New Letters, Volume 69 Number 1

New Letters Archive Table of Contents

New Letters, Volume 69 Number 1

E S S A Y S

6 / Editor's Commentary: On Being A Managing Editor, Robert Stewart
27 / Introduction: The Drawings of Laurie Lipton, Janet Burroway
75 / A brief history of hair:, Alyce Miller

F I C T I O N

11 / Family, Frances Sherwood
31 / Bobbing, Helen Barolini
57 / The Birthday, Harry Mark Petrakis
89 / Say When, Roderick Townley
101 / Pine Cones, Scott Ely
119 / Handel's Father, Bill Oliver
139 / Mistrals, Stephen Ausherman
167 / The Bombing of Tripoli, William McCauley

P O E T R Y

41 / Christmas 2001, Tim Seibles
44 / Five Poems, Nance Van Winckel
49 / What the Body Knows, Alison Townsend
52 / Two Poems, Eric Pankey
93 / Hostage, Roberta Swann
95 / The Black Hole, David Ray
96 / In a Season of Absence, Maryfrances Wagner
97 / Some Boys are Born to Wander, Walt McDonald
98 / At Sybaris, Francis Blessington
99 / Spring Fires in Livingston Parish, Alison Pelegrin
148 / Three Poems, Regan Good
154 / The Bar Mitzvah, Alex Horne
155 / The Letter Walter Bargen
156 / The Skeleton of Roaring Camp Might be a Woman, David Citino
157 / Georgia, Susan Whitmore
158 / Water, Greg Field
160 / On the Undying Political Influence of Frank O'Hara, Saul Bennett
163 / The Swing, Miriam Poeter-Miller
164 / The Race, Kurt Brown

A R T W O R K

Laurie Lipton, drawings, front cover, pages 5, 10, 25, 26, 30, 39, 40, 56, 74, 100, 118, 138, 147, 162, 166. (Introductory essay by Janet Burroway, page 27.)
Roger Pfingston, photographic portfolio, pages 81-88.
Kathrin Perutz, photograph, "One Year Later," page 94.
175 / Notes On Contributors
180 / New Programs: New Letters on the Air
181 / Visitors' Log: The New Letters Guest Book
182 / Celebrations: News From Our Authors


S T A F F

Editor: Robert Stewart

Editorial Advisor: James McKinley

Administrative Director: Betsy Beasley

Assistant Managing Editor: Aleatha Ezra

Producer, New Letters on the Air: Angela Elam

Assistant Producer: Leslie Koffler

Readers: Thomas Russell, Karen Subach

Student Staff: Jason Holmes, Adam Kraft, Jannie Morrison, Amy Thomas

Past Editors: Alexander Cappon, David Ray, James McKinley

New Letters website: umkc.edu/newletters. Webmaster: Joe Short

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NEW LETTERS (ISSN 0146-4930)

Copyright 2002. The Curators of the University of Missouri.

VOLUME 69 NUMBER 1



Electronic edition published by Cultural Heritage Langauge Technologies and funded by the National Science Foundation International Digital Library Program. This text has been proofread to a high degree of accuracy. It was converted to electronic form using typesetters source files.

   

A brief history of hair: (Alyce Miller)

1953: Recorded as fact: I was born with hair.

1954: A mosaic of multiple baby photos, mirrors splitting off and exponentially doubling, quadrupling, and octupling Baby. I am the featured baby, posed and bribed into not minding. An oversized, goofy curl twists like a miniature cheese danish on the top of my head: coaxed, cajoled, manipulated into smiling, frowning, laughing. Oblivious of my hair.

1959: Hair Hatred. Hair that has never been cut, hair that tangles and catches when I fight boys with my fists, hair that mats after shampooing, hair that must be combed into compliance after I've been outside wrestling. Pleas for a crewcut categorically refused by uncomprehending parents. Response: Twist and jam my long hair inside the hood of my sweatshirt, pull the drawstring tight, and announce in a rough voice I am a boy. In this way I gain access to "no girls allowed" territory. Anyone suspicious I'm not a boy gets his ugly face punched. I play ball late into the evening with the other boys, and I beat them all.

1961: Convince my parents into letting me chop off the waist-long hair to well above my ears. It's called a "feather

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