“The Wanderers,” Original Fiction by M.S. Coe

“The Wanderers”
by M.S. Coe

Even though the desert sun has dipped far below the mountaintops, a leftover burn snakes up through the asphalt of Saint Mary’s parking lot. The automatic entrance wheezes open to admit Magnus. In the hallways, he makes one wrong turn, then another, before he finds the elevator.

The doors part; a woman presses against the back corner.

“Going up?” Magnus asks.

She says, “I’m a star.” A flannel nightgown sags past her slippers. “I’m going to shoot right down out of this place.”

“I like your hair.” Thick synthetic strands pouf around her head. Perhaps she will be one of Magnus’s charges.

“Just wait,” she says. “On my third trip to France, the virtuoso composed a — pretty — about me. It was my theme song.” She executes a stiff curtsey. “When can we begin?”

The elevator dings and they step out.

A nurse seated behind a computer says, “I’m Annie. You can only be Magnus. I see you’ve met our Mrs. Brandey — looks like I’ll have to change the elevator code again.”

Magnus nods and takes the seat Annie offers.

“She’s one of our wanderers.” While Annie shuffles papers, Magnus glances at her. She is big-boned with long, thick, dark hair secured in a ponytail. She wears bubblegum lipstick too light for her complexion. “Your background checked out fine. I’m pleased to find a volunteer. We never get takers for the twelve-to-three shift.”

“I go to work at four in the morning,” Magnus says. “I don’t sleep at night.”

“And you’re interested in volunteering with the elderly?”

“Yes.” Magnus fidgets. He hopes that Saint Mary will be the outlet he has been searching for, the place where he can interact with people when he is at his most alert and needy: the middle of the night. Tentatively, he tells Annie, “But I’d also love to work with babies. Infants, I mean.”

“Really?” she says. “A man like you? How surprising. A man who loves cute babies.”

Magnus shrugs and doesn’t tell her that he prefers the ugly babies, their squished faces and unnaturally colored skin, their hair sprouting in strange places. Such tiny homeliness stirs his affection. They are brand-new, but flawed, an endearing contradiction.

“Not that I don’t adore babies myself,” she says. “Not that a man can’t… Well.” She clears her throat. “Would you like to see the newborns?”

Magnus follows her up one floor and down a hallway. They stand side by side in front of the glass and stare into the dim room filled with miniature beds.

“I wish we could have a volunteer for the babies,” Annie says. “Sensory stimulation is so important in the first few weeks. They can only see thirty or so inches in front of their nose, so you have to get right up close.”

“I could stay with them,” says Magnus, imagining a baby wriggling in his swaddling.

“That would be nice,” says Annie, “but we can’t. New parents are… protective. If only they knew the infinite good a volunteer could do, especially when we are so short-staffed.” She doesn’t move, though. “Do you know how to properly hold a baby?”

“I think so. Not really.”

Annie opens the door and they enter the cheddar soup-smelling nursery. She hands him a baby. The power of holding a person only hours old makes him long for the influence of fatherhood, of his presence in a life from its very inception. Annie says that he’s a natural.

Tuesdays and Thursdays at midnight, Magnus steps into the air-conditioned hospital from the neon glow of Las Vegas, retrieves his volunteer nametag from the unmanned reception desk, and heads to geriatrics.

Alone in the stainless steel kitchen, he slices sugar-free banana bread and brews decaffeinated coffee. Then he searches for the wanderers, those patients with dementia or insomnia who wake suddenly — or never fall asleep in the first place — and spend their night hours perambulating the hallways. Annie explained the many benefits of a midnight snack. The routine calms the patients, helps them remember where they are, even induces them into sleep. They’re less likely to hallucinate or fall or wander away lost if they keep busy, and eating is as good an activity as any. The term for his charges’ nighttime restlessness is “sundowning,” as if one of their symptoms is to become nocturnal, like the desert life that surrounds them.

Tonight, Mrs. Brandey drapes herself over the television in the entertainment room. Her cheek presses against the top of the dark box. “Don’t you ever leave me again!” she says shrilly, then lowers her voice to a croaking old baritone. “But I love your twin sister.” Her voice rises. “But I am the mother of your children! The godmother! The grandmother!”

Mrs. Brandey is reminiscing about her days on a seventies soap opera. Magnus tried to look up her acting career, but she often changes the name of the soap and his internet search turned up blank. Maybe she worked under a forgotten pseudonym. The nurses know nothing.

Magnus guides Mrs. B. away from the television and finds Mr. and Mrs. Herrera at opposite ends of a room, their backs to each other. Annie told him that one spouse’s diagnosis increases the other’s risk sixfold: a startling influence of proximity, like the one Magnus imagines a father might have over his son. Though the Herreras rarely acknowledge each other, they stay in a close orbit.

His charges settle around the table, and Magnus lights a centerpiece candle. He likes them to feel attended to.

Mrs. Brandey says, “Today I went to the zoo in a beautiful black boat of a car.” A bit of plum skin sticks to her bottom lip. “I wanted to see the lioness because she is devastated; her mate died of confinement, and she must raise the cub on her own.”

After snack time, Magnus leads the patients to their bedrooms — the Herreras’ rooms adjoin and he delivers them last in case they remember to say goodnight.

Mr. Herrera watches his wife disappear inside and says, “Who is that dirty girl? Maybe she’ll buy me a… the drink. With ice cream. Ice cream and… a milk shiver.”

Over Mr. Herrera’s window hangs a painting of a pond, mother duck in its center. Three ducklings trail behind. The movement of the sun, its shadows and nightly disappearance, agitates Mr. Herrera; the painting covering the window is an attempt to make his world more static. He says, “Do you think she likes strawberry?”

Magnus shrugs. “You should ask her in the morning. Now it’s time to sleep.”

In the empty corridors, Magnus tries to shut off his brain, to forget that he lives alone, that his greatest wish in life is to become a father, that he ate cold pizza for breakfast at eight in the evening — but he can’t forget himself.

One thing he had forgotten, that Mr. Herrera’s painting returns to him: a book, The Ugly Duckling, read by his mother, and his intense disappointment when the ugly one grew beautiful. Each night the same story, but he never accepted the transformation.

Magnus finds Annie the nurse counting pills. She has started to wear blush and eye shadow. He wonders if she paints herself always, or only when he’s on the schedule.

She snaps a bottle shut. “Do you want to go?”

“Yes,” he says. “Thank you.”

She brushes lightly against his upper arm and leads him down the hall, up one story. At week fourteen, she says, in preparation for birth, a baby pretends to breathe.

When they reach the door, she swipes the key-card dangling from her lanyard and a light flashes green. Her zebra-striped bra shows through the white uniform.

“Have fun,” Annie says. “I’ll be back for you later.”

This is their arrangement: Magnus gets twenty-seven minutes to hold, coo at, and tickle the babies in the half-hour gap between shifts. For these thirty minutes, Annie is the hospital staff. No visitors are allowed and the new parents are passed out. If questioned, he will say that he’s a doctor. Magnus knows how to handle a baby, to sanitize his hands. He’s careful. His presence comforts the infants when everyone else is too busy. Annie told Magnus that it was obvious he shares her commitment to the patients’ wellbeing, and then she proposed, a surprise to him, these unofficial visits. They will benefit everyone, she said as he nodded along, grateful that she had unwittingly absorbed his silent desires.

