrow. How silly is it that this woman is worrying about something that she chose to partake in. She knew what the circumstances would be but yet continued to follow her heart. Correct, she followed her heart because up until recently she was over-thinking her decisions and not enjoying herself. It probably wasn’t the right decision but oh well she took it anyway. What is life without risk anyway? Perhaps this was just another chapter to be added to the book of lessons titled “What not to do with a handsome man who has nothing to offer but his great body and witty charm”. A wild delirious type of laughter begins to rage out of her. Was she really losing sleep over such a petty little game called lust? Deep down it does leave a little sting and from time to time when she looks back it will make her question “Why did I think that was a good idea”? The end result is this, it is better to fall flat on your face and feel the earth below you, rather than wonder why you didn’t just tie your damn shoe laces and play it safe from the beginning. She takes in another deep breath in and releases a smooth exhale. She picks herself up off the cold porch and starts to head back into the house. She turns to take one last look at the moon and it is gone, hiding again amongst the clouds. It served its purpose for the evening, now it is up to her to be at peace with her decisions. She smiles and turns to go into the warm house and into bed. Hopefully this is just what she needed to rest her mind and body, at least for tonight.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-11683021455244267412010-09-04T16:14:00.001-07:002010-09-04T16:16:13.294-07:00Alexis Pope<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">Coughing Up Petals<br /></span><br />The little girl, blonde ringlets and all, walked up to the small tree. This tree, bare except for a few thinly spread leaves, was exactly five years old today. It had been growing in the space between an abandoned playground and a neighborhood street in desperate need of a fresh asphalt job. The little girl had watched this tree grow from infanthood to its present stature. Lately she had lain in her bed at night wondering about death, and also what it would be like to drive a blade into the tree’s barky flesh. The blonde girl tightened her grip around a hatchet she was hiding behind her back in her right hand. Playfully running her left fingertips along the hem of her pleated skirt, she stood directly in front of this tree and was a threat to the life it had just begun to enjoy. The tree, in fear for its life and finding itself in a quite stationary position, had little time to think of a plan of defense. On his fifth birthday this tree was already experiencing a potentially tragic situation.<br /><br />The tree decided to reach deep, down into the earth. His roots ached as he gathered energy from the rich soil and allowed it to run up his trunk and stretch through to the tips of his branches. Suddenly the tree began to grow at an incredibly alarming rate. The little girl clenched the arm of the hatchet, with both fear and amazement. This was not ordinary. She had never seen anything like this before. Neither had the tree, and he’d seen a lot (especially late at night in the playground, mostly between horny teenagers, but that’s another story).<br /><br />His branches spread out before her. Creating a constellation of deep green leaves in the air above her head. Flowers began to blossom from a previously flowerless tree. Petals of rich color: red, pink, yellow, orange, purple, even aquamarine. Now that’s cool! His blossoming flowers were much more than ordinary. They formed into shapes. Now, not your average flower shape, but actual images of for-real things: lollipops (the girl loved these tasty treats), underpants (she was also familiar with these), bicycles (she was pretty into hers), coffee mugs (she preferred hot chocolate), and other pretty spectacular shapes, but I could go on forever so I will restrain myself.<br /><br />Now the tree became pretty exhausted during this process. He could no longer manifest these outrageous blossoms. He stopped. With any strength he had left, he hoped. He hoped that the little blonde girl would not heave the hatchet into his trunk. Investing every inch of bark and root to hold his position long enough for the little girl to retreat. The girl stood very still. Staring at the tree, an icy gray tear appeared at the corner of her eye. The tree’s petals, feeling her pain, began to fall around her shoulders. They fell in waves and the shapes melted off the branches, broken into singular entities. The petals’ colors were glowing, illuminated by the earth’s raw energy. The blonde girl’s mouth was slightly ajar and one lone petal fell onto her plump young tongue. It tasted of fresh fruit, the tree’s life became one with her saliva, and she swallowed.<br /><br />Suddenly she felt a warm, tingling from within her belly. The tree watched as her skin, once pale, was consumed by an all-encompassing blush. Then brown hues took the place of pink. Her feet began to grow: long and espresso-colored. They broke through the grass and into the soil. She was taking root. The hatchet fell from her hands, as her fingertips became branches. All over her body bark grew from her flesh. Her eyes, mouth, and nose became divots in her trunk’s surface. The hatchet’s wooden arm dug into the ground as well, silver flowers sprouted from its blade. The girl’s thoughts about life and death disappeared. Her body began breathing sunlight and she dug deeper into the rich earth. Her blonde hair turned to green leaves. The tree’s birthday wish came true. He now had a partner to share his life with. The girl, now tree-girl, was also happy. Instead of destruction she was the very image of life.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-70275867225118078802010-09-04T08:06:00.000-07:002010-09-07T19:57:54.308-07:00Joshua Friedt<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">The Girl with the Ridiculous Sweatband</span><br /><br />My favorite song is “Purple Rain,” but not the version made famous by Prince. I prefer an alternative version I heard back in middle school, it’s edgier and has some amazing guitar riffs, it’s such an awesome song. As I ride my motorcycle down along the beach front I happen to hear that particular version, which I haven’t heard in at least a decade. As I pass the corner made famous by a local celebrity, I see a group of girls running. The girls are dressed in typical athletic attire; one of them is even wearing a ridiculous sweatband. Across the street I can hear the laughter of three surfer dudes exiting a surf shop, boards and wax in hand. As I complete my turn around the corner to continue my journey home, I can still hear that song playing, drifting in the warm, salty summer air. It’s almost as if it the song itself was following me, like it knew I loved it and didn’t want it to end. I pulled up into the white sand-covered driveway of my apartment complex; the song was still mysteriously playing. How could this be? No one appeared to be around, it was a very warm day and like most warm days, everyone was at the beach. Freaked out by my current thoughts, I hopped off my bike and bolted for my apartment, I couldn’t get there fast enough. Upon entering my chilly, yet comfortable living quarters, the song stopped playing. But, little did I know, this wasn’t my apartment. Something didn’t feel right, how could I have gone into the wrong apartment, I’ve lived in this complex for the past ten years. As I began to get lost in my thoughts I realized I couldn’t hear. I attempted to figure out what was happening, bright flashes of white light began to encircle me. The events that were occurring didn’t add up. “Sweet Jesus,” I thought to myself, “have I lost my mind?” I tried to scream for help, but I had no idea if any noise was escaping because I couldn’t hear… utter silence, deafening silence. Outside, I ran around and spun in circles, still no one to be found, but the girl with the ridiculous sweatband. I weakly and feverishly uttered words so I could ask what was happening. The girl replied, “You struck me with your motorcycle. As my body flailed in the air my head collided with the road, killing me instantly.” I then asked her, “How is this possible? If you’re dead, why can I see you?” With much hesitation she replied, “You also died in the accident.” As I came to the realization that I, Justin Andrew Mahoney was dead, no longer to exist in the world, “Purple Rain” began to play once more; warm, glowing whiteness engulfed our bodies.