The Solace of Blank

Florence, Italy
Florence, Italy, taken in February 1987

Written in response to Sunday Scribblings prompt #121, "Solace."

Once in a great while I enter a state of mind where everything about me drops away. My goals, my identity, my name.

No pressure. No frustration. No worries.

The feeling doesn't last long.

It took me by surprise the first time. I sat stunned, stripped of all masks. I just was.

One might call it a state of psychological and spiritual free-fall. Or, in a way, a state of grace....(continued)

It wasn't frightening or uncomfortable. The first time it happened it was confusing, and then it was fascinating. It was like taking a mini-vacation from myself. After a moment or two, I was back to being "me."

Self-Portrait in the Tongass National Forest

I've always liked this photo of myself, taken back in August 1992 using my camera's auto-release feature. I was hiking alone in the Tongass National Forest in Juneau, Alaska. The Tongass is the largest national forest in the U.S. (almost 17 million acres). It is a temperate rainforest, with leaves the size of dinner plates.

I was in a meditative, serene state of mind when that shot was taken.

Some time afterwards I dreamt that I was looking at that photo and I had no idea who the woman in the picture was. She seemed nice enough. The dream wasn't troubling at all, but it left me with a curious sensation upon awakening.

Other instances in which I am stripped away occur when I am awake, and then only briefly. I can count those moments on the fingers of one hand.

Summit of Bartolome, Galapagos Islands
Galapagos Islands, taken from the summit of Bartolome, July 1984.

I've heard that some people have had trouble when visiting the Galapagos Islands, suffering from a sense of alienation, at least when I was there almost 25 years ago (one of 12 people living on a 40-foot fishing boat for a week. It was heaven). Back then there was a single human settlement, Pto. Ayora on the island of Santa Cruz. The rest of the archipelago belonged to the wildlife.

I didn't have that difficulty. Quite the opposite. In such places I am, for a time, not overly conscious of being human. My sense of self diffuses: I am mammal, animal, carbon-based life form, whatever. I am not separated or alienated from my surroundings but communing with them. Barriers drop away.

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Climbing the Darwin Steps
(Bartolome, Galapagos Islands, July 1984)

As though we were
creatures submerged, who needed to get out
somewhere, surface
some way out of some fathomless
ocean, this is what it is like,
we knew, to evolve.
To pass some barrier to change
and thrive.
It is natural,
that we should have had to climb
as Darwin climbed.
To lift cameras and backpacks,
notebooks and vestigial preconceptions
up those torturous logs anchored by posts,
sunworn-white and designed for the footsteps
of giants.
To cover
what from a distance
looked like the bleached bones
of a snake's spine
coiling to the top of a volcanic cone.
So that once we reached the summit
we were, indeed, chemically altered,
unable to explain ourselves
as we gazed back through layers of time
under a sere, equatorial sun.

Published in Anthology Twenty-One, Florida State Poets Association, 2003.
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A starry night will do the same thing. Sure, the heavens make me feel small, but in a comforting way. I greet constellations and planets the way I do old friends.

White Rock Overlook
White Rock Overlook in New Mexico, August 1990

I sat and meditated at this spot for a long time. Behind me lay a playing field and a subdivision of houses that looked transplanted straight out of the Northeast. White Rock is a suburb of Los Alamos, where in the Bradbury Museum I saw (but did not photograph) a little girl fast asleep on a bench in front of a wall-sized mural showing a crater blasted away by a nuclear bomb test.

Being nothing -- not in a derogatory way but in a transcendant one -- has its advantages.

Taku Glacier, Juneau, Alaska
Taken from a helicopter flying over the Taku Glacier in Juneau, Alaska, August 1992.

So does blind faith, when everything else is stripped away. When I am most troubled, I need to take what I call a "side step." It's a psycho-spiritual version of swimming perpendicular to an undertow. It's a way to keep from drowning. Sometimes getting to the side step takes a while, because finding it is hard when one is directionless.

"If a man wishes to be sure of the road he treads on, he must close his eyes and walk in the dark." -- St. Juan de la Cruz, 1542-1591. Thanks to Paula C. ("magic fly paula") for making me aware of the quote here.

