Alternative Constellations by Julie Lunde

The Astronomical Woman . . .

is planetary and huge, looming large, with as many moons as fingers, or stars. Every day she crafts a careful chignon, twisted in on itself like an ampersand, leaking bobby pins. From behind she is always saying yes, and?

Orion’s Belt . . .

must be heavy on his hips, I think, to carry that much light—to hold the sun. His is an hourglass figure, a magazine might say. Cigarette pants are forbidden. Stick to darker hues, nothing too tight. Avoid at all costs anything bright across the span where you are wide. It is ill-advised to string Christmas lights here. His hips should be hidden, cloaked in the black night—to draw the eye to his other assets, broad shoulders, long legs. Perhaps his outline is better suited to a pregnant woman, said to be glowing, but our model not concerned with trends or flattery struts his span for us.

Star-Smugglers . . .

have an impossible task—they shine too hard to hide, dead giveaways, their glow is a smoking gun spilling starlight out of pockets, caught red-handed with a burn from handling; serving up sneers with a shrug, with a smug smile, taunting. They are rude, obsequious; they love you for letting them be snide. They are terrible at hiding and seek, but good at lying. It is a lucrative business, this grave-digging; the pay will pay off just swell.

Mars . . .

Bars and milky ways, penny candies for galaxy hitch-hikers. Thumbs-ups flag down black hole portal taxis; prices are astronomically low here (but Uber rates are sky-high—few stars can drive). Sweeteners taste sweeter at this height; the addicts warn of sterilized star-Splenda that’ll eat you from the inside out. Orion tempted too many of these, his sore sweet tooth always hungering for cavities, for emptiness to fill a hunger for empty calories and empty things, cupboards and calendars, Saturday nights.

Vertigo . . .

The star that is afraid of heights knows real pain—he has made his home in a bed of fear, sinking his teeth deeper into doom, settling down in this hated real estate, praying for a break. He broods, he counts the paralyzed seconds between first lights and last night’s crazy heyday. He sleeps at dawn. He paces his concrete pavement, grey-blue; dancing up a melancholy streak, the fluttered hands flap in distress, the five extremities splay in shivers, in quivers, etc. He says et cetera aloud. He thinks nothing of it.

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Julie Lunde works at Penguin Random House and writes in her small Brooklyn apartment. Her previous works have been published in Typishly, Underwater New York, and Tikkun Magazine, among others. Visit her at julielunde.com for more.

“Alternative Constellations” is a guide to the rarer figures of astronomy. I like to think of this piece as the celestial version of Matthea Harvey’s Mermaid Poems; the cast of characters exist somewhere between sky and Earth, providing commentary on the above as much as the below.

BREATHE FREE PRESS ARCHIVE

OUR STORY

Experience zigzags leaps, regresses then spurts forward, tosses frays delays surprises. Narrative revisits manifestation in countless iterations recounted since the Big Bang. Machinations of living breathing striving to make meaning from days and nights of existence. Morning provides for itself.

Breathe Free Press is a place for the essay in every imaginable, inventive form, cross-genre—flash—critical—experimental—travel in particular the lyric essay. 

Narratives are a metronome to mark time: This happened, it happened often and repeatedly with some variations on different backdrops. Most often it happened on the planet Earth. Once and only once did it happen on the moon. Einstein’s space-time theory challenges our belief in the illusion of past, present, and future. The illusion, Jean Baudrillard cautions against in Simulacra and Simulation, is the normalization of empty signs of representation.

Breathe Free Press delights in essays testing patterns of perception. We appreciate attentiveness to language and cultural associations. Essays that transform and transgress metanarratives of authority and power structures. Essays to subvert imposed constraints of genre conventions.

Some man, at some time, dominates the human psyche with his emotional ignorance. It is almost as if fate colludes with tyrants to taunt our complacency into action.

Breathe Free Press challenges the normalization of regressive tropes of renascent authoritarianism, illiberal, nationalist power threatening to reverse progress. We publish essays that allude, intimate, insinuate, attempt, analyze, critique, and express through compassion and awareness.

No weapon was ever lifted, no peace ever made, no society ever founded in silence. Liberal and illiberal movements form on the page. Modernism repurposed and reinvented representation on the ashes of the material, human, and spiritual devastation of two world wars.

Breathe Free Press is an online journal of literary resistance for essays that channel the spirit penned in dog-eared spiral notebooks, in smoky subterranean basements. Nietzsche and Buddha’s conscious narratives were composed of the rhythm of protest that lit the fuse for epochal cultural change.

MISSION STATEMENT:

Breathe Free Press, a literary magazine of essays: Essays of resistance, imagination, and social awareness. The personal made global, and the global made personal.

