“When I start to moralize, I remember shortcomings
[ — ] and the urge dies” (from a postcard sent to me by Bella Bravo, Aug.
2017.
Three Crises from the trees arrived last week.
Three new stories by Bella Bravo. I enjoyed especially the middle story
“Concussion” in which a young lawyer protests police violence in a concussed
state: “The concussion separated ideas as I cohered them.” A helpful store
clerk participates (this is a favorite scene):
The old clerk ran past me and sent $350 in standard rolls of U.S. coin bound together with electrical tape through a floor-to-ceiling bank window—I wasn’t surprised when the crystalline structure of a single pane slipped and scattered into many symbols of the window to the sidewalk….
I don’t know if it’s possible to obtain copies of
Bravo’s chapbook—her website makes no mention of Three Crises, nor does MonsterHouse Press (I assume the “W The Trees” is upside-down “M”-ster House Press).
Also, the front matter reads “First Edition of 23.” 23 editions? 23 copies? A
mystery.
However—if possible, obtain. Three Crises extends
her first (excellent) collection the unpositioned parts. Read this prose:
Traffic air hissed past. Sulfur sewered from the curb. Silent vibrations connected my muscles, the soft knit tissue caught in chemical fight, still strained to sustain their structural integrity against a nearly overwhelming force, against asphalt, against time.
Read this prose.
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