Kantju Gorge, Uluru
Kantju Gorge, Uluru (Ayers Rock), Australia, August 1991.

Over the decades I've been driven to share the visionary part of me -- mostly in writing, but also in music and art. Drives, when met, can be wonderful things. A sense of purpose can be an anchor in the world. My current convention-hopping, publicity-seeking, and networking kick all of that into full-throttle for me.

It can be scary sometimes.

Sometimes being "nothing" offers as much comfort as the adventure I'm on. It is a waystation. It is Being.

And sometimes just Being is enough.

The View From Fort Belvedere
(Florence, Italy, February 1987)

This fort belongs to the children now --
and the young, hands around each other's waists,
denim jackets, legs dangling over the top railings
too high for official safety,
over row after row of round, red-tiled roofs.
Sunlight glistens on gleaming terra cotta pools,
the pastel sides of buildings
bearing bleached outlines of gods and goddesses,
heroes and myth
once sharply etched and painted -- now
fading behind the bars of streaked rain.

Here on Ft. Belvedere there is grass,
benches, ramps interrupted by transverse rises --
as though someone had taken flights of stairs
and shaken them out,
and let the steps fall angled, dominoes tipped.

Down below, Via Santa Lorenzo twists
like a serpent. Scooters race
between ten-foot-tall walls crumbling
into a countryside of cypresses and rolling hills
mounded, like Firenze roads, one
upon the other,
layered, all things possible,
past, present and future
simultaneous.

Even as Florence crumbles, it is gold,
gold leaf, gold dust, sacred swirls
raised by Dante Aligheri's feet, larger than life
by the Church of Santa Croce. Shaded mosaics
pieced together fine as tender brush strokes
meet with parallelograms of cobbled roads.
The Duomo rises like a sun off the horizon,
like a planet, a biosphere of Brunneleschi's labors
and inside -- angels...

The young, at the Fort
call to each other...
cluster on the sun-lit grass in a perpetual Spring.
Some will enter dark, plaster corners
to work with wood, with leather and swirled fumes
of varnish and preservative. Others
will step off the street and into sudden atria,
centered pools, birdsong lilted from the skies.
Will gather the sacred knowledge of restoration -- as
each Florentian generation learns
how to put the gold dust back.

Then, like ruby fish
hatched at the mouth of the Arno
each spirit, one by one will rise in blinding color
and form, texturing the city into new light and shadow.
Streaking the air, each incoming flight
traverses a mosaic of spirals, of Euclidean angles,
cypresses and cathedrals, the towers of palazzos.
Laughing in the sunlight, the children run
up and down the ramps of Ft. Belvedere,
the Arno a finger pointing beyond.
Sending them
to paint a new patina
of forever.


Covenant, the first volume in the Deviations Series, is available from Aisling Press, and from AbeBooks, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Book Territory, Borders, Buecher.ch, Buy.com, BuyAustralian.com, DEAstore, eCampus.com, libreriauniversitaria.it, Libri.de, Loot.co.za, Powell's Books, and Target. Deviations: Appetite is now available for pre-order at Barnes and Noble. The Deviations page has additional details.


Readercon

Readercon Bookstore

Above: The Readercon bookstore. From the convention website: "In the course of its twenty years, it has become the standard bearer and role model for conventions that focus on the literature. A typical Readercon features well over 100 writers, editors, and critics (attracting prominent figures from Canada, the U.K., and occasionally even Australia) and more than 400 of their readers."

This has been a year for me of "coming back" -- to Readercon (which I last attended in the 80s as a professional guest), to Boston (from which I moved to Florida in 2003), and to an industry in which, a quarter-century ago, I had suddenly found myself transfixed like a deer in the headlights.

Back then I was in my mid-20s. I'm about to turn 50, and hope my experiences in the interim have helped prepare me for the next wave....(continued)

First, many thanks go to my friend Michael, who picked me up at Logan Airport and put me up my first night back in Boston. And more -- after a scrumptious dinner at Casablanca in Harvard Square, we went to Dance Freedom. I used to be a regular there and it just happened to be dance night at 10 Garden Street. Getting back into that space was a marvelous treat. So, too, long conversations with Michael, whom I also call my "Midrash Buddy."

