1786 lines
73 KiB
Groff
1786 lines
73 KiB
Groff
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
T M M OOOOO RRRRR PPPPP OOOOO RRRRR EEEEE V V IIIII EEEEE W W
|
|
MM MM O O R R P P O O R R E V V I E W W
|
|
H M M M O O RRRR PPPP O O RRRR EEE V V I EEE W W W
|
|
M M O O R R P O O R R E V V I E WW WW
|
|
E M M OOOOO R R P OOOOO R R EEEEE V IIIII EEEEE W W
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
Volume #1 May 17, 1994 Issue #3
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
CONTENTS FOR VOLUME 1, ISSUE 3
|
|
|
|
A Bob and a Matt . . . . . . . Robert Fulkerson and Matthew Mason
|
|
|
|
Leaving Costa Rica Before the Election . . . . Leonard S. Edgerly
|
|
|
|
Pederast . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bryan Thomas
|
|
|
|
Lorelei Adams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jerome Mandel
|
|
|
|
Driving in Amahrica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James Lewis
|
|
|
|
Untitled . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . by Leah Cole
|
|
|
|
SuperMenu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leonard S. Edgerly
|
|
|
|
Death of a Giant Jack Rabbit Rodeo Star . . . . . Byron Lanning
|
|
|
|
Untitled . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Magnus Y. Alvestad
|
|
|
|
Second Impression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dror Abend
|
|
|
|
Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tuomas Kilpi
|
|
|
|
Untitled . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Tarver
|
|
|
|
Open the Day . . . . . . . . . . . . . Christopher Jacques Hoover
|
|
|
|
What Donna Knew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J.D. Rummel
|
|
|
|
About the Authors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Authors
|
|
|
|
In Their Own Words . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Authors
|
|
|
|
Israeli Poet Traveling Lecture Series . . . . . . . Announcement
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
Editor + Editor
|
|
Robert Fulkerson The Morpo Review Staff Matthew Mason
|
|
rfulk@creighton.edu + mtmason@ucdavis.edu
|
|
|
|
Proofreader PostScript Editor ReadRoom Layout Designer
|
|
Kris Kalil Elizabeth Simmons Mike Gates
|
|
kkalil@creighton.edu esimmons@usd.edu tsmwg@alaska.edu
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
_The Morpo Review_ Volume 1, Issue 3. _The Morpo Review_ is published
|
|
electronically on a bi-monthly basis. Reproduction of this magazine is
|
|
permitted as long as the magazine is not sold and the entire text of the
|
|
issue remains intact. Copyright 1994, Robert Fulkerson and Matthew Mason.
|
|
The ASCII version of _The Morpo Review_ is created in part by using Lynx 2.1
|
|
to save ASCII formatted text of the World Wide Web HyperText Markup Language
|
|
version. The PostScript version of _The Morpo Review_ is created using
|
|
Aldus Pagemaker 5.0 and Aldus Freehand 3.1 (both from Aldus Corporation) and
|
|
Adobe Photoshop 2.5 (from Adobe Systems, Incorporated). All literary and
|
|
artistic works are Copyright 1994 by their respective authors and artists.
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
A Bob and a Matt
|
|
(Editors' Notes)
|
|
|
|
o _Robert Fulkerson, Co-Editor_:
|
|
|
|
Recently, we celebrated Mother's Day here in the States. I'm not sure
|
|
if other cultures or countries celebrate Mother's Day, but if they
|
|
don't they should. I'm finally old enough to understand and appreciate
|
|
the gifts and knowledge that my mother has given to me over the years.
|
|
|
|
One of the great pearls of wisdom she dropped into my lap about ten
|
|
years ago was that I should take a typing class. At the time, I
|
|
thought it was one of the geekiest, stupidest classes for a seventh
|
|
grade kid to take. But now, ten years and somewhere around seventy
|
|
words a minute later, I can thank her that it doesn't take me very
|
|
long to type up my Editor's Notes mere hours before this issue goes to
|
|
press.
|
|
|
|
But one of the most important things that my mother shared with me at
|
|
a very early age was her love of reading. There was not one room in
|
|
any of the houses I lived in as a child (all two of them) that didn't
|
|
have books in it somewhere. Of course, I started out with some of the
|
|
childhood classics, like _The Velveteen Rabbit_ and numerous _Grimm's
|
|
Fairy Tales_ both at home and at my grandparent's house. As I grew
|
|
older, I of course devoured as many of _The Hardy Boys_ books that I
|
|
could (I still have a few of the hardback books, including the master
|
|
sleuth book, _The Detective's Handbook_.).
|
|
|
|
I enjoyed _The Lord of the Rings_ by Tolkien and, yes, I indulged in
|
|
many Stephen King books (my first one was _Christine_). Today, the
|
|
reading list includes Orson Scott Card, Frederick Pohl, the
|
|
_DragonLance_ series (written by Weis and Hickman) and many others.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, given the amount of time I spend on schoolwork and
|
|
working, I don't get half as much time as I would like to simply read
|
|
books for pleasure. Instead, I'm reading books like _High-Performance
|
|
Computer Architecture_ and _Applied Combinatronics_.
|
|
|
|
Which is why I enjoy editing _The Morpo Review_. People from around
|
|
the world send in poetry, short stories and essays for me to read, and
|
|
since I've taken on editing _Morpo_ as a sort of obligation, it's my
|
|
job to read what gets sent in. For pleasure. Which I enjoy
|
|
tremendously. Sure, I still manage to sneak a book in now and then
|
|
(currently it's _The Second Generation_ by Weis and Hickman), but I
|
|
really enjoy the pieces that pour in for each issue.
|
|
|
|
In this issue, we've brought together a collection of authors from
|
|
five different countries, with such varying backgrounds as published
|
|
scholarly author to iron worker.
|
|
|
|
I think you're really going to enjoy the diversity of literature in
|
|
this issue. To touch on a few of the pieces, Jerome Mandel has written
|
|
a ghost-love story, _Lorelei Adams_, that is a comedic yet sobering
|
|
look at reality. Byron Lanning, who appeared in our first issue with
|
|
_Oh Bean Curd!_, has returned with a story that can only be termed as
|
|
"slapstick literature" -- _Death of a Giant Jack Rabbit Rodeo Star_.
|
|
Not to be left out, we have some excellent poetry by James Lewis
|
|
(_Driving in Amahrica_), Bryan Thomas (_Pederast_) and Chris Hoover
|
|
(_Open the Day_). We close this issue with a story by J.D. Rummel, who
|
|
also appeared in our first issue with _Frozen with a Stranger in the
|
|
Park_, entitled _What Donna Knew_. What Donna knew was what the main
|
|
character of the story is still searching for -- what exactly does
|
|
love mean?
|
|
|
|
Which brings me back around to my Mom. If it hadn't been for her, I
|
|
probably wouldn't be here today, at two in the morning, writing this
|
|
little Editor's blurb for _TMR_. Thanks, Mom, for one of the greatest
|
|
gifts.
|
|
|
|
Which also, incidentally, brings me around to saying that I can see
|
|
that this rich tradition of loving books and reading will continue in
|
|
my family when I marry Kris Kalil (the proofreader for _TMR_) on July
|
|
1st, 1994. She probably has more books than I do, which is a
|
|
frightening thought. So perhaps, twenty or so years down the road,
|
|
you'll see my son or daughter editing their very own little _Morpo
|
|
Review_. The legacy lives on ...
|
|
|
|
o _Matthew Mason, Co-Editor_:
|
|
|
|
If I were to apply to nursery rhymes the same literalist
|
|
interpretations I apply to the back of cereal boxes, _Donahue_
|
|
transcripts, and the _Book of Revelations_, then I would have quite a
|
|
quandary to contend with at the line _Sugar and spice and everything
|
|
nice/that's what little girls are made of_ since I have diabetes and
|
|
it would then only seem logical that dating girls would do
|
|
outlandishly harmful things to my blood sugar.
|
|
|
|
The only healthy solutions which leap to mind, then, would be to
|
|
either join a monastery or start dating men.
|
|
|
|
I don't think I could do the dating men bit. No, I don't loath or fear
|
|
men who date men, I've simply come to the unshakeable conclusion that
|
|
men in general are pigs when it comes to dating. I've heard the locker
|
|
room talk and the jokes at parties and the anecdotes over lunch and,
|
|
yes, heard the snortings of my own pig within and I know that, with
|
|
only the rarest and unlikliest exceptions, dating a man would drive me
|
|
insane (this, of course, branches nicely into a separate discussion
|
|
about the mental status of most women but neither space nor topic will
|
|
allow this at the moment).
|
|
|
|
And the monastery option? I don't think so. It looks like those robes
|
|
must chafe something awful.
|
|
|
|
Now then, how does this pertain to _The Morpo Review's_ third issue?
