TBR Vol 4 No 3 - The Broadkill River Press
Transcription
TBR Vol 4 No 3 - The Broadkill River Press
PRICE $4.00 May, 2010 Linda Blaskey interviews Joshua Isard in this issue! Don’t miss Steven Leech’s article on Henry Seidel Canby and Christopher Ward! The Broadkill Review c/o John Milton & Co. 104 Federal Street, Milton, DE 19968 Editor and Publisher: James C. L. Brown Editorial Advisory Board: Grace Cavalieri H. A. Maxson Fleda Brown Howard Gofreed Linda Blaskey Gary Hanna John Elsberg Edward M. Lukacs Scott Whitaker Michael Blaine hadrow deforge Phillip Bannowsky Australia and South Pacific Editor: Maryanne Khan To submit work to The Broadkill Review, please send no more than six poems or one short story to: the_broadkill_review @earthlink.net. Simultaneous submissions must be identified as such. Submissions must be in MS Word format and sent as a single attachment, or be contained within the text of your email. No photos at this time, or fanciful renderings of your work. These make downloading your text difficult and time consuming. Allow up to three months for response, as we fill each issue with the highest quality material. Subscriptions cost a first time fee to individuals of $12, $15 annually to libraries, but you must send an e-mail requesting the publication to our e-mail address, above, and a check made payable to John Milton and Company, mailed to 104 Federal Street, Milton, DE 19968. 6 pdf issues will be delivered to your e-mail-box. You must renew your subscription once a year ($6 individuals, $12 libraries), and you are in charge of. updating your e-mail information with us. Bounced issues will result in your subscription being dropped. Alternatively, we will mail you a cd with all six issues on it at the end of the year for $15, which includes shipping and handling, if you select this option. Advertising rates for an ad in each of the year’s six issues: eighth of a page, $50; quarter page $95; half page $180; full page $350. Inside this issue: P. P. P. P. 1 BRP to Publish Five Titles Inside issue: 2 Letters andthis Notes, Credo 3 1 TBR Editor Linda Blaskey Interviews Joshua Isard, P. 2 Letters and Notes, Credo P. 3 Coordinator, Arcadia University’s new Summer P. Creative Writing Institute P. P. P. 8 Poetry by Elisavietta Ritchie P. P. 11 Non-fiction by Steven Leech P. P. 13 Artist Profile by Steven Leech P. P. 18 Scott Whitaker Reviews Wendy Ingersoll’s new book P. Grace Only Follows P. P. P. 19 Poetry byPhillip Calderwood P. 20 Poetry by Lenny Lianne P. P. P. 20 Poetry by Elisavietta Ritchie P. P. 22 Fiction by Joseph LoGuidice P. P. 23 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin P. P. 32 “Under the Wedgehorn” a RegularNonfiction Column P. by Philip Bannowsky P. P. P. 36 Poetry by Shelley Grabel, P. P. 38 Poetry by Lisa Ellis P. 38 Poetry by Wendy Ingersoll P. P. 40 Fiction by Maryanne Khan P. P. P. 44 Literary Birthdays P. P. 45 More Essential Books P. P. 46 Contributors’ Notes P. Literary Birthdays ISSN # 1935-0538 Volume 4, Issue 3 Five Books to Debut Under Broadkill River Press Imprint (Milton, De) The Broadkill River Press is please to announce that it will bring out five deserving works this calendar year. The five works in question are Sounding the Atlantic, a collection of poetry by Martin Galvin, a regular contributor to The Broadkill Review, That Deep and Steady Hum, a collection of poetry by Mary Ann Larkin, Domain of the Lower Air, a collection of short stories by Maryanne Khan, who serves as the Australia and South Pacific Editor for The Broadkill Review, The Shape of Water, a collection of poetry by Laura Brylawski-Miller, and The Year of the DogThrowers, a collection of poetry by Sid Gold, a regular contributor to The Broadkill Review. In addition to three of these authors having some connection to The Broadkill Review, four of them, Martin Galvin, Mary Ann Larkin, Laura Brylawski-Miller and Sid Gold are also all previous award winners in the annual Washington Writers Publishing house competition. 8th Annual Dogfish Head Poetry Prize Competition Guidelines Set (Milton, DE) Submission Guidelines for the 8th Annual Dogfish Head Poetry Prize for a chapbook-length manuscript of poetry by a resident of the Delmarva Peninsula . The reading period for the 8th Annual Dogfish Head Poetry Prize will begin Memorial Day and end on Labor Day, 2010. For the first time, organizers announced, entrants will be able to submit their manuscripts on-line as email attachments in MS Word 03 (or earlier) to [email protected] Alternatively, send ten copies of your manuscript and a self-addressed postcard for acknowledgement of receipt to: The Dogfish Head Poetry Prize, c/o John Milton and Company Quality Used Books, 104 Federal Street, Milton, DE 19968. Manuscripts should be no more than forty pages in length, including title page, table of contents, acknowledgements page and author’s bio. Winner agrees to provide a color photograph for the cover and to maintain seThe Broadkill Review is a member of the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses (CLMP), the Delaware Press Association (DPA), and the Independent Mid-Atlantic Publishers (IMAP), and is listed in Dustbooks’ International Directory of Literary Magazines and Small Presses and the Writer’s Market and Poet’s Market crecy until the Prize is presented at the 12th Annual John Milton Memorial Celebration of Poets and Poetry in Milton Delaware. Winner agrees to appear in person at the event and will be invited to read from their prize-winning work, with a meet-and-greet book-signing afterwards. The Dogfish Head Poetry Prize consists of $200 and two cases of Dogfish Head Craft Brewed Ale. In addition to the award, the chapbook manuscript will be published by The Broadkill Press, and imprint of Broadkill Publishing Associates. The winner will receive ten copies and the right to purchase additional copies at deep discount. Sam Calagione, CEO and Founder of Dogfish Head Craft Brewed Ales is a former English Major who decided to pursue opening a microbrewery instead of an MF in Creative Writing. Past winners of the Prize are James Keegan, Emily Lloyd, Michael Blaine, Scott Whitaker, Anne Colwell, Linda Blaskey, and David Kozinski. Independent IndependentMid-Atlantic Mid-Atlantic IMAP IMAP Publishers PublishersGroup Group V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 Letters and Notes from Our Readers My day job sometimes makes it so difficult for me to read the things I want to read! I'm just sitting down to enjoy this issue now.. I did notice your Credo, where you mention giving feedback to writers. I wanted you to know that I'm always happy to receive feedback; I hesitate to ask for it because I figure editors have enough ways to spend their time without my asking for more of it. Best, Tery Griffin BTW, my sister was very pleased with the review and photo of her book My Boys. As was I -- thank you. You may be interested that both of our books just won first place in our respective divisions in the Del. Press Association 2010 Communications Contest - hers in memoir, mine in book of verse. Feels good! Wendy Ingersoll PS I'll put subscription renewal in the mail tomorrow. thank you thank you looks excellent Respectfully, Kelley J. White Issue jam-packed with good stuff. And I like being sandwiched between Edmund Spencer and Sir Walter Raleigh. And the rest of the journal seems devoted to one ER. My head is swelling. Thanks-- More anon as I have more time to read (at is nearly midnight now)-Elisavietta Ritchie That looks great! Thank you so much for including my story and for sending a copy of the magazine. Cheers! Leah Darrow I know you thanked me for considering The Broadkill Review, and you are welcome, but we writers owe a bigger thanks to you, and to all that work to keep their magazines going. It's not always easy to put them together, and it can be time consuming work. I appreciate your consideration of my writing. Below is a very short bio. Please let me know if you would like something longer. Best Regards, Joe Hi Jamie, I'm still working my way through the latest, and as always substantial, TBR. I have more articles in the offing about Delaware literature….It is a piece about the "Wilmington" novels of Henry Seidel Canby and Christopher Ward. It's short -- only a little more that 1300 words. I've been revising the original and am within days of feeling good enough about it to send a copy for your consideration in TBR. I'm also currently reading Out of the Hurly-Burly by Max Adeler (Charles Heber Clark), which takes place in New Castle in the late 19th century. After I've read and digested it, I plan to read Ella Tybout's novel from the very early 20th century, Poketown People. Tybout's novel also takes place in the environs of New Castle, actually closer to Delaware City. Placing the two together, in a kind of compare and contrast fashion, may prove to be another article about yet another aspect of Delaware literature, but more about that later. Steve Leech Credo “Just reading through my poems included in the last issue and I'm thrilled to see them -- thank you so much! Unfortunately I had sent you a copy of one of the poems with an error in it -- my fault -- this is in middle stanza - the next to last line is some brainstorming I was doing and neglected to delete. Just goes to show, we should re-read everything before pressing that Send button! At any rate, thanks again so much for including my poems.” The good news is that the poet who wrote me this note after their work appeared in The Broadkill Review is such an incredibly good writer that the “brainstorming” portion of what we had published was still quite good, but this does bring up the point I have made over and over about writers not bothering to proof their own material before they send it out to a magazine or publisher. And while I try to catch ty- pos (I’m not perfect at this) in the realm of poetry I am more inclined to give the submitter the benefit of the doubt and chalk up “re-spellings” or grammatical oddities to artistic license (which nonetheless isn’t the same as having artistic 007 license to murder the language, although you would think that that’s exactly what some people who consider themselves “writers” think). So please, do NOT send us your “rough” draft, or even you polished “first” draft, or the story in which your protagonist’s name changes somewhere in the middle of a muddy fourth paragraph because you suddenly decided that the new name is perfect but then forget to replace every iteration of the character’s first name, the one you don’t like any more. We want to see your LAST draft, the actual perfect copy over which you have been with a proverbial fine-toothed comb. (Please note: When contributors from England or the Commonwealth submit to us, we deliberately do NOT correct their spellings of such words as “colour.” While I a a fan of Noah Webster, it was THEIR language first.) V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 Carry-On Luggage (Inside the Mind of Josh Isard) TBR Editor Linda Blaskey Interviews Joshua Isard, Coordinator, Arcadia University’s Creative Writing Institute Just like that all important flight bag, adjunct professor Joshua Isard’s mind is packed with essential stuff. He has graciously agreed to reveal to The Broadkill Review some of the thoughts that travel with him constantly. Thoughts on topics such as “dangerous writing”, international travel, the creative writing process, the importance of trust, and the creation of a summer writing program. —LB TBR: In your short story, “Ignore the Man at the End of the Rope” (The Broadkill Review, Vol.3, issue 5), there is a character, a boyhood friend of the protagonist, who hangs himself in his backyard. That character is mentioned again in a later story, “False Premises” ( Inscribed, Vol.4, issue 8). Was this an actual event in your life? JI: Kind of. (I feel like that’s a common answer when people ask if something I wrote really happened.) When I was in elementary school I walked to school with someone who lived down the street from me, and we were friendly, but not friends. I saw him as we went through middle school and high school because the district wasn’t that big, but after age 11 or so we didn’t spend much time together. After I graduated I forgot about him until my mother told me that he’d committed suicide – he apparently had serious psychological problems – and someone later told me that he hung himself in his back yard. That image stuck with me for years, and then the story around it appeared one day. I wasn’t actively thinking about the whole thing, but there it was, so I wrote it down. TBR: This is a quote from “Ignore the Man at the End of the Rope” – “People reading stories are always looking for important parts.” It seems the suicide of this young man is an important part of your life. Do you think writers exorcise some memories by writing about them? JI: I know that a lot of my favorite writers exorcise memories in their work (Tom Spanbauer calls it “Dangerous Writing”), and I think it works for a lot of people. It not only helps them deal with events, but produces some great writing. TBR: Why do you think Spanbauer calls it “dangerous writing”? Because the writer has to access a dangerous part of his psyche or because the writing is edgy in that the author is putting himself out there? JI: I think it’s called “dangerous” because the author has to go somewhere inside himself or herself that they don’t want to go, to discuss something they know won’t be comfortable. The things we don’t talk about are the things our society tells us shouldn’t be said, so the act of saying them is a little dangerous. A lot of that ends up being edgy, which is a different kind of dangerous, and has more to do with the reception of the work. I don’t want to discount that discussion, but finding the material inside you, accepting it’s a part of you, then expressing it – that’s the truly dangerous process of writing. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 4 TBR: You got your advanced writing degree from the University of Edinburg. What prompted you to go to Scotland? diculous”. What do you think prompted these comments? And were they made by students taking the course? JI: I’d traveled abroad a few times, but never lived abroad. Since I transferred as an undergrad I missed that experience, and I thought grad school would be a great opportunity for it. It was. I had fabulous professors, and opportunities for travel you can’t get living in the United States. That combination of school and primary experiences affects my teaching and writing to this day. And it gave me the travel bug, so my wife and I make sure to take one or two trips overseas each year. TBR: You now teach at Drexel University and Arcadia University, both in Philadelphia. Do you teach similar courses at both universities? JI: Lolita is and advanced piece of literature, and I taught it to a group of kids who, when we went over Animal Farm, needed to be told what the Soviet Union was. Not the details, but that it existed. The very reasonable skepticism came from other faculty members and some friends, but the students really rose to the occasion. That was a situation where I think the kids learned a lot, and probably didn’t even realize how “advanced” the rest of us consider Lolita. Reviewing that book with CCP students is one of my top five most gratifying experiences in teaching; it showed me that any good student in any school will strive to meet a challenge. JI: I teach composition at both Drexel and Arcadia, but I also teach literature and creative writing at Arcadia. TBR: You’re currently putting together and directing a summer writing workshop at Arcadia. Could you tell us something about that? TBR: What are some of the challenges teaching at two schools? JI: We call this course an institute, which is similar to a hybrid course. The group will meet for one weekend on Arcadia’s campus (July 9 – 11, 2010), and then workshop online for the next four weeks. What we’re trying to do is to recreate the in-person workshop environment online as accurately as possible. I feel like this is a relatively unexplored area, and I’m excited about what we’re establishing. JI: Adjunct professors tend to make a living by teaching a lot of classes; many of my friends teach five or six in one term. I’m teaching five right now. Managing all those classes, especially when it comes to grading and preparing, is difficult. No matter how I organize things, at some point I end up with a stack of 80 papers which I have to turn around in a week. So some weeks I put in thirty hours of work, some weeks I put in eighty hours. It can get a little crazy, but then what job can’t? TBR: Is this a credit course? JI: Yes. Undergraduates will earn four credits, and graduates three credits. TBR: This is a quote from your short story, “Mr. Bones” (The Broadkill Review, Vol. 1, issue 6). “Teaching has become a means for your own creation, instilling ideas and possibilities, and having time to produce new material.” Is this true for you, in your writing? TBR: How will you staff the program – instructors from the university, visiting writers? JI: We all want to be that way, and each term we think we’ve planned well enough so it will be, but something always comes up. A particularly frustrating student, an assignment that causes unforeseen problems…..that sort of thing takes time away from producing “new material”. I write as much as I can when school’s in session, and plan for a major spurt of writing during breaks. Sometimes that works, but sometimes the muses laugh at my plans. TBR: TBR: You taught Nabakov’s Lolita in an Intro to Lit course at the Community College of Philadelphia. Some comments about your selection of this piece of literature were “audacious”, “over the top”, and “bloody well ri- JI: We’re planning on utilizing Arcadia’s faculty. We have great instructors who are excited about being a part of the Institute. What kind of students are you hoping to attract? JI: We’re looking for students with some creative writing experience, in either a scholastic or informal environment. It is an intermediate level course. Undergraduates and graduates are welcome, and both groups will work on their writing with an experienced group of peers. TBR: Is there a contact person or a website where people can go for more information? JI: Anyone with questions can contact me ([email protected]). The website for the program is V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W http://www.arcadia.edu/creative-writing-institute.htm TBR: If the summer program is a success, does Arcadia hope it will lead to an MFA program? JI: We’re actively expanding our creative writing offerings, and the Creative Writing Institute is part of that process. We’re focusing on the Institute for right now, but we’re also optimistic about where our expansion could lead in the future. TBR: How does a school start and MFA program? JI: One way is to generate interest, through something like the Institute at Arcadia. Most of the details, however, depend on the particular institution. TBR: Is it too early in the process to ask how you would envision staffing the MFA program? JI: Unfortunately, it is too early to ask about this potential program. If it goes that way, there are a lot of decisions yet to be made. TBR: There is a website that allows students to rate their professors. Apparently, your students give you high marks in the “overall”, “helpfulness”, and “clarity” categories but consider your courses tough. How do you feel about that? JI: I never read those sites, but that’s actually nice to know. I like running a tough course, and at the same time being available to help my students through it. I’m of the philosophy that if a college course doesn’t challenge the students, it’s not well planned. TBR: By the way, in the “hotness” category you get a red chili pepper. Care to comment? JI: Well, it is relative to university professors, who aren’t known for moonlighting as models. Best to keep that one in perspective. TBR: Who do you consider some of your biggest influences? JI: I’m motivated by precision, so George Orwell, James Joyce, Amy Hempel and Chuck Palahniuk really influence me. The thing is, they all had their own ideas of precision, which is relieving to me, because I get to decide on my idea. TBR: And what is your idea of precision? JI: Precise writing says exactly what the author desires. No superfluous words or phrases, no metaphors that seem at first glance like they should make sense, but don’t when readers consider them. This doesn’t mean simple or minimalist; Virginia Woolf and P AGE 5 Gordon Lish are both precise as far as I’m concerned. B.R. Myers wrote a great little book about this called A Reader’s Manifesto. He said “The problem with so much of today’s literature is the clumsiness of its artifice – the conspicuous disparity between what writers are aiming for and what they actually achieve.” So, to take a bit from Myers, precision means hitting exactly what you’re aiming for. TBR: If you could give just one piece of advice to writers, what would it be? JI: Find people you trust. There’s so much advice out there, so many people ready to criticize you, it can be overwhelming. Decide on who you trust, whether they’re close to you or you’ve never met them, and listen to those people very carefully. TBR: You mention “so many people ready to criticize you.” What do you think of writer’s groups? And isn’t there an inherent danger in them as far as criticism goes? JI: I’m actually in a writer’s group, and we criticize each other freely. It works because we trust each other. The four of us met because we work at the same university. Someone brought up the idea of meeting up once a week and discussing writing, and for the last six months or so that’s exactly what we’ve done, and with great success I think. This one happened organically: we met, we clicked, we passed around our work. I’ve seen writer’s groups advertised in cafes and on craigslist, but I don’t think they’d have the same success because there’s no natural element of friendship. One of the members of my group said on his blog: “I don’t know if we’re ‘I’ll-help-you-move-the-body’ friends, but some boxes of books? No problem. Is this an important ingredient? It could be.” I think it is. TBR: You advise writers, and it is good advice, to find someone they trust and listen to them. How does one go about finding that someone to trust? JI: Well, like I said about my writer’s group, we just happen to work at the same school. We met, we figured out we respected each other’s opinions, and that trust grew. I think it’s a lot of chance, but you have to keep your eyes open. Aside from my group there are two or three other people I trade work with, and I feel lucky to trust that many people enough to do so. TBR: Thank you so much for consenting to this interview. The Broadkill Review wishes you much success in your personal writing, your teaching and in the summer writing program and all that comes out of that endeavor in the future. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 6 Creative WriTing Institute Dates: July 9, 10, 11 on campus; four weeks of online projects (ends 8/7) Special Price: $899, earn 3 Graduate Credits or 4 Undergraduate credits Course Code: EN 386/486 (OP) Period: 2010 Summer II Creative Writing: Develop Your Skills in Poetry, Fiction, or Creative Non-Fiction Participate in a face-to-face workshops during the weekend on Arcadia’s campus (7/9-11). Improve your writing during an intensive four week workshop conducted online (7/12-8/7). Get specific feedback from Arcadia’s experienced faculty. Attend an event with James A. Michener Memorial Prize winner Richard Wertime. This course can be taken at the undergraduate (4 credits) or graduate (3 credits) level. About this Institute This institute is for intermediate to advanced creative writers who want to hone their skills over four weeks of discussion and workshops. Students will get personal feedback from Arcadia’s Creative Writing faculty and their peers during both the weekend on campus and four weeks of online workshops. Eligiblity and Requirements Students who will be juniors, seniors or graduates as of the Fall of 2010, and who have taken an introductory creative writing course—which includes a workshop—at their university. Students new to Arcadia will be expected to submit Two pages of writing, poetry or prose, before July 9 for an in-person workshop over the weekend. Students will be expected to consistently participate in online workshops for all four weeks after the in-person meetings, during which students will have the opportunity to develop more of their writing. How to Register Pre-Registration Complete the Creative Writing Institute Questionnaire. This brief questionnaire is to ensure that you have some experience in creative writing classes and will therefore be able to actively and effectively participate in the workshops for the Creative Writing Summer Institute. Students new to Arcadia are asked to submit samples of their writing in this questionnaire. If you have never been an Arcadia University undergraduate or graduate student, click here for new student version. If you have been (alumni) or are a current Arcadia student, click here for Arcadia student version. Once submitted, your questionnaire will be reviewed. Expect a response within two weeks, informing you of your acceptance to participate in the institute. If you are an undergraduate student, Clare Quigley, academic advisor, will be contacting you. Registration If you have been accepted to the program, you will be automatically registered for the course. Whether you have been accepted or not to the Institute, you will be notified by Clare Quigley or Josh Isard. You will receive via e-mail additional details regarding the on-campus weekend, the online component and payment options before the course begins. Course Information Deadline for registration is Friday, June 25, 2010. Institute Schedule (To Come) Meals available for purchase on campus. Off-campus accommodations are available for participants. Mention when you call that you read about the Summer Institute in The Broadkill Review! V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 7 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 8 Poetry by Elisavietta Ritchie But Can’t You Tell I’m Working? I can’t say that. He wants to talk. He could have seen my finger’s tap. He did not look. He needs to chat. I remove my borrowed specs, (I snitched his owl-face glasses till my own are fixed, so I can’t pull the bell jar down, lock doors). Must smile and ask, “You’d like some tea? The kettle’s hot.” But that is up to me. The water’s cold, takes time to boil, time for friendly conversation, do wait, as he is pleased with his day’s writing jag. I’ve nowhere used up mine, am desperate— sixteen personae on the loose, half-fixed, their destinies unsolved, in limbo still, if I pause they’ll slip away and disappear— “Did you pay these?” The pile of bills. “Not due for a week. Tuesday’s good enough.” “What’s for lunch?” “Snips and snails--” I clean each lens with vigor, almost break the fragile frames. The computer buzzes, pants with thirst for words. My brain leaks paragraphs. My mind’s a pousse café, liqueurs or Jello layers stirred so lemon/cherry/orange mingle, mix. Rainbows of gas in puddles turn a glistening black. Yet I’m considered cheerful, friendly, kind, and must not scream, Please just one hour more, my love, for God’s sake let me work in peace! First Light When black sky grays to reveal new fawns hatched in the grass, the stag after another doe, five hunters among the pines, when the sleeper pulls sheets higher for one hour more, the lover nudges and whispers, Shall we try it again? When the crone feared in fairy tales (her loveliness as a girl renowned) opens lined eyes before dawn and notes she survived her peers one more night, when dreamers replay their dreams, the hermit remembers his losses, while the rest of the world awakes to banal tasks and grand schemes. The soldier on guard duty studies the eastern sky aflame and recalls, Red sky in the morning— Shepherd, take warning. He perceives through infrared goggles the remains of yesterday’s battle, the enemy who’s crept back. He knows he won’t sleep again. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 9 Poetry by Elisavietta Ritchie Outsiders “Every poet is in exile” John Pauker, Hungarian-American poet I swim a sea that has no shore or bottom, Petrarch complained, but did he have to buck the Immigration officer? We are all in exile, you from your natal land, I from the crowd, most of us split from our other selves. Like carpenter bees in the boatyard, we buzz and bump around a hull, seek a soft patch in a plank to chew through one ship’s walls. Inside the galley, tea waits in the pot, coals glow in the stove, a loaf’s uncut. An empty hammock expects our shape. But we can’t grind away the rot. Stranded, we remain on the dock, watch all the others embark, We wave back to the child on the third-class deck— Look! He wears our face. Halfway up the gangplank, we seize the helm, check tides, raise anchor. Our ship departs, sail off without a chart, the keys to our cabin lost, to our steamer trunks, to all our locks. We disembark in shallows. Unsteady ground ashore. Stay here? Return? We find no passports for either port. Secrets in Iambic Pentameters For a child who doubts I can keep them So many secrets you will never know long hidden in my lines on face and page. Although my conversations seem to flow true tales remain confined within the cage of my long skull, while most of those who shared their riddles and their loves with me have died. I too have lived adventures, and much dared. Don’t guess. I do know better than confide. Communiqués though skin are safe—no need For paragraphs. What if the listener spoke? Like marbles, I may scatter words and seeds: the small birds twitter and the large ones croak. I am the owl, who flies on unheard wings, foretells when others die, but never sings. