Issue 83: Laura Van Prooyen

Prooyen

About Laura Van Prooyen

Jennifer Christman Laura Van Prooyen is author of two collections of poetry, Our House Was on Fire(Ashland Poetry Press 2015) nominated by Philip Levine and winner of the McGovern Prize and Inkblot and Altar (Pecan Grove Press 2006). Her poems also have appeared in APR, Boston Review, Ploughshares, Prairie Schooner, and The Southern Review among others. Van Prooyen teaches in the low-residency MFA Creative Writing program at Miami University, and she lives in San Antonio, TX.

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “Bless The Feral Hog”

A few years ago, the Texas Dept. of Agriculture Commissioner, Sid Miller, tried to make it legal for people to poison feral hogs to try to control the population. The poison promised a slow, terrible, painful death for these sentient creatures. This great idea came after allowing people to shoot feral hogs from helicopters (true story) failed to control the population. Meanwhile, I recalled Galway Kinnell’s romanticized poem about St. Francis and the Sow, and I wondered where these two ideas might meet. You see where the poem ended up.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

I have three cats, and it’s probably wrong to play favorites, but my lap belongs to Pico. Full name Pico de Gato “Picoso” Clyne. His paw prints are all over my poems, literally. He’s a crooked-jaw wonder who looks like Snowball from the Simpsons:

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Issue 83: Brenna Lemieux

Lemieux

About Brenna Lemieux

I’ve published a full-length poetry collection (The Gospel of Household Plants) and a chapbook (Blankness, Melancholy, and Other Ways of Dying), and my fiction has appeared in The MacGuffin, Printers Row, Rappahannock Review , and elsewhere. I’m currently writing novels and loving the process and learning a lot and looking for an agent. I live in Chicago, where I work as a content marketer and co-host the monthly reading series Tangelo.
Website: http://www.brennalemieux.com/

Twitter: @BrennaLemieux

Tangelo: https://tangeloreadingschicago.tumblr.com/

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “The Year We Lived”

“The germ of this story came to me during a funeral in a year that included, sadly, several untimely deaths. I was in an emotionally heightened state, and it was the kind of thing where I had to find a scrap of paper in my wallet and get the beginning down before it left me. But it took me several drafts to figure out what was happening in the story, I think in part because I didn’t want the narrator to lose her husband. I was in as much denial as she was but when I finally figured out that he had to die, the narration made more sense, the going back and forth in time, circling around but not quite talking about the thing that she can’t stop thinking about or feeling—the thing that is the reason she’s telling this story.”

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

“I have recently fallen in love with mayonnaise. I was vegan for several years but then started eating eggs again and when I did, I realized mayonnaise was back on the table and somehow discovered that I absolutely love it. It’s gotten to the point that I’m looking for excuses to dip things into it. The weirdest so far has been chickpeas—just plain chickpeas in mayo. It feels like I’m riding a train that will inevitably crash. And this is all very recent: I never liked the stuff growing up, I think because we were a reduced-fat mayonnaise household, and that is an utterly forgettable condiment.”

“The Year We Lived” by Brenna Lemieux

Found in Willow Springs 83 Back to Author Profile It was the year everyone died and I could not stay pregnant. Young people dying, I mean, tragedies: blood clots and suicides … Read more

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Issue 83: Suzanne Highland

Highland

About Suzanne Highland

Suzanne Highland is a queer writer and teacher from Florida currently living in New York. She has an MFA in Poetry from Hunter College, where she received the Miriam Weinberg Richter Memorial Award in 2016. She has also received support from the Sundress Academy of the Arts, the Vermont Studio Center, and Brooklyn Poets, where she was a fellow in the summer of 2018. Her poetry has been published or is forthcoming in Redivider, Yalobusha Review, Cosmonauts Avenue, glitterMOB, and Bomb Cyclone, among others. She teaches critical writing to high schoolers as well as composition at Hunter College, and she is a mentor and teaching artist with Urban Word NYC. Online at suzannehighland.com and @emotingsweater.

