Slicing It Open

I want a fruit that cleaves
               as cleanly as butter, and if
                               its barbed skin

grates my lips with an animal
               scratch, no matter.

Give me one with salmon-
              colored flesh
                             even if its nectars

mask its burrs
                and snares.

Is there no succor
                in the bite that
                               lodges inside,

in the sound
               of a device

that could
                cut me, slowly
                                whirring to life?

Dilruba Ahmed’s debut book of poems, Dhaka Dust (Graywolf, 2011), won the 2010 Bakeless Prize for poetry. Ahmed’s writing has appeared in Blackbird, Cream City Review, New England Review, New Orleans Review, Drunken Boat, and Indivisible: Contemporary South Asian American Poetry. Web site: www.dilrubaahmed.com.

philada blues

pink nickel-Ziplocs
branded

“NEW LIFE”

litter the outskirts
of a high-

rise condo

construction site
dumpster

that’s been

tagged “DREAMS
GO HERE”

Paul Siegell is an editor at Painted Bride Quarterly and the author of three books of poetry: wild life rifle fire (Otoliths Books, 2010), jambandbootleg (A-Head Publishing, 2009) and Poemergency Room (Otoliths Books, 2008). More about Paul may be found at paulsiegell.blogspot.com.

Tying Flies for a Friend

The time isn’t anything of course,
or the hair plucked from a rabbit’s cheek,
feathers pulled from turkey wing, mallard neck.
Each thread pull, each twist,
tight against the steel hook
the barb surgically sharp like a threat,
the promise of a deep jaw set.
I haven’t seen you for years.
I hear your legs are gone,
the fight, gone too.
And yet I’m here at my desk,
tying flies and thinking of the moon
on the Bushkill, pale evening duns
lifting off the water like ghosts
while rainbow trout slipping in and out
of moonlight, gorge on velvet insects.
The water, cool against my hand
as I release the trout, one swish of the tail
and it’s part of the night again.
You laughing under the willows,
a pair of bats flying just above your head.
I twist a little bit of that night
into each set hackle, into the wings
cut from flight, into life.Grant Clauser is a medical magazine editor near Philadelphia and freelance technology writer. He lives with his wife and two daughters in Hatfield, PA. Poems have appeared in various places including The Literary Review, Schuylkill Valley Journal, The Wisconsin Review, The Maryland Poetry Review, Painted Bride Quarterly and others plus a TV show about bass fishing. Read his blog at www.poetcore.com.

From the Editors

It’s hard to believe an entire year has passed since we announced our fifth anniversary!

As we enter year six of publication, we can reflect on another good year. Why? One word: members. Thanks to member support, we were able to take part in the following events since the last issue:

Free Library Book Festival: We distributed thousands of free magazines to readers both local and national, to both current fans and new ones.

Launch of PROMPTED: This fourth title from PS Books is an anthology from the students of Greater Philadelphia Wordshop Studio and features both established and emerging writers from the area.

Workshops for writers: We continued to offer affordable workshops for writers, including fiction workshops from Aimee LaBrie and Elizabeth Mosier.

Free spring reading: We hosted a free reading at The Belgian Café showcasing our spring authors, including our 2009 Marguerite McGlinn Prize for Fiction winner, Katherine Hill.

Free reading series at Rosemont Writers Retreat: We offered free readings and “meet the author” events each noon during our third annual Rosemont Writers Retreat.

But the best member reward is in your hands: a four-color, free print magazine that showcases our region’s writing and artistic talent. Thanks to our members for continuing to keep Philadelphia Stories free to all readers, and also continuing to support reading and writing through our workshops and other programs.

We hope to see you at one of our upcoming events!

All the best,
Carla & Christine

Night Diving

             No wheels, no license, no ability to drive – I’m  a little hesitant, a little ashamed. I pause for a two-beat before I dial Ursula to [img_assist|nid=6462|title=Flight of the Spirit by Donald Stephens © 2010|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=200|height=303]arrange our weekend together. She’s a teacher and single mother in Pottstown, I’m a late-thirtyish man living at my Granny’s Drexel Hill Tudor-style house. During this pause, I’m sitting at my adapted computer, my finger poised over my phone’s Velcro-marked Five button. I feel like I’m the sighted adolescent again, standing at a mall payphone, arranging a pick up.

 

            The adult me pushes through, and dials. But I don’t get Ursula. It’s her daughter.

            "Hi, is your mom home?"

            "Stop making that funny voice," Ursula’s daughter says, right away without a "howdy-do."

            "Is your mom home?" I repeat in my higher-pitched "everything is okay kid" voice.

            "Stop that," the girl shouts. "Daddy, stop talking like that!" Then slam. Dial tone.

            My chair creaks under me as my heart becomes all inaudible bass beat. I fidget with the phone cord, then work at disentanglement. I fill the silence with a movie image.  Today it’s Big, and Tom Hanks is hoofing "Heart and Soul" on the oversized walking piano. How many takes were there? Did he break a sweat?

* * *

             It’s the weekend and Ursula gathers me from the Reading bus station. We drop off my bags at her place, then take a walk through her neighborhood. As we stroll, my ears tell me what my eyes would. Traffic is infrequent, sound is sponged up by lawns and bushes,  the stationary eloquence of a robin several stories above me hints at tree heights.

            We head uphill, past the pools, and to the pond, circle it at leisure with my hand resting on her right shoulder for guidance. I hold my white cane upright, dandy-style in my free palm. Ursula pulls me aside when we meet an oncoming couple who haven’t done the white cane and black glasses math.

            "We’re coming to a footbridge," she says. "No rails."

            I scrutinize her tone for weariness or resignation. I still can’t figure if I’m man or encumbrance to her. Her divorce is not final and I fear I am a cliche in tennis shoes — the Transitional Man.

            A brush of her long hair against my arm tells me she’s turned her head away. I Photoshop her locks day-glo apricot to contrast her picket-fence spirit. Only, I’m thinking about the steady quiet of her neighborhood, its pond, its pools, the nearby market. I could easily tap-tap-tap along the pickets, as well.

            There’s the faintest of paddling noises from the water. I’m sure there are duck feet, upended, as a Mallard goes under for a morsel.

            "Still going swimming tomorrow?" Ursula asks.

* * *

            While she’s in the kitchen drawing up a shopping list, I’m out of the way, in the bedroom, attending to medical concerns. Diabetic, I test my blood sugar, the meter counting down aloud and voicing a number I’m satisfied with. It’s time for my afternoon meds, so I take the four anti-rejection transplant pills, the pair of blood pressure, the anti-nausea pill.

            Ursula calls out, "Can you think of anything besides soda and chicken you want?"

            "Strawberry Pop Tarts. The glazed kind, please." They are my current form of emergency sugar. But still, I blush.

            Before she leaves, Ursula refreshes my memory about the stairway threshold and projecting TV shelf. She grabs her keys, says, "I have to stop at my husbands with my daughter’s schoolbag." The door closes behind her. It’s not long before the stillness conjures the creepy twin girls from The Shining.

* * *

            We wait for the senior citizen hour at the lap pool because the main pool is a mined bay of bobbing children in nosecoat and water wings ready to sink my ship.