|
|
Thankfully, that's not up to me to explain as I can leave that to the
|
|
literary scholars of the future to pick apart and interpret at their
|
|
will. In the meantime, you, the dedicated reader, must just be sick of
|
|
me rambling on, so enjoy our latest issue and stop throwing corncobs
|
|
and moldy cabbage leaves to yours or anyone else's inner pigs.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Leaving Costa Rica Before the Election" by Leonard S. Edgerly
|
|
|
|
The red and blue parade
|
|
fills my streets
|
|
children waving flags
|
|
our side and your side
|
|
dinner and dessert
|
|
rising to meet the slogans
|
|
honking all the horns
|
|
tomorrow's forecast: green and white
|
|
|
|
the same idea
|
|
only more so
|
|
since these tourists
|
|
will have departed.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Pederast" by Bryan Thomas
|
|
|
|
Winnow it down
|
|
to a terse
|
|
tense diatribe
|
|
just so, you fail
|
|
you've not even elucidated
|
|
your loathing
|
|
and you're back-to-front in the lifestream
|
|
and you're anxious to turn around
|
|
because it makes more sense to expect
|
|
than to regret
|
|
but your urge to totally debase yourself,
|
|
in front of as many people as possible, to purge and rebuild
|
|
stands in the doorway
|
|
You find that you must have one stick with you
|
|
up your ass let it
|
|
pass through you'd go
|
|
through less if it was just you the whole way and none of this
|
|
garbage
|
|
you're trying on postures and poses and hats and they don't fit
|
|
and you know it but its your personal cross to bear
|
|
you still masquerade there's a big
|
|
psychological rationalization potential word there
|
|
tweeze it out
|
|
"Yeah, it's my inner child, man. Fucks me up, hardcore."
|
|
pederast to the last
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Lorelei Adams" by Jerome Mandel
|
|
|
|
The house was quiet now. Not so much silent as still. Lorelei Adams
|
|
waited for her husband to die, and now that he had done so, she wasn't
|
|
at all content with the results. They had been together for so
|
|
long--forty-seven years, except for their honeymoon and the year that
|
|
followed--that his absence from the house was an amputation.
|
|
|
|
They drove away from the wedding, trailing streamers and rice,
|
|
directly into the path of a schoolbus which tripped over their car,
|
|
spilling children across the highway. Everyone thought they were dead.
|
|
They spent the first hours of their married life in adjacent operating
|
|
rooms, the first weeks undergoing resurrective surgery, and then
|
|
months recuperating--he in his parents' house, she in hers. Although
|
|
they shared the same experience, they healed separately, and, once
|
|
they actually began to live together, their lives were full of jokes
|
|
about extended honeymoons, delayed sex, and the danger of children.
|
|
After that it seemed empty to be with anyone else.
|
|
|
|
And now he was wrapped in earth with a modest stone set upon his head
|
|
to keep his spirit down. She visited him a few times as though he were
|
|
recuperating. Sitting on the edge of the gravestone, she spoke to him
|
|
in the same level voice she used while he was alive. She explained, as
|
|
carefully as she could and for the thousandth time, the need to
|
|
separate whites and coloreds, woolens and cottons from synthetics. She
|
|
reiterated in her earnest way the importance of changing his underwear
|
|
every single day and that he mustn't wear the same shirt two days in a
|
|
row. But he was always as impervious to instruction as the cat. She
|
|
stopped visiting him in the cemetery, which only emphasized his
|
|
absence.
|
|
|
|
Now, whenever she came into the house, she turned her music up, the
|
|
way she liked to hear it, on all the speakers at once. And she was
|
|
just a little disappointed when no one got up to leave.
|
|
|
|
Though every picture in the house was hers, the ones she valued most
|
|
were the ones they fought over. She threw away that horrid lamp and
|
|
turned his study into a sewing room. The mash'ad on the floor beside
|
|
the music center was superior in every way to the bokhara with that
|
|
foolish medallion he had chosen. And the print he wanted when they
|
|
reupholstered the chairs in the living room--well, it made Lorelei
|
|
Adams smile.
|
|
|
|
And finally, finally, she was able to eat the way she wanted to eat.
|
|
She abandoned his tiny table in the kitchenette and set the octagonal
|
|
oak table in the dining room with the polished silver and laundered
|
|
linen placemat and napkin. A goblet of water and a thin glass of pale
|
|
Vouvrey stood beside her plate. And then she brought in the tureen.
|
|
She served herself carefully. She ate graciously. She smiled to either
|
|
side. She tapped the napkin to her lips and cleared away the soup
|
|
before she brought out the platter of steaming vegetables to which she
|
|
helped herself with the silver tongs. She cleared away the dishes
|
|
before she brought out the dessert and the coffee on a silver tray she
|
|
had prepared before dinner with the sugar bowl and the creamer. She
|
|
washed and dried the dishes herself, pleased with the newfound
|
|
elegance of her life, and more than a little irritated by his
|
|
selfishness.
|
|
|
|
She had to do all his jobs now. She brought the mail up and separated
|
|
it into his and hers. She answered hers in the timely manner that
|
|
always earned the admiration of her correspondents, and, as usual, his
|
|
piled up on his bedside table until she finally had to go through them
|
|
herself to pay the bills, cancel his subscriptions, and inform his
|
|
college alumni office. You think he would have had the foresight ....
|
|
|
|
But no, he never considered her or what she constantly had to do to
|
|
keep their lives together pleasant. When his mother died, he wanted to
|
|
leap upon the first plane home, never thinking that she would have to
|
|
pay the hotel bill in a currency she didn't understand, pack and carry
|
|
all the suitcases herself, and miss the very production of Carmen they
|
|
had come all that way to see. Didn't he realize that his mother was
|
|
already dead and that it could not possibly make any difference to her
|
|
when he returned?
|
|
|
|
He thought only of himself: his work, his clients, his limited
|
|
vacation time. It rarely occurred to him, as she pointed out on more
|
|
than one occasion, that she was a person too, that she, too, had work
|
|
and requirements and never enough time. And if society paid him more
|
|
than it paid her, that did not measure what was important so much as
|
|
it declared society's inverted values. Those who serve humanity are
|
|
every bit as valuable as the technicians who keep the machines
|
|
running.
|
|
|
|
But nothing about him was ever quite satisfactory. So it didn't
|
|
surprise her at all when he returned.
|
|
|
|
He was sitting in the living room as she came through the door with an
|
|
arm full of groceries.
|
|
|
|
She walked right past him, miffed at his lack of consideration.
|
|
Couldn't he see she was weighted with packages? Her irritation
|
|
increased as he continued to sit and read, while she put the groceries
|
|
away. And where had he been the past few weeks while she thought he
|
|
was dead? Damn inconsiderate.
|
|
|
|
She went into the living room to confront him precisely on this topic.
|
|
|
|
"Where have you been, Manny?"
|
|
|
|
"Dead," he said.
|
|
|
|
"That's no excuse. Really," she said.
|
|
|
|
"The cancer got me."
|
|
|
|
"You might show some consideration for me sometime," she said.
|
|
|
|
"Platelets plummeted," he said. "White cells on the rampage. Red cells
|
|
metathesizing right and left."
|
|
|
|
"Can't you stop thinking about yourself for once?" she said. "Selfish.
|
|
That's what you are and that's what you've always been."
|
|
|
|
She turned away in anger and was suddenly back in the kitchen, but
|
|
when she opened the refrigerator door, there he was, awkwardly stuffed
|
|
between the second and third shelves.
|
|
|
|
"Frozen sections showed metathesized tumors all over the place," he
|
|
said.
|
|
|
|
"Manny," she said, "would you please stop!"
|
|
|
|
He unfolded himself from the refrigerator--all arms and spindly gangly
|
|
legs--and finally inflated to his full height beside her with a
|
|
dishtowel in one hand and the unwashed salad bowl in the other.
|
|
|
|
"What are you doing?" she cried. "Can't you see that bowl hasn't been
|
|
washed yet? Put that down."
|
|
|
|
And while she washed the bowl, he disappeared. She spent the rest of
|
|
the night searching for him in every room of the house. She found him
|
|
in the study the third time she went in there.
|
|
|
|
"What happened to my lamp?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
She felt the accusation like a lash and woke up before she had a
|
|
chance to answer him.
|
|
|
|
She was out of sorts. Well, a dream like that! She washed and dressed
|
|
before going down to breakfast. Now that she was alone, it was
|
|
important to look her best all the time. Imagine! As if Manny actually
|
|
cared about that stupid lamp.
|
|
|
|
She set the octagonal table for one: woven placemat, linen napkin,
|
|
silver fork, knife, two spoons, luncheon plate, bowl, cup and saucer.
|
|
There! it looked beautiful. She brought the small silver coffeepot to
|
|
the table, steaming through the spout, filled her cereal bowl, and
|
|
brought the warm croissant from the micro, but when she went to get
|
|
the milk, she found his shoe in the refrigerator.
|
|
|
|
Really! how embarrassing! She grabbed it quickly, looked about to make
|
|
sure she was not observed, and hugging it tightly, she returned it to
|
|
his side of the bed where it belonged.
|
|
|
|
When she returned to breakfast, Manny was sitting at the table.
|
|
|
|
"Really, Manny," she said, "you shouldn't leave your shoes in the
|
|
refrigerator. It's disgusting."
|
|
|
|
"Well, what could I do?" he said. "Lymph-nodes were swelling and there
|
|
was hardly a platelet to be seen anywhere. Absolutely defenseless.
|
|
Hey!"--looking around at the shiny surface of the dining table--"what
|
|
am I? an orphan?"
|
|
|
|
Lips in a tight line, she set a place on the mat in front of him
|
|
without chipping anything. Then she noticed the small silver coffee
|
|
pot. If only he had said something. She took the coffeepot into the
|
|
kitchen and, heating the water again, prepared coffee for two in the
|
|
larger pot, knowing as she did so that her croissant would have to go
|
|
back to the micro and her cereal was uneatable. Damn irritating!
|
|
|
|
When she turned around with the large coffee pot in her hands, he was
|
|
sitting at the wretched table in the kitchenette. Two places were set
|
|
with the daily dishes and mismatched cups.
|
|
|
|
"Much better," he said. "Everything's handy. Don't have to walk so
|
|
far."
|
|
|
|
She put the silver coffeepot down on the table where it didn't belong.
|
|
She sat.
|
|
|
|
"Don't you know," she said evenly, "how much I hate eating in the
|
|
kitchen?"
|
|
|
|
"Hey, I meant to ask you," Manny said, "whatever happened to the lamp
|
|
in the study?"
|
|
|
|
Oh, she thought, was he going to get it now!
