Christi Craig is a native Texan living in Wisconsin, working by day as a sign language interpreter and moonlighting as a writer, teacher, and editor. Her stories and essays have appeared online and in print, and she received an Honorable Mention in Glimmer Train's Family Matters Contest, 2010.
You can send comments or questions via her contact page.
Sitting on a bench in my favorite tiny woods, I heard the twigs crack in an uneven rhythm and expected to see a chipmunk hop and scurry past. Instead, I turned into a gaze of intention, steady and unwavering, which made me question my intentions. I was used to being the one who watches to determine when it might be safe to stay, or to go. I barely took a breath, moving with caution to snap a photo of her in the wild. I wondered if this would break her focus. But she was direct, she would not be moved. Not by fear or by doubt or by question. Not until she so desired. I admired such character and her willingness to sit with me in my own moment of doubt. I had questions for her then, but her eyes fluttered as if to say, This isn’t the time. It’s simple trust. Her expression relaxed, and so did I.
This month’s roundup includes a few links to get you connected with Wisconsin authors, past and present, and their great books , granting you an endless list of new reads.
Early on in the issue is information on the Wisconsin Literary Map, a website that promotes Wisconsin authors and their work, including links to author websites, interviews, and so much more. Such a cool project, how did I not know about this?
Towards the end of the magazine is an announcement of the Wisconsin Writers Association 2019 Jade Ring Winners. Not only that, but the first place winners’ pieces (poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and humor) are right there in the pages for you to read.
In between, you’ll find articles on art and culture and a photo essay that serves as “a kind of ‘love letter’ to Lake Superior.” Congratulations to all the Jade Ring Winners, and thank you to Wisconsin People & Ideas for a wonderful issue!
I met Myles Hopper when Lisa Rivero and I co-editedFamily Stories from the Attic (Hidden Timber Books, 2017). Myles and I worked closely together on his essay, “Exodus Redux.” I came to know him as a writer with great introspection and dedication, one who strives not only to uncover the pieces of a story but to retell it in a way that builds meaning and insight, for the author as well as the reader. Today he shares excerpts from his forthcoming book, THE COLOR RED: That Was Then & This Is Now, which speaks to the power of writing and the art of the story.
The Color Red is a collection of stories that comprises a memoir, rather than a chronological autobiography, which isn’t how I remember my life, nor is it the way many other people remember theirs.
The experience is like standing in an editing studio ankle-deep in old-fashioned, raw film footage, searching for missing pieces. Some can be found, and memories can be refreshed; others, alas, are lost, perhaps forever.
Nevertheless, the search has been productive. The result is this book, in which characters and events move back and forth in time, the same way memories present themselves in unexpected flashbacks and associations.
Preparing this collection has been a long process. A story
of mine, first drafted in 1992, languished in a file folder for the next twenty-five
years. Before it had been relegated to that folder, another author had
encouraged me to write the rest of the stories I wanted to tell. I told him I
probably wouldn’t––actually, I told him I couldn’t––though writing was what I
most wanted to do. To his “Why?” I said, “Because, I don’t know if I’m able to
tell the truth, and if I don’t, none of this is worth writing about.”
“The truth about what?”
“About my relationships with
members of my family, maybe my father, most of all. There was a great deal of
love and caring, but there also was violence and rage, and I still have trouble
dealing with the lifelong aftermath.”
“Then I guess you have a decision
to make.”
Though it took many years, I made that decision to finish
what I had begun. It has helped me to keep in mind Joan Didion’s final sentence
in her preface to Slouching Towards
Bethlehem, where she reflects
upon how her interests as a writer run counter to those she writes about: “…writers
are always selling somebody out.” [emphasis
hers]
I was determined to avoid writing only for myself, about
myself. My purpose has been to write this book in a way that might provide
readers an opportunity to gain new perspectives on some of their own life experiences,
to discover something of value that might have eluded them, to gain a deeper
understanding of themselves.