            "Marco!"

            "Polo!"

            Ursula gives me a quick description of the layout, and then I’m swimming, first time in the dark. Splash splash, then a little bit of a crawl, and then I’m going freestyle. I bump into walls and tangle myself in lane dividers. But this isn’t good enough.

            Hand out, I trace my way to the ladder. Once I’m up, Ursula walks me around to the deep end and sets up her towel. I perch on the coping, work up nerve, then jump. I try to go coast-to-coast underwater, and put my hand up to meet wall. I fall short the first dozen tries. This game still isn’t good enough, though. I encounter my first flotation worm and get ideas.

            The Styrofoam worms are a little shorter than my white cane, but when I’m up and poolside I find I can hold them ski-pole style and make it to the diving board.

            Once up, I edge cautiously past the handrails. Tap with the left pool toy. Tap with the right, then another tap ahead to discern my placement on the board. I don’t want to pitch forward unprepared.

            I find the end and ready myself. Ursula, poolside,  and a senior couple treading in the water, wait in sparkly daylight. This is not nighttime, shades drawn, lights out. My body is exposed, on display with my shrunken eyes, my transplant scars, my insulin injection bruises. I am a Google map of doctor visits and hospitalizations, Hinting at many more unpaved miles ahead. Is Ursula up for that trip?

            I am eager to dive. But my mind conjures a dry excavation in front of me. Then, the crypt full of snakes from Raiders of the Lost Ark. Next, a chamber filled with a thousand armed Chinese terra cotta soldiers.

            "Are you watching?" I ask.

            "Go ahead," Ursula says, and the words hang in the air. I picture her floating as well, Chagall-like, five feet over cement pool deck. "Just go."

            Finally, I toss the worms into the pool.  I trust there will be water, soft and buoyant, to catch me as I leap.

Sean Toner’s essays have appeared at webdelsol.com, perigee-art.com, and in Opium Magazine (where he’s twice been a finalist in their 500-word memoir contest). His CNF also appears in the Book of Worst Meals from Serving House Books. Sean is a former vice president of the Philadelphia Writers Conference and was chair of its Free Forums at Drexel University. He earned his MFA from Fairleigh Dickinson University in 2006 and lives in Bryn Mawr, PA, with the writer Robin Parks. Sean has been sightless since 1995 and is a public speaker about disability.www.seantoner.com

Grove of the Patriarchs

I am the first child my mother never wanted. [img_assist|nid=6459|title=Warm Autumn Sun by Madeleine Kelly © 2010|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=250|height=251]

That I have two brothers and a sister is a testament to her docility, not her change of heart. My earliest memory is of her perfume, an exotic, spicy scent, and of her dark hair swinging down around her pale and pretty face when she rescued the hem of her dress from my grasp. I was always reaching out for her. This is not selective memory. In photos she is ever lovely, and I am ever longing—one chubby arm outstretched—to touch her. One day (I must have been five or six years old and whining for her attention) she told me, “I’m not your mother.” And, for a moment, I believed her. It’s when I noticed for the first time my mother’s dreamy blindness and deafness, inhabiting what world I didn’t know. All I knew was that she was unhappy when summoned back to mine.

For all his faults, my father was the one who took care of us when we were sick, staying with us until we fell asleep. “Frère Jacques, Frère Jacques. Dormez-vous? Dormez-vous? he’d chant over and over, but I’d resist, waiting once more for the Sonnez les matines. Sonnez les matines, loving the sweet cadence of his voice, his hand on my forehead.

Since he walked out on her, it falls to me to be my mother’s caretaker, not that she needs one yet. But if it comes down to that, it will be me. My brothers live on the east coast and my sister Sharon, who lives in Vancouver—Washington, not Canada—and close enough to drive down in a few hours, hasn’t spoken to our mother in years. “You’re a sap, Suzanne,” she tells me. “You can’t change the past.”

I’ve taken today off from my job at the Puget Sound Views to drive my mother to a cardiologist in Seattle for a consult about a condition that causes her heart to slow and lurch disconcertingly. She and I live on opposite sides of the Narrows Bridge; I’m in Tacoma and she’s in Gig Harbor. I leave early enough to first drive down to Point Defiance Park to walk the waterfront, a salve for the resentment I will inevitably feel when she fails to evidence any interest in those parts of my world that do not intersect with hers.

A mile long crescent of walkway snakes from the parking lot at the boat launch to the beach along Commencement Bay in the penumbra of the Cascades. Mount Rainier wears a corona of clouds, so I can’t see its distinctive ram’s head shape, even though the weather is unusually fine for December. That’s where I planned to be today for my ritual respite after the jumpy rush of making another deadline—up in Mount Rainier National Park on a small island in the middle of the Ohanapecosh River, at the Grove of the Patriarchs, filling my lungs with oxygen from the ancient trees. That stand of Douglas fir, western hemlock, and red cedar has been growing undisturbed for nearly 1,000 years, the river protecting the Grove from fire, the gods protecting it from all else. I am fascinated by the elegant symbiosis of the nurse logs, which perpetuate that lush forest. The fallen trees decay by degrees into a carpet of mosses. Then lichens, mushrooms and fern transform them into nurseries for cedar and conifer seedlings. There are nurse logs here at Point Defiance as well, along Five Mile Drive, but I’ve run out of morning.

There’s no bridge traffic at this hour so I can easily hazard glimpses down at the choppy swells and the blue-gray ropes of rip tides in the Narrows. On the other side of the bridge, I take the second exit and drive around the harbor where the marinas are filled with masts soldiering in the breeze, before looping onto the access road to my mother’s house. I turn left at the crooked Madrona tree, drive down the unpaved lane and park on the gravel. Her house, rented since my parents’ divorce three years ago, is shoebox plain with dated appliances and drab carpeting but situated on a sandy spit of beachfront amid grander homes. Inside it smells pleasantly of bracken from the stones and shells and driftwood she has placed on every windowsill, in every shallow bowl, her only contribution to this furnished house. Her decorative stamp is outdoors, in the whimsical sculptures, the tiles embedded in the pathways, a hot tub enclosed by a filmy forest of pampas grass.

My mother beams her hello from the open doorway. Nothing personal, it’s the same smile she offers everyone. She used to be beautiful, with a hint of animal wildness peeking out in the otherwise buttoned-up old photos, her belt tied askew at her cinched waist, a bit of tooth bared between the dark lips, her hip cocked and knees aslant, as provocative as she dared, it seemed to me.

Even now at nearly seventy, she is prettier than I, with her thick hair—streaked and cropped spiky-short—and espresso eyes. She wears an ivory silk blouse with a narrow black skirt and a light wool jacket the color of plums. Two-inch heels and tinted stockings show off her elegant ankles and calves. I am raggedy with lack of sleep and rumpled for lack of clean laundry.

Both my daughters were home over Thanksgiving break—Elise from Boston, where she lives with her father during the school year, and Kit from Ann Arbor, where she lives with her lover, also named Kit, also a woman. When the girls are home, except for work, I put the rest of my life on hold. Not out of obligation or sacrifice but because I enjoy their company; Elise’s mordant wit and discerning intellect; Kit’s dead-on mimicry, her hilarious political rants. I’d like them even if they weren’t my daughters.