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-25247138289501721552010-09-04T05:27:00.000-07:002010-09-06T18:05:04.317-07:00Michelle Sinsky<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">The Edge of the Park</span><br /><br />As soon as the coin slipped into her pocket, she made a quick and pointed pivot with her heel and continued down the street. She took an unhurried drag from her cigarette, putting the pocketed hand into reverse and fixing her hair with the flat of her hand, just as she imagined it to look were someone strolling alongside her with a large mirror.<br /><br />The park ahead presented itself like a mirage behind a hill, though under her feet she knew it to be completely flat. She felt the sudden impulse to duck, to shrug into her jacket and disappear, to bolt; she stuffed this down as securely as the coin, but it turned in her pocket nervously.<br /><br />"Hey!” A whistle from the car parked some spaces behind made her straighten and at once the smile returned to her face. She walked towards the playground. It was early in the evening for this but the day was bright, still; traceless of the town’s frequent overcast.<br /><br />The boy on the swing set grew larger and the dirt sucked her heels square into the sod. Not that one. Her feet noted the resistance of the earth; her hands swung coolly and indifferently. A girl skipping rope was called away to supper and in the corner on the perimeter of the blacktop, two boys poked a dead frog with a stick.<br /><br />She spotted a smaller one with a single piece of chalk by the bushes and walked over.<br /><br />"What's your name?" She knelt and dropped her shoulders to his level.<br /><br />"John." He dragged his chalk in directionless lines.<br /><br />Her hair was dyed the color of baby powder, of communion linens, of textbook pages, of all things innocent and weightless. But her eyes were a hard black.<br /><br />"Myra." She smiled and took her fingers away from her hair.<br /><br />John took the outstretched hand and walked out to the car's open door. At the edge of the park the chalk fell earthward and broke.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-57363501697015298062010-09-04T05:17:00.000-07:002010-09-04T08:26:02.650-07:00Rachel Stone<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">Dead Letters</span><br /><span style="color:#000099;"></span><br /><br />Dim candlelight lit the hollow darkness, as I read the ardent letters from my mistress. Her beautiful, precise handwriting was like calligraphy on the page. She wrote to me of poetry and passion, and as I read her letters, I recalled our last meeting with great despair.<br />~<br /><br />Arabella was stunning in her sensuous, aubergine dress. She inched toward me, her voluptuous hips swaying beneath the silk and crinoline. Her piercing gaze set my heart ablaze, and I wondered why I ever married my wife. Arabella had always won my sincerest affections. Her raven-black tresses fell down her chest and back, and they brushed against my neck as she leaned in to kiss me unabashedly. Without hesitation, I wrapped my hands around her perfectly cinched waist, feeling her curves under the loosened fabric of her bodice with my calloused hands, a low growl in my throat. Gently, my fingers traced the fine boning of her corset. Arabella’s lips rouged with my familiar, intense kisses. The air grew heavy; my knees weakened, just as they always did whenever Arabella was around.<br /><br />“Henry,” She rasped suddenly, as if awakening from a trance.<br /><br />“Yes?” I said, slowly kissing down her alabaster décolletage.<br /><br />“We mustn’t do this,” She replied, pushing me away.<br /><br />“Why?” I asked, not understanding. Emily and the children were away for the whole night, with my mother-in-law. There was no reason to discontinue.<br /><br />Arabella looked away, her blue eyes turning gray with unspeakable sorrow. “I am terribly sorry,” She began. “I’ve met someone else.”<br /><br />My head began to spin. This could not be happening. I would not lose the woman—only woman—I ever loved; it took a while for me to be able to think, let alone speak, but eventually I asked the one question that had been smoldering on my lips, like an over-seasoned curry:<br /><br />“Whom?”<br /><br />“Someone,” She sighed simply. Her lithe body was shaking now; clearly, this was not easy for her, either. “There is nothing you can offer me anymore. I don’t want to sneak around. I want a real family—a real husband.”<br /><br />Desperately, I wanted to protest, but she was right; my duty was to my wife, regardless of how much I wished otherwise. I knew this now.<br /><br />“I still love you,” I said tenderly; the words fell from my lips like a hopeless prayer. I could feel my heart—a dead weight in my chest.<br /><br />Arabella said nothing as she walked out the door, tears glistening from her rosy cheeks.<br />~<br /><br />The last of Arabella’s letters felt like an albatross in my hands. I was a useless puzzle, for half of my pieces were missing. Without her, I would never be the same.<br /><br />Numbly, I stared at her last letter, unsure of how to carry on. But then—on an impulse, I threw the letter into the fire, deciding that her letter’s ashes were better-suited to my memory of our last encounter.<br /><br />The red-hot coals melted the fine stationary from the inside out, and I pretended to find salvation in the incinerated pieces.<br /><br />I would never have another mistress.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-69932860313212082592010-09-03T12:47:00.000-07:002010-09-04T05:26:30.754-07:00Janell Brownlee<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">Caught </span>
<br /><span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">
<br /></span>The room was cool and quiet, lit only slightly by the neons outside the open window. A light breeze rustled the curtains every now and then, and the sounds of the city outside played like white noise in the background. She moved through the room with a purpose. There was no time to spare and no time to hesitate. She made no noise and was quick and efficient in her actions. She did not think. If she thought, the memories of her life, of her actions, might cause her to fumble. She did not have time to fumble. Time was of the essence. She counted the documents she had collected, leafed through the photographs. Was it enough? Was it convincing? Was it everything she needed?
<br />
<br /></span>She dressed quickly in a non-descript black outfit. Her whole existence rested upon her ability to blend in to the background. To never be noticed. As she fumbled with the buttons on her jacket, her thoughts began to slip. Was she a good person? Was she moral? What had she made of her life? Quickly, she pushed her emotions aside, never noticing the button that fell from her jacket to the floor. She gathered her belongings and stepped out into the busy evening street. The people that passed by seemed ordinary, but she could never be sure. She could never let her guard down. Did they know? Did they see her? Could they tell? She never made eye contact.
<br />She hailed a cab, stepped inside, and gave the driver the address. The stillness in the cab was unnerving compared to the bustle outside the window, and the stagnant air forced her to crack the window for relief. She breathed the cool fresh air deeply as the cab slowly crept forward through the busy streets. She checked the documents and photographs once again to make sure they were accounted for. Occasionally, she would glance over her shoulder out the review window of the cab. The cab ride seemed to be taking longer than it should have been….
