Fairy Tale Review: The Blue Issue #1
By Kate Bernheimer, Lily Hoang, Alissa Nutting and
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About this ebook
The tenth-anniversary Emerald Issue contains new stories, poems, essays, and artwork inspired by the themes of "emeralds" and "Oz."
The sheer volume of responses to the first issue of Fairy Tale Review shows that fairy tales continue to be one of the most viable art forms. In fairy tales, all things are interdependent, mysteriously and insanely entwined. They contain a deeply ecological world. The Green Issue is devoted to new fairy tales, with a special consideration for nature.
The unbridled individualism at work in the literary forms most dominant today devalues the natural world in relation to the human. In fairy tales, the human world and the animal world are collapsed. The collapse remains open to wonder and change. In this way, fairy tales provide the possibility for narratives to shine a different sort of terrible light on the natural world. This world is transparent, imperiled, abstract, and new. In this world, clarity and wonder go hand and hand.
Lily Hoang
Lily Hoang is the author of five books, including A Bestiary (finalist for a PEN USA Nonfiction Book Award) and Changing (recipient of a PEN Open Books Award). She has been a Mellon Fellow at Rhodes University in South Africa, a Distinguished Visiting Writer at Cornell College, and a Cultural Exchange Faculty Fellow at Wuhan University in China. To date, she has taught creative writing on five continents. She currently teaches in the MFA Program at UC San Diego. She lives in San Diego, California.
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Fairy Tale Review - Kate Bernheimer
FAIRY TALE REVIEW
The Mauve Issue
FOUNDER & EDITOR
Kate Bernheimer, University of Arizona
MANAGING EDITORS
Laura I. Miller, University of Arizona
Thomas Mira y Lopez, University of Arizona
PROSE EDITOR
Joel Hans, University of Arizona
POETRY EDITOR
Jon Riccio, University of Arizona
ADVISORY BOARD
Donald Haase, Wayne State University
Maria Tatar, Harvard University
Jack Zipes, University of Minnesota
EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS
Sylvia Chan, Jarrett Eakins, Andrea Francis, Kendra Mullison, Matthew Schmidt, William Slattery, Sara Wolfe Vaughan, University of Arizona; Elka Weber, Mills College
UNDERGRADUATE INTERNS
Kelsey Blackman, Katelyn Canez, Nola Christopher-Meziab, Jared Hughes, Zane Johnson, Catherine Walker, University of Arizona
ORIGINAL PRINT DESIGN
J. Johnson, DesignFarm
COVER ART (INSIDE FRAME)
Kiki Smith, Born
COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
LAYOUT
Tara Reeser
FAIRY TALE REVIEW
www.fairytalereview.com
Electronic edition © 2015 by Wayne State University Press, Detroit, Michigan 48201. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without formal permission. Manufactured in the United States of America. Originally © 2015 by Wayne State University Press.
The Mauve Issue (2015) 978-0-8143-4180-3
FAIRY TALE REVIEW is devoted to contemporary literary fairy tales and hopes to provide an elegant and innovative venue for writers working with the aesthetics and motifs of fairy tales. How can fairy tales help us to go where it is we are going, like Jean Cocteau’s magical horse? We hope to discover. Please know that Fairy Tale Review is not devoted to any particular school of writing, but rather to original work that in its very own way is imbued with fairy tales.
Mauve is the past; the future is mauve.
—Shelley Jackson
FAIRY TALE REVIEW
The Mauve Issue
ANNOTATED TABLE OF CONTENTS
THOMAS MIRA Y LOPEZ
Editor’s Note
Mauve, most famously, is an accident.
MATT BELL
The Painted Sisters
Because in this story the older and the younger were again sisters, both brave with tattoos.
EMMA BOLDEN
In Every Tale About Hunger
He slices the soles off his shoes
to give his feet the gift of ice, a slow burn to numb.
Above him, geese gather like a bad hem. They urge
him: northward, north.
WYATT BONIKOWSKI
Wind-Up Toy
My mother sat on her grandfather’s lap at the mahogany desk in his study and he showed her his collection of tin wind-up toys. It was her happiest memory of him, she told me.
