Category Archives: Uncategorized

Newsday Tuesday

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  • naming plants in the garden: I can’t get the idea of having a moon flower garden out of my head.  In the book, the boyfriend says, “Why would you want to grow flowers in the dark when no one can see them?”  I can think of about a thousand little secrets why.
  • type of narrator in your high school english class look at mr. killian’s face. decide faces are important. write a villanelle about pores. struggle. write a sonn...: This is so long it had dot, dot, dot in my search terms.  I feel like this is my life right now except I don’t wear tweed like Mr. Killian and I’m the proud owner of femininity.
  • jessica rabbit crotch: Who searches cartoon crotches?  You couldn’t have used a prettier word? Why.  Why, I ask.

Books News:


“In the Skin of a Lion” You Are a Red-Lipped Hound

The first sentence of every novel should be: “Trust me, this will take time but there is order here, very faint, very human.”

Screen shot 2013-05-10 at 9.59.06 PMYou know it’s bad when you’re sticky-noting the white brim of library book pages.  The book in its plastic trench and my pink hang-nails hanging out.

With Michael Ondaatje, I would say most readers have a love/hate relationship.  His books are always at the pace of which you would suck and teethe a wheat pick.  By the end you feel thankful that you made it through the heap and somehow it was worth it.  There’s a twinge of you in every book he writes.  Somehow he knows just what to write to make each reader feel like they’ve been touched in the shadows.  I started with Ondaatje for The English Patient which is a hell of a book.  There are no other words for it.  It was dark, but beautiful and chaotic, but quiet, and sensitive, but brutish.  It was just this book of binaries that makes the reader feel like they’ve just been strangled.

In the Skin of a Lion – Michael Ondaatje

I’m not sure why I thought, “Yes, let’s do Ondaatje again” when I was in the library.  The English Patient was a very difficult read.  I didn’t particularly like the time I spent with it, but afterwords I felt like I needed it.  I went originally to get a volunteer application for this summer and happened to walk through…oops, every isle of the fiction section and pull out numerous books, placing them back almost-correctly.  If I don’t leave blank space when I pull it down to read a page, there’s no hope for my broken dewey decimal heart to put the book in the right place.

It must have been the cover.  It has two nude people in a bed, but there’s cooled coffee on the table behind them, each cup holding a spoon.  It’s as if the passion was too much, but it’s not erotica.  The people are entwined in the position of dreaming sleep.

I don’t regret it.  I sat here all night listening to Hoarders in the background, finishing off this book about the heat of thievery and matters of the heart.  Michael Ondaatje seems to weave the  mundane and the delicious so well in his stories.

A heron stretching his head further underwater, the eyes open within the cold flow, open for the fish that could be then raised into the air and dropped moving in the tunnel of the heron’s blue throat.

While herons are an easy bird to find majestic because as they grow older, they grow beards, it’s just one of the most beautiful eating images that I’ve ever read.  He makes me want to plunge my head into creek water.  The novel is all about fishing and water as well.  The reader must take the oars and paddle out to the center of the lake leaving the hook in the poetic glory of the words and wait for sudden feeling.  As a reader you want to keep swimming, but not because the pace is quick or it’s an easy-read but because there’s mystery within the story without it being a detective novel.

Strachan Avenue storm sewer, 1913 @ City of Toronto Archives

At the heart of the novel is one man’s path at finding himself.  It begins and ends with Patrick in the car with his daughter.  They have awoken in the middle of the night to drive cross-country and are telling stories.  Like any good road trip, the stories are fantastic, but believable.  They feel like memories that are passed down by generations.  Stories you’ve heard so much from your mother, from her mother’s mother, that you start to believe them as your own.  Of course it’s true that your grandfather fought a gang of Italians in WWII and because of that came back to the Ford Plant and Friday night’s cashed checks at the bar.

These are the stories that people carry.  They aren’t legends, but they’re the climbing branches of the family tree.  How will we know what we are without these memories?  I’ve asked this before.  They may be painted with the names of different countries, or surrounded by water, but they are our own memories and we raise them as our own.

