Meg Tuite

FAMILY EXTRAVAGANZA

By Meg Tuite

What is it that struggled within my oversized head that made my body nothing more than transport apparatus beneath it? The legs moved when expected, as did the arms, but the face twitched as fast as a hummingbird swilling across the air toward sugar water and the eyes tracked horizons never met.

“So how’s your job?” my mom asked. She and I both knew the Colonel had dethroned me and absconded with my cap after I saw rats masquerading as chicken in every deep-fried basket that squealed up at me with those tails in full-salute giving me the lowdown on what was what. Amazingly, they did hire me back after a week of finding no one to replace me. “I’m on to you,” the manager, Pete, said as he stared at my breasts. Few men ever looked at my face.

“I think I’m getting a promotion soon,” I answered.

“Oh, honey, you are, with a whisper of your uncle’s ass, ‘a Broadway kind of girl.’ A tribute to the Klonstein family,” Mom said as she clapped her hands and bowed to me.

My face trilled across itself like a piano player revamping the keyboard. She’d been telling me that forever, and I still didn’t get how a job dousing chicken or what posed for chicken in Exxon-layered grease and Uncle Barry’s silent farts had made me a Broadway kind of gal.

“Mom, I’m not okay.”

“But, how could you possibly ridicule the stage, baby? You’re a goddamn gyro. The high-end cut that everyone wants a piece of. Just watch out that they don’t get a hold of your rack.” She always laughed at that one.

If my head was badly managed, my frantic breasts were racing for the finish line. They grew like a food chain long after Mom and her friends had said they had hit their full growth potential. I worked at a Greek restaurant before KFC, and that had lasted all of three weeks.

“So where’s that dark, musky Greek you brought home a few weeks ago?”

Carlos was a son of the owner, Javier. They were as far from Greek as I was from sanity.

“Mom, I’ve been to this doctor.”

“Doctor? What? Anything can be taken care of without bringing in the psycho preachers, baby. Come here, my beauty.” She grabbed a bottle of whatever crap she was sucking down. Tonight it was orange and plasmic with bubbles.

“Okay, bambina,” she pulled my elongated head to her and kissed somewhere in the vicinity of my chin. “Let’s toast to kicking up those heels and love, love, love.”

I took a glass of her cheap booze that she poured out of a raging florescent orange bottle with green letters that screamed Mimosa and swallowed it down. She never wanted to know, nor see where I was headed. I was online all the time diagnosing myself.

The psychiatrist said it was a psychotic breakdown that now needed to be managed. I nodded my head, while the voices told me my mother was no hallucination. Whether I was with her or alone, I was hearing other voices chiming in, and they weren’t Broadway material. They were more like deranged family members singing rap from the 80s. My dead cousin was one of them. “Don’t stop thinking about the attic boards. Don’t stop, until you find the electrical cords.” It was a cross between Psycho and Grand Master Flash.

I started stealing scarves every time I passed a clothing store. Aunt Christina let me know that I’d be strangled by a stranger. I hadn’t seen her in years, but her voice rasped in my ear, “Keep that neck a swaddled or you soon going to be throttled. Strangers creeping, watch your back for peripheral leaping.” I coughed when I was encased in crowds or stood in front of TV stores for hours at a time, unable to move from the spot, pretending to be engrossed in the grossness that emanated from the screens while I watched the reflection of the crowd blasting past me from the window instead, waiting for someone to rope me from behind. I was paralyzed.

My grandfather, who had been packed in dirt years ago, would sing in my ear, “Pick up them feet, girl, don’t let them predators catch you eyeing them on the street.” So I’d finally make it home, staring at the sidewalk, without allowing my eyes to falter into anyone else’s. I always had a craving to do exactly the opposite of what the voice said. I wanted to stare at someone and see what would happen. It was an amplifier turning on and off between listening and wanting to die.

The doctor prescribed Zyprexa. I gained twenty pounds in over two weeks. Most of the weight went to my face, my gut, and my breasts, which now led the way in some kind of marching band with a parade of letches following. I could hear the music, but there was no beat left in me.