We cook together and scout thrift stores, ride the ferries and walk the waterfront. Sail in good weather. They catch up with their friends and each other when they’re home. But they’ve stopped visiting their grandparents. My father berates my former husband to Elise, who adores him, and crudely mocks Kit’s relationship. “You just haven’t met the right guy, honey,” he told her.  “Believe me, he’d change your tune.”

My mother, on the other hand, pretends that neither the girls’ father nor Kit’s lover exist.

“I had a bad night,” my mother tells me, offering her cheek to be kissed.

“You look wonderful.” I say this as if it were an accusation.

“Oh, well . . .” she waves her hand, dismissive. “I felt it though.” She rests her fingertips in a cage over her heart.

“What? What did you feel?” I always have to shape her language to understand her. She’s maddeningly vague.

“My heart,” she says.

“Felt it what, Mom? Stop? Slow? Hesitate?”

“Just different, you know. Like it’s been.”

My mother has unwittingly chosen my profession. I untangle syntax, un-mix metaphors, interrogate reporters until I know the story as well as they, so their articles will read with clarity and grace. I sigh. It doesn’t matter what she says, anyway. We will have empirical evidence soon. The exam, EKG, the labs.

My mother waits until I pull onto I-5 and am dodging traffic before she tells me she has been seeing my father. The way she says it, I know it isn’t for coffee.

“He’s married,” I say, although that’s not what worries me.

“Maybe it’s better this way.”

“Why? So he can beat her up and date you?”

“Don’t be melodramatic, Suzanne.” Her tone is mild. “Your father never struck me.”

When I feel compassionate, I remind myself that she was constricted in every possible way: by poverty and gender, education and class. What she had in abundance was imagination. It was how, I understood later, she could pretend my father was exhausted or worried when he was overbearing or cruel. How she could reframe his badgering as concern, his insults as instructive. The dreamy quality that kept her at a remove from me, from us, was how she survived. The pity was she couldn’t imagine herself free.

 

The cardiologist is bald except for a low-lying fringe of wooly grey hair, and is extremely tall. Tall, and good-looking in a coarse, sensual way. His fingers are thick, his mouth wide. He swivels in his chair and rests one ankle on the opposite knee, his thigh a long and solid plank, his shoe like a small boat.

“I haven’t seen you before, Mrs. . . .” he glances down at her chart, “ . . . Garner, have I?”

“It’s Ms.,” my mother says. “And yes, I had a consult in August.”

He puts down the chart and studies her. “I think I would have remembered you.”  He manages to make this sound provocative.

He stands and extends his hand, “Come, let me listen before we do the EKG.”

He helps her onto the examination table, tells her to unbutton her blouse. She is, I see, wearing a lacy camisole. He slips the stethoscope under its frothy trim. Her breast disappears under his cupped hand.

“Fifty beats per minute,” the doctor says. “Any dizziness? Nausea?”

“Sometimes.”

“Which?” he asks her. “How often?”

Good luck, I think, trying to understand my mother.

He takes her hand and tries again. “How about now? Do you feel lightheaded now?”

It infuriates me that this man is flirting with my mother—and not in a patronizing way. Some remnant of her glory days clings to her, some superannuated estrogen patch or pheromone. My boyfriends, my husband, all of them were taken with her. I don’t know how my father stood it.

No, that’s a lie.

My father is the sort of man who likes his women beautiful. Beautiful and frail. He does, of course, resent them for it later.

“Christ, Adele, must I do every little goddamned thing for you?” he would say after my mother handed him a light bulb or a recalcitrant pickle jar.

“Of course you must, Mitchell,” she’d say, and laugh as she rubbed up against him, the sensuous gesture revolting to my teenage self. Was it that or the way in which my father was captivated?

He always got the best parts of her. And when my father was away, at work or on a business trip, it was as though she went away as well. From the time I was twelve, I became the woman of the house in his absence, signing permission slips, helping with homework, defrosting the ground beef for dinner. My mother wore aprons fussily, like a wardrobe in a play. Pots got burned and dinners ruined amid chapters of a book.

I am fulminating about all this when my mother blinks three times then slumps to the floor.

The doctor kneels beside her, bends his ear to her mouth. When he places his hands between her breasts, it takes me a second to realize it’s CPR. 

“Get my nurse,” he tells me. “Now. Move!” 

I intercept the nurse in the hallway. “My mother collapsed . . . he wants you . . . ”

The placid-faced Filipina races past me into a room, then pops right back out, like in a cartoon, dragging a red metal cart behind her. She summons another nurse who rushes into the same room and wheels out a gurney.

It’s only minutes before the doctor is running alongside the gurney, two nurses in attendance, the Filipina straddled across my mother’s chest, her hands like pistons revving up my mother’s heart. I run behind until they disappear into the service elevator at the end of the corridor. I’m punching the elevator buttons when the receptionist tells me they’ve taken my mother to the Cardiac Care Unit.

“Fifth floor,” she tells me. “Bear right.”

           

I call Sharon from the family waiting room. “I’ll come down,” she says.

I know she means for me, not our mother. The kindness undoes me. “Okay,” I manage through the knot in my throat. “Good,” I whisper.

“Suze?” 

I can’t speak.

“Suzanne. You’ve done your best.”

“Her, too,” I say, and hang up before Sharon can tell me that’s bullshit.

While I wait, I close my eyes and conjure the hushed embrace of the Grove of the Patriarchs, immerse myself in its green glory until I am as tranquil and still as the trees themselves, and so I can’t believe it when the handsome doctor comes out with that look on his face, the one that says everything isn’t okay and never will be again.

           

The room has a ghoulish green glow, all fluorescence and scrubs and easily washed plastic chairs. Everything else is white, the crib-like hospital beds, the linens, the bathroom fixtures exposed to passers-by.

I edge past the patient in the bed closest to the door, my heart knocking in my chest, to look for her but the second bed is empty. I double-check the slip of paper in my hand. Room 3605-A. The first bed. I spin around. I didn’t recognize her because this time she has gone so far away that she’s never coming back.

I know this even before the doctor arrives and tells me it wasn’t her heart, after all, but a burst aneurism that caused the stroke, which has spared her heart but ravaged her brain.

My breaths seem to enter my chest through a long narrow tube, one cold milliliter at a time. I back out of the room grateful for the obligation I have to call the others. I call my brothers first. They take it in stride. To them our mother has been as impartial and reliable as a nurse log, giving off nutrients but little else once they took off on their own.

“I’m sorry, Suze,” they tell me, acknowledging that the loss is mine alone.

I call Sharon but she’s not home so I don’t leave a message. I call my father last, reluctant to subject my mother to either his scrutiny or his lack of regard. Until I can make contact with Sharon, I walk the streets, wandering over to Pioneer Square, then into the lobby of the Alexis Hotel where I buy a pack of cigarettes in the gift shop. It’s been a decade since I’ve smoked but I decide I’ve been prudent for too long, that I should have been bolder and said my piece when I still had the chance. Three cigarettes later, I throw away the pack and dial Sharon again.