When I read Philip Roth, I was mesmerized by the glove terminology of the factory.  When I read Ondaatje, I was mesmerized by the way things were built and created in the early 20th century.  Into the start of the novel, men carry steamed breath in the winter and ax’s to load timber.  They don’t know where they are, but it is winter and they are cutting lumber for the owners.  A father and son watch them walk from their bunkhouses to the steep woods of pine trees and in the end the father goes to work for the company.  He begins by building explosives to get trunks from piling up in the river and creating a dam.  The way this technology is told; how the father builds the explosives, the way the trunk’s swing into the air and scar the banks of the river.  I never thought I would be interested in that.

Construction Workers, Bloor Street Viaduct @ City of Toronto Archives

He describes building a bridge and the way the men ride ropes down to their terminal to cement or harness.  How a water viaduct is built by the hands of displaced men and history gives its ownership to the bulbous rich who name it and put up the money.  There’s the feldspar mines, and the idea that thieves are made for love.  I didn’t even know what feldspar was before reading this book and yet it sits in the soft white of my mother’s china cabinet.

Kate’s Literary Tour of Canada. Bloor Street Viaduct

Part of the tension in this novel is the pounding uprising of the working-class immigrants of Toronto, Canada.  This is going to make me seem really dumb, but I always assumed Canada was a country of freedom from the beginning.  History is told in the eyes of the winner and I never thought that the immigrant experience in Canada could be so unfair.  The rich owner, Harris has been using Macedonian’s from all over the city to fix the darkest corners of his dream architecture.  He doesn’t lift a finger from his fat office, but watches men dipped under ground into the caves of feldspar.  Men are expected to live with the duty of near-death.  Some work at the tannery factory and dip themselves in dye, so fully, just for a dollar-a-day.  They don’t last more than six months ever says the author.  Of course, dyed to their necks, becoming wholly new everyday.  Going from a father or an important family gentlemen to a man dipped in color for the pocket watch of a businessman.  It’s strange the way the world divides people, but it must in the way it runs.  This novel had me from the moment a blurred nun is saved by a viaduct worker after slipping off the edge of the bridge.  His arm out of socket, his harness tight-roped at the lip of the bridge, cradling the woman in the brown habit from certain death.

Slant of Moon on a Lake

There’s a way that authors can write about things that we just would never think about.  Ondaatje must sit in the cubicle of a library and wind his way through history books in order to write the intricacies of architecture.  Somehow, mines of feldspar and the lowering of donkeys into the darkness by harness and whines becomes a metaphor for strength.  I just love the way that everything small connects to the bigger picture until again we are riding in a car through the night with a father and daughter who are telling each other the only stories a father and daughter can share, those of memory.  Whether that memory is true, or half-true, or not true at all, it’s a memory that our brains have guarded.  A memory like the slant of moon on a lake, the only pore for a late-night writer’s hand.


Newsday Tue Days Late

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Favorite Search Terms:

  • parody rhyming book about shoe laces and velcro and library books: My nephew totally needs a book to teach him how to tie his shoes. YES.
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  • library stack bowel movement: Usually I get REALLY WEIRD bowel movement searches, but this one just made me laugh.
  • “emma bolden” -emmabolden.com: People google you, lady.  People are googling YOU.
  • minecraft instructionals: ERMAHGERD MINECRAFT!

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Newsday Tuesday

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Favorite Search Terms:

  • on the moon we have everything lettuce and pumpkin pie quote pg#: I’m obsessed with this book and I feel that my mom would definitely live on the moon.
  • slam poetry on self respect: Look at Katie Makkai “Pretty”
  • women fart more than men: A good dose of potty talk for the bowel movement viewers of this blog.  Make sure you reenact the moment by using your mouth to create a voice for the flatulence.

Book News:


Newsday Tuesday

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  • “we have always lived in the castle” nailing the book and the pocket watch: I just wonder if this person is constructing a shrine….or making a cake.
  • dr. seuss book spines: Color-up your library!

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Newsday Tuesday

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  • when women were birds negative review: This does not exist.  Stop looking.
  • is it insane to post a 3 paragraph response on facebook: Yes, yes it is.  If you have friends that you have to write a 3-paragraph post to, then you should delete that person.  I don’t have a facebook, but once I had a friend who decided she was going to post a science video (that wasn’t actually science) saying that women on birth control are more promiscuous AND choose the wrong guys.  I then progressed to delete her with a very hard click, a pounding click if you will, and went about my normal day. 