“You’re every woman’s fantasy of a volcano. Look at you, baby.” Mom would snuggle up to me and try to drag me up on her lap like I was a Chihuahua in a St. Bernard’s body. “You’ve got the makings of a science project.” She’d rub my corpulent belly that was giving my knockers a run for the money. “Every day you could blow your fuse or blow a tire, you never know, but I say, keep on singing, baby, keep on singing and it’ll never catch up to you.”

I really wanted to slip some of my Zyprexa in her mimosa to see if she could see what I saw in her, but I never did. She was so full of some kind of life that neither of us had ever experienced. She was hopped up on a drug she’d never known. Mom’s psyche had become mutilated when she was a child. Some rank neighbor’s father had molested her for years, annihilated her kid-dom. She told me once that she didn’t speak for a year after that. “My mom never prepared me for bankruptcy,” she said. “What was there to say?” she’d ask and wander into an abyss that felt like trying to dig that hole to China. I knew what it felt like to dig for something that I’d never find.

“Rein them in, baby, rein them in,” she’d say. I told her the bras she bought me were a structural engineer’s fantasy capable of shooting boulders at any enemy that crossed us. She’d laugh and cup them in her hands, “By god, you’ve got a goddamn gorgeous mountain range erupting on your chest.”

Mom was a true fan no matter what I did. And I barely did much. I attempted to date sometimes. Manager Pete, or some guy who ordered a 9-piece original or another one who went for a 24-piece bucket without looking beyond my breasts, didn’t matter if they were single or had an entire family at home, would wait for me outside when we closed up. I let a few of them suck on me in their cars in the parking lot after hours, and I could understand what the marrow felt like in those bones after they’d ripped away all the meat. What is it about the weight of a breast that makes a man lose his faculties and become a slurping, corpulent baby? I guess those weren’t really dates.

So, the psychiatrist took me off the Zyprexa before I launched into the girth of the state of Texas. He told me I would lose the weight on this new drug and that I was the psychic equivalent of a teeter-totter. I can’t say I hadn’t met anyone that didn’t peer over the precipice of something.

“Mom, I’ve got to have my own room. I need some space.” The new drug hadn’t kicked in yet, so I heard rapping ancestors in the background. She held me in her lap while we watched the biography of Bette Midler and stuffed popcorn into our mouths.

“Baby, baby, please. I know what this is all about. It’s that dull textbook talk of a doctor trying to fit us into one of his chapters. We are the showgirls, the lights, the goddamn extravaganza. Of course, he hasn’t written our chapter yet. He’s yanking off in his office to the idea of us instead.”

“Mom.” I slipped off of her lap and sighed. “I adore you. But, I’m twenty-five years old. We need to sleep in separate beds.” Someone started singing in my head, “Cut the crap, get out the dope, cram in a pile, that’s the way to cope. Belt down some Boonesfarm, smack it out of the park, it’ll work like a charm, crack you out of the dark.” I think it was my cousin again. He was a sports fanatic until he got knocked into a coma by a fastball to the skull.

The doctor said these new pills might take a while to kick in.

“Okay, baby, okay! Guess what we’re doing tomorrow? We’re going to fix up that attic for my gossamer of a daughter. A perfect apartment to set off her career, how does that illuminate you?”

I smiled and hugged her. A tic started gyrating off my right eye.

“Now get out more of that orange bubbly so we can celebrate. My baby’s going to Broadway.”

We lived in Bloomington, Indiana. We were as far from Broadway as the attic was from my freedom.

Mom was up the next morning with pancakes on a plate at the kitchen table for me. “Bambina, it’s a day made for the tabloids.”

I loved her.

“Let’s get up there and make it a parallel universe of flight and space.”

I hadn’t spent much time in the attic. It was the place where voices seemed to feel at home. I could hear mumblings as soon as we mounted the wooden steps.

There were boxes of shit all over the room. I loved that it had an alcove with windows that opened out. That’s where we set up my bed.