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 0 Poetry by Elisavietta Ritchie This April Day This is the day after another insomniac night. This is the day thirty-some bison fled a Maryland farm and, corralled on a tennis court, leapt and re-leapt the net. I cannot leap anything anymore but admire the bison. A day it did not rain so at dawn I hung out the sheets washed at midnight. Also a day 41 more soldiers and civilians were killed and how many more got their legs blown off though on the globe far away. The day Ed and I discussed the logic of euthanasia but he could not put down his diabetic dog or I my aging cat. The day I read my poems to 42 middle-school kids then at the end skipping lunch each composed a strong poem of his own. For this day I am glad they managed to keep me alive. [But on a September day after Ed took his pets to the vet he aimed the gun inside his own mouth. At the wake I had to explain to his relatives shocked his days were all pain he knew nothing was left and nothing could keep them alive.] SPRING, 1976 We drink expresso with whipped cream flecked with specks of cinnamon and chocolate, discuss the exquisite anxiety of sinning, justify excursions and experiments toward further vraisemblance, verisimilitude— who has not stolen cannot write of theft, who has not lain can’t write of love, though Lazarene, we tell of death imperfectly. In lassitude of cushions piled, we lick the sweet cream from each other’s lips, resolve new boldness on the page. My tiny statue of a Japanese philosopher adventuring too near the table’s edge has lost his head. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 1 Delaware Literary History by Steven Leech Henry Seidel Canby & Christopher Ward: Forerunners of Wilmington’s 20th Century Literary Movement From his DREAMSTREETS #37 article Jerry Shields, the late scholar on Delaware literature, comments on Henry Seidel Canby: "Canby clearly was a prime mover in America's literary renaissance of the 1920s and '30s. Even so, he never forgot his Wilmington roots and managed to help a number of fellow Delawareans get published and read." Henry Seidel Canby and Christopher Ward were the two firmly established authors among that flapper era group of bohemian and avant-garde Wilmington authors. The main character from Canby’s only novel, Our House, the budding writer Robert Roberts, after finally finding his own voice making him capable of writing his own novel may well have been the novel actually written by Wilmington author Christopher Ward. The novel that Canby’s Robert Roberts was about to write and which Christopher Ward actually wrote was One Little Man. Canby's novel, Our House, was published in 1919 by MacMillan. It is a coming-of- age novel about a young man named Robert Roberts, who comes home to Wilmington from college in New England. His family lives on Delaware Avenue near Trolley Square during the last years of the 19th century. There's a war going on with Spain in both Cuba and the Philippines. Roberts comes home to crisis. The family real estate business is failing, then his father dies. After selling a house on Palmer's Row as a real estate agent in his father’s firm, he decides he must liquidate the family business, sell the family home, "our house," set his widowed mother up with an aunt, then take the money and run off to Greenwich Village. In New York City he runs into Johnny Bolt, a former college chum who has become a cultural and intellectual provocateur. One might be reminded of Jack Kerouac’s portrayal of Neal Cassady in Canby's portrayal of Johnny Bolt, but later in the novel there is the suspicion that Johnny Bolt has become a denizen known as the "pencil man" who surreptitiously frequents the neighborhood. Among other characters in Our House is Mary Sharpe, a self confessed "pagan" who is also from his Wilmington neighborhood and shows up in Greenwich Village to round out the group. In fact, Mary Sharpe may have been modeled after Canby’s future wife and Wilmington poet, Marion Gause. While socializing with his group in the Village, Roberts learns a little about class divisions, a whole lot about philosophy and art, and that you can't see reality until you really see who loves you. Roberts also discovers that, " literature costs money instead of making it." Ultimately, it's "our house" that brings everything home. After selling the house in which he grew up, "our house" becomes a powerful metaphor, and a context for Roberts to form his conclusions about himself and life in general. Wilmington, renamed “Millington” in the novel, has become a place for him to find the reality he can really see and understand as an artist. So well is this theme of Our House developed, that a review in the New York Times, on July 27, 1919, said this: "An interesting, delightful novel, written with that apparent spontaneity that is one of the basic essentials of good fiction, intimate and varied and unafraid in its knowledge of human nature and with its local coloring so rich and so graphically portrayed that when we have finished the story we know the town and its people as if we had lived there." As suggested earlier, Wilmington author Christopher Ward wrote that novel that the fictional Robert Roberts may have been about to write at the end of Our House. Ward's novel is about one little man named Paul Herbert Fricke. His novel, One Little Man takes place on the streets of Wilmington, most likely in west center city and near Brandywine Park and up to 18th Street. One Little Man, published by Cassell & Company in 1926, is about a naive ordinary man who is always being aptly named by those who affect his life. He is either being named "Herbie," or "Bert," or "Pallfrey" by a cultural poseur, J. Warrington Dawson, whose malaprops work in the same amusing ways as do the Duke's in Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn. Fricke is part hapless mark and part visionary. More than anything, he is naive, and this adds to his charm. When he falls in love with an itinerant salesclerk named Rose, he finds himself being conveniently hauled off to Elkton to get a quickie marriage to her. Herbie is about to become a hapless and star struck father. Yet, throughout the remainder of the novel, Fricke remains a true optimistic Candide. Ward wrote another Wilmington novel. That one was Starling, published in 1927 by Harper. In the novel, Cynthia Rivers gets married and becomes Cynthia Bruce, but will always be Sandy to her closest friends and college chums who were all independent women in 1920s America. On her way in the world with her friends, she is the first to get married, and not to just anybody. True high class romance snags her and Cynthia marries into a filthy rich family of old money who has a lot of real estate along the Brandywine. Where Paul Herbert V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W Fricke is a poor as a church mouse, Cynthia Bruce is living in style. I’s easy to feel sorry for both Fricke and Cynthia. Both learn the truth behind each’s ill fated marriage. Both have measured up to being a parent, but both have been trapped through each’s own brand of abandonment. While Fricke finds true love in the task of raising a daughter without a mother who has run off with another man, Cynthia finds true love with another man who is a writer. But because of her husband’s overpowering social status she must remain a starling trapped in a gilded cage, mired in snooty intolerance and blind inheritance. She is truly a misfit. Christopher Ward had three careers as a writer, early in his life he wrote parodies which were published in the Saturday Review of Literature, which was founded by Canby. One Little Man and Starling were Ward’s two “Wilmington” novels. He also wrote several historic adventure novels, one of which, The Memoirs of a Rascal, remains unpublished. Ward also wrote history, particularly local history about the American Revolution. His book, The Delaware Continentals remains in print, thanks to the Delaware Heritage Commission. While Ward remained in Delaware until his dying day, Canby managed to escape. But if there is another strain of literary legacy among Delaware literary figures, Canby and Ward might very well represent it. The suggestion could be put forth that beside the Poe strain that has influenced Delaware’s literature, that there is a strain that more closely resembles some of the influence of Walt Whitman, for example, who is another notable American literary figure with some claim to a mid Atlantic identity. Closer to us in time, enhanced by our counter culture sensibilities, Canby’s and Ward’s fiction more truly represents what would eventually develop into a modernist 20th century world view. While it is true that Ward became somewhat parochial and later was given to writing historical fiction, and later just plain history, his perspective in his two Wilmington novels, One Little Man and Starling, could be construed to have a “bohemian” or even a progressive perspective akin to the literary perspective held by Canby and the community he depicted in Greenwich Village in Our House. After Canby’s 1934 reminiscence of middle-brow fin de siecle Wilmington in his The Age of Confidence, he published Thoreau in 1939. This biography of the American thinker, commentator and Transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau remains one of the most authoritative and consulted works on the subject to this day. It also represents Canby’s position in the broad cultural arena of the 20th century in America. Christopher Ward was not the only Wilmington area author who Canby helped and nurtured. Another was Anne Parrish, and by proximity, Anne’s brother Dillwyn. Through his connections in New York with Harper & Brothers, Canby helped both Parrish siblings publish their earliest works. (Publisher’s Note: I found a boxed two-volume set of War of the Revolution nearly twenty years ago and it remains one of my favorite histories of the period.) P AGE 1 2 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 3 An Expatriate Among the Branches by Steven Leech Maryland Avenue heads south out of Wilmington through the old “trolley suburb” of Richardson Park. Early in the 1950s the old trolley bed was still adjacent to the old two lane road, but later expansion of Maryland Avenue to four lanes wiped out its earlier history along with a slew of old front yards that had swept down to a road less traveled by automobile traffic. The widening of Maryland Avenue was a harbinger of the baby boom expansion that began to chew up old farms and fallow land beyond our aging neighborhood where I and my family had moved after World War II. Growing up in Richardson Park in the 1950s, which was not like the crisp new suburban developments of those slightly younger than me, was a mix of the older and the new, of both “war babies” and baby boomers growing up. Many things were expectedly typical, like television, tail fins and excessive chrome. This odd mix subtly subverted the stultifying atmosphere of apathy and conformity that defined burgeoning 1950s cultural life. Where I lived in Richardson Park, Maryland Avenue divided into the nearly forgotten older developments of Glenrich and Ashley. I lived on the Glenrich side and my friend Jonathan Bragdon lived on the Ashley side, where once the Delaware artist Jefferson David Chalfant had his studios. Jonathan’s and my lives had their similarities and crosscurrents. Both of us were born in Wilmington during World War II while our fathers served in the war effort. We both spent our first years with grandparents, myself with mine near P.S. duPont High School and Jonathan with his near Cool Springs Park. It was there that Jonathan received his first artistic inspiration, when as a toddler he saw artists from either the nearby Pyle or Schoonover galleries working at their easels in the park. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 4 “What they were doing seemed magical to me,” Jonathan commented to me when relating the story. After the war, when our fathers came home, our families moved to the suburbs south of Wilmington, mine to Richardson Park and Jonathan’s to Roselle. Later, Jonathan’s family moved to Richardson Park where we met. In the late 1950s when I was reading Batman comic books and watching Bandstand on channel 6, Jonathan was spending hours slowly polishing a convex mirror work, Jonathan was showing me the heavens in all its true glory. It was only a short time after that Jonathan turned his curiosity from the cosmos to the microscopic world, specifically the activity of a single cell life form called the paramecium. Learning that these almond shaped beings on occasion would eject small threadlike matter called trichocystes, Jonathan explored ways to make them more visible by using dyes in order to photograph them through his microscope, but more importantly to find out why paramecium performed this phenomena so that he could try to catch them in the act for his camera. as main ingredient for a telescope he was building from scratch. Comic books and television were not allowed by his mother who observed strict religious teachings. Instead, Jonathan was doing other things which seemed to harken back to older and simpler times, like raising an orphaned crow chick, which he named Johnny Crow, by feeding it balled up morsels of raw hamburger. One Sunday night Jonathan knocked on my door. I was surprised to see him because his mother’s religious practices meant strict observance of the sabbath. While she was away at a church related event. Jonathan broke that sabbath. “Jonathan, it’s Sunday,” I said, surprised to see him. “Come on over,” he replied. “I’ve something to show you.” It was an extraordinary clear night. In his backyard he had set up the telescope he’d just finished building. He aimed it around the skies inviting me to peer through it. There was Saturn with its rings and that field of stars called the Pleiades. I always reflected on that incident and its inherent irony; that while his mother was away doing God’s “I am tickled to find that they are still listed as of ‘unknown function’,“ Jonathan recently told me regarding the trichocystes. “In my research, I tried all kinds of ways of trig- gering reaction of the trichocystes, so that they would shoot out their threads, from mechanical irritation to presence of predators, change of temperature, and introduction of chemicals. I proposed an electrochemical mechanism for the 'shooting' or discharge, and tested it by introducing tranquilizer to the medium. I also proposed several functions the discharges might have, from defensive to signaling. By the way, it really surprises me that no progress has been made on the trichocyst in the 51 years since I did my study! I wish that I still had a copy of my report, which included lots of color photographs made through my microscope.” Jonathan’s project got the notice of his biology teacher at Conrad High School as well as an invitation to the National Science Fair in 1960, which was held in Indianapolis. The experience was remarkable. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 5 “To travel to the National Science Fair in Indianapolis,” Jonathan told me, “ I was given a choice between DC8 jet or Pullman deluxe sleeper, and to the consternation of the journalist who was to accompany me, my biology teacher, Mr. Gilligan, and an executive from the main sponsor, I chose the train because I thought I would see more. The executive and Mr. Gilligan seemed to enjoy themselves thoroughly on the train, with a pile of newspapers and books, while the journalist puffed on a fat cheap cigar and scowled either at me or out the window, when he wasn't off drinking and trading stories at the bar in the restaurant car. The night was a waking dream of dozens of levelcrossings with the wail of the horn and bells ringing and lights flashing, or the bashing passage of trains in the opposite direction, or complicated junctions with jolting and swaying and clackety-clack over the switches, so when we arrived in Indianapolis it was as if I'd finally fallen asleep found out what had happened. It was also then that I found that he’d been living in Amsterdam, Netherlands, had a family, and had become a successful artist in Europe. Over the next 40 years Jonathan’s and my paths crossed several times, yet neither of us knew. We both lived in the metropolitan Boston area in the early 1970s, and a few years later when I had an extended stay with friend in Memphis, Tennessee Jonathan was living there with his first wife. Jonathan had finished his high school graduation requirements early and had earned his diploma while only a junior at Conrad High School and was admitted to Johns Hopkins University. However, he was persuaded by relatives living in Switzerland to spend a year living in the mountains overlooking the Rhone Valley. If Jonathan’s first artistic inspiration had been to see those local artists painting in Wilmington’s Cool into a realistic dream. The day was spent setting up the exhibits. “The next night, the first at the hotel which, if I'd chosen the plane, would have been the second, I couldn't free myself from the TV in the sitting room of our suite. When everyone else went to bed, I found myself alone with a TV for the first time in my life, and I couldn't stop. I watched until deep in the night and all the broadcasters signed off. The executive had given me a pill, saying, ‘I bet you're so excited, you'll have trouble sleeping, so just take this and I guarantee you'll fall over and sleep like a log.’ The idea of a sleeping pill scared me, but finally I was so wound up, hovering about an inch above the mattress, that I took the pill, and was surprised to find it worked powerfully, like being pulled down by a strong arm, more like being drowned, I guess, than anything else, and then it was morning. That was the day of the judging. I awoke feeling dizzy, with a dull headache, which developed into a splitting headache during the day. By the time the judges reached me, I could barely follow their questions, and they may have thought I was doing an impersonation of a robot needing a recharge.” In the spring of 1961 Jonathan disappeared. Suddenly he was no longer in class. It was not until after I googled his name on the internet nearly 50 years later that I Springs Park, then a visit with an uncle to the Louvre in Paris was an epiphany. There was no turning back. Art had become the prime purpose in Jonathan’s life. For the next few years while living in Europe Jonathan tutored students in chemistry, attended the École Superierure des Arts Decoratifs, and studied art under the European artist Biagio Frisa. For a period between 1963 and 1967 he attended the University of Strasbourg and the École Payou in Lausanne. In 1967 he had his first solo art show at the Schuster Gallery in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The show was sold out! For a time in 1967 he lived in New York City where he found encouragement from the noted choreographer Merce Cunningham and the American artist Jasper Johns. In December 1967 he moved to London. It was there that he participated in an “happening” at the Royal Albert Hall called “The Alchemical Wedding” where he met and interacted with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. Just as Jonathan’s career as an artist was hurtling toward greater success, the times caught up with him. In 1969 he received his draft notice. While still living in Richardson Park in the late 1950s, Jonathan had registered for the draft as a conscientious objector thanks largely to his mother’s pacifist views, which were proscribed by her affiliation with the Plymouth It’s been 50 years since that night Jonathan Bragdon ran across Maryland Avenue to bid me to look at the heavens through his homemade telescope. Now he comes to knock on my door via the information superhighway, and an occasional transatlantic phone call. It’s been a long journey for both of us and my own work has remained here in Delaware for the past 35 years, but now after 50 years, Jonathan’s work could finally come home. children, Jessie and Thomas. He now lives in Amsterdam with his present, and third, wife, Beate, their son Jessie and their two daughters, Hannah and Clara. “It is one of the happiest things in my life,” Jonathan told me, “that all four children have been able to grow up together, and now feel like they're in one family.” During the ensuing decades he has become a noted artist in Europe, participating in numerous exhibitions, participating with other artists in Europe in a number of collective art projects, and has enjoyed respectable sales of his artworks. In September through October of 2008 Jonathan had a solo exhibition of his work at the Aurel Scheibler Gallery in Berlin. P AGE 1 6 “The show’s opening could not have been better,” Jonathan told me. “An important American collector bought two large drawings, the Berlin Museum is buying four, and the curator of the Beyeler Foundation in Basel, which has the highest quality collection of modern art in Europe, has called to say he wants to meet me, and left his card.” What’s in the immediate future for Jonathan? His recent exhibition in Berlin has spawned new opportunities. “My Berlin gallery owner,” Jonathan told me recently, “nominated me for the central ‘prestige exhibition’ at the Cologne International Art Fair, April 2009, and my work was selected.” T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W Brethren church. It had been this draft status that enabled Jonathan’s work at the nonprofit Concord Community Mental Health Service, and later with the McLean Mental Hospital, which was affiliated with the Harvard Medical School, to suffice as alternative service to possibly being sent to the Vietnam War. His service with these two institutions dovetailed into his matriculation to the University of Massachusetts where he earned a Bachelor’s degree in the Philosophy of Art in 1975. After a first marriage ended in 1977, Jonathan lived with a Dutch student of art history, who had written a review of his first show in Europe at the Free University in Amsterdam. In 1979, they moved to the Netherlands where they married and had two V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 7 Schilderijen van Jan van der Pol zijn van 11 maart t/m 1 april 2010 deel te zien in de tentoonstelling (Let's March) Into the Labyrinth inGaleria XX1 in Warschau. Galeria XX1, Al. Jana Pawla II 36 , Warschau · Hinke Schreuders neemt van 25 maart t/m 24 mei 2010 deel aan de tentoonstelling Tegendraads in de galerie van LUMC in Leiden. De groepstentoonstelling toont kunstenaars die werken met traditionel handwerktechnieken - verdere deelnemers zijn onder anderen Desiree de Baar, Jan koen Lomans en Seet van Hout. Galerie LUMC, Albinusdreef 2, Leiden. Geopend dagelijks van 8.00 tot 20.00 uur, toegang is vrij. . Paul van Dijk neemt van 20 maart t/m 30 mei 2010 deel aan de tentoonstelling Peinture Céramique in Museum goudA in Gouda, waavoor het museum 17 kunstenaars uitnodigde een vaas te beschilderen met behulp van de historische techniek 'Gouds plateel'. In de tentoonstelling zijn verder vazen te zien van onder anderen Gijs Assman, Arjanne van der Spek en Helen Frik. Museum goudA, Achter de kerk 14, Gouda. Geopend wo t/m vr 10.00-17.00 uur, za t/m zo 12.00-17.00 uur Van 17 april tot 25 juni is werk van Paul van Dijk te zien in de tentoonstelling Proeflokaal in museum SM's in 's-Hertogenbosch. De tentoonstelling omvat werken uit de eigen collectie van het museum, van onder anderen JCJ vd Heyden, Ger van Elk, Jan Dibbets, Tony Cragg. In het kader van deze tentoonstelling presenteert Paul van Dijk op 30 mei een door hem gemaakt kunstenaarsboek, dat in een oplage van 1000 verschijnt als uitgave van Peter Foolen Editions. SM's, Magistratenlaan 100, 's-Hertogenbosch. Geopend dinsdag t/m zondag 13.00 – 17.00 uur, dinsdagavond en donderdagavond tot 21.00 uur Van 8 mei tot en met 12 juni 2010 zal verder een project van Paul van Dijk in samenwerking met dichteres Gerry van der Linden, met als thema 'pinksteren', tentoongesteld worden in de Protestantse kerk in SintMichielsgestel. Het project is onderdeel van een serie projecten over hoogtijdagen in de Christelijke kerk, waaraan verder o.a. Guido Geelen en Reinoud van Vugt in combinatie met dichters deelnamen. Er is een uitgebreide catalogus bij verschenen met afbeeldingen en interviews naast. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 8 One, two, three, one, two, three: music and breath in Wendy Ingersoll’s Grace Only Follows a review by Scott Whitaker on a summer night,/stretch(sic) out against the earth’s back, Wendy Ingersoll’s book, Grace Only Follows, (March listen(sic).” Her guilt in her ability to not save her loved ones is Street Press) is rife with loss; death, her husband’s sudden dethe lynchpin on which much of this collection hinges upon. parture, her family’s health Because what’s left for the problems. Ingersoll not only speaker after thirty years of marsurvives these challenges riage is Al-anon meetings, the but composes poetry out of painful, forced conversations the them that is balanced, quiet, speaker must have with the ex, and careful, belying the danthe bald fact that her son is an ger underneath. alcoholic, that her ex has “scotch What else does an for lunch”, that her father is loosartist do with grief? ing his mind, that her mother is Ingersoll is a poet terminally ill. One only tries to who stares her task down, breathe, to get a grip, to control. “an artist’s intent/ is to Some of the best momake his flowers bloom forments in Grace are when the poet ever. But first/he hacks off uses the precise language of gartheir stems,” and if it is her dening or of music to kick out a marriage, or her children rhythm. In “Late Bloom,” the she is speaking to or about, names of plants such as pachythe hard cold truth of love is sandra, and evergreen mix with laid bare in her poetry, love trowel and dig, and the music of can leave us stripped bare, planting and the rhythm of a garisolated, like a lone power den help ease the pain of a dying line knocked down in a parent. In “Every Afternoon storm. Sometimes you get Since” the rhythm of teaching shocked, sometimes you piano is key to grief relief that sizzle till someone shuts the ultimately results in staid anger. power down. As if to love Is she furious with her husband someone or something is to leaving, or is she furious with herkill it. This tension is felt self for “playing the Well Temthroughout the volume, pered in all the wrong keys?” sometimes from her relaGrace is a fine collection tionship with her husband, that is weaved together by Ingeror mother, or children. At soll’s eye and ear: the imagery of the end of the opening poem the Chesapeake and music motifs, “Every Afternoon Since,” she the reoccurring urge to breathe, isn’t sure who she would as if after thirty years of marriage shoot if she had a gun, “her the poet is finally at peace, or at target husband, or self.” And least seeking it in a new life. where does one direct the “...It’s okay to loose your place, I anger, direct the grief? She tell my students,” and Ingersoll is isn’t sure herself, for “We talking beyond the sheet music, have no radar,” she writes in beyond the piano where she “Fly Blind” and we cannot teaches her lessons, she is talking see the truth, much less about a woman’s life, and the de“your true face/nor my own,” mands placed upon it. And Ingerfor our own deceptions are soll is too smart to mope, and by as powerful as those we enthe end of Grace, where the salt counter day to day. isbn 1-59661-128-6 March Street Press marshes are still salt marshes, she’s This volume could have <marchstreetpress.com> $9 (paper) found joy in her granddaughter, pracbeen called “Breath Only Folticing her scales, and much more lows,” for there is a tight, anximportantly the ability to breathe. For in music, as well as in ious tension in her verse, coupled with the psychic pain of longpoetry, the rhythm of the breath is essential. ing for her son “to breathe easy,” someone for whom she has not —SW taught “the best way to observe the stars/ is to be eight years old V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 1 9 Readers Respond to Publisher’s Challenges Poems on Classical Themes by Phillip Calderwood Invoking Virgil I sing for the sake of a new order, for an insecure empire led by simple minds and good intentions. Our officials lack your complexity of vision, you Homeric Roman, you practical poet, who never grew too high-minded to forget the farm of your boyhood, to lose sight of the humming hive, the cultivation bees bring, or the danger in each swarm and sting. Show us again the pains your hero, faithful Aeneas, took to found the eternal city: first forsaking the fallen towers of Troy, his homeland, whose wise king the Greeks left headless on a barren shore; then abandoning the safe harbor of Carthage and the love of its already bereft queen; and in the end unsettling the tenuous accord that tethered Italians together before his arrival. Forgive us, you self-effacing sage, you model of the noseless bust. We must wrest your lessons from fire again. Flesh, I fear, will have to burn before we feel the human cost of our dream: a smoke that brings tears, a shadow that feasts on blood. Pity our advisers, who cannot descry the subtleties you describe: the winds that disorder the signs we wish to read, the path to a destination that never arrives, and the pyre that immolates all we leave behind. Dante’s Shadow If I were born and raised in a city graced with churches, statues, and icons, its wealth fought over by impudent men under the banners of emperors and popes; if I had seen battle myself and, wanting to promote peace, served the public until the vengeful took power, and my possessions, and banished me from my home; and if I had met my city’s fairest citizen when I was nine, and she as well, and honored her in verse, and scarcely nine years later, she took sick and died— I would think her too good for all but the eternal city, and pray some day she’d lead me there, but first I would have to wander, begging for bread, looking to books for answers. I would learn to see Lombards, Romans, Sicilians, and Tuscans as one, and write in their tongue, as I sat in lonely castles, dreaming of justice in hell, hope in purgatory, and love in heaven. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 0 Readers Respond to Publisher’s Challenges Poems on a Classical Theme Phillip Calderwood Lenny Lianne Melanion Considers Atalanta AS PERSEPHONE GATHERS POSIES She feels no love for men, and I cannot blame her. She would have died on a high hilltop, at her father’s command, if the she-bear had not suckled her. She senses how the fields cease to hum with bees. Wildflowers in bloom lose their sweet speeches. When she strode out of the wilderness, not only alive but lean and lovely, more fit for chasing down game than any of us, we saw only the woman. The ground goes somber as if some hulking cloud overpowers all sunlight. The meadow convulses Those hairy half-men, the centaurs, charged, all lightning hooves and lust, and would have raped her were she not a sure shot with a bow. and howls. The earth around her quakes, afraid of being split open. Something more savage than nature Her arrow brought down the boar that ravaged Calydon, but men fought over her due, the hide, until poor Meleager and his pig-headed uncles died. slogs its way closer, flexing muscle. She played our games and proved her strength by pinning Peleus, but when the call went out for heroes, Jason would not count her among his crew. We regard her as any woman, and I am not surprised she runs from our designs. With her feet so fantastically fleet, no man can hope to overtake her— unless, like me, he plans to cheat, rolling god-given gold, a prize whose purity and warmth she has never known. A Sonnet by Elisavietta Ritchie Tradecraft in Iambic Pentameters For a child who doubts I can keep secrets So many secrets you will never know long hid in lines upon my face and page. Although my random chatter seem to flow, true tales remain confined within the cage of my long skull, while most of those who shared their riddles and their loves with me have died. I too have lived adventures, and much dared. Who’d guess? I do know better than confide. Whispers through the skin are safe—no need for megaphones: what if the listener spoke? I may broadcast my sacks of words and seed: the small birds twitter and the large ones croak. For I’m the owl, who flies on unheard wings, foretells when others die, but never sings. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 1 Cape Henlopen Writers’ Retreat (APPLICATION DEADLINE HAS BEEN EXTENDED) 2010 Poetry and Nonfiction Writers Retreat October 21-24 Location: The Biden Center, Cape Henlopen State Park, Lewes, Delaware Retreat leaders: JoAnn Balingit, Poet Laureate, State of Delaware Tama Baldwin, poet and nonfiction writer Frank Giampietro, poet Applications: due Tuesday, June 1, 2010 by 4:30 PM* (*extended from previous deadline of Monday, May 17th, 2010) Apply online at www.artsdel.org BEGINNERS ENCOURAGED TO APPLY -NO PUBLISHING EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Fee: $250, includes room and board V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 2 Fat Boy A short story by Joseph LoGuidice He was an orangutan the first time I saw him playing first base. Little league. All belly and arms. It didn’t start there, his mother said about the belly part. That fight began the second the free air outside the womb hit his screaming face. He wanted nothing more than to be fed – constantly. And he was an Italian kid. So was I, and food was up there with the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. She packed snacks for him whenever they visited relatives. She had to; the car trip would be unbearable if she didn’t, and he was always a big kid for his age, capable of being loud and knocking things over. I’m hungry, I’m hungry. It never stopped. I didn’t befriend Eugene until seventh grade. By this time he was one of the fat kids. But he was also one of the big kids, tall, so no one made fun of him…. to his face. And he was a good kid. Big heart, but slow academically. Always in remedial classes. He knew baseball stats every which way, and would cripple anyone in sitcom trivia, but ask him to break down a scene from Steinbeck’s Of Mice And Men, and his brain crystallized like dog piss in January. Ironic that he was so much like Lennie Small, and I, a slight kid with a brain, so much like George Milton. But I could never shoot him in the end. It was Eugene and the fat farms. It was craziness like the Optifast all liquid diet, and lettuce with tofu. The fat burned off in layers, the accolades always followed. Pats on the back, and up down looks of disbelief. But inside, nothing had changed. Not in his stomach, nor deep enough in Eugene’s head. Shakes and lettuce were to his form of hunger what drilling pinholes in the earth would be to a monstrous cavern of bubbling magma. The world says fat is a problem in a million different ways other than, “Hey, fatso, your weight is a problem.” There were the girls Eugene couldn’t have. That was the worst of everything. It got so that I wouldn’t bring up a girl I might be seeing in front of his father so as not to embarrass Eugene. I would let his father ask what the hell was wrong with me. Why couldn’t I get a girl? God, you two losers are hopeless, he’d say while rinsing the suds off his corvette. I told him he could get as many vettes he wanted; it was all downhill for him. And by the way, straighten your earring, dummy. Eugene just sat on his milk crate in the driveway smoking and cracking old-fart jabs. Age was the one thing he would always have over his father. Eugene bounced at a place called Tuxedo Junction before he was even booze legal. It wasn’t exactly the place to go if food was a weakness and women quixotic. He was the big guy at the door who let the tittering girls pass with a smile and race to the bar. The salty, humid scent from the hot dog guy on the sidewalk battled with their perfume for dominance under his nose, and I sometimes thought that in his quiet places, away from the noise, a huge compensation took place. We all can do that in spots. Some of us get away with it. Must have been tough loving movies so much. Being so close to that screen, seeing the kinds of people one sees, mouth chewing him away from society’s ideal like a planet losing its orbit. It grows colder the farther you get from the sun. Because there wasn’t a candy bowl or sample station Eugene didn’t like, his fat cells, like ancient mafia, went back many generations. Their numbers were in need of a desperate purge. Eugene did manage a girl in his life, but knowing them together was to replace the word relationship with maelstrom. She was a medicated bi-polar bulimic live-in girlfriend turned friend that cinched Eugene’s stomach in Velcro wraps when he went out on dates. The whole thing was the best he could do. I was in his parent’s kitchen the night they brought up the surgery. Eugene was standing around blocking all sorts of light. It was one of those moments when scenery and thought coalesce to form a sudden awareness. Eugene left the kitchen, and his father, with a dumbfounded look, gasped. Could he have actually gotten bigger? Yes, he could have. Five hundred pounds was now a possibility. What’s Eating Gilbert Grape was no longer a thing that happened to others. We wanted Eugene to be one of those people that pose holding their old pants, a pair that could fit a small woman in each leg with room for a poodle in the crotch. Cut your goddamn stomach so you can’t eat, so the world will accept you more, so you don’t die. That was what the surgeon at Yale planned for him, and it was a last resort. I was there when they wheeled him into his room. Don’t say anything stupid cause the laughing kills my stomach, Eugene said. Bastard. I had planned jokes around the fact that a handful of desperate peas would now fill him up and maybe cause him to puke. Eugene and his damn stomach; it was always getting in the way of things. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 3 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin RAGE a flower that explodes, something you once thought you wanted to curl near, stroke, becomes a porcupine in your throat, nail bomb breaking apart in your throat so even your last words bleed THANK GOODNESS I DIDN’T BUY THE SKULL COAT drugged as I was by his eyes. It was not my fault I felt intoxicated. Few made my being a poet seem an aphrodisiac. I thought I’d been inoculated against charmers but his ecstasy about my words, a dangerous tango. What felt like foreplay, a player’s play SHE SAID FOR YOU THE WOMEN WORE LOW GAUZY DRESSES it’s true, women beam in your arms. Old widows and taut 20 year olds with licorice hair and tight asses. They glow, a bride for an hour. When he walks you to the dance floor he could be carrying you across a threshold. When you’re in his arms and his dark mahogany eyes lock on you, you are the only woman who exists until time for the next lovelorn. What more could you want? You don’t have to do his laundry, never hear him snore. Who wouldn’t want the most pricey perfume, want to buy clothes you don’t need dying for him to notice? HE SAID THE NIGHTMARE POEMS BLEED he said they were too real to be dreams. He said they scared him, a parallel world, deeper than DNA. Terrifying he said, the words were armed, were bleeding all over the page V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 4 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin ADORABLE maybe the first time I was called that: bitch, sexy, honey, babe, but not adorable. Kittens are adorable, babies. Frustrated, I can’t get the step. Each try in his arms, I screw it up. “This is fun,” he says, “we never get to dance this much.” He holds me closer, lifts me up. “Adorable.” I’m not a cat, a puppy. My face burns. I think of a man ages ago I didn’t want to go to bed with who took me to the Adelphi. My skin was rose. “Oh,” he said, “I can see you want me.” No, it was just an wild allergy to Macrodantin WHEN, AT THE BALLET BARRE, THE MAD GIRL REALIZES the only relief, that she could end it all, this going thru the motions. She is sick of fantasy being more real than her life. On the metro, only gray. In ballet, the gray leaks in thru her skin, braids with a litany of dreads. She can’t remember when she stopped looking ahead but only backward AFTER THE E MAIL the gulp of his black eyes won’t obliterate her venom. I play loud music to drown her words. It isn’t that there isn’t something of his darkness, his knife in her verbs. Lady Killers are never alter boys. Or are they? He was, no matter. Wasn’t it Satan Eve found irresistible? And isn’t that feeling worth everything? V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 5 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin WHEN I SEE HER PHOTOGRAPH IN HER NEW BOOK glum and gloomy, not the startling beauty she was. Haggard, something close to a witch or bitch. My poems are as dark as hers. I’m sure I am too but would never pick such a grave, sour image. Where is that black eyed kohl eyed beauty, her hair pulled back, arrogant, maybe spoiled? But at least one of my boyfriends fell wild for her: that pout, that taunt, that dare. “It was a mistake,” a famous poet said to put two beautiful young women together.” Invited to a dinner before my reading, she refused, introduced me then walked haughtily out. It was my worse reading. Sleet in April on the coast, the feeling I’d never do another reading and never one of only new poems. Worse that I like much of her poetry so much, still do. At least, now, I look better THE DATING SERVICE DELICIOUSLY LUSTFUL DREAM Suddenly, I’m as unattached as milk weed dust. It’s not so bad floating free though I would have liked to have the body I had when I was 20 though maybe not exactly. I still thought I was fat but I want that taut skin, arms I loved to wear sun dresses in. Well, what is is and it’s not so bad. Not a babe in this dream I’ve got men flocking I didn’t at 16, groveling to jerks who refused me, invited to Women’s Club hayrides and balls, goodbye to waiting on the side lines, a wall flower, my face bright rose. In the dream at least I’m gorgeous, well if not gorgeous, sexy and especially the one with long strong legs wants me to care. We are in a house, not familiar, pillows spread. I half expect hookah pipes. There’s oriental carpets. I’m in a tie dyed filmy sarong . Though I’ve hated my arms, I feel mysteriously attractive. I feel on fire, want either of these men to want to get in my pants. I don’t care if anyone knows it. It’s rare I have time or even care. Maybe it’s the scent of jasmine, the feel of silk and lace with nothing between it and my skin. Or the voice of the tallest one with the thighs, I couldn’t help be drawn to it, more sexy than any body part, seduction and lullaby braided into what I want to lasso me to his kiss V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 6 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin MAYBE, HONEY, I’M GRINDING MY TEETH TO DUST to throw on your grave. It isn’t easy to bury you. Running to the metro in the handicapped spot I see license plates with “COMBAT WOUNDED” on it. You never would have gone for that, once said, when you saw your leg on the other side of the road, it was something, as a marine, you were ready to take but then when you couldn’t feel the other and they were shouting up to the copter, casings exploding, enough is enough, you screamed, both, are fucking too many I THINK OF YOU PAST ANY WEATHER OR TIME and then, of the film about the woman who only loved the dead, prepared their bodies and then, sure there was a last spark of energy inside, saved for one more spurt of bliss, she climbed on top of them and took what still pulsed like a last breath into her. She felt fulfilled, that she’d held and comforted them on their last trip as she once wrapped dead frogs and kittens in soft velvet, caressed them, kissed their coolness before planting them under the Ginkgo tree I THINK MAYBE MY JAW HAS FROZEN as if to keep pace with everything turning to stone in you much as, when my mother was so ill, becoming thinner and thinner, something in me, as if trying to keep up, withered away. I hear a clicking, a reminder, as if what’s coming past my teeth might jolt and jar, be harsh and metallic, words that could scar, tear lips and tongue, words so tortured and boiling nothing they passed thru could be the same I COULD HAVE BEEN A WIDOW I think of that standing with the light going rose over the pond. This small deck could be a widow’s walk I think of women staring out into gray water, into some blue black sea looking for signs, imagining the boat reeling My hair would frizz in peach plum and salt air my jaw frozen in the shape of a moan V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 7 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin AFTER THIS LAST MAROON OR PURPLE NOTEBOOK WHEN I HEARDHE LEFT RADIO to work as a counselor for troubled kids, I knew it couldn’t last long, being a troubled kid himself and with worse things coming it wouldn’t be enough to get him through. “I don’t know what I’m going to do when I grow up,” he’d grin toward midnight. Women of all ages wanted to try to help him , hold him, behold him emerging between their legs or from a table spread just for him. With one hundred stitches and my face egg plant purple, I who never cook, made a chicken sandwich he celebrated on the air. What he did best was on air, made of air. What turned stillness into some thing I wanted to hold, of course, being air, couldn’t I’ll leave you alone which is what you said you wanted, want on your grave. But I don’t think that’s true. Why, after quitting