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “The Collector”

I wrote a first draft of “The Collector” at the beginning of 2016 and it’s gone through ten or eleven different revisions since then, which, I don’t know, is that a lot? It’s a lot for me. The first draft started in a story my mom told me—that as a child I would walk around the house, pick up all the drink coasters, and put them into a perfectly aligned, perfectly stacked tower—and even though the coasters themselves disappeared by the third-ish draft, they were the wellspring I kept returning to: the question of gathering, accumulating, like or unlike data and trying to keep it all in one place, and for what? As the draft developed, the question developed, and this “you” came in, but not until later—the poem’s opening line, “When you came close enough, I wore you like a raincoat”, was in the second to last stanza in the first draft. Then I read “Deep Lane” by Mark Doty, the “Deep Lane” that begins “November and this road’s tunnel”, and the line “I have a lake in me” became part of the emotional fabric of my poem. In later revisions the “you” climbs closer to the top and the speaker keeps reaching and reaching… The poem turned out to be about obsession, I guess. I gather things—literal things, but also memories, experiences—in an attempt to cohere with them, to draw a border around the self, in order to understand it. And I think a lot of people do this, either gather or let themselves be gathered, even by other people, even trying to align with them, to evaporate into them, because it’s uncomfortable and painful to obsess over your loose ends. The poem wasn’t hard to write, but thinking about what it means that it’s out in the world is hard. Writing it taught me that the interior lake is deep.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

I’ve had “Assume Form” by James Blake on repeat the past few weeks, another beautiful album from the world’s last excellent man. I’ve also been listening to Clara Rockmore, the theremin player, which, if you haven’t heard someone play the theremin before, get ready to feel haunted. When I’m walking around the city, I’m listening to A Tribe Called Quest. And I’ve been building a playlist that’s mostly alternative women artists and women-fronted bands from the 90s: Björk, Hole, PJ Harvey, Alanis Morissette.

I’m eating chocolate Newman-Os right this minute, and I still drink the beer I drank in college. I’m a creature of habit.

I have two tattoos: one says “in medias res” and the other says “(write it!).” I’m wildly attached to both, but one would have to be to get tattoos like those in the first place, I think. I want to get another, more complicated one, but honestly, dropping hundreds of dollars on anything is an anxious act for me. I need to be paid fair wages. That’s not a statement about tattoos, really. See: austerity at large public higher ed institutions in New York City, elsewhere, everywhere.

I just moved in with a friend with a dog who has almost the exact same black and white patterned coat as my cat, so my domestic life has become an incredible series of photo ops. Their relationship—first time living with another animal, let alone their sworn enemy—is also teaching me a lot about communication. They’re bad at it, but they try desperately to talk to one another, and it’s kind of endearing and hopeful to watch, even when it’s evident they’re coming from two different experiences and with two different ways of being. And they can be sweet to each other still. A tonic for a rough era.

 

“The Collector” by Suzanne Highland

Found in Willow Springs 83 Back to Author Profile When you came close enough, I wore you like a raincoat. Black lakes, big hands, a party   you ignored me at. … Read more

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Issue 83: Anne Raustol

Raustol

About Anne Raustol

Anne E. Raustol received an MFA from Bennington College in 2001. Her stories have appeared in Rock and Sling, Rapid River Magazine, Florida Review as well as an essay in Literary Mama. Her story, The Bees, Their Rising, which was published in Florida Review, was first awarded second place in Glimmer Train’s Short Short Story award in 2003. She lives in Asheville with her family of three kids and a dog named Lucy. She is currently seeking representation for her young adult novel, The Pretenders, based on her father’s death of AIDS in 1989.

