North Carolina Literary Review Online Winter 2022

Page 48

48

NORTH CAROLINA L I T E R A R Y RE V I E W

Winter 2022

2021 JAMES APPLEWHITE POETRY PRIZE FINALIST BY MICHAEL LODERSTEDT

The Eye How many warm nights I’d lie awake listening to waves crashing into troughs, a rising hiss then falling softly, always beckoning I am here, I am always here, this unwavering sea.

COURTESY OF THE ARTIST

I never thought you’d come for us, breach thin dunes and lift this house from its blocks. Even as winds roared and beds shook, oak branches slamming their fists all around us. A heavy silence fell when the eye passed over, the sky a pale yellow. Children wandered the tangled yard, lost like drunks, waiting for another wind to switch and blow us back inside.

Entrance (after Florence), Atlantic Beach, NC, 2019 (silver gelatin print, 16x16”) by Michael Loderstedt

We’d pull groaning nails from boarded windows and drain the tub as lights flickered back. Pots on the stove, water salted, the broken bay tree gave leaf to our unholy sauce. Outside the sound of many hands clapping, the sea’s distant applause.

MICHAEL LODERSTEDT is Professor Emeritus of Kent State University where he taught printmaking and photography. He received an Ohio Arts Council Fellowship in Non-Fiction Literature for his book, The Yellowhammer’s Cross (PHOTOcentric, 2020). His work has been published in Neighborhood Voices, and he has written for The Land and CAN. His visual work can also be found in the public collections of the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Akron Art Museum, the Kupferstich-Kabinett in Dresden, Germany, and others. He has completed international artist residencies at the Frans Masereel Centrum and at AIR Antwerpen in Belgium, Grafikwerkstatt in Germany, and the Vermont Studio Center, among others. The poet/artist grew up on the Outer Banks, a region that continues to inspire his art and now his poetry. His poem “Why We Fished” won the 2021 James Applewhite Poetry Prize. Read it in the 2022 print issue.


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Articles inside

n Flashbacks: Echoes of Past Issues

1hr
pages 102-132

Calling the Bluff on Show-Don’t-Tell

6min
pages 96-97

The Transformational Potential of Writing

6min
pages 92-93

Wintering

2min
pages 90-91

J.J. – 1985

2min
pages 86-87

A Year of Collected Notes: Storytelling Sublime

6min
pages 88-89

Being Christian, Being Jewish

6min
pages 84-85

Love – and Mushrooms and Zooms – in the Ruins

19min
pages 76-82

Debut Novel by Halli Gomez Wins NC AAUW Award

1min
page 71

Turning Reality on Its Head

14min
pages 72-75

Charting Grief, Seeking Solace

8min
pages 68-70

Clichés

2min
page 67

Why I Flinch at the Thought of Daylight Squandered

2min
pages 62-63

A Reading Full of Light

4min
pages 60-61

More Than a Haircut

2min
pages 52-53

A Roving Search for Provisions of Any Kind

4min
pages 58-59

An Unsung Legend

8min
pages 49-51

Ghazal: Reflection and We Think of Night as Still

3min
pages 56-57

Stories about Growing Up Black and Female in America

5min
pages 54-55

The Eye

1min
page 48

You Can Come Home Again – and Be Lauded Jim Grimsley Receives 2021 Hardee Rives Dramatic Arts Award

3min
page 31

Linking the Common and the Uncanny

8min
pages 28-30

People Constructed of Pain and Grief

5min
pages 16-17

New Fiction Reckons with Landscape of Change

9min
pages 20-22

Mixed Messages: A Southern Childhood

3min
pages 18-19

First Published Novel by a Member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Receives 2021 Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award

6min
pages 26-27

Betrayal

1min
page 23

“The Black Condition” in Hell of a Book

5min
pages 12-13

They Have Been at Something Some Carrion, a Deer, or Such

5min
pages 24-25

Borrowed Light

2min
pages 14-15
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