Letter From the Executive Editor
Volume 14 | 2011
Each year, when I write this opening essay, I
end up writing variations on the same theme: the human condition in all its
terror and beauty. Simply put, the human condition is what it is, and
writers grapple with it over and over—sometimes making sense of it, sometimes
not—and the work we publish captures and depicts our ongoing, mythic human
journey. If that sounds like a cop-out, it’s not meant to be. Because each issue is different; each is beautiful and haunting and
transformative in its own way. But the raw material we’re all working
with as writers, that our authors have shaped into these winning poems and
stories and works of creative nonfiction, is made of the unchanging stuff that
joins us one to another—sentient and non-sentient, human and nonhuman
beings.
Inspired by Philip S. Bryant’s poem, we chose
How Myths Begin as the title for this year’s issue. Numerous abstract
words come to mind when you think of myth, words like epistemological,
archetypal, metaphysical, and allegorical. And let’s not forget
sacred. or our purposes, I’ll simply say that as we reviewed the
contents for our next issue, we marked the many ways in which our authors seek,
in Ed Bok Lee’s words, “something to believe in, bigger then themselves.” These writers are embracing, revising, and exploding old myths and creating new
ones. The narrator in “Veteran’s Day” by Sarah Gilbert, winner of the
2011 Judith Kitchen Creative Nonfiction Prize, chooses familiar heroes from
Greek myth as models: “But for the shredding of flesh, the man-killing, I could
be Achilles on any given day.” Home is her crucible: “Sarah, constant,
changeable, keeper of passions, bearer of woes, she of the loud voice, she who
wipes the tears of young boys, wife of an Army Reservist at war.”
Families in this issue re-enact—sometimes
heroically, sometimes violently, sometimes in silence—the deepest struggles and
decisions we face as humans. The father in Mark Rapacz’s story, “Bellwether,”
after impregnating his daughter, reinvents himself as a father. The
father in “What It Means To Be a Man,” by Ed Bok Lee forces a murderous
act on his son to teach him a lesson.
The questions asked in this work are important,
if unanswerable. “Let us keep turning to each other,” Travis Mossotti writes,
“like children / pausing for answers to questions that always begin / and end
with why.”
What is the nature of love? How do we
come to terms with, construct and reconstruct, our own identities? The narrator in Ames Hawkins’ “Optickal Allusion” is mesmerized by the novel
Jaws, which she reads when she’s in junior high. Her struggles with her
own sexual identity echo her father’s unspoken struggle:
But I also know that it wasn’t Brody, or Hooper, or Quint with whom I
identified. It was the shark itself, the great monster beneath, lurking
in the open blue, always on the move . . . . This is what George, my father,
and I had in common—the sense that we, too, could be hunted, tracked, and
killed. We were in this wide open together, hidden yet exposed. He
in his marriage and I in my gable.
Some of the questions asked are
heartbreaking. Why do some women conceive and others don’t—why do some
give birth to a healthy baby whereas others miscarry? In her poem, “From Five
Poems About an Apple Tree,” Sarah Fox asks: “How does one hold in the
mind a form / —which one intended to clutch, feed— / that is said to have
existed / inside the body / which evades completion . . . ”
“How did it happen that my hands came to carry
words?” Lidia Yuknavitch asks in “The Work of Art,” this year’s Meridel Le
Sueur Essay. She uncovers multiple roots of her avocation as a
writer. One was trauma: “When my daughter died in the belly world
of me, I became a writer—so that all the words that cannot name grief, all the
words threatening to erupt from my belly and uterus did not explode up and
through my skull and face and shatter the very world and sky.”
Why are some bodies healthy and whole whereas others are riddled with
cancer or AIDS, or depend on crutches and urinary catheters to function?
“We come into the world naked, in a puddle of pee,” writes Mary Jane LaVigne in
“On Incontinence: Tim’s Coming In and Out Party.” “We leave shed of all
artifice. In between, we clothe ourselves in personas, some chosen by us,
others by fate.”
Even in the womb, our bodies gesture.
