Heritage Trails

AP Service:  Dateline: Milan, Ohio

 

            A break-in during cherry festival last week at the birthplace of Thomas Alva Edison left the sleepy town of Milan, Ohio perplexed. 

            “Nothing appears to have been stolen,” George Conklin, chief of detectives said yesterday. “In fact, we seem to be dealing with some kind of vigilante maid service.”  

According to docents familiar with the historic site, papers placed on Edison’s desk had been straightened, and one mirror appears to have been wiped clean of fingerprints and dust.           

           

I’d been working the bar at Coltrane’s, in Ft. Myers, Florida for maybe two months before Alva and I talked. Alva was [img_assist|nid=5683|title=The Silent Body Melody by Orna Ben-Shoshan © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=167|height=250]Coltrane’s, had been working there since the place opened, and no one—not the bartenders, not the big, slow-witted busboys, not even the owner, Mr. Harvey Synell himself with all his money, ever messed with Alva.

I was the new girl at Coltrane’s. I’d come down from Jersey for my grandfather’s stupid-ass wedding and couldn’t figure a reason to go back—Mom gone, my brothers all married and cheating, just like every guy I’d been involved with. I got sick of angry, big-haired wives coming by whatever CVS I worked in that week and getting me fired. I think I could have put up with the guys with the bad toupees and the smoker’s breath sliding their rings in their pockets before asking me out for coffee, but after Mom died, I couldn’t take the way there was never a woman to cry to. New Jersey’s a small state if you’re past thirty-five and you find yourself in bed with other people’s husbands.

The manager at Coltrane’s didn’t ask for references, only if I was strong enough to carry trays of drinks without spilling. I said sure I was. I have never been afraid to work up a sweat, I said. But I was thinking, just don’t ask me to deal with people or vermin.

 

            “Well, will you look at the tail on that one?” Alva said to me the night a rat moved right out from behind the twelve-burner stove in Coltrane’s kitchen.    

            I glanced at what looked to me like a line of thick electrical cord, bundled and bound with gray electrician’s tape circled tight around and around until it came to one nasty little point what looked like yards from that nasty rat’s ass. That was my view from my vantage point up on a counter. I didn’t have a clue how I got up that high, one leap; the only time in my life I ever vaulted anything.      

“Jesus. You scared of a little four-legged creature of God that I could smash with a broom handle?” Alva laughed when she saw where I landed. 

            That rat was the size of a full-grown cat.

            And then Joe’s screaming. “Freya! Table four is waiting on their nachos and the guy with the scotch looks pretty damned hot about it.”

            Oh great, I’m thinking while Alva’s leaning against the wall near the door by then, getting ready to light an unfiltered Camel even though any other waitress would be afraid of being fired if she broke the no smoking in the kitchen rule.

            “You want me to take that table, Freya?” After that, Alva’s the one thing in my otherwise dim life that shines.

           

For a town where the bulb and filament were perfected right in a lab on the main drag, Fort Myers surely is no bright light. Coltrane’s is smoky, blue-gray haze hanging over tables of desperate out-of-towners over-paying for cocktails. No jazz, despite the restaurant’s pretentious name. The usual night’s entertainment is some group of overweight bikers doing bad covers of Dylan songs. There’s always some girl channeling Janis Joplin, throwing back Southern Comfort and showing her navel ring to a bunch of guys who would probably rather be taking each other home.  

            “Just like every one else around here–a real riot,” Alva commented to me the day we saw the photos:  Edison on a camping trip, Edison on the porch sipping lemonade, Edison fishing with one of his six children. Tie and jacket, pressed pants and straw bowler hat present in every shot.

 

It was my idea to tour the Edison and Ford estates. The only place I knew well was Jersey. I wanted to be a tourist when I was off work. Alva had lived in Fort Myers all her life, never bothered with the city’s stars: Edison, Ford.

“You’re a decent sidekick, Freya,” Alva told me. “But sometimes you have the strangest ideas of what constitute a good time.”

Then she came into Coltrane’s one night and told me what I catalogued as one of her bigger whoppers. 

            “He’s no biggie,” she told me the fifth time I harangued her about how important T. Alva E. was. “Only really important thing he ever did was me, indirectly, I mean.”

            She had me, I admit, though all I did was raise an eyebrow.

            “Oh. Didn’t I tell you he’s supposedly my illegitimate grandfather?”

I thought she was humoring me. All either of us really wanted to do was get the highball glasses dried and put away before the first set started and the customers were screaming for service. It was the end of a particularly draining week, the chiropractors and Barcalounger salesmen in town at the same time for their conventions.

“No shit, your grandfather?

“No shit at all,” she said.

 

“Well, that just sounds good to me; I would give one of my flabby arms to be able to claim kin other than the ones I own. My grandfather? His last stroll down the proverbial aisle’s what got me down here. Too bad you couldn’t have come to the wedding,” I said. “A real psycho ward home movie.”

