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Flash Concernant

Roland Michenet

Issue 43, Summer 1968

 

 

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More from Issue 43, Summer 1968

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  • Fiction

    • John Ashbery & James Schuyler

      Further Adventures

    • Donald Barthelme

      Alice

    • Francis Ponge

      Soap

    • Marge Piercy

      Love Me Tonight, God

    • Francis Ponge

      Four Short Texts

    • Eric Thompson

      Adam, Adam, Shave Your Face

  • Interview

    • Jack Kerouac

      The Art of Fiction No. 41

  • Poetry

    • Vito Hannibal Acconci

      Two Poems

    • Michael Benedikt

      The Chest of Energy

    • Michael Brownstein

      Big City

    • Jim Carroll

      Poem

    • Clark Coolidge

      Poems

    • John Godfrey

      Our Knees

    • Kenneth Koch

      The Pleasures of Peace

    • David Lehman

      The Presidential Years

    • Bernadette Mayer

      Two Poems

    • Aram Saroyan

      French Poets

    • Aram Saroyan

      Introduction

    • Tony Towle

      Daybreak

    • Anne Waldman

      Two Poems

    • Lewis Warsh

      Poem

    • Don Weingarten

      Two Poems

  • Art

    • Patrick Caulfield

      Issue No. 43 Cover

    • Patrick Caulfield

      Issue No. 43 Cover

    • Roland Michenet

      Flash Concernant

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By Sharon Olds
 

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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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Aisha Sabatini Sloan

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In an essay specially commissioned for the podcast, Aisha Sabatini Sloan describes rambling around Paris with her father, Lester Sloan, a longtime staff photographer for Newsweek, and a glamorous woman who befriends them. In an excerpt from The Art of Fiction no. 246, Rachel Cusk and Sheila Heti discuss how writing her first novel helped Cusk discover her “shape or identity or essence.” Next, Allan Gurganus’s reading of his story “It Had Wings,” about an arthritic woman who finds a fallen angel in her backyard, is interspersed with a version of the story rendered as a one-woman opera by the composer Bruce Saylor. The episode closes with “Dear Someone,” a poem by Deborah Landau.

Rachel Cusk photo courtesy the author.

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