TRACI BRIMHALL
Plantation Landscape with a Mob of Unwanted Children and Pollinating Rubber Trees
Little knights, little queens, little overseers
of this squalid kingdom. In the dry season
the river retreats, and rocks reveal the faces
of everyone who’s gone missing since the coup.
LUCAS CHURCH
The Whole Thing up Till Now
When the two men showed up, Emma panicked and pushed Jack into the closest hiding place, an old wooden chest at the far end of the kitchen. She let the lid slam and lock.
CLAIRE CRONIN
What Haunts
The Mauve Issue Poetry Contest Winner as Judged by Ilya Kaminsky
Once a woman was disfigured by a story
told only through a series of red masks
LENNY DELLAROCCA
Fables
I collect windows in a bottle, and as you might expect, windows are the same everywhere. Mostly.
MONICA DRAKE
Love Story
An Essay
Last night a very intoxicated older man decided to set up on our porch.
MOLLY FAERBER
And Also in the Sea
The widow had taken her in that first day, impressed by the way she could reach unflinching into the barrel and draw out the lobster whose meat was sweetest. Beguiled by her fingers that coaxed the creatures to sleep before she slipped them into steaming broth. Like carrying children to bed.
MAJDA GAMA
British Museum, Neolithic Deer Antler Headdress
Here is age, dim word, the warp of it
In a glass case of remains from a time
Of flint and bone, when tongue trumped ink
Skin and skull held words
ELIZABETH GROSS
Antelopes of Thera
Famous, unlucky
the goat fell through centuries
and centuries of volcanic ash.
Archaeologists followed in awe.
KIRSTEN HOLT
Selkie
In this city, everything drowns:
Wedding dresses stick to the knees, libraries soak
to the third shelf, compost floats like paper
boats, and daughters are named after hurricanes.
CHRISTINA KLOESS
Binnorie
On the last day of winter, Vikrum watches Born Free in his bedroom. The movie is showing on cable, which means the connection is a little fuzzy. Vikrum steams up his glasses when he cries.
MARY LAVALLEE
Victor Vale
I meet the protagonist outside a coffee shop in Prague, which is a city I have never been to. He orders coffee, thick with sweetened condensed milk. I wonder if there is some sort of significance in this.
ALICIA REBECCA MYERS
Legs
The ocean was popular and nearby removed
from her like an ablation her grandmother
warned that she would be removed from it her body
SEQUOIA NAGAMATSU
The Peach Boy
And so came the day when Momotaro, whose parents found him inside of a peach, grew tired of adventures and settled down with a samurai’s daughter.
HELEN PHILLIPS
One of Us Will Be Happy; It’s Just a Matter of Which One
Once upon a time and for all time, a Queen and King sat on twin thrones. They were young and beloved, this Queen and King, for she was famous across the land as a wife who valued above all else the happiness of her husband and he was famous across the land as a husband who valued above all else the happiness of his wife.
TIM RAYMOND
All Our Children
My Aunt Sarah used to say that Tina Wallace has so many kids because she’s a Catholic, and I didn’t get it until later, last year, when I turned fifteen. Tina Wallace has a husband, somewhere, and she has five girls and four boys at home. Aunt Sarah is a funny person, though she doesn’t laugh when she tells her jokes. To me, that makes her funnier.
CHRISTIAN REES
The Rope-Maker’s Beautiful Daughter
they never love her like a knot
loves a bind to them loving her is carpentry
lay seven untimely stairs flush
one crook-fingered post true
latch the trick-lip door
ELIZABETH FRANKIE ROLLINS
from Seeking Rubilio
Armed with the Optimists’ List and their Glossary of Fears, the little band marched resolutely towards the darkest part of the woods. They gave up trying to leave a trail. They did not think they’d be coming back.
RICHARD SIKEN
Two Poems
Once, night, unchallenged, extended its dark grace
across the sky. To the credit of the town, the stars
at night had been enough, though sometimes
the townspeople went about bumping their heads
in sleep.
EMILY TEMPLE
Olive
Olive was drilling a hole through her fence.