The Heart of Poetry by Ai Aida

All words represent things only when there is a perceiver. Put another way; they are nothing until the perceiver shows up to decode and render their meanings. But even then, after the advent of the conscious mind, words are still forever empty. “I” for example, is devoid of content not only because it’s a pronoun which substitutes for a noun and which is literally nobody until somebody uses it, but because when one says/writes “I am a mother” or “I am a student” the word “mother” (m-o-t-h-e-r) or “student” (s-t-u-d-e-n-t) has no relevance whatsoever to the very thing it signifies. For words are not the things themselves and are empty of everything that is. This lack of thingness or is-ness is expressed in Buddhism as sunyata (a Sanskrit word for emptiness) and articulated in the following passage of the Heart Sutra:

Form is emptiness, emptiness is form

Emptiness is not separate from form, form is not separate from emptiness

Whatever is form is emptiness, whatever is emptiness is form

This emptiness is not only real but also physical because it is this emptiness –or the nothingness of things– that we feel when we touch flowers with our hands or when we soak our feet in water. We never come in contact with the “flowers” or the “water” but only with their reality; that is, their nothingness or their indescribable-, unsayable-, unnamable-nature. And the purpose of the above passage is to make us realize this fact so that we can transcend words/language and be free from the suffering caused by the linguistic “game” whose rules we created but with which we tie ourselves down endlessly.

Now, my question is: What is poetic language? And my answer to this is: It’s a language that is beyond language and therefore is closer to the emptiness or the nothingness of things mentioned above. In poetry, there is no fixed signified behind the signifiers which work on multiple levels and which are forever open to interpretations as they renew themselves every time they are read. The poetic words are meant to speak the silence of existence, no matter how impossible or contradictory that may seem. In this sense, it can also be said that the poet is someone who serves her end when her voice is no longer hers. The poet’s work belongs to the Universe. Poetry is the absence of the poet, and the poet is nobody in her poetry.

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Ai Ebashi (pen name: Ai Aida) is a Japanese-born writer and translator, who holds an M.A. in English Language and Literature from Istanbul Yeditepe University and an M.A. in English Literature from San Francisco State University, and who is currently an M.F.A. candidate in Creative Writing at San Francisco State University. Her plays have been seen in the Bay Area, California, and her poems, translations, short stories, non-fiction stories, and illustrations have appeared in New American Writing, National Geographic, Di-Vêrsé-City Anthology and Mainichi ga Hakken Japan, among other publications. She is a winner of the Leonard Isaacson Award Browning Monologue Contest and The Austin International Poetry Festival 2017. She has previously worked as a translator, journalist and children’s book author in Turkey, where she lived for seven years, and presently works as a Japanese language teacher and as a Creative Writing instructor at San Francisco State University.

perdido en las luces by Brendan Connolly

this should be more, a more lambent exomologesis of madrid. but this is not complete.

if it were the words would be wet to the touch. there would be noise and movement, lights between the letters humming softly. you would smell soapy water on cobblestones in the gaining morning while standing in front of large windows staring at slightly sheared pork legs. you would feel sunshine and breeze between shadowshuffled buildings blowing dust at cross streets and watch as it cyclones and does one, two turns on the corner and moves on into the crowds. there would be color and laughter, the echoes of talk over tables or counters of food, the taste of bread dunked in wine late at night after singing old irish drinking songs in the metro to the unimpressed across the tracks as trains squealed into the station. you would feel the bronze bite of a famous poet beneath purple neon lights in the heart of the city as you lean against him and look down the curving corridors of streets bleeding in more light and sound, but you had already been to the cervantes monument earlier that day under open sky between tall buildings and saw purple strands of light sifted between the outstretched fingers of don quixote as he reached for the sun in his small dirt garden of olive trees.

you would have a nowheretogo pace on saturday afternoon drinking wine and eating meatballs as you read a book written a hundred years ago about a different part of the country, an old man would spill his coffee down a counter and stain its pages, the man would be very upset by this, becoming vocal and dramatic, cursing as he makes a huge scene about his coffee until a replacement is put in front of him for his troubles, the pages of your book would still be stained after you dab them with drying towels you would grab from the servers station, keeping silent as you try to minimize the damage because imagine his reaction to your property being irrevocably ruined, he probably couldnt stand the thought, but soon a plate of chorizo and potatoes is given to you from the bartender and who cares about literature when theres food?

you would lightly step on the fine gravel of downwinding paths below the templo de debold in sight of the palacio real and the cathedral, both cliffside and imposing over the valley basin below where the buildings ebb to brown earth and hipsofwomen hills all along the horizon till the sierra de guadarrama with snow crested peaks cloaked in descending clouds that grizzleblur the berm of land and sky or enjoy quiet minutes sitting on a bench in a small park off of the viaduct littered with long flat seedpods dropped from the trees around you watching a girl balance on the guardrail at the edge of a fiftyfoot dropoff as her friend takes photos, from there though you would see the cathedral and the same mountain range miles behind but you would rather follow small birds as they burrow into the trees with your eyes and like always time gets away from you and is anybody else hungry?