These stories acknowledge childhood trauma, tragic losses,
and confusing, sometimes violent relationships within a family; they also
celebrate the love and reconciliation, acceptance, and forgiveness. The result
can be transcendent.
Winter 2017
December came and went, and it was my seventy-fifth January birthday. On that day, I had already lived five years longer than the too-short lifespan of my father. Frequently, throughout the winter, my thoughts drifted to how difficult it had been for me to unravel our complicated relationship. I recalled the day when, in my mid-twenties, a half-century earlier, I had been regaling my therapist with stories of my father’s magnificence.
“So, your
father can walk on water?”
“Huh?”
Thus, began the
healing. It has been a slow, sometimes imperceptible, process until heart and
mind could remain open to understanding life experiences in new ways. I needed
to arrive at a place where my love and admiration of a father––gone now more
than thirty years––weren’t expressed in order to camouflage my darker feelings.
I have needed all of that time to cease repressing or denying what was painful
and debilitating. Only then could I allow another reality to emerge and
coexist. To heal has required embracing the “other” and transcending the
limitations of being lost and drowning in the lonely “self.” To heal has
required relegating certain memories, photographs, and spoken words to a place
called “that was then,” and cradling close to the heart the ones that are
called “and this is now.”
Now, when I think of the person I was then, I imagine him walking slowly on a path under a canopy of foliage, all veiled in a gray, pre-dawn fog. He isn’t aware of my presence close behind him. His unhurried steps slow until he comes to a halt, and I give the slightest of nods as I pass him.
At the sharp bend in the path, I look back just as beams of sunlight penetrate the canopy. In the light and warmth, he begins to dissipate along with the night fog. I watch until I see only green leaves glistening at daybreak.
Midsummer 2017
In late afternoon, I leave my writing
behind and walk outside to the garden. The oversized terra-cotta pot has been
back in its place since early spring, and now the white rosebush it contains is
blooming, as is the rest of the garden. In the midst of this loveliness and
tranquility, it takes only a few seconds for a perennial fantasy of mine also
to be in full bloom. In it, my father is alive and I ask him to work with me in
the garden––mine, not his. He welcomes the request, and I welcome his
suggestions regarding the placement of new plants and the appropriate
preparation of the soil.
At the end of the day, we sit on
the patio, enjoy a glass of scotch, and admire our accomplishment: Not only has the garden been improved, but
we’ve spent the day working as father and son without an angry word between us.
It waits until our second glass for
me to tell him how much I learned as a boy and as a man during those times when
we had been able to work and play together in peace. Then, I tell him that I
have provided my children the chance to experience a garden’s peaceful beauty,
but never have demanded anything from them in return. I tell him that they, now
adults, take pleasure in asking me which plants they should choose and how to
care for them. They do this not because I am a gardener, but because I am their
father.
I know he understands everything he
has heard from me, because he gives one of his self-conscious laughs, more like
a quiet clearing of the throat, revealing the depth of his emotions.
By the time I emerge from my
fantasy, shadows have grown long and advanced across the patio and the garden
and onto the lawn, but there is one more task to complete before dinner. I
select the proper spade for transplanting a languishing rosebush, so it will
receive the sun and nourishment it has been deprived of for too long. At the
new site for the rose, I lift a handful of the loamy soil and inhale its clean,
sweet aroma.
On this day, nothing eclipses my sense of well-being, not even as my foot presses on the shoulder of the spade, and I remember standing at the side of my father’s open grave and releasing a shovelful of earth onto his coffin.
Myles Hopper is the author of the forthcoming collection of stories, THE COLOR RED: That Was Then & This Is Now––a memoir. As a cultural anthropologist, he taught in several universities in the United States and Canada, and consulted with nonprofits engaged in strategic planning and organizational development. Writing is now his full time pursuit, with the exception of occasional consultations with organizations whose mission he supports. He and his spouse are parents of two adult children and live in Shorewood, Wisconsin.