<br />
<br />When the agents entered the room there was a pervading, quiet stillness except for the noise of the street drifting up through the window that was left open. The room appeared untouched, never occupied. They searched the drawers, cabinets, and dressers not knowing quite what, or who, they were looking for. They were chasing a ghost. A nameless, faceless person, always one step ahead. As the last agent left he scanned the darkness. As he stepped forward he heard the distinct crack of something under his foot. He bent down and picked up the two halves of a broken copper button that lay under his feet…
<br />
<br />As the cab continued toward its destination she sat in the back with a cold sweat beginning to collect on her neck and forehead. Somewhere off in the distance she heard the sound of a siren and wondered if it was finally all over.
<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span>
<br />
<br />Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-38858530780791762682010-09-03T06:15:00.000-07:002010-09-05T07:50:56.058-07:00Cheryl Evans<span style="color:#000066;"><span style="font-size:130%;">The lady on the Bus</span><br /></span><br />The woman in front of me keeps bumping me with her bags. Her arms are loaded down, and I can see the red grooves that her bags are making in the soft flesh of her forearms. It looks painful. She's teetering back and forth and I swear on the next turn she's going to fall over. It's the bags. They’re throwing her off balance. I will never understand why people insist on buying more than they can carry. I mean, didn't she know she would be riding the bus? Not that she’s dressed for it. Her hat is bubblegum pink and looks like it could be made of felt or something. It’s one of those funny french hats, a beret I think they’re called. And then there is the dress. It’s pink, like the hat. And it fits to her body like plastic wrap on leftovers, really tight in some places and baggy in others. It’s low in the front, so low I can see the tan line from her bathing suit on her breasts. Her skin is lightly golden 'til it hits that line and bam! White as whipped cream. Her earrings are so heavy they are pulling down her ears. And they’re cheap. The kind that you know is supposed to look expensive but isn’t foolin’ anyone. The bracelets loaded up her arms clink every time she sways and her feet are shoved into stilettos at least a size too small.<br /><br />You know she is really trying to look sophisticated but the heat isn’t helping her one bit. Sweat slicks her hair to the back of her neck and it’s starting to curl around her face. She probably spent hours on that hair only to have it ruined by the lack of air in this tin can on wheels. It’s obviously dyed and she probably calls it blond but it's actually yellow, like the petals of a daffodil. It’s oddly pretty actually.<br /><br />As the bus comes to a stop, a kid whizzes by on his scooter, squinting to look in the windows of the bus. I wonder if he can see her hair, lemon yellow under a pink beret, through the bus windows.<br /><br />I am fixated on the woman in pink. I have so many questions for her. I wonder what she does? Is her to-do list filled with tasks like dye hair, get manicure? Does she work? No, she can’t to be shopping on a Monday. Does she have kids? I wonder...<br /><br />A screeching baby snaps me back to reality. The mother sings softly to the child, trying to soothe her. I turn around to glance at the baby and when I look back she’s gone. I stand quickly, knocking my purse off my lap and dumping its contents onto the dirty bus floor. I scan the bus in a kind of panic to see where she went. Then I spot the hat, bobbing toward the front of the bus. As she exits she stumbles, her heel getting stuck in a sidewalk crack. She moves through the crowd on street head held just high enough to seem forced. The bus lurches forward and she fades into the distance like pink mirage.<br /><br />I wonder where she’s going, wonder, wonder.........Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-2426924097934698882010-09-03T06:11:00.000-07:002010-09-03T06:15:12.650-07:00Seth Hepner<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">The Rat</span><br /><span style="color:#000099;"></span><br />A man sits in the sunroom of his colonial home with his legs crossed reading a newspaper. His recliner creeks as he reaches for the coffee mug sitting on the end table beside him. Not even one ray of sun shines through the windows, but the inches upon inches of snow provide the light to skim the crime notes in section <strong>B</strong> of <em>The Repository</em>.<br /><br />He shakes his head as he passively reads through the easily comparable drug related arrests the previous night. The longest of the crime notes deals with a hold up at the liquor store, just down the street, that the man visits almost daily. Without his fix of Maker’s Mark Whiskey or warm glass of red wine, he’s never able to sleep well enough through the night to feel capable of reading the paper before his 10 a.m. breakfast date with the regulars at the local diner. Knowledge of the local news is required to participate in the discussion at the breakfast table.<br /><br />Turns out, the man who robbed the liquor store got away, and the police are offering a reward for any information on a suspect. Ironically, he only got away with two liters of Maker’s Mark and a bottle of sweet vermouth. While adjusting himself in the recliner the man thought a good Manhattan, free of charge, might be worth the risk of prison.<br /><br />The thief wore a typical black ski mask, clothes, and gloves that covered his skin. The clerk confirmed this and that a small hand gun was held to his forehead at one point.<br /><br />The man closed the newspaper; he folded it just right before tossing it to the beige carpeted floor. Outside the window a large rat struggled through the snow like a man climbing a mountain. He wondered if the thief’s experience was anything like the struggle taking place before his eyes, and he doubted it very much.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-3952834748849979452010-09-02T07:15:00.000-07:002010-09-02T07:24:58.377-07:00Sarah Oser<span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#000099;">Stuck in a Moment</span><br /></span><br />The hummingbird hung in the air, suspended in time. It seemed that he really wasn’t moving at all. He was like an image, like a photograph captured in one isolated moment. He was unreal; his vibrant colors, the yellows, blues, and greens couldn’t be natural. Everything about him went against the laws of nature—the way he was frozen in air, his intense coloring, and the way that nothing affected him. Not even the breeze could move him.<br /><br />From a distance it appeared that he wasn’t even a living breathing thing. In reality, his heart was humming and pounding rapidly and his wings flapped wildly—so fast that the human eye couldn’t see. What seemed to be a moment stuck in time was really the opposite. So much speed prevented this animal from propelling into motion.<br /><br />All around the hummingbird the rest of nature was in motion. Leaves blew in the breeze, lifting off the ground, swirling around in the air before landing back on the ground. Birds made dramatic plunges from far up in the sky only to level out inches from the ground in an effort to catch their prey. Cars speed by with passengers inside hurrying towards their destination. The passengers are moving so fast that they are unable to perceive the bustling life around them.<br /><br />The hummingbird remained suspended in midair. All his movements were concentrated on staying in this one space. Although the surroundings were so hectic, nothing could match the humming of the bird’s pulsing wings.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-87412247281062246302010-09-02T07:14:00.002-07:002010-09-03T13:07:48.209-07:00Karen Pavlisko<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">Lola<br /></span><br />We called her “Spider-Girl” inspired by the spider web design in black ink that adorned her left arm, tracing all the way down it and tapering off into her middle finger on the back of her left hand. But the name could have come about due to the fact that she looked almost like a spider. She was thin, spindly, and sickly looking. Pale white with long, frizzy, black hair that could best be described as “big.” She had large dilated black eyes that were only further enlarged by the wire rimmed glasses surrounding them, which were much too large for her thin face. She wore oversized dark clothes, commonly frequented by a black hoodie tied about her waist, and socks that stuck up a few inches above her sneakers.