several times would you want to go back on radio the last years you were sick, the fast way to touch so many, touched them to then have them die to touch you, be in touch. For you, still, it was that scoring, those touch downs and you always had the touch. What you wanted was to be wanted, and you watched from the side lines like an angel, or devil, aloof, above, knowing with one touch you could have whoever was at your feet as if worshipping or praying, taking your time with no special time now you have all the time, only time RESISTANCE – DO IT his hand flat against mine. No, I didn’t think flu or worse. Resist, more he purrs as if I wasn’t already, not wanting him to matter, when I push you resist. Can he imagine what I’m thinking. It’s all technique he says. I’m sure it is V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 8 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin I’M HAVING TROUBLE WRITING A LOVE POEM what was, the darkest blood petals. Scorched roses, not the fresh ones surrounding Cleopatra’s bed so with Anthony braided around her it must have looked like they were on a bed or maybe a raft, surrounded by roses. When I think of roses, they’re the color of blood and rust, the ash, something in a church for the dead. Or the rose of his cigarette burning holes in everything as he staggered thru my arms leaving no thing he moved thru as it was I COULD HAVE BEEN A WIDOW obsessed with death as the woman in Kiss, sure I could make you breathe, have you as my Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, my frog prince awakened by my lips. It wouldn’t have mattered that you didn’t have a pulse, your heart dead ages before. I could have dressed in black, been pale from crying, as spooky and angelic and aroused by death. That wouldn’t surprise: look how long I stayed talking to you when it was like whispering to someone in a casket I COULD HAVE BEEN A WIDOW obsessed with death as the woman in Kiss, sure I could make you breathe, have you as my Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, my frog prince awakened by my lips. It wouldn’t have mattered that you didn’t have a pulse, your heart dead ages before. I could have dressed in black, been pale from crying, as spooky and angelic and aroused by death. That wouldn’t surprise: look how long I stayed talking to him when it was like whispering to someone in a casket. I was always sure your soul lingered in your body waiting for one last fling in your room that filled with other worldly light probably from the sheets tacked over every glass so you could, like any ghost, sleep days, the light of near death experience that turns bodies, hunky stiffs in to shining stars V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 2 9 Poetry by Lyn Lifshin THURSDAY In high school, always the day I was sure bad things happened. Bobby Senecal said no about the Junior Women’s Club hay ride. Mark already taken. What shame, asking a boy to a dance or a party and having him say let me think about it and then have him say no. Always on Thursday. A doomed day. My thumb would break on Valentine’s Day Thursday so I had to wear a clunky cast to the Valentine party. Chubby, with glasses, why bother with clothes. Sure, I’ve made up for that with daily arrivals from Bebe, Free People, Saks and Betsey Johnson. But when I look in my over stuffed closet, I still feel I have nothing THE LAST, WAS IT LOVE OR HATE POEM, I WROTE ABOUT YOU I want to apologize, there was no passion for you, just emptiness I wanted to fill. Someone said women shop to soothe, release stress, for excitement. To have you on the sheet of paper was some thing like that. Of course it was expensive. Except for one thing, I’ll be discreet enough to leave out the poems that could have been about anyone and maybe some real lovers will be sure they are. It’s a relief tho sad to not feel that electricity. Some things fade like the sepia of remembered faces common in old photographs of parents you can’t quite remember young leaning against an old model T, glowing in the light of dreams I can never know TODAY A CAR BURST INTO FLAME IN THE STREET wild tongues, a blur of everything else out there: that was the news of your death. Paint in my blood bubbled, pale roses went crisp as if a magnifying glass sucked the sun down thru it V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 0 A Random Soldier is the story of Chad Clifton told in his own words and through is own writings, edited, and with accompanying narrative by his mother, Terri Clifton. This moving story can be order by contacting Telephone: 302-684-4747 Email: [email protected] Adress: 9397 Cods Road Milford De. 19963 The book may also be special ordered through any full-service bookstore using the number below ISBN-13: 9780978530006 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W BAY OAK PUBLISHERS, Ltd., a Delaware-based publishing company, is proud to publish Magical History Tours www.bayoakpublishers.com Federal Street Gallery & Espresso Bar FINE ART ORIGINAL -TRADITIONAL - CONTEMPORARY ART CUSTOM FRAMING 108 FEDERAL STREET MILTON, DE 19968 PHONE 1-302-684-1055 FAX: 1-302-684-0341 Toll Free 1-888-684-1055 E-MAIL: [email protected] WEBSITE: WWW.FEDERALSTREETGALLERY.COM P AGE 3 1 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 2 Under the Wedgehorn The REP/PTTP: Can the Crown Jewel of UD’s “Path to Prominence” Be a People’s Theatre? By Phillip Bannowsky Tonight my wife Joanie and I are going to the theater: The Resistible Rise of Arturo UI, by Bertrolt Brecht, the revolutionary, as directed by Heinz-Uwe Haus. I am wondering if the experience will be as revolutionary as the play: raising consciousness and solidarity, transcending the insular and obfuscated environment of the Great Recession, or, indeed, of the University of Delaware, whose Resident Ensemble Players (REP)—the crown jewel in UD’s “Path to Prominence”— will be performing. We have been attending plays by the University of Delaware’s Professional Theater Training Program (PTTP) since about 1991. Shaw! Shakespeare! Wilde! Chekov! Moliere! Williams! Ibsen! Brecht! Giants of the stage, great words on the page: the patrimony of humankind. Founded by Sandy Robbins with Jewel Walker as an initial faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 1976, PTTP migrated to the University of Delaware in 1988. In 1992, Jewel Walker, now faculty emeritus, kindly observed a herky-jerky performance of my Autoplant: a Poetic Monologue and gave me some gentle advice about drama consisting of moments. PTTP students stay together for three years working on their MFAs, learning the craft of acting piece by piece, and performing classical works in kick-out-the-jams sets either at the venerable Hartshorn Theater (once a women’s gym) or at the new neo-Georgian semi-opulence of the Thompson Theatre at the Roselle Center for the Arts. The REP, a recently added ensemble of journeymen actors, produces its own plays while mentoring PTTP apprentices and gradually incorporates them into the REP. And they are good. Many of the students were already professionals before they came to re-program themselves into artists of a higher order. Most graduates join regional theaters and repertory companies. Some have hit the bigs on Broadway and TV, earning nominations for Tony, Emmy, and Obie awards. Sometimes, on the stage right here in Newark, Delaware, they hit those registers of theater that open your heart and fill you with a sensation of encompassing something greater than yourself, of transcending your own individuality and knowing the collective soul—at least in my experience. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, for example. With Steven Pilinski as Big Daddy, Mic Matarrese as the brooding and drunken son, and Elizabeth Helfin as a very hot Maggie the Cat, Tennessee Williams’s play is not merely words, actions, and sets; those are just the dressing of the play. When cut and combined with precision, they reveal the shape of the body and the light of the soul: not just a randy and ailing Southern patriarch, a conflicted son, and his frustrated wife, but the self-consuming struggle for life to generate life. A playwright gathers the forgotten dreams and incomprehensible experiences of humanity—our patrimony— and gives them back in a form that revives memory and makes sense of life’s struggles, not merely to interpret the world if I had my way, however, but to change it (See epitaph, K. Marx). So, how does the PTTP/REP break out of the insularity of UD and bring the dramatic patrimony of the people back to the people, especially the revolutionary patrimony? Certainly some of its alumni have gone off to present plays that strip the veils from the bullshit. For example, 2007 PTTP graduate Sarah Dandridge performed My Name is Rachel Corrie, about the American activist who gave her life resisting Israeli bulldozers sent to demolish Palestinian homes. My friend Sevîn Ákbar (Summerhill Seven) has created his own art form, poemedy, a kind of “neo-beat-hip-hop verse” (Phil Hubbard) in which the artist performs the different voices of the African American community as aspects of his own soul. His upcoming Squircular: An Actor’s Tale! takes poemedy to new frontiers of form. See http:// www.poemedy.com/. Having now experienced The Resistable Rise of Arturo UI, I believe the REP/PTTP can be as revolutionary as its alumni. A farce set in a gangster-era Chicago, Arturo UI represents the rise of Hitler if Hitler was Capone. It opens with a phalanx of trench coat-clad thugs drumming a cacophony with tonfa clubs until, stomping and glaring down the audience, they beat a menacing tatoo. Soon Ui appears, a grotesque like that other murderer Richard III, played with perverse mastery by Carine Montbertrand. At first, the way she sits or holds her hands projects the half-formed banality who is UI. Like Hitler, Ui learns the arts of gesture and movement (silly walks?) to project power. At first comic, by the end of the play Montbertrand’s Ui physically revolts me. Steadily, in other ways, the play erodes the distances between audience and player and between real and esthetic experience. As a parallel to the scandals and disasters propelling Chicago into the arms of Ui’s protection racket or Germany into Hitler’s, the cast read headlines from that very day’s Wilmington, Delaware News Journal. Another time they play the game of gossip onstage, each version of the story rising to greater heights of paranoia until the final participant shouts, “Obama is Osama and we’re all gonna die!” Ui takes advantage of these uncertainties as he allies with depressionbeset capitalist to intimidate petit bourgeois grocers and suppress the working class deliverymen. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W In the last scene—and I won’t spoil it with exactly how—the audience is swept up in Ui’s triumph, compelled to sing some ludicrous hymn. Never one for Large Group Awareness Training, I sing “The International.” Director Haus characterizes the play as “interventionist realism” in the playbill. Was my response his intention? Forcing the audience to make a choice, to resist, to rewrite the play, is about as close as it gets to where art actually has a transformational impact. So, how do we connect people who have a material interest in transformation to the art? How do we go beyond a university audience who may be merely concerned with the esthetic and interpretive aspects of the work? In a between-act chat, REP Artistic Director Sandy Robbins told me he is always looking for ways to expand his audience. When Chrysler closed down, the REP/PTTP offered free tickets to laid-off workers and some came. Myself a Chrysler retiree (as well as a parttime professor for UD), I immediately went off on the University for ending the hopes of workers when they bought the plant for a song. They scared off any investors who might want to reopen the plant for blue-collar jobs (as Fisker is doing with the former GM plant at Boxwood Road) by threatening to grab the plant right out from under them using eminent domain, so don’t get me started. Anyway, Robbins said surveys had shown an increase in blue-collar workers in their audience. And REP/PTTP keeps the prices down. General public admission ranges from $15 to $22. REP faculty present four or five public lectures yearly downstate. But there is not much budget for conducting off-campus workshops or taking plays to the community. Robbins added that he pushes the boundaries of what the University of Delaware’s decision-makers might tolerate by producing shows like Arturo Ui and I Am My Own Wife. In that one-man show, the amazing Michael Gotch portrayed more than 30 characters to recreate the life of a morally ambiguous transvestite who survived in Berlin under both the Nazis and the German Democratic Republic. Well, my suggestion would be to partner with unions, charities, non-profits, community organizations, civil and human rights groups, and other participants in civil society. Expand your power base beyond the University’s purse strings to a community that would permit the REP to push the boundaries even further. That’s where the taxpayers are who help fund the University’s programs. That’s where the workers are whose incarnate sweat and sinew built what the University now pulls down. That’s where the people are from whose dreams and experiences comes the raw material of art. In the meantime, REP/PTTP can provide a transcendent and empowering experience for anyone who attends. The season ends Sunday, May 16. Next year’s offerings are unannounced, but Sandy told me they are planning a world premiere of a play by Theresa Rebeck. Rebeck has written several plays for the New York stage as well as scripts for LA Law, Law and Order, and NYPD Blue. She has won numerous awards including a Peabody and a National Theatre Conference Award. Insha’Allah, I’ll be there. For info and tickets, see http:// www.pttp.udel.edu/. P AGE 3 3 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 4 Required Summer Reading List V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W http://www.shakespeareco.org/index.htm http://washingtonart.com/beltway If you don’t get it, you don’t GET it! P AGE 3 5 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 6 Poetry by Shelley Grabel What can I tell you about the day we buried Morgan? It was cold It was raining It was raining money It was windy and wild It was too early It was too late It was full of people you know It was full of people you don’t It was morning It was rush hour but no one was rushing It was hard It was funny as hell It was a day Morgan would have loved It was chaotic It was orderly It was full of excellent food It was full of the blackest earth It was a day that flew into night too fast It was full of noise and It was absolutely silent It was a day I will always remember It was a night I want to forget It was scary It was funny It was empty It was without her It was without her It was without her It was a day full of love It was a day devoid of love It was the first day It was the last day What can I tell you? For My Lover In Answer To A Question “I love the scars we reform daily” You are not my first You will be my last This