Jazz with Ella

excerpt

“Sit with me here on this bench,” he said, taking her hand gently. “You asked to know about me and my family. So look around you. Except for my mother and aunt, most of my family are here. My father fought the fascists—just outside of the city. He wasn’t a brave man. He had no choice. To serve in the army was better than dying in Leningrad.”
“And your mother?”
“She survived the siege. She had no food except the ration. She didn’t get skinny though. She puffed up, she told me, her legs swollen—and her face, too—with disease.”
At that moment, Jennifer could feel a disease working through her own body in sympathy, a horrible nausea, her head heavy, her arms like lead, then only emptiness.
Volodya went on: “That first winter, 1941, she told me that many people froze to death on the streets. Those who survived were too weak to bury the others. So they just stepped over the dead on their way to stand in the food lines.”
“But she lived?”
“Somehow she lived. When the city was liberated, my father returned and nursed her back to health. He had an army ration; it was only a little more food than the usual ration. He died two years after I was born in 1947. He had been wounded in the chest. He couldn’t breathe.”
“That’s ghastly. So your mother had to raise you by herself?”
“Yes, she and her sister. But I don’t tell you for pity. This is what I want to tell you.” He stood up. “Look around here—at this memorial. All the memorials around town are built in honour of our glorious fallen comrades. So many memorials for the dead.”
Jennifer had a glimmer of understanding now. She shook off the nausea.
“A few years ago I looked at how my mother was living—how damp is her apartment, how she still stands in line for food, and I decide to write to Comrade Brezhnev. I asked him how come so many things are done for the dead and so little for the living.” Jennifer shifted uneasily. “Soon two special men came to my mother’s door. You know what this means, special men?”
“KGB,” she whispered.
“Yes, they question my mother. What is her son doing? Does he make trouble? The neighbours see these men come to the apartment.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763246

Poodie James

excerpt

in Washington, D.C. pushed President Roosevelt for the appropriations
that got the dam started. Everyone who grew apples
knew that Winifred Stone and The Daily Dispatch pushed the
senators.
The barrel of his chest straining the buttons of his faded Hawaiian
shirt, his frayed khaki shorts held up by an Army surplus webbed
belt, Poodie made his rounds, adding bottles and old newspapers
to the stock in his wagon. He was trying to think of a way to make
the mayor like him. Most people were friendly. Some ignored him
or looked away embarrassed, worried that he would approach and
ask for something, but Pete Torgerson yelled at him. Nearly everyone
knew about his deafness, knew he lived in a shack down by the
river. A few encouraged him to pick up bottles and papers from
back porches or corners of sheds. Poodie moved along, his wagon
following like a dog on a leash. The mailmen and garbage collectors
knew the town no better than he did. He pulled his wagon the
length and breadth of the town, making side trips into alleys,
retrieving bundles of papers, rummaging through garbage cans for
bottles. When the wagon was full to the top of its stakes, he hauled
it below the tracks to a rusting tin shed in a field between a foundry
and a freight warehouse. He watched a dusty old man box the bottles,
weigh the papers on his iron scale and count out a handful of
change from the coin purse he extracted from the pocket of his
leather apron.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08W7SHCMV

Orange

Past
Looking back
I wonder why
everything I left without
any effort to change them
remained as beautiful
as nature had crafted them.
Who was I, after all
who once wished to shift
the balance of the universe
by changing the depth
of the beautiful cove
of a woman’s body
and the length of a man’s penis
without the Grand Master’s plan?

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