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Susan M. Schultz
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Susan M. Schultz

And Then Something Happened

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Biographical note:  Susan M. Schultz is author of Aleatory Allegories (Salt), Memory Cards & Adoption Papers (Potes & Poets Press) and A Poetics of Impasse in Modern and Contemporary American Poetry (Alabama). She edited The Tribe of John: Ashbery and Contemporary Poetry (Alabama) and runs Tinfish Press and its journal out of her home in Kane`ohe, Hawai`i. She is Professor of English at the University of Hawai`i in Honolulu.

 

BIC Basic

EAN13:  9781844710164
ISBN-10:  1844710165
ISBN-13:  9781844710164
Author:  Susan M. Schultz
Title:  And Then Something Happened
Series:  Salt Modern Poets
Product class:  BC
Language:  eng
Audience:  General/trade
BIC subject category:  CTCH1
Publisher:  Salt Publishing
Pub date:  15-Mar-04
Extent:  148pp
Height:  216 mm
Width:  140 mm
Thickness:  9 mm
Weight:  222 gms
Supplier:   Gardners Books
Supplier:   Ingram Book Group
Supplier:   Inbooks (James Bennett)
Availability:  IP
Price:  GBP 10.99
Price:  USD 16.95
Rights:  World

 

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spacer Short description/annotation:  Investigations of childhood from a philosophical perspective, asking how to reconcile childhood with suffering and as a real and imagined place, always subject to re-call. Writing out of the experience of adoption, Schultz uses language from her son’s experience to think about ways in which “the political is personal.”

 

Main description:  And then something happened is divided into four main parts. The first, “The Philosopher’s Child,” is composed of short and long poems that address issues of childhood, memory, and prospective loss. The language of this section, as of the next, “Addenda,” is philosophical and poetic. “Addenda” forms an extended reaction to the poet’s visit to the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, where she wondered, at one instance, how children might respond to the horrors contained in the museum-space. “Material Lyrics” shifts form, containing prose poems that examine the aftermath of the poet’s adoption of her son Sangha from Cambodia (a country devastated by the United States during the Vietnam War) as well as meditations on “the political in the personal” and on the act of writing poetry. The final section, “And then Something Happened,” was written in London in autumn, 2002, when war was in the air, but not yet fact. This long poem, composed both of poetry and prose, thinks through the pre-war atmosphere, using language from politics and from the poet’s son, his stories and his songs. Written over an extended period the book focusses on the rough and joyous terrain of childhood.

 

Meet the author:

 

Table of contents:
The Philosopher’s Child
Addenda
Material Lyrics
And then something happened

 

View excerpt as PDF:

PDF Click here to view a sample (96 KB)

 

Excerpt from book:  

Creative Memory Consultant

I love to help people organize their memories. Imagine the following film: Being Dr. Kissinger. There’s no light at the end of that tunnel. Lala lost her ball: aw down, aw down, Sangha says, waves hands, palms cupped up to signify the nothing that is there. And then Po her ’cooter. Vast pockets of lint over the Koolaus. Write to the rhythm of the pile driver. If lyric is material, how to reconcile its obsession with what is forgotten? Does that explain the moose with a head cold, bedded down amid animated rubble? Bomb crater where a wedding party was? What memories my son carries are physical: the touch of foreheads, particular curve of the hand when he dances. What he has forgotten is a entire language. I'm eager to show you how to organize your adoption scrapbook, the consultant writes. Your snapshots are testimony, remainder, the excess that spills over in long division. Revision by reduction, memory plants—a glove still grows in the garden. And they all live together in the big red barn.

 

Unpublished endorsement :  Susan Schultz’s morphing metaphors hurl us through the dizziest landscapes, and dazzle us with their philosophical wizardry, their cross-cultural acrobatics. Her prose poems thrive on a poetics of adoption, an ethics of the domestic, politics as hybridity.

Hazel Smith

 

Unpublished endorsement :  Susan Schultz asks ‘if language is at the center of the poem, what inhabits the periphery?’ Interrogating fundamental conditions of culture, language, kinship and family, these poems dis-cover the edges of assumed myths and false histories, re-mapping the so-called natural world on to the real one, the world in which ‘something happens.’

Craig Watson

 

Unpublished endorsement :  Schultz’s poems strike me as a thoroughly fertile coup de plume and standing wave of metacognition; a sage, mordant social critique united with an abundant heart.

Lissa Wolsak

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