Michael Amos Cody's Blog, page 16

October 21, 2018

Challenge to Choose

On Tuesday the 16th of October, I posted a challenge of Facebook, and it looked like this:





I agreed with Thom Kirkpatrick when he wrote, “I wish 1000 people would respond to this.” But just a few stepped up. I appreciated them for doing so, because I was interested in how the choices would turn out.



I guess the results are, in one way, not surprising — given that many on my list of friends tend to be more liberal. (I was surprised, however, that only a couple of my closest followers responded at all.) I made a quick count of the results: three for A; four for B; nineteen for C; and a handful who made alternate choices, typically between B and C.



I thought that those who responded would like to know where the three choices came from, if they didn’t know already.



Choice A is paraphrased from the GOP’s web site, specifically here.Choice B is paraphrased from the DNC’s web site, specifically here.Choice C is paraphrased from the Judeo-Christian scriptures, specifically sample verses like these: Leviticus 19:34, Ruth 2:10, Matthew 25:35, Hebrews 13:23 John 1:5, etc. (For the KJV-only folks: Leviticus 19:34, Ruth 2:10, Matthew 25:35, Hebrews 13:2, 3 John 1:5.)

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Published on October 21, 2018 13:50

October 2, 2018

I Must Say,

my reading of late, particularly in and about the middle of the nineteenth century, suggests to me that our country has been just as seriously divided — if not more so — at other times as it is now. But I must say that we have never been under the influence of a man so ignorant, arrogant, and self-absorbed as our forty-fifth president.

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Published on October 02, 2018 12:54

September 30, 2018

That Bright Land by Terry Roberts

That Bright Land

That Bright Land by Terry Roberts


My rating: 5 of 5 stars



I really liked this book, which my aunt gave me for either birthday or Christmas a couple of years ago. She saw the phrase “SOUTHERN GOTHIC THRILLER” on the back and thought I’d enjoy it. She was right.

I enjoy reading works set in the area where I grew up. Madison County in western North Carolina has a rich history and is an interesting socio-cultural stew today, and writers can do a lot with it. Terry Roberts has done a lot with it. The representation of Barnard resonates well with my memories of many trips there via bicycle and car from my ancestral home in Walnut. Big Pine and Hot Springs and the wooded MadCo hollers are also so familiar that I found myself easily able to be present with the characters.

And I enjoyed those characters, particularly the women, May June Washington and Sarah Freeman, both of whom come alive in the reading imagination. Jacob Ballard has an engaging voice and, like many Madison County voices, tells a fine story. The parade of interesting mountain folk was vivid and reminded me, in a good way, of those who come and go throughout Fred Chappell’s wonderful I AM ONE OF YOU FOREVER.

But Roberts’s story is his own in THAT BRIGHT LAND. It’s a good mystery, a touching love story, and a well-imagined historical fiction.





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Published on September 30, 2018 20:28

September 26, 2018

Thomas Merton Gets Pissed

I’ve been reading from A Year with Thomas Merton: Daily Meditations from His Journals, which is filled with beautiful, contemplative, sometimes playful writing. But just now I ran across something typically brilliant and insightful but unexpectedly blunt. He wrote the following on 9 September 1961:



I fear the ignorance and power of the United States. And the fact that it has quite suddenly become one of the most decadent societies on the face of the earth. The body of a great, dead, candied child. Yet not dead: full of immense, uncontrolled power. Crazy.

If somebody doesn’t understand the United State pretty soon–and communicate some of that understanding to the United States–the results will be terrible. It is no accident that the United States endowed the world with the Bomb.

The mixture of immaturity, size, apparent indulgence and depravity, with occasional spasms of guilt, power, self-hate, pugnacity, lapsing into wildness and then apathy, hopped up and wild-eyed, inarticulate and wanting to be popular. You need a doctor, Uncle!

The exasperation of the other nations of the world who know the United States thinks them jealous–for what they don’t want and yet what fascinates them. Exasperation that such fools should be momentarily kings of the world. Exasperation at them for missing their great chance–this everyone finds unforgivable, including America itself. And yet what held the United States back was a spasm of that vestigial organ called conscience. Unfortunately not a sufficiently educated conscience. The conscience of a ten-year-old boy, unsure of his parents’ standards–not knowing where approval or disapproval might come from!