No, that’s not quite accurate. The carpenter was drilling a hole through Olive’s fence, the fence being a big honking white picket one, the kind you see in advertisements for dryer sheets. Olive was directing.
MAI DER VANG
Two Poems
You told me north water
was not built by virga
but from suicide of the moon.
CALEB WASHBURN
The Man in Your Mouth
Nights I can’t sleep I picture a man carrying me
between his cheeks, his body
exposed in the sun. I picture his chest as its own
horizon
KELLIE WELLS
The Arse End of the World
When Death was born, it was outwardly ambivalent, gelatinous face pursed in indecision, groin smooth and non-committal.
ELISE WINN
Brother and Sister
The Mauve Issue Prose Contest Winner as Judged by Sarah Shun-lien Bynum
My poor brother: he was born a rat, a snake, a wolf, a roach. Our mother tried and tried for another child like me, a plain and smart child, a resourceful child, but it didn’t work out. Each time she birthed him, she cried out in terror and put him back, but he came out a different kind of disappointing every time.
REBECCA WOLFF
Myshka, or The Unknowable
You’re bored but you don’t want to read.
The mother sat with her daughter in a comfortable proximity. It was a warm spring, cooler inside the house than out this afternoon, so the mother had lit a fire in the stove in the middle room where the pale sun bypassed the windows.
RACHEL ZAVECZ
Six
Perfection: he creates them six electric children organized into two rows by three Their reflective bodies detailed silver etching at the fingers throat and testicles
Contributor Notes
EDITOR’S NOTE
Mauve, most famously, is an accident. William Henry Perkin, the 18-year-old English chemist charged by his professor with synthesizing quinine, found a purple residue in the midst of his experiments and had the good sense to take note of the leftover pigment. So began the color mauve in 1856, the world’s first synthetic dye.
Kate Bernheimer, our professor, asked a group of her students to conduct an experiment of her own. We were to assemble The Mauve Issue and shepherd two inaugural contests through their various stages. It was an adventure, to say the least, not only because some of us didn’t even know how to pronounce the word mauve. Although we also didn’t synthesize anything antimalarial, we ended up with what any good experiment stumbles upon: the happy mistake, the alluring and seductive accident. Move through this issue however you like—wade, tear, rubberneck, walk—and you will find the unexpected resonances within that we did not originally set out to encounter. You will find the pieces exert a thrall as seductive and serendipitous as the color under which they gather.
This was an experiment, but also a generosity on Kate’s part. She didn’t just invite us to a seat in her world, but over the past two years, her efforts have funded a number of University of Arizona graduate students to serve as editors with Fairy Tale Review. The fairy godmother analogy is passé, so we’ll simply say that we have dined on fairy tales. They’ve been our bread, bottle, and butter. Though we might turn back into tuberous roots in a short while, they’ll have to yank us out by our hair first.
Mauve is a fashion. It is a color for vestment, a color to wear. Many people confuse mauve with magenta. Do not do so. Mauve has many more intricacies of blue and grey.
Mauve is also fashioned. It is a new word with old roots. The color’s earlier incarnations—Tyrian purple (given for the shade of Roman emperors’ cloaks) and aniline purple—were abandoned when, to increase the popularity of Perkin’s dye, its sellers named the color after a French flower called the mallow. Mauve is a marketing tool. We hope you forgive us that.
When we consult the dictionary, it tells us that the mallow is a herbaceous plant with hairy stems and pink or purple flowers. Its fruit comes shaped in wedges and so it is nicknamed the cheese plant. Mallows are grown as ornamentals, and mallows are grown as edibles. Some are for looking at, others are for eating. We want this issue to be both—a mallow, a marsh, a cake that defies old proverbs. Gaze at it. Eat it too. Consume, ravage, devour it. Why, go ahead and try it on, walk around in it as long as you like. Either way, we promise you’ll look ravishing.
What do we do with stories if not dress in them? We suit up, parade around, show our friends, and see how long we can remain stitched in their skin. And what do we seek of stories if not that thrilling, sexy moment when we wonder just what would happen, however dangerous, if we stayed sown up there forever?
