Contributor Spotlight: Kathleen Bangs

Kathleen Bangs: How "Cold Woods" Came to Life

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It was a drizzly, cold November morning on the opener of Minnesota’s deer hunting season. I was driving into the remote town of Grand Marais, an outpost hugging the north shore of Lake Superior, to attend the second day of a writer’s conference. We were meeting in a log building on the main drag. The day’s class was titled Write What Haunts You

With a few minutes to spare, I ducked into an adjacent coffee shop. As the barista handed me a mug, I puzzled over a sign on the wall. “Oh. Yesterday I thought this place was called Java Loon. But it’s named after a different north woods animal?” I asked.

She smiled. “Yes, we’re Java Moose. There’s a sticker if you’d like one,” the barista said, pointing to a pile of large round stickers on the counter between us. Not really a sticker person, I didn’t know what possessed me to pick one up. The sticker indeed displayed a drawing of a moose, not a loon.  I stuck it into my jacket front pocket and headed to class.

A police officer, moonlighting as a mystery writer, sat across the table from me in Write What Haunts You. Before the instructor began, I took him aside. “You know, there’s this unsolved case that often bothers me this time of year, about a missing man in the Minnesota woods.” I had no intention of ever writing about the missing person. But the opportunity to ask a cop if he had ever heard of the case was too tempting to resist. 

During the break I went to step outside for a moment to enjoy the pine scented air, and a close view of the world’s biggest lake. As I pushed open the glass double doors, something caught my eye. A blur of animal coming toward me at a gallop. For a split second I thought it was a freakishly giant Newfoundland dog, with wiry colored fur the shade of green moss. 

With my right leg through the door, and only a pane of glass separating whatever was barreling toward me, its wild eyes caught mine. I saw mostly white, the look of panic. With a collision imminent, instinct kicked in. Stepping backwards, I yanked the door shut.

The animal’s head slammed against the glass with a loud thunk. 

Apparently unfazed, it made a sharp turn to the left, disappearing across the street toward the coffee shop, gone in an instant.

“Did anybody see that?” I yelled, flustered.

“I did,” said a man’s voice, from behind. It was the police officer. “That was a juvenile moose.”

***

What were the odds? Of a near-miss with a wild creature, a moose no less. With the moose sticker still in my pocket. After just getting up the nerve to finally ask law enforcement about the case of a missing man. I still don’t know if the universe was trying to jar me into action, or silence. But I did feel that the story of a man, long presumed dead, needed to come to life. I stepped inside, sat down, and wrote "Cold Woods."

Contributor Spotlight: Beverly Burch

Beverly Burch on "Psalm of the Glass City"

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Psalm of the Glass City” began when I spent time in Vancouver, BC. I love this city, how its glassiness reflects the surrounding mountains and water, its green space on high buildings, but being there I also sank into what was missing.

The poem is one of a series of Psalms about the sometimes alluring damage humans inflict on the natural world, especially wealthy humans. Imagining the missing wildlife and the disappeared trees seems a necessity when living in a city, as I do in Oakland, CA.

Bay Area cities have turned to glass as well. These psalms are praise songs to what we don’t see or know and they became part of a manuscript about the aftermath of Eden, the afterlife of a fleeing Eve as she enters the contemporary world. This manuscript, The Book of Eve, explores natural destruction, gender relations, and the potential dystopia all our lives seem headed toward.

Congratulations Mary Kovaleski Byrnes!

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Congratulations to Mary Kovaleski Byrnes on her forthcoming poetry collection So Long the Sky  (Platypus Press)!

Two of Mary's poems, "Centralia, PA" and "X, 1926," appeared in Split Rock Review (Issue 5). 

Mary teaches writing and literature at Emerson College, and is the co-founder of the emersonWRITES program, a free creative writing program for Boston Public School students. Her work has appeared in GuernicaSalamander, the Four Way Review, the Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review, the Boston Globe, Poet Lore, Cimmaron Review, the Best of Kore Press, Best of the Net, PANK, and elsewhere. She served as Poetry Editor for Redivider and has been a poetry reader for Ploughshares since 2009.

So Long the Sky is scheduled to be released on May 11, 2018. You can order it from Platypus Press

Congratulations Mary on this wonderful achievement! 

Contributor Spotlight: Doug Van Hooser

Doug Van Hooser on "Wild Phlox"

 

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I have a house in Wisconsin on the edge of the Kettle Moraine State Forest. When we moved in the prior owner had grassed over a tiered garden in the front yard. I tore out the grass and started planting. The wild phlox across the street did too. I have a hard time pulling out any plant that blooms and the phlox quickly took advantage of this flaw. Seed finds every nook and cranny and the next thing I knew there was a mass of blue. I love the big show. The Morton Arboretum in Illinois has a field of naturalized daffodils that is a special sight. I planted a hundred scilla in the front lawn and after twenty-five years the thousands of tiny plants put on an early spring show that mesmerizes everyone who sees it. And the phlox? No matter my annual efforts, it keeps its grip. Survival is never in question.