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Driving in Amahrica" by James Lewis
|
|
|
|
I lost my coat in America
|
|
walked around in the state campsite
|
|
in what's left of their
|
|
vast wilderness
|
|
|
|
In America, men have jaws of stone
|
|
they pulled their few possessions and small children
|
|
in handcarts
|
|
to the New World
|
|
wives walking behind
|
|
praying
|
|
They sell comic books for religion down there,
|
|
have motel beds that massage you for a quarter,
|
|
T.V. shows about Hitler's teeth,
|
|
and gossip
|
|
in the frozen food section
|
|
|
|
In a liquor store a black man called a white man
|
|
a brother
|
|
white man protested showing me the colour of
|
|
their skins
|
|
I said I thought it was a form of expression
|
|
they laughed
|
|
someone mentioned a fight
|
|
I ducked
|
|
|
|
Damn coat
|
|
always blame someone else for the things I lost
|
|
Ma said things will work out in the end
|
|
that's when
|
|
I was too young for her to know me
|
|
That coat's gone for sure
|
|
|
|
So many miles in the desert
|
|
makes a family want to explode
|
|
look at that horizon
|
|
you can't see anything else
|
|
makes you forget where you left your coat
|
|
looks like rain
|
|
hope it won't last long
|
|
It's getting dark
|
|
I better go find her
|
|
I saw a guy today
|
|
lives in a bathroom off the Interstate
|
|
|
|
Hey, we're tourists
|
|
picture taking, stone arches
|
|
stepping around the U-Haul
|
|
river rafting the Colorado
|
|
Santa Fe Chicken
|
|
coffee in the pub
|
|
driving down from the mountain's deer and poplar trees
|
|
to the red sugar bowl, by the Colorado
|
|
feet in the muddy river
|
|
off roading
|
|
slickrock, lizards, and bats
|
|
kids working tables
|
|
up to my neck in Navaho jewelry
|
|
This lady tells us her grandad's a medicine man in a teepee
|
|
up on a mountain
|
|
eating peyote
|
|
Sure, we just need a place to sleep
|
|
|
|
The Grand Canyon
|
|
Ick komme mit Deutschlander
|
|
The sight every American should see
|
|
Il ne parle Francais, mais il essaye
|
|
Cin-cin
|
|
tip the water jug back
|
|
Morning, dusk, walls like rust
|
|
and wind
|
|
|
|
It's a journey, I tell her
|
|
|
|
East Arizona's the bottom of a tide pool
|
|
barrel cactus and yucca trees
|
|
Lake Mead - blue playing field
|
|
Have fun!
|
|
(they're driving off to gamble)
|
|
Fat man cleans a fish
|
|
That's a good fish!
|
|
Baseball hat on the porch says,
|
|
Sold three thousand bags of ice!
|
|
|
|
Wind carries the heat under the curry smelling tree
|
|
smell from the what's-that-flower? rides the heat
|
|
Viking woman cradles her baby
|
|
rides a fast boat
|
|
her husband tows to the lake
|
|
We talked to a philosopher
|
|
Knew he was, he smiled so_
|
|
unexpectedly
|
|
lives in a camper with his dog
|
|
|
|
Viva fucking Las Vegas!
|
|
Wayne Newton's down with flu
|
|
Three-forty-nine breakfast in the Paradise Buffet
|
|
We sneak past the slot machines
|
|
to the res-taur-rant
|
|
birds sing caa-caa, ooee-ooee
|
|
Don Ho: moookie looukie loww
|
|
Guitar: twayiianng
|
|
An angel: no doggie bags in Paradise
|
|
|
|
On edge
|
|
I watch butterflies
|
|
cartwheel over the hood of my new truck
|
|
going down into Death Valley
|
|
|
|
Wind always blows
|
|
In California it blows sand
|
|
from the lake drained for L.A.
|
|
driving it thirty forty miles an hour down the highway
|
|
into my new truck
|
|
|
|
I snap
|
|
get out behind a shack
|
|
read a threat in the window
|
|
rub the pits in the windshield
|
|
listen to country radio
|
|
sandblast my legs on the highway
|
|
see a hole and go
|
|
wind knocks the truck around
|
|
like those butterflies
|
|
|
|
We stop at a drive-in
|
|
I consume
|
|
coffee, Marlboros, french fries
|
|
see her back as she runs away across the parking lot
|
|
to call her mother
|
|
I go
|
|
quietly fetch her
|
|
|
|
Drive north into June snow
|
|
so
|
|
Motel 6 ecstasy
|
|
|
|
Can't wash a truck in Mammoth
|
|
(like to keep ma truck clean)
|
|
|
|
Over the Sierra
|
|
love them snowy streams and rocks and trees
|
|
down to drive the Yosemite
|
|
500
|
|
take pictures of Park Rangers and waterfalls
|
|
|
|
In the west, grassland lies rumpled like golden fur
|
|
Lake Shasta, skirted in red dirt
|
|
needs a top-up
|
|
|
|
I-5 North to home
|
|
timberline
|
|
home
|
|
home green
|
|
Jungle!
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Untitled" by Leah Cole
|
|
|
|
I visited that place
|
|
Cloudy summer day
|
|
A chill breeze
|
|
Or was it more?
|
|
Steel grey, no black.
|
|
No contrast as sharp as
|
|
The draped wire
|
|
Still sharp
|
|
Was that ditch--
|
|
The one that grew poppies
|
|
And had a little gravel--
|
|
A moat?
|
|
Or-- no
|
|
|
|
Muffled mumblings
|
|
Of tourists
|
|
That don't speak the language
|
|
The language of the photographers
|
|
The army, The language
|
|
Of hate
|
|
The language of the dead
|
|
To them mixed up letters
|
|
To me hate clothed in beauty
|
|
Despair lilting and bouncing
|
|
With gentle syllables
|
|
|
|
The nightmares find me
|
|
Paris. London.
|
|
Home.
|
|
Small towns
|
|
Obscured even on the Rand McNalley
|
|
Fleeting black images
|
|
Chase me to church
|
|
Break my pious thoughts
|
|
Sketch themselves faintly
|
|
Over the Moscow sky
|
|
And put on a new Mask
|
|
In Petersburg
|
|
|
|
A pilgrimage
|
|
Of duty? Of guilt?
|
|
To seek absolution?
|
|
Or crucifixion?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A common unconscious
|
|
Opens suddenly before me
|
|
Like birth waters breaking
|
|
A flood of life seeping away
|
|
That ditch-- was it?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
They are there.
|
|
Poppies wrap their sullen roots about the wrists and ribs.
|
|
In the midst of a flood
|
|
I dream of a hand exposed
|
|
Reaching up to God in heaven
|
|
But there's no Michelangelo
|
|
To paint this on another Sistine Chapel.
|
|
Only me.
|
|
I don't wake crying.
|
|
I never do.
|
|
Only half remembered images
|
|
Over tea and toast.
|
|
|
|
Not so difficult a journey
|
|
Up before the sun
|
|
A padded motor coach
|
|
No forced march
|
|
No fitful sleep standing closely in a cattle car
|
|
No twitch of dreams in anticipation
|
|
Of confronting this evil.
|
|
I wonder, should I be nervous?
|
|
Will I stick out as the only aryan?
|
|
Will they hate me because I have
|
|
No name to find
|
|
Because I won't see in a display
|
|
My dead grandmother staring back?
|
|
|
|
We are hushed.
|
|
No one else is.
|
|
They are not pilgrims.
|
|
They are in Junior High.
|
|
They are bored on Spring Break.
|
|
They are here to see the gore.
|
|
They are here not to understand
|
|
But to gawk.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We stop. She looks in a mirror
|
|
Or is it a photo that somehow survived?
|
|
He wonders if the bunk he sees
|
|
Held his great uncle
|
|
I am drawn to the monitor.
|
|
Hidden from the faint of heart
|
|
By a barrier to shield and lean on.
|
|
|
|
Past the tattered Torahs
|
|
And the shattered windows
|
|
Texts I can translate but don't want to read
|
|
I know it will be there, playing
|
|
Playing ceaselessly
|
|
Waiting for me.
|
|
That moat that used to circle the camp.
|
|
|
|
I know that place.
|
|
How many people did I walk on?
|
|
How many grew into the poppy
|
|
|
|
I pressed so lovingly into
|
|
My German-English dictionary?
|
|
|
|
The barrier meets my body
|
|
Cool and seductively dark
|
|
I become locked to the screen
|
|
I have no power to back away
|
|
People carried to that moat
|
|
Like so many rotted chicken legs
|
|
Dangling loosely for crab bait
|
|
Or it is-- yes.
|
|
It grows poppies
|
|
|
|
I am jostled sharply
|
|
My elbow contacts the barrier
|
|
The physical pain is revitalizing
|
|
The decaying scent of the shoes
|
|
Is almost jarred loose from my nostrils.
|
|
A woman who can barely
|
|
|
|
Reach the barrier
|
|
Short and soft
|
|
Rotted from the inside
|
|
Cues up
|
|
Pushes her way through
|
|
Not willing to wait her turn
|
|
To get a peep at the freak show
|
|
At the sensationalist video
|
|
Propaganda of the West
|
|
|
|
"Damn kids. They're watching
|
|
It over and over four times"
|
|
So eager to drizzle her
|
|
Leering eyes over the record
|
|
Of the moat
|
|
Or is it-- no!
