Alice Weiss
Briar Cliff
Review, glossy, eight by eleven, book bound, has riches: for the eye, for the mind, for
the heart. There are poems, essays, short stories. Every poem is accompanied by a color
photograph, or a color photograph of an artwork, on a facing page. The resulting experience is sumptuous. The editor, Tricia Currans-Sheehan is an
ironist and a gimlet eyed observer. I
know this because the photo given pride of place is black and white, pictures a
man’s chest, hands pulling his shirt open to reveal the Superman logo reaching
from his collarbone to mid abdomen.
Above the left fist gripping the shirt, is a smallish but readable name
tag like one you would wear at a convention: CLARK
KENT/ DAILY PLANET REPORTER/50 YEARS OF SERVICE.
The editor’s theme: the international is
local. The editor’s choices broadly
international. Thailand, Paraguay and
Pakistan, are examples of the reach. The first story “Thunder in Illinois”
rather remarkably illustrates that theme. It spans the world from
Champaignw-Urbana to Bangkok, but its locality is the marriage of the Evanses.
Mister being an international contractor with a mistress in Bangkok and Mrs.
being a fourth grade teacher who nonetheless and knowing his indiscretions
stays married to him. Their battleground
is a scrabble-like weekly game. They
have been keeping score for all the years of their marriage. He is losing by a few points although their
scores are close and add up to more than a million. She minds about the mistress. He is dying slowly from Leukemia. What is
amazing about this story is how adroitly the writer, Leslie Kirk Campbell,
handles all this material so you never notice you are reading a novel in five
pages.
Rose Lane’s
“Apogee,” the winner of BCR’s poetry contest, follows a dying father through
all the last times he does the things he does in his life, selling his lobster
boat, mowing neighbor’s lawn “for a couple of bucks.” While the family watches
the tractor reel, and his head bob up over the tall bushes, the poem rises to a
moment when the father picks up a dying baby bird, “no bigger than a knuckle,”
holds it and merges weeping with it in their common death, the bird “pecking
his path ahead.” Opposite this poem is the photograph of a painting,
“Vespers,”by Arlene Laoesche Branwick,a gold and orange yellow cloudish color
and a dark maroon, leading to a bright line horizon and then more
darkness. Apogee, the word, designates
the point at which a planetary body is furthest from the earth, a dispersal or
a movement of spirit both poem and painting share.
Another
coupling of the visible and the poetic: on the left side page a monotone Roberto Kusterlle, A Silent Mutation
9A/Head. gelled and spiked, spikes,
sharp beige tipped, scalp hair dark, sie of neck and face a rich browny beige,
skin rough even scarred. The shocking
sight is the spikes all over the head, but you can’t help thinking thorns. No face show in the photograph.
The facing page, a poem by Jed Myers, “Another Start”
Before all
the stars there was a dark /magnificent woman. . . a run
just under
the knee in that black silk
stocking
with all the luck – that’s all
it took, a
little defect, maybe
only as
long as a light year
The power of that defect and the scars and spike resonate in
such a way that again the picture and the poem become meditations on each
other’s power and power, itself.
This is a
magazine with many such moments.
:) Thank you Alice! I am a Briar Cliff alum. . .Tricia was one of my amazing teachers there. ~ Rene
ReplyDelete