When my grandfather remarried, it was to Vera, a woman more than thirty years his junior and for sure, he wanted to please her. Vera wanted to get married by water, and though she and Granddad had moved from New Jersey to Florida by then, they lived in a trailer park in the flatlands in the state’s center. So Vera’s daughter set up one of those blue plastic swimming pools in their backyard, and, to mimic those fancy old hotels in Miami, her son put a spouting whale in the water.  The gray plastic whale swam in circles, growled its mechanical little wind-up toy growl, and every few seconds spouted a stream of not so clean water onto the hems of the wedding party.   

Even now I can hear how, over that growl, my relatives talked about Vera, about what a gold-digger she was to marry this deaf old man and him with Parkinson’s pretty advanced.  Really they were angry, my three brothers especially, because we all learned the morning of the ceremony that Vera had been having an affair with Granddad for twenty-two years before Grandma died.

“Jesus Christ.” Alva hooted, when I described the scene. “As if she wasn’t going to get the worst maybe two years of your grandfather’s life and end up wiping his butt to boot.” Alva is my go-to girl for perspective, alright.

Later she admitted she only confided her grandfather thing to shut me up about going on a house tour. A house tour of the Edison winter estate was Alva’s idea of how God would punish a truly shitty bar waitress on her one day off. 

 

Somehow I prevailed. “Well we gotta’ see if you have his eyes.”

 

            Edison on the docks with his straw bowler and a white linen jacket. Edison with the president of the United States and his friend, Henry Ford, sitting by a campfire his servants built, the great inventor in that white jacket even here.           “You think he left his jacket on and had the servant press his pants while he boinked Grandma?” Alva said, like she knew exactly what I was thinking. I remember how two white-haireds moved away from us then, looking at us like we were something they’d scraped off their shoes.

            But when we got to the inventions room Alva got animated all of a sudden.

            “Freya,” she said, dragging me from phonograph to bulb, from display case to display case. “You gotta’ see this.”

            Turns out Alva was a bit of a science freak as a kid, before her father beat it into her that she was a girl and that it was her destiny to wait tables to salesmen for the rest of her life. “Think I could be an inventor?”

            That question stayed with me. Alva with ambitions. Who’d have thought?

 

            “You really wanted to be an inventor?” I asked during our next shift. “I mean, I know you’re smart enough and all, but inventor?”

        “Sure,” she said, coloring a little and then looking out over the usual crowd.

“Right now I’m inventing full heads of hair and decent sports jackets on those guys at table three. This morning I invented a deeply satisfying mouth feel and taste for my Special K and diner coffee.”

            I know she was embarrassed, but I watched the way she held her tray after that. I watched the way she carried her head up too. I thought she was maybe inventing some truth in her being descended from T Alva himself, and I felt something. Pride? In my most secret heart I guess I also have one ambition; I always thought I’d make a good one of those what they call motivational speakers. Look at that, I thought, watching Alva that night. She seemed to grow a couple of inches taller after that smart enough remark.

 

            Now, back in Jersey, I’m wondering when did my motivational speaker’s triumph turn so crazy. I have to park back of the Oasis, unlock the kitchen door, and drink my first cup of coffee in quiet before I can face that question.

            “You sitting here in the dark for a reason?” Gladys says, flicking on a light. Gladys is my first waitress to show up every morning.

            “Yeah,” I say and get up off my stool, top off my coffee with hot and sit again. “I was just thinking of Alva.”

            “What’s got you thinking about that nut-job friend of yours?” Gladys is saying. Everyone in my diner’s heard a bunch of Alva stories. I flip her the paper, that Ohio thing.

 

            After that first trip to the estate, Alva wanted to go back and then go back again and again. Visiting the relatives, she called it, smirk-faced, while Gee at the bar thought she’d become all saintly spending so much time with family. I was the only one at Coltrane’s who knew.

            “You got any family to speak of, Alva?” I asked once when we were hanging at her place.

            “God forbid!” The line of ash from her cigarette glowed when she took a pull on it. It dribbled onto her kitchen floor, just missing Leon, her part dachshund, part hell-knew-what, who stood as close to her leg as he could without going up her jeans. “Except, of course,” and she got hyper-smirky here, “Grandpapa Edison. How about we head off and catch the last tour, Freya?”

 

            Jeezus, but how many times did Alva take that tour, I’m wondering as the first customers settle into the Oasis booths. I could have spoken the whole guided flaptrap with the docent after my third trip, but Alva went back every Thursday. After a while, even I began to believe it when I heard Gee and the others at Coltrane’s talking about how Alva must be at the nursing home visiting that make-believe failing aunt she told Gee of; what a saint she was for putting up with that old woman. It seemed more logical than believing she was back at the estate. How was I to know she was casing the place? 

By the time she found the photo, she knew the schedule of every guard and tour guide, knew which bathrooms were locked up[img_assist|nid=5686|title=Underneath by Kristen Solecki © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=160|height=250] first and by when the gate snapped shut. She knew the first moment of opening time and a quick route out while the first visitors came in. I don’t know how she learned these things, or how she came to evade security. God help me but there are things you don’t want to know, even on behalf of a really good friend. 

