[ image: scan of first poem in Poetry, November 2018 issue (Lucia Perillo, "Say This") with cross-outs ]
Brookline Booksmith 7:04pm packed house. Maybe two people of color in audience for Teju Cole / Elisa
Gabbert conversation.
Elisa reads “Variations on Crying.”
Gone With the Wind made Elisa weep; controversy
re. Vanessa Place retweeting Gone With the Wind line x line
“When I was 26, I got 13 stitches in my chin after
fainting toward a French door and breaking a pane of glass with my face.” Twenty-six?
More than a decade ago? I shot footage of those French doors on my Motorola RAZR.
T. Cole offers “a special shout out to the
nonwhite people in the audience.” He claims he’s the reason they’re at the
reading; E. Gabbert says, “I brought you.”
T. Cole reads his anthology of cliché observations.
Elisa reads “one more”—“We’ve never owned property,
and our families aren’t in a position to contribute to a down payment.”
Mentions her friend Katie, crushed by a gallery
wall, in both essays. The power of this anecdote. Richard Serra.
T. Cole talks. Doesn't lead a discussion or
engender conversation. Elisa listens. T. Cole asks of the audience if
anyone is happier than they were ten years ago. Four women respond. He categorizes
each response. He is pleased women commented because, he says, it’s usually men
who comment. He interrupts Elisa. He decides to read another essay from his
book during q & a. He tells anecdote about losing keys and worrying that he’ll
end up in the news like Henry Louise Gates. He asks, “How is everybody feeling?
Uncomfortable?” Yes—when will you give Elisa an opportunity to speak uninterrupted?
She answers a question about the lack of an index
in The Word Pretty. Is frank about it—there was a rush to get the book done. She's asked about craft. Her answers are concise and honest.
Outside Booksmith, police cruiser, lights flashing. Blue.
Outside Booksmith, police cruiser, lights flashing. Blue.
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