it should have the break of dusk in the plaza tirso de molina and its buildings colored as though they were built from the sides of canyons, the ground tones wrapped with wrought iron terraces all crowded with hanging plants in pots, the torn posters reflecting the constant traffic and the shouts of salesmen with their bootleg dvds and a seemedsense seeps in that the city wasnt erected by human hands, more grown from the surrounding dirt hills and low shrubs and then the streetlights come on and cast an amber glow that showers more than it shows the everywherenoise, the barks of dogs and the revving of motorcycle engines, the loud steps of people wearing sneakers on the old stone, the laughing of smokers standing on a small patio as dark windows alight above the red neon signs of cafés or strung up balls of white lights that hem the overhangs like pearls in the desert behind thick trunked trees with thin scraggly branches missing leaves, the constant chorus of contrast between the doldrum building faces and the streaming color begging for attention scored by chalkboard scratching of skateboards grinding on concrete benches. you would get the feeling that it/s almost not worth seeing the sun in this city.

this is not entire.

it would have the love at first smile from a ravenhaired aisling crooning the language of ocean waves, offering arroz con leche but you cant make eye contact let alone express yourself in her language properly so you would accept the food and tell her she sounds of the earth and should be carved in marble, that she is like long drawling violins drowned out by the orchestra and so what if she doesnt understand because her glasscutting smile fills her face and youre back to staring at the bar, wondering why you would ever want to go home without a workingclass broken heart in a forgotten bar where plastic plants sit in front of mirrors and have orange lights shining through the branches. the scent of salt should creep in through barely opened windows early in the morning as the tires of slowly passing cars on the flat cobblestone street bleat below drying laundry hanging on clotheslines strung between the buildings swaying in the warming sunshine. you would feel the shoulders of others cramped around counters for breakfast and you would have café con leche and churros or tostada catalan and you would hear the crumple of discarded sugar packets piled on the linoleum floor as you step on them getting back to the grind of blocks with crosswalk signs that sing like ballading birds.

there should be more hunger. more confused looks during pidgin conversations in tiny bars of old men and daytime game shows where nothing is discussed at great length and done mostly through hands gestures, but youre in luck because they understand the universal dialect of pointing and saying please and thank you, sometimes the electric gambling machine in the corner would interrupt your orders with flashing lights and pinball noises as sexualized halfnaked cartoon women parodying charlies angels show up on the large screen, youre better off throwing your money against the wall because the rules are made for children and youre on your way out anyway to watch the watertrucks spraying down the streets as they patrol the winding plaza aton martin around the bronze statue of several people interlocking arms over shoulders as cars emerge from the underground to join the pulsing arteries of the city into the downward feeling of offshot neighborhood streets with iron ballasts outlining the sidewalk, barely giving room for police cruisers with silent blue lights to fly down the curved chutes of buildings early in the darkened morning.

there should be more walking. much more. long nowhere walks of grey stone streets and hiddenaway community gardens with gazebos built from lashed together driftwood and the small red and purple flowers of yet grown vegetables in rowed plots tucked into the nook behind buildings muraled with thirty foot bulls and lions rushing to the corner of their canvas. there should be a roundwrung weariness, accrued aches earned in between cafés and pop up flea markets in outoftheway plazas where children kick soccer balls against the surrounding buildings or following the wayward streets of record stores and indian restaurants, farmacias and tobacco shops, small convents and older mosques, memorials of angels randomly placed on the slender sidewalks, empty retail stores that all have fifty percent off sales, empanada stands and tall sticks of meat rotating on vertical spits for shawarma, people standing on the doorsteps of bars resting their drinks on wooden barrels as they smoke, images of oscar wilde made from tiles that adorn irish pubs with enormous bottles of jameson upside down in dispensers behind the bar, bakeries smelling of alcohol and the museo de jamon with marbled pink pork legs in the window, the winter air outside of the reina sofia beneath the glass elevators rising and falling along the exterior of the museum and you would try to go into the royal music conservatory in the same plaza but not get much further than the threshold so instead you shout shakespeare in an openair amphitheatre beside the observatory to empty benches of grass and stone where a man tunes his djembe and over the lip of the seats sit the carbon colored rooftops of madrid beyond a stockyard hugging the faces of the shallow valleys.

there should be a bounding loneliness on calle melancolias beneath the shade of the vincente calderon futbol stadium after having breakfast of café con leche and a sweetened croissant and mancilla smeared on crusty bread in a bar because the address you were looking for is just a city block worksite of opened earth but thankfully there are other incorrect streets with similar names you can hang around, sitting on the walls of dirt parks or walk along the shallow manzanares and watch novices try their hand at rollerblading over the pedestrian iron suspension bridges while others crosstrain like sled dogs, trying to run with a fullgrown man as an anchor birds fight for morsels of food from the slow current and fly to the muddy banks of cattails to hide and eat their meal.