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “A Drop of Blue”

I wrote the first draft of A Drop of Blue after a conversation with my mother about the Me Too movement, how most women have a story to tell, whether big or small, of how their body was invaded or when a man used his power to get sex. Immediately, I began to think about this day in Springfield, Missouri when I was a little girl. The words flew out of me, and I wrote the first draft in less than an hour. This is a rare occurrence. The last time this type of writing flow happened was in 2001 with a short short story called The Bees, Their Rising set on my grandmother’s farm. Both times, a similar thing happed: it was as if I was overtaken by some ghost or spiritual string, pulling the story out of me, as if the story was ready and waiting to be brought up and out. As I wrote, I was struck with how insignificant my “Me Too” story is compared to others and yet, the way it left a mark on me is palpable. That incident is one of my most vivid memories of growing up, along with the time when the class bully trapped me in the girls’ bathroom and said I looked like a cabbage patch doll.

After this day, described in my essay, a fear and suspicion of men settled on me, the whisper of which has remained. As I wrote that day, the string pulled up memories of my mother’s relationship to her body and even reflections about my daughter came up, how quickly she learned that part of being female means to find out what boys want and to alter oneself accordingly. As I write this reflection today, I am struck with how growing up strip mines our girls, and that even fear of walking down a street or a boy pleading for a hug from a girl so he can feel her breasts, is a drop of blue.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

I was a late bloomer when it comes to appreciating the joys of drinking. I don’t have stories of getting wasted at high school and college parties except for the one time my boyfriend and I decided, in college, to get drunk responsibly. I was housesitting for a couple from church and they invited me to help myself to the large wall of liquor. I ended up getting very drunk off a large mix of drinks including peppermint schnapps that resulted in me crawling around the floor like a dog, saying to my boyfriend, you know you want me? and then later puking in the bathroom. My, now ex-husband and the amazing Norwegian father of my three children, will probably tell you that he definitely did not want me in my doggy-style drunken state, which is part of why I married him. After that, we didn’t drink until our thirties and drank wine at restaurants. I progressed from White Zinfandel to Riesling to Pinot Grigio and now am firmly a fan of New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc. I like the occasional cocktail with fresh citrus or a cucumber flare or a dark and stormy.

Speaking of dogs, my family and I have a Bernedoodle named Lucy, and she is an intense pursuer of love. When I come home and sit on the couch with one of my kids, she will stand up on her hind legs and place her paw on my shoulder. She will look at me, her dark eyes barely visible behind her thick wisps of fur, as if to say, You know you want me. And I do.

Oh and food and music. Lately, I’ve been writing to a list on Spotify called, Coffee Table Jazz, and my new favorite music to cry to is The Oh Hellos or Brandi Carlisle and to dance to, Matisyahu or Billie Eilish, my daughter’s new find. My favorite food to make is fresh tomato – flash-fried with tons of garlic, olive oil, salt, black pepper and basil tossed with angel pasta and topped with a handful of parmesan cheese.

 

“A Drop of Blue” by Anne Raustol

Found in Willow Springs 83 Back to Author Profile I am in the third grade. I cross Pickwick Road to wait for the bus. I have shoulder-length, feathered hair, waist-high shorts, … Read more

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Issue 83: Caitlyn Curran

Curran

About Caitlyn Curran

Caitlyn Curran is a third-year MFA candidate and English instructor at the University of Idaho. She serves as the current Marketing Editor for the literary journal Fugue. Her recent work can be found in: The American Journal of Poetry, Basalt, Hubbub, Miramar, PANK, Raleigh Review, Queen Mob’s Tea House, Willow Springs and elsewhere. She was a 2018 Centrum Fellow at the Port Townsend Writers Conference.

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “Duck Duck Goose” and “Fish Tank”

“Duck Duck Goose” actually arose from a creative nonfiction piece I was writing at the time. When I sat down to write the poem, I was already concerned with repetition as a way to enact the trickiness of memory. I noticed after a few stanzas that this poem wanted to be a villanelle. “Duck Duck Goose” is fairly true to the villanelle form, besides omitting a few lines and using slant rhyme, which again I did to enact the sense of hazy memory. “Fish Tank” went through a few phases of revision— at first it concerned two separate events, but then I was rightly advised to focus on the fish tank and go ahead and write another poem for the lines I ended up cutting. Workshops are good for something, after all.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

