Fury of the Wind

excerpt

“No, strangely enough, Sarah, she’s quite a good woman in her
way. Oh, she has her faults, and she thinks she’s a cut above the
ordinary Joe as we used to say in the Old Country. But then, lass,
which of us doesn’t have any faults?”
Mrs. Thompson expertly positioned a round slab of pastry onto
the sliced apples in the shell and began to press down the edges with
a fork. Without waiting for Sarah to answer her rhetorical question,
she said, “It’s Will I feel sorry for. He’s never been the same since it
happened. Used to be such a jolly man, always ready with a joke.
The girl was a lot like him in that way. Although in looks she was
fair like her mother. They hadn’t been here long when … when it
happened. Maybe a couple of years because I know the girl finished
up her high school in Nimkus.”
“What did happen, Mrs. Thompson?”
“I can’t really say, lass.” Mrs. Thompson suddenly looked embarrassed
and flustered. “And, my goodness, I’ve talked enough. The
time’s going on, and Ben’ll be in for his supper.” She gathered the
unbaked pies onto a tin tray and hurried into the kitchen.
Sarah stared after her. She wanted to ask more questions, but she
knew that no more information would be forthcoming from Mrs.
Thompson. Obviously, the English lady had already disclosed more
than she had intended.
But Sarah knew that something disturbing had happened in
Nimkus, and she was sure now that Ben had been a part of it.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0981073530

HEAR ME OUT

At Both Edges
At both edges of the emotion.
I love you as much as I hate you.
My beloved, hated love!
We don’t meet anymore.
We walk on parallel paths going opposite directions.
For long time we have passed the point where we met for the first time.
We can only go around the globe once more, since life is round like the earth.
Until then, each of us alone…

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562946

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763807

Titos Patrikios – Selected Poems

Sharing

So many things to share
and we always select a few;
we always want someone
in our ownership forever
shortening his body
dissecting his voice.
How long shall I live
in the faces that contain me
how long shall I still carry in me
faces that steadily shrink?

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562972

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08L1TJNNF

Wheat Ears

Principles
You coached leaves of the olive tree to
shred sunlight and you begged
finches to whistle summer
but you left my lips not kissed
except while foreign lands rejoiced
in your principles, behind you
this yellow wall’s firm blocks
of the abandoned building
overgrown with brier where
cicadas compose adagios
gardenias sweating aromas
but you exiled my lips
while only seagulls kept you company
and my sobs hushed the night

https://draft2digital.com/book/3748127#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BKHW4B4S

Blood, Feathers and Holy Men

excerpt

“Those who left you on this shore caused you the pain you have had to suffer. I
am sorry. The raiders were Pequat. By their law and our own law, we had to leave and
let them take you or they could have destroyed our village and taken our children as
well. A Pequat mother lost a daughter just as Brown Bear lost his Namid.”
Bjorn stood up in anger, “How? Where?”
Ari also rose, painfully. “Who did this murder?“
White Eagle raised his hand for silence. “Word has spread from further toward the
warm lands that the serpent ship brought death among our neighbours. The Pequat
travelled far to where they camped last night. They lost warriors and have the right
to take the bravest from among you to replace lost sons and daughters. Your brave
singing saved your lives. Now our people have bought you back so you belong to us.”
Ari looked around to his companions, then he replied for all, “Thank you for our
lives. We will be your people. Your people will be our people.”
“Now,” said White Eagle, “you must eat and rest. You have done well.” He turned
to Rordan and placed a hand on his shoulder. “You have honoured us with your
bravery and with your music. We gave many gifts to have you back. The Pequat warriors
have named you Hototo Nikamu, Warrior Spirit Who Sings. Now you are our
Mountain Thrush, Hototo Nikamu, and you are free to fly as you will.”
When White Eagle left to go to his lodge, Brother Keallach spoke to Rordan, “If we
are to stay here forever, shouldn’t we talk to Father Finten, first?”
“Not on your bloody life.” Ula was angry. “He wasn’t ransomed. Shit! He wasn’t
even with us. He can go when he bloody well wishes. This is our decision. Rordan
has spoken for all and his word stands.”
Brother Ailan used his right hand to get to his feet. His left hand was heavily
wrapped in moss and balsam fir sap. Brother Rordan had learned of the healing
properties of balsam from Corn Mother and, having paused to gather sap and cones
on the return journey, had already applied resin to everyone’s burns and to Ailan’s
finger stump. Now Ailan stood to address his Brothers. “No matter what happens, do
not forget we are tied to Father Finten by our vow of obedience.”
“Maybe you are, if you choose to be. At least three of us are free to make our own
decisions.” Ula stomped out of the lodge and Bjorn and Ari followed after her.
Rordan looked at both Keallach and Ailan. “What do we do about Finten? Has
anyone seen him?”
For days, Finten roamed the headland, looking out to sea, afraid of what might
appear on that vast expanse, afraid and ashamed of what White Eagle and the First
Light People would think of him now. Why, when he knew he could be so brave,
did his knees buckle whenever he was faced with danger? He regretted that he had
not died with his Brothers. He was certain none of the companions had survived.
He’d heard the bloodcurdling shrieks as he cowered in the lodge. He’d seen blood
splattered on the ground outside the lodge. He’d seen the trails of blood where the
savages had dragged bodies into the woods, probably to be eaten at a gruesome victory
feast.
When the villagers returned and he saw that none had been wounded, much less
killed, he knew immediately he had been betrayed. The attack was not against the
village but only to capture and kill him and his Brothers and the other three.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562826