there is a lacking to this.

it/s missing the headspun heralding of the crawling carousel of cafés and calles around the plaza mayor counting down the steps until you can see the patioed buildings and the pastel colored classical figures wrapped in grapevines looking down at the plaza and the tables and chairs spreading from the restaurants, voices muddled and contained are overpowered by the bizarre whistles of men selling selfie sticks under a large perforated fabric all pink and blue and red before the sun suspended from the tops of lampposts with lovelocks ringing their pedestals written all over with tragedy by the sad but beyond and through a darkened archway on the oldest street in madrid is blinding sun and the mercado de san miguel with its glass walls and crowded stalls of people moving for better views of the food in long display cases or somewhere to lean against an aluminum counter to eat with their hands from paper plates, you would drink sangria served from twenty gallon glass jars with floating apple pieces more tart than you expect so you pluck them from your drink with a wooden skewer and toss them to small brown birds in the rafters above you and you would walk to the plaza de las villas, the crest of spain carved in stone and mounted on the wall behind the bronze statue of a man on horseback, the scabbard on his hip hanging low over purple cabbage planted around the pedestal and further on you see the cathedral up the street but first you would stop at an irish pub because theres no excuse to take in religion on an empty stomach.

up a small set of stairs is a stone courtyard in the shade of the cathedral, on a bench is a bronze figure bundled under a sheet and inside you would hear ethereal music playing as you open the large wooden doors, it echoes from high cupolas and stainedglass windows as several colors of light bleed in and shine down on the golden crucifix standing on the main altar, behind it is the large wooden altar of the virgin of almudena showing the life and ministry of jesus and as you would climb the rounded stone staircase for a closer look you would see the huge organ pipes and rows of pews and the hollowed out campanillas, each with its own patron saint and electric candles glowing red, in a tuckedaway corner the chapel has frescoes of golden hues on its walls showing the three kings bearing gifts for the holy family, their features large and exaggerated and it/s hard to not just sit and listen to the haunting music but the sun is still up and there are more streets to wander back towards the puerta del sol and you would run into two violinists and a cellist playing frank sinatra on calle mayor as gutterpunks nearby have six plastic red cups out to solicit money, the names of different alcohols written across each and past them are little old women windowshopping in full length fur coats and beyond them the puerta del sol opens to bright sky and performance artists and people in costumes posing for pictures and bootleg handbags spread out on plastic tarps with string coming from the corners for a quick getaway if the police happen by so on you go past municipal buildings under construction and masked with scaffolding covered with webbed netting and you would smell roasting chestnuts and seared ears of corn until youre standing at the corner of paseo del prado and gran via watching jugglers wearing bowler hats performing in the street, throwing their tennis balls twenty feet into the air before lying in the crosswalks as the cars pulled to a stop at red lights.

there should be the night window literacy of sacred text streets written in oldhand that smoothbore the rowed buildings burning neon colors along the seam of the starless sky as you turn along the blinkandmiss corners following a beautiful argentine out for her birthday to a afterhours bar and of course you lose the people you came with because it/s 4am and your ten drink accent isnt getting you very far with your rapidly depleting vocabulary in the dark so you would dance your way through the crowd on the checkerboard dance floor, attracting the attention of an older woman that follows you to a table where youre speaking with a few gentlemen from peru and she would make the most obscene gesture towards you as you realize youre out of money and it/s yeah bye nice to meet you to the predawn streets shimmering in the streetlights on the walk to bed.

the streets always seem wet when there is no one around.

in dark bars after more cañas grandes than you expect, you would close huddle with a woman whose name you never intended to remember as the rest of the place bangs on the bar to salsa music and you two would talk about different cities she should visit in america, promising to watch the sun rise over the brooklyn bridge one day in the near future, using her smartphone translator for the more eloquent portions of your conversation, speaking quiet with folded hands and shoulders on soft skin, she would smell how sunflowers look in a field and you both knew this wasnt meant to last and afterwards on the sidewalk you would meet a newly arrived traveler from the ivory coast yelling up the building for a key to get in, this would be the most drunk you get and the neon sign of the matadero shines across the street in blurred red and through the tall plastic flaps at the entrance you would wander around the renovated slaughterhouse that now has artist residencies and a small movie theatre, you would have a caña and sit at a wooden picnic table and enjoy the sounds of traffic in the cool winter night air.