Before driving me to the Burlington Marriott for Readercon, he arranged for me to audit the "concerto class" he's taking at the Cambridge Center for Adult Ed. (I used to teach there and he still does, which is where we met around 25 years ago.) The instructor used a great technique of describing the instruments, progressions, tone, etc., in anthropomorphic terms -- how the instruments relate to each other emotionally. ("Brahms shows the relationships from on high. Dvorak's concerto is like two people talking to each other in a bar.") Very cool.

Readercon, Room 745 at the Boston Marriott Burlington

Room 745, Burlington Marriott. While I was settling in, I came up with the title and some of the structure for the keynote address I'm giving at the Florida State Poets Assn. convention in October. On Friday I attended "SF as Mirror for Reality," a discussion led by Robert J. Sawyer; a Kaffeeklatsch with Cat Rambo (editor of Fantasy) and Hildy Silverman (editor of Space and Time, whose issue #104 contains my poem "First Contact in Appalachia"); panel "Triumphing Over Competence;" plus readings by authors in the new annual anthology Clockwork Phoenix (Mike Allen, Ed.); Mike Allen's Speculative Poetry Workshop; R. Scott Bakker's talk "The Post-Posterity Writer;" and a meeting of the "Interstitial Arts Foundation."

Speculative Poetry Workshop at Readercon 2

Mike Allen waits during the writing of "scifaiku" (speculative poetry haiku) by the group.

Readercon "Meet the Pros(e) Party" 2

"Meet the Pros(e)" party on Friday night.

Having awakened disgustingly early on Saturday after staying up late rehearsing for my two readings, I banged out 1,935 words of draft for the keynote.

My favorite craft-related quote of this convention came early Saturday afternoon from Michael Swanwick at the panel, "Genius is 90% Higher Standards: The 'Unnecessary' Rewrite," in answer to the question, "How do you know when a story is ready to send?"

He answered, "It's not perfect, but you know you have to become a better writer in order to make it perfect."

Oh yeah. Amen. Boy, if that one doesn't put a humble and positive spin on all my raging insecurities, especially when I read stuff that blows me away. Because stuff that blows me away is an "Oh the agony/Oh the ecstasy" experience for me.

My late-night rehearsals for the Broad Universe Rapid Fire Reading and the Science Fiction Poetry Association "Poetry Slan" paid off.

Flyer for Broad Universe "Rapid Fire Reading" at Readercon
Large view

Broad Universe "Rapid Fire Reading" flyer, constructed by coordinator Sarah Micklem.

Readercon SFPA "Poetry Slan": Drew Morse

Drew Morse reads at the SFPA "Poetry Slan," where he also announced the winners of the SFPA's Rhysling Award for best short and long speculative poetry published in 2007 and the SFPA's new Grand Master (voting results will be posted on the SFPA website). Morse is chairman and editor of the Rhysling Anthology, which is now that trade paperback he's holding. Twenty-plus years ago it was a saddle-stapled Xerox that I put together with paste-up -- White-Out and glue stick! -- so seeing how it and the SFPA have grown and evolved over the years simply blows my mind. A lot of volunteers do a lot of hard and beautiful work over there.

Photos of other readers in the "Poetry Slan" are posted in my photoset here. I'm still trying to match names to faces.

Before the readings I attended the panel "How to Write For a Living When You Can't Live Off Your Fiction," at which roughly half the attendees including myself were already freelancers, and half were looking for info about the business. And now I've got more stuff on my To Do list.

I also filled a box with books and magazines that I mailed home. Never mind that I am waaay behind in my reading as it is.

Broad Universe Table at Readercon

Readercon, Broad Universe Table

Covenant and Riffing on Strings: Creative Writing Inspired by String Theory made a stand at the Broad Universe book table (kudos to all the volunteers there, too). On the first day of Readercon, Riffing on Strings (which reprinted my story "Arachne") got a very positive review over at New Scientist. A snippet of the review is here.