|
|
She cares nothing for our Grandmother
|
|
Or great uncle
|
|
Or my poppy
|
|
|
|
And I am become Michelangelo.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"SuperMenu" by Leonard S. Edgerly
|
|
|
|
Internet in the morning:
|
|
a trip to Brown
|
|
for poetry
|
|
creates a menu of all things
|
|
touching the word (poetry)
|
|
highlighted in black,
|
|
a menu all to myself,
|
|
the poetry at Brown.
|
|
|
|
Imagine if I were a student there now,
|
|
or at Harvard, or Stanford,
|
|
this lit by words,
|
|
this free to order up
|
|
my own menus.
|
|
|
|
Instead (old song)
|
|
a meeting of the
|
|
Steering Committee to Reengineer the Purchasing Function
|
|
(oh please, oh please)
|
|
Bring a menu with honey on it!
|
|
Slick clear juice of the bee,
|
|
my own digital network,
|
|
cross-referenced and very, very fast.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Death of a Giant Jack Rabbit Rodeo Star" by Byron J. Lanning
|
|
|
|
The Bernoulli Brothers Gunpowder Circus and Giant Jack Rabbit Rodeo
|
|
suffered a tragic loss last night when its premier giant jack rabbit
|
|
rider, Adios Superfly, exploded and burned to death in the middle of
|
|
his performance.
|
|
|
|
A few seconds into Superfly's act, the giant jack rabbit he rode,
|
|
Becoming Mr. Fink, bucked him off and propelled him to the top of the
|
|
big top tent where he flew into the midst of the flaming trapeze act,
|
|
slamming into the flaming trapeze artist, Napalm Dickey, also known as
|
|
the human meteor, also known as the Flambeau Rambo because he wears a
|
|
napalm turban on his head, which burns like a maniacal, pissed off
|
|
bunsen burner as he swings through the air the with greatest of ease.
|
|
When Napalm Dickey and Superfly collided, Napalm Dickey's flaming
|
|
turban ignited Superfly's creosote cowboy hat and volatile crepe paper
|
|
neckerchief. Flaming embers then dropped on his electric chaps.
|
|
Superfly detonated, and he fell to the arena floor in a ball of flame.
|
|
|
|
A fire alarm sounded in the big top tent and several rodeo clowns
|
|
dressed in firefighter outfits drove out onto the arena in a emergency
|
|
fire wagon pulled by Playboy bunnies. They jumped off the wagon and
|
|
extinguished Superfly with bottles of seltzer water, but not before
|
|
the flames had given Superfly an excessive cremation. A clown dressed
|
|
in a surgeon's costume named Old Doc Laudanum then entered the arena.
|
|
He took one look at the pile of ashes and stated in his medical
|
|
opinion, "Superfly could be possibly dead." The Bernoulli brothers
|
|
respected his medical opinion greatly because before he became a clown
|
|
he was a surgeon, and he became a circus clown only when he lost his
|
|
medical license in a botched liver transplant operation in which he
|
|
mistakenly transplanted a hot water bottle into a man.
|
|
|
|
Giant jack rabbit experts consider Adios Superfly the greatest giant
|
|
jack rabbit rider in the world and probably the best in the modern
|
|
era, ever since giant jack rabbit riders began using electric chaps,
|
|
Pancho Villa foot deodorant, thalidomide chewing tobacco, and wearing
|
|
frilly underwear under their electric chaps for good luck. Despite his
|
|
success, Superfly did not have a natural talent for giant jack rabbit
|
|
riding. For years he never road a giant jack rabbit longer than the
|
|
required ten seconds and many times he fell off before he mounted one.
|
|
|
|
His riding career took a complete turnaround when he attended Dr.
|
|
Puzzletwit's two hour confidence-building program, based on certain
|
|
metaphysical principles of ichthyology and the major teachings of
|
|
Nazism. The principle part of the seminar consisted of Dr. Puzzletwit
|
|
grabbing his students by the shoulders, screaming in their faces, "By
|
|
God, all you need is some confidence!" and slapping them with a live
|
|
tuna fish. As students progressed in the seminar, Dr. Puzzletwit no
|
|
longer had to tell them they needed confidence and just hit them with
|
|
a live tuna fish. Upon completion of the seminar, the students didn't
|
|
need Dr. Puzzletwit to hit them with a live tuna fish, for they had
|
|
self-confidence and could hit themselves with a live tuna fish, which
|
|
they did most severely upon receiving their diplomas.
|
|
|
|
After Superfly graduated from Puzzletwit's seminar, he had to ride a
|
|
white colored giant jack rabbit named Cream of Punishment that no
|
|
rider had stayed on longer than three seconds. This did not deter
|
|
Superfly because now he had confidence. Before mounting Creme of
|
|
Punishment, Superfly stared him in the eyes and said, "Today's the day
|
|
you get ridden you overlumpy, moby-jumbo, heathen of an Easter Bunny."
|
|
He slapped himself with a tuna fish, mounted Creme of Punishment, and
|
|
rode him for ten seconds, scoring a 9.5 for technical merit and a 9.95
|
|
for artistic merit on account he smiled vigorously throughout the
|
|
ride, pointed his toes, and extended his pinky fingers of both hands.
|
|
|
|
This successful ride launched his rodeo career. No giant jack rabbit
|
|
threw him again until his death on Becoming Mr. Fink. He wound up the
|
|
number one giant jack rabbit rider five years consecutively and
|
|
retired from the rodeo circuit when the Bernoulli Brothers hired him.
|
|
|
|
Upon Superfly's death, Sheriff Heyday of Kranky Karma County suspected
|
|
foul play. He found evidence that someone had severely buttered
|
|
Superfly's saddle. Immediately, suspicion fell on Rub Chevalier,
|
|
another giant jack rabbit rider, for the day of Superfly's death
|
|
Superfly and Chevalier had an argument over Candylegs Desideratum,
|
|
Chevalier's exwife. Superfly had started dating her and Chevalier
|
|
didn't approve of it because Candylegs was a strict full immersion
|
|
Baptist; whereas, Superfly had no religious convictions other than hot
|
|
tubbing.
|
|
|
|
In addition, Old Doc Laudanum had seen Chevalier walking around the
|
|
rodeo grounds with a large stick of butter, licking it like a
|
|
Popsicle. This did not seem unusual by itself because he always walked
|
|
around the rodeo grounds licking a stick of butter; however, on this
|
|
day, he came up to Old Doc Laudanum and asked him, "Theoretically, if
|
|
a man buttered Adios Superfly's saddle and Superfly died as a result
|
|
from a giant jack rabbit throwing him and this certain man got
|
|
convicted of the crime, could that certain man still enter a convent
|
|
and become a nun?" Doc Laudanum refused to answer. He called it a
|
|
stupid question that only someone with postgraduate work in philosophy
|
|
could conceive. Chevalier thanked the doctor, offered him a lick of
|
|
his butter then left.
|
|
|
|
When Chevalier became the prime suspect, Sheriff Heyday gave him a lie
|
|
detector test. Chevalier scored only a 55% on the test and failed, so
|
|
Sheriff Heyday told him to go back home and study the test harder,
|
|
especially the sections on George Washington cutting down the cherry
|
|
tree, Baron Munchausen, and the boy who cried wolf. Heyday feels
|
|
confident Chevalier will pass the lie detector test on his second
|
|
attempt, and he will charge him with first degree murder and reckless
|
|
misuse of butter in the act of a felony.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Untitled" by Magnus Y. Alvestad
|
|
|
|
She's dressed in black
|
|
as if
|
|
someone died -
|
|
I think
|
|
she did.
|
|
|
|
She doesn't look
|
|
back
|
|
at me.
|
|
|
|
She laughed
|
|
and
|
|
I did -
|
|
now she cries
|
|
alone.
|
|
|
|
I'm a stranger
|
|
but
|
|
she lets me
|
|
read her
|
|
like
|
|
an open book.
|
|
|
|
I want to fill those pages.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Second Impression" by Dror Abend
|
|
|
|
Not as much as to have left a furious letter behind
|
|
I didn't even pretend not to care
|
|
or that I wouldn't be willing to preach Holocaust to Sabbath school kids
|
|
wherever I was going
|
|
or that I knew where it was
|
|
|
|
Only that I will never have to wear that canvas uniform in a hundred degrees
|
|
weather
|
|
never be owned by a higher ranked sadist
|
|
never sent on jog in the heat with a pint of stale water
|
|
never again assist in the oppression of individuals
|
|
for the general good of a people who would not like to hear my opinion about it
|
|
|
|
so I didn't tell them.
|
|
Now, behind an ice glazed window in a frozen bottom university out there
|
|
I have my wish
|
|
I study eventlessness,
|
|
holocaust-lessness, bone-breaking-less-ness,
|
|
not even my bones by town people who think I'm a Martian
|
|
|
|
So well did I step out of my world
|
|
into the limbo of post recession
|
|
my neighbor fast asleep, his wife one month pregnant
|
|
I like pancake for breakfast
|
|
but no ketchup
|
|
I ask him
|
|
how can you have no health insurance
|
|
he says that he has study loans
|
|
|
|
Universities
|
|
are so great.