there would be unaccepted tarot readings from playing cards late at night with wine and bread and cheese bought from a gas station, surrounded by black and white photos of famous new york city bridges listening to punk rock covers of showtunes or singing villian songs from disney movies, trying to bounce a cork on the table so that it lands upright, you only get five attempts before it/s your turn to drink but this cant last forever because the next day youre going to the parque del buen retiro to sit with loose peacocks poking into low flowerbeds or listen as they stand on white trellises shouting their complaints to the day so on you would go and find people doing calisthenics in the shade of a blended brownburgundy tree cordoned off by a metal fence because its four hundred years old and you would kneel and pick up one of its fallen sprigs and place it in pages of poetry before hearing jazz standards past the dirt paths and low hedges and children chasing congregated pigeons which erupt in thunderous claps of wings as they fly over manicured plots of daisies around spurting fountains where birds youd never seen before peck at the dry loam next to green parrots as police pass riding large brown horses in front of the manmade lake filled with koi and people in row boats, behind them are huge stone statues to assorted royalty standing on stairs leading to the edge of the water and it/s not far to a satellite of the reina sofia and you would walk through the installation of prime number poetry written with straight lines mapped out on the floor, it looks like a circuit board but you would be more interested in playing blues on a paintedover piano, unfortunately there are rules regarding the touching of museum art so outside you would stroll, seeing the crystal palace through the trees and walk past a man playing por ti volare on a violin and then you hear american pie as you get closer to the shine between the trees and watch a marionette with a guitar go through the entirety of the song, the line is long around the crystal palace so you would keep going, hearing the laughter of children watching early afternoon puppet shows washes away some of the chill of the day and down the wide asphalt paths you would see people riding bikes or walking slowly with their hands behind their backs or exercising with leg lifts and hand cranks built by the city for public use, birthday parties for toddlers between a sparse clutch of trees with brown squirrels running through the scattered pine needles and leaf litter, the smell of running water around small rises of cypress trees as soccer is played within earshot in penned off fields fenced with tarped chainlink, through rolling mounds of pine and patchy low grass you would come across the end of the park and stroll down the several wooden sheds and folding tables of books and used postcards from the edges of the old eastern bloc already written on and mailed, by now you would be in sight of the atocha train station, its glass roof curved like an airplane hanger and set at the foot of curving stone stairs and filled with palm trees and ferns, a humid jungle beneath the strengthened sunshine showing misting water floating among the broad palm fronds until a shallow pool populated with leftbehind pet turtles all crowding together on small wooden squares of sand, you might try to name them but doing so would keep you from making your train to toldeo.

out of madrid the buildings turn to blasted expanses of crumbling earth stacked into smooth hills under heavy layered sky all blue and bright over the nameless homesteads and dirt roads traveling alongside the train tracks, tractors left out in the sun in plowed fields spotted with balanced stone shacks and barelyseen stretches of barbwire fence drenched in daylight and parched in the early afternoon exposure of yellowgreen treetops cyan by distance into sepia soaked dust of the rolling rises as scorcheddry topsoil melts to orange swaths sweeping away the passed window views, the strokes of brush anchoring the whipped grist from the arid mounds in the rushing overthere, sewing the horizon in languid lines windblown and polished with rising smoke from controlled burns of felled olive trees beside winding snakecreeks meandering through the faroff slender vales showing sky behind them, the slightslopes dressed by waves of large passing shadows.

you would feel like you could just reach up and grab the clouds if only the train would slow down.

there would be a wonderment at the stainedglass windows at the toledo train station where tourist kiosks want a few euro for a map but you would wander towards the river and find a walking path along its banks and you would see spurts of white water rushing over submerged stones before large grey stretches of rocky outcrops set into the opposite shore and from there you would see toledo on the hill across the river, its high walls and long stone staircase to the summit surrounded by small flowers and enormous aloe vera plants crumpled under their own weight but first you would have to cross the stone bridge with fortyfoot archways at either end. you would feel the burn in your legs as you ascend to the top and the grand views of the orange earth rolls away to small farms but downriver the road carves along the edge of green cliffs and ruins of stone still being washed over.

you would have sweat on your brow by the time you reach the tourist office, the cathedral dominating above the rim of the roofs and you only have to keep it in sight instead of relying on your map written in a different language, you would pass giftshops filled with damascus steel swords or numerous marzipan shops, one has a detailed miniature replica of the cathedral made from sugar, the crooked streets turn to stairs at whim and you would notice the peeling plaster and take photographs of doors while cars speed by on the narrow cobblestone streets heading uphill and in the shade of the cathedral you would eat in an underground restaurant, empty besides the legs of pigs hanging from the ceiling so with great confidence you would order a lomo bocadillo and a racion of tapas, the manchego cheese goes quickly, so does the chorizo tossed in stuffing, outside the sun shines down the long lines around the cathedral and you decide not to go in and instead sit in a small plaza nearby listening to a man playing numetal songs on a cello as roosting birds shoot from the shoulders of saints adorning the edifice of the cathedral.

