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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 9        Page 14

What a Long, Strange Trip

Answering a letter-writer to her column,

a woman having a hard time in pandemic lockdown,

“Amy,” ends with, “What a long, strange trip…”

to refer to all of us dealing with the coronavirus:

the second time Amy’s mentioned the Grateful Dead

in her advice column, so we wonder: a Deadhead?

Worse ways to spend one’s time than listening

to the band’s music, quoting lyrics, especially the one

that’s become an anthem, a prayer, of sorts,

“We will get by, we will survive,”

and hope it’s true, with a little help from our friends,

to paraphrase Ringo in another old song.

In the meantime, we wait for Amy to refer

to “Uncle John’s Band” someday, playing

“down by the riverside,” when we can all gather again,

and not worry about anything, too much.

Before His Title Bout, Moshe Breslau Is
Visited by His Brother

It ain’t my night? I thought

that’s why you got rid of Big Al,

him telling me to take a dive,

so he could clean up on a rematch.

Who gave the order? You

or one of your “business associates?”

These ain’t guys you never want to cross?

You afraid of them? What you got me for!

No one yet that can go toe to toe with me.

And if it comes to knives and guns,

I got no qualms. So I’m only one guy;

you got hard guys who take orders from you. 

Use ’em, what you pay them for!

No more talk about me going down,

I got this far by giving an honest effort.

People bet their life savings on me,

and don’t you dare call them suckers.

You’re the sucker, thinking to make

a dishonest buck on someone

else’s sweat and pain, and that someone

being your own damn brother!

Don’t tell me how much these guys

stand to lose. And don’t fuckin’ tell me

how much you stand to lose.

And definitely don’t tell me how badly

they’ll make us pay if we cross them.

You can depend on me to protect you,

like when we were kids.

But damnit it, Danny, betting against

your own brother? You should be

fuckin’ ashamed!

© Christine Karapetian: Social Study 38[2]

Posing for an Art Class at a Prison

When I was otherwise out of work,

I’d take off my clothes and strike poses

for art students, letting my mind wander

to favorite songs or poems or autumn walks,

or wintry Manhattan Beach, waves hitting

the rocks hard as gauntleted fists.

This job: a community college rented space

in a prison on the empty, forested border

between Queens and Nassau County,

the studio in a building for the criminally insane.

I won’t lie and say I walked as blithefully

into that hell as I would’ve through the doors

of the old Fillmore East when the Dead

or the Airplane were playing.  Still, no howls,

no cells exploding with homicidal madmen

flinging themselves about the bars

as if evil Jungle Jim’s: just hospital-antiseptic

green walls, a guard at the barbed-wired entrance

checking my driver’s license and name

on the visitors’ list, to allow me inside.

What I remember?  Changing behind a screen,

then twenty-second poses, so the students

could limber up their wrists, then a series

of one, two, five-minute poses, then finishing

with one that lasted an hour, with breaks

to rest aching limbs holding still for too long.

When the session ended, I collected my check,

and all but skipped the mile or so to the bus stop,

sun Eden-bright, autumn leaves dancing,

a fox disappearing into the quiet woods.

Scam Artist

A guy’s got to get by.

Who better to support me

than the kids from high school

who made my life hell because

Ma took in male boarders

and Dad took a powder faster

than I can snort a line of soda?

So I got the emails of everyone

I knew back then, wrote to say

I’d married, but she wasn’t

what an honest man would expect:

took out a couple of policies

on my life, then hired a guy,

who blasted me, left me blind,

then kidnapped our daughter.

Now I’m fighting for her custody,

since how could I leave

sweet Amy in her depraved hands?

Worked like a snake charm,

until these two sisters hired me

a lawyer; I split the state faster

than if the mob were on my trail.

Taking Up a Musical Instrument

People less musical than bloodhounds

have, in later life, found a talent

for playing a musical instrument.