|
|
lectures and students repeat in fast jargon
|
|
future minds and experienced philosophers re-read verbally with the use of
|
|
new methods
|
|
young scholars and established residents of academia reiterate in professional
|
|
terms
|
|
margined thinkers and members of the establishment rephrase in unique language
|
|
differently trained and degree earned mental writers say differently
|
|
nothing
|
|
|
|
alone
|
|
I embark on conventions
|
|
how further into the snow was I buried at the MLA
|
|
it was Christmas in Toronto,
|
|
Paris translated, London at a Cafe`
|
|
this being arranged by the business people of a word procession
|
|
|
|
I could well afford to sit belly emptied at THE ROYAL YORK
|
|
and read The New Yorker: "Mrs. Lethwes had no feelings for the idea
|
|
[of adoption];
|
|
... Their own particular children were the children she wanted,
|
|
an expression of their love"
|
|
Mr. Shiltz had no feelings for the idea of AIDS
|
|
Mr. Fauel had no feelings for the idea of free trade
|
|
Mr. Mobavitz had no feelings for the idea of penis slashing
|
|
Ms. Hardings had no feelings for the idea of losing out at the Olympics
|
|
So my wife has no feeling for the next snow storm
|
|
nor I for my toothache
|
|
putting off my check up for two years
|
|
now it will cost
|
|
|
|
A nice touch of reality under my crowns
|
|
don't I wish it for those convention people
|
|
giving lectures of white domination
|
|
in ten inches,
|
|
research papers of
|
|
Walt Disney's policies of employment
|
|
Now criticized by tenureship junkies
|
|
manifesting
|
|
Gay and lesbian - we hate bisexuals - studies,
|
|
saying "they cause AIDS" -
|
|
as if blaming the Japanese
|
|
will help produce better cars.
|
|
the Russians - better winters
|
|
the British - snobbier schools
|
|
the Israelis - lousier wars
|
|
the Deficiency Syndrome is a part of our lives now
|
|
|
|
a thousand times better than that stale uniform, them canvas water,
|
|
that one hundred degrees Holocaust that you may not protest
|
|
|
|
for I may have no feelings for the idea of reality
|
|
Now, I can delay
|
|
and put it
|
|
away
|
|
for a while.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Names" by Tuomas Kilpi
|
|
|
|
I have no dreams
|
|
|
|
just visual remorse
|
|
lies remembered badly
|
|
in an imaginary landscape
|
|
|
|
black noise
|
|
on all channels
|
|
life
|
|
ends in a commercial break
|
|
|
|
no transmission
|
|
without transgression
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have no face
|
|
|
|
just a distant cloud of dust
|
|
chinese particles and junk bonds
|
|
tattooed on my forehead
|
|
|
|
an empire destined to expire
|
|
and nothing more
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Untitled" by John Tarver
|
|
|
|
These people
|
|
bother me.
|
|
|
|
Walnut-shaped, satanic,
|
|
|
|
they stand in a leafy
|
|
wind,
|
|
poking and prodding the fun out
|
|
of autumn sounds.
|
|
|
|
Smoldering rubbish heaps
|
|
for heads,
|
|
|
|
they turn away
|
|
after expressing strong,
|
|
mixed feelings.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The black outfits billow.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Open the Day" by Christopher Jacques Hoover
|
|
|
|
Open the day
|
|
With the slightest of breath
|
|
That rises to point and pirouettes into the coming light
|
|
It crystallizes in the bedroom's cold first air
|
|
Takes form to seize life from the jaws of dawn
|
|
|
|
To your side, she has not awakened
|
|
And continues to dream
|
|
Of a river, strong and slumbering
|
|
Of warm coffee
|
|
And a daughter
|
|
And a future
|
|
And of music without ending
|
|
|
|
And opens unfocused eyes at last
|
|
To a drowsy, lopsided smile
|
|
And "good morning"
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"What Donna Knew" by J.D. Rummel
|
|
|
|
The first time I entered Locklin's mind, I was every bit as surprised
|
|
as you might imagine. It was a strange union to be sure; I was limited
|
|
to just seeing what he saw and hearing what he heard. I was never
|
|
privy to his thoughts or impressions, nor do I have any explanation
|
|
for the phenomenon. I have never shared the details with anyone.
|
|
|
|
Unusual as it was, it wasn't a lot of fun, not after the initial
|
|
novelty wore off, anyway. In fact, after a while it was a lot like
|
|
going to a long and boring movie. Locklin was no secret agent. He did
|
|
pretty much the same things I did. He ate breakfast, lunch and dinner.
|
|
He watched a god-awful amount of television, and when he wasn't going
|
|
to the gym he was working or sleeping. I stopped this ultimate
|
|
invasion of privacy not out of any high moral code, but out of a sort
|
|
of boredom.
|
|
|
|
Then he introduced me to Donna.
|
|
|
|
The damn fool introduced me to soft, sexy, and completely captivating
|
|
Donna. How was I supposed to behave myself after meeting her? To this
|
|
day I don't know how to express the effect she had on me. I knew that
|
|
prettier women existed. Sometimes she wore too much eye make-up and
|
|
sometimes her nose was a trifle outstanding, but in her presence I
|
|
felt an electricity, as if every system in my body were on alert; I
|
|
thought faster, I observed more, and every statement I made came under
|
|
careful scrutiny before I would release it for public consumption.
|
|
|
|
Maybe it was her laughter. When she laughed at one of my jokes it was
|
|
an honest laugh, not polite. When she listened to me she actually
|
|
heard what I said and acted as if my opinion mattered.
|
|
|
|
I knew that I was headed for trouble, and for one of the few times in
|
|
my twenty-five years I didn't want to run. I wanted this trouble more
|
|
than anything I could remember.
|
|
|
|
And I wanted more; I wanted to see myself in her eyes; I wanted to
|
|
hear her voice call my name; I wanted to make the blood rush in her
|
|
veins.
|
|
|
|
But if any one person can belong to someone else, she belonged to
|
|
Locklin. I have to be fair, Locklin was not some jerk, and I could
|
|
understand how a woman could find him attractive. Locklin was tall,
|
|
broad of shoulder and narrow of hip. He had white teeth and all of his
|
|
own hair.
|
|
|
|
He looked great with his shirt off.
|
|
|
|
I am none of those things. The best that can be said of me is that I
|
|
have a peculiar charm which permits me to have never suffered a dog
|
|
bite.
|
|
|
|
I tried to behave in a decent fashion. I played the game and tried to
|
|
live through it as I'm sure lots of people have before me. I was only
|
|
allowed to play because of Rule Three:
|
|
|
|
_NO NON-EMPLOYEES ON THE LOADING DOCK_
|
|
|
|
When Donna would come around to pick Locklin up, or just to say
|
|
"Hello", she had to wait in my shoebox-sized office.
|
|
|
|
One day she came in looking like she had unloaded and puddled a
|
|
hundred yards of concrete; she was the most gorgeous non-union labor I
|
|
had ever seen.
|
|
|
|
"Good afternoon," and as I spoke I could feel my metabolism shifting
|
|
into that Donna-fueled overdrive.
|
|
|
|
"Howdy-doo," she replied, and plopped down in the molded plastic
|
|
chair against the wall.
|
|
|
|
I was careful not to stare and yet maintain the sort of pleasant eye
|
|
contact that she would expect from a friendly, nice man.
|
|
|
|
"We look like we've been working," I said.
|
|
|
|
She blew a breath of air upwards pushing back a fallen tress of red
|
|
hair. "My brother is putting a patio in my Dad's backyard and nobody
|
|
told me to be out of town."
|
|
|
|
"Gee, I'm sorry," I said, "But look at it this way, it could be
|
|
worse."
|
|
|
|
She aimed a questioning look at me, "How?"
|
|
|
|
I gave it my best "intense cogitation" look, adding a sort of Rodin's
|
|
"Thinker" posture, even stroking my chin. "No, I guess it can't get
|
|
any worse."
|
|
|
|
She smiled. That smile meant so much; If a meteor burned through the
|
|
roof and killed me it would hurt a little less because she smiled.
|
|
|
|
"Are you going to buzz the Man, or do I have to get tough and break
|
|
Rule Three?" she asked.
|
|
|
|
"Oh-ho. Mother warned me about girls like you--never thought I'd be
|
|
lucky enough to meet one though." I wiggled my eyebrows Groucho-style.
|
|
|
|
She laughed. What a day! Christ, maybe there was a check from
|
|
Publisher's Clearing House at home.
|
|
|
|
I paged Locklin.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me something," she asked, "why are you working this job?"
|
|
|
|
A question about me?! Did she care? She was asking about me! I had to
|
|
be cool, but not flip--down-to-earth.