Magnus’s eyes adjust to the dim nightlights that glow every few feet along the nursery; the fluorescents turn off at nine o’clock as a form of sleep training. The room is a white-tiled square, one wall a window into the hallway, with not much inside besides five rows of tiny beds, usually only half or a third filled, and a couple metal-and-corduroy chairs. Everything feels quiet, though the air rustles with breath. Soon, his eyes make out a tiny arm, a round head, a cocooned body. He smells warm cheese. The babies.

Finally, among these new and most lonesome of souls, he feels at home.

The nameplate affixed to the closest wheely-bassinet reads “Leslie Lars Hunter.” Little Leslie Lars’s eyes aren’t closed all the way, but his lips purse and saliva trails to his blanket: deep sleep.

Magnus searches for the ugliest baby. Beneath a pink blanket, he finds Vanessa D’migi, her name a handsome hum of syllables. She smells of parmesan.

Vanessa’s bony bottom fits in Magnus’s one palm and her lumpy head fits in his other. Her long, thin body rejects all the fat, happy babies from commercials. Reddish freckles spot her yellow skin. A patch of dark hair grows over her left ear and her eyes are very close together, even for a baby. Such a unique form can only produce a unique person, and Magnus thrills at the possibilities concentrated in her six pounds. He adores her, homely Vanessa D’migi.

At four in the morning, Magnus arrives for work in a part of the Las Vegas Valley that everyone calls Water Wasters. Green Acres, the development’s official name, is where all the rich people build houses with custom bathrooms and custom billiards rooms and extra-large bedrooms so that no one has to spend any time in the living room together. All the houses have lush green lawns, as required by the homeowners association, and jungle-inspired pools. The construction workers could never afford a Water Waster, which Magnus assumes is the reason everyone else hates this job. Magnus hates it because fake beauty is the only aesthetic allowed in Green Acres’ man-made desert oasis.

At lunch, he holds a peaches-and-cream jellybean between his thumb and pointer finger: the size of a two-month-old fetus. He places the bean back in its baggie.

Magnus, a roofer, works above the other men, on a platform for the sun, which burns into his back as soon as it rises. Though he sucks down water, he only has to piss once. It’s June in the desert.

The midnight snacks are ready, but the only person Magnus can find is Mrs. Brandey. They sit side by side at the round table. The absent wanderers are hopefully asleep, but he isn’t supposed to enter their dark bedrooms without reason. Not that he wants to: the cold black of the rooms reminds him that the person beneath the sheet might be only a body, a cold object itself. The death of the old, with their long lives to extinguish, feels more substantial than the death of babies. An infant is a clean slate, reproducible in another nine months, but the old have been shaped so precisely that not even a clone would be their replica.

“Mrs. B.,” he asks, “where are the others?”

“God fuck them!” Her hand slams against her plate. Bits of cake smash up through her fingers and crumbs scattershot around her place setting. She runs through an angry slew of curses, then moans, “I hate… I hate… I hate… the block. Inside of me.” Her dirty hands fold calmly in her lap. “They’re jealous. Bright green, in fact.”

The most disconcerting part of his job is this: accepting the patients’ outbursts tranquilly, as though nothing is wrong. His nonchalant reaction should soothe them, but he doesn’t understand why he must pretend that Mrs. B. is perfectly fine when, in fact, her brain is boiling over, melting away the neuron connections that once made her herself.

“Mrs. B.,” he says, a shiver running through his spine, “would you like some yogurt?”

She leans her face towards him, the wig low on her forehead. Her denture-less mouth collapses over her gums and her bottom eyelids droop, though the top ones are taut, making her eyes strangely round. “You know, Magnus,” she says. She has never called him by his name before, though he’s introduced himself twenty times and wears a nametag in large print. “Nurse Annie is in love with you.” The candlelight flickers over the wet spot her tongue leaves on her lips.

Magnus blushes and ducks his head. “No.”

“I’ve been on this earth for ninety years.” Her records list her as seventy-nine, but Magnus nods. “Nurse Annie loves you, true and deep, with the sort of love Amos and I shared on episode one hundred forty-two.”

“Who told you this?” Magnus asks.

“Told me what?”

“Who told you Annie, Nurse Annie… that she…” Magnus cannot say the rest. Every day, he sleeps in the patch of sun on his bed to trick his subconscious into believing it’s near someone’s body heat. Even in Las Vegas, a city of night, where most days the sun burns mean and harsh, it is difficult to find a woman willing to sleep all afternoon and into evening. Annie, the night nurse, might. They could coordinate their lives as sundowners.

“Stop mumbling,” Mrs. Brandey says. “Now let me tell you about Amos. He owned a… the place with horses. Like salad dressing. A suave man, Amos! He wanted to whisk me away so we could raise a family of seven, but I was a city girl, through and through.”

After snack time, Annie finds him. “At thirteen weeks,” she says, “a baby develops a unique set of fingerprints.”

Magnus trails her down the hallway. Mrs. B.’s love idea makes him a bit afraid of Annie. She doesn’t love him, she doesn’t know him, but Magnus can’t slip the thought. He is forty-two and he’d guess that Annie is three or so years younger. She looks motherly, soft and sure of herself on a corporeal level. She’s almost as tall as Magnus — he’s tall — which means he wouldn’t need to lean far to kiss her.

When they reach the nursery, Annie stops in front of the viewing window, where she stood on the night they met.

“They’re cute, aren’t they?” she says. “Babies are so cute.”

“Most of them.”

“They’re cute. If I ever had a baby…”

He asks quickly, “You don’t have any kids?”

She holds up her unadorned left hand. Magnus feels an unexpected wash of relief: he would not need to inherit her children; they could make their own. Annie is likely nearing the end of her childbearing days, encouragement to work quickly. “We’d better let you in,” she says, “before time’s up.”

He wonders if he and Annie, both reasonably attractive, could produce an ugly baby, or if their offspring would turn out like everyone else’s, plump and button-nosed. Maybe their baby would wind up with Magnus’s big chin and Annie’s abbreviated forehead and all his features would squish to the center of his face. Maybe he’d come out with a cleft palate.

Before Magnus’s shift ends, he finds Mrs. Brandey, wigless, in the hallway, her nails digging into her forearm. Continents of scabs show through her sparse hair.

“You’re out of bed,” he says, “let me help you.” He pries her thumb away from her arm’s thin flesh.

“I hate you!” she says.

Her hand flies up and slaps him across the face. The blow is soft, like a thrown pillow, but he trembles with shock. “I want to help,” he says.

“You never make me happy. You never do. I hate this.” Her hands flutter through the air around her body. “Isn’t it time to begin?”

Though Magnus suspects that Mrs. B. knows he cannot help her, not really, she allows him to lead her to bed. She pulls her wig, left on the quilt, over her eyes.