Inexplicable, but it happens,

which gives me hope that maybe

I’ll wake tomorrow or next week,

and play the guitar like Jerry Garcia,

or the bagpipes like a pipe major,

a loch shimmering below me

with the scales and fins of a million

flashing salmon, my drones

calling them to their spawning grounds.

But I’m enthusiastically tone deaf

when I sing with musician friends,

who kid, “Do you know ‘So Low’”

or ‘Far, Far Away’?”

A friend once suggested

I take up the hammered dulcimer,

no need for finger dexterity,

her small, padded hammers flying

faster than pickpockets,

the notes she coaxed:

a miniature, archaically lovely piano

Bach might have studied

for a few moments,

then played like a virtuoso;

something I look at and see

only a magic I’ll never master.

Moshe Breslau, Managed by His Younger Brother Daniel in the Fight Game: the Lower East Side, 1916

Danny’s taken over managing my fights,

with Big Al probably at the bottom

of the Narrows, wearing cement dress shoes.

When he tried to get me to throw a bout,

and after I refused and hit him,

Danny cleaned up the mess.

As kids, it was me who’d protect him from bullies

picking on a weakling smarter than them, pushing,

punching him, ’til I’d guard him to and from cheder,

breaking some teeth, when things got rough.

But now, with his saykhel, he looks out for me:

I never see the big picture, like he does:

his mind clicking faster than the hooves

of the winner at the featured race at Belmont,

like when he used to run numbers for Big Al,

keeping all the info in his head,

a ledger neater than any I can write.

Tonight, I fight the champ. 

I can take him, easy: two steps slower

than in his heyday, his fists weighted down,

and not with the piles of quarters that send

your opponent into woozy-canary-land

when you connect, his jaw suddenly

more fragile than Seder wine glasses.

Here’s Danny now, not looking too happy.

Shit, I hope Ma and Pa are okay, and Esther

ain’t tossed a conniption fit on account of her role

in the play Danny got her into, ain’t big enough.

My Dentist’s Monthly Newsletter

In the latest, an article about how laughing gas

was discovered in 1844 by Horace Wells,

a Connecticut dentist, as he walked past

a street show that employed what we once

called “Hippie crack” at Grateful Dead shows.

The strolling players magically levitated passersby

into barking, tearful, helpless hilarity;

when Doctor Wells realized the mist quelled pain,

he tried it on his patients with excellent success.

The little imp in me wants to ask my dentist

why he’s never run an article about Doc Holliday,

who infected even more victims with tuberculosis

while he yanked their teeth and filled their cavities

than he killed with his six shooters at the OK Corral

and in the random, .45 violence he was drawn to

like the rotgut booze he couldn’t get enough of.

But no need to rile a man who uses sharp

instruments in my mouth, and he already knows

about the not-so-good doctor, since we’ve traded

stories about him: my delaying tactic before

Dr. Unser’s horse tranquilizer-size needles can pinch

and numb me up for the torments he later performs,

“DDS,” after all, in the old Brooklyn joke,

meaning, “Dey Died Screamin’.”

The Electric Menorah

Every Chanukah we lit the menorah,

waited for all the candles to burn down

to that whiff of smoke that reminded us

of the ascending soul: not so much

for love of the dancing flickers, but fearing

if we turned our backs for an instant,

the flames would burn down the whole house.

So a few years ago, I bought a used electric one,

pleasantly surprised at how cheap it was,

until we switched it on, and discovered

one candle—not the shamus—the one

we light the others with—was a dud.

Too late to heed my mother’s advice

that what’s cheap is dear, we shrugged

and said impromptu prayers for the health

and happiness of everyone we knew,

for world peace, and happily ignored

the menorah until we went to bed.

Still, it nags at me, that imperfection,

but even more that it’s all so easy now:

a flick of the switch and there’s light,

as opposed to my childhood ritual

of lighting the shamus, then the others,

night after night until all nine glowed and swayed,

as if around a campfire where everyone sang,

“Kumbayah,” like the world depended on it,

which it still does, only more so than ever.

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