Book News:


“…using his sharpie tip writing, ‘I was here.”

Anis Mojgani

I, like a lot of beating-hearted teenagers, first fell in love with Anis Mojgani over Shake the Dust.  I wanted to “brush my shoulders off,” peel the wane of fluff from my legs and arms, let the old skin flake and shed so I could come back a chameleon, and “walk into it.”  I was a teenager then, or maybe I was in college.  Maybe I was a college teenager.

I needed someone to tell me that life wasn’t all lollipops and raindrops, but instead give me the real struggle of it.  It didn’t happen throughout my high school literature circuit so I began looking to poems somewhere between not getting out of bed for Pre-Calc and changing my major from religious studies to creative writing.  Somewhere on the in-between, probably lying in bed because I did that for most of my freshman year, I confused a perfect world with my world.  I thought when you made silly faces at boys in class, it wouldn’t lead to cheating on your back-home boyfriend.  I thought that people didn’t backstab each other, that they loved one another truly when they said, “this is a commitment.”  I believed my friends partook in recreational drug-use, but none of that back-shed-lab stuff.  I believed in the majority good, the hearts of the people I met and the friendly faces that passed me on the all-brick campus where I had my first writing lesson:  No one wants to hear about the good stuff, and no one wants to be entertained by something perfect.

“This is bullshit.”  I remember distinctly when Allison said this to my fiction workshop.

Why can’t we write about happiness.  Why does shit always have to be dark or go dark.  How does darkness just come, just show up on a doorstep and expect to be let in because what else can you possibly do when half the world is bearded in it.  There are forests of it, holes of it, religious movements dedicated to it, gangs of starships who have gone to its side and yet we expect to somehow fight it off and let the good triumph.  Always, always over evil.  What we forget is this binary.  This halfness of the world.  When we’ve had winter, we know spring is coming.  When we have light, we know the moon will skim the sky like a mini-skirt and leave us in the dark.  I wish there was a color for it, I wish I could say “leave us in the black” but that’s not even right.  It’s like a steeped gray.  It comes. Everytime.

Song From Under the River by Anis Mojgani

That’s what Anis Mojgani knows about the world.   When I saw his book of poetry, Songs from Under the River, years of poetry collected, up on NetGalley, my breath caught.  I may have spit up something I was drinking.  Here’s what I had been waiting for.  This selection of poetry, ending of course in one of my favorite slam poems ever, Shake the Dust.  Those who are not familiar, need to immediately watch the video.  It’s a poem that makes you want to pray, even if you’ve never believed in anything greater than yourself.  Then, you pray for yourself, you pray by yourself, you pray with yourself.  You fold your hands together like a little drummer boy and you lean your head towards your feet and you become humble to the words coming out of this man’s swollen mouth.  So full of words, it’s buoyant.

I thought Shake the Dust was his best.  I thought he gave it as a gift to the teenage world.  With all these hormones, all this carrying-on, all this switchback, where’s the poem for us.  It’s here in these words of half-God, half-growing pains.  That’s not it though,  Shake the Dust isn’t all he whispered into the darkness.  There’s so much more to Anis Mojgani as seen in Songs from Under the River.  It made me want to eat my ipad it was so delicious on my tongue.  I would read it into the ferns on my porch where a Robin has warmed eggs in the hanging pot of it.

Songs from Under the River is a fascinating collection of new-age poetry, slam-poetry and rambling.  I think sometimes it’s easy to consider rambling, poetry,  especially if it’s someone you respect as a poet, but it’s just not.  You can’t ramble your way through a poem.  Poetry is a thing that needs specific words.  That’s why I believe that once you reach poet status, you have reached the highest level of writing.  It’s just too hard to get perfect.  Your word choice has to be impeccable and even after you publish that 12-line, succinct, beautiful little capsule, you’ll find that one word that’s off.  A poem is one of the hardest things to get right.