 

            “You got to get here quick.” When Alva called about the photo, it was past midnight and I was just off a shift serving Venetian Blind salesmen and tolerating blue-grass covers. I hadn’t even pulled out of the Coltrane’s lot.

            “It’s important,” she said. “Otherwise, you know I wouldn’t bug you.” 

            I admit even if she hadn’t said that, I would have been made curious by her tone. Serious. Excited. So Not Alva. 

I drove directly to Alva’s and found her wide-awake, her kitchen table strewn with old black and white pictures.

            “Look here,” she said before I had even parked my tired ass in a chair. “Evidence.” 

            She stuffed an old photo of a gray-haired woman—sharp, but not too young—under my nose. “Evidence of what?” I asked trying to see the photo like a detective might. It was taken by a cheap camera; that much was for sure. The edges were serrated the way photo edges always came out a long time ago, before processing got so fancy. The woman was pretty, looked a little like Alva around the eyes and had a sneer on her lips, like whoever took the photo she was probably flirting with. 

            “Look. Here. And here.” She pointed to the hand the woman had laid in her lap. She held a magnifying glass over that section of the photo so I could see the ring on the woman’s finger. It was a signet with a big E on it. And under the hand lay a straw bowler hat.

            “Who is she?” I asked, though my head told me the answer.

            “It’s my infamous grandma,” Alva said, “And look. His ring. His hat.”

            I knew she wouldn’t hear any contradictions or what ifs, so I didn’t offer any. “What are you going to do with this—evidence?” I feared a big scene: Alva chaining herself to the gates of the TAE winter estate until someone acknowledged her genealogy, or Alva hiring a fancy lawyer and taking the family to court, but what she did, well, that just plain astonished me.

“I’m putting my grandma where she belongs,” she said.

           

            When I tell this story at the diner, someone always asks didn’t I ever find out how she pulled it off and the answer really is no. There are times you don’t ask for too much information. I know Alva left for the Edison estate one late afternoon, telling Gee the old aunt was sick as hell and she had to take off early. And I know she wasn’t home all night because I did like she asked and went by to feed Leon. Knowing there was no old aunt, I decided I’d better wait at her place till she came home or till the police called, but the police never called. I fell asleep with my head in my hands on her kitchen table and she woke me sometime after 9 a.m., wearing the same clothes she’d had on the day before.

            She never breathed a word of what she did and I didn’t ask. But the next time she went to the estate for the tour, she dragged me along and there it was: a really sharp 9 by 12 reproduction of Grandma, ring, hat and all framed and parked along one wall in the photo room. Edison on the dock in a hat and jacket. Edison camping with Henry Ford. Alva’s grandmother laughing into the camera. I had to cough to keep her from asking the docent giving us the tour who the woman in the photo was. The tour cruised right by the picture and for all I know, it hangs there still.

 

            I was afraid Alva couldn’t leave it at that, and you know she wouldn’t have, but as luck would have it, before she got herself arrested, I got handed an opportunity to get her out of town.

            “Holy shit!” I think those were my exact words when I opened the official- looking envelope that was special delivered to Coltrane’s during one of the few really crowded lunch rushes I ever recall serving. “Holy good God damn.” 

It turned out my grandfather, who’d passed—not quietly—a year after the infamous nuptials, hadn’t left everything to his child bride Vera, like the family feared he would. Nope: The Oasis Diner came to me. 

            I’d forgotten about the Oasis, nearly forgotten Trenton, New Jersey. Turns out my grandfather’s wife was more than happy to [img_assist|nid=5687|title=Stream Off Route 82 by Deena Ball © 2009|desc=|link=node|align=right|width=155|height=250]forget Trenton herself once she found herself in Florida, even in the ugly part in the middle. “I told him I’d give away the business rather than have anything to do with that butt-hole city again in my life,” I think the lawyer said were her exact words. So there I was, an heiress.

            I wasn’t too crazy about making the move north myself, but Alva told me I’d be crazy not to.

            “Freya,” she said, maybe a dozen times before I finally agreed to it. “You can’t pass up this opportunity to get out from under. Look, Kiddo, your very own business.” We could both be motivators when we wanted, Alva and me.

            “Imagine me as someone’s boss,” I said. Alva was probably the only soul who knew I’d actually imagined that once or twice myself. “But you come too.”            I wasn’t sorry to quit Coltrane’s but I knew I was about to miss Alva something fierce. In the end, it took less convincing than I thought it would to get her to at least drive up with me. I guessed she was going to miss me too.

            God we had laughs on that drive, the U Haul towing my Nova behind it and so many really bad songs on the radio. Alva insisted on playing the worst oldies station in every state between Fort Myers and Trenton. “So you won’t miss the bands at Coltrane’s just yet,” she’d say.

            I put her in charge of the AAA books and finding cheap motels, which is, I’m afraid to tell you, how she found out about Menlo Park.