I enjoyed conversations with other BU and SFPA members, as well as touching base with people I'd met at WisCon back in May. Now that I'm attending conventions again, I can truly appreciate their "movable feast" aspect.

Science Fiction Poetry Association Table at Readercon

Mike Allen staffs the Science Fiction Poetry Association table.

Since coming home, I've found these comments in reviews of Electric Velocipede #14, with my story "Hermit Crabs":

"'Hermit Crabs' by Elissa Malcohn is a strong opener and still resonates with me once I was through with the magazine. It features strong characterization and has that powerful, inevitable ending." -- Charles Tan, Bibliophile Stalker.

"At first, I thought: 'Oh, no! another SF crab story!' Then I began reading and I thought: 'Oh, no! another depressed teen suicide story!' But unexpectedly, the more I progressed into the story, the more I enjoyed it; the characterization is good, the flashback structure is well done, the ending is surprising and satisfying. A valuable discovery for me (never heard before of Elissa Malcohn)." -- Fabrice Doublet, on the Night Shade Books message boards.

Doublet also recommended "Hermit Crabs" on the Asimov's Best New Stories of 2008 boards. Gardner Dozois replied, "Elissa Malcohn was a new writer back when I first took over ASIMOV'S, then vanished for decades. Good to see that she's writing again."

"There’s much to like about 'Hermit Crabs,' and I can see why the editors kicked off the issue with it. Great title, too, as it’s a metaphor for the crustacean that takes its new shell for a home after the old inhabitants have departed from it." -- Marshall Payne in his review posted at The Fix. Payne named "Hermit Crabs" as one of his favorite stories in the issue on his blog.

That plastered a grin on my face. "Hermit Crabs" was the first short story I'd completed in more than a decade, several months after moving to Florida. It told me I could still do this stuff.

So -- thanks, guys.

My first week home I received three contributor's copies: We'Moon '09 with my poem "Ancient Wisdom Distilled," Space and Time #104 with my poem "First Contact in Appalachia," and The Drabbler #11 with my short-short story, "Houston, We Are the Problem." (The Drabbler publishes stories of exactly 100 words, and each issue has a particular theme.)






We'Moon '09Space and Time #104The Drabbler #11

I also learned that Deviations: Appetite, the sequel to Covenant, is now available for pre-order at Barnes and Noble. After a brief summary of Covenant, reviewer Jean Roberta writes in this blog entry, "I recommend the novel & the author..."

Next con: Denvention in less than two weeks!


Covenant, the first volume in the Deviations Series, is available from Aisling Press, and from AbeBooks, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Book Territory, Borders, Buecher.ch, Buy.com, BuyAustralian.com, DEAstore, eCampus.com, libreriauniversitaria.it, Libri.de, Loot.co.za, Powell's Books, and Target. Deviations: Appetite is now available for pre-order at Barnes and Noble. The Deviations page has additional details.


A Funny Thing Happened While I Prepared My Keynote

While up in the Boston area for Readercon, I've been writing my keynote address for this year's convention of the Florida State Poets Association. "A poem in your pocket" is the conference theme.

The conference doesn't occur until October, but I'll be convention-hopping, so the time is going to fly. After rehearsing until late this past Friday night for the two readings I gave on Saturday (prose with Broad Universe, poetry with the Science Fiction Poetry Association), I awoke disgustingly early on Saturday with ideas churning for the keynote. I banged out 1,935 words before heading down to that day's 10 o'clock panel.

My keynote deals with the whole inspiration/brainstorming/get-it-on-the-page process. As I wrote, I clicked over to Sunday Scribblings and its prompt, "Ghosts," then wrote the poem below in a couple of minutes:

I'm floating my options
through the wall,
making those hard, incorporeal choices,
the ones that never take solid form.

The ones that haunt,
just out of reach.
Dead ideas making mischief.
The life not taken.

I'm posting a little late, but my "Ghosts" writing occurred on Saturday morning. My Readercon report is forthcoming -- after I catch up on sleep...

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Old Friends Rediscovered

The Intersection of Cats and Books

The intersection of cats and books. Top photo (early 1970s): Daisy I rests on encyclopedias in the Brooklyn, NY, house where I grew up. Bottom photo (early 1990s): Daisy II poses by part of my library in my Cambridge, MA, apartment.