I didn’t have much to move. I put a nail in the wall and hung my KFC uniform and cap on it. I set up my iPod and headphones next to the bed. I jammed out to Fleetwood Mac at night to keep my haunting family ensemble under a louder incestuous family so I could sleep.

“Babykins?”

“Yes, Mom?”

“Are you ready to take the stage by yourself?”

“I am,” I said. I was just as nervous as she was.

“Okay then, let’s go downstairs, order a pizza, and get on with our night.” She pulled out her box wine for the occasion to go with the pepperoni. We watched a Glen Campbell concert from decades ago that mom loved. We’d watched it at least a dozen times, but I didn’t care. Mom cried all the way through “Rocky Mountain High.” Then I flipped channels through a few sitcoms and kept the wine flowing until she passed out on the couch at some point.

I didn’t know what to do. Usually I woke her up and we staggered to her room. Tonight was its own night. I put a blanket over her and then crept up the stairs to the attic. A half moon was shining through the window. I got under the covers.

I put my headphones on and turned the iPod to “Landslide,” until it was blaring, and I pulled my new pills out from under my pillow. They were yellow. The others had been blue. I shook one out and stared at it in the moonlight.

My breasts slithered to either side of my armpits. My stomach flattened when on my back. Fuck it. This was the first night. I dropped the pill back in its container and pulled off my headphones.

At first, I heard only ominous creaks and groans of the wind. But soon the music started up again in all its 80s glory. Uncle Nate sang, “Grab a scarf and a chair, loop it over a rung, until you’ve sung your last song and finally hung.” I could even smell his farts.

Grandpa bellowed, “Never one yellow that brings you thrills, come join me child and take all those pills.”

Aunt Christina belted in her chorus. “This wood from the old rafters was once an old boat, get a blade from mom’s bathroom and slit your own throat.”

I smiled and closed my eyes. I would never have to take that stage alone.

============================================================================
Meg Tuite’s writing has appeared in numerous journals including Berkeley Fiction Review34th ParallelEpiphanyOnethe JournalValparaiso Fiction Magazine and Boston Literary Magazine. She has been nominated several times for the Pushcart Prize. She is the fiction editor of The Santa Fe Literary Review and Connotation Press. Her novel Domestic Apparition (2011) is available through San Francisco Bay Press and her chapbook, Disparate Pathos, is available (2012) through Monkey Puzzle Press. She has a monthly column, Exquisite Quartet, published up at Used Furniture Review. The Exquisite Quartet Anthology-2011 is available. megtuite.wordpress.com.

How to Write Funny Dialogue

Tim O’Brien gives writers a lesson in dialogue during the last quarter of Going After Cacciato, when he writes:

“It is humorous?” asked the captain. “You find desertion humorous?”

“No,” Oscar said, “but I find it kind of funny.” (223)

This brief exchange is excellent because of its realistic use of repetition. The variations make the dialogue funny and true at the same time. Note that the captain repeats his question, the second question a variation of the first. The variation emphasizes the captain’s surprise at Oscar’s inappropriate reaction in a way that seems authentic. Then Oscar puns on the captain’s question by using a variation in return. The quick delivery (and the placement of the first dialogue tag between the captain’s questions) achieves the right timing for authenticity and humor. This creates a humorous counterpoint to the serious question of desertion.

O’Brien is able to create tension through humor by contrasting the horrors of war with moments of hilarity that seem inappropriate in contrast. For example, the following dialogue shows writers how to be hilarious:

“You ever hear of such a thing?”

“What?”

“What Doc said.”

“No, I never did.”

“Me neither.” The boy was chewing again, and the smell was licorice. The moon was a bit lower. “Me neither. I never heard once of no such thing. But Doc, he’s a pretty smart cookie. Pretty darned smart.”

“Is he?”