 

            The breakfast rush is over. I’m thinking about Milan, Ohio. Too early to call Alva. If she’s back in Florida, she’ll be out cold after a late night on the drunkards shift. Worse yet if she isn’t home to answer. 

            “Alva, you take too many chances,” I told her when she told me about her plans for Menlo Park and she snapped right back, “What do you mean you? It’s we, Babe. You’re driving the get-away car.”

 

            Thomas Alva Edison’s known in New Jersey as “The Wizard of Menlo Park.” I wish I’d remembered that when I gave Alva the Mid-Atlantic AAA book. By the time we got to Maryland, she’d picked up every cheesy brochure on the Edison labs up there in North Jersey and was determined to go. The moment we unloaded the U Haul into my new mobile home out Route 1, she left me to unpack the kitchen and took off for her first tour of what she called “Edison’s North.” The second tour she took me on, and the third, but at the end of that one, at just about closing time, she said for me to go ahead, she’d meet me outside.

            “Just wait by that back alley I pointed out when we came in this time. I’ll be there,” she said.      The voice on the P.A. had announced closing time already and I knew this was not a good sign. 

            “I just have to go to the bathroom,” she said. Her eyes were glinting like they were throwing sparks off a disco ball. She had brought a bigger handbag to the labs that day, I noticed, big enough to hold a framed 9 by 12 photo.

“Don’t go getting yourself arrested,” I said to Alva. “I hear Jersey cops can be mean sons-of-bitches.”

 

            There are two of Jersey’s finest at my counter for lunch, nice guys really. One of them notices I’m distracted and even asks if everything’s okay. 

            “Yeah, where are you today, Freya?” Gladys comments after I put the wrong sandwich down in front of the wrong cop.

            I don’t tell Gladys that I’m back in Menlo Park, watching from the back alley into a locked historic site and praying my best friend doesn’t find herself in Rahway State Prison by morning.

 

         I watched Alva’s shadow pass around the flashlight lit room, saw through the gauzy curtains as her shape moved to the wall opposite the front window and stopped in front of a painting hanging there. For a moment I thought she was about to remove it, but she just straightened the picture, stood back, and straightened it again a couple of times until it appeared she was satisfied and could move on to another part of the room. Then she was out of my view altogether. 

            The second hand on my watch jerked in large, exaggerated motions, each minute passing as if it was a decade until Alva suddenly appeared at my passenger side.

“Drive.”  

I remember she said it like it was nothing, and then I was off onto the open road.

“What happened?” Silence.

  It’s like a movie in my head when I replay it now:  Alva’s bottle-red hair has come loose from its clips and is blowing wildly around her face. I’m afraid she’s going to catch a piece of it in the ash of her cigarette but I know better than to say anything about that. I merge us onto the New Jersey Turnpike, am halfway back home before I try again.

            “What happened back there?” 

            Alva’s finished two Camels, lit one off the last, and started on a third.

            “You do not want to know, Freya.” 

            And yeah, I tell my regulars when I retell the story. Yeah, after the tearful goodbye, after Alva took the train ticket I bought her and headed back to Fort Myers, I did drive back up to Menlo Park, and no, I don’t know how she did it, but sure as shit, Grandma was there.

 

            I turn the dinner hour over to Carmen. She’s old and doesn’t want to do early or late hours; serving up stewed tomatoes and macaroni and cheese, the AARP special I added to the menu, is just about her style. On the drive home, I’m sitting in traffic as usual, so I’ve got plenty of time to figure what I’ll tell Alva.

“Hey, Alva,” I’ll start, casual like, if she happens to be, by some miracle, sitting at my kitchen table when I come home for the day. When she left to go back to Fort Myers, I gave her a key. You never know when someone like Alva’s going to need a place to sleep, or maybe hide. “Hey Alva, what’s new?” I won’t let on at first about how worried I’ve been for her; I wouldn’t want to drive her away. I haven’t met too many people I can really talk to yet in Trenton and Alva sure would be a sight for sore eyes.

            “You got anything worth eating in this place?” That would be her idea of a greeting and I’ll say, “Well, hello to you too.”

            But sure she’ll be hungry. Milan, Ohio’s a long way from Trenton. Not just in miles but as to a whole life, I’d like to tell Alva. Here you’ve got Formica-boothed diners and traffic circles, guys in hoody sweatshirts coming off a night shift road crew out Route 1, coming in for a cup of coffee black, and as hot as you can serve it. At the counter of the Oasis they’re like as not to be sitting next to some hotshot MBA with his first job up there in the State House, his suit jacket shoulder right up against that construction worker’s shoulder and him asking for a skinny latte.

            Better make that decaf, the hotshot kids always say here in Trenton.

            “As opposed to?” Alva will say. She hates when I presume to know a place I don’t.

            As opposed to how I see Milan:  lily white, cream and two sugars and Alva crazy enough to think she fits right in, her with her fire engine dye job and those stilettos she always wears when she’s serving anything with three olives in a stem glass to a regular.

            When I tell her my picture, Alva will say, “Freya, I swear you have become a cynic since you came north. You lacking sunshine or just sad you went missing the Barcalounger salesmen in February?”