<br /><br />Every day we could see her through the bus windows riding up to school on her purple bicycle. She was the typical “weird kid” that other students would normally make fun of, but for some reason nobody ever said anything to Spider-Girl, and she never said anything to any of us.<br /><br />She worked at the convenience market on the corner of the main road, and therefore everybody from school avoided the place like a sick leper, though sometimes they would watch it from the ice cream shop across the street to see if the purple bicycle was tied up in the front. Many said she had troubles at home. One boy, Richie Findle, a fat red-headed fellow with freckles and a double chin, swore that he had proof that her mother gave her nothing to eat at home but old peanuts and stale croutons, and beat her if Spider-Girl ever asked for more.<br /><br />Curtis Clermont offered to give her a ride home one night, pulling over to the curb just past the market in an old, beat up, navy pickup truck. Although the rain was coming down cold and icy, such that it was almost hail, spider girl refused, with excessive shaking of her head and increased the speed to her pedal.<br /><br />It was startling how much the incident changed Spider-Girl. She grew nervous and jumpy, and would snap at people in a high-pitched squalor if ever they came to close to her. We were all frightened; pondering if we had ever even heard her voice before.<br /><br />She began riding up to school later and later, until her attendance became such that she skipped several periods before arriving, and began having similar attendance problems at work. The popular rumor was that Curtis’s gesture was the only nice thing that anyone had ever done for her, and the realization that anyone could ever be nice shocked her to the point of snapping.<br /><br />One week in February Spider-Girl stopped showing up to school all together, but Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday her purple bicycle could be seen at the convenience mart. We all grew concerned for her, although not a one of us could call her friend. A few days later the corner market burnt to the ground overnight. That Friday school was riotous with excitement and rumors as to what had happened. Spider Girl was still unaccounted for and our curiosity led us to bazaar conclusions about Spider-Girl setting it afire. Richie Findle’s explained it as Spider-Girl’s suicide; how she trapped herself inside the lit building, taking her only real home with her to her death.<br /><br />A few days later the charred frame of a purple bicycle was found amongst the ashes of the corner market. Although no body or skeleton could be found amongst the rubble, we never saw Lola Fulton, the girl with the spider web tattoo, again.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-28922977184495290352010-09-02T07:14:00.001-07:002010-09-03T06:26:38.508-07:00Sarah Dravec<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">Absolution, Resolution</span><br /><br />She wondered, really, how many stars there must have been in the patch of sky above the four houses that bordered the end of the street. From the screened-in porch, she wondered and gazed up into the space above the house next door. Twelve, thirteen maybe—there was too much goddamn light in a suburb to be sure—and she spent a moment wanting to step onto the thin ledge along the screen like a tabby to walk the perimeter of the room and count the rest of them. Goddamnit, she may have said aloud. The cane that always grazed her right hand when she sat ruined everything.<br /><br />So, how many more angles could there be from this room with twelve or thirteen stars at the end of them? Four seemed safe to assume. There were four cardinal directions, eight if you counted the in-betweens, but why did it matter? Fifty, she guessed. Fifty visible in the night sky, but better yet, she thought, there were really fifty-two. Two more came from the other side of the wicker couch; two goddamn stupid tattoos the boy had gotten the moment he was eighteen, she remembered. They were patterned different colors in alternating sections—nautical, he had proudly called them—and one rested an inch above either elbow. Goddamn stupid, she thought of them. Fifty-two, then; fifty real stars, two nautical ones, how goddamn stupid could a person be—<br /><br />“Grandma,” Seth said, timid once she turned to him, “take this.” He tugged at his long sleeves. “Please take this,” he said, and he pulled off his hooded sweatshirt and stood beside her, draping it over her shoulders so she could pull the sleeves over herself. She had been noticeably shaking in the cool air, but she refused to go inside. She couldn’t stand to think of the scent that still lurked in her home, clinging to her possessions. She leaned forward, extending a wavering hand toward the cup of tea that rested on the table in front of them. The grip of her fingers was weak; the delicate glass fell to the ground, spilling as it went and shattering when it landed.<br /><br />“Goddamnit,” she said too loudly, and Seth winced.<br /><br />“It’s okay,” he said. He couldn’t comfort her. “It’s okay,” he said again. “Hold on a minute, Grandma, I’ll get you another…” and his voice faded as he reentered the house and busied himself with another teabag, another cup of boiling water.<br /><br />She stood, taking several seconds, clutching her cane as tightly as her hand would allow. “Goddamnit,” she said when it hurt her back to stand up straight. Her legs wobbled. She regripped her cane and took slow steps toward the outer door of the porch.<br /><br />The walk to the backyard cost what little energy she had and took more time than it would have even a few weeks ago. She barely lifted each foot, swearing as she went, but she remained diligent as she rounded the house. The energy it took to walk, the chill it brought her to navigate through the dark. She thought of bones, the chill to her bones; she thought of how weak her own must have been. A bird, perhaps away from its nest mistakenly, flew just above the trees that divided her property from the homeowner’s beside it, a person she had never met, maybe some goddamn idiot with ink in their skin—bird bones! she thought. Hollow, extraordinarily light, and able to move without the complications of an elderly woman’s age. Birds flew, she thought, and humans, smarter, never got off the ground. Birds shit on the ground. Men and women stayed in a single place if they were unlucky, and she was, and they still, more or less, shit on the ground. Birds, then—smarter?<br /><br />She stopped in front of the largest bush that bordered the house. There were several buds poking out of the leaves, but only a single rose had opened its petals. She looked at the flower, iconic, frail, and red, and let out a sigh of relief, but the bush had not been hers. It had come from someone and somewhere else, surely a cramped store that sold plants for sales and never for plants. The bush had come from a bit of stem purchased because of the darkness that awaited them all—everyone on the street, in the suburb—beneath the fifty stars.<br /><br />“Grandma?” came his voice between the shutting of the porch doors as he emerged, looking for her. There were children, she thought, the ones who belonged to her and the ones who didn’t, stems and the hands that buried them in the ground, and did gardeners garden in hopes that their hands would touch other hands that had once been in that ground?—and grass slowly grew, and the children still grew in a slower manner that was much too fast. They would fail each other, goddamnit. She knew it. She always did.<br /><br />“Here, Grandma,” Seth said as he moved closer behind her. She turned and saw his sweatshirt in one hand and a new cup of tea in the other. He stretched his arm, placing it just in front of her free hand, and she took the handle of the cup slowly. The teaspoon in it made a tiny clink, and the sound held onto her, and her eyes were heavier than perhaps they had ever been.<br /><br />“Thank you, Son,” she said.Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-87898099717575125352010-09-02T07:13:00.001-07:002010-09-03T06:32:26.770-07:00Curt Brown<span style="font-size:130%;color:#000099;">They brought it up in trucks, in trope<br /></span><br />Grumble... grumble... wondered the nephewless uncle, his niece has gone toward stores weeks ago—migrated westward and shallowed the clouds as they stumblebummed their freight across the bindlestiff plains. He wondered, expressed wonder in grumbles and pushed his cap back to let a line of sweat trace floorward. Orange juice, she had said. The light snaked in cracked blinds. She was gone. His sister was all metaphor. Why hadn't she birthed a boy? Bouncing in blue—bubblegum cigars. Instead she left him with railroads, carving their rails back, illusory-connecting in distant childhood.