National Poetry Month Poster 2013

I think Anis Mojgani has some definite winners in his collection with lines like:

Know this: my heart was too big or my body so I let it go.  And most days, this world has thinned me to the point where I am just another cloud forgetting another flock of swans — having shaved off so many of my corners that I have flet at home only in the shape of a ball, bending myself so far backwards that the song of my mother believed I was returning home.  But believe me when I tell you my soul somehow still squeezes into narrow spaces. – Closer

Cussing doesn’t come from a lack of vocabulary–I know all the other words.  None of them speak the same language that my fucking heart does. – On the day his son was born the astronomer screamed out his window

Come Closer – Anis Mojgani

(5) I was never a broken man/but I too know how to pick the pieces/ up.  Some days the pieces are all teeth/ pulled from the mouths of children.  Some days they are simply books/ searching for a shelf.  (6) I have carved shelves out of my heart/ to try and bring an order to things. All/ it did was make space.

(10) Some ladies’ legs are shaped like/ confessionals/ and some confessionals are built like/ the bows of burning boats.  Speaking/ through both my body caught fire like/ everything else. – 17 books

All the flowers have the same name.  They all grow in the direction of her mother’s house. – Love is Not a Science

A Paixão Segundo N.A.B. | via Tumblr auf We Heart It.

Sometimes he does fall into the category of unedited.  Sometimes you want something to be a poem so badly, and yet it’s just not there yet.  I think his poems didn’t make sense because they weren’t edited correctly.  It’s a myth that poetry isn’t supposed to make sense.  Poetry should make sense in the deepest recesses of your soul, even if it’s so specifically your story and your experience, it should matter to the world.  That’s why poetry works, it takes the most true happening of one person and makes it general, worldly, international.  My favorite poetryism is from Joe Millar.  Joe says when you go to the poetry store, you don’t look for these inflated academic words like however, rudimentary, reveal, assessed, constructed, objective, but words like hairbrush, vein, dogwood bud, wet, chalk.  There are other words the poetry bookstore doesn’t sell: love, hate, mad, angry, sentimental, because in poetry you’re supposed to make us feel those words.  It’s the great fictionism: show don’t tell, but in even tighter detail.

I would be lying if I said I wasn’t inspired by this book and I would be lying if I said every poem in it is perfect.  There is some unbreakable writing in this book, lines that I want to etch into a tree.  (Line from Anis: “but the initials carved that break the trunk open the tree flaunting its body”).

There were moments when I almost cried because something he wrote on the page was so beautiful that it hurt and helped at the same time.  However, some things could be parred down, some poems could be taken from the mind and then worked into real things that live on the page, instead of a reader just being confused at what Anis thinks about during his writing hours.  It’s an honest collection of poems and it’s for the individual with secrets; both filled with anger and just quiet little ones that we haven’t found a way to give up yet, or speak up.

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Sometimes, as writers, we look at something and say, yes, this makes perfect sense.  This is exactly how you would describe a…fist fight, or a break-up, or a wedding.  And then, when the reader gets to the page, it’s just a swan’s feather, or the gully of the Grand Canyon, or just something that makes no sense to anyone else.  It’s frustrating and is really just a call-out for better editing and more early morning writing sessions.  I’m not knocking Mojgani by any means because he is impeccable and he made a writing career from a college dorm room.

I encourage everyone to live a moment in the church of themselves, that small sanctuary we keep just below our rib cage and just above our stomach and read this poetry collection.  Spend time in the river water, don’t just dip your toes in, touch the bottom with your flattened palm.

Here is my new favorite slam poem of the moment:


Newsday Tuesday

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Favorite Search Terms:

  • lumberjack valentine: Somewhere out in the interwebs, there’s a girl who’s dating an alligator wrestler, or an Olympic weight-lifting champion, or a lumberjack.  The lumberjack’s girl wears plaid in her freetime and smells distinctly of burnt wood.
  • dress up poison ivy what every decision do you suggest any kids to do in nc is everything: I’m not sure this makes any sense at all, but thank you for using the google machine to write your life story, or a Halloween drunken memory.  Not quite sure which.
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Book News:


This is Not a Nice Review.