“You bet he is. When he says something man, you know he’s tellin’ the truth. You know it.” The soldier turned, rolling onto his stomach, and began to whistle, drumming with his fingers. Then he caught himself. “Dang it!” He gave his cheek a sharp whack. “Whistling again! I got to stop that dang whistling.” He smiled and thumped his mouth. “But, sure enough, Doc’s a smart one. He knows stuff. You wouldn’t believe the stuff Doc knows. A lot. He knows a lot.”

Paul Berlin nodded.

“Well, you’ll find out yourself. Doc knows his stuff.” Sitting up, the boy shook his head. “A heart attack!” He made a funny face, filling his cheeks like balloons, then letting them deflate. “A heart attack! You hear Doc say that? A heart attack on the field of battle, isn’t that what Doc said?”

“Yes,” Paul Berlin whispered. He felt a tight pressure in his lungs.

“Can you believe it? Billy Boy getting heart attacked? Scared to death?”

Paul Berlin giggled, he couldn’t help it.

“Can you imagine it?”

Paul Berlin imagined it clearly. He imagined the medic’s report. He imagined Billy’s father opening the telegram: SORRY TO INFORM YOU THAT YOUR SON BILLY BOY WAS YESTERDAY SCARED TO DEATH IN ACTION IN THE REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM. (214 – 215)

This dialogue kills for a number of reasons. One, the mix of speech and action makes Cacciato come alive in the reader’s mind. His use of the word “dang,” for example, makes Cacciato seem both young and stupid. Two, his whistling and mouth thumping make Cacciato seem likable. The phrase “heart attacked” is awesome because it sounds so childish. Three, the telegram at the end of this dialogue achieves a comic climax to which the dialogue builds.

Dean Bartoli Smith

THE ONLINE LITERARY MAGAZINE AS TRIGGERING DEVICE

by Dean Bartoli Smith

I.

“Discovery is the ideal. . . . When not writing a writer may search for a triggering device, and literature is one of several places to find it.”

– Richard Hugo, The Triggering Town

At a meeting of the Downtown Poets Club in San Francisco in June of 2010, the poet John Lane recommended Richard Hugo’s The Triggering Town to me. He was talking about works that profoundly affected him as a writer and described it as a classic manifesto. The “club” consists of Lane, Alan Kaufman, William Taylor, and Kurt Lipschutz (nom de plume is “Klipshutz). They meet sporadically around the city for tea and impromptu readings.

A graduate of the Columbia MFA program and former masseuse, Lane works as a janitor who defends the rights of immigrant workers and writes his poems in a kind of self-imposed obscurity. He reads Roberto Bolaño (in the Spanish) on the freshly mopped corridors and caverns of Cal Berkeley in the middle of the night and cares deeply about printed books and their long-prophesized so-called digital extinction.

Out west on business, I traveled next to Salt Lake City in my role as director of Project MUSE and searched for Hugo’s book in Sam Weller’s independent bookshop downtown. I was there for the American Association of University Presses (AAUP) conference and to start recruiting publishers for Project MUSE Editions, a fledgling initiative to put several hundred eBooks on what had previously been a scholarly journals platform. This initiative has grown to 70 publishers and 14,000 eBooks as I write this. Project MUSE is not really a “project” at all, but a mature fifteen-year-old database of diverse scholarly journal content across 500 publications.

The helpful bibliophile at the information desk told me they had one copy left, but they could not locate it.

I took out my iPhone, downloaded the Kindle app, and searched for the eBook.  Published in 1979, it was available on Amazon and I read the entire collection of essays on my flight back to Baltimore—thumbing away the business card-sized pages and resurrecting my own desire to write poetry with what Hugo calls “a genuine impulse to write so deep and so volatile it needs no triggering device.” The reading experience on the iPhone screen took a heavy toll on my eyes after a couple of hours, but it was worth it.

Busy with a new job and relocation, I hadn’t written a poem in many months, but was struck and inspired by these lines:

“An act of imagination is an act of self-acceptance…Writing is a way of saying you and the world have a chance….the real reward of writing—that special private way you feel about your poems…What endures are your feelings about your work.”