Written in response to the Sunday Scribblings prompt, "My oldest friend."

My thanks go to Bill Chance, over at Flickr's new Readers & Writers group, for steering me toward a couple of stories I'd read as a child in a book that had vanished from my life long, long ago.

More than 40 years ago, in fact. These stories may not have been my oldest literary friends, but they come close.

I also have Noel Hynd to thank, for establishing the Readers & Writers group. And Krista Vead, who began the discussion thread "Reminiscing," in which she asked members to name their favorite books from childhood.

My old literary friends included mythology books by Evslin, Evslin, & Hoopes, most notably The Greek Gods (Scholastic Books, 1966). My favorite biographies included those of Thomas Alva Edison and Althea Gibson: "One detail from Edison's biography that stuck to me like glue was a childhood incident in which he tried to be like one of his family's chickens, sitting on eggs to incubate them. That mishap caused him to be labeled a slow child."

My post also included the first science fiction books I'd ever read: "when I was 9 (my grade school library had a shelf devoted to SF -- a bottom shelf, in the back). My first two books from that shelf (I forget in which order) were [Robert A.] Heinlein's Starship Troopers and [Murray] Leinster's Time Tunnel."

Then I wrote this:

"And I had and lost (and have pined for) a collection of Japanese fairy tales, from which I remember two small details from separate stories. One was a dragon who cried tears of blood that turned into rubies. The other was a little girl who was told by a magical being to value small places, and who subsequently hid in a cupboard when burglars invaded her family's house. Doing so saved her life. The volume was gorgeously illustrated. I haven't been able to find anything like those stories since."

I had misremembered some details on that second story, but about three hours later Bill pointed me to "The Gratitude of the Samebito," as told by Lafcadio Hearn.

I found both the stories I was looking for (and I realized my misremembering) over at the Mukashibanashi ("tales of long ago") Library.

It was such a treat to finally read "The Gratitude of the Samebito" again, after all these years! So, too, "The Boy Who Drew Cats." The protagonist was a boy rather than a girl (though I'm willing to bet the illustration made me think more of a girl -- plus my family was taking in stray cats at the time, when I was a girl). The "magical being" was a priest, who told the boy, "Avoid large places at night; keep to small!" -- and the boy subsequently hid in a cabinet (cabinet, cupboard -- "c" words, what the heck :-) ). And he slept in a temple rather than a family house -- though having lived at his prior temple, one might call that family. And it was a goblin rat, not burglars.

Other than that, I remembered it fine! ;-p

Oh, yeah -- and there was the part about the cats.

I'm looking forward to reconnecting with old friends and to making new ones, both literary and human. This week I am off to Boston for Readercon 19. From the website: "Readercon is, depending on your point of view, either an annual literary conference (except it's infinitely more fun than that) or an annual science fiction convention (except we've stripped away virtually everything except talking about and buying books). In the course of its twenty years, it has become the standard bearer and role model for conventions that focus on the literature."

I was a professional guest at the first Readercon, and I haven't been back to one since the 1980s. This will also be my first trip back to my old stomping grounds in the almost 5-1/2 years since I moved from the Dorchester section of Boston to central Florida. The convention takes place in the Boston suburb of Burlington, MA.

I will read poetry with the Science Fiction Poetry Association at its "Poetry Slan," will read prose with Broad Universe at its Rapid Fire Reading, and will put in some time at the Broad Universe book table. Copies of Covenant and Riffing on Strings are coming with me. I also plan to make it to Mike Allen's speculative poetry workshop.

And I still have to go through the list of Readercon's program items (its delicious .pdf guide is here) and make the very hard decisions about what to attend, because I want to attend everything.

Covenant, the first volume in the Deviations Series, is available from Aisling Press, and from AbeBooks, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Book Territory, Borders, Buecher.ch, Buy.com, BuyAustralian.com, DEAstore, eCampus.com, libreriauniversitaria.it, Libri.de, Loot.co.za, Powell's Books, and Target. The Deviations page has additional details.




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