SELECTED TWEETS: LIVE TO LIVE ANOTHER LIFE

Written by Christopher Hughes

Live to live another life. 10/28/12 

Live to live another life. 10/28/12 

Steam rose from a crumpled, metal hood. Yellow fire turned in the bulbs. Sirens echoed in a soft, suburban block.  I could feel the heat in my face and the blood underneath it, blooming.  Then I was alive.  They blotted my wounds with gauze that scratched at the raw, open flesh.  It hurt, but I was glad the blood was no longer leaking into my eye. Ten months later I wrote about it and failed. All I could do was click and click, twirl a pen across the knuckles of my hand, observe the curious resistence to memory.  I was called to the stage and reached into my bag and there was nothing there.  Those bright lights shone and I conjured something violent in my mind.  Sorry y’all, but I forgot it, I said.  A few people laughed like it was some kind of joke, and it probably was. 

            The medics asked for my name, address, phone number, and permission to inject some kind of something into my body.  I agreed and supplied them with information and requested the removal of a bandage from my face. I imagined my mother on the other end of a line, voice cracking, full of questions, suspicious and on the verge of accusation. Then I lay in a gurney in a hallway, staring at a pock-marked ceiling, trying to remember everything and trying not to nod.  A doctor approached, clipboard in hand, and said, You’re lucky to be alive. Living is easy, I said, but she didn’t get my sarcasm. They gave me a Morphine shot. I thought I was dreaming. I rolled over and peed in a plastic bottle with the curtains drawn, wondered how many Facebook notifications I had, wiped some leftover blood onto the bed sheets, tried to curl my hand into a fist, claimed I was still in pain and got another Morphine shot, considered the damage to my face, felt the bridge of my nose with my good hand, and thought about feeding my cat. It took me ten months to write about it.  It was the worst I’ve ever written. 

            I left the stage with my head down low, exited the bar, drove home and saw the pages scattered across the carpet, my cat resting on them in a meditative state.  I pulled them out from underneath and he shot me a bothered glance and I apologized.  When I returned I read what I wrote and the crowd figured it for comedy and laughed, thinking they were being polite.  I folded the pages and made a shopping list that included two apples and a spaghetti squash.  It’s been ten months, I thought, and I still recoil in the presence of headlights.  Then I entered a stall and peed with the door cracked and washed my hands and splashed water on my face.  Between band stickers I could see, in the mirror, the reflection of a scar on the bridge of my nose.  It wasn’t very noticeable, but I noticed.


 Christopher Hughes is the author of Selected Tweets, a spoken word project and ongoing collection of prose poems based around the idea of giving context to his otherwise vague Twitter feed. He is the singer, guitarist and songwriter for The Calmative, and he produces other artists as well, out of his studio, Miscellaneous Sound. He holds an MFA in creative writing from The New School, has been published in Pax Americana, Omnia Vanitas Review and the Augury Books blog, and lives within spitting distance of Midway Mart.

 

LITERARY ARTIST: DARIN BRADLEY

Words by Harlin Anderson, Image by Erin Rambo

Photo by Erin Rambo

Photo by Erin Rambo

We recently cornered local novelist, Darin Bradley, as he sipped a beer by the smoker and stoked the coals under a batch of his special recipe Lemon Pepper Chicken. Talk inevitably turned to his critically-acclaimed debut novel, Noise, but damned if we weren’t distracted by the smell of that yard bird. Lucky for you, we got the whole chat transcribed all fancy like.


Noise  is one of the most horrifying books we’ve ever read. What drove you to embark on such a dark literary undertaking?

It wasn't always so disturbing. The original idea was simple: two young men who rise to power in an unstable U.S. based solely on their wits and resourcefulness. It wasn't an overly sophisticated concept, and I carried it around in the back of my mind for several years while I worked on other projects. When I finally decided it was time to write Noise (it was called Amaranth back then), I decided that I needed to know the architecture behind re-making the U.S. (Was there a "right way" to do something like this? Should my characters follow some Plan?) As the story came together, and international financial collapse became the stage, the earliest tenets of "The Book began to surface (the guide the characters assemble in the novel to help them establish their nation-state). It became clear very quickly that I needed to actually write the entire "Book" before approaching the story, so I asked myself straightforward questions about what I would do to survive and protect my loved ones if the rule of law collapsed. I didn't always like the answers I came up with, but I felt they were true to the spirit of the exercise. It's this hard-line, no-exceptions, survival-at-all-costs program that made the novel as dark as it became. My characters adhered to my "Book" with dangerous, obsessive exactitude, and the results were pretty gruesome.