<br /><br />Grumble. He wondered again, pulling a folded pack of cigarettes from the pocket of fade denim coverall. Rivets, he thought and he did his best to rivet his memory of her—of both hers—into firm coiled dirt. He planted the tiny metal where it could afford a view of the sea. Swallow the salt. Steal an errant beam. His nephew was a lighthouse. A pulsar. Still, wood clambered in bits. Jagged. His hands were full of splinters. Orange juice, stanzad citrus. Hollow, he thought. Grumble. The pins engaged, the rectangles were plagiarists. There—concrete. The sea heard as blood, beating in tide to his head. Groaning light, hum. In this hue, just. His hand gripped. Cold. Grumble, he wondered, is Florida this close?Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-18554478785244338842010-07-21T05:38:00.000-07:002010-07-21T05:41:39.183-07:00Gertrude Stein on the Atomic Bomb (1946)<span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#660000;">They asked me what I thought of the atomic bomb. I said I had not been able to take any interest in it.<br /></span><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#660000;">I like to read detective and mystery stories. I never get enough of them but whenever one of them is or was about death rays and atomic bombs I never could read them. What is the use, if they are really as destructive as all that there is nothing left and if there is nothing there nobody to be interested and nothing to be interested about. If they are not as destructive as all that then they are just a little more or less destructive than other things and that means that in spite of all destruction there are always lots left on this earth to be interested or to be willing and the thing that destroys is just one of the things that concerns the people inventing it or the people starting it off, but really nobody else can do anything about it so you have to just live along like always, so you see the atomic [bomb] is not at all interesting, not any more interesting than any other machine, and machines are only interesting in being invented or in what they do, so why be interested. I never could take any interest in the atomic bomb, I just couldn't any more than in everybody's secret weapon. That it has to be secret makes it dull and meaningless. Sure it will destroy a lot and kill a lot, but it's the living that are interesting not the way of killing them, because if there were not a lot left living how could there be any interest in destruction. Alright, that is the way I feel about it. They think they are interested about the atomic bomb but they really are not not any more than I am. Really not. They may be a little scared, I am not so scared, there is so much to be scared of so what is the use of bothering to be scared, and if you are not scared the atomic bomb is not interesting.<br /></span><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span></span><br /><span style="color:#660000;"><span style="font-size:130%;">Everybody gets so much information all day long that they lose their common sense. They listen so much that they forget to be natural. This is a nice story. </span><br /></span><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />[first published in <em>Yale Poetry Review</em>, December 1947]<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span></span>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-60564336919209573332010-06-13T11:08:00.000-07:002010-06-13T11:52:28.576-07:00<div align="justify"><span style="font-size:180%;color:#000099;">The Year Halloween Fell on a Thursday</span><br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />Charity Anderson had polished off three quarters of a bottle of her favorite Merlot. The subject for this evening’s homily—her own sad joke—was “the road to hell is paved with good intentions.” All she wanted for her shy little boy was for him to grab just the teensiest portion of the life out there for us all. She had been so clever, gone in the train store and found what she wanted, laughed all the way home—this would do the trick. She had schemed on such a small scale, for such small purposes. How could she know what trick it would do? How could she be expected to know?<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~<br /></span>If Tom hadn’t run off to Australia two years before (good riddance, she had thought) he might have told her to leave it well enough alone, let the boy be himself, whoever that self turned out to be. He would have been right, that’s what hurt the most. She shouldn’t have been so proud—too clever by half. She took another hit off the cigarette before she slowly, methodically set the glowing ember into the soft, white skin of her inner arm, among the bright and fading flowers there.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~<br /></span>She remembered the year Halloween fell on a Thursday as vividly as if it had come yesterday, or earlier today, for God’s sake, as if it was happening right now all the time. There was Billy, her only child, telling her he had too much homework, but she wanted him to go trick-or-treating. I'm too old, he said.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />Fifth grade—that's too old? Eleven years, too old? But she knew the problem all along: masks frightened him. That’s how she knew he wasn’t ready for this world. That’s what scared her. When masks are all we know, you can’t be scared of masks—be scared of the real face, that’s what she would have told him if she could.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />She imagined him across from her at the kitchen table, a grown young man of twenty-two. When you were little, you mistook the mask for the reality. You didn't like knocking on strangers' doors, and you didn't want to admit you were afraid. I was the original aging hippy. We once watched a children’s show together because I wanted you to see Ringo Starr, the former Beatle, playing Mr. Conductor. So…knowing you wouldn’t want to go trick-or-treating, I bought a conductor's hat and jacket, a long, wooden whistle that sounded like a passing train.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />You might have been a little fifth grader, but you were a smarty, good in math and science like I had never been—your father’s genes at work. But, smart or not, you were still a kid. The whistle interested you, so you tried the hat and jacket. It didn't feel too bad—hardly a costume. The sound of the whistle excited you. You went out as soon as it got dark enough, carrying a hemp bag your old hippy mother provided. Several neighbors remembered you at their door. You seemed to be enjoying yourself, blowing the whistle as you went from house to house collecting candy. A boy named Jimmy Samson remembered saying, “Cool whistle.” That comes back at night, when I don’t know that I’m awake.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />That girl in your class, Julie Jenkins, said hello to you. You smiled back at her but were too shy to say anything. The ghosts and goblins must have seemed pretty harmless. You wondered why you had been afraid—a little cute one then, with the bluest eyes and lightest brown hair that almost floated as you walked. And when you put your glasses on I wanted to cry.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />You might have been out an hour, heading for one of the last houses you intended to hit, when you ran into Ralph Bunch, who only co-operated because his friend Kip Green mentioned seeing you. Once the parents and police started asking everyone, Kip couldn’t keep quiet. Keeping a secret is holding a balloon underwater—it wants out.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />It had gotten dark by this time, and chilly. You weren’t dressed warm enough, and later on it started to rain. I hate to think of you out in that weather, no one paying attention to whether you were warm, whether you were dry. You blew your whistle as you passed the trees bordering old man Hager’s house—that drew their attention. Kip had wrapped himself in ace bandages and painted his face brown with yellow lips. Ralph was a tall seventh grader who had gone as a vampire. You didn't recognize either of them.