The Unchangeable Spots of Leopards by Kristopher Jansma

I abhor this book.  The only reason abhor isn’t in capitals is because I want you to know the quiet rage I feel towards the man who wrote this and the pretentious, gimmicky nonsense that this book became by the end.  If you don’t want to read a review filled with spewing rants, please just stop reading now.

The only reason another human being should pick up this book is to see a book within a book, or as an April Fool’s joke.  Give this one to someone you detest and tell them to live like the princess.  This is every experimental novel gone wrong.  You should not take me on a journey to every country under the sun just because your narrator can’t figure out who he is.   The travel throughout this book wasn’t justified at all.  It’s as if the author needed a reason to move this lonely boy throughout the world.

He must have thought, Hm, I’d like to write about Dubai, let me take him there next.  I know, he’ll have a student who offers him a delightful teaching professorship.  No, just no, Kristopher Jansma.  I know I’m a literature snob, and I loathed Goon Squad which everyone and their mother, including the Pulitzer committee adored, but seriously, is this what fiction is coming to?  Should I expect books that have no follow-through in the narrative.   Are there not expectations that a book has a solid cause and effect cycle even if I don’t agree with the cause and effect of it all (i.e. Harry Potter living in the final book)?  In Goon Squad, forty pages of powerpoint is not writing, that’s called forty pages of a powerpoint presentation, something I do infrequently for my students and I don’t want an author to do to me.  In The Unchangeable Spots of Leopards, two-hundred pages of just-so-so literary development isn’t enough to enhance the dangling characters.

While the characters are interesting and I find them somewhat tempting to read about it, they are filled with potholes of cliche. Puddles of cliche.  Mind-bombs of cliche.  Of course, Anton is a complete brown recluse of a writer hiding out in Iceland typing away a novel without any punctuation.  Until our author can quit a love that was never there to begin with, he can’t write his novel.  Why at the end, do we have to tie it all up with a nice little bow?  This boy from Airport Wing A writing a novel about all the experiences he has traveling on flights that his mother was once a hostess and inevitably used as a method to meet men and make her son.  I get the full circle, it didn’t need to be shoved in my face.  I also really didn’t appreciate the gimmick of having the book we’re reading be the book that the editor finds at the end and obviously publishes.  Whoever on Goodreads said this was such a new way of doing things, where have you been? Authors have been doing this for ages.  The book begins and ends and we discover, oh gee, that the book we’re reading was the book he was writing.  I wasn’t born yesterday, Jansma.

Of course, the unnamed main character finds his dream at the end and leaves it on the very table where he began the tale of losing his novels.  I wasn’t aware we needed that lovely little bow tied up at the end of our story.  I thought Eat, Pray, Love did enough of that.    Shoelace-perfect books are for girls who love when the princess falls for the prince and goes off into the sunset.  NOT for girls like me who think the princess has gone off to clean the kitchen of her throned prince.  We aren’t told what the princess does after marriage because of this: we make our own ideas, as readers, we’re a reliable sort.  We learn to read between the cracks that the author left.   In literary fiction, we don’t like these bows.  We want the gore and the pain and the raw affirmation that life is poetic, but hard as shit.

So… I’m sorry I’m the only one that feels this way, but absolutely not.  You may not gimmick your way into the literary folds of this universe.  I don’t care how many experiments you play on your reader, how many countries you don’t describe but somehow we end up in, or how many depressing conversations and drugs your characters take, I will never appreciate a book that can’t even take itself seriously.  How do you expect me to suspend relief through continents, narrative lines that are drug out, but never truly meaningful, and relationships that are painfully fake.  You can’t possibly expect me to just accept and hang on these experiments and cliches, right?

I am disappointed, sir.

Story of my life. Not for this book.

Side Note: The lovely and wonderful people at Penguin sent me this book as an advanced reader’s copy.  I will say that this is the first ARC I really did not adore by Penguin.  They usually send me fantastic literary ditties. I will never write a review just to get more advanced reader’s copies or to please the people at the top.  You will always get my most pure and honest thoughts.  It remains your choice whether you read this one or not and this is the opinion of a young adult woman who read this book while being rained-in on a camping trip.  Goodreads features other opinions here.