is not a curse Your eyes search for answers I will not easily give This is the secret I hold fast I am a pebble stuck in your shoe You ask me none of the hundred questions Stuck in your throat and yet Your eyes spill always with question marks I hide in the curl of your commas We are 10 years older And 10 years later grown into each other’s hair My toes curl toward you at night You now know that my sleeping back does not reject you and yet that one open question hangs above the bed like a ceiling fan The low noise of it Is the soundtrack of our days Roses, perfume, red flock gift boxes Not your style – either to give or receive We have instead One year piled on the next Like Frost’s Mending Wall But in this story We are on the same side The stony unevenness our strength A wall built of our fits and stops A wall built of our unfit starts Our hands meet on rugged surfaces Our fingers bleed on jagged points Blood believes in you and you in me We grow together like mending skin In this bed with small dogs curled between us The cat braids my hair into yours Fur bridges my thigh to yours The morning does not unmake this cloth The sun does not unshake me from you The tether of your voice Holds me to you a balloon in a violent wind a kite reeled in each night by my own hand We reweave, reattach until we cannot distinguish fur from hair from robe from slipper The question I will answer now is this Will I choose you? I do choose you, go on choosing you breath by minute by mile V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 7 Poetry by Shelley Grabel Marriage Marriage is not a joy ride in mid-December down an icy slope Or maybe that’s all it is It’s not a comedy about a love story – it is a love story about a comedy It’s not taffeta, organza, and silk in the honeymoon suite It is denim and a holey t-shirt in the bedroom of a Motel 8 It’s not the moment you say I do – it’s the moments you say I still do It’s not the best of times and not the worst – it is all of the times It’s not the hand in hand on a sunny day It’s the hand held at the bedside when death comes to call Marriage is not a dream catcher – it’s the caught dreams held steady to the light of day. Marriage is a November full of regret – not yet winter and definitely not fall Marriage is falling and finding finally you I left you because I left you because you wouldn’t let me breathe I left you because I was 29 and didn’t want to wait until I was 30 I left you because she was leaving me I left you because I needed you too much I left you because you were the first thing I reached for every morning I left you because you were the last thing I did every night I left you because you were costing me too much – too much time, money health I left you because you yellowed my fingertips I left you because the matches would no long light on cue I left you because my chest hurt I left you because had my father’s cough I left you not because of the surgeon general’s weak warnings I left you because once and for all I wanted to do something completely fully and finally I left you in the end because, at last I could V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 8 Poetry by Shelley Grabel Poetry by Lisa Ellis Christopher Street 1993 Vacationing Night time on Christopher Street Black leather collars turned up to hide red splotches on necks and cheeks Sharp angled street lights slice guilty faces Fear of discovery as if a disease determines good or bad Disease as judgment Black leather collars turn into the night Fewer and fewer footsteps echo down these damp streets Soon the time will come when night is utterly still and leather jackets swing empty on creaking wire hangars in silent apartments or hospital closets All that remains on Christopher street: balled up bandanas tossed into gutters soaked now with rain and sludge. Poetry At The Beach Schedule Set May 27 South Coastal Library (Bethany Beach) Sherry Chappelle, H.A. Maxson, Scott Whitaker June 22 Lewes Public Library Beth Joselow, Sherry Chappelle, Denise Clemons July 27 Rehoboth Beach Public Library Scott Whitaker, Denise Clemons, Sherry Chappelle Aug. 26 South Coastal Llibrary (Bethany Beach) Michael Blaine, Denise Clemons, Beth Joselow Sept. 28 Lewes Public Library H.A. Maxson, Michael Blaine, Scott Whitaker Sometime I leave this place. I close my eyes and breathe, breathe, And I no longer sit next to you. That person there is a stranger. Doesn’t know my favorite things. She goes through life Doing things like me Then checking them off the list I left. She will wake up three minutes after the alarm, And talk just a little bit too fast And walk just a little bit too slow. Then I will come back And you will ask me things That I will not know. Poetry by Wendy Ingersoll Between Me and the Far Trees a drainage ditch draws a straight line down the middle of the field and into the next, collecting sticks, bugs, clots of earth, spilling them onward the way Bach floats a phrase into the next measure, the way forgiveness must be ferried into tomorrow. So I paddle forward that moment my husband said he was leaving. At dark this ditch is where my father would scout, snap on his torch to shine in the eyes of a big bullfrog hunkered in the mud, retinas reflecting the light until he shot between them with his 22. He mostly stalked ducks— in the house there hangs from the ceiling a clean-shot mallard, wound patched, wings spread, dead head glossy-green as new spring leaves. It was traveling a line south or north, wanting, like us, warmth or propagation, when it spied our field, circled. Now it floats below our ceiling, looking as if it longs to land. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 3 9 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 4 0 Roast Chicken and Chips A short story by Maryanne Khan Riccardo stood at the pool table talking to a tall young man. A Punjabi, Tanvir thought as he paid for his beer at the bar. ‘Ehi! Tan,’ Riccardo shouted. ‘One of your mob!’ he called, shaking the young Pakistani by the shoulder. Tanvir estimated the newcomer was barely twenty years old and embarrassed. In fact, the guy squirmed out of Riccardo’s grasp and sat down abruptly. He offered his hand to the young stranger, who leaped once more to his feet. ‘Adab arz, janab,’ Tanvir said. The young man smiled at being addressed as ‘sir.’ ‘Adab. Kya hal he Tanvir Sahib?’ he said. Tanvir replied that he was well. ‘Mera nam Nadeem he.’ ‘Hi Nadeem.’ ‘What’s with this mumbo jumbo?’ Riccardo interrupted. ‘Speak English, you Paki bastards. Me and Nadeem, here, we play you. We’re on small. You want to break, Tan?’ The game ended with Tanvir sinking an extremely difficult shot. ‘Where did you learn to play like that?’ Ricardo protested. ‘It’s criminal.’ He retrieved the ball from the pocket, holding it in front of his face to scrutinise it. ‘There’s something wrong with this ball. There has to be if a Paki can beat Il Maestro.’ He rolled the ball across the table, saying cheerfully, ‘My shout.’ and went to the bar. Tanvir and Nadeem sat at one of the green plastic tables that the owners of the place considered a waste of time to wipe down given the clientele the establishment attracted. In fact, a group of bikies across the room were becoming increasingly raucous. Nadeem stared at them. ‘If you leave them alone, they leave you alone,’ Tanvir said. ‘So what are you doing over here?’ ‘I’m doing a PhD in Optical Physics,’ Nadeem replied. When Tanvir did not comment, he added, ‘I’m from Lahore. And you?’ ‘Peshawar.’ ‘You don’t look like a Pashtun.’ ‘I’m not. My people come from Mansehra District.’ Riccardo returned with three glasses in his enormous calloused hands. ‘So how was the first day at work, Tan?’ he inquired. ‘It was today, no?’ ‘Yes. It was all right.’ ‘Treat you okay?’ ‘There was only the manager there today, the two partners weren’t in.’ ‘At least that’ll keep you off the streets,’ Riccardo said with a wink at Nadeem. ‘And who are these partners?’ He took a long swig of his beer, wiping his mouth on the back of a hand that bristled with a mat of dark, wiry hair. ‘One guy is a Lebanese businessman and the other’s a retired surgeon. My neighbour knows the surgeon, the Indian guy. He’s married to a woman from Pakistan.’ Nadeem shot Tanvir a look as though to say, ‘That will be an interesting set up.’ ‘The manager says it’s like the United Nations over there,’ Tanvir continued. ‘The janitors are Philippinos. They go around speaking their own language, and that really annoys the English guy who runs the place. He thinks they’re plotting something.’ Riccardo consulted his watch. ‘Time for me to get back home, I’m a working man,’ he added, grinning broadly. ‘Not like you Signori who haven’t done a real day’s work in your lives.’ Tanvir also rose to leave. ‘I’ll see you again?’ Nadeem said as they shook hands. ‘Sure.’ He walked through the glass doors into the night that was reverberating with the sound of twelve powerful Harley Davidson engines roaring into life. in.’ ‘You’ll never sink that,’ Nadeem said. ‘Get your hand out of the way,’ Tanvir said. ‘I’ll get it ‘After the meeting the other night, we were talking about Muhammad Khan Junejo getting sworn in as Prime Minister,’ Nadeem said. ‘If I were you, I’d stay clear of those Socialists,’ Tanvir said. ‘It’s not such a good idea to let everyone know what you think. This isn’t Lahore. This place is like a village.’ ‘Some of the brothers think that just because he’s promised to end Martial Law, Ul Haq is going to let him go ahead and do it,’ Nadeem added. ‘No chance of that one happening. Anyway, if I have a social conscience, that’s just how it is.’ ‘Have it your way,’ Tanvir said, sighting along his cue. He struck the ball so that it rolled with the bias in an elegant curve to come to a stop in the mouth of the pocket. ‘You missed!’ Nadeem crowed. He then took stock of the state of play. Tanvir had managed to position his balls so that they blocked all but one of the pockets. ‘I suppose you think that’s funny,’ Nadeem said. ‘Doesn’t leave me much choice for my shot.’ He leaned against the table, stretching forward. ‘Thank you. That’s a point for me,’ Tanvir said, having trapped Nadeem into sinking one of the balls he had set up. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W ‘Why don’t you just sink them yourself in the first place?’ Nadeem asked, a little put out. ‘More fun seeing how close I can get without it going in.’ You should come to one of the meetings some time,’ Nadeem said. ‘Some of us Pakistanis talk about what’s going on at home these days.’ Tanvir chalked the tip of his cue. ‘No thanks,’ he said. ‘Why not?’ ‘When I was seven,’ he said, ‘I had to listen to my Dad’s friends discussing the Kashmir War without knowing what it was all about. I used to curl up in bed, scared stiff, listening for the Indian air force to come swooping down from Kashmir. Once it ended, the villagers sank back into their usual boredom. I’ll leave the political agitation to people like you,’ he said adding, ‘By the way, I had a friend in the village who was also called Nadeem. Always trying to get me to go the mosque. Now there’s you trying to get me to join the Socialist Party. Too many Nadeems trying to boss me around.’ Nadeem laughed. ‘Did you go to that thing at the High Commission the other night?’ ‘Yes. And I’m not going anywhere near the place again.’ Nadeem leaned on his cue and waited for an explanation. ‘They don’t realise what it means to be people like you and me,’ Tanvir said. ‘They talk about a Pakistani Community, but there’s no such thing. It’s like a private club. If you don’t belong, you don’t belong. As he drove home, he thought over the evening he had spent as guest of the Pakistan High Commissioner along with other expatriate Pakistanis. These men were successful businessmen who had received a great deal of support from other Pakistani entrepreneurs. He had been scrutinised and it was clear that they had formed the firm opinion that he was inferior. In their eyes, he was a person obliged to work for others, and therefore an embarrassment. He refused to mention that his contractor’s certificate was not valid in Australia, nor that having owned and managed a motel in Peshawar somehow did not qualify him to work in what was called the ‘hospitality’ industry. He was left to sit staring into the glass of tea a young houseboy served him. The servant had an expression in his eyes that hinted that he had detected a certain fraternity between them. Excusing himself, he had taken his leave, vowing never to return. He turned into his space in the carport. Bruce had been drinking all day as usual, and called, ‘Hey, black bastard!’ from the threadbare couch that occupied one wall of his carport and where he entertained other drunks. He was swigging from a long neck. ‘Wanna beer?’ he called, waving the bottle at Tanvir, all smiles. ‘That’s an invite, ya bastard.’ ‘I’m right Bruce, thanks.’ ‘Yer a funny bugger,’ Bruce replied. ‘Gunnight then,’ he slurred. ‘Good night Bruce. See you tomorrow.’ As he entered the hall of the flat, he heard a tiny click, a sound that he could not quite place. There it was again. In the kitchen. He snapped on the light and noticed that the little red warning light on the iron was glowing. He switched it off and unplugged it. P AGE 4 1 It was rather amusing to see that he had accumulated quite a collection of small appliances after leaving Sarah—a white plastic electric kettle, the wretched iron he always forgot to turn off, on, a toaster, a deep-fryer, the stove responsible for the burns on his forearms every time he used the oven, a drawer full of utensils, gadgets he needed to make it comfortable for James. That’s the thing about life, he thought, you dump all the baggage from your past only to have to go out and collect another lot. ‘What would you like for dinner?’ he asked James every night he stayed with him. The answer was always the same. ‘Roast chicken and chips! Chips with vinegar.’ He took a bottle of beer from the refrigerator and walked into in the dark living room. He switched on the television behind his armchair and sat watching the reflected screen swim blue and flickering in the large window like a mystical lunar event. His mind wandered as the reflections floated in a dimension suspended between the dark shape of the large tree outside the window and the interior of the room. He stared at the window dancing with phantom images, thinking, these days, I have nothing to say for myself. I tell people I work in a car park, and that’s it. I’ve gone back to revealing nothing about myself. I can’t go round telling people who my father was and expect them to give me some kind of credit for it. There’s no such thing as a Sahib over here. No one here understands what it means to hold a position of privilege and responsibility for as long as the men in my family have. Nothing else I did in Pakistan counts over here anyway. He thought of James, a consideration that steadied him. I have my son, and I’ll always have him, no matter what. For the rest of it, I got myself into this bucket of shit, and I have to get out of it. He gazed across the dark room to the large collage of photographs he and James had assembled on the far wall. Images of them walking on the beach; flying a kite; the first tricycle; James holding the cat around the neck with its body dangling from his arms. His mind wandered back to exactly what he might represent to anyone other than his son. Over here, it’s all about how much money you have, and even then, it’s mostly about having more. People have so many good things in their life, but they want something else. I’m not going to be like that. His wristwatch showed two in the morning. I can either sit here thinking this nonsense or bother going to bed. Either way, he thought, it doesn’t matter. The telephone rang early next morning. He started awake, finding that he had decided to sleep on the bed after all. He struggled up, feeling his way to the living room, the shrilling phone urging him hurry! hurry! He answered. It was Sarah. ‘I’m going to be out of town for a few weeks,’ she said. ‘You’ll have to take James for a while.’ Right, he thought. ‘And don’t forget his doctor’s appointments.’ Through the fog of sleep he remembered the intensive treatment James’ kidney condition demanded. ‘Where are you going?’ he asked. ‘Anna and I booked a trip to Mexico,’ she said evenly. V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 4 2 As always, he was amazed that Sarah seemed to consider her role as parent a secondary alternative to other interests. She interpreted his present silence as curiosity. ‘Anna wants to explore the Yucatan Peninsula. Absolutely wonderful Mayan temples.’ He dropped his head into his free hand. Something nasty in his mind whispered; make sure you don’t come back with some poor Mexican you’ve decided to marry. Instead, he said, ‘When are you leaving?’ ‘Tomorrow,’ she said brightly. ‘Can’t wait. Anyway, I’ll have James’ stuff packed and ready for you to pick up.’ Apparently, that was a farewell, as she abruptly hung up. He stared at the phone, wondering, what kind of mother constantly decides to go off and leave her child like that? Doesn’t happen where I come from. But that’s there, he thought. Different here. If Sarah wants to go somewhere, she goes, no questions asked. Seminars in Sydney? No problem. Trips overseas? No problem. Each time it’s, ‘You’ll have to take James,’ and she’s gone. The following day, the boss was not pleased that he needed to take time off to collect James from day care, saying, ‘It’s hardly sufficient notice.’ ‘Listen John. I only found out yesterday,’ Tanvir said. ‘Oh well, if you’re prepared to dance around like a puppet on a string,’ John began. Tanvir slammed both hands on the desk so that the cup of pencils rattled. ‘I’m not ‘dancing’ as you call it. This is my son. What am I supposed to do? Leave him there? He’s five, for god’s sake!’ He strode to the door. ‘I don’t understand what’s wrong with you people. You treat your children like parcels. Shove them here, shove them there . . .What about the poor kids?’ John, sitting shocked in his chair, pen suspended in mid air, said, ‘You can’t drag your family issues to your place of business and expect everyone to shuffle about to suit you! I might very well remind you that you work here, young man.’ ‘I work here yes,’ Tanvir said raising his voice, ‘that’s my choice, but it’s not my entire life. You can take your car park . . .’ he said, deciding at the last minute to bite off further words he might regret. ‘Now look here!’ John thundered. Tanvir took himself up to the open parking lot on the roof. The sight of the distant Brindabella Mountains always struck a calming chord in him, memories of his village and the Karakoram Range beyond it. ‘What if I have to go back to Mummy’s tomorrow?’ James said, clutching his red backpack to his chest, resisting having its contents removed and laid neatly in the small chest of drawers. ‘You’ll just have to put it all back in again.’ ‘You’re staying with me for a little while,’ Tanvir said sitting on the bed. ‘Is that okay with you?’ James grinned, nodded vigorously, shoved the backpack at his father and ran off to find the cat. ‘Can we have roast chicken and chips?’ he called from the sofa. Look for Maryanne Khan’s collection of short stories, Domain of the Lower Air this summer! Pre-order now! ISBN 9780982603048 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 4 3 V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 4 4 Literary Birthdays May May 3, 1912 May 5, 1867 May 6, 1861 May 7, 1812 May 7, 1857 May 7, 1776 May 8, 1698 May 9, 1860 May 12, 1907 May 12, 1812 May 15, 1890 May 17, 1873 May 20, 1799 May 22, 1688 May 26, 1799 May 27, 1867 May 30, 1835 May Sarton Nellie Bly (Elizabeth Cochran) Rabindranath Tagore Robert Browning Jose Valentim Fialho de Almeida Daniel Berzsenyi Henry Baker Sir James Matthew Barrie Daphne Du Maurier Edward Lear Katherine Anne Porter Henri Barbusse Honore de Balzac Alexander Pope Alexander Pushkin Arnold Bennett Alfred Austin June Jun 2. 1816 Jun 3, 1867 Jun 6, 1799 Jun. 8, 1874 Jun. 10, 1832 Jun. 12, 1827 Jun. 13, 1752 Jun. 13, 1574 Jun. 14, 1811 Jun. 18, 1896 Jun. 20, 1905 Jun. 20, 1743 Jun. 21, 1912 Jun. 21, 1813 Jun. 23, 1910 Jun. 23, 1889 Jun. 24, 1842 Jun. 25, 1875 Jun. 29, 1809 Jun. 29, 1900 Jun. 30, 1803 Grace Aguilar Konstantin Dmitrievich Balmont Alexander Pushkin Jose Martinex Ruiz (Azorin) Sir Edwin Arnold Johanna Spyri Fanny Burney Richard Barnfield Harriet Beecher Stowe Philip Barry Lillian Hellman Anna Laetitia Barbauld Mary McCarthy William Edmondstoune Aytoun Jean Anouilh Anna Akhmatova Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce Sir Ernest John Pickstone Petrus Borel Antoine St. Exupery Thomas Lovell Beddoes July Jul. 3, 1883 Jul. 3, 1860 Jul. 9, 1843 Jul. 12, 1602 Jul. 19, 1863 Jul 21, 1899 Jul. 22, 1898 Jul. 24, 1900 Jul. 26, 1856 Jul. 27, 1870 Jul. 29, 1869 Jul. 30, 1818 Jul. 30, 1888 Franz Kafka Charlotte Perkins Gilman Bertha Felicie Sophie Edward Benlowes Hermann Bahr Ernest Hemingway Stephen Vincent Benet Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald George Bernard Shaw Hillaire Belloc Booth Tarkington Emily Bronte Jean Jacques Bernard 3819 North 13th Street Arlington, VA 22201 [email protected] V OLU ME 4 , I SSUE 3 T HE B R OA DK I LL REV IE W P AGE 4 5 More Essential Books Chosen by TBR Editors and Readers Here are more essential books as selected by our Editors and Readers. Do you agree or disagree with their selections? Let us know and why, and, while you’re at it, send us your selections for essential books which everyone should read. Let Us Now Praise Famous Men The Levanter The Proving Flight Monsieur Pamplemousse After Sorrow Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable O'Pioneers/My Antonia On the Black Hill The Collected Stories Democracy In America (works) A Yellow Raft on Blue Water The Alexandria Quartet (esp. Justine) (works) Under The Red Sea Sun (works) The Art of Eating The Machine Stops (works) Don't Lets Go to the Dogs Tonight The Man Who Planted Trees (works) Our Man In Havana (works) Stranger In A Strange Land Revolt in 2010 Pentimento The Old Man And The Sea Islands In The Stream A Book of Bees (works) (works) Being There (works) The River of Doubt The Kapillan of Malta HMS Marlborough Will Enter Harbour (works) When the Emperor Was Divine Sharks And Little Fish The Last Time I Saw Paris Giants in the Earth Passing Through Customs Rootabaga Stories The Raj Quartet (four books) (works) Round The Bend A Town Like Alice Angle of Repose (works) The Run for the Elbertas Living Well is the Best Revenge Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn Webster's Dictionary What Saves Us James Agee and Walker Evans Eric Ambler David Beatt Michael Bond Lady Borton (nonfiction) Willa Cather (fiction) Bruce Chatwin (fiction) Anton Chekhov Alexis De Tocqueville Charles Dickins Michael Dorris (fiction) Laurence Durrell (fiction) T.S. Eliot Commander Edward Ellsberg William Faulkner M.F.K. Fisher (essays) E.M. Forster Robert Frost Alexandria Fuller (memoir) Jean Giono Louise Gluck Graham Greene Thomas Hardy Robert A. Heinlein Robert A. Heinlein Lillian Hellman Ernest Hemingway Ernest Hemingway Sue Hubbell James Joyce Franz Kafka Jerzy Kosinski D.H. Lawrence n Candice Millard Nicholas Monsarrat Nicholas Monsarrat Mary Oliver Julie Otsuka Wolfgang Ott Eliot Paul O.E. Rolvaag Gibbons Ruark Carl Sandburg Paul Scott Shakespeare Nevil Shute Nevil Shute Wallace Stegner Wallace Stevens James Still Calvin Tomkins Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) Bruce Weigl P AGE 4 6 A JOURNAL OF LITERATURE The Broadkill Review and its contents are © John Milton & Co., 2007 Address correspondence to: The Broadkill Review c/o John Milton and Company Books 104 Federal Street, Milton, DE 19968 Phone: 302-684-3514 e-mail: [email protected] V OLU ME 1 , NUMB ER 2 John Milton & Company Quality Used Books “Pre-owned books read just as well.” Bringing you the best in used books since the last millennium — Now proud to bring you The Broadkill Review, featuring the best in contemporary writing. CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE: Phillip Bannowsky is a retired autoworker, an educator, and the author of Autoplant: A Poetic Monologue and The Mother Earth Inn: A Novel, both published by Broken Turtle Books LLC. See http:// brokenturtlebooks.com/ Linda Blaskey Originally from the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, she now resides in Sussex County, Delaware. Her work has appeared in Terrains, Literary Mama and a broadside entitled The Poet Laureate Presents and is included in the moving exhibition Poetry in Public Places, supported by the Delaware Division of the Arts. She is a founding member of the Rehoboth Art League writers group and was selected to participate in the 2002 Delaware Division of the Arts poetry retreat held at Cape Henlopen. She is the winner of the 2008 Dogfish Head Poetry Prize. Jamie Brown is Publisher & Editor of The Broadkill Review. Phillip Calderwood’s poems have appeared in The Chabot Review, The Berkeley Text, A Magazine of Paragraphs, and The Innisfree Poetry Journal. I am originally from Northern California, where I received undergraduate degrees in English and history from UC Berkeley. I moved to Maryland in 2004, completed a master’s program in history at American University, and now work as an editor and content manager in the District of Columbia. Lisa Ellis is a student at Orange County High School of the Arts in Santa Ana California, and is currently studying Creative Writing. She is on the editorial staff of Inkblot, the school’s the literary magazine. One of her short screenplays was chosen to be produced by OCHSA’s Film and Television class. This is her first publication.. Shelly Grabel has been writing poetry for over 35 years. In 1975 Persephone Press published "The Fourteenth Witch" a book of Shelley's poems with photographs by Deborah Snow. Her poetry has appeared in a number of publications including “Off Our Backs” and ”The Journal of Radical Therapy” . She performed her poetry in the Village at local cafes, Folk City and on WBAI Radio. Shelley graduated from Brooklyn College with a degree in TV/Radio in 1987. After a successful career in computer systems at various corporations in the Northeast, Shelley relocated to Milton, Delaware. . Shelley now writes articles for local publications as well as continuing to develop her poetic style. She has participated in workshops with Fleda Brown as well and is an active member of the Rehoboth Writers Guild. She currently teaches Business Leadership courses at Delaware Technical & Community College. Joshua D. Isard is a writer from Philadelphia who has published his writing in both American and British fiction magazines and anthologies. He has completed one novel, for which he's still seeking a publisher, and is working on a second. Joshua earned a master's degree in creative writing from The University of Edinburgh, and is currently enrolled in University College London's master's program literature. He has taught literature and writing at Temple University and the Art Institute of Philadelphia. Maryanne Khan has lived in Europe, the United States and now Canberra, Australia. She has had works of short fiction and poetry published in American and Australian literary journals, in two anthologies, and her book I Never Lie to You was published in Australia. Her "Family Guide" to the Hirschhorn Museum has been repeatedly re-published since 1997, and received an Honourable Mention in the American Museums Design Awards. She is currently writing memoirs based on her recent trip to Pakistan, and her life in Italy, the US and Australia. Steven Leech has been an editor of the Delaware literary periodical Dreamstreets since 1980. He is also the producer of the radio series Dreamstreets 26, which is podcasted from WVUD.org. His latest novel UNTIME was published in 2007 by Broken Turtle Books. Lenny Lianne is the author of A WILDERNESS OF RICHES: VOICES OF THE VIRGINIA COLONY (ScriptWorks Press, 2008) and two other forthcoming books of poetry. She co-hosts a monthly reading series in Escondido, California. Lenny won Third Place in 2009 Wergle Flomp Humor Poetry Contest for her parody of Ginsberg’s “Howl”. Lyn Lifshin is the author of The Licorice Daughter: My Year with the Ruffian, Texas Review Press. Also Another Woman Who Looks Like Me from Black Sparrow at Godine.. She has over 120 books & edited 4 anthologies. In Mirrors, An Unfinished Story, The Daughter I Don’t Have, She Was Found Treading Water. Coming soon: Tsunami Poems and All the Poets (Mostly) Who Have Touched Me, Living and Dead, All True, Especially the Lies. Joseph LoGuidice was born in rural New York, but spent much of his childhood in the urban environment of the Bronx. These counter settings have prevailed upon his creative mind, and his writing, always taking root from childhood impressions, explores the surface and the depth of human relationships. He has been published in several magazines for both fiction and non-fiction, and is currently seeking representation for his first novel, Little Gods. He now lives with his wife, Corín, in Cortlandt Manor, New York. Elisavietta Ritchiebooks include: Awaiting Permission to Land, The Spirit of the Walrus; The Arc of the Storm; Elegy for the Other Woman; Tightening The Circle Over Eel Country; Raking The Snow; chapbooks: Timbot; Wild Garlic: The Journal of Maria X.. Fiction collections: In Haste I Write You This Note; Flying Time: Edited The Dolphin's Arc: Endangered Creatures of the Sea and others. Scott Whitaker grew up on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. He attended Emerson College and was a creative writing fellow at Boston University, where he worked at Agni Magazine. His poetry has appeared in PIF Magazine, The Coe Review, The MacGuffin, and others. In 2002 he was a NEA recipient of grant for his rock and roll adaptation of Romeo and Juliet. In 2003 A Third World Christmas, a comedy co-written with his wife was a finalist in the Richmond Playwriting Competition. Finishing Line Press published his first chapbook, The Barleyhouse Letters. He currently teaches literature, drama, and psychology at Pocomoke High School, and lives in Onley, VA with his wife Michele, and his two sons. He was the winner of the 2006 Dogfish Head Poetry Prize.