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763106

Yannis Ritsos – Poems, Volume III

8th of December

Two glasses on the table
a stool at the corner
the shadow of a hand cutting flowers
shadow divided between bed and ceiling
I don’t remember, didn’t see it on time
only the shadow of the closed window
on the white wall
and the hand that didn’t cut flowers
the hand that was cut at the first moon-second
falling in the muddy waters middle of the road
next to the broken wheel of the post office truck.
A mandolin, an angry angel
a glass of water, the cigarette
the sound which takes both of us out of loneliness
so we separate again without saying goodnight.
Then, the eyes that open two holes in the wall.
I planted a tree. I’ll make sure it grows.
I won’t come back, no matter what.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B096TLBNFK

Orange

Closet
All night long, sleepless,
you promised not to cry
to empty the closet
give his clothes to charity
his red shirt
you’re now holding
tightly in your arms
as if it is his body
his hands hanging off the sleeves
his fingers that touched
your secret contours
suddenly a lone tear
flops on the side of his heart
and you run to the washer
impossible to give it away
with such a teary stain

https://draft2digital.com/book/3746001#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763750

Podcast Episode: Greek Poetry And Rural Fiction

Pip: Manolis Aligizakis runs a site that could double as a library card catalog, if libraries had this much range — Greek exile poetry, Canadian prairie childhoods, Soviet-era blackmail, and a taxi ride you would not want to be on.

Mara: vequinox has been posting across all of that territory, and today we're moving through three areas: modern Greek poetry collections, literary and crime fiction, and the theme of identity, memory, and exile. Let's start with the poetry.

Greek Verse, Exile, and the Long Tradition

Pip: The question underneath all these poetry posts is what it means to translate and collect Greek verse — not just linguistically, but as an act of cultural preservation, pulling work from Ritsos, Seferis, and others into a form that travels.

Mara: The Yannis Ritsos volume sets the tone early. From "The Exile Diaries," dated the fourth of December: "Moon, take off your shoes / I can't sleep on my back / if I'll turn to my side I'll hurt. / The door is open / I can't leave."

Pip: That last line does a lot of work. The door is open and he still can't leave — which is exile's specific cruelty: the constraint isn't always a lock, it's something internal, something the body carries.

Mara: George Seferis's collected poems push into similar territory with "The Sentence to Oblivion," and Tasos Livaditis, whose volume was longlisted for the 2023 Griffin Poetry Prize, writes of being "completely dishonest like this world that it belongs to you only when you promise it to someone." Titos Patrikios in his selected poems warns readers to "protect yourselves from the poets who steal verses from graves of the unknown."

Pip: There are also original collections here — Entropy, Ugga, Medusa, Troglodytes, Hours of the Stars — each posting a single poem as a window into the full book. Hours of the Stars centers on Ionia, lost in 1922, where "man tried to create the face of god and at last he created his own thoughtful face." The Neo-Hellene anthology rounds out the range, gathering voices across the modern Greek tradition into one place.

Mara: That breadth — from Ritsos's internment diary to an anthology spanning the whole tradition — is the argument these posts make together. The fiction excerpts are making their own kind of argument, and it runs across a very different set of landscapes.

Novels at the Edge — Fiction and Crime Excerpts

Pip: What connects this stretch of fiction posts is that nearly every excerpt drops you into a moment of pressure — someone is hiding something, someone is about to find out, and the social fabric is visibly straining at the seam.

