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The Open Secret

Howard Grey

Issue 54, Summer 1972

 

 

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More from Issue 54, Summer 1972

Buy this issue!

  • Fiction

    • Kenward Elmslie

      Tropicalism

    • Gail Godwin

      Some Side Effects of Time Travel

    • James Ivory, Michael O'Donoghue & George Swift Trow

      Savages: A Motion Picture Outline

    • Harry Mathews

      The Sinking of the Odradek Stadium: Parts 6 and 7

    • Michael Rothschild

      The Austringer

    • David Shetzline

      Country of the Painted Freaks

  • Interview

    • Jerzy Kosinski

      The Art of Fiction No. 46

  • Poetry

    • Tom Clark

      On Venus

    • Tom Clark

      Water

    • Tom Clark

      The Door to the Forest

    • Allen Ginsberg

      An Open Window on Chicago

    • Faye Kicknosway

      Our Gang: Ginger

    • Ron Padgett

      Two Poems

    • Tom Walsh

      Two Poems

  • Art

    • Howard Grey

      The Open Secret

    • Serafina Voltic

      Issue No. 54 Cover

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From left, Galway Kinnell, Robert Hass, Olds, and Brenda Hillman in the Oakley house at the Community of Writers, Olympic Valley, California, 1989. Courtesy of Sharon Olds and the Community of Writers.

Sharon Olds published her first book, Satan Says, in 1980, at the age of thirty-seven. The book is organized into four sections, “Daughter,” “Woman,” “Mother,” and “Journey,” and it begins with its title poem, whose speaker is locked in a box she can open only by repeating after Satan: “Say shit, say death, say fuck the father.” At the time, Olds—who was born in San Francisco, graduated from Stanford, and received a Ph.D. in English from Columbia—was married to a psychiatrist, and she spent her days on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, caring for their two young children. Not long after the book’s publication, she told me last year, someone who had invited her to give a reading picked her up at the airport and said, “I thought you would look angrier.”

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Rachel Cusk photo courtesy the author.

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