I have a very energetic one-year-old blue nose pitbull named Leila, so most afternoons you’ll find me walking with her. During our daily 3-mile walk, I listen to podcasts. I’m a voracious listener of podcasts— be they true crime (Last Podcast on the Left, My Favorite Murder, Dr. Death, Teachers Pet, etc.) or news (anything from NPR, Abe Lincoln’s Top Hat) or storytelling (The Moth, Invisibilia, Lore) or just people reading riddles. In the evenings, it’s Malbec from a box or bust while I work on my poetry manuscript and try to stop Leila from chasing my cat, Penny. I spend a lot of time grading papers, too, but no one wants to hear about that.

 

“duck duck goose” by Caitlyn Curran

Once, Mom got us out. Packed my sister and me into the old wood-paneled van. Middle of the night, maybe summer.   All in our pajamas at the park. I … Read more

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Issue 84: Gail Martin

Martin

About Gail Martin

Gail Martin’s book Begin Empty-Handed won the Perugia Press Poetry prize in 2013

and was awarded the Housatonic Prize for Poetry in 2014. The Hourglass Heart (New Issues Prose and Poetry), was published in 2003. She works as a psychotherapist in private practice in Kalamazoo, MI. http://www.gailmartinpoetry.com/

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “Switches” and “What Pain Doesn’t Know About Me”

Switches

My theory is that we develop a kind of “health identity” when we are young and that when it starts to erode and shift, we are stunned. These bodies, once reliable are no longer so steadfast. It is disconcerting. Both these poems were written during a period when I was trying not to be browbeaten and cowed by some health issues—both my own and those of close friends.

What Pain Doesn’t Know about Me

I had bi-lateral hip replacements within six weeks of each other. During the on-ramp to these surgeries, I kept looking for the parts of me that were not taken over by the pain. Personifying pain and talking back to it helped me diminish it some. (along with drugs.)

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

In Michigan, we are always five miles from a lake and that suits me well. If I can’t get to a lake, there are pools. Swimming keeps me moving and keeps me sensible. Nothing can get to you underwater. No incoming. I am most at peace at our family cottage in northern Michigan, on the lake that Hemingway called home his first 20 summers. I am not a fan of Hemingway, but I am a big fan of Walloon Lake whose waters are deep, cold and clear.

My psychotherapy practice has become part-time and my weeks are peppered with play dates with my nearly 3-year-old grandson. Who knew the joys of CARS, CARS, CARS— building “car homes” from toilet paper rolls, from dominoes, parking cars in perfect alignment, stacking them, building roads with the pinochle deck? It never gets old.

Music plays in my head all the time. (Is this normal?) Last year I’d wake in the night with the “Hamilton” soundtrack rapping along. My taste is various although more often it runs toward Keb’ Mo’ rather than Bach: Bonnie Raitt, Lyle Lovett, Pink Martini, Sam Cooke, Allison Kraus, The Beatles, The Band. Closer to home, I am a total fan of May Erlewine.

As I write this, it’s early summer and I am literally toting a big bouquet of peonies from room to room so I don’t miss a moment of that fragrance. A fleeting season. At my age, each quotidian day is quite exemplary and lovely. The more ordinary the better. I take nothing for granted. The pathos of time passing is genuine.

 

Issue 84

“Switches” and “What Pain Doesn’t Know About Me” by Gail Martin

Switches   The first doctor offered to remove both ovaries.   One minute the lake is flat, the next the wires on the hoist where the boat floats are humming. … Read more

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Issue 84: David Dodd Lee

Lee

About David Dodd Lee

David Dodd Lee is the author of ten books of poetry, including Animalities (Four Way Books, 2014), Orphan, Indiana (Akron, 2010), Arrow Pointing North (Four Way Books, 2002), Abrupt Rural (New Issues, 2004), Downsides of Fish Culture (New Issues, 1997), as well as a forthcoming book of collages, erasure poems, and new original poetry, entitled Unlucky Animals (Wolfson Press, 2019). He has also published two books of Ashbery erasure poems. He writes and makes visual art and kayaks in Northern Indiana, where he lives on the St. Joseph River. He is Associate Professor of English at Indiana University South Bend. His Twitter handle is @davdlee1 and his blog (which showcases his visual art) is at seventeenfingeredpoetrybird.blogspot.com.