Once born, we communicate and mis-communicate, healing and harming, often
indiscriminately. In “Signs of the Times” by Morgan Grayce Willow,
Honorable Mention winner of the Judith Kitchen Creative Nonfiction Prize, a
group of gang members mistake a deaf man’s signal that he is waiting for a #5
bus for a “dis” against them. Morgan writes: “Body of words.
Words—and signs—of the body. Whether hearing or deaf, we all require
bodies to make language, bodies which then put us smack in the middle of place
and story. Mistranslation can make of this gift a curse.”
Characters in this issue are in the midst of
mythic journeys—from child to adult, male to female, heterosexual (either in
actuality or as a default condition) to homosexual or bisexual, civilian to
military, single to partnered, birth to death. The personal and
political are juxtaposed and intertwined. The strong pummel the weak;
animals are cared for, eaten, and slaughtered. Common household objects
provide meaning and comfort: the family Sno-Cone maker, the Maytag washer, a
lemon, a box of oil paints.
We are caught between worlds; we yearn for wholeness; we commemorate the
dead. In “Orphans in the Terrorist World,” Rigoberto González mourns the
death of his mother, a grief thickened by the tragedy of September 11,
2001: “I descend into solitude for a day, and ascend the next morning
somehow refreshed, cleansed of a darkness that first took hold of me when I was
twelve years old. But each year, it comes back, this overwhelming
clobbering of my spirit. And each year, I survive it.”
Our writer’s interview this year is with
fiction writer Richard Bausch, author of eleven novels and eight collections of
short stories. In his interview, Bausch talks about his writing, his work
as a teacher, the creative process, effective dialogue, characters you can’t
forget, the importance of reading, and much more. He also gives
invaluable advice on how to live a writing life: “There’s really only one thing
to think about each day: Did I work?”
Our folio of photographs was curated (again!) by MCAD graduate, Ashley Kapaun. In selecting the photographs, and the cover, for this issue, Ashley wrote the following:
My inspiration revolves around the conflicting methods and circumstances
which define identity and the ambiguity of that definition, reflected in our
human gestures and exchanges, our secret beliefs and hidden altars, our
luminaries.
The photography compares the uncertain moment
to the moment of insight and hope, reflecting the continuous shift and expansion
of human thought and awareness.
This year’s essay review by Mary Cappello explores
the “biographical impulse” in two new books of creative nonfiction: a biography
of cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee and a “life” of Montaigne by Sarah Bakewell.
Both of these books newly imagine “the shape that a transcription of a life can
take in writing . . . . To be able to imagine new forms of thought (literary
genres) is also to be able to imagine new forms of life: not how to live, but
how to make life living.”
Stan Sanvel Rubin grapples with the making, and
non-making, of metaphor in contemporary poetry. He looks at four new
books of poetry—by Stephen Dunn, Carl Phillips, Michael Dickman, and Joni
Wallace—focusing on what he calls “declarative poetry: a poetry that by and
large abjures metaphor and decoration . . . . a poetry of cunning
transparency.” Making sense out of the cosmos, and our place
in it, is the domain of myth. We create stories to explain. A
preverbal child points to what he doesn’t know and gestures, “What is
that?” When she’s old enough to talk, she asks, incessantly, “Why?”
The earth is round. “Why?” Gravity keeps people standing
upright. “Why?” Finish your cereal. “Why?” Grandpa is
dying. “Why?” This “Why” can drive a parent to distraction.
We writers do it, too.
“If we are going to meditate on the purpose of
existence” writes Eleanor Lerman in “Mysterious Interventions,” “then we might
as well start / with Life As We Know It, into which / we were born
confused.” Even if there is no answer, the compulsion to know, Lerman
says, “does not diminish.” So what do we gain by such
questions? An occasional clue perhaps, “The night of a thousand falling
starts / The mysterious intervention that /changed what you think of as your
life / but may be something else. And if / so, that is where the real
work begins.
I hope you find your own “occasional clues” on
the pages of this new issue of Water~Stone Review. Where the real work
has begun, and is continuing
Mary François Rockcastle