—Thomas Mira y Lopez
Managing Editor
MATT BELL
The Painted Sisters
Because in this story the older and the younger were again sisters, both brave with tattoos, spun across their collarbones and forearms, hips and breasts, and so it was easy to misunderstand why they hid their new bodies within their skirts, sleeved their thighs in patterned tights, crossed cautious arms across bright and buttoned cardigans. The sisters went unsweatered only in certain parlors, where they paid illustrated men to ink holy histories across their bodies—birds among the lions, lady patron saints, more feathers—and then at night when they touched their own flesh, or else with invitation each other’s, tracing the raw outlines of that work, the painted feathers and the fur. Later they spoke boldly across the black room, spoke the whole of secrets hidden now in plain but hieroglyphic sight: the aggression of a false uncle, a tutor with hungry hands, the way every boy they’d ever loved had turned out to be a wolf. The ink was like an armor but it was not enough. For every kind of boy it scared, it invited another. With their voices the sisters went looking for strength in the darkness; when apart they cried out each other’s names, the true names known only to each other. When they awoke it was often to find themselves in the same bed, entangled, all their inkiness touching, leaning against, learning to last.
. . .
Because before the abandonment their parents were frequently absent, so that the sisters were often alone except for each other. And because they believed it would protect them—and later restore them—they had first become such good girls: Remember their spotless rooms, their perfect handwriting, spun across homework completed early and without error. Remember their manners at the dinner table, their demureness with the spoons. Remember the tasteful colors of their early paintings, the teal and the taupe. Remember as they aged the way they learned to walk so erect, chests over hips, legs lengthening atop the squatness of first heels, each step following the last, as if balancing atop the beam. Such good girls, these sisters, everyone agreed, not just the older but the younger too—but despite their belief, goodness alone was no barrier from harm.
. . .
Because even as children they had loved to frighten each other with loss, they often went alone into the unsupervised night of the city, treaded the streets as far from home as they dared. Theirs was a special kind of fright then, the safest trembling: In the oldest tales, breaking a prohibition never resulted in lasting punishment. In the fairy stories, mistakes were the path to adventure. But these were not the oldest tales.
. . .
Because when the older desired to master the violin, then the younger was left home alone during her lessons. And while somewhere in the city the older made the first unlearned scrapes of bow across string, at their own home there was a knock on the tall glass of the sliding door, the glass that led to the shared backyard between apartments, where for the younger there waited a man in a robe, its rough fabric bachelor-grey, barely tied. The first of the suitors.
Because in another telling the suitor wore the white square across his throat. And in yet another he was the music teacher, and it was the older who was first exposed to danger.
But not in this story. In this story it was the younger who suffered first, who found the suitors waiting, already comfortable in the dark, the rebuttal to the girls’ belief that they would not be punished for their bravery.
. . .
Because the sisters wore what they liked and because the suitors liked this too: first ribbed tights, of mango and canary, robin’s egg and fuzzy wuzzy, and then later the older wore black thigh-highs, the younger flesh-colored stockings. The color nude, as if skin were a shade. Because the suitors convinced themselves the sisters wore what they wore for the suitors’ attention, affection, desire. Because after the first harrowing, the younger could not see any other colors, then the sisters redrew their wardrobe, choosing only black and white and reds, a solidarity of patterns, muted polka dots, tearing each new outfit out of a sketchbook of blank pages, from which any cloth they desired might be summoned. They tried to address their problems with coverings of new clothes and with sophisticated style, pledged never to be younger than, less than anyone else again. Remember their hair dyed, their skin inked, their eyelids mascaraed and their lips painted, their shapes swathed and sweatered, the first tattoos—and remember all of their costumes were insufficient to hide the younger’s sadness, a great welling grown within them both, for each a tree planted as always, planted with a seed.
. . .
Because they were asking for it, the suitors said. Because the sisters had not said no, they said. Because they had not said no enough. Because of the color and shape of their dresses. Because of the boldness of their makeup, its smoked allure. Because of their scent, the perfumes applied and the perfumes made. A pheromone irresistible. Because as teenagers they had fallen asleep in the suitors’ beds, in the beds of the suitors’ friends, in the