I am already dreaming about you, Russell Edson, wondering where you are, if you’re still tinkering with the language, leaving surprise packets in the unguarded provinces of our groins when Harold begins discussing the performance of a gifted pianist from Wilkes Barre who has just ignited Chopin in exemplary fashion. Harold, however, pauses, obviously troubled that his wife, who’s just come through a breakdown, is not fully included in our conversation and so he asks if I know the Christ rocker coming next week, a performer his wife recommends, and just then a balloon descends showering upon us buckets of words, the ballast of fools, and I wonder if, though good for the balloonist, this isn’t really a bad diet for anyone to be ingesting when war is streaming live through our sets and the folks in Basra have for weeks sat to their lentils without khubaz, without mamounia. Still, Harold gets round to winking successfully to his wife who then asks me up to their house for a white chocolate mousse after which, Harold says, we can go back to campus and hear someone named Russell Edson read something literary and I almost tell him about this dream I’m having about you but am afraid the curtains would forever close upon it were I to do so and thus, as you see, I did not say anything about it except that, after we were seated and you began to read, I had this weird feeling that I had, indeed, ingested too many unfamiliar words, words like catafalque and exequy and Aceldama and that it had been you, Mr. Edson, who had orchestrated this entire claustrophobic evening and so afterwards, when you were fielding questions, I wanted to ask just how much power you had in this corner of the universe — it appeared to be considerable — and whether you mightn’t do something about poor Mary’s anxieties, about the folks in Basra, but perversely, instead, asked if Williams was still working the night shift and if he still kept his ear in the tree behind the tool shed and if he was the one who had pulled the blinds when the sun had come too near the feed elevator and so created that moment in Religion 101 when a pair of F-15’s outside Schuyler’s college window seemed ready to herald the end of the world and inadvertently supplied the only epiphany we had ever known besides that glimpse of Mona Richards in bra and panties – just ask Jones – but you had laughed and said “…not elephants but lions … and tigers … and bears …” And…. oh, why, hadn’t I thought of that, I thought! It was then you handed me your mantle of tissues and so left this heaven for me to ponder alone with moist eyes and a dirigible, a dirigible — imagine that! — a dirigible filled with a menagerie of the happiest beasts, each of them fluent in the alphabet of the Laputans. We were all to be friends, comrades, of this I was sure. And to save the world we would start in Basra, transform the Aceldama into fields of plenty where exequies are chanted no longer and the catafalques are all empty and so end the breakdowns that afflict the body and the mind. We would. We will. Mr. Edson, pray that we have. And heal our Mary while you’re at it. She’s a good soul and makes a fine mousse.
-
Follow us!
The Anthology
Readers’ Comments
- On "Kritios Boy": I am re- reading this for the millionth time, through tears, once again. It is absolutely perfect! – Laurel Wexman
Jan 26 - On "Losing My Mind and Getting a New One": Beautifully movingly written so, Thank God, the talent and ability is still somehow, miraculously, intact. – Antonie Becker
Nov 21 - On "My Own Personal Mr. Crabtree": Garry, you mentioned this piece at the PVTU meeting - nicely written. It had me searching around, as things like this tend to do, for... – Jim Brennan
Nov 17 - On "NOTE: We are NOT currently taking submissions (except Fiction Awards until Jan 2020)": Hello All, Are you taking submissions for the June 2022 contest? – Dan Minnock
Mar 08 - On "I Made It Myself": Dear James, Thank you for sharing this outstanding essay. My father also built a "Z-Box" and I've recently taken up learning its backstory, even if... – D. Oakleaf
Jan 03 - On "NOTE: We are NOT currently taking submissions (except Fiction Awards until Jan 2020)": We're near the end of 2021. When will the 2020 Fiction Contest results be announced? – F. J. Bergmann
Dec 11 - On "Seeing The Inca Trail": Blimey - what a read........we just celebrated a UK and anyone else who could make it - Cusichaca reunion at our home in Scotland -... – Dawn Holmes
Sep 15 - On "NOTE: We are NOT currently taking submissions (except Fiction Awards until Jan 2020)": Thanks, Richard, that is much appreciated! You stay safe, too! – Literal Latte
Dec 18 - On "NOTE: We are NOT currently taking submissions (except Fiction Awards until Jan 2020)": Hi James and Michelle (and other writers who have inquired) -- We're truly sorry about the delay. It looks like results for the fiction contest... – Literal Latte
Dec 18
- On "Kritios Boy": I am re- reading this for the millionth time, through tears, once again. It is absolutely perfect! – Laurel Wexman