She cries when I tell her. Great gulping sobs, which astonish me. I’d expected her to comfort me, but it’s the other way around. When I hang up, I realize that she must have harbored the same secret hope all the years she’d been ridiculing mine.

 

The hospital room is dark now, except for the frenetic flickering of the TV. The remote is pinned to the sheet near my mother’s head, the stagy voices and static-y soundtrack leaking onto her pillow. I can’t tell if she’s listening but she’s not watching the screen, her eyes are closed. Wait. If she turned on the TV, then perhaps she’s trying to work her way back to speech, back to comprehension.

The nurse’s voice startles me.

“We turn it on for them. Sometimes it helps,” he says as he fastens the blood pressure cuff onto my mother’s arm.

“Is it helping now?” I ask, a tendril of hope taking root in my chest.

He shrugs. “Hard to tell.”

As soon as he leaves, I stand close to the bed.

“Mom,” I say. “Mom. It’s me.”

She looks up at the sound of my voice. Her gaze slides down my face to my hand, which she seizes in a fierce grip.

“Mom,” I try again, and this time she doesn’t even look up but just tightens her hold on me until my hand aches and her nails inscribe their hieroglyphics in my flesh.  One by one, I pry her fingers loose and cradle them between my palms until they slacken.           

“It’s okay, Mom, I’m right here.” I tuck her in and brush the damp hair away from her still lovely face.

I station the green plastic chair where she can see me and settle into its cool, unyielding embrace, prepared to stay until she falls asleep. She reaches for me through the bedrails. I take her hand and begin, “Frère Jacques, Frère Jacques.  Dormez-vous? Dormez-vous?”

Grace Marcus has been published in The Bucks County Writer Magazine, TheWritersEye, and Women on Writing. Her novel, Visible Signs, was a semi-finalist in the 2007 William Faulkner Writing Competition. She lives in Bucks County, where she is working on a second novel and a collection of short stories.

The Sea Crest

I’d moved to Atlantic City to take care of my father. My sister Daphne had called from Tampa Bay to say that his number was up.  [img_assist|nid=6458|title=Rittenhouse Square by Nancy Barch © 2010|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=250|height=183]

“What are we going to do?” she asked me, like we talked all the time, like we was a thing.

“How bad?”

“He wouldn’t say.”

I didn’t have anywhere else to go. Jillian had left me. I was living in a basement apartment in Bensonhurst whose only window looked out to a dry cleaner’s vent. She’d run off with the guy, Nick, who’d fix our car; they sparred together at the zendo. Jillian was a brown belt. She’d go to the zendo morning and night, and suddenly our car was never in better shape. I was most likely gambling, as I gambled every day. I always had a bet on. That was my fix, my way of getting through this life that is supposed to bring happiness before the inevitable fold.

I’d been in Gamblers Anonymous for six months before my sister’s phone call. We didn’t talk much, which is to say we didn’t talk at all. Daphne had run off when she was just seventeen with an Iranian guy who sold jewelry. The guy, Danny—Danny! I remember my father saying, What kind of a name for an Arab is that? Danny?!—was more than twice her age, and he took her to Tampa Bay where they’ve been happy ever since. They go on cruises and have Danny’s mother over for dinners, and the last time I had seen Daphne—maybe four years earlier when I was in the middle of my master’s thesis on Joyce, Yeats, and Synge, and an Anaheim Raceway horse-betting binge—she had told me they were thinking of children.

I don’t know what happened with her plans. I didn’t follow up. There was my teaching assistant money from the English department going to football and basketball and the track, there was a short, six-month bout with drinking, and then Jillian’s pregnancy, our marriage, and the miscarriage. And then the move back East where we lived with Jillian’s mother—herself addicted to mah jong and juicing—and the trips to Atlantic City to visit my old man (who’d been born there of all places and who’d moved back to be near the casinos). And the jobs I could not keep—men’s suits, ice delivery, shoes—and then the final blow, where I found myself washing dishes in the back of a Brighton Beach Ukrainian discotheque. The owner’s brother had busted one of my shins and had said he’d bust the other if I didn’t make him back the money I’d borrowed to put on a sure thing.

For better, for worse, my father did not survive long after I moved in. He was taken care of by the guy, Mr. Stottlemyre, who lived across the hall. The whole building, The Sea Crest, was out of another era. No one in the building was under 70, except the blacks who, Mr. Stottlemyre said, were in there either on behalf of the state government or the Atlantic City Improvement Council.

“You can’t blame the shvartzes,” Mr. Stottlemyre said, running a mop around my father’s baseboards. “Where else are they going to go?”

Stottlemyre was 81. He’d lived in Toronto and then moved to Providence and eventually he’d ended up at the Sea Crest, floor seven, just across from my father and the room that had the lady with all the cats.

Stottlemyre was in costume jewelry. That’s how he put it, I’m in costume jewelry, such that I checked to see if he was wearing it. He told me how Providence was the costume jewelry capital of the world, and when he said it his eyes bulged wide and the veins stood out from his neck with conviction. He’d flail his arms to make a point, and then sit in a chair and say nothing. He smoked constantly, whatever he could borrow. He’d escaped the Nazis with his brother, who’d died packing fish in Toronto. And he was a member of the Atlantic City Polar Bear Club. Somehow, he’d gotten my old man to join. Every Sunday, at eight in the morning, they plunged in and swam.

My mother died when I was twelve, so my father had long been a widower. He never remarried. He worked in the train yards for the MTA, the big yard outside of Bensonhurst. I remember him always fixing things and always working. I went to St. Stephen’s in Bay Ridge and my sister to St. Mary’s, and when I’d get home she’d be out with a boyfriend and my father would be out at the yard, though I soon understood that he wasn’t working at the yard as much as drinking. Drinking killed him. He had cancer of the bladder, and because he didn’t get it looked at until too late—and he’d have to have been pissing blood for a month—the cancer got into the surrounding muscle and lymph nodes, and that was it. He carried a scrap of shrapnel in his shoulder his entire life—sometimes it would set off the metal detectors at airports when he flew to Florida to see Daphne and Danny at Christmastime—so I guess pissing blood did not seem too much of a big deal. The one time he came to see Jillian and me in Pomona he was drunk the whole trip. But we did get him into the Pacific—he always loved to swim—and he put Jillian’s niece up on his shoulders—you could see the thick scar from where the metal went in—to show her the seabirds in the sky.

He drank to the inglorious end. He’d get cheap drinks at the casinos, especially the older ones, which were being taken over, so nobody cared. If you ever want to knock off a casino, get them when they’re being sold, when the employees feel betrayed.

Stottlemyre, on the other hand, used the casinos as an upscale walking track. He got my father to come along: a small group of oldsters power-walking from one air-conditioned lobby to the next.

In the casino lounges, my father would start with beer and end with gin, and Mr. Stottlemyre would extinguish the cigars and turn off the living room lamps and pull a blanket across my father, who always had the windows opened in a building whose super used the heat sparingly.