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />All you saw was a chubby zombie and a tall vampire with a white face, red blood dripping from his black lips and fluorescent fangs. It must have terrified you to see them standing there, blocking your way—a zombie and a vampire. You must have lowered the whistle and looked at the vampire’s eyes, glittering green in blackened sockets. The cape spread out on one side as the vampire's arm drew back. The fist shot out, slamming you in the nose—this according to Kip who thought it looked cool when the fist in the white glove came out. For no reason but he wanted to, that’s why I blame him.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />You went down flat on your back. That Ralph didn’t want to admit this either, but Kip told us he snatched the cap off your head and spun it in the trees. That’s where I found it, no one else thought of going in and looking for it. I kept thinking I saw you behind a bush, or lying under a tree. In my dreams I see you running here and there, in and out of trees, giggling or crying, which wasn’t your style at all, I know that. You would have been quiet.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />They left you there, on the ground where he had knocked you, didn’t even go back to see if you were all right. Ran on, laughing, never thinking they might have seriously injured my sweet little boy. Left him for dead, thought no more of him than that. Was he still conscious? Was he lying in the dirt wiping his mouth or blacked out to the world? They did that, left him there, the last anyone saw of him that night, my Billy boy, or the years since.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />How many nights have I walked out there to stand, smoking a cigarette, looking at the spot where he lay on his back, unattended how long? There was the empty house, the dark windows from which Jim Hager could have watched the moment when the white glove shot out from the black cape. Did he have a moment’s good intentions? Did he come out to see if my boy was all right and find him there unconscious, semi-conscious, wakeful but ashamed? How did he get Billy to come inside? Was it that Billy recognized him as the kindly old fellow? Had he been inside the house before? Or was it entirely different? Had Ralph Bunch and Kip Green done more than they said, done something worse and dragged him off into the trees? Or was it something else?<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />She would walk out back of the Hager house and stand where bones had been found by a neighborhood dog fond of digging, with a sense of smell that went back years. He had come home, this mangy black and white, one blue eye and one brown, with a rib bone in his mouth. What possessed Sarah Miller to take it from him, turn it over in her hands, and show it to her husband?<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />When she let him out again he ran back to the same spot, came up with another—a dog with a bone. Over here, here’s where I found that one. Come look, come and look now. Was her tail wagging high? Why now? Why this time? Had it simply been long enough in the ground?<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />Was there some key to everything in the length of time such things must go undiscovered. She walked around the Hager house, looking in the windows, sometimes found a way inside and gravitated to the basement, even though she found nothing to indicate anything that would make some awful sense to her. Sometimes going home she saw the faces at the windows, watching the mother in her bathrobe, smoking another cigarette, coming back from they knew where.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />How long had it taken kids at school to get used to your empty desk? No one asked much more, except one teacher and a couple friends of mine, once in a while, but even they avoided me when you became a scary story: Billy Anderson, the boy who disappeared the year that Halloween fell on a Thursday.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />It came as a shock when bones were found by Happy, Sarah Miller’s black and white dog, inside the woods behind the Hager house, less than a mile from where we live. No one wanted to remember you, but there you were, your little bones, as they had been when they were planted in the dirt.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />Oh, I knew immediately. Police said they found a rotting wooden whistle nearby, the kind that sounded like a train. I kept covering my face with my hands, looking between my fingers, as if I couldn’t keep myself from seeing the last moments or hours of your precious life. Behind the Hager house—what did that mean? Hager had been dead for seven years, by his own hand, with a shotgun in it. But he had always said he hadn’t seen a thing, and who could doubt a poor old man, with all his liver spots and sagging skin, those enormous watery eyes swimming behind aquarium lenses?<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />Cleaning crews had spent a couple of weeks there but didn’t find a thing to make them suspicious he was anything more than a lonely old man. Now, I’m turning forty-three, and all the years you didn’t live have been collected with the bones in loose dirt behind the Hager house. Those who still remembered you had a little fear some retribution might be exacted from those who did nothing to save you. But the one that suffered, little man, besides you, was me, who ceased to think of anything except the fact that I insisted you go out that night.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />The little cap, the rotted whistle on the table, she keeps hoping they tell her something more. All they can say is, I am dead, I died an ugly death, and it was your own fault. So when she sets the ember to her wrist, between the roses burned in there already, it doesn’t hurt. She keeps them fresh. She holds it there until she feels the spark of something left.<br /><span style="color:#ffffff;">~</span><br />One rose for every year that he’s been gone.</div>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-55715628669015619092009-12-09T06:05:00.001-08:002009-12-11T09:57:38.569-08:00<a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/Sx_LV_PjRyI/AAAAAAAAAwY/3w7P3B72LCw/s1600-h/Crace.bmp"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 140px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 207px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5413268855736977186" border="0" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/Sx_LV_PjRyI/AAAAAAAAAwY/3w7P3B72LCw/s320/Crace.bmp" /></a><br /><div><div><span style="font-size:180%;color:#990000;">Incomplete</span><br /></div><div align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;color:#ffffff;">~</span></div><div align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;">This semester is almost over. I have turned in grades for two classes and have one to go. I mark days off on my calendar, like a prisoner chalking days on his cell wall. I will pick up some essays at school and read them tonight or tomorrow morning. I will experience momentary happiness giving students who have done a good job an A or B and momentary unhappiness giving students who did a less than stellar job a C or less. Even when the latter is accurate, it is never satisfying. It leaves the taste of incompleteness in my mouth--like biscuits not cooked through completely.<br /><br />I recently heard from a couple of friends that they hoped one day to read all the books on their shelves which they have started and not finished or had intended to read but have not cracked. That sounded like something I ought to understand, but I realized I did not have this problem, as I have enough of a driving need to finish what I have started or know why. A book I have not finished does not go back on my shelf, but into the Goodwill box--because it seems to me not worth finishing. There's another feeling of incompleteness.<br /><br />Once I pick a book to read, I generally read it through. And I generally pick a book knowing a little bit about it. I have usually read or heard something about it, or, more often, read a few pages or a chapter in the book store, enough so I know whether or not I want to read it. A lot of people loved <em>The Lovely Bones</em>, but after a few pages of stomach turning prose I knew I would never be able to finish what seemed essentially a book for young girls. I think the word that tipped me off was <em><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_0" class="blsp-spelling-error">skeezy</span></span></em>, though I may be botching that word. The young girl who was clearly about to be molested and killed said that something made her feel all <em><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_1" class="blsp-spelling-error">skeezy</span></span>.