down the other side of the hill is el greco/s home and in his garden of dry moorish fountains and small smooth stones and in the echoes of singing birds you would bend down, taking a stone home for your mother or write to your true love in new york city and watch children playing in a small dirt park at the edge of a cliff before wandering into cellars built centuries ago and are all thats left of a castle that once stood, in the house you would go the wrong way and see el greco/s thirteen apostles in wooden hallways leading downstairs, each holding their implements of death with serene faces, the kitchen and living quarters are period kept and the large ashgrey stone hearth has clay pots draped along its mantel from hooks with hemp rope.

and soon it/s back outside and across the street to the small dirt park and at the handrail you would lean over and look along the steep cliffs of grass and wildflowers to the running river and more ruins of fallendown bridges as birds fly from cracks in the rocky bluffs of the other bank, the sun drenched villas with the spanning views of toldeo look abandoned on the rolling ridges of cypress trees. you would walk down shadowed alleys of convents where the nuns make sweets from marzipan and you see suits of templar armor and a casual crucifix on a brick wall above toy crossbows with felt tipped arrowheads, the low buildings with christmas cactus plants behind iron grates over the windows of the old neighborhoods and over the crown of toldeo you would see the plain below and the escaping horizon of gold and brown and orange with spots of green around the farmhouses as you go down the stone stairs reading antitourist graffiti along the walls, seeing a herd of sheep grazing among the rocks on the banks of the river, their shepherd and sheepdog leaning against a sparse wooden fence quietly waiting in the sunshine as the sheep crowded wherever they discovered small flowers poking up but theres a train to catch back to madrid so you would have a quick meal and take the wrong seat on the train and are asked to move by its rightful occupants when all you want is to finish these postcards for back home.

there are still pieces missing.

there should be more confused corners. more art. you should feel the time drawing as you rush to the prado, on the metro you would stand next to an old man with an old accordian and on cue with the closing doors he plays loudly in the crowded train car, the leather of the accordian pitted and peeling and he smiles beneath a fewdays old beard so you would worm to the center of the car but heres your stop and through the tiled underground you follow signs to the exit and in pastel twilight you would stand in line waiting to get into the prado for free because youre not going to pay money to stand in rooms you hadnt been in since being in love and after a quick security check you aimlessly stroll through classical religious icons before standing in front of el greco or admiring a marble statue of a mother murdering her child before committing suicide, the sweethorror of terriblebeauty carved with flawless skill, the old triptychs of biblical stories not told on leaves and the incredible violence of the past and the hammeredhome reminder of mortality etched on canvas with oils by masters, the aged wood all goldengilded in brushed on dust, there would be crowds speaking all the languages of europe as art guides explain the importance of each piece loudly while more people push into the small galleries and take up the best real estate among the black paintings because there is nowhere else to go in this museum.

you would be corralled out while appreciating medieval wooden altars and large frescoes taken from churches somewhere deep in the countryside, finding yourself with thirst sitting under the statue of goya in the cool night air so away you astray and by accident stumble on the home of miguel de cervantes, it has a stone plaque on the building proclaiming he lived and died there on a tucked away side street of cafés and not much else but youre not far from the plaza de santa ana and the bar where hemingway used to sit and watch the world and you would find live music in a bar named after a beatles song, the dark walls covered with posters of rock gods but aside from your inherent distrust they give you free food and you stay to listen to the singer and guitarist duet, they play ella fitzgerald and johnny cash and of course you fall in love with her old world features forelit by white light singing your favorite songs to a halffilled room so far from home and soon they are accompanied by a flutist that melismas up and down scales in a rather impressive blazing solo, rounding out the sound of the duo and giving it real depth, but these things are all irrelevant because you would sit at your darkened table slackjawed and enraptured by the singer, trying to determine whether setting your passport on fire for her would be considered romantic or just a prudent life decision.

you would victory lap familiar neighborhoods as a consummate caucus racer chasing a finish line never in sight, stopping short in a bar where the walls are covered in black and white framed photographs of movie stars, some are obscure and you would try remembering the names of silent era actors with people sitting around the bar watching the soccer game on a television in the corner, you would sadly realize youre not as uptodate on the stars of golden age cinema and after the cañas and chorizo and olives and laughter and the sounds from the street you would remember it/s an early night and maybe the empanada stand is still open so foodinhand you would become a lone laggard on the walk to bed because in the morning you would have a quick goodbye to say to madrid at the legazpi metro station where at night the fountain in the middle of the plazas rotary is lit up in green, the color dancing on the falling water as cars pass in the dark, just silhouettes in the streetlight shadows.

