Graffiti | By Joshua Rivkin

Categories: NER Digital, Secret Americas


According to the Racine Country Military Record Archive, a John J. Kroes enlisted as a private in the Air Corps on October 30, 1942, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. What stands out in his inscription are the commas. Between John Kroes’s first name and his father’s name, between his father’s name and his mother’s home are a series of half-moons, half-hearts, half-throated commas, like memos from the dead: delay just this. Read this slowly. Wait. As if an answer to the question of why—why write your name knowing it would be erased; or why write your name on something that was being sent to kill. As if there is an animal desire to see our names—the image of ourselves writ small, a tiny mirror, a father’s ghosted body, a history—carved on any blank surface. Our names, little lighthouses of graffiti, signal from their dark—cave wall, tree, gas station bathroom, school desk, church pew, bomb. There are no blank surfaces.

There are, by my count, nine names on the bomb. My grandfather’s name isn’t here. But might have been. Or so goes one version of American History told in my family: after the bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he was one of the first soldiers on the ground and the radiation, invisible as gravity, killed him twenty-five years later. And so it’s not too big a stretch to imagine him alongside these other men signing his name on the aluminum sheet tail, then watching the B-52 disappear above the Pacific.

In another photo, not part of any national archive and displayed nowhere as far as I know, not in the house of my aunt or my mother—I’ve never seen it and take its existence only as hand-me-down gospel—my grandfather stands on a pile of rubble with a skull in his hand. Smile, frown, fear, some look of dulled awe or terror, I’m not sure. Quickly following the famous lines, Hamlet says, skull-handed, of poor Yorick, “…he hath borne me on his back a thousand times; and now, how abhorred in my imagination it is!”   The it unnamed, unspoken—grave, death, afterlife where the body is just bone and the name of the man becomes the fact of his absence. Maybe the photo never existed. Maybe the cancer that killed him was just a coincidence.

*

Secret Americas features writing about images from the U.S. National Archives.

Image via Wikimedia Commons - “Different names which have placed on FM (Fat Man) unit,” National Archives and Records Administration College Park

Joshua Rivkin is currently a writing fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA. A former Stegner Fellow in Poetry, his work has appeared in VQR, Slate, Southern Review, Best New Poets, and elsewhere.

New Books from NER Authors: Wreck Me by Sally Ball

Categories: NER Authors' Books

wreck_me_coverFrom the jacket copy of Sally Ball’s new book of poems:

Wreck Me is a primer of emotional violence—a primer because, as these unassumingly gorgeous poems know so well, we can only be beginners when we confront our wish to be seized, transported, remade….’We love / that ravishment,’ says Sally Ball of what we simultaneously fear and crave, ‘we trust it.’ These poems are ravishing.”
-James Longenbach

“Wreck Me is an entrancing collection. From the first line to the last, we are tugged into a sensibility and a world as familiar as our own world, and as strange. Sally Ball leaves no line unelectrified. Each poem feels finely wrought and completely newborn, which is exactly the point of poetry.”
-Laura Kasischke

Sally Ball is author of two poetry collections, including Annus Mirabilis (2005). Currently, she is an assistant professor of English at Arizona State University and associate director of Four Way Books. Her poem “Tributary” appeared in NER issue 29.2.

Wreck Me is available at Barrow Street Press and other booksellers.

No Others Before Me

Categories: NER Classics

31-2coverMaria Hummel’s short story “No Others Before Me” appeared in NER 31.2:

Laura’s labor was long and difficult, not because it was hard to squeeze the villagers out, but because several of them tried to climb back in. After their town finally collapsed into a mud of placental fluid around them, they sat in the muck, rubbing their skinny arms. They submitted to being prodded by the doctors and lay listlessly on the mattress while Laura and I cooed at them.

“Give them as much body contact as possible,” advised the nurse. So we spread them out like Christmas ornaments all over Laura’s naked belly and thighs. They curled. They sighed. Then finally one fellow reared his head and pronounced his new world cold and inhospitable. He told the others that they were being punished for exploiting their paradise in the womb.

“It’s okay, little guy,” Laura said, in a voice I had never heard before. It was gentle and singsong and full of authority. She guided the man toward her breasts. “It’s okay.

After a good feed, he revised his opinion and called out to his brethren about a land of milk and honey. Laura pulled the others to her and they waited their turn in a cranky huddle. 

“See?” she said to me, her eyes glistening with tears.

I nodded. I saw. They needed her. All that tugging and sucking. All those itty-bitty sounds. This was what my beautiful wife had wanted: to be everything to them. And my job was to make it possible for her.