For years after my mother died, I’d come down in the mornings for school and find my father asleep on the sofa. He slept only sporadically in the bed he’d shared with her. They were dancers; they’d met at one of those vast VFW dances, when my mother was just eighteen. She worked at Bell Atlantic until her death, and her death was a lingerer. She was in pain for nearly two years. That’s why my father didn’t call my sister until near his own end, I think. That and the drinking. He didn’t want to remember. At the end of my mother’s life, he’d go straight from the yard to the hospital, and she would have one roommate after another, in various stages of agony, and he’d sit in the visiting chair, and he’d wait for my mother to wake, running for the nurses if she wanted even the simplest thing. Thinking of it now, the panic in his body must have been crippling without a drink

Daphne and I were there when she died. She died with an intern yelling—really yelling—into her ear to see if she’d come back to life. I hid behind the silver wrap-around curtain, and my father found me and picked me up. His face was wet, and he told me I was a beautiful boy.

On the day my father headed to the big Caesar’s Palace in the sky, I was at a GA meeting. We’d got him so he could die at home, such as it was, at The Sea Crest. A male nurse came in once a day. Mr. Stottlemyre was there all the time. I wondered about Stottlemyre’s family. Stottlemyre had kids all over the place, as he put it, but in the five months I’d eventually live at the Sea Crest, I never saw them visit even once. Stottlemyre cooked and took my father’s sheets to the laundry and one time when I came home they were smoking cigars and he was covering my father’s hand with his own.

They talked about the War. My father had never talked about the War before, with me or my sister, as far as I know, and I don’t think much with my mother. I heard my father tell Mr. Stottlemyre that until he’d fought beside one, he’d never liked Jews, had heard they were stand-offish and yellow. Stottlemyre shrugged, said he’d heard all Irish were drunks. And he told me a story, one night when neither of us could sleep, when the Giants game was over and the TV reception was frazzled by a shore-line lightning storm, how in 1945, in northern Italy, with the War for all intents over, a German soldier no older than fifteen had shot at him. My father said he couldn’t believe it. He let the German kid get away, staring right into the kid’s face so the kid would know his benign intentions, and then the kid fired a second shot at my father—my father, an old man sergeant at twenty-one, who’d nearly bled to death from shrapnel in the neck, whose eardrum was punctured by mortar. The German kid leapt onto the back of a hay wagon, pointed his rifle right at my old man, and my father fired and killed him with a single shot to the head, the boy’s head bursting, he didn’t have to say it, with the lightning outside the window, with the glass untouched on his knee, all over the dry hay.

At the GA meeting, I talked a little about Jillian. About the late miscarriage, in the sixth month, how we’d feel Shea practicing kicks in the womb. Flying Monkey, Jillian would laugh. Horse Scraping the Hoof. I’d place my ear to Jillian’s belly to hear our daughter. I’d sing to Shea. Born to Run and Dirty Old Town. Jillian would read her stories. Maybe she came to know the fighting; maybe she came to know how in her name I was betting her upbringing away.

My sponsor, Bob A., a former card shark who’d had his teeth literally kicked in when he tried to hustle the larger games—we all had our little indignities—told me that Jillian hadn’t left me, but that I chose to let her go. Although I’m not the type, I nearly decked him.

When I came back from the meeting, Mr. Stottlemyre was reading a Bible and had covered my father’s whole body with a blanket. He didn’t look up when I came in. He sort of bobbed there, leaning over my father, praying, two water glasses half-full with seltzer, a cigar still smoking in the ashtray. The broken television set, the framed photograph from his wedding, the dusty sea bass mounted on the wall. I excused myself fast and headed for the bathroom.

I splashed my face with water. There were cigar ashes on the tap. My father would sit on the toilet and tap his cigar ash into the sink. I remember this as a kid, my mother complaining, It’s like living with Groucho. My father with, It’s the only place I can sit in peace!  She was a duster, she always had the feathers flying. The house could be on fire, my father would say, and you’d run back inside to straighten! Once, winking at me, she’d vacuumed his chest hair when he’d fallen asleep eating crackers on the living room sofa. He jumped so high and laughed so hard that our cat leapt out the window onto Twelfth Street.

When I looked up from the ashes on the sink, I stared into the complete whiteness that I had experienced the time I was wrapped in the hospital curtain while the intern yelled into my dead mother’s ear. Out the opened window, an ambulance sirened. And then I realized that Stottlemyre had covered the medicine cabinet mirror with a towel that my father had swiped from the Holiday Inn. In the mirror, where my face should have been, was a casino in terry cloth relief.

I turned to the window. I hoisted it higher. The cold snapped in. Past the low roofs of Pacific Avenue banks of light swirled with the storm clouds; snowflakes flashed red, green, and gold. Beyond the lights, white caps crested the ocean. I looked down to the Avenue. The rows of air conditioners, the square windows each the same, dropping toward the street, where the ambulance’s lights whirled in front of a pawn shop, Gold Bought Here.

In the living room, Mr. Stottlemyre’s eyes were shut, the Bible open in his lap, the window shade pulled tightly behind him.

“Did you call someone?” I asked.

For a moment he seemed as far away as my old man. “Call your sister,” he suddenly said, and without opening his eyes he made a karate-chopping motion with his hand.

I pulled on my coat—a heavy coat that in fact had once been my father’s—to get out of there, and I walked up Kentucky Avenue fast. I walked past St. Joe’s, where my father had been confirmed in 1937, snow falling across headstones as in every Irish novel, past Dino’s Grinders, his favorite, Real Gravy Served Here. I crossed Atlantic and Pacific and up along Baltic and cut through the shitty little park the casinos built—seagulls clustered on the waterless fountain, a homeless kid slipping a bag over his head—and out onto the frigid boardwalk, and I wish I could say that I dove straight into the dark water like one of Stottlemyre’s bold cronies.

Instead, I sat on an icy bench—all the benches in Atlantic City have their backs to the sea—and watched two bronze horses guard two minarets. A couple of dealers came out, leaned on the concrete railing at the top of the flashing escalators, the Taj Mahal bright behind them, the gold plate, the lapis-like archway, inside the clashing of chips, the whorls of slots and roulette, the clean snap of blackjack and the tumble of fresh dice.

When my father was home from the Army for a few weeks and thinking about, I imagine, what to do, he drove down to Alabama to visit a guy he’d served with. He spent the night sleeping on a roadside in South Carolina, only to be awakened before sun-up by a cop about his age, rapping on the windshield. You can’t sleep here, son. He says it was the son that did it. My father stepped out of his car and decked the cop who merely looked up, lying on the ground on his back, and let my father drive away.

One asks for mournful melodies;

Accomplished fingers begin to play.

Their eyes mid many wrinkles, their eyes,

Their ancient, glittering eyes, are gay.

The dealers lit cigarettes. When I called Daphne, Danny answered. He was in their back garden, in Tampa, spraying their lemon trees with soap.

Jeff Bens is author of the novel Albert, Himself and many short stories. 

Push to Publish Bios 2011

Courtney K. Bambrick is the poetry editor at Philadelphia Stories.  Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in such journals as Apiary, Certain Circuits, Dirty Napkin, Philadelphia Poets, and the Schuylkill Valley Journal.  Courtney currently teaches writing and literature at Holy Family University, Philadelphia University, and Gwynedd-Mercy College. She recently coordinated the third annual Children’s Arts Program for kids at Old Academy Players in her neighborhood.  She lives with poet Peter Baroth in East Falls. 