Staring out the window of the plane, I remembered my first publications and wondered if my favorite literary magazines had their own apps.

II.

“It’s a trick, it’s a con, a little inside game.”
“Sounds like you’ve been rejected.”
“I knew I would be. Why waste the stamps? I need wine.”

– Charles Bukowski, Ham on Rye

During that summer, I thought about expanding the collection of literary journals on Project MUSE.  When I lived in New York, Niko’s Magazine and Smoke Shop in the West Village carried the best collection of literary magazines from around the country along with Drum tobacco, clove cigarettes, and Gitanes.  CityLights Bookstore in North Beach also had a great collection and a large room for poetry publications.

I want to create an online version of Niko’s or CityLights on Project MUSE. We already provide a digital home for Callaloo, The Missouri Review, Prairie Schooner, Ploughshares, Sewanee Review, and The Hopkins Review, among others. The journals appear in full-text HTML and PDF at no cost to the publisher. Most of these publications also offer their own dynamic and visually interesting websites—all of which are fully discoverable. This expanded collection would enable us to provide a sustainable model for these magazines to earn meaningful royalties from libraries and provide access to the emerging new voices of the next generation of writers in 60 countries around the world—just as we had done for scores of smaller scholarly journals being published in the back offices of universities.

Scanning the market, I soon discovered that online literary journals have triggered a sea change in the world of creative writing.

Publications like Drunken Boat, Blackbird, Ducts, and Beltway have transformed the landscape and built steady readership communities. Online submission systems have made it very easy to engage with these publications for editors to access poems and stories and make their comments.  Rejection rates and quality standards remain high and costs are down.

Blackbird rejects 96% of all submissions.

In Ham on Rye, Bukowski’s character Henry Chinanski refers to The New Yorker and Harper’s as a “waste of stamps.” He submitted one story per week to those publications for years before breaking through. Gone are those halcyon days of sending poems as if by carrier pigeon to receive a handwritten comment from a well-known editor along with a rejection slip. I still have mine from Alice Quinn. Twenty years ago, there seemed like only a few places to send work to: River Styx, TriQuarterly, Poetry, Poetry East, Paris Review, The Southern Review and The New Yorker.

There were experimental attempts in the late ’80s to energize the writing scene such as The Big Wednesday Review which published a few volumes and would convene “The Wheel of Poets” in places like the Night Café on the Upper West Side where writers would receive a number and read when the serendipity of the wheel called them forward. Bruce Craven channeling Adam West played Alex Trebek and Jennifer Blowdryer, a disaffected Vanna White.

Poets from writing programs found refuge at the Nuyorican Poets Café which gave rise to the Spoken Word scene and can be traced to the current work of DC poet Sarah Browning and her “Split This Rock” conference and her “Sunday Kind of Love” series. On hiatus for the last few years, Lolita and Gilda’s Burlesque poetry hour in DC’s Bar Rouge involved writers auctioning a piece of clothing or an accessory.

Technology continues to drive new channels of engagement between writers, readers, and editors.

Thomas Beller’s Mr. BellersNeighborhood.com is a digital expansion of The New Yorker’s “Talk of the Town” section. The stories are accessible on an interactive map of New York City by neighborhood. Online salons and workshops offer real-time critiques for those trying to hone their craft.  DC poet Gregory Luce uses Facebook to workshop his poems in a closed group.

What about poetry readings via Webex?

Along with an abundance of MFA programs, literary journals have exploded to the point where hundreds of publication tables at the annual AWP Meeting can barely be contained in two massive halls. MFA programs are actively recruiting the best students. Literary journals are becoming digital villages or communities around a particular aesthetic.

Upstart journals like Smartish Pace (the Wilco of literary journals) and 32 Poems have employed all forms of digital media to rise to the top of the lit mag heap in a relatively short time.  They exist purely for the love of the game—stripped of pretension—for good poems in all their forms.

The online literary journal embraces the possibility of what it is coming.