Wednesdays are hardest, the low point of his week, bookended by the highs of volunteer shifts. Wednesday night, he drives away from the city, away from the noise and people, the constant blush of neon. The truck winds up humming across Death Valley on a road illuminated only by his headlights. He tries to lose his mind to the air rushing through the window and resonating in his ears, but instead, his body dissolves. Somehow, his hands stay on the steering wheel, his foot presses on pedals, his spine fits along the seat, but he is only a brilliant collision of synapses. These are the sparks that the wanderers are losing, the sparks he worries are extinguishing, already, from his own brain. He needs redefinition, wholeness, a replica — himself, outside himself, where he can observe. He must begin, again.

But for now, he pulls the wheel hard left, turning the truck back the way it came. He cannot be late for Water Wasters.

Skylights are Magnus’s specialty. He not only knows how to install all shapes, sizes, and types, but he also knows where to install them. The movement of the sun plays so often across his back as he works that he can predict where and when, with what intensity, the sun will enter an envisioned skylight, where the light will move inside a room.

Magnus is so good at his job that it bores him. Sometimes, he counteracts this boredom by imagining what his skylights will illuminate. For a bedroom, he pictures the couple who will wake up below him. Kitchen skylights must brighten the spots people will stand in most often: before the stove or the sink. If there’s a dining nook, he’ll place the skylight to spotlight it at breakfast. At the completion of each skylight, he etches his initials into its frame: a pitiful way to leave a legacy.

As dawn overtakes the workers, one of the plumbers boasts about the strength of his sperm and how it impregnated his girlfriend for the second time.

“The first one was enough,” he says, “but now we gonna have two on our hands.”

“Is it a boy or girl?” Magnus asks, entering the conversation against his better judgment. It burns, knowing that this indifferent man will be a father twice over before Magnus has his first chance.

“Man, I got no idea,” says the father-to-be. “When can you even know that shit?”

An ultrasound at eighteen to twenty weeks, thinks Magnus. The girlfriend might be that far along; she hasn’t come to the site for a couple of months. Magnus thinks of her as a woman who spends more money on acrylics than groceries. An embryo grows fingernails at nine weeks and at thirty-two weeks the nails extend beyond the tips of the fingers, long enough for the enwombed baby to scratch itself or its mother.

When Magnus reaches Saint Mary, he heads to the television room, Mrs. B.’s favorite spot.

“Hello, Charles,” she says. “Can we begin? Isn’t it time?”

When lost in her fantasy world, she has addressed him as “the postman” and “Señor Hondurez,” but never before as “Charles.” He asks her if she’s hungry.

She shuts her eyes and turns her head away, as though he scares her. “You look suspicious,” she says. “What have you done to me?”

“It’s all right. This is snack time. We’re going to have cookies.” He realizes that he’s altered his voice to talk with her, the way he babbles to the infants.

Her eyes still closed, she holds out her hand. “Take me away, Charles, if you must.”

He leads her, trembling, to the dining room.

A few other wanderers are out. Mr. Herrera strokes the leaves of a potted plant while Mrs. Herrera stares at her reflection in a darkened window. Magnus seats them around Mrs. B. He tries to set a good example with his own sugar-free cookies and the caffeinated coffee he made just for himself, wiping his mouth and patting up the drops that plop onto the table. His charges forget simple things like what a napkin is for and that coffee is sometimes too hot to drink. Magnus has learned to set the mugs out to cool before passing them around.

“Charles,” says Mrs. Brandey, “may I have another pastry? I used to bake pastries like this when you were a little boy.”

Magnus’s curiosity piques: Charles might occupy Mrs. B.’s real, not her television, life. “Oh, yes,” he says, “they were delicious. How did you make them, again?”

Mrs. B. wiggles more firmly into her chair. “Well, they were difficult. First I’d grow the blueberries.” The cookies on their plates are chocolate chip. “Then to the mill for flour, the farmer Jonson for eggs.” This sounds complicated, but perhaps she lived in the country between the soap’s tapings — if there were tapings. “I churned the butter myself, of course.”

“Didn’t I help you?”

Mrs. B. ignores his question in favor of eating another cookie. He wonders what she was like as a baby, whose guidance brought her to this place.

Mr. Herrera keeps reaching for his cup, but his quavering hand won’t cooperate. Mrs. Herrera is sorting her crumbs, large to small. Magnus wonders if an infant, a fresh life to focus on, might bring them back to themselves, or bring them together, just for a moment or two.

When Magnus walks Mrs. Brandey to her room, she says, “You stay out! I know about you.” Then, thoughtfully, she asks, “Do you own the meaning of the word ‘ravish’?”

He wonders about the world inside her mind, flip-flopping from the present to the past to the fictional. Does he sometimes look like her son, or does he look like himself and she attaches her son’s name to him, or does she even have a son? Maybe her entire life has become a derivative of the soap opera.

Annie is typing on her computer when Magnus approaches. “Only a few babies tonight,” she says, smiling. She walks him to the nursery; her toes point outward, a quirk that Magnus had not before noticed, and he feels a stab of jealousy for all the peculiarities that might pass through her genes, that would have nothing to do with him.

When she stoops to open the door with the card attached to her lanyard, Magnus stretches his arms to either side of the doorframe, trapping her in front of his chest. If she wants, she can retreat into the nursery.

But she turns as one of the babies begins to cry, a high note that gradually drops lower. Another baby joins in with a mewl, and soon all the newborns are fussing.

The baby sounds make Magnus feel protected, as though he and Annie are in a warm, loud bubble where they can demand the things they need. Magnus tilts his chin enough to kiss her closed lips. She tastes like milk and he puts his hands on her shoulders, then kisses her again next to her ear. He can’t tell if she approves, so he pushes his eyes open to search for a clue in her face. Her eyes are closed.

“I’m going to go in,” he says.

“Oh,” she says, “go. Medical companies are working on a new drug that releases these same hormones in depressed patients. Dopamine.”

He releases her shoulders and she presses against the door for him to pass.

He is grateful to be alone with the babies, who will be gone tomorrow or the next day or the next, and whose entreaties are small and straightforward. One baby is still mewling and Magnus picks him up. His shiny dark skin and big eyes will win him love. When the baby quiets, Magnus begins the search.

A raspberry birthmark covers the eye of Bill Joseph Bush, but otherwise his features are well-proportioned. Only six other babies — all male and blue-swaddled — fill the bassinets. The ugliest sleeps on the end of the row, his little hands stuck over his face as though he knows that no one — no one but Magnus — wants to look at him. Magnus pries the hands away and the ten fingers all grip his index.

The boy, Hank Applebranton, has a nose like a fat slug crawling diagonally across his face. Maybe it broke during the struggle out of his mother. His eyes are tiny, beady things hidden beneath his already-massive eyebrows. Hair arcs from his one ear around to the other, like an old man’s, and his wrinkled red skin smells of charred Swiss cheese. He may be the ugliest baby ever. Magnus holds Hank close to his chest. This baby needs him. The others will be doted on by parents and strangers alike, but to little Hank, Magnus’s concentrated affection will be remarkable. Magnus carries Hank to the observation window, within reach of the fluorescent hallway lights.