and thats it. there is no more, no more to be thought, no deep meaning besides a searching hunger, no shouts from rooftops or groveling in the gutter, let alone some final truth or great epiphany, persian flaw potential rarely has answers towards the tailend of curtain call and it/s possible thats missing, a simple summation of the experience, a flashpoint spark of finality that wisps like white smoke into nowhere, left to the whim of a crossbreeze on a lonely street all blownfilled with loose pieces of paper and pooled billowing of dustclouds down the winding ways among the buildings. but thats not here. the only lessons you would learn are that beans are not called frijoles and that children speak the most pure form of spanish. not exactly an ending though maybe there isnt one, the heavyhearted always look for resolution in hiraeth, missing that the best memories are left behind in the grout of the sidewalks beside roses trying to grow from concrete, making it easier for you to go find them when walking back through your footsteps.

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Brendan Connolly’s work has been featured by incessant pipe, OPEN: Journal of Arts & Letters and River River Journal. He lives and writes in Salem, Ma.

In The Middle: On Crots, Markson, Writing & Wine by DS Levy

“Writer is pretty much tempted to quit writing.

Writer is weary unto death of making up stories.”

So begins David Markson’s This is Not a Novel (Counterpoint Press, 2001). This anti-novel wastes no time with background, exposition, or scene-setting, but rather notes down individual statements of fact about well-known writers, musicians, and artists. Markson locates these building blocks of narrative in luxurious white space or crots. The negative space is the place where I can stop, breathe, reflect.

Reading the crot is like finding a desperate note in a bottle.

“In composition, a crot is a verbal bit or fragment used as an autonomous unit to create an effect of abruptness and rapid transition. Also called a blip.” (thoughtco.com)

This Is Not a Novel does not rely on narrative convention: characters, plot, theme, setting—all the expected fictional elements readers expect:

I’m drinking chilled Moscato.

Does it really matter what I’m drinking? Do you even care that I have a life beyond these words? Aren’t words enough? Would knowing more about the writer make you more interested in reading my words?

Answer: No. I do not consider myself an interesting person.

Someone is pulling someone’s chain here.

It’s a perfect evening, a still evening—until as the day waxes into the night, some dumbass starts mowing his lawn. Then … a percussive explosion.

Earlier this evening I wrote:

How to describe a perfect evening on the back porch drinking Moscato while sitting with the dog—he in his chair, me in mine. The pale blue sky. The still maple trees reaching up. Birds tweeting, twittering. The humming of the neighbor’s AC. Tires licking the pavement down the street. Otherwise, Friday night in the city. Still as still can be. That’s a cliché. But how else to say it? I have never experienced a stillness like this before. The evening is so perfect it brings tears. I’ve thought of moving from this place I’ve called home for sixty years, but how could I? This place, this perfect, perfect place.

You see what I mean? How words fail me when I’m trying to be writerly?

Like Markson’s narrator, I’m tempted to quit writing. I am always tempted to quit writing. I am wary of making up stories. How many stories are there to make up? What haven’t you read? How do I tell you what I’m feeling, what this (cheap) wine has done to loosen my tongue?

The sky is turning silver-pink. The lawn mower is thankfully still. A bird chirps its last heavenly call—for what? To whom? The Moscato kicks in, bringing on a nocturnal feeling of melancholy and gloom. (Not gloom really, I’m exaggerating for the sake of writing, trying to pull you in, trying to make you like me better.)

I don’t want you to know everything about me. I have secrets. I’ll keep them, maybe make you work for them. Or not.

The writer David Shields says the best thing F. Scott Fitzgerald ever wrote was The Crack-Up, a collection of essays about the ups and downs of the writing world whose main essay begins: “Of course all life is a process of breaking down …”

Carole Maso.

Sarah Manguso.

Maggie Nelson.

Anne Carson.

Some of the writers who use crots to writeBut didn’t I say I’m tired of writing? Or just tired of traditional storytelling?

Carole Maso’s sister was a professional tennis player. I was standing (or sitting) beside her when she said so. I was one of many who had gone to hear her talk about her writing in The Barn on the Bennington College campus. It struck me as odd, someone so ethereal as Maso to have a sister whose feet depended on solidness of ground, whose feet were planted on an asphalt, grass or clay tennis court.

Maso had told us she was writing “etudes.” I didn’t know what that meant, but I sure as hell remembered that her sister was a tennis pro.

The mind and the heart hear what it wants to hear.

Wizard of Oz: As for you, my galvanized friend, you want a heart. You don’t know how lucky you are not to have one. Hearts will never be practical until they can be made unbreakable.

Tin Woodsman: But I still want one.

Mary Ruefle also sometimes writes in crots. Also, Eula Biss.

You can go swimming in white space. Dive in, paddle around. Think, wonder, dream, imagine, lose yourself.

White spaces are a place to float before swimming on toward shore.