Janet Benton is a highly experienced editor and teacher of writing who has worked closely with countless writers to improve their manuscripts and their craft. Her writing has appeared in Kiwi, Working Woman, Women’s Health for Dummies, and many other publications, and her editing clients have published hundreds of books. She serves as a mentor and teacher to writers throughout the region through The Word Studio in Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia.

Anne Bohner founded Pen & Ink, a boutique literary agency. She has ten years of experience as an editor with major trade publishers. Prior to founding Pen & Ink, Anne Bohner was a senior editor with New American Library and also worked at Bantam Dell for several years.  While at NAL, Anne spearheaded the Young Adult line NAL Jam where she worked on many promising books including a current New York Times bestselling series. Anne has also worked with bestselling and award winning authors of both adult fiction and nonfiction and has an extensive background in the romance genre.

Jim Breslin’s first collection, Elephant, is a mix of short stories, flash fiction and prose poems about loneliness and hope in suburbia. His writing has appeared in Metazen, Think Journal, The Daily Local, The World According to Twitter and numerous websites. He is the Managing Editor for The Town Dish. Jim founded the West Chester Story Slam, which is in its second season. He is currently publishing an anthology called Chester County Fiction.

Elise Brown is an independent publicist for innovative companies and extraordinary individuals, including several authors. She was previously Dir. of Public Relations and Sr. Manager for Feature Content for Sirius Satellite Radio, and led the marketing efforts for Q Records, a former division of QVC, Inc. Brown also directed public relations for the New Jersey State Aquarium in Camden, NJ and Ben & Jerry’s Homemade, Inc., among others, and has also been a national and major market radio host and marketer.

Randall Brown teaches at and directs Rosemont College’s MFA in Creative Writing Program. He is the author of the award-winning collection Mad to Live (now available as a reprinted deluxe edition from PS Books), his essay on (very) short fiction appears in The Rose Metal Press Field Guide to Writing Flash Fiction, and he appears in the Norton Anthology of Hint Fiction. He has been published widely, both online and in print, and blogs regularly at FlashFiction.Net. He is also the founder and managing editor of Matter Press and its Journal of Compressed Creative Arts.

Sheree Bykofsky,  AAR, represents over 100 book authors in all areas of adult non-fiction as well as literary and commercial fiction. Her non-fiction specialties include popular reference, business, health, psychology, poker, spirituality, self-help, humor, cookbooks, pop culture, biography, women’s issues, decorating & crafts, music, and much more. Among Sheree’s non-fiction clients are Taro Gold, Jane Eldershaw, Bill Walsh, Margo Perin, Albert Ellis, John Carpenter (first millionaire on "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?"), Bill Baker (President of Channel 13, PBS in NYC), Supermodel Roshumba, and Richard Roeper (of Ebert and Roeper). In the area of fiction, Sheree’s clients include Donna Anders and Leslie Rule. Sheree is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Publishing at New York University and teaches at SEAK’s conferences for doctors and lawyers.

Rosemary Cappello’s poetry has appeared in a number of publications, including Anthology of Women Writing, Voices in Italian Americana, Poet Lore, Avanti Popolo, and Iconoclast.  Her chapbooks include In the Gazebo, The Sid Poems, and San Paride. Rosemary edits and publishes Philadelphia Poets, which she founded in 1980, and in conjunction with that publication, organizes and presents poetry readings throughout each year and bestows two annual awards. She is a published prose writer as well, mainly of essays and film reviews.

Anna Evans’ poems have appeared in the Harvard Review, the Atlanta Review, American Arts Quarterly, Rattle and 32 Poems. She has been nominated seven times for a Pushcart Prize and was a finalist for both the 2005 and 2007 Howard Nemerov sonnet award, and for the 2007 Willis Barnstone Translation Award. She gained her MFA from Bennington College, and is the Editor of the Raintown Review. Her chapbooks Swimming and Selected Sonnets are available from Maverick Duck Press. Anna will be representing the Schuylkill Valley Journal.

Kathye Fetsko Petrie is a freelance writer and the author of the children’s picture book, Flying Jack. Her non-fiction publication credits include The Philadelphia Inquirer, Main Line Today, The Writer, The Sun, pif magazine and Mused: The BellaOnline Literary Review. She has published interviews with notable authors including Mary Gordon and William Styron. Locally, Petrie is perhaps best known as the editor/publisher and founder (2002) of Local LIT, the online publication of literary events and resources taking place in the Philadelphia area. She is at present working on a non-fiction book about women writers writing while being mothers. For more information about Kathye Fetsko Petrie including links to some of her published writing go to www.kathyefetskopetrie.com.

Best-selling author (Lyrec) of both novel-length and short fantasy, dark thrillers, historical and science fiction, Gregory Frost’s latest novel is the duology Shadowbridge and Lord Tophet (Del Rey/Random House), voted one of the best fantasy novels of the year by the ALA.  The two-volume tale was also a finalist for the James Tiptree Jr. Award.  His latest short story is "The Dingus" in Supernatural Noir, edited by Ellen Datlow (Dark Horse Books).   He is the current fiction workshop director at Swarthmore College.

Lise Funderburg’s
latest book, Pig Candy: Taking My Father South, Taking My Father Home, is a contemplation of life, death, and barbecue. Her articles, essays, and reviews have been published in The New York Times, TIME, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Nation, Salon, MORE, Chattahoochee Review, O the Oprah Magazine, and Prevention. She teaches creative nonfiction at The University of Pennsylvania and the Paris American Academy.

Frances Grote is the author of award-winning memoir, poetry and fiction. She is a graduate of the Master Fiction Workshop at Grub Street in Boston and the San Juan Writers Workshop.  Frances supports her writing habit with a day job where she contributes to the effort to find a cure for cancer. She is a recognized expert in the field of global drug development outsourcing, and has published multiple industry presentations and articles. Fire in the Henhouse is her first novel.

Alison Hicks’s first full-length collection of poems, Kiss is just out from PS Books. Her other books include a chapbook, Falling Dreams (Finishing Line, 2006), and a novella, Love:  A Story of Images (AWA Press, 2004). She has twice received fellowships from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts; her work has appeared in Eclipse, Main Street Rag, Gulf Stream, the GW Review, Pearl and Softblow, and is forthcoming in Gargoyle, Grey Sparrow  and The Hollins Critic. She leads community-based writing workshops under the name Greater Philadelphia Wordshop Studio, and is editor of Prompted (PS Books, 2010), an anthology of work from the first 13 years of the Wordshop Studio.

Lisa Jahn-Clough is an author/illustrator of picture books and an author of young adult novels. Some of her fourteen titles to date include: Alicia Has a Bad Day, My Friend and I, Little Dog, A Tale of Two Bunnies. Country Girl/City Girl and Me, Penelope. She has taught creative writing and illustration for more than fifteen years. Currently she is a professor at Rowan University. She is a frequent artist/writer-in-residence at elementary schools throughout the country.