</em> I put the book back on the shelf. There was enough in that word usage to let me know I had nothing to gain there: morbid sentimentalism and false youth.<br /><br />There is not much better than finishing a book knowing that it has satisfied you in many of the ways a book can satisfy. I can name things that beat it on the fingers of one hand, though, to be honest, I use all the fingers. In the pitch of the last weeks of a semester, I am usually unable to read something not required of me, as I must reread the books I have assigned, and student papers and stories, perhaps a thesis or two, keeping up and finishing off as grandly as possible. So as soon as I had attended my last class of the semester, and even though I still had plenty of work to complete myself, I picked up a book my dear Lisa recently bought and began to look at it.<br /><br />When she bought it, it seemed like a book I would pick out; it had been niggling at the back of my mind since she put it on the shelf unread. As soon as I got home from the last class, I pulled it out and gave a look. It looked short enough I thought I might finish it in time to get back to what the world required of me. Two hundred pages of pleasantly produced text, a handsome cover with a photo of lissom grass on a sand dune, obviously near the ocean--inviting and forbidding under the title<em> Being Dead.</em> The writer was a Brit named Jim Crace, who looked pleasantly like he had spent some time on such a dune. Also on the cover, a small gold seal which claimed this novel had won the National Book Critics Circle Award, which had no effect on me whatsoever until I finished the book and felt this was a pretty good choice for such an award.<br /><br />One thing I noticed right away: each 'chapter' of the book was short, generally of the same length as all of the chapters. This matched the gentle and generous tone of the novel, and made it more pleasant to read, as it seemed to open before me. In the very first chapter we understand that a pair of married zoologists have been rather brutally murdered on a sand dune much like the one on the cover, that <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_2" class="blsp-spelling-error">Celice</span></span> is naked from the waist down, and her husband Joseph is totally naked and holding on to her ankle.<br /><br /></div></span><p align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;">Throughout the novel, the couple remains dead, though they are visited by various insects and birds and small mammals, and, finally, by their human counterparts. You might say that the entire novel is a meditation on their being dead, though we go back to the momentous and very unspectacular day they met, and several days in between, but that doesn't really account for how engrossing the book became for me.</span></p><p align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;">Why does it strike me as a small miracle that the two main characters, though dead, were in their fifties? And not entirely attractive. She is built a little like like a satyr, a lovely, small-breasted torso from the waist up, and the large butt and thighs of a normal woman. He is too short for most things, as he often points out, and certainly shorter than her. Their lives, though intense and dedicated to their science, are really common, moderate, usual. And the natural processes of death to which they become susceptible are also completely normal, though often shied away from in the course of our lives.</span></p><p align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;">I want to note that I am sixty-three years old at this writing. I have had a heart attack, which I like to call minor, and have two stainless steel bits in my chest to keep arteries from occluding once more, so thoughts of death, while sometimes as inviting to me as to anyone else, are not entirely welcome. I do not like to take long walks through graveyards--which I take to be the reason I chose not to read <em>The Lovely Bones</em>. In addition to this, sentimentality often seems to me like a way to invite death to your doorstep; please don't ask me to elaborate. But this death I enjoyed reading about. It left me <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_3" class="blsp-spelling-error">unfrightened</span></span>, accepting, acknowledging. </span></p><p align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;">Perhaps this is because <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_4" class="blsp-spelling-error">Crace</span></span> is something of a naturalist in his understanding of the processes of senescence and <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_5" class="blsp-spelling-error">thanatology</span></span>, which are the basis of the study to which the deceased couple gave themselves in life. How, you might ask, can such a gentle novel of death keep the reader's attention? I think the answer is balance. He balances this discussion of death with scenes from life, and just when it seems impossible that <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_6" class="blsp-spelling-error">Crace</span></span> could keep my attention alive through his meditations, we get a new character--the daughter of the deceased couple who becomes involved in discovering what has happened to her parents.</span></p><p align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;">Even with her rebellious nature (she has left home, shaved her head, and gone to work as a waitress at a hot spot called <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error"><span id="SPELLING_ERROR_7" class="blsp-spelling-error">MetroGnome</span></span>) she manages to charge the prose without taking over. In the course of the novel, she <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_8" class="blsp-spelling-error">discovers</span> her place in this world, and a little about her parents, even if only that they were born to die; much more isn't required of children, is it? Children of decent parents, let's say. That should be enough to cause them to be loved by the child who took life from them and will yet take it further than she or they could have imagined. </span></p><p align="justify"><span style="font-size:130%;">But now, alas, I must leave this discussion unfinished, as my duties call me back. I must finish, submit grades, a hundred other little things--some of them large and heart-breaking in their smallness. But let me </span><span style="font-size:130%;">say this much: the life in Jim <span id="SPELLING_ERROR_9" class="blsp-spelling-error">Crace's</span> book is real, unadorned by dreams or falsity, yet touched by the grace of decency, of respect for life, such as it is, such as it will be, in this world. And finally, it is touching. </span><span style="font-size:130%;">Because, at last, the novel is as beautifully complete as their lives.</span></p><br /><div></div></div>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5234139477716026162.post-66283547039844768362009-08-09T07:53:00.000-07:002009-08-09T09:39:46.397-07:00A Few Words about "Flip Cards"<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/Sn76boOUqYI/AAAAAAAAAwI/b6PEezmKtBA/s1600-h/1991%25201953%2520Topps%2520Archives%2520Baseball%2520Cards.jpg"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 228px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 320px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5368003158433114498" border="0" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_tWUgPwf5jyk/Sn76boOUqYI/AAAAAAAAAwI/b6PEezmKtBA/s320/1991%25201953%2520Topps%2520Archives%2520Baseball%2520Cards.jpg" /></a><br /><div><br /><div><div><div><span style="font-size:130%;color:#000000;">~</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">I am going to say a few words about my personal essay "Flip Cards" for my friend Steve Smith, who asked me to. An English class he teaches at Manchester High School will be reading it in the Fall of 2009. When I think of what to say about it, I first think about the experience of getting it published, and only after that what it was like writing it, so that's the way I'll go here. I think these notes will be best after you have read the personal essay.