I drove them home in three car-seats, each with eight snug pockets where the villagers rode and tossed their arms at their mama.

[read more]

 

Scott Russell Sanders Reads at Bread Loaf

Categories: Audio

scottrussellsandersScott Russell Sanders is the author of twenty books of fiction and nonfiction, including A Private History of Awe and A Conservationist Manifesto. The best of his essays from the past thirty years, plus nine new essays, are collected in Earth Works, published in 2012 by Indiana University Press. Among his honors are the Lannan Literary Award, the John Burroughs Essay Award, the Mark Twain Award, the Cecil Woods Award for Nonfiction, the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana Authors Award, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2012 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English at Indiana University, where he taught from 1971 to 2009. He and his wife, Ruth, a biochemist, have reared two children in their hometown of Bloomington, in the hardwood hill country of Indiana’s White River Valley.

An excerpt from Scott Russell Sanders reading his essay “The Way of Imagination” (The Georgia Review) at the Bread Loaf Writer’s Conference.

To listen to the entire reading, or to other readings and lectures from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, visit their iTunesU site.

 

New Books from NER Authors: I Was Thinking of Beauty

Categories: NER Authors' Books

lea450Sydney Lea, a founding Editor of NER, has published a new poetry collection. From Four Way Books: “It’s been said about conservationist and Vermont Poet Laureate Sydney Lea that ‘this extraordinary poet finds an elegance and beauty that can be glimpsed throughout his often harsh landscape.’ I Was Thinking of Beauty, his eleventh collection of poems, evidences that skill. In this collection, we follow a speaker who no longer feels he can ‘distinguish regret from knowledge, / accountability from sorrow,’ as he wades through the layers of memory and experience: ‘I was thinking of beauty then, how it’s faced grief since the day / that somebody named it.’ Lea’s keen narrative eye keeps us fully in the present as he reminisces on a past—which Lea unravels, chisels away at in search of a deeper understanding—so vivid it could be our own.”

Sydney Lea is the co-founder of New England Review and has appeared numerous times in NER, most recently in its current issue, 33.4.

I Was Thinking of Beauty is available at Four Way Books and other booksellers.

 

NER presents Middlebury alumni authors: June 8

Categories: NER Community, Readings

New England Review is pleased to present a gathering of alumni authors during Middlebury’s reunion weekend on Saturday, June 8, at 2:30 p.m. Dan Elish ’83, Lucas Farrell ’03, John Kolvenbach ’88 (with Alex Draper ’88 and Alec Strum ’08), Maria Padian ’83, and S. S. Taylor (Sarah Stewart Taylor) ’93 will read from their work in Middlebury College’s Axinn Center, Room 229.

ElishDan Elish ’83 co-wrote the book for the Broadway musical 13, which initially played at the Mark Taper Forum and won the 2007 Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for best production. His new musical Nine Wives (book and lyrics), written with Douglas J. Cohen (music and lyrics), was part of the Goodspeed new works festival in January 2013. In 2010, he was commissioned by Theater Aspen to write The Gifted and Talented, a play about bullying. Dan is also the author of ten novels, including The School for the Insanely Gifted, Nine Wives, and Born Too Short. He lives in New York City with his wife and two children where he also teaches piano.

FarrellLucas Farrell ’03 is the author of two books of poetry: The Many Woods of Grief (University of Massachusetts Press) and Bird Any Damn Kind (Caketrain Press). He and his wife, Louisa Conrad (’04), run Big Picture Farm, a small goat dairy and farmstead confectionery located in southern Vermont.

kolvenbachJohn Kolvenbach ’88 is the author of the plays Goldfish, Mrs. Whitney, Love Song, on an average day, Gizmo Love, Fabuloso, and Marriage Play (or Half ‘n Half ‘n Half), which premiered in 2012 at Merrimack Repertory. Goldfish premiered at South Coast Repertory in spring 2009 and was then produced at the Magic Theatre in San Francisco. The Magic also premiered Mrs. Whitney in fall 2009, under Kolvenbach’s direction. Love Song premiered at Steppenwolf in Chicago in spring 2006 and went on to the West End, where it was nominated for an Olivier Award, best new comedy. Kolvenbach’s plays are published by Methuen and licensed by DPS. Kolvenbach’s first screenplay, Clear Winter Noon was selected for the Black List in 2008. His short film, Gray Dog will be shot in New York in June 2013. Bank Job is his latest play. Actor and theater professor Alex Draper ’88 will read a part in Bank Job.