            In no time at all she’ll have me laughing as she’s spinning the scene: all that polyester in light blue and who knows how many hair pieces sliding further and further with each round of drinks.

            “Stop it before I pee myself,” I will have to say. I’ll be laughing but inside I’ll feel a little sad, thinking my way back to all those smoky blue nights at Coltrane’s.

            A bar in Fort Myers is a long way from a diner in Trenton. I’m missing Alva, missed her the moment she went back to serving martinis and left me here to serve up two eggs, scrambled, but keep them dry and rye toast, jelly, no butter. 

            Trenton’s even a long way from the Trenton I remember when I was a kid, the place my grandfather cheated on my grandmother for twenty-two years, the place where any self-respecting diner customer never met a cholesterol he wouldn’t shove in his face.

            I pull into the mobile home park—no rental cars with Ohio plates in sight—and I’m sad to say no lights on in my unit. Alva’s out there somewhere and who might that be driving the get-away car? Alva’s crisscrossing the country leaving her mark in state after state. Claiming my heritage, she calls it. I’m unlocking the door and getting set for a quiet night, all the lives I’ve left behind me spooling out over highways—Pennsylvania Turnpike to the Ohio Tollway, or straight down 95 to Florida. All the lives I’ve left behind.

“Cut the violins and shit, Freya.” I hear that husky smoker’s voice in my head. I pick up the phone and dial a number more familiar than my own.

 

Liz Abrams-Morley is the author of Learning to Calculate the Half Life (Zinka Press, 2001,) and What Winter Reveals (Plan B Press, 2005). Her second full-length collection, Necessary Turns, is due out from Word Press/WordTech Communications early in 2010. Liz’s poems and short stories have appeared in nationally distributed journals and anthologies and have been featured on National Public Radio. She has received fellowships from the Pennsylvania Arts Council and the Ragdale Foundation. Co-founder of Around the Block Writing Collaborative, (www.writearoundtheblock.org) she is an adjunct gypsy, part of the MFA in Creative Writing faculty of Rosemont College, and serves as a poet-in-residence in area schools.  

Collision

I myself see the car crash as a tremendous
                        sexual event really.
               J.G. Ballard 

 

I blame chance, that reprobate,
for my slide and spin and slow-motion
carom across both lanes. I’m lost
in an icy lot full of damaged cars,
mine among them, towed by a trucker

who had a tremendous day. At least
I’m not in love with my car. What hurts
is not that stubborn muscle the heart,
but only my ribs and back and foot,
a humble list of injuries. My witnesses

got on their cell phones to call police
who filled out forms in neat block letters.
If crashes are sexual, who has the fun? 
I think drivers who lived through today
are turning up music to induce sweet

amnesia. I clutch ruined cars as I slip
from one to the next, find my own
with one door working and papers
I need inside. Is this like after a funeral?
People go home to love and trouble,

quarts of gin, a woman kissing another
woman, a woman so drunk she can’t
stand up. Some must call friends and
tell their crash stories; some call strangers
and whisper into their quiet machines.

Barbara Daniels lives in Sicklerville and taught English at Camden County College from 1976 through 2008. Her book Rose Fever: Poems was published by WordTech Press. She received two Individual Artist Fellowships from the New Jersey Council on the Arts and earned an MFA in poetry at Vermont College.

The Fig Tree

The fig tree has fallen in love with the place in the yard
that separates neighbor from neighbor. I didn’t ask permission

to plant that stick of wood between the two houses. It seemed small
and innocent, a foot of broken branch with the only life visible

in the veins of a small white root poking from one end.
What did I know of the soil and its minerals, only that I could scoop it

with one hand like cake, and drop the branch into a small warm hole,
pat the sides upright, and go on with my laundry.

And here it is now, eight feet tall and wide enough to hide me, full
of a ruby-centered fruit, tentacles of crystals, green rocks dripping

with white liquid. If I am too late the head gets so heavy that birds
call to me to pick up the over ripened broken flesh. I carry the warm

tear drops into the house and place them on the table. Here is my still
life, lush and desired. The neighbor has no idea.

Nina Israel Zucker is a poet and teacher. She has taught Creative Writing at Rowan University and has been a leader for the Spring/Fountain series offered to educators by the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation.  She also teaches Spanish for the Cherry Hill School District. Her work has appeared in US1 Worksheets, the anthology POETS AGAINST THE WAR, ed. Sam Hamill, the New York Times feature on the Dodge Poetry Festival and many other publications. She received her MFA from Columbia University.

Burned

A course of action: to not
think about that. Instead, find
a recipe, one that calls for
flour, salt, wounds, and
tiny daggers.

In a mixing bowl, sift until
snowfall covers the sinkhole
entirely, in bitter perfection.
While it bakes, catch your breath.
Think of swampland.

Wait an hour, silently; when
the sunken submersible of
dignity rises from the deep,
stick a pin in it. Inhale heat
and its flavors.