Illuminated, Hank looks even uglier. His dark pupils float behind the yellow skin of the lids, his nose looks raw and fleshy, his face squinches up like a dried prune. The little body gurgles and sighs, its newly working insides acclimating to the world. A well of pride opens inside Magnus’s chest. He is Hank’s father, he can feel it, he can believe it, he was the one above Hank’s mother when he was conceived, the one who massaged her feet and held his ear over her navel. The one who watched Hank wrench himself into reality.

A rap on the window startles Magnus from his fantasy.

“Charles!” Mrs. Brandey says from the other side of the glass. She clutches a few peacock feathers and silk ties, items from the shrine of her television days that she maintains atop her dresser. “Join the others. I need you for my audience.”

Magnus’s guts twist as if colicky. He should be watching the old people, not the babies. Anything could happen to Mrs. B. on this, an unfamiliar floor. She shuffles away and he hurries after her, out of the nursery — though he pauses to place a pen from his pocket in the jamb of the self-locking door.

When Magnus catches up with Mrs. B., she thrusts her face into the bundle still held in his arms.

“What, may I ask, are you doing with that baby?”

Hank and Mrs. B.’s proximity has filled Magnus with a realization: they have the same potential, the infants and the wanderers, to become absolutely anything, because they have no idea who they are. Those stuck in the middle of life, like him, are the only ones resigned to single, straightforward identities: construction worker, volunteer. Father, maybe, someday. He says, “This is my baby. Charles Junior.”

“You never had a baby. There is no baby!” Mrs. Brandey’s voice is loud, hysterical. “You never made me a grandmother!”

Hank starts to cry and that’s when Magnus panics. No, he shouldn’t have a baby. He’s not allowed to remove Hank from the nursery. Technically, he’s not even allowed to see Hank in the nursery. Annie has warned him about horrible germs; maybe peacock feathers can transmit bird flu. “All right, Mrs. B.,” he says, “this isn’t a baby. I’m going to put it back and then we’ll go down to your room.” Magnus wonders if part of the reason he brought Hank along was because he wanted Mrs. B. to meet the infant. Hank is a magic charm, shiny-new, with endless possibility. Magnus hoped, foolishly, that Hank might have some effect on her.

“Charles, you had better get rid of that baby right now! I am fraught with grief. Oh my, oh my,” she says and flings her hand across her brow, “now you might miss the show. It will be a grand show. Everyone awaits.” She shakes her fist of ties and feathers at Magnus. “I will expect you in the womb, promptly, with all the others.”

“Good,” he says, chastised. He escorts her to a nearby chair, promises to return for her soon, then hurries the baby back towards the nursery.

Just as he is about to place Hank in his bassinet, Annie returns.

“I thought I heard a noise,” she says. “Is everything all right? Was someone shouting?” She takes the whimpering Hank from Magnus’s arms. “Oh, god. This one is terrible. He looks like he was dropped on the head. Did you drop him on his head? What’s wrong with his nose?”

Magnus shrugs. “It’s always been diagonal like that.”

Annie checks the baby over. After she re-swaddles, she moves Hank’s blanket across his face. Magnus can see that the blanket isn’t suffocating him, but he worries about how Hank feels, having his face hidden like that, just because he’s not pleasant to look at. Annie is ruining his self-esteem at age two days.

As Magnus pushes Hank’s blanket down, a scream leaks through the wall: Mrs. B.

“What was that?” Annie bites her lower lip as she hurries from the nursery.

In his last moments with Hank, Magnus kisses the top of his head, the leathery, orangey scalp. Hank remains peaceful while most of the babies are crying in gasps, in sobs, in hiccups and snorts, snot smelling of soapy mozzarella, their negligible identities dissolving. The wails blend and Magnus wouldn’t be able to tell their sounds apart even if he spent days curled up on the nursery floor, listening. The cries enter his ears as the same lament: love me, care for me, find me beautiful no matter what please please please don’t leave. A sense of regret overtakes him as he realizes that he’s found the ugliest infant; his search is over. No one will appreciate Hank as much as he does.

When he becomes a father, he’ll stand on the outsiders’ side of the glass, possibly years from now; someone will likely own a newborn uglier than his, but Magnus will only be allowed to hold, to give love to, his own baby. He won’t be able to predetermine if it’s ugly or not, boy or girl, crier or napper. This seems a tragedy.

The nursery door locks behind him and he heads down the hall to check on Mrs. B. She’s with the others in the television room, a peacock feather in each hand and a few more stuffed down the front of her dress, their tops tickling her chin.

“Charles!” she says. “You are just in time for the show. Do you plan to watch peacefully” — she thumps the dead television — “or will I have to truss you up, too?”

“I’ll watch,” says Magnus.

“This dirty girl wanted to be trussed!” cries Mr. Herrera. He and his wife sit along the back wall. Annie, trying to unknot a silk tie that binds the couple’s wrists together, kneels before them. “I wanted to be! Trussed!” His hand jiggles, throwing off Annie’s working fingers.

“This is one of her worst episodes.” Annie speaks in staccato. “They come every few weeks. She gets the others involved.”

“Watch the episode!” Mrs. Brandey flaps the feathers, slowly at first, then harder and harder, but she doesn’t ascend. “I might have blamed you,” she says, staring into Magnus’s eyes, “but I don’t. It’s your fault you’ll never begin.”

A knot forms in Magnus’s stomach, a knot that grows and grows.

“Help me!” says Annie. “Get over here and help me.” She’s red-faced, standing now, hands fisted on her hips. “I don’t see how our Mrs. Brandey tied these two together so tight.”

The way Annie says “our Mrs. Brandey,” as if she and Magnus own another person, together, floors him.

“When can we begin?” Mrs. B. jigs. “Begin! Begin!”

“This is what can happen when you’re gone for only twenty-seven minutes,” Annie says. “Too much can happen.”

He nods. He is not a father; he didn’t know.

“Why are you doing this?” says Mrs. B., pointing a feather at Annie. “He’s a good boy. Happily ever after. You all need to watch. It’s a fucking lie.” She stamps her foot three times.

“I understand,” Magnus says. He reaches out to touch Annie and she flops the tie into his hand.

“Mother of god!” Mrs. Brandey shrieks. She walks in agitated circles. “We need to begin!” On the ground beneath her, a yellow puddle forms. It smells of her medication.

The knot inside Magnus tightens. At the start of life, a person should belong to his parents; at the end, to his children; but both stages are ceded to the hospital. He and Annie, not young or old, belong nowhere but to each other, their proper place in Saint Mary a limbo between floors.

Together, Annie and Magnus escort the patients back to their rooms. Magnus wishes that he was through sundowning, that he’d already fulfilled his own long years. In the elevator, neither here nor there, Annie slips her hand into his, and Magnus feels the enormous chore of the future. It is time for him to stop wandering. How strange, he thinks, that the hospital keeps babies on one story, the elderly on the story below, as though with time a body grows enough to sink through the ceiling and finish off life in a place scarcely different.