You created sympathetic, likable characters and then put them through absolute hell. Does that take its toll on you in real life?

Absolutely. The characters in Noise are portraits of real people—myself included. Many of Hiram's memories are my own, so to revisit them under circumstances that twisted their meanings and contexts wasn't exactly pleasant. I had to surprise myself with the cold, surgical violence in order to later surprise my readers with it—there's a fine line between believable shock value and engineered shtick, and staying on the right side of it, for me, involves not really knowing what you're doing at every given moment. My characters are young (early twenties) and angry and confused—just as most of us are at that age. The apocalypse occurring around them becomes just a giant metaphor for their tumultuous inner lives as they try to make the world work the way they want it to. When the world pushes back, it's difficult to just powerlessly read about the psycho-social damage this must be doing to those kids. In the real world, I'm a tolerant, progressive Denton townie—it definitely felt weird to borrow sociopathy and Fascism as I wrote the novel.

The town in  Noise  seems eerily familiar. Any truth to the rumor that it's actually set in a fictionalized Denton?

Ha! Yes: completely true. Here's the very duplex I lived in that appears in the novel: I renamed it Slade, and I moved a few things around, but it's absolutely supposed to be Denton. I didn't want to be restricted by the actual layout of Denton, in case I needed to take creative license, so I just rebranded it. Some of the streets even retain their real names, but some were jazzed up a bit for the fiction: Carroll became "Broadway" (even though Denton already has a Broadway), and Hickory became "Meyer." In a way, the book dates itself by the portrait it paints of Denton. In Noise, there are still longhorns grazing in the old Rayzor pasture, and Fry St. looks like it did before the recent developments (including a fragment of a burned-down pizza place). If you remember what the parking lot behind Cool Bean's looked like five years ago, then you've got the perfect mental stage for Hiram's gruesome act of vehicular assault against the "Strip Rat"—see, even Fry Rats made their way in.

What’s your connection to this area?

I moved to Denton in 1999, earned all three degrees here, burned through a fair portion of my twenties, and then my wife and I moved to the Carolinas in 2007. I had just finished a Ph.D. in cognitive theory and experimental literature, so I was positively buzzing with, quite possibly, the most sophisticated trains of thought I'll ever have in my lifetime. And I was unemployed. And homesick. Noise arose from this miasma and became, in many ways, a lament for the city I didn't think we'd ever come back to. I burned it down—a sort of exorcism so I could move on with the next chapter of my life. Luckily, though, we came back in 2010, and now we're here to stay.

What items should be in everyone’s bug out bag?

Mundane things. The first thing everyone wants to reach for is an AK or a sword or a shoulder-mounted anti-tank weapon. But you're going to need water purification technology, bandages, food, and fire starters. (Unless you want to cheat, like Hiram, and just beat people up and steal their stuff.) But, to be fair, I'm not bugging out without my revolver . . . 

What are you working on these days?

I'm writing the third book of what I think of as the Noise Cluster. The books don't comprise a trilogy, but they do represent three different experiments in the worlds of collapse, depression, and identity. With each new book, I try to challenge myself to write something more compelling--more contemplative—so I hope this final title will hold to that tradition. We'll see. I'm supposed to be writing it right now, but thank god you came along with these questions because I was really just staring out the window. You know: "writing."


EXCERPT from Noise

We got the jump because we lived near the square.  Walking distance.  Slade was like most small Texas towns--it radiated outward from the old courthouse.  At some point, someone had paved the original hitching yards and erected a cenotaph for the Civil War dead.  There were water fountains on each pillar, each with its own inscription:  White. Colored.  They both still worked.  There were pecan trees with dubious histories.

Livery posts, hardware stores, and hotels had clustered slowly around the squared avenue--the buildings still stared at the courthouse-turned-museum, the remnants of their painted-brick signs now protected by city codes.  Those businesses were all something else now--candy shops, bars, high-end boutiques.  But they had several signs each.  Meyer's Pawn was the most important to us.  Guitars and drum sets and stereos filled its storefront windows--the ejecta of the nearby university.  Its bread-and-butter music program, mostly.  Slade still lived because the university owned most of it.  Sweet Pine, Siwash, and Minnie Falls, all nearby, had dried up when they were supposed to, half a century before.  When Slade should’ve gone.

But we didn't care about instruments.  Meyer's had tools, too.

We got the jump.  We’d been watching Salvage for months, so we knew what to do. 

We knew enough.