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “Hawks”

“Elodie” “Hawks” was written after I actually spent a day acting in a music video in which I played a priest. (You can see it on YouTube here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWjfRYXz6S0). So, not a lot of premeditation was involved. But if there is a time when I feel absolutely unlike myself it’s when I’m acting in a video (I’ve, hilariously, acted in four). Anyway, forget the narrative offered up by the song the video was scripted to accompany, I somehow got in touch with the soul of this former member of an Alice Cooper tribute band, who it turned out was simply happy to have something expressive to do since he was in the process of grieving after a break-up. I will say I wrote “Hawks” in early 2019 when I was writing a series of “short fictions,” one per day in fact, for a period of about two weeks. So I wrote the first draft in probably about an hour, having had no idea, before I sat down, what was going to emerge. But I had been involved with the video production a day or two earlier. The details reported in the story are totally made up, by the way, though I do own a five pound cat. I just sat down and started to type. The whole WORLD of the story spilled onto the page, including the narrator’s voice and the various details. Otherwise, I enjoyed the opportunity to go all expressionistic and gothic with the imagery, perfect for communicating the protagonist’s emotional state and the sense of delight he took in being rescued by artifice totally steeped in the theatrics of the macabre. There was very little revision after the initial draft.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

My world, recently, includes six wood ducks, the mother and her ducklings, who gather in my yard, daily, and intermingle with two adult swans and their four cygnets, as well as a heron, who posts itself nearby most evenings, and who, occasionally, I’m able to watch as it goes about the business of swallowing a three pound carp. I live on a shallow bay, a wetland, really, so creatures are a minute by minute thing—muskrats, snapping and softshell turtles, the red fox that comes by at dusk, and birds birds birds . . . After far as music goes, the album I most recently listened to (several times over) was John Prine’s Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings, which features songs such as “Lake Marie,” which is a dark song about our romance, American history, violence, and place. (I also wanted to mention this because I first heard this Prine album in Jonathan Johnson’s truck, years ago.) As far as sustained listening, I’ve been immersed in Scott Walker’s music (Walker recently passed away), especially his operatic, avant-garde, anti-fascist Bisch Bosh. Talk about walking through brightly-lit darkness. I’ve been writing some to Gary Numan’s lesser known albums, his later funk-driven, industrial rock stuff, and in fact I believe that was something I was involved in when I wrote “Hawks.” Also Chrissie Hynde’s new solo work as well old Pretenders albums. I work, if I’m not traveling or out fishing for the day, quite often in a Starbucks that appeared in my very rural Indiana neighborhood recently, so it’s numerous Americanos a week for me . . . I’ve mostly been focused on writing and exercising, so my food menu has been reduced to basics—chicken and asparagus, yogurt and blueberries; repeat. I’m cataloguing recipes for Brussel’s sprouts though. I have been eating the trout I’ve been catching in various secret, cold-water, spring fed lakes, along with the occasional crappie.

“Hawks” by David Dodd Lee

He was shooting me from across the street, me in my priest’s collar, my black gown. St. Sebastian’s was a flood of electric light. I could see the outer fringes … Read more

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Issue 84: Bruce Bond

Bond

About Bruce Bond

Bruce Bond is the author of twenty-three books including, most recently, Immanent Distance: Poetry and the Metaphysics of the Near at Hand (U of MI, 2015), Black Anthem (Tampa Review Prize, U of Tampa, 2016), Gold Bee (Helen C. Smith Award, Crab Orchard Award, SIU Press, 2016), Sacrum (Four Way, 2017), Blackout Starlight: New and Selected Poems 1997-2015 (L.E. Phillabaum Award, LSU, 2017), Rise and Fall of the Lesser Sun Gods (Elixir Book Prize, Elixir Press, 2018), Dear Reader (Free Verse Editions, 2018), and Frankenstein’s Children (Lost Horse, 2018). Presently he is a Regents Professor at the University of North Texas.