The Greatest Game in Literary History: chatting with author Mitchell Jackson about Books and…

In a few days — Saturday, June 20th at 3pm — the National Book Foundation is putting on a basketball game. Let the strangeness sink in: the presenter of the National Book Awards is pitting writers against editors, publicists, festival organizers, and a host of publishing people in…a basketball game. The event is going by the name, “The Other NBA,” because, apparently, I’m not the only one who gets a little frustrated with the book world for throwing around the NBA acronym every November when there is, very clearly, already a fully-functioning, some would say thriving, Lebron-and-Steph-buoyed institution going by that name. The proceeds from the game are going to the National Book Foundation’s reading program, BookUp, which is in the midst of an expansion to Detroit. (Pistons fans, feel free to imagine here an elongated, singsong “De-troit Bas-ket-ball.”)

I decided that (1) I should somehow get involved in the game, and (2) I should talk with Mitchell Jackson, the unofficial captain of the Writers Team and a proud member of the Book Up family.

Dwyer Murphy: First off, this is an event being put on by the National Book Foundation. Does that mean it’s going to be black tie? Is Cipriani’s involved?

Mitchell Jackson: Oh heck no. This is super casual with St. Francis College involved. There’s no dress code, though I will suggest being camera ready, otherwise known as social most post worthy. We’ll be snapping.

DM: The game is being billed as “the greatest basketball game in literary history.” Tell me about your training regimen. I assume you’ve been working with a shot doctor, sleeping in a hyperbaric chamber, consulting with Dr. James Andrews, eating a lot of pasta dinners, that sort of thing. Typical greatest game ever stuff.

MJ: I actually have been working out a bit. I went to an indoor gym and shot around a few weeks ago. It was the first time I’d done so in over a year. Then just this past week, I went to a park in Battery City and played four-on-four half court. I felt things aching that should not be aching, but it also felt good to compete. Not sure how much practice everyone else is doing, but I hope at the least everyone stretches. We sure don’t want any Kyrie Irvings or Kevin Loves out there.

DM: You’re raising money for BookUp, an after-school reading program. I hear you’re a faculty member. Can you tell me about the program and what you do?

MJ: BookUp is a program that sends authors into schools and gets kids excited about reading. We read, write, play games, whatever we can to get them engaged. Then twice a quarter we also take them on literary-related field trips, outings at the end of which they get money to buy books. It’s an amazing program. I love seeing kids excited about reading.

DM: And now BookUp is expanding to new cities?

MJ: Yes, the game is to help raise money to bring BookUp to Detroit. And with all the turmoil in Detroit in the last few years, I can’t think of a city that needs it more. I’m of the mind that reading helps build dynamic kids. And that dynamic kids have the chance to transform their circumstances.

DM: Okay, so the game is between a team of writers and a team of publishing people. I’m looking at your squad. Seems pretty decent. Alex Gilvarry’s rangy. Valeria Luiselli gives you rim protection. Where do you fit in? Secret weapon?

MJ: I haven’t seen anyone play yet, so I can’t say how I fit in. But I’ve played a few games in my life, so I’ll see where I can help and try and help. Alex is a young guy and I’m hoping he has young legs and plays doggish defense. Valeria has lived in some tough places, so I’m banking she’s got some scrap in her too. We’ll be like the Bad Boy Detroit Pistons.

DM: How about the publishing team? We should probably get the trash-talk started now. John Freeman’s too pretty to really bang around in the post, right? How about the rest of the team?

MJ: I get the feeling John Freeman can play. I haven’t seen it, but he looks pretty athletic. But at our age athleticism is all but out the window, so he’d better be a smart player too. I think Steph Opitz is athletic. We’ll see what the jump shot is looking like though. As far as trash talking. This used to be how I felt (maybe there’s still some residue of this in me too): if you didn’t get paid to play professional basketball somewhere in the world, then you can get dealt with. So unless there’s some retired semi-pros on the other side, I feel good about my chances playing against just about anyone. Plus, word on the literary streets is Jess Walter can play. Maybe we can get some Northwest buddy-ball going.

DM: Final pitch? Why should people come out to the game instead of, say, going to the park to celebrate the summer solstice?

MJ: You can go the park almost any weekend in the summer and see the same thing. But this game, this could be the first and the last. Don’t do for us. Do it for those kids in Detroit. Don’t forget we have Pulizter winner Greg Pardlo’s playlist. Where else can you hear his DJ skills?

An Unsettling But Familiar Irreality, an interview with Paul Tremblay, author of A Head Full of…

Tremblay AHFOG

“No live organism can continue for long to exist sanely under conditions of absolute reality,” Shirley Jackson wrote, “even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream.” In his unsettling new novel, A Head Full of Ghosts, Paul Tremblay combines demon possession with reality TV, toying with ideas of perception, belief, and hard truth. Tremblay’s work shows us how irresistible the darker corners of imagination can be, too.

When Marjorie Barrett begins to show signs of madness, and medical treatment doesn’t offer any answers, her parents turn to their Catholic priest, Father Wanderly. The previously stable family has fallen on hard times, and when the offer of an exorcism comes just prior to an offer from a production company to film the whole thing, the Barretts hastily accept both. A Head Full of Ghosts is written from the perspective of the Barrett’s younger daughter, Merry, fifteen years after The Possession airs.

I spoke with Paul Tremblay recently about the ghosts in his head, horror in the literary world, and his new connection to Iron Man.

Heather Scott Partington: This book certainly freaked me out. I’m not usually a horror reader. But as someone unfamiliar with the genre, I appreciate the novel’s accessibility. It’s written so well. Can you talk about how this book came about? Did you decide to write something in the exorcism genre (is that a thing?), and then develop a story, or did the story idea come to you first?

Paul Tremblay: Thank you for the kind words and, yes, I’m glad I freaked you out.

In February 2013 I was doing some research for a book about an 8th grader obsessed with ending the world and stumbled across some deconstructive essays about William Friedkin’s The Exorcist. It occurred to me that while there have been recent literary updates of vampires, zombies, and werewolves, there hadn’t been much in the way of possession novels. Hollywood had pumped out a spate of possession movies that did well enough financially but they were mostly formulaic PG-13 fodder; with the exception of the first Paranormal Activity, which is clever and affective…let’s not mention the sequels. So how about a secular/skeptical exorcism novel? Why not, right? From there the two sisters, Marjorie and Merry, appeared, and I knew the story would be told from the younger, unafflicted sister’s POV. I could use Merry as a narrator to keep the reader off balance, leave people wondering if there was or wasn’t something supernatural going on.

All that and I had Bad Religion’s song “My Head Is Full of Ghosts,” running through my own head. Seriously, I think I listened to that song over 100 times that month.

HSP: It’s apparent right away how you use an alternate voice — a blog persona — to call out similarities between the family’s turn on a reality show and other famous exorcism narratives, especially The Exorcist. That’s a really clever way to offer commentary from within your own story. There’s also a frame story element of an interview. Can you talk about how these ideas became a part of AHFoG?