Imagine a linked digital “mitochondria” of literary journals, eBooks of poetry and criticism, fiction, non-fiction, along with scholarly journals, monographs, and reference works linked and discoverable. Envision a database of publications as the mechanism or “trigger” of discovery where you will be able to trace the first instances of a poet’s publications to the criticism and the book reviews and even the original manuscripts and the marginalia.  Writers, teachers, researchers, and students could thus share reading lists, facilitating collaborative research projects and other forms of social reading (e.g. book clubs, guided reading lists).

I could have used such a product when reviewing the New Directions reissue of Spring and All by William Carlos Williams last summer.  The first 300 copies of the book had been destroyed in the 1920s and it was released after his death in 1963. My first instinct was Kindle—no such luck. The facsimile edition arrived in its original 1923 cover—light blue with black type. I found an article about Spring and All on Project MUSE and utilized my print copy of the collected volume filled with the hazy marginalia of my undergraduate years.

I found myself wanting to see the original digitized manuscript and the criticism side-by-side with annotation functionality and an option to generate commentary and access ratings from the scholarly community—all on my iPad.

III.

“The transition from the codex to the presently evolving electronic book, the fourth form of the book in history, will not happen overnight . . . to take one example, the roll-form book persisted for four centuries after the successful introduction of the codex.”

– Frederick G. Kilgour, The Evolution of the Book

In Campbell McGrath’s new book The Kingdom of the Sea Monkeys, “The Custodian” describes a conversation with his long-time friend and poet John Lane.  In it, Lane worries about the death of the book.“But books have been my whole life, he said. What will we do without them?” Lane would applaud the efforts of the Tampa Review, one of the only hardback literary journals still published today.  Its editors believe “that contemporary works resonate most powerfully within a great tradition.” With an emphasis on visual arts, it’s also referred to as “a gallery space in print.” Tampa Review also features an online submission system and a new online identity—the Tampa Review Online (TROn). Will TROn eventually replace the Review in print? No tablet, Smartphone, or e-reader has come close to replacing the “quidittas” or the “thingness” of the hardback book.  The printed book and journal still provide the most pleasurable browsing experience in existence.  Usage statistics confirm that scholars and writers prefer the PDF versions of articles and chapters, essentially “the pages of the novel on television” as a colleague of mine once referred to it, versus the HTML.

Tenure committees in the humanities and the social sciences remain wedded to print for advancement. Aside from the portability and convenience of an eBook, it has yet to prove more useful than the printed book. And, truth be told, it has to be turned off for take-off and landing—a good thirty to forty minutes of lost reading time.

I might one day allow the organizers of my estate to remove the fiction and non-fiction from my shelves, but not those precious divining rods of poetical expression such as Ariel, For the Union Dead, The Lost Pilot, Gathering the Bones Together, The Book of Nightmares, The Country Between Us, Quoof, The Other Side of the River, A Perfect Time, Pictures from Brueghel, The Vandals, and Capitalism.

I will take these to the grave.

TROn which ironically sounds like something from the Transformers will undoubtedly attract a larger audience on the web, be accessible to search engines, and expose the content to aspiring and established writers, students of creative writing, networks of its published authors and artists, and other literary journals within its growing cohort.

It may also serve as a catalyst to a young writer, or “a triggering device.”

============================================================================
Dean Bartoli Smith’s poems have appeared in Poetry East, Open City, Beltway, The Pearl, The Charlotte Review, Gulf Stream, and upstreet among others. His book of poems, American Boy, won the 2000 Washington Writer’s Prize and was also awarded the Maryland Prize for Literature in 2001 for the best book published by a Maryland writer over the past three years. His fiction has appeared in Minimus, The Patuxent Review, and Smile Hon, You’re in Baltimore. His prose has appeared in Patch.com, Zocalo Public Square, The Baltimore Brew, Baltimore City Paper, Baltimore Magazine, The Catholic Review, Indiewire, and the Woodstock Independent. He received an MFA in Poetry from Columbia University and is director of Project MUSE, a leading provider of digital humanities and social science content for the scholarly community.