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean?" I answered, trying to look thoughtful.
|
|
|
|
"You have an education and a lot on the ball, why are you working in
|
|
this office? You could do better."
|
|
|
|
"I don't know. Maybe I've never found what I want to do."
|
|
|
|
She sucked in her bottom lip and nodded, "I know what you mean. For a
|
|
long time I thought God would send me a telegram saying, _"BE A
|
|
DOCTOR, DONNA"_ but he never did. I guess it's something most of us
|
|
have to work on."
|
|
|
|
"I think. . ." I started to reply, but I never got to finish, for at
|
|
that moment Locklin came in and my small magic was broken. I no longer
|
|
existed in the same room: there was a chemistry present in which I was
|
|
a completely inactive element.
|
|
|
|
Looking back I know of course how much she must have cared for him,
|
|
but at the time the reality of it was too great and I purposely denied
|
|
what my eyes saw and my heart most feared. I've done it before. How
|
|
could I be attracted to someone who wasn't interested in me? Or more
|
|
accurately, why was I always attracted to such people? For one reason
|
|
or another I have played this scene virtually all my life.
|
|
|
|
There was a very major difference this time, however: I could enter
|
|
Locklin's mind.
|
|
|
|
I guess that's why I did it. I just wanted to be with a woman who
|
|
wanted to be with me, even if it wasn't really me she was with.
|
|
|
|
At first I wrestled with the morality of it. Later, I questioned the
|
|
healthiness of it. But I guess the weather was what finally wore me
|
|
down. I couldn't stand watching the snow swirl down outside my window
|
|
and stay in that house knowing that Donna was alive in some part of
|
|
the world but wasn't with me. I had been given a marvelous gift and
|
|
only a fool would not use it.
|
|
|
|
So, on a Sunday afternoon I quietly slipped out of my own mind and
|
|
slid into Locklin's experience. It was a great deal like waking up in
|
|
a strange place. I closed my eyes in my living room and the surprise
|
|
was that, when I opened them again I wasn't in my own life anymore.
|
|
|
|
I was in luck. Donna and Locklin were together. They were walking in
|
|
the park, watching children skate on the frozen lagoon surface. We
|
|
held hands.
|
|
|
|
"Do you know how to skate?" she asked him.
|
|
|
|
"No," he replied.
|
|
|
|
"Want to learn?" she squeezed our hand as she asked.
|
|
|
|
I wanted to learn, I wanted to positively fly across the ice.
|
|
|
|
When he answered "No," it made me angry. I wondered if he didn't want
|
|
to look foolish. Hell, I was used to that.
|
|
|
|
She leaned her head against us as we walked, and I felt special, like
|
|
the only child at Christmas in a house full of adults.
|
|
|
|
We walked in relative silence, listening to the frozen earth crack,
|
|
occasionally watching it crumble to chocolate bits. I watched, as best
|
|
Locklin's eyes would let me, her chilled breath rise in clouds and
|
|
disappear.
|
|
|
|
She dumped a mitten-load of snow down our back and we chased her up a
|
|
hill. I noticed her hiding place but wouldn't have given her away even
|
|
if I could have. She jumped on our back and kissed our left ear.
|
|
|
|
Locklin dumped her in a snow drift and I wanted to tell her a joke
|
|
about her rising from the powdery pile looking like a cartoon Santa.
|
|
But I couldn't.
|
|
|
|
On a remote hill by the snow-filled swimming pool she led us to a
|
|
hole in the cyclone fencing and guided us over toward a cement bench.
|
|
She sat down on the cold surface and pulled us down to her.
|
|
|
|
We kissed. My heart was slamming inside me, or maybe it was inside
|
|
him, I wasn't sure. She tasted so good, her scent was so incredible;
|
|
the sheer rush on the senses was staggering. As she circled her arms
|
|
around us and drew herself onto our lap, I was suddenly aware of how
|
|
rarely I touch anyone, and how few were the times anyone has wanted to
|
|
touch me. It became very clear at that moment how much I missed
|
|
something I'd never had.
|
|
|
|
I began to feel ashamed; this was not my life.
|
|
|
|
I left him at that point, returning to my living room aware of a
|
|
salty, burning sensation behind my eyes, aware that I was alone.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Although I am not proud of any of the times I intruded on them, the
|
|
night at the bar was perhaps the most significant.
|
|
|
|
It was certainly the worst.
|
|
|
|
My involvement was purely accidental--to a point anyway.
|
|
|
|
I was drinking in a hotel lounge, watching a live D.J. perform the
|
|
unenviable task of motivating a Monday night crowd to dance.
|
|
|
|
As I stepped from the bar, looking for a rest room, I observed Donna
|
|
seated in the lobby, checking her watch, obviously waiting on someone.
|
|
|
|
I'd had a few, so I approached her.
|
|
|
|
"Come here often?" God! I regretted it instantly. What a stupid thing
|
|
to say.
|
|
|
|
She looked up, apparently oblivious to my blunder, "Hi, what are you
|
|
doing here?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm working undercover for the F.B.I., it's their new Bottom of the
|
|
Barrel Program." I wiggled my eyebrows Groucho-style, falling back on
|
|
proven material.
|
|
|
|
"You have great eyebrows," she said.
|
|
|
|
That was all it took, just that one comment and suddenly my desperate
|
|
imagination was off and running, turning "You have great eyebrows"
|
|
into, "I am secretly attracted to you, please ask me out."
|
|
|
|
Fortunately, although my imagination is strong, it doesn't overpower
|
|
my rational side. I replied, "Yeah, they're great on cold winter
|
|
nights."
|
|
|
|
My mind raced to think of anything to say that would prolong staying
|
|
with her, but after a few moments of unspectacular small talk, the air
|
|
between us began to hang in heavy, drooping pauses. It was time to
|
|
move on.
|
|
|
|
So, I waited in the parking lot, seated behind the wheel of my car,
|
|
checking to see if it was Locklin she was meeting.
|
|
|
|
I don't know why, but somewhere in the back of my head maybe I
|
|
thought if she was meeting someone besides him, maybe I had a chance.
|
|
|
|
Desperate, very desperate.
|
|
|
|
Of course Locklin drove in, parked, and at once affirmed my faith in
|
|
Donna and brought me down to reality.
|
|
|
|
My reality. Not my favorite place to be. So once more I entered
|
|
Locklin's world.
|
|
|
|
In the hotel room they had dinner, and he said things I could have
|
|
said better. I should have left then.
|
|
|
|
But I stayed. I stayed as he drew her to him and undressed her. When
|
|
I saw Donna naked, my throat tightened--somebody's throat tightened. I
|
|
saw the desire in those wonderful eyes--such a different look than she
|
|
gave me when praising my eyebrows; this look was pure and hungry. He
|
|
was making the blood rush in her veins, and I hated him for it.
|
|
|
|
And I stayed, I stayed as he made her cry out his name; I felt her
|
|
excitement, and the rhythm they built between them excluded me far
|
|
more than any mere conversation. I will never forget the sheer warmth
|
|
inside her, nor forget the fear that finally drove me out: the
|
|
stunning dread that I might never have what they had, that such
|
|
passion and acceptance was something it was my fate to only desire and
|
|
envy but never attain.
|
|
|
|
I was vomiting in the cold parking lot, watching the accumulation of
|
|
several hours spill itself down the side of my car, the acidic stink
|
|
waking me, but not halting the memory of her face as they coupled.
|
|
|
|
A bald security guard was standing beside the car, telling me that he
|
|
didn't come to my job and throw-up.
|
|
|
|
Asshole.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
It was particularly hot that Friday night. For years, Fridays have
|
|
always been special to me. When I was a boy, Friday meant that I had
|
|
survived another week of abuse in school and could escape into my
|
|
comic books for the weekend. For two days and nights I was Superman,
|
|
Spiderman, or all of the Mighty Avengers. Friday night, when I was
|
|
very lucky, had monster movies on late, and my Mother watching them
|
|
with me, half-asleep on the sofa. And Friday night inevitably led to
|
|
Saturday morning and cartoons: Fantastic Four, Johnny Quest, Bugs
|
|
Bunny.
|
|
|
|
But those were the Fridays of my youth. The Fridays of my manhood
|
|
were spent alone, watching reruns and going to bed early, knowing that
|
|
cartoons today suck.
|
|
|
|
I had not been in Locklin's mind for the entire spring and a fair
|
|
chunk of summer. After the night in the hotel I was consumed by a
|
|
period of self-loathing and depression. I had resolved to respect
|
|
their privacy.
|
|
|
|
But it was particularly hot that summer--that night. I was in bed
|
|
watching lightning flash in the eastern midnight sky. I was damp; my
|
|
exposed flesh clung to the sheets, and long pools of moisture gathered
|
|
in the creases of my skin. The wind gusted, steadily bringing the
|
|
storm closer. It shook the leaves in the trees and whistled and moaned
|
|
around the corners of the house.
|
|
|
|
I felt sweat collecting under my eyes and tasted salt against my lips
|
|
as wetness gathered on my face. The air in my room was heavy and moist
|
|
and the rattling fan on the dresser pressed it into me like a damp
|
|
towel.
|
|
|
|
My thoughts were of Donna. They were the kinds of thoughts that are
|
|
never mentioned in daytime. How pathetic. Lying in bed enjoying
|
|
memories of sex with a woman I couldn't call my own. Not just the
|
|
woman, but the memories themselves.
|
|
|
|
All the past came back to me, faces of girls I never dared speak to,
|
|
and the rejections of those I did. In comics, sometimes there are
|
|
drawings of the hero surrounded by all the villains he's fought. I was
|
|
in the center of a circle comprised of Mary, Janet, Pam, and Cindy.
|
|
|
|
I thought long and hard in my seclusion, trying to grasp why I had to
|
|
endure such alienation. In the end the weather beat me again. It was
|
|
too hot to deny myself; I had been good long enough. With a storm
|
|
brewing in the east, and my skinny body pasted to the linen, I reached
|
|
out to Locklin's mind.
|
|
|
|
Ordinarily the transition to his experience was a smooth process.
|
|
Tonight, however, was different. Terrible. At first there was the
|
|
unpleasant sensation of biting tinfoil, then lots of little pinpricks,
|
|
an uncomfortable tingling that resembled a fever chill. Slowly, wave
|
|
after wave of some sort of horrible perception, a realization on
|
|
Locklin's part that so affected him it was transmitted almost as
|
|
physical pain. I have never been privy to his memory or his own view
|
|
of reality during our joinings, so I had no idea what was assaulting
|
|
him. I could only be aware, as always, of our immediate surroundings.