While waiting, sponge and scrub
countertops. They won’t be
clean, but good enough. Place
in the window to cool. Eat
with your hands.

Gabriel Shanks lives and works in the New York City area. An award-winning poet, playwright and stage director, he was one of the creators of The Village Fragments, which received a 2007 OBIE Award. His poetry has been published in From Now On, Spark, Chopin With Cherries (2010) and elsewhere; theatrical recognitions include the Maxim Mazumdar New Play Award, the Southern Young Playwrights Award and the Theatre Project Honor for Outstanding Vision. He was recently named a "New Arts Leader" by the Washington, DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities.

A Friend, Post-Treatment

The problem is that
I can’t tell him what
I think about the fact
that he died.
                        I’m against it.

I’d rather he inhale, exhale,
repeat, et cetera,
                        but, as things are,

his parents, sibs and others
confront his worldly assets,
including a slow computer,
loose papers, and
an awful car
kept alive by his constant care.

It all may sit untouched for years
while loved ones deal
with more important things.

Ben-David Seligman lives in New Jersey, where he was born and raised, and where he works as an Assistant City Attorney. His poems have appeared in The Anthology of Magazine Verse, Midstream, Jewish Currents, Kerem, Yugntruf, Poetica, Spiral Bridge (Internet), The South Mountain Anthology, Columbia Perspectives, and Surgam.

(catalog of nightmares)

asphyxiation; aliens, from mars of course; black cats, the

bad luck kind; drowning, amidst those who drowned before

me & the muck that is decay; falling, jumping off of swings,

teeth, out of mouth; death (the dead), as if nothing

was wrong; screaming, lacking the ability; rape; car

crashes, witnessing demise; running, lack of speed;

witches and warlocks, Grimm to say the least; tornados;

babies, mine; losing, someone (close to me); getting caught,

under sheets & in closets; nudity, exposition; bathrooms,

no doors, filthy creatures; repetition; getting nowhere,

though I try; cartoons, funny colors;  breathing, underwater;

high school, a test of wills again; weddings; zombies.

Rachel is a 2008 graduate of Temple University’s Film and Media Arts program. Currently, she is working on two screenplays set in the Philadelphia area when she is not editing for Comcast Spotlight. 

Water, Communion

“My mother is a fish”

As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner

She’d anoint the dock with blood
And baptize the gills to save my
White mouth from swallowing
Insolent sea religion.

Blame the fisherman for biting
Silence and sanity and sin and
The worm-bait that begged her
Green algae kisses.

Marry the midwife that birthed
The last tide change and she’d
Steal the ebbing burden of
Quiet pressing waves.

My mother is a fish
And when the weight of scales
Scraped my eye like a hook,
Did you ever doubt she’d fight
To consecrate my water-grave?

Originally from Jupiter, Florida, Alexandra Gold has been living in Philadelphia for three years as a student at the University of Pennsylvania. She is currently a junior in the College of Arts & Sciences double majoring in English with a Creative Writing/Poetry Emphasis and Political Science.

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Best of Philadelphia Stories: Volume 2 – Author Bios

L. M. Asta has published fiction in Philadelphia Stories, Inkwell, Schuylkill, and Lemniscate, and her essays have appeared in Hippocrates and the Journal of the American Medical Association. Current projects include a novel set in a small motel and a collection of medical stories. A native of Bucks County, she trained at Temple University School of Medicine and St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children. She writes and practices in Northern California. www.lmasta.com.

 

 

Colleen Baranich grew up in Northeast Philadelphia and currently resides in Palmyra, NJ. She holds a B.A. in English Writing from Rider University and an M.A. in Speech-Language Pathology from The College of New Jersey. She works as a speech therapist in a hospital in Gloucester County. Her work has also appeared in the Schuylkill Valley Journal.

 

Deborah Burnham is the Associate Undergraduate Chair of English at Penn where she teaches literature and writing. She has lived and gardened in Powelton Village since moving to Philadelphia. Her most recent publication is a chapbook, Still, from Seven Kitchens Press.

 

Angela Canales is a West Philly native born to Colombian immigrants. She holds a Master’s Degree in Writing Studies from Saint Joseph‘s University.

Barry Dinerman’s recent fiction has appeared in Lullwater Review (Emory University). His plays have been staged on the West Coast by A Contemporary Theater and on the East Coast by a variety of companies.  The Edward Albee Foundation helped to support many projects.  He is a freelance editor and teaches non-credit courses in creative writing at Temple University Fort Washington.

 

Marie Davis-Williams grew up in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. She currently lives in New York’s Hudson Valley and continues to write stories inspired by her hometown.

 

Christina Delia received her BFA in Writing for Film and Television from The University of The Arts in Philadelphia. Her work can be found in the anthologies In One Year and Out The Other (Pocket books) and Random Acts of Malice: The Best of Happy Woman Magazine. She also writes the satirical wedding advice column "Bride Dish with Mags & Dags" for Happy Woman Magazine. Christina currently resides in central New Jersey with her husband, Robert.