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “Lost Language #11” & “Narcissus in the Underworld #9, #26, #28, & #29”

These poems were born of a larger project: a series of three long sequences in a single book entitled Scar. The first sequence from that book is the title sequence—a poem that explores trauma, fracture, and the search of a mind alienated from itself and others. In my next sequence “Narcissus in the Underworld,” I first set out to look at the internet as a kind of contemporary hell that had, instead of concentric circles, more of the un-centered, un-mastered, infinite and unruly—something imagined as a totality but never experienced as such. I thought of modern loneliness as a shared condition, a kind of narcissistic wound that sets us on our journey. In rereading Dante, I found a kindred struggle that challenges the empathy in the book. It exposes the problematic nature of an exclusive, if not sadistic, moral order. Dante’s hell is to me a psychological space, still alive in us, still oddly compensatory, destructive, inspirational, and worthy of understanding. In many ways, the obsessive-compulsive and self-centered means of negotiating anxiety engenders extremities of both law and lawlessness, both of which disengage us from one another. The third section of my book Scar—“The Lost Language”—was written last, and there I explore, via the theme of music, the sense of loss and longing and sublimities of the unspeakable and near at hand that haunts all language.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

I run all my poems by two people: my wife and my cat. My wife is the best critic I know. For me anyway. Somehow, she gets me and I her. Our recent 35th anniversary was a good day. My cat too gets me, though he cannot understand my poems. I respect that and his undying patience as I read them aloud. I also respect my cat’s apparent lack of any sense of failure or success. Good kitty, I say. It’s my way of saying, “The End.” I can’t explain it, but I find his tiny repertoire of priorities oddly inspiring.

 

Issue 84

Five Poems by Bruce Bond

Found in Willow Springs 84 Back to Author Profile THE LOST LANGUAGE #11   If you are searching for a friend online, an insomniac to break the bread of misery and … Read more

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Issue 84: John Sibley Williams

Williams

About John Sibley Williams

Jennifer Christman

John Sibley Williams is the author of As One Fire Consumes Another (Orison Poetry Prize, 2019), Skin Memory (Backwaters Prize, University of Nebraska Press, 2019), Disinheritance, and Controlled Hallucinations. A nineteen-time Pushcart nominee, John is the winner of numerous awards, including the Wabash Prize for Poetry, Philip Booth Award, American Literary Review Poetry Contest, Phyllis Smart-Young Prize, Nancy D. Hargrove Editors’ Prize, Confrontation Poetry Prize, and Laux/Millar Prize. He serves as editor of The Inflectionist Review and works as a literary agent. Previous publishing credits include: The Yale Review, Midwest Quarterly, Southern Review, Sycamore Review, Prairie Schooner, The Massachusetts Review, Poet Lore, Saranac Review, Atlanta Review, TriQuarterly, Columbia Poetry Review, Mid-American Review, Poetry Northwest, Third Coast, and various anthologies. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

 

Website: https://www.johnsibleywilliams.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/john.sibleywilliams

Twitter: https://twitter.com/JohnSibleyWill1

 

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “My Heart is in the Mouth of Another Heart” and “Suture”

“My Heart is in the Mouth of Another Heart” hurt to write as much as it hurt to experience. One afternoon while strolling by a local cemetery I noticed a family of deer nuzzling the grass between headstones. Being the veteran section of the cemetery, these gorgeous animals cut a stark contrast with the flaccid, windless, yet still colorful flags and the stoic, age-stained white crosses that differentiated one religion from another. Witnessing the astoundingly simple, loving gesture of grazing, almost kissing the earth, I was flooded with contradictory emotions. Yes, something natural, even nutritional, is blooming from the dead. Yet these dead took lives, animal lives too, I’m sure. This poem was my way of coming to terms with this contradiction. Not to judge the dead. Just to kick their dirt around a bit to see what I could unearth. And in the end, I found the living equally guilty. I found myself as guilty of contradiction.