GIVEAWAY! The lovely people at Penguin also gave me the opportunity to have my first giveaway on my blog.  In honor of the new paperback cover of Glow by Jessica Maria Tuccelli, one of my readers will receive a free copy.  *SCREAMS OF GLEE*

To win the free copy, you must find a poem that uses the word “glow.”   I want to highlight some poetry for National Poetry Month.  The first reader to do this will win the free copy from Penguin.  Now, go on a poetry hunt!


Tell the Truth, but Tell it Slant.

The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien

I first came across The Things They Carried in a fiction class at NC State University.  While on book tour, Jill McCorkle had assigned us the title story for homework.  I read it thinking people can’t write fiction by writing lists.  As an avid list-maker at my ripe old age of twenty-five, this was a harsh critique I made.  I generalized war.  Having read the title story, I assumed that I had completed the book and didn’t have any other purpose of reading some hopeless war stories.  Some hopeless war stories, who do I think I am?  Truth is, I’m America.

Newspaper

We sit on subways, drive our cars with radio buzzing, read the newspaper, eat our bagels and our grits in the morning.  My mother oozes over the Newspaper, reads every word, every caption, sends me the uplifting pieces, cut-out haphazardly, by mail.   She might whisper, “oh, that’s awful” under her breath while my dad coats his cereal in blueberries and slices through a strawberry until the knife is just noting his finger.  I read these things about another seven soldiers killed by roadside bombs in Afghanistan or a tour guide who stepped on a field explosive and is living with one leg.  I don’t think about them afterwards unless I’m lying awake at night.  I don’t think about the burning feeling in the legs of soldiers who have walked miles and then are killed in a hum.  I might think about the mothers because those are people I know.  I know a mother, I know a sister waiting on a letter, a girlfriend waiting for a boy to return with a stiff cap and a smile that hides every single thing he just lived through, lived. through.

Rice Paddies in Vietnam

When I think about war, I just think about women sitting on balconies staring off into wheat fields waiting on men with coal faces to come humbly up the drive.  I think of gravel and dirt.  I think of Rosie the Riveter, more her headgear than her symbolism.  I don’t think about actual men fighting a war.  In fact, I’m not sure until I read this book that I had the capacity to think about much more than widows, letter-writing and the “pretty” of the Civil War.  When I think of war, I think of the Civil War because I live in the South.  I’m not sure why this is.  It’s like the South engrains that war into your head from a young age.  You see the ignorance of the rebel flag on the backs of muddin’ trucks.  It’s one of those “gotta live there things.”

This isn’t war.  Cassie’s head doesn’t always filter things together correctly.  War isn’t a pretty girl in a long dress writing a letter to Dear John on her porch.  It isn’t coaled-face men, sweaty men, men who have no history.

Baggage @ Tumblr

Tim O’Brien opened me up to my own history and my own small idea of the world with his book The Things They Carried.  And let me tell you, they carried a lot.  Girlfriends always joke that they have too much baggage for a new relationship, but this is not trivial.  In Vietnam, they carried letters (like I thought) to girls with Volleyball thighs, they carried guns that I can’t spell the name of, high school graduations, ideas about fleeing to Canada, pantyhose from their woman’s sock drawer, their father’s homemade Christmas cookies, the soaking smell of rice paddies, poetry, regret, the weight of their muscles, the heat and tension of no parades, no welcome, no cheer.  They carry this idea that they could die and that would be alright, or lonely, but not heartbreaking.

“They carried all the emotional baggage of men who might die.  Grief, terror, love, longing–these were intangibles, but the intangibles had their own mass and specific gravity, they had tangible weight.  They carried shameful memories.  They carried the common secret of cowardice barely restrained, the instinct to run or freeze or hide, and in many respects, that was the heaviest burden of all, for it could never be put down, it required perfect balance and perfect posture.”

I think just the title story is a testament to Tim O’Brien’s writing, but I’m not sure I can say I’m a real reader if I hadn’t read the entire book.  I’m not sure I could say I even had a glimmer of war knowledge if I hadn’t read the entire book.  Here I am teaching my students about WWII and I know nothing about the feelings of men in a foreign country lying together in the squeezed darkness, hearing music that doesn’t mellow, but explodes.