PT: Instead of avoiding the inevitable comparisons to The Exorcist and other horror texts, I decided to go all in, embrace the similarities and use them to my advantage. The blogger within the story lets the reader know that we’re all in on it, that we know the beats and the scares and the lore, that it’s all part of our pop cultural DNA. But that a priori knowledge doesn’t clarify what is or isn’t reality within the story, and instead serves to make things more complicated. I usually struggle with non-fiction/critical essay writing but the blog posts were so much fun and became this weird dissertation on my lifelong love/hate relationship with horror. Hopefully the push and pull at genre tropes and expectations works and still makes for a satisfyingly disturbing and creepy story.

As far as the narrative frame goes (a best-selling author interviewing Merry fifteen years after the fact), it was the opportunity to add another filter or layer to the POV; another retelling and reshaping of the story, of what it was that happened, if we’ll ever be able to know what happened at all.

HSP: Without giving anything away, there’s a strong sense of doubt that runs parallel to the ideas of demon possession and schizophrenia. This has the nice effect of knocking your reader off balance. Every time we think we might do something, we find out that we don’t — but that never feels disrespectful to the reader. It’s done well. Is that something you’ve been a fan of in your own reading and viewing?

Horror is often about how we live in the liminal, whether we want to or not.

PT: Absolutely. Ambiguity and the horror of possibility play a part in so many of my favorite horror stories: Shirley Jackson’s We Will Always Live in the Castle, Mark Danielewski’s House of Leaves, Victor LaValle’s Big Machine, Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper,” Stewart O’Nan’s The Speed Queen, and so many more. What those stories have in common is that they exist in this liminal space between the real (or what we perceive to be real) and an unsettling but familiar irreality. Horror is often about how we live in the liminal, whether we want to or not.

I wanted a similar vibe for AHFoG. Along with the different layers of narrative, I worked to keep the cases for what was really wrong with Marjorie — the supernatural-explanation and rational-explanation — in balance throughout the novel. The hope was that as I kept piling on the evidence to both sides, it would seem like either case could collapse at any time.

HSP: A Head Full of Ghosts is full of references to unexpected things — Richard Scarry, for example, and TV. It’s a nice balance of lightheartedness to give the reader breaks between the more intense scenes. Reality TV’s take on truth and investigation also feature in the book. What might potential readers be surprised to learn made it into the book? Any unexpected details or strange things from your life as you were writing it?

PT: Unlike my weirdboiled crime novels, I didn’t start this book with a detailed summary/outline. I had a beginning, ending, narrative frame, and the three part structure in mind. I winged it from there. With the book in some ways being about influence and how it affects story, I kept an open mind to the unexpected, unanticipated. I let whatever I was watching and reading seep in. And it was a fun, freeing way to work.

When you trust your subconscious enough to put something in a story and then figure out why it really needed to be there later, when that works out, aye that’s the stuff.

My daughter Emma was around Merry’s age while I was writing the novel and a lot of her personality and outrageous outbursts made it into the book. (Her, as a pre-schooler being able to shimmy up the hallway walls to the ceiling did not make it into the book…and now I’m regretting it!) The house the Barrett’s live in is a combination of my sister’s current house (sorry, Erin) and the house I grew up in. Lastly, and without getting too spoilery, there was a personal quirk I took from my older son and used it as a character detail in the beginning of the novel, almost as an afterthought. This character quirk turned out to be a vital, plot-turning detail for the ending. When you trust your subconscious enough to put something in a story and then figure out why it really needed to be there later, when that works out, aye that’s the stuff.

HSP: I had no idea until I started reading AHFoG that Pope Francis did (what was widely perceived as) an exorcism on a man in 2013 in St. Peter’s Square. How did current events or trends in TV influence the book? It seems like a dialogue between older stories and horror movies and a more contemporary sense of reality as it relates to what we can see with our own eyes, even if that is heavily edited).

PT: I had no idea either! I found it in one of my random exorcism-spinning-head-green-puke Google searches. The YouTube clip seemed innocuous enough, but then reading that so many people were convinced it was proof Pope Francis had conducted an exorcism in public was certainly an unexpected and serendipitous find. I wanted more head-spinning in the vid though. Alas.

Reality TV certainly plays a big role in the novel. Merry’s and Marjorie’s parents — due to financial desperation — agree to become the stars of a reality TV show called The Possession. I used the TV show to make things more real and less real at the same time. I’m convinced a show like that, if not in development already, could happen. I treated the why-and-how of the show as realistically as possible. Of course, we know that reality TV is hardly as real as advertised. Comparing the TV reenactments and staging, the blogger’s deconstruction of the show, and Merry’s admittedly imperfect memories makes, hopefully, for a nice dizzying affect.

Part of the appeal of the horror genre is the sense of adding to/participating in a conversation hundreds of year old…

I’m fascinated by the dialogue you described. Part of the appeal of the horror genre is the sense of adding to/participating in a conversation hundreds of year old: from oral folklore and myth to Grendel to Poe to Shirley Jackson to The Exorcist to Stephen King to last year’s wonderful The Babadook. It’s all there (the good and the bad), building and stealing from each other, and informing and reshaping. As a math guy (well, I have a master’s degree in it, anyway, and that’s what it says on the diploma, math guy) I like to think of stories, especially stories that fit within a genre tradition, as grown or developed in a manner similar to new mathematical theorems; these new discoveries as direct and indirect offshoots from previous ones.

On the other hand, on a much more macro level, I’m more than a little worried about how living in the age of information/disinformation affects our stories, how we tell them, and how it affects our perceptions, and even how we think. There’s a horror story for you: the age of influence run amuck. Amuck! I half-kid, but the blogger in my novel proposes that if Marjorie is possessed, it’s by the horrible monster that is pop culture.

HSP: One of the most compelling elements of AHFoG is how mental illness — schizophrenia — is manipulated and misconstrued by several characters. Does your book have something to say about how mental illness is mischaracterized? Or, is the 14 year old Marjorie’s affliction just a part of the conflict she feels as a character and therefore necessary in the story?

PT: It was certainly necessary to the story, the foil to being possessed by a supernatural entity. Her symptomatic behavior/irrational leaps of logic coupled with the appalling decision making of the adults, leads to the most horrific consequences. The idea that the scenes with the least amount of potentially supernatural fireworks would be the most horrific was important to me. I hope that most readers feel bad for Marjorie and see her as a tragic figure and not an evil one. She’s a fourteen-year-old girl who’s already suffering, and is then made to suffer more because of the ignorance, sexism, and manipulations of the men (her dad, the priests, the psychiatrist, the show runner) who bully their way in and never really listen to what Marjorie is telling them. Those adults are as much to blame for what ultimately happens as anyone.

HSP: What do you think some of the challenges are for contemporary horror writers? You’ve become known as a crossover from literary fiction into horror. Does that have any meaning to you, or are you one of the “genre is meaningless” guys? Who are your favorite authors of literary horror?

PT: It does have meaning to me. And the pairing of the two words “literary horror,” seems to piss off a bunch of folks.

