"Charming Billy"

I didn’t love “Charming Billy.” It was pretty good as far as tragic, alcohol-drenched Irish family stories go, but … I don’t know. I just wasn’t all that (please forgive me for saying it) charmed by Billy, and I think that’s a pretty important part of the book.

"Tangerine"

American Life in Poetry: Column 054

By Ted Kooser
U.S. Poet Laureate

Poet Ruth L. Schwartz writes of the glimpse of possibility, of something sweeter than we already have that comes to us, grows in us. The unrealizable part of it causes bitterness; the other opens outward, the cycle complete. This is both a poem about a tangerine and about more than that.
This weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Tangerine
It was a flower once, it was one of a billion flowers
whose perfume broke through closed car windows,
forced a blessing on their drivers.
Then what stayed behind grew swollen, as we do;
grew juice instead of tears, and small hard sour seeds,
each one bitter, as we are, and filled with possibility.
Now a hole opens up in its skin, where it was torn from the
branch; ripeness can’t stop itself, breathes out;
we can’t stop it either. We breathe in.

From “Dear Good Naked Morning,” (c) 2005 by Ruth L. Schwartz. Reprinted by permission of the author and Autumn House Press. First printed in “Crab Orchard Review,” Vol. 8, No. 2.

"Peace Like a River"

Gracious, did I enjoy this book. Again, I got so swept up that I neglected to write down all of the phrases that impressed me. Sections of Leif Enger’s “Peace Like a River” took me so by surprise that I actually had to reread the passages to be sure that I’d read what I thought I’d read. I might read the whole book again, and I don’t do that very often anymore.

Here were the two phrases that I did jot down:

… “Once in my life I knew a grief so hard I could actually hear it inside.” …

… “The sun was out so hard on the snow I could barely look — it was like we lived on the sun.” …

I only wish I hadn’t read the dust jacket’s description; I think it gave away too much.