|
|
|
|
Locklin was crying. Crying and driving. It was raining and the water
|
|
rushed out of the sky in black, blinding waves. The car was moving
|
|
very fast, too fast for the road under such conditions. He was alone.
|
|
The sky lit up and for a moment became high noon tinged in eerie,
|
|
electric blue, then blackness swallowed us up again and the car
|
|
plummeted along into the evening. But the darkness outside could not
|
|
compare with the sort of shadow that was welling up in Locklin. The
|
|
pain he was enduring was gigantic, it loomed around my own
|
|
consciousness, looking for a way in, seeking to consume any
|
|
intelligence it found.
|
|
|
|
The road was unfamiliar, and the speedometer needled higher and
|
|
faster. The engine was whining, straining against the overdrive. The
|
|
rubber blades couldn't clear the glass fast enough; the road was a
|
|
flashing, twisted blur.
|
|
|
|
"Get out of my head!" I heard him say.
|
|
|
|
I was frozen. He said, "Get out, bitch!"
|
|
|
|
What in the world was he talking about?
|
|
|
|
The tears came faster now, his vision was gone. He mashed the
|
|
accelerator to the floor, and I felt the tires break loose from the
|
|
slick blacktop. Locklin took his hands off the wheel and covered his
|
|
head. The vehicle seemed airborne, it tilted and the wet, flashing
|
|
world turned sideways. I felt his throat constrict as I left him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
It was a hot summer, much like the one in which Locklin died. Years
|
|
have passed since that night, many things have changed, and many
|
|
remained the same. Seated on the front steps I looked up at the stars,
|
|
then down at the highway, comparing the still lights above with the
|
|
rambling glitter below.
|
|
|
|
My last conversation with Donna was at Locklin's funeral. I recall
|
|
the day being sun warmed and pleasant, a comfortable environment
|
|
oblivious to suffering.
|
|
|
|
The preacher said a few words. It was very generic, since I don't
|
|
think he knew anything about Locklin. But then neither did I, really.
|
|
|
|
After the service, Donna and I walked towards our respective cars.
|
|
Mine was not near hers but I walked beside her anyway. "If there's
|
|
anything I can do for you. . ." I said. She walked very carefully over
|
|
the grass and occasional stranger, "No, but thank you."
|
|
|
|
She seemed very controlled, very calm. I certainly didn't have the
|
|
right to ask what she thought had happened, let alone explain that I
|
|
had been present. There was so much that I wanted to say, but all I
|
|
could finally bring to her was the only thing I was certain of.
|
|
|
|
"I want you to know he loved you," I told her.
|
|
|
|
"I know he loved me," she answered, and her voice had a trace of
|
|
regret as she added, "Wouldn't it be nice if that were all it took?"
|
|
And she smiled at me, not a happy smile, but a face that seemed to say
|
|
other days were coming, and these days did not stop or wait.
|
|
|
|
She said goodbye and drove away.
|
|
|
|
I never saw her again.
|
|
|
|
The only conclusion I ever came to was the result of thinking about
|
|
it over and over on nights just like this.
|
|
|
|
It's quite possible that we forget something about ourselves: In the
|
|
beginning we are born alone, in the end we die alone, and in the
|
|
interim, ultimately, no matter who we love, or who might love us, we
|
|
must live alone.
|
|
|
|
I'm not sure, but maybe Donna always knew this. I think most of us
|
|
have to work on it.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
ABOUT THE AUTHORS, VOLUME 1 ISSUE 3, TMR
|
|
|
|
o Dror Abend (bc05323%bingvaxa.bitnet@cunyvm.cuny.edu) is a graduate
|
|
student of English at New York State University at Binghamton. He
|
|
writes poetry and engages in creative criticism.
|
|
|
|
o Magnus Y. Alvestad (magnus@ii.uib.no) is a student, consultant and
|
|
poet in Bergen, Norway.
|
|
|
|
o Leah Cole (colel@alleg.edu) is a first year student at Allegheny
|
|
College in Meadville, PA. She plans on majoring in English and
|
|
minoring in German, with a concentration of double teaching
|
|
certification. Her ultimate goal: To get a job in a wealthy school
|
|
district (ha) and wear her birkenstocks to work.
|
|
|
|
o Leonard S. Edgerly (edgerly@ng.kne.com) is a poet and corporate
|
|
executive who lives in Casper, Wyoming. He has poems published or
|
|
forthcoming in _Amelia_, _Owen Wister Review_, and _Visions of
|
|
Wyoming_. He has published a chapbook titled _Disputed Territory_.
|
|
|
|
o Robert A. Fulkerson (Co-Editor, rfulk@creighton.edu) just finished
|
|
his first year of graduate school. He will soon graduate from another
|
|
school, that of bachelorhood, when he marries Kris Kalil on July 1,
|
|
1994.
|
|
|
|
o Mike Gates (ReadRoom Layout Designer, tsmwg@alaska.edu) is a
|
|
cyberholic who runs a small BBS in Ketchikan, Alaska. Mike is a closet
|
|
writer who sells explosives for a living (really!) and has a humming
|
|
room full of computers in a house he shares with his wife and two
|
|
infant daughters.
|
|
|
|
o Christopher Jacques Hoover (choover@usd.edu), known in certain
|
|
Morponian circles as Shadowspawn, is a network coordinator at the
|
|
University of South Dakota. His poetry and short fiction have
|
|
previously appeared in _The Longneck_, an annual publication of the
|
|
Northbank Writers Group in his home town of Vermillion (e-mail him for
|
|
details). He hasn't written anything about cows yet, but does own a
|
|
really cool handmade necktie with holsteins on a red background.
|
|
|
|
o Kris M. Kalil (Proofreader, kkalil@creighton.edu), a graduate
|
|
student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, is eagerly anticipating
|
|
her marriage to Robert Fulkerson on July 1st--a mere 5.5 weeks away!
|
|
|
|
o Tuomas Kilpi (tkilpi@cc.helsinki.fi) is currently studying
|
|
philosophy at the University of Helsinki. He also edits a small press
|
|
journal that deals with everything from comix to Bach. So far he has
|
|
written four published books and a fifth is on the way.
|
|
|
|
o Byron Lanning (bjlanning@delphi.com) lives in Missouri. He is
|
|
working on a script for an interactive CD ROM and a collection of
|
|
humor, which includes the story _Death of a Giant Jack Rabbit Rodeo
|
|
Star_. His story, _Oh Bean Curd!_, appeared in Volume 1, Issue 1.
|
|
|
|
o James Lewis (James_Lewis@mindlink.bc.ca) grew up in Vancouver, B.C.
|
|
and has lived there all his life. He worked for years as a structural
|
|
ironworker, but hasn't worked much recently, so he bought a suit and
|
|
is looking at being a salesman. He lives with his wife and their baby.
|
|
|
|
o Jerome Mandel (jerome@ccsg.tau.ac.il) is a professor of English at
|
|
Tel Aviv University. Although primarily a medievalist (his most recent
|
|
book is _Geoffrey Chaucer: Building the Fragments of the Canterbury
|
|
Tales_) he has also published on Shakespeare, Fielding, Lawrence,
|
|
Joyce, Fitzgerald, and Houseman as well as short stories in American
|
|
and Israeli magazines.
|
|
|
|
o Matthew Mason (Co-Editor, mtmason@ucdavis.edu) eater of many bagels,
|
|
is currently putting the finishing touches on his master's thesis of
|
|
poetry now titled _The Thin Line of What I Know_. He just received the
|
|
Celeste Turner Wright Award for Poetry from UC Davis but hasn't let
|
|
this go to his head (yah, right).
|
|
|
|
o J.D. Rummel (rummel@phoenix.creighton.edu) is a mysterious figure
|
|
who seeks after the truth and has sworn to use his great powers only
|
|
for good. Or at least he'd like to be. His story, _Frozen With a
|
|
Stranger in the Park_ appeared in Volume 1, Issue 1. Other stories of
|
|
his can be found on his personal World Wide Web page at
|
|
http://phoenix.creighton.edu/~rummel/.
|
|
|
|
o Elizabeth A. Simmons (PostScript Editor, esimmons@usd.edu) is a
|
|
graphic artist and editorial assistant living in Vermillion, SD. She
|
|
designs advertising layouts, posters and logos for clients as far away
|
|
as Washington state. Her publications include _Wildlife on the
|
|
Cheyenne River and Lower Brule Sioux Reservations_, two U.S. history
|
|
texts (currently being published by Harcourt-Brace), _History of Bon
|
|
Homme County_, the new format for _Schatzkammer_ (an international
|
|
journal for German teachers), cover art for numerous locally published
|
|
textbooks, and far too many pending projects. She usually wakes up
|
|
before her husband, Chris.
|
|
|
|
o John Tarver (tortorsen@aol.com) practices administrative law in
|
|
Baton Rouge, LA.
|
|
|
|
o Bryan Thomas (ez006593@bullwinkle.ucdavis.edu) is a third-year
|
|
student at UC Davis and is a victim of the 'i' for an 'I' syndrome,
|
|
afflicting those habituated to the
|
|
real-time-stream-of-consciousness-ness of the teleconference. He is
|
|
currently paralyzed by bliss, unable to write poetry.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
IN THEIR OWN WORDS
|
|
|
|
o _Leaving Costa Rica Before the Election_ by Leonard S. Edgerly
|
|
"[The Costa Rica poem] was inspired by the recent election
|
|
campaign, which sent colorful flags of the two major parties
|
|
racing through the streets when my wife I vacationed there in
|
|
January."