PadianMaria Padian ’83 received her Masters in English from the University of Virginia, and has worked as a news reporter, press secretary to a U.S. Congressman, freelance writer, and essayist before returning to her first love: fiction. She currently lives with her family in Brunswick, Maine, where she writes young adult novels. Her published work includes Brett McCarthy: Work in Progress (Knopf, 2008), Jersey Tomatoes Are the Best (Knopf, 2011), and Out of Nowhere (Knopf, 2013).

StewartS. S. Taylor (Sarah Stewart Taylor) ’93 is a writer and teacher living with her husband and three children in Vermont. She is the author of a series of mysteries for adults, a graphic novel about Amelia Earhart for younger readers, and, most recently, the first installment in a series of adventure novels for kids aged eight to fourteen, entitled The Expeditioners and the Treasure of Drowned Man’s Canyon. Her website is www.SSTaylorBooks.com.

Swarm

Categories: NER Classics

nick flynn4From Nick Flynn’s poem “Swarm” (NER 23.1).

Cosmos. Lungwort. Utter each

& break

into a thousand versions of yourself.

You can’t tell your stories fast enough.
The answer is not one, but also

not two.

[read the poem]

After | By Jane Ratcliffe

Categories: NER Digital, Secret Americas


After the war, after all the pertinacious death, after the women have scrubbed the bathtubs and changed the sheets in anticipation, after the farmers have driven their produce to the nearest market and manufacturers have trucked their goods to the local stores, after the rabbits and chickens and pigs have been slaughtered in celebration, after the cows have been milked and the butter churned, after the children have had their ears washed behind and their manners coached, after the parents have settled their hearts to the inevitable damage of their sons which they know so well having been damaged themselves in the previous war, after the wives have washed and set their hair, and younger sisters and brothers have tried to remember their sibling as someone other than the face in the photo on the mantelpiece, after the cats and dogs have had whispered into their fuzzy ears news of the impending return of their beloved human, after the bars have stocked up on whiskey and the pool halls polished their cues, after the hospitals have opened their windows and the cinemas have reeled up movies about happy families and kindly priests, after the churches have polished their pews and the President has given his speech, after the men have returned–or what arms and legs and hands and ears and hearts and faces are left of them—Nora and I will go to the sea and swim. We will swim out as far as we can without losing sight of the shore. Then, on the count of three, we will drop deep into the water, the way the bombs dropped onto us for so many years, and we will stay there as long as we can without drowning, the salt of the ocean pardoning all that we have seen and heard and touched and smelled and tasted. And then we will surface again, perhaps together, perhaps one by one, breaking through the water with a gust of breath, and swim back to the land.

*

Secret Americas features writing about images from the U.S. National Archives.

Image via Wikimedia Commons - “Like girls from Mars are these ‘top women’ at U.S. Steel’s Gary, Indiana, Works. Their job is to clean up at regular intervals around the tops of twelve blast furnaces. As a safety precaution, the girls wear oxygen masks.” From the National Archives and Records Administration College Park

Jane Ratcliffe is a freelance journalist and fiction writer. Her work has appeared in NER 33.1, The Sun, The Intima, The Huffington Post, Vogue, VH-1, Interview, Guernica, and Tricycle. Her novel, The Free Fall, was selected by the New York Public Library as one of the most notable books of the year.

New Books from NER Translators: Psalms of All My Days

Categories: NER Authors' Books, NER Community

Cover image for Psalms of All My DaysNER contributor Jennifer Grotz has published Psalms of All My Days, a translation of Patrice de La Tour du Pin’s poetry from Carnegie Mellon.

Maurice Manning says: “The very idea of pursuing faith leads to the possibility of missing it or mistaking it or going wrong and, thus, one must learn to become comforted by uncertainty and paradox. Such is the tone of these songs of faith by Patrice de La Tour du Pin – anguish and hope are voices in the same choir. The justice Jennifer Grotz has given these difficult poems is clear – they shine with import and originality and the heart is in them still. It is a joy to have this book.”

Jennifer Grotz’s poetry was published in NER in issues 32.3 and 33.3.

Psalms of All My Days is available on Amazon and other booksellers.

 

New Books: The Best of the Best American Poetry

Categories: NER Authors' Books, NER Community

This special edition of the Best  American Poetry series celebrates twenty-five years of publication. Guest editor Robert Pinsky chose 100 poems from prior years to include in this anniversary edition anthology, including a poem by our own C. Dale Young. Publishers Weekly writes, “No doubt, some readers will discover new favorites here.”

C. Dale Young has published three books of poetry and is the Poetry Editor for NER.

The Best of the Best American Poetry is available on Amazon and other booksellers.