Merry Jones is the author of two suspense series.  The bio-thriller SUMMER SESSION came out in August; sequel BEHIND THE WALLS is due out this winter.  Her Zoe Hayes series, THE NANNY MURDERS, THE RIVER KILLINGS, THE DEADLY NEIGHBORS and THE BORROWED AND BLUE MURDERS is now available in ebook and paperback forms.  She’s also written several humor books (including I LOVE HIM, BUT…) and serious non-fiction (including BIRTHMOTHERS: Women who relinquished babies for adoption tell their stories.)  Jones teaches writing part-time at Temple University, is a member of Mystery Writers of America, The Authors Guild, Sisters in Crime and The Philadelphia Liars Club.

Liana Katz is the co-founder of Damask Press and a graduate of Swarthmore College where she studied Latin Literature and History. She is currently an intern at the Center for Book Arts in New York in search of gaining a holistic understanding of the book-making process. Her literary interests include exploring the relationship between physical form and content, poetry and the delicate dance of foreign language translation.

Patti Kerr has been writing for more than 25 years. In her memoir, I Love You, Who Are You?” Loving and Caring for a Parent with Alzheimer’s, Kerr shares her personal experience as well as the collective wisdom, insight, experiences and stories of the caregivers and professionals she interviewed. 

Peter Krok is the editor of the Schuylkill Valley Journal and serves as the humanities/poetry director of the Manayunk Art Center where he has coordinated a literary series since 1990. Because of his identification with row house and red brick Philadelphia, he is often referred to as “the red brick poet.” His poems have appeared in the Yearbook of American Poetry, America, Mid-America Poetry Review, Midwest Quarterly, Poet Lore, Potomac Review, Blue Unicorn and numerous other print and online journals. In 2005, his poem “10 PM At a Philadelphia Recreation Center” was included in Common Wealth: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania (published by Penn State University).  His book, Looking For An Eye, was published by Foothills Press in 2008.

Aimee LaBrie received her MFA in fiction Penn State in 2003. Her collection of short stories, Wonderful Girl, won the Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Short Fiction in 2007. Other stories of hers have been published in Minnesota Review, Pleiades, Quarter After Eight and numerous other literary journals. She teaches the Philadelphia Stories fiction workshop and is a director of marketing and communications at the University of Pennsylvania. You can read her blog at www.butcallmebetsy.blogspot.com.

Marie Lamba is an Assistant Agent at the Jennifer DeChiara Literary Agency. As an agent, Marie is currently looking for young adult and middle grade fiction, along with general and women’s fiction and some memoir.  Books that are moving and/or hilarious are especially welcome. She is NOT interested in picture books, science fiction or high fantasy (though she is open to paranormal elements), category romance (though romantic elements are welcomed), non-fiction, or in books that feature graphic violence. To contact Marie, send query letters to marie.jdlit@gmail.com. Marie is also the author of the young adult novels What I Meant… (Random House),
Over My Head
, and the recently completed YA novel Drawn. Her work
appears in the short story anthology Liar Liar (Mendacity Press), the
anthology Call Me Okaasan: Adventures in Multicultural Mothering
(Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing), and her articles appear in more than 100
publications. 

Don Lafferty
is a writer, lecturer and social media marketing consultant who works with bestselling authors and publishers to craft successful online marketing strategies. Lafferty has published articles about sales, marketing and social media for national magazines, trade publications and newspapers. He’s the social media director of It’s Todd’s Show and Wild River Review. Visit him at his blog, http://donaldlafferty.com.

Marie Lamba is the author of the popular new young adult novel, Over My Head, the followup to her humorous YA What I Meant… (Random House), which Publisher’s Weekly dubbed “an impressive debut.” She is the author of more than 100 articles, including features in Garden Design and Writer’s Digest, has an essay in the anthology Call Me Okaasan: Adventures in Multicultural Mothering (Wyatt-MacKenzie Publishing), and her short story appears in the just-published fiction anthology Liar, Liar! (Mendacity Press).  She’s a proud member of the Liars Club.

Debra Leigh Scott is a writer, playwright, dramaturg, arts administrator and educator.  Her collection, Other Likely Stories, was published by Sowilo Press.  Her novel, PIETY STREET, is forthcoming with New Door Books.  She’s Founding Director of Hidden River Arts, which celebrates and supports creative and performing artists, and is now Founding Editor-in-Chief of Hidden River Publishing, a brand new independent small press here in Philadelphia. Debra is working on a book/documentary project called ‘Junct: The Trashing of Higher Ed. in America and blogs as The Homeless Adjunct.

Nathan Long, an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at Stockton College in NJ, is on the editorial board of Philadelphia Stories.  More than one hundred of his stories and essays have been published in anthologies and literary journals, including Tin House, Glimmer Train, Story Quarterly, The Sun, and Indiana Review.  His work has appeared on NPR and has won him a Truman Capote Fellowship, a Mellon Foundation Fellowship, and a Pushcart nomination.

Andrea Lynch Vinci recently self-published a young adult novel, Adam’s Prep, and has spent the last two years promoting the book, and teaching writing at Camden County College, Burlington County College, La Salle University and Paul VI High School. Andrea has also worked with the Writers Matter Program (a partner of the Freedom Writers Organization), Philadelphia Stories and PS Junior. She enjoys nothing more than opportunities to connect with young readers and writers.

Julia MacDonnell’s short stories have appeared in many literary journals, including American Literary Review, Happy, and Mangrove and her creative nonfiction in Many Mountains Moving.  Her articles and essays have appeared in numerous publications such as the Boston Globe, the Philadelphia Inquirer and Columbia Journalism Review. MacDonnell’s novel, Mimi Malloy by Herself and story collection, River of Grace, are currently under submission. She teaches graduate workshops in fiction and creative nonfiction as a tenured professor at Rowan University and is the essay editor of Philadelphia Stories.

Writing as D. H. Dublin, Jon McGoran is the author of the forensic crime thrillers Body Trace, Blood Poison, and Freezer Burn, from Penguin Books. As Jon McGoran, his fiction has appeared in several anthologies, including Liar, Liar, by the Liars Club, and the upcoming “Zombies Versus Robots” anthology from IDW. A member of MWA, ITW, and the Liars Club. he is also communications director at Weavers Way Co-op and editor of The Shuttle newspaper.

Fran Metzman was nominated for the Dzanc Books Award for an online short story published in Wilderness House Literary Review. In addition, she has published many short stories and she appears on many writer panels. Her most recently published short story, REDEMPTION, was in WildernessHouseLiteraryReview. She has a Masters degree from University of Pennsylvania and is currently teaching  memoir/creative writing class at Temple University’s Adult Education School. She is the fiction editor for Schuylkill Valley Journal and The Wild River Review. Her Wild River blog is “The Age of Reasonable Doubt,” which deals with mature dating (sometimes tongue in cheek), women’s issues and how to have better relationship for all ages.

Christopher Munden of Don Ron Books is editor and publisher of the Philly Fiction series, collections of short stories set in Philadelphia and written by local writers. He is also an non-fiction editor for the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and Where Magazine Philadelphia and a theater writer for several regional publications.