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">"Flip Cards" first appeared in <em>The Georgia Review,</em> was reprinted in <em>The Pushcart Prize</em> and then again in my book of stories, <em>Private Acts</em>. I never really thought much about whether it was a story or an essay, and when I first sent it to Stanley Lindberg, at <em>The Georgia Review</em>, I didn't identify it. Stanley told me he first thought it was a story, but then it lit up when he realized it was a personal essay. I had sent him a few things before, and he had published an essay of mine already, but this time he sent me a rejection saying he wanted to publish it but felt the ending needed to capture and reflect the whole essay. I had ended with an image of my friend Danny's father wandering around their house playing the accordion, which seemed to me to do everything I wanted, but then I am strongly oriented toward the visual image rather than excess talk or reflection. </span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">This rejection found me at the end of my rope. It exasperated me more than I could say, enough to write out, by hand, a rather frustrated response that stated that I thought the reflection and any conclusions that could be made were already obvious from what was there. I told him what these reflections and conclusions might be under the force of my anger that even my best work, which this seemed to be, was being tested like someone sticking their toe in the ocean. I laid it out for him. What did I have to do, walk on water? I let him have it. And this is a testament to how frustrating it can be to send out your work, because he was the smartest, kindest, most gentle editor with whom I have ever had the privilege to communicate.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">A few days later I got a phone call that I never expected. Stanley asked me if I had a copy of the note I sent him, and I said I did not, a little embarrassed that I had sent it at all. He said, "Let me read it to you," and then I felt like pure crap. But he read it to me, and then he said, "Bob, this is what you need at the end of your essay. Now, I'm going to send this back to you and you see if you think you could work it in. Don't do it if you don't want to, but I think this is exactly what you need." As he said it a light came on in my mind. I could see exactly what he was saying, and that what I had sent him was in fact the true end of the essay. I could not wait to get the note back, but by the time it had arrived I had already been working on the end. I rewrote it and sent it back to him, knowing this was the right way to end the essay. You can see how it ends now, and this is the result of Stanley feeding me back the note I sent him.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">Once he had the finished essay in his hands, he called me on the telephone, at a time he had already set up, and we read the essay to each other over the phone. He said he wanted to hear it. He asked me questions about the essay and we talked about it for over an hour--he had a meter on his phone. We didn't change the essay, just read it aloud, perhaps the best experience I have had with an editor. I did make one change from the conversation. For some reason, I had decided to make one of my paragraphs one long sentence. I had seen writers try to make long sentences before, and I always thought they weren't really sentences, that the reader knew most of the time that this one had been patched together for effect. I wanted to write a really long sentence that worked perfectly and that no one would notice. Don't ask me why. Probably pride.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">Anyway, Stanley was reading at this point, and when he reached the end of the sentence he paused. "I just noticed," he said, "that sentence is one, two, three....thirteen lines long." I told him what I had tried and he said, "You did it. Now, can we put some periods and commas in there?" I laughed. "Sure," I said, "now that I know I did it." The paragraph was just a little better, and there were no splashy effects after that one was removed.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">And then, some time after the essay appeared, Stanley called again. "The Pushcart wants to use it. This is firm. They want to publish it." He was very happy about it, almost as happy as I was, it seemed to me. But a</span><span style="font-size:130%;">ll this took place after the essay had been written. </span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">When I wrote it, I experienced delight, not so common for me. I can't remember how the idea entered my mind, but the first thing I did was to describe a game we played when I was a kid, involving baseball cards, and how much I loved these cards, and how they smelled, and how good I was at playing flip cards. Sometimes you discover a talent you didn't know you have and you have no reason for possessing, and it's a high experience, so you go with it. Asked once why she wrote, Flannery O'Connor said she wrote because she was good at it. I played flip cards because I was good at it, and because it became the mode of the day, the thing we did, the expression of our desire.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">I spent a very long time one bright morning writing that first section and then I went home. I wrote it at my office at the university, and I didn't think there was anything more, until I returned the next morning and started thinking about my childhood friend Danny Gary, and his parents, and where they lived. I thought, there is more to this, and so I wrote the next section. Every morning I returned I had something more to say, more to remember about this time in my life. What a wonderful period this was, living on the edge of the ocean! Delight filled me as I wrote, and then I spent some time putting it all together. I just laughed when I finished it, a little embarrassed about the way I had been spending my time, feeling foolish about writing so much about my own childhood.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">When asked to give a reading on my own campus, I decided to try it out. This seemed like a safe forum, but I was deeply embarrassed to be sharing such private moments, and to talk about who I was at that young age. But I read it aloud and the response was overwhelming. My colleagues might be polite a great deal of the time, but this went beyond politeness, and it surprised the hell out of me. I went back to my office, put it in an envelope, and sent it to Stanley Lindberg with my heart beating. So when I got that first rejection I was dashed. </span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">This was the process of writing, a pure joy, an exploration of memories. In an earlier story, "Beth," I had discovered that once you began to remember a period of time, the memories came back with greater fluidity. You remember what happened before and after, and then before and after again. It spreads, it opens up, before it finally closes again, and the story is finished. This happened with "Flip Cards." And the memories were so bright, and so filled with delight for me, that even the darkest moments were mitigated. The essay made me happy like a piece of music, and it had taken two weeks to complete! </span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">I immediately started another autobiographical piece, one that I had been thinking of for some time, about the year I was seventeen and a paper boy in Maryland. Six months later, worn out, pleased, and still engaged, I sent out a completely different kind of personal essay that had come in three parts. The first, "The Friends of a Stranger," appeared in <em>The Missouri Review</em>, again the first place I sent it, and the third part appeared in the alumni magazine under the title, "Lucky Bob." All three appeared as the last entry in my book of stories, under the title "A Million Billion Trillion Stars," a title taken from an e.e. cummings poem about the good Samaritan. This one was darker, but, I thought, in the long run richer, but readers have always like "Flip Cards" best.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">I wondered why this one made such a hit, and for a while I thought it might be the baseball stuff, with the baseball card material, and then I thought it might be the delight with which it was written, the glow of light from another time. Finally, I just let it be and stopped rereading and revisiting it. I moved on, but it was back there, the spot of light, that landscape and seascape with the sun rising or setting over it. It was there just a surely as that time in my life had been there, as magical in the experience as it had been in the writing.</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">~</span></div><div> </div></div></div></div>Bobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18266437091249635868noreply@blogger.com3