Mara: Wellspring of Love opens in a hospital corridor. Tyne has just entered her aunt Millie's room and the excerpt lands here: "Tyne was conscious of two disturbing thoughts, the first that Dr. Dunston had seldom greeted her in any other way than with his usual cheery, 'Hi, sis.' Her second thought was that the woman in the bed, frail and ashen-faced, was hardly recognizable as her beloved aunt."

Pip: Two small observations, and suddenly the reader knows the diagnosis is bad and the relationship is complicated. That's efficient fiction — the weight is in what goes unsaid.

Mara: Jazz with Ella works the pressure from a completely different angle. Pavel, Vera, and Shukshin have cornered a Soviet bureaucrat named Pyotr — they have photographs of him with the police chief's wife, and they need forged documents. Pyotr sputters through a tantrum, and then Vera simply asks, "May I pour you another drink?" The coercion is wrapped in perfect politeness.

Pip: Nothing says "you have no leverage here" quite like being offered a refreshment mid-extortion.

Mara: In the Quiet After Slaughter takes a coming-of-age angle — two teenage brothers drawn into a scheme involving a mysterious receiver on a hill called Pork Chop, with a cast of characters that includes a man with a wart that "looked like a ladybug" above one eye. The Qliphoth is denser, set in a flat littered with occult paperbacks and failed technology, a woman piecing together who her missing lodger has become. Savages and Beasts puts a boy named Anton in possession of a dead priest's diary, paralyzed by what he should do with it.

Pip: He Rode Tall goes quieter — a maritime engineer named Joel, decades of city noise behind him, sitting on a horse in a pasture and feeling his heart come back online. In Turbulent Times is a social novel, a dinner table of doctors and their partners trading sharp observations about a young woman Clifford delivered as an infant under difficult conditions. The Unquiet Land sets its pressure in Ireland, where Mother Ross tells Padraig that "forgiveness is a rare commodity in Ireland — Irishmen never forgive and never forget." Redemption and Straits and Turns close the set — one a quiet departure from a Cretan village, the other a Vancouver taxi ride with a passenger whose presence is described with the kind of sensory detail that makes you grateful for fresh air.

Mara: What holds these excerpts together is that each one catches a character at a threshold — a decision, a revelation, or a departure. That threshold question carries straight into the next set of posts.

Where You Come From, Who You Are

Pip: The identity and memory posts are asking a version of the same question across very different geographies: what does a person carry when the place they came from is gone, or far, or changed beyond recognition?

Mara: Twelve Narratives of the Gypsy opens at the largest possible scale: "before we existed the Earth lived, before it spread its plains it was alive with its knowledge and wisdom." It's a cosmological frame for belonging — rootedness as something older than any single person's story.

Pip: Which makes the smaller, more personal accounts feel like they're answering that opening from the ground level.

Mara: Prairie Roots does exactly that — a childhood memoir of Saskatchewan winters, threshing season, geese in formation, paths worn single-file through snowdrifts toward a school facing a rising sun with no warmth in it. Red in Black brings it into the present tense, a poem about wilted supermarket vegetables and rotten tomatoes that pivots sharply to a man shot by a police officer. And Introspection's poem "Delta" traces a speaker who walked to the far ends of the world arguing for elegance and freedom, and was called a lunatic for it.

Mara: The thread running through all of it is that identity under pressure — exile, displacement, the refusal to forget — keeps finding its way back into the work, whether the form is a Greek lyric or a prairie memoir.


Pip: Exile poetry, coercive Soviet bureaucrats, a boy with a priest's diary, and a cosmological origin story for belonging — it's a wide orbit.

Mara: The site keeps returning to what people carry across distance and time. There's more of that to come.

Entropy

Ready to Give Birth to Forgetfulness
The zero exists and it doesn’t
eternity is in its space
distant root of the sea
realities and reflections
all the shed blood
for sanctified or sinful dreams
ecstasy of the flesh in the immensity
of life
thought that lifts and imprisons
crowding of my mind
sails, sphinxes and shipwrecks
and Eros in absentia
soul that flutters
my cosmos is always
in the cosmos
from the foggy gleam of who I am
passing memory joins me
with the ready-to-die forgetfulness
timid and at the same time a hero
from the beginning to the end
the attempt will be
her unfamiliar hand in my hand
when time unexpectedly enlivens
youth
music score that wished to love
and guide me to the wind-whipped light
will guide me to whom I was
in the fleeting footmarks
of an eternal Odyssey.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DPCRLJC6

Ugga

eight
You laid the morning
upon a wheat ear
and the bird you kept for lunch
the two interactions
you have been hungry for eons
and contemplate
your up-coming demise

https://www.amazon.com/dp/192676370X