Suzanne Palmieri holds a MA in Sociology and works in Academia. Under the name Suzanne Palmieri and Suzanne Hayes, she writes women’s fiction with supernatural wonder and her essays have been published online in Life Learning Magazine and Full of Crow’s On the Wing edition. Suzanne recently sold four books in one week to St. Martin’s Press and Mira Books.  Look for her debut in 2013.  In the meantime you can follow her via her blog, Diary of a Lost Witch.  Suzanne is represented by Anne Bohner of Pen & Ink Literary.

Susan Perloff is an award-winning freelance writer, editor and writing coach. For more than 20 years, she has taught adults to write. In group and private settings, she has trained doctors, lawyers and division chiefs; new hires, technical specialists and CEOs. She writes for corporate and institutional clients in print and electronic media, with expertise in writing web content. Her byline has appeared more than 140 times in the Philadelphia Inquirer and in more than 100 other periodicals.

Marjorie Preston is a literary agent for Sheree Bykofsky Associates.
With over 20-some years as a journalist/editor/writer, Marjorie has
written for local and regional newspapers and magazines and national
publications including Ladies Home Journal, Fitness and New Woman. Two
of her LHJ articles were later featured on Oprah. In 2002, her first
book was published by Simon & Schuster.

Lynn Rosen is Director, Graduate Publishing Programs, at Rosemont College. She has taught writing, publishing, and literature courses at a number of venues, including the University of Pennsylvania, Drexel University, and Temple University. Lynn is a veteran book publishing professional who has had a twenty-five year career as an editor, literary agent, book packager, and author. She is the author of two recent books: Elements of the Table: A Simple Guide for Hosts and Guests (Clarkson Potter, 2007) and The Baby Owner’s Games and Activities Book (Quirk Books, 2006).

Marc Schuster is the editor of Small Press Reviews and the aquisitions editor for PS Books. He is the author of The Singular Exploits of Wonder Mom and Party Girl (The Permanent Press 2011) and the forthcoming novel The Grievers (The Permanent Press 2012).

Kelly Simmons is the author of the critically acclaimed Simon & Schuster novels, Standing Still and The Bird House.  She is currently at work on her third, The Painted Bones.  Kelly is a former journalist and advertising creative director who lives in the Philadelphia area with her family, and divides her time between writing, teaching, public speaking, and vacuuming up dog hair.

Robin Slick is a music-obsessed novelist who lives physically in downtown Philadelphia and vicariously through her rock star kids. 

Curtis Smith’s most recent books are Bad Monkey (stories, Press 53), Truth or Something Like It (novel, Casperian Books), and Witness (essays, Sunnyoutside Press). His stories and essays have appeared in more than seventy literary journals and have been cited by The Best American Short Stories, The Best American Mystery Writing, and The Best American Spiritual Writing.

Catherine Stine is a middle-grade and YA author. Books include A Girl’s Best Friend, in the new multimedia series Innerstar University from American Girl and Refugees, a "Best Book for Teens" that appears on the United Nations official study guide. It earned a featured review and "Story Behind the Story" interview in Booklist. She also writes fiction for Scholastic and teaches creative writing and literature at the School of Visual Arts. Learn more at catherinestine.blogspot.com and catherinestine.com

Dennis Tafoya lives in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and is the author of two critically acclaimed novels, Dope Thief and The Wolves of Fairmount Park, as well as numerous short stories appearing in collections such as Philadelphia Noir from Akashic Books. He has been nominated for two Spinetingler awards and his novels have been optioned for film.

Kathleen Volk Miller is co-editor of Painted Bride Quarterly, co-director of the Drexel Publishing Group, and an Associate Teaching Professor at Drexel University.   She is a weekly blogger (Thursdays) for Philadelphia Magazine’s Philly Post. Volk Miller writes fiction and essays, with work in publications such as Opium, thesmartset.org, the New York Times Motherlode and with upcoming work in Drunken Boat.  She is currently working on My Gratitude, a collection of essays.

Spend a Day with a Literary Agent

Spend a Day with a Literary Agent

Friday, October 7, 11-4, 2016 * Rosemont College, Rosemont, PA

[img_assist|nid=11565|title=Sheree Bykofsky|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=67]Where: Rosemont College, 1400 Montgomery Ave., Rosemont, PA 19010. When: 11am-4pm (includes lunch)

COST: $95 (includes lunch)

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER – SPACE IS LIMITED!

“Thank you for what has thus far been the best writers’ workshop I’ve had the pleasure to attend!” – author Peggy A. Wheeler, workshop attendee

Join Sheree Bykofsky, the bestselling co-author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Getting Published (5th Edition), for the workshop, Spend A Day with A Literary Agent*. The day-long intensive seminar will teach you the ins and outs of the publishing universe, including:

  • How to effectively pitch agents.
  • The difference between a query letter, a pitch and a proposal
  • How to develop ideas with true commercial potential
  • How to write a query that really sells
  • How to locate and work with the right agent
  • What’s hot right now in both fiction and non-fiction
  • What to realistically expect in a first-book contract
  • Why becoming a published author is just like being a contestant on Wheel of Fortune!

Participants will also have the opportunity to submit their query letters to Ms. Bykofsky ahead of time for a customized critique at the workshop. This workshop precedes the “Push to Publish” program, which follows the next day. Highlights of Saturday’s program include:

* Speed date with the editors: Meet real editors and agents who will review your specific work.
* Learn how to increase your chances of getting published.
* Discuss the new writing trends with professionals in the community
* Get great marketing and networking tips to break into the competitive world of publishing. 

 

 

*Copyright 2014 Sheree Bykofsky.

 

From the Editors

[img_assist|nid=5906|title=Prompted|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=134|height=201]It was about one year ago when we sat down with Marc Schuster, our book acquisitions editor, and Alison Hicks, founder of the Greater Philadelphia Wordshop Studio, a well-known Philadelphia-based creative writing workshop. Alison, who has run the Studio for more than thirteen years, had a proposal for PS Books: to publish an anthology that would offer a sampling of work from her students both past and present. We liked it, and agreed to take on the project.

Publishing the anthology was not the journey we expected. Alison’s father became very ill during the production of the book, and she often had to travel between Pennsylvania and California to care for him. During this difficult time, she managed to juggle author edits, formatting questions, permissions issues, and more. Co-editor Elizabeth Mosier spent many hours helping to fine tune the book, and the result is Prompted, an anthology that explores the human condition via poetry, personal essays, and fiction. From internationally published author Julie Compton (Tell No Lies, Rescuing Olivia) to first-time poet Marsha Pincus, Prompted’s connective tissue lies in a deep love andrespect for the craft of writing.

Alison’s father passed away the week before the book launch this past May, and while she was unable to attend the launch party, her voice was present throughout event. It was a beautiful day– the sun broke through the rain in time for the event, and more than one hundred people came out to celebrate the launch. It was another moment that reminded us why we volunteer so many hours for Philadelphia Stories– to see so many people gathered together to celebrate words was proof that the muse is alive and well here in the Philadelphia region. We’re honored to be a part of it.

Thank you for the journey, Alison. Your father would be proud.

 Christine Weiser and Carla Spataro