I don’t think I’m getting at the heart of this.

Letter @ Tumblr

This was one of the best books I’ve ever read.  I’m tired, I was on vacation, I was riding bikes along the restored shore of Bald Head Island.  Lounging in the sun after riding a golf cart 16 miles per hour down a hill.  There were chapels, and sunrise services, old men in penny loafers with golf bags slung over their shoulder and all I wanted to do was open the next page of The Things They Carried and walk into the sludge of Vietnam with Tim O’Brien.  I wanted to smell like shit, but feel it.  Sometimes in a world where everything is okay and beautiful, you need to read horror and misunderstanding to be able to feel it.  Don’t people always say, no one would like to read a happy story?  If all you’re living is a happy story, you’re doing it wrong.

I think this book touches the reader at the most tender moments.  At one point, a baby buffalo is brutally killed.  It’s strange how much those three paragraphs brought to life Vietnam for me.  I tell my students all the time about desensitization and effects of imprisonment, but this really sealed that for me.  Vietnam was a type of prison for these men.  Not only are the almost-memories,  in this book extraordinarily well-written, but the way it’s told is phenomenal.  At one point, there are notes about the soldier in one of the stories.  I was shocked at how true and not true the story was all at once.  Tim O’Brien says he told the story that way because the lie impacts more than the truth.  This is the truth, but it’s slant.  Tell the truth, tell it slant.  I heard that so many times in writing workshops.  This is both a war story and a love story, but it’s also stories about how to write stories.

You can tell a true war story if you just keep telling it.

Often in a true war story there is not even a point, or else the point doesn’t hit you until twenty years later, in your sleep, and you wake up and shake your wife and start telling the story to her, except when you get to the end you’ve forgotten the point again.  

It’s hard to believe in a story that doesn’t place you at the heart of the matter.  I cried over Kiowa, over his sunken boot and mud face.  I cried over Ted Lavender over and over because he kept appearing and then disappearing.  He kept dying, it kept repeating itself and blowing over until it was time for that memory to resurface.  The way this book is told is the way we remember.  I know my grandfather is dead, but I only think about it sometimes.  It resurfaces, it hurts the same every time, a thump of hurt just below my ribs in my not-quite stomach, a cramp of hurt.

Crying @ Tumblr

I understand why people write stories because of this book.  It isn’t because they have this deep need to write, it’s to write that girl they knew in fourth grade, but still cover her up at the same time.  You know, the writer, that she’s that girl in fourth grade with one crooked tooth and a monstrous yell when she ran across the bridge of the playground, but to your reader, she’s Karen, many years later, still crooked tooth, a bit of a snaggle at this point, and the yell is at her husband in the folds of their home together.  This is why people write, we can hide ourselves in the pages, but tell the truth.  We can be our whole selves in the halves of it.  Tim O’Brien gets this,  Tim O’Brien writes for the girls on vacation, the girls with chubby thighs and bike rides, the girls in high school who whisper their feelings into their pillows and dance when they get home before the rest of their family.  Just because their war stories, doesn’t mean they’re not our stories.

“In Airborne strike last week Vietnamese scramble for American H-21 helicopters landing to ferry them into action near Saigon. The two-day action was successful.”

How does a girl in North Carolina cry over a passage written about a group of men with shells in their pockets and grenade tips in their teeth?  I’m not even a girl who typically reads the true grit of war story.  I’m a girl who reads about everything surrounding a war.  Women crying into their vanities, girls not allowed to go to school for fear of gun blasts, couples in hiding, farmers giving their rotting vegetables to passerby’s, and every store is out of grocery, there is no milk, rations come in boxes.  Folded inside a small envelope is everything your family is able to eat that month, four mouths to feed and one tugging at your skirt, dirt under his fingernails, bare-feet in the burnt grass.  This is the war I know, everyone else’s imagination of war.  Not the actual war.  Not men in fatigues and helmets.  Not grime, or wounds, or how it takes three packages and nine men to deliver a Kellogg’s box to the front.  Not how killing a baby buffalo creates puffs of gun smoke that crack the ground open and lets it fester.


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