I never understood “transitions.” The need for them seems so … traditional, old-fashioned. Why build a bridge when you can knock one down? Isn’t the pile of ruble worth more than easy access?

Markson’s anti-novel is about the “travail—and all too often tragedy—of the creative life” (book jacket blurb). He reveals much about the way various well-known artists have died.

Markson died on June 4, 2010. His children found him dead in his bed. He had cancer. As per his wishes, his entire personal library was donated to the Strand Bookstore. He was born in Albany, New York.

Markson’s later novels are, in Markson’s words, “literally crammed with literary and artistic anecdotes” and the “nonlinear, discontinuous, collage-like, an assemblage.” (Wikipedia)

There are many people I don’t trust, but I always trust collage, which seems like watching a mind play tennis on the page.

The beauty of collage is that there is no true beginning, middle or end. Each crot is a beginning, middle and end, and the overall arc of the story has no end or beginning, only a middle.

An ongoing middle, the way life is really lived, or at least how we imagine it, never understanding where we’ve come from or where we’re going until it’s (usually) too late.

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DS Levy is a writer from the Midwest. Her essays and short fiction have been published in Brevity, The Pinch, Hippocampus Magazine, Gravel Magazine, Pithead Chapel, the Alaska Quarterly Review, Columbia, Santa Fe Writer’s Project, and Little Fiction, among others. Her website is dslevywriter.wordpress.com, and you can find her on Twitter at @122cats.

SYNTAX by Samuel Cole

As a boy, I listened carefully to my parents who talked openly in the kitchen about everything. I was rarely the topic of conversation: a face seated at the table; a vexation with a big appetite; a house pet who wore my father’s ski-slope nose and my mother’s bottom-heavy ass; a creaky fulcrum on which their tiny world swung. And missed. Sometimes they laughed. Oftentimes they stared at each other menacingly, as if to erase the other altogether.

When I turned ten, I sat atop the kitchen table to practice spelling words. My parents didn’t yell me off the table or point me upstairs. Invisibility: a word I could spell, define, and draw upon. With refrain.

One night, creating a top 10 favorite vocabulary list of 1991, I overheard my mother ask my father, “I wonder if rain ever wishes to be something other than wetness.”

  1. WETNESS

“God, you’re dumb,” he said, leaning against the baker’s rack. “Rain becomes snow if the temperature gets low enough.”

  1. TEMPERATURE

“How cold does it have to get before that happens?”

“It depends on the amount of humidity in the air and the rate at which precipitation falls. Do you know nothing besides pea pods and chicken?”

“Don’t be mean to me.”

  1. PRECIPITATION

“Speaking of rain.” His voice turned cavernous. “I’m feeling a downpour coming on myself.”

  1. DOWNPOUR

“Henry.” My mother snapped, stirring with a spatula pea pods and chicken. “Don’t be a pervert.”

  1. PERVERT

“Said the biggest dick tease in high school.” He laughed.

“Miriam Bensworth was the biggest dick tease.” My mother turned around and threw a dishtowel at his crotch. “I was the biggest seduction.”

He threw back the dishtowel which landed on my mother’s face before it fell into her hands. “Miriam Bensworth was a dick thesaurus who knew all the freakiest words to explain everything I needed,” he said.

  1. FREAKIEST

“Miriam Bensworth was a classless slut.”

“No.” My father shook his head. “She was simply unwilling to change her character.”

“It’s time we both got over her.”

“Still threatened, I see.”

“A rose isn’t threatened by a skunk cabbage.”

“You, a rose.” He stepped forward and wrapped his fingers around my mother’s waist. “No, I don’t think so.”  He squeezed her neck. “But you and your ways won out.”

7. ROSE

“You can be so vile sometimes.”

“Say it.” He squeezed. My mother stood quiet, her cheeks turning red. Water poured from the faucet as he slapped her ass. Over and over. He buried his lips in her cleavage. She shrieked. Her boobs jiggled like Jello. “I said say it.”

  1. CLEAVAGE

“You said last time was the last time.”

“I lied. Now say it.”

She stared at the floor, and whispered, “Whore.”

“Now come upstairs so I can show you what a real rainstorm looks like.”

  1. WHORE

My mother turned off the stove and covered the pan with a dinner plate while my father’s face took on the wild lust my sexual adulthood would become. Embedded. Combative. Disturbed. So very.

  1. UNWELL


Samuel Cole lives in Woodbury, MN, where he finds work in special event/development management. He’s a poet, flash fiction geek, and political essayist enthusiast. His work has appeared in many literary journals, and his first poetry collection, Bereft and the Same-Sex Heart, was published in October 2016 by Pski’s Porch Publishing. His second book, Bloodwork, a collection of short stories, will be published in 2017. He is also an award-winning card maker and scrapbooker.