 

Gwen Florio first worked in the West during the 1990s as a Denver-based national correspondent for The Philadelphia Inquirer. During her time at the Inquirer, she was also a member of Philadelphia?s Rittenhouse Writers Group. She has received two prose grants from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, and a residency from the Ucross Foundation in Wyoming. Florio now lives in Missoula, MT, where she is city editor for the Missoulian newspaper. She is afraid of bears.

 

Emily Fridlund grew up in the Twin Cities and earned her M.F.A. in fiction from Washington University in Saint Louis. She has published work in Boston Review, New Orleans Review, Quick Fiction, The Portland Review, The Great River Review, and Beloit Poetry Journal, among others. She is currently studying fiction at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

 

Leonard Gontarek has lived in Philadelphia for twenty years. He has taught and presented hundreds of poets through reading series in the area. He is the author of St. Genevieve Watching Over Paris, Van Morrison Can’t Find His Feet, Zen For Beginners and Deja Vu Diner (Autumn House Press, 2006). His poems have appeared in The Best American Poetry, Joyful Noise! An Anthology of American Spiritual Poetry, American Poetry Review, Blackbird, BlazeVox, Pool, Fence, Field, and as a tattoo.

 

Brian Patrick Heston grew up in Philadelphia Pennsylvania. He has a Master’s in English and Poetry from the University of New Hampshire and an MFA in Fiction from George Mason University. His poetry has appeared in Pennsylvania English, Confrontation, Slipstream, Cake Train, Poetry Southeast, West Branch, The Bitter Oleander, Many Mountains Moving, Philadelphia Stories, Portland Review, Gargoyle, and is upcoming in Painted Bride Quarterly and 5 A.M. He currently is an MFA candidate in Poetry at Rutgers University in Camden New Jersey and is an Assistant Editor with Many Mountains Moving Press.

 

Since his first published poem “Physics” appeared in Philadelphia Stories, Jason M. Jones has had his writing appear in a number of print and online journals, most recently Pear Noir!, Rosebud Magazine, and Gargoyle. In the meantime, he is nearly finished his first novel, Barcelona, which details the plight of an aspiring opera singer whose career ends when he contracts a terminal illness. An excerpt of this novel appeared in Slow Trains.

 

Autumn Konopka is a poet, teacher, amateur baker, sometime blogger, nonprofit devotee, democratic socialist, and ferocious Philadelphia Eagles fan. She lives just outside of Philadelphia with her husband, wee son, and two very fickle cats.

 

Nathan Long has work in Story Quarterly, Glimmer Train, Indiana Review, The Sun and other journals. He has won awards including a Truman Capote Literary Trust Fellowship, Breadloaf scholarships, a Virginia Commission of the Arts grant, and a Mellon Foundation Fellowship. He teaches creative writing at Richard Stockton College in NJ and lives in Germantown, PA.

 

Marguerite McGlinn was an editor and writer until her passing in 2008. Her travel stories appeared in the New York Times, the Sun-Sentinel, the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Los Angeles Times. She edited The Trivium: The LiberalArts of Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric (Paul Dry Books, 2002). Her short story about an American child and her Irish relatives won second place in a national competition and was published in English Journal. Three of her short stories won places in “Writing Aloud,” a program of dramatic readings that matches contemporary fiction with professional actors. She was an adjunct instructor at Saint Joseph University in Philadelphia and the nonfiction editor of Philadelphia Stories from 2004-2008. We still miss her terribly.

 

Elisabeth Majewski is a native of The Netherlands. She has published poems and essays for Dutch and French journals. Her English poems are forthcoming in a Weldon Kees anthology and in “The Working Poet—Seventy-Five Exercises in Poetry Writing,” both published by Backwaters Press. She is an English instructor at Montgomery County Community College during the day and a freelance translator at night.

 

Helen W. Mallon received her MFA degree in Fiction Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts and is completing a novel, working title Quaker Playboy Leaves Legacy of Confusion. Her poetry chapbook, from Finishing Line Press, is titled Bone China.  Biology, a short story, was nominated for a Pushcart Prize by Relief: A Quarterly Christian Expression. She has published poems, essays, and book reviews in the Philadelphia Inquirer, Kennesaw Review, Café Review, Drexel Online Journal, and Phoebe: A Feminist Journal, among others. She teaches short story writing at Cheltenham Adult School and works with private students. She lives with her family in Philadelphia.

Teresa Méndez-Quigley, a Philly native, was selected Montgomery County Poet Laureate by Ellen Bryant Voigt in 2004. Her poems have appeared in four volumes of the Mad Poets Review, Drexel Online Journal, Philadelphia Poets, California Quarterly, and more. She is passionate about health and the environment and feels compassion for living beings.