|
|
|
|
o _Pederast_ by Bryan Thomas
|
|
"_Pederast_ was written 12-15-93, and is very much a dialogue
|
|
between the poet and himself about the forcible removal of
|
|
guilt. I actually spoke a few of the lines aloud as I typed
|
|
them, and it's still a frighteningly vertiginous read for me."
|
|
|
|
o _Lorelei Adams_ by Jerome Mandel
|
|
"I attend a writing class with some fine Israeli writers and
|
|
the novelist Chayyim Zeldis. I had just finished two unworldly
|
|
stories, with time-slips and the impossible, and then started
|
|
this with the third sentence. As I worked on it, adding the
|
|
accident and manipulating the language, it took the shape of a
|
|
multiple-resurrection story. Just before I read it to the
|
|
group, one member told an anecdote of a friend who carried on a
|
|
conversation with her dead husband. Felt damn silly."
|
|
|
|
o _Driving in Amahrica_ by James Lewis
|
|
"I seldom take photographs, so this poem, I suppose, is
|
|
composed of word-graphs from a road trip through the Southwest
|
|
US. I did a lot of work with a musician and produced a poetry &
|
|
drums show at the Vancouver Fringe Festival in '92. We used a
|
|
hip hop beat in the background, and I just 'drove' through the
|
|
poem, keeping up a steady fast pace in the reading of it."
|
|
|
|
o _Untitled_ by Leah Cole
|
|
Leah visited Dachau several summers ago. Her interest in the
|
|
Shoa has continued throughout high school. She was able to
|
|
visit the Holocaust Museum in Washinton, D.C., earlier in the
|
|
spring. Much of what she experienced both connected with her
|
|
visit to Dachau and a later trip to the seige-scarred city of
|
|
St. Petersburg. Images haunted her until she trapped them on
|
|
paper. This poem is the result.
|
|
|
|
o _SuperMenu_ by Leonard S. Edgerly
|
|
"My daughter is a freshman at Brown, where my search for the
|
|
word 'poetry' sparked musings. What if I had majored in poetry
|
|
at Harvard instead of heading for business, what if I were in
|
|
college now?"
|
|
|
|
o _Death of a Giant Jack Rabbit Rodeo Star_ by Byron Lanning
|
|
"The image of a giant jack rabbit ridden by a cowboy entered my
|
|
head. At first, I thought I had a religious vision. However,
|
|
after careful research, picking through a myriad of religious
|
|
texts from the _Kabbala_ to _The Bhagavad-Gita_ to Hans Kung's
|
|
_On Being a Christian_, I could find no religion based on giant
|
|
jack rabbits. So I wrote a story with them in it.
|
|
|
|
o _Untitled_ by Magnus Y. Alvestad
|
|
"I wrote this little poem a year or so ago because there wasn't
|
|
anything else I could do for that sad girl. Maybe one day I'll
|
|
show it to her."
|
|
|
|
o _Names_ by Tuomas Kilpi
|
|
"I'm just trying to see if I could actually write poetry and
|
|
prose in English (which has been my primary language for about
|
|
ten years as far as reading is concerned). I enjoy the ability
|
|
to create tense images that just would not work in my native
|
|
language, Finnish. I tried to create a vivid poem - kind of 24
|
|
hours of CNN trashed into five seconds..."
|
|
|
|
o _Open the Day_ by Christopher Jacques Hoover
|
|
"Sometimes, when I tell my wife I love her and she happens to
|
|
be in a perverse mood, she'll ask 'why?' The answer that
|
|
sometimes feels the closest to the truth is simply 'because of
|
|
the way it feels to wake up with you.' 'Open the Day' is my
|
|
attempt to put that feeling into a poem. My wife maintains that
|
|
it must be fiction, because 'he never wakes up first.' Go
|
|
figure."
|
|
|
|
o _What Donna Knew_ by J.D. Rummel
|
|
"_Donna_ was inspired by two circumstances. I used to work with
|
|
this nice guy who felt very deeply for this exceptional woman
|
|
who was absolutely out of his league. Two, I was confounded by
|
|
a physical attraction for a woman that I found personally very
|
|
dull. Despite the fact that we could never have a meaningful
|
|
discussion, I felt aroused in her presence. So, one day, as her
|
|
significant other was dropping her off at work, I looked at him
|
|
and wondered what it would be like to be in his head while they
|
|
did the nasty. Those who wish to, can send "get help" hate mail
|
|
to: rummel@phoenix.creighton.edu"
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
ISRAELI POET TRAVELING LECTURE SERIES
|
|
|
|
The Israeli Consulate in New York is sponsoring a traveling lecture
|
|
series of six significant Israeli Poets. If you or your university are
|
|
interested in more details regarding this series, please write to Dror
|
|
Abend at E-Mail: BC05323@BINGVAXA.bitnet@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU or Post
|
|
Mail:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Binghamton University
|
|
Box 10355
|
|
Binghamton NY, 13902-6010
|
|
Tel 1-607-777-7762
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
Where to Find _The Morpo Review_
|
|
|
|
Current and past issues of _TMR_ can be located and obtained via the
|
|
following means:
|
|
|
|
o Interactive Methods:
|
|
The following methods of accessing _TMR_ allow you to
|
|
interactively pick and choose what you want to read. WWW and
|
|
ReadRoom support are the most interactive, allowing you to
|
|
select individual pieces to read. Gopher access simply provides
|
|
access to _TMR_ as one whole issue.
|
|
|
|
o Via the World Wide Web.
|
|
Point your WWW browswer to:
|
|
http://morpo.creighton.edu/morpo/
|
|
|
|
o Via Gopher.
|
|
Just point your Gopher client to one of the following
|
|
sites:
|
|
morpo.creighton.edu in /The Morpo Review
|
|
ftp.etext.org in /Zines/Morpo.Review
|
|
|
|
o Via the following Bulletin Board Systems:
|
|
|
|
The Outlands (Ketchikan, Alaska, USA)
|
|
+1 907-247-4733, +1 907-225-1219, +1 907-225-1220.
|
|
_The Outlands_ is the home BBS system for the
|
|
ReadRoom BBS Door format. You can download the
|
|
IBM-PC/DOS ReadRoom version here.
|
|
|
|
o Semi-interactive methods:
|
|
You can grab the full text of past issues from the following sites.
|
|
|
|
o Via Anonymous FTP.
|
|
- Just point your FTP client to ftp.etext.org in
|
|
/pub/Zines/Morpo.Review
|
|
- You can also use morpo.creighton.edu in any of
|
|
the following directories:
|
|
/pub/morpo/ascii for ASCII versions
|
|
/pub/morpo/dos for Reading Room formatted versions
|
|
/pub/morpo/ps for PostScript
|
|
|
|
o Via Electronic Mail Server.
|
|
Send the message "get morpo morpo.index" to
|
|
lists@morpo.creighton.edu and you will receive instructions
|
|
on how to use our email archive server to retrieve ASCII
|
|
versions of _The Morpo Review_.
|
|
|
|
o Via America Online
|
|
Just use Keyword: PDA and then select Palmtop Paperbacks/
|
|
Electronic Articles and Newsletters. You can find the
|
|
DOS-based ReadRoom version here, also.
|
|
|
|
o Subscriptions:
|
|
You can obtain an electronic mail subscription and have the
|
|
full ASCII version of _TMR_ arrive automatically in your e-mail
|
|
box when it is released to the public. Send Internet mail with
|
|
a subject of "Moo!" (or some variation thereof) to
|
|
morpo-request@morpo.creighton.edu and you will be added to
|
|
the distribution list. There are currently 238 world-wide
|
|
subscribers.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
Addresses for _The Morpo Review_
|
|
|
|
rfulk@creighton.edu . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert Fulkerson, Co-Editor
|
|
mtmason@ucdavis.edu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matthew Mason, Co-Editor
|
|
|
|
esimmons@usd.edu . . . . . . . . . . Elizabeth Simmons, PostScript Editor
|
|
kkalil@creighton.edu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kris Kalil, Proofreader
|
|
tsmwg@alaska.edu . . . . . . . . . . Mike Gates, ReadRoom Layout Designer
|
|
|
|
morpo-submissions@morpo.creighton.edu . Submissions to _The Morpo Review_
|
|
morpo-request@morpo.creighton.edu . . . Requests for E-Mail subscriptions
|
|
morpo-comments@morpo.creighton.edu . . . Comments about _The Morpo Review_
|
|
morpo-editors@morpo.creighton.edu . . . . . Reach all the editors at once
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
Submit to _The Morpo Review_
|
|
|
|
What kind of work do we want? How about Sonnets to Captain
|
|
Kangaroo, free-verse ruminations comparing plastic lawn ornaments to _Love
|
|
Boat_ or nearly anything with cows in it. No, not cute, Smurfy little "ha
|
|
ha" ditties--back reality into a corner and snarl! Some good examples are
|
|
"Oatmeal" by Galway Kinnell, "A Supermarket In California" by Allen
|
|
Ginsberg, or the 6th section of Wallace Stevens' "Six Significant
|
|
Landscapes."
|
|
|
|
But, hey, if this makes little or no sense, just send us good stuff;
|
|
if we like it, we'll print it, even if it's nothing close to the above
|
|
description of what we want (life's like that at times). Just send us
|
|
good stuff, get published, and impress your peers and neighbors.
|
|
|
|
So send us your unhinged poetry, prose and essay contemplations at
|
|
|
|
morpo-submissions@morpo.creighton.edu
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
Our next issue will be available around August 15, 1994.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
|
|
|