I’m not wholly sure where the inspiration behind “Suture” came from. Perhaps, like most poems, it sprung from a variety of sources that happened to converge at just the right moment, sparking something unique to that brief convergence. As a New Englander by birth yet an Oregonian the past 10 years, I was reminiscing about the old covered bridges that haunted and intrigued my youth. I’d also recently read an article about a bridge collapse in another part of the country. Given my intertest in how the lives and landscapes of small towns affect and define each other, “Suture” sort of wrote itself. Yes, silly as it sounds, I believe poems know what they want to be, and it’s our job to listen to the unwritten poem. The structure also came naturally, on the first attempt, as, at least to my eyes, it resembles a bridge collapse…that failing attempt to span so much white space.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

As a parent of twin toddlers, I haven’t been able to keep up with the newer music I love. My house’s foundations continuously quiver with Baby Shark, Wheels on the Bus, and the like, and such songs drill into my head so deeply as to drown out the rest. But I’ve been steadily infusing the kids’ musical experience, and therefore my own, with the tunes that drive and inspire me. My three-year-old son has finally admitted the “okay-ness” of David Bowie, as long as I don’t sing along with it. He recently said “I don’t hate this” to a Joy Division album, so that’s a step forward. And they’re both beginning to recognize New Order, Tom Waits, and Nick Cave, whose songs I turned into lullabies to rock them to sleep in their infancy. Luckily, Motown utilizes such simple rhythms and pitch perfect harmonies that even the kids allow me some Ronettes, Crystals, Sam Cooke, and Smokey Robinson without complaint. We’re getting there.

 

Issue 84

“My Heart is in the Mouth of Another Heart” and “Suture” by John Sibley Williams

Found in Willow Springs 84 Back to Author Profile My Heart is in the Mouth of Another Heart*   May the deer navigate              this field of white crosses                         … Read more

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Issue 84: Andrew Gretes

Gretes

About Andrew Gretes

Andrew Gretes is the author of How to Dispose of Dead Elephants (Sandstone Press, 2014). His fiction has appeared in New England Review, Witness, Sycamore Review, Booth, and other journals. His Twitter handle is @acgretes.

A Profile of the Author

Notes on “Mind Graffiti”

“What if God got dementia?” That’s probably where the story began: as a question you ask yourself in the shower, eyes closed, mind squinting. If I’m being more honest, I suppose I would say that the story was overdetermined: my dorky loyalty to Lord of the Rings, my fascination with the philosopher George Berkeley, my experience of being recently divorced—too many causes to count. Among other things, it’s also a story about friendship. Going on an insane quest and knowing that at least one person will have your back, no matter what happens: there’s something quite comforting about that! So perhaps the story is an ode to Sancho Panza.

Music, Food, Booze, Tattoos, Kittens, etc.

What I’ve been listening to? Well, recently I’ve become a little obsessed with a podcast called “Entitled Opinions” by Robert Harrison. What if Jimi Hendrix was a Dante scholar at Stanford? The answer is Robert Harrison. As for music, The Kinks are always fun. I had a nice moment watching one of the new Marvel movies (Endgame). Halfway through the movie, a lesser-known Kinks song began playing (“Supersonic Rocket Ship”). In the theater, I immediately perked up and turned to my brother, excited to inform him of my vast knowledge of the British music-hall genre. My brother preemptively said, “Shut up, I don’t care.” The song ended. Thor and Hulk engaged in dialogue. I felt special.

 

Issue 84

“Mind Graffiti” by Andrew Gretes

Found in Willow Springs 84 Back to Author Profile THE WORLD WAS GLITCHY. Mount Rushmore lost one head (Teddy) and sprouted another (Ulysses). The Big Dipper was upside down, spilled. Birds … Read more

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