Horror is still stigmatized by many. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, horror (or any other genre) is not inherently inferior. You still see articles crop up, usually once or twice a year with hey-is-genre-lit-innately-sucky? To wit [this] recent Guardian click-hole piece. Or Glen Duncan’s obnoxious review of Colston Whitehead’s excellent Zone One. Quoting Duncan’s first line: “Colson Whitehead is a literary novelist, but his latest book, ‘Zone One,’ features zombies, which means horror fans and gore gourmands will soon have him on their radar. He has my sympathy.” Ironically, this last sentence applies to anyone who has read Duncan’s unfortunate and misogynist sequel to his excellent The Last Werewolf. But I digress…

Despite my (not-so) cheap shot at Duncan, there are horror fans who do view the term literary as pejorative.

But the good news is that we are seeing less of the old-guard attitude toward genre and we are in the middle a golden age of horror fiction

Speaking as a contemporary horror writer, it’s frustrating having to fight that battle on two fronts. I don’t know what the solution is. But the good news is that we are seeing less of the old-guard attitude toward genre and we are in the middle a golden age of horror fiction. Lucky us! There are many talented and worthy writers engaging horror in new, imaginative, and yes, terrifying ways. For the past seven years I’ve been on the board of directors for the Shirley Jackson Awards. To quote our mission: “In recognition of the legacy of Shirley Jackson’s writing, and with permission of the author’s estate, the Shirley Jackson Awards have been established for outstanding achievement in the literature of psychological suspense, horror, and the dark fantastic.” Our now seven-years worth of winners and finalists is a great snapshot of the excellent horror fiction.

All time favorite literary horror authors start with Joyce Carol Oates and Peter Straub. Below are my recent personal favorites, that I haven’t mentioned already, category style. And I only regret that I’ll inevitably leave off some great writers.

Novels: Stephen Graham Jones’ Demon Theory, Elizabeth Hand’s Generation Loss, Michael Cisco’s The Traitor, Brian Evenson’s Immobility, Helen Oyeyemi’s White Is for Witching, Stefan Kiesbye’s Your House Is on Fire Your Children All Gone, Sarah Langan’s The Keeper, and this year’s When We Were Animals by Joshua Gaylord.

Short story collections: John Langan’s The Wide Carnivorous Sky, Livia Llewellyn’s Engines of Desire, Yoko Ogawa’s The Diving Pool, Laird Barron’s The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All, Nathan Ballingrud’s North American Lake Monsters, and Kelly Link’s Magic for Beginners.

HSP: Robert Downey Jr. I mean. Robert. Downey. Jr. Focus Features. The whole thing. That must have been a good day, when you found out A Head Full of Ghosts is going to be made into a movie?

PT: It certainly was! The possibilities are fun to think about. Screenwriters Ben Collins and Luke Piotrowski are currently working on the screenplay. I’ve tweeted at them (that sounds threatening, doesn’t it? I don’t mean it to be.) that I entrust Marjorie and Merry to them. And they didn’t block me! An omen of great things to come. Not a Damien from the movie The Omen. That would be bad.

My younger brother Dan is convinced that the father (not the father father, er, a priest, but, you know, the father, the dad, ugh…) John Barrett is our dad. He’s not. My brother is a terrible person for thinking such a thing. Still, Dan sent me my favorite text after the Focus Features option was announced:

“Iron Man is our dad.”

Help Deliver This 50 Year-Old Letter

Redditor bbbron says they found a surprise inside a copy of Herman Voader’s Four Plays of Our Time that they bought in a used bookstore.

“Flipped open a book in a secondhand store…to find this letter thanking the recipient for helping a family escape a German refugee camp.”

The letter (which apparently was sent with flowers) is a note of thanks to a woman who aided a refugee family at the start of the construction of the Berlin Wall. “Forever we will remain gratefull to you for your kind deed,” writes Joseph Usvaltas “It was a deeply moving experience for them to comprehend; that a total stranger extender her hand, helping them make a new start in life.”

You can join the other redditors at r/books to help solve the mystery.

mysterious letter

Queen Victoria’s Children’s Book To Be Published

To my dear Mamma. This, my first attempt at composition, is affectionately and dutifully inscribed by her affectionate daughter, Victoria.

By the time she died in 1901, Queen Victoria had survived five assassination attempts, given birth to nine children, and reined for 64 years, the longest of any British monarch in history. But by the time she turned 11, she had already written a children’s book. And on June 22, The Adventures of Alice Laselles will hit bookshelves — nearly 200 years after it was written.

In Alice, the beribboned protagonist is sent away to boarding school, and must solve the mystery of “who put the cat in Miss Dunscombe’s kitchen.” Along the way she encounters a “poor little French orphan,” the daughter of a rich London banker, and lots of pastel. The book includes Victoria’s illustrations, restored and updated (and a little bit eerie).

Written for a homework assignment, the book offers a window into the mind of an assiduous future royal who “studied with private tutors and spent her free time with her dolls and her governess.” A bit bleak, perhaps, but conducive to precocity. And after two centuries spent chilling in the royal archives at Windsor, Alice will surely be thrilled to see the light day.

Bill Murray Leads Poets Across the Brooklyn Bridge

When Walt Whitman wrote “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” in 1856, he probably did not have in mind a bumbling parapsychologist in a khaki flight suit. But that didn’t stop legendary comic and erstwhile Ghostbuster Billy Murray from leading the charge last week at the 20th annual Poets House Brooklyn Bridge Poetry Walk.

Each year, tri-state area Whitmanites trek across the 5,989 foot long bridge; at the end of their journey they recite the poem, which, in nine exuberant stanzas, describes the ferry ride that once spanned the Manhattan-Brooklyn divide, today traversed by the Brooklyn Bridge.

Flow on, river! flow with the flood-tide, and ebb with the ebb-tide!
Frolic on, crested and scallop-edg’d waves!

Murray is a self-professed poetry lover, and has put in appearances at several Poets House events (in 2009 he gave the first ever reading at the nonprofit’s headquarters). He said of the Whitman poem, “It’s beautiful to read with all of it happening right in front of your eyes.”

The event, capped off by a celebratory dinner in DUMBO, also featured readings by Mark Doty, Thomas Lux, Vijay Seshadri, and high schooler Anita Norman, winner of the Poetry Out Loud National Recitation Contest.

Here’s hoping the event is reprised as many times as February 2 in Groundhog Day.*

*According to one intrepid tallier, approximately 12,395 times.

Japanese Library Causes Uproar for Attempting to Break “Book Dominos” World Record

Should books be used as dominos?

A large majority of the Japanese public, in the wake of Gifu City Library’s planned attempt to break a world record, are up in arms about this seemingly obscure question. According to the Telegraph, the book domino event “was intended to promote Gifu as a ‘book city,’” as well as to celebrate architect Toyo Ito’s renovations.

Book-lovers, however, have vehemently criticized the upcoming event as disrespectful to the books and their authors. The Telegraph provides an example of a particularly scathing remark, found on the event’s Facebook page: “Books are not toys to be used as dominoes. Gifu City government should be ashamed.”

Is the world record attempt a shameless, even cruel betrayal of books in pursuit of fame and revenue, or is it perhaps a harmless, entertaining act of celebration?