 

Eileen Moeller has an M.A. in Poetry from Syracuse University, and many years experience as a Storyteller. Her poems have appeared in Melusine, Umbrella, BlueFifth Review, The Wild, The Paterson Literary Review, Feminist Studies, and more. Her manuscript Body In Transit, is online at www.skinnycatdesign.co.uk/eileen/html. Her Blog And So I Sing is at eileenmoeller.blogspot.com

 

James (Jay) W. Morris grew up in Philadelphia and attended Central High School and LaSalle University, where he was awarded a scholarship for creative writing. His fiction has appeared in numerous literary magazines and for a time he worked as a monologue writer for Jay Leno. Recently, his first play, RUDE BABY, was produced by the City Theater Company of Wilmington, Delaware. "Regalia" is the second story of Jay’s to appear in Philadelphia Stories.

 

Mary Kate O’Donnell is an English and biology major at St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia. This is her first published piece.

 

Margaret A. Robinson’s chapbook of poems, about breast cancer and love, is called “Arrangements” and is available at the Finishing Line Press website. Robinson teaches in the creative writing program at Widener University and lives in Swarthmore.

 

Myrna Rodriguez was born and raised in Philadelphia and currently resides in South Jersey. She received her MFA in Creative Writing from Goddard College in January 2007, and is presently an adjunct instructor at several local colleges.

Mary Rohrer-Dann grew up in Philadelphia and currently teaches at Pennsylvania State University at University Park when she is not slumming at the Jersey shore. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in Cimarron Review, Sun Dog, Alembic, Antietam Review, Literary Mama, Atlanta Review, Sojourner, and other journals.

 

Ona Russell holds a PhD in literature from UC San Diego. She writes and lectures nationally on the topic of Literature and the Law and is a published novelist. Ona was named a finalist for her latest historical mystery, The Natural Selection, in three 2009 book award contests: the Next Generation Indie Book Awards, historical fiction category; the San Diego Book Awards, mystery category; and the prestigious California Book Awards, fiction category. She is currently working on her third Sarah Kaufman mystery, set against the backdrop of the 1920s Los Angeles Oil Boom. She lives in Solana Beach, California with her husband and has two grown children. For more information, please visit www.onarussell.com.

 

David Sanders has had his short fiction published in journals and anthologies that include Baltimore Review, The Laurel Review, Sycamore Review, Schuylkill Valley Journal, Philly Fiction, and others. He was a winner of the Third Coast national fiction competition and the Benjamin Franklin Tercentenary Autobiography Competition. His short plays have been produced at Brick Playhouse and at Inter Act Theatre Company, where David was founding director of the “Best of Philly” reading series, Writing Aloud. David lives in Queen Village with his wife, photo critic Nancy Brokaw.

 

Bernard J. Schaffer is a police detective in the Philadelphia Suburban Region. He is a lifelong resident of Montgomery County. His previous work has appeared in “American Police Beat Magazine,” “Comic Zone,” and “The Enemy Blog."

 

Marc Schuster is the author of two-and-a-half books, including The Greatest Show in the Galaxy and The Singular Exploits of Wonder Mom and Party Girl. He teaches English at Montgomery County Community College.

 

As an attorney practicing consumer bankruptcy law in Lancaster, PA, Mitchell Sommers may be one of the few people in America to benefit from the economic policies of George Bush. Mitchell received his MFA from the University of New Orleans and his law degree from Penn State Dickinson School of Law. He has had op-eds published in numerous Pennsylvania newspapers, including The Philadelphia Inquirer, and has had short stories published in Ellipsis and PHASE. He is currently fiction/non-fiction editor of Tatanacho, an online literary journal, and is working on a novel. He can be reached at sommersesq@aol.com.

 

Ryan Teitman is an MFA student in Creative Writing at Indiana University in Bloomington. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in DIAGRAM, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Mid-American Review, Pleiades, Puerto del Sol, and Redivider.

 

 

Valeria Tsygankova is an undergraduate at the University of Pennsylvania who studies English and works with print media and rare books. Her poems have appeared in The Wanderlust Review and Chantarelle’s Notebook and several campus publications. Valeria was born in Moscow and grew up in the Philadelphia area.

 

Gwen Wille graduated from the University of New Mexico in 2005, and now lives and works in the West Chester area. This is among her first poetry publications

 

Chad Willenborg’s work has appeared in McSweeney’s, The Believer, City Paper, and First City Review, and has been nominated for Best American Short Stories. He is working on a new novel set in Philadelphia.

 

Tim Zatzariny Jr. is a veteran reporter and writer, covering South Jersey and its residents. He also is an adjunct professor of Writing Arts at his alma mater, Rowan University. He is at work on his first novel, set in his hometown of Vineland, N.J.

 

PS READS

"PS Reads" is more than just a reading series. Each event showcases a variety of local authors that will not just share their work, but their insights into the world of writing and publishing. After a brief reading from our authors, we will begin a panel discussion that will cover subjects like: Where do you find your inspiration to write? What is your writing process? How do you get your work published in this competitive market? How do I find an agent? What are the best ways to promote my writing? The resulting conversation will help writers of all experience levels, and give readers a fascinating inside look into the complex world of writing.

Watch for upcoming events soon! If you are a local author and would like to be considered as a special PS Reads guest, please email  christine@philadelphiastories.org.