Novelist, Eagle Scout, documentarian, linguist, video game writer, brew master, and student of the smoker, Darin Bradley is a true Renaissance Man who makes his home right here in the heart of Denton. Keep an eye out for his next project, and if you haven’t yet read Noise – turn off the television and crack a damn fine book. We guarantee you won’t regret it.   


Harlin Anderson is the underground BBQ champion of Denton, Texas. When he's not digging through crates of vinyl at Recycled Books or Mad World Records, he can be found manning the smoker on the back patio at Dan's Silver Leaf - or wherever there are hungry musicians. His lives with his wife, Ashley, and their three furry children: Earl, Jake, and Nanette the Pocket Beagle. He prefers to stay comfortably within the Denton city limits at all times.

DENTON LIT: APRIL MURPHY

This post is part of our monthly collaboration with Spiderweb Salon in which they show off the best of Denton's literary artists. This month, they're sharing the work of April Murphy.

Artist introduction and photos by Courtney Marie. 

​Photo by Courtney Marie 

​Photo by Courtney Marie 

April Murphy is a writer who strives, like many of us, to create and not starve. She writes mostly creative nonfiction, though she sometimes dabbles in fiction, poetry, and songwriting. She’s been told that her writing is matter-of-fact and tends toward black humor and sentimentality. If you’re an emotional person and sometimes find yourself looking for anatomical charts on Etsy, there’s a good chance you’ll like her stuff. Murphy is currently working on a nonfiction book entitled Shrouded. It is a collection of essays weaving together her family history, the funeral home industry’s treatment of women, and exploring life and death as gendered spaces.

Before moving to Denton, Murphy spent much of her life in rural outposts of the chilly North East and Mid-West. She’ll tell you how the four years she’s lived in Denton have warmed her heart – she has found a great community of writers and artists here, and says it’s hard not to stay inspired in such a supportive and interesting place. She is currently finishing up a PhD in Creative writing at UNT, but won’t limit her professional ambitions to the academic world. She wants to always be writing, publishing, and performing, and hopes her first book will be published in the next few years.

In cahoots with Denton’s artist collective, Spiderweb Salon, Murphy has agreed to share an excerpt of her short fiction with us. This excerpt is from a larger piece entitled “Partners.” Other accessible works of hers include “Puppy Tail,” “Vanilla Bones,” and “The Caves.” Check it out and be sure to keep up with April’s involvement in Spiderweb Salon, where she has presented multiple readings and performed her music as well. Some of her original writings will appear in the next Spiderweb zine: The Collaborative Issue, to be released this Friday!


​Photo by Courtney Marie

​Photo by Courtney Marie

-Excerpt from “Partners”

            Despite the unconventional cases he took, Mr. Percy had a strong conservative streak, like all those in the funeral industry. The only unorthodox thing about him was the fact that he was a Braves fan in upstate New York’s Red Sox territory. He’d inherited the team along with the funeral home and the Republican Party from his Southern grandfather.

            Maggie wasn’t lucky enough to have family in the business. Her parents, both English teachers, had never understood her aptitude for sciences. They had supported her through 4 years of pre-med and did the best they could to understand why their daughter was never interested in the books they sent at Christmas, why she only responded to their pages long emails with a short paragraph. When Maggie failed her MCATs, the relationship with her family strained. When she brought home Krystal, the pretty blonde she’d met in a cadaver lab, it broke completely. So much for books opening the mind.

            For a while after that, Maggie worked days as a barista and evenings as a grocery store clerk, too busy with affording her shitty apartment and paying back her college loans to allow herself to really feel as scared as she was about the rootless life she was leading.

            Krystal was there for it all, quick with a kind word but busy with double shifts and EMT training. They didn’t see each other much, and when they did both of them were usually too tired for conversation.

            Maggie applied for a temp job as an embalming assistant with The Percy Family Funeral home around their two-year anniversary. Mr. Percy hired her because of her background in anatomy and paid her enough so that she could leave the coffee shop and Price Chopper. After about six months, satisfied with her reliability and resourcefulness, he offered her the apartment above the home and sponsored her through her associates degree in mortuary science.

            She never asked him why he did it. She was nervous, afraid that if she drew attention to her good luck it would go away, she’d have to start over again.

         Mr. Percy seemed to think that adding her to the staff allowed him to start over too. He liked to joke around the office that after three generations of Percy and Sons, it was about time the funeral home had a lady’s touch. Maggie suspected that his sons, no more interested in the dead trade than she was in Shakespeare, had broken something between them too.

 

​Photo by Courtney Marie 

​Photo by Courtney Marie