United Biscuits, a UK-based food manufacturer, is the current record holder after toppling 5,318 books — specifically, copies of The Guinness Book of World Records — domino-style.

The book domino event in Gifu City is set to take place on July 12th, right before the library reopens on July 18th. Liam O’Brien of Melville House reports the event is rumored to involve 10,000 books.

Into the Wilderness: The Hope of Floating has Carried Us this Far by by Quintan Ana Wikswo

“I have followed a woman into the wilderness.” Seriously. I have. These aren’t my words, but they apply here. When I read Quintan Ana Wikswo’s collection of stories, The Hope of Floating has Carried Us This Far, I felt as if I was following her through a type of wilderness of words. Far deeper than the sparse text on the page, down past the gorgeous yet eerie photographs Wikswo took and wove in with her text, there lives a story of something wanting to rise up. It’s continual and won’t ever plateau. Growing, yet not aging: it’s a steady stretching of each character who wants to believe in the concept of connecting. In the opening story, Wikswo writes about the need for and complexity of human connection: “I gather her letters together in a string and keep them in a place where no one will look. These secret specimens of lost words, of cartography and discovery and longing.”

Even though the reader follows Wikswo’s characters through every yearning, the stories are not necessarily plot-driven. They’re about sound and rhythm, imagery and pace. The reader takes in more than a story, but language, too. In that aforementioned opening story, “The Cartographer’s Khorovod,” the reader is immediately swept into Wikswo’s description-driven flow. “Immediately” as in the very first sentence: “When she writes to me as she did before, at first there is the incomprehensible sound of crickets, and then there is my familiar smell, a scent released from my pores as dark and full of longing as they were before.” Following the sound of her sentence and the imagery contained within, the reader is sent off into a collection where text and image intersect in order to create a sense of identity-searching in each character. As the language and photographs engage more with each other throughout the book, the characters, too, engage with a type of landscape — both literal and metaphorical — weaving human with wilderness.

In “Aurora and the Storm,” for instance, Wikswo writes about identity through the imagery of a landscape. “[When] I look out into the wilderness, I am looking through something, through a translucent pane that separates me from the beyond. There has been a change in pressure, and a collapse. A skin diver’s lung, or a chambered nautilus too far into the deep. There has been a shattering, and now all is softness.” Here, the narrator sees beyond what she has seen before, which, in turn, brings her to a different understanding of her relation to that space — the depth of her identity as it shifts from shattered to softness.

The wilderness is a place to lose ourselves. It’s that space where we can get lost and twisted, dizzy and confused, but it is by finding our way through that wilderness that we begin to find ourselves. But let’s stop right now with that cliché — let’s put an end to the obvious metaphors of journey and transformation — because while wilderness is a predominating theme in Wikswo’s work, clichés and easy metaphors do not exist anywhere in the book’s pages. Yes, there is an underlying topic of transformation, and yes, the landscape and setting of the stories span out and transform with the characters, but these stories don’t use setting to give the character a vague stage on which to act. Instead, place and person begin to merge.

It’s another way of saying life occurs in The Hope of Floating has Carried us This Far. Not just life as in breathing and all of our biology, but life as in the science of connection, too. The art of continuously trying to become new, to renew is discussed and discovered through Wikswo’s words. The vehicle for all of this merging and transformation doesn’t occur through plot or narrative arc, but, again, through language.

From “Holdfast Crowbiter”:

“Our world a punctured lung that contracts and expands without ease. What is close comes near, then billows away far from reach. So much is evacuated, then all is spasm, and gashes, and wet tissue. Where there is pain, there is a gasp. Our rib cage cleaved accordion, the organ no longer used for lovemaking. The air we expel is stale with fear.”

Here, Wikswo gives the reader a type of poetics of where self and place intersect then interact. I’m not quite sure what the plot of this story is, but that doesn’t matter as it is the language and sound of the story that drove me through it. Gliding along the undulating river of her rhythm and imagery, my mind flowed with Wikswo’s words and I could feel the transformations taking place in the text not because of any events, but because of this lingual movement.

Ultimately, in this collection, every story is a poem with life thriving throughout each image. That, combined with Wikswo’s own photographs of different types of nature, creates a multi-sensory reading experience. You don’t just read the stories; you engage with them through consideration and interpretation. For instance, when you take this text: “Prayers for bones that bend instead of break are prayers for our bodies to be soaked in vinegar, pickled, unable to expire. Pray for good winds. Pray for calm seas. For our immortality. What we have here is a multi-sensory reading experience and it sucks you in. A large contributor to the pace and flow in this example is the use of repetition — “pray.” This technique is powerful, as it feels as if through the repeated phrases and descriptions, a momentum is gathering, a meaning shifting and maturing into larger and connected concepts. Pray for good winds. Pray for calm seas. For our immortality. As often as possible, pray for something that does not exist. The story builds.

Aside from these connections brought forth through wilderness, the different characters begin to create and communicate themselves through each other. In “The Kholodnaya Voyna Club,” for instance, two people merge through the lyrical. Wikswo writes, “The pilot shared the same dreams with her at night, unconscious. Autobiographically accurate, yet identical. They had even dreamed them at the same hour, and woke together, crying. She drove the pilot so crazy, sometimes it seemed possible they were the same person. Perhaps a single schizophrenic.”

It is through these stories and photographs in which not only are identities created and discovered, but the experience of connection becomes vibrant. Tangible, even. One aspect that Wikswo concentrates on in “My Nebulae, My Antilles,” is that of how we learn to speak through writing. “When I was a small child, I was very silent. I was known for my silence. It was not known that I kept a diary. In its earliest life, it was a simple count of the day’s activities. Tally up the scabs on my kneecaps. The sixteen collectors that live within a beet. As the days passed, I learned that paper listens.”

The reader, too, is listening. She’s reading closely, attentively as she follows Wikswo through these meditations of where wilderness lives not only outside of us, but within us, as well. The reader weaves around and discover the ways in which through language, wilderness is a type of getting lost in beauty — getting lost in herself. Through this, the senses created by this reading experience are forever heightening. It is through Wikswo’s poetic language and movement that we can recognize, live, and exist in our own ecology of complexity.

The Hope of Floating Has Carried Us This Far

by Quintan Ana Wikswo

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Sunday Sundries: Literary Links from Around the Web (June 14th)

Looking for some Sunday reading? Here are some literary links from around the web that you might have missed:

Paul Bacon header

Iconic book designer Paul Bacon passed away this week. You can see some of his classic covers here.

One publisher is combatting industry sexism by only publishing women for a year

Why isn’t the Western world outraged at Chinese censorship of Western literature?

Jonathan Franzen speaks about his new novel Purity

A look at gender and identity in the Civil War

The benefits of reading: “Regular readers sleep better, have lower stress levels, higher self-esteem, and lower rates of depression than non-readers.”

A look at why teens are so crazy for romantic vampires and werewolves

A book for every Myers-Briggs type

Ranking the novels of Jurassic Park author Michael Crichton

Finally, our last advice column caused a huge internet storm. Vulture followed-up with columnist Elisa Gabbert to clarify her views.