I think Merton probably wrote this in response to the news of 4 September 1961, when the U.S. founded its Agency for International Development (USAID). Certainly it doesn’t sound like such a bad thing. And I’m sure that it seemed like a good idea at the time. Ultimately, this agency intended to reduce poverty and grow economies in impoverished parts of the world. This seems like a really nice thing to do, except for the fact that it wasn’t an altruistic drive. The idea was not foremost to help those countries to realize their own social, political, and economic aspirations but to replicate U.S. social, political, and economic entities in order, on the one hand, to create markets for U.S. exports and, on the other hand, to cockblock the U.S.S.R. and the spread of communism.



The reality, however, is probably that USAID actions, while doing some good on the surface, I’m sure, ultimately interacted with the ghosts of European imperialism and colonialism to inspire levels of resentment, at least in some areas, that played a significant role in the development of extremism that roared at the U.S. with the voices of weaponized airplanes on 11 September 2001.



To Merton’s “mixture” of ailments that leave Uncle Sam in need of a doctor, I would add the dangerous mixture of arrogance and ignorance.

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Published on September 26, 2018 14:34

September 11, 2018

9/11

11 September 2001 was a Tuesday, just like this year, 2018. But the sky then was striking in its blueness. Such a beautiful, deep blue. We felt no oppressive sense of foreboding like we feel beneath gray skies today, when Hurricane Florence churns off the coast of the Carolinas, threatening our family and friends who live within its powerful reach. We know Florence is there, know what she is capable of, know her every move as she makes it and can predict — with reasonable accuracy — what each move might lead to. But in the blue September skies of 2001, only those sitting terrified in the planes or curiously watching them as blips on a screen noticed the moves made, and none could predict what those moves would lead to from that day to now.

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Published on September 11, 2018 06:49

August 3, 2018

James Lee Burke’s Civil War Novel

White Doves at MorningWhite Doves at Morning by James Lee Burke

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Burke briefly turns aside from his detective/mystery genre to lend his terrific prose style to a story of the Civil War (with some of his family history, I think, thrown in as well). His large cast of characters include a Southern planter, his mulatto daughter, a Massachusetts abolitionist, an Irish immigrant (Willie Burke) living in New Iberia and fighting as a Southerner, several white trash Southerners (Ku Klux Klan types), and so on. Burke manages the large cast expertly and manages to bring them all to vivid and visceral life. One of the best things about this novel is how well the time after Lee’s surrender is handled. Those post-war days were dangerous, and Burke brings that danger to life while making haunting suggestions about how life could become in the Trump-era and post-Trump-era USA.


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Published on August 03, 2018 17:30

July 28, 2018

THERE THERE by Tommy Orange

There ThereThere There by Tommy Orange

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


This is a beautiful and energetic book. Many of the American Indian works I read and use in the classroom are set on or around reservations, many of which are largely rural in character. Some take place in urban settings. One of the best of those urban narratives is Tommy Orange’s There There, a novel that takes place in Oakland, California. It’s told in many voices, and many of the storytellers are intricately connected, although most of these connections are unknown. For example, without really spoiling anything, at one point in the novel, a half brother and sister — who don’t know they’re half brother and sister — stand talking with an older man and woman, who together are the parents of the young woman and don’t know it. The old man is also the father of the young man (I think at least the young man suspects this to be true). . . .


I think I might offer a graduate course in American Indian literature in Spring 2019. Orange’s novel will definitely be on the reading list.


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Published on July 28, 2018 19:14

July 20, 2018

Wolfe Literary Award Nominee

For Immediate Release


July 11, 2018



For more information: pisgahpress@gmail.com


A.D. Reed, Editor-in-chief


828-301-8968



Gabriel’s Songbook, Pisgah Press’s 2017 novel by Michael Amos Cody, nominated for Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award


Author will read and sign copies at Waynesville’s Blue Ridge Books July 21


~~~


Pisgah Press, Asheville-based publisher of fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and memoirs, has learned that its most recent release, Gabriel’s Songbook, a novel by Michael Amos Cody of Jonesborough, TN, has been nominated for this year’s Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award. Cody will appear at Blue Ridge Books at 3 p.m. on Saturday, July 21, to read (and perform original music) from the book, and will autograph copies for those who buy or bring them. The bookstore is located at 428 Hazelwood Avenue, Waynesville (828-456-6000).


[www.blueridgebooksnc.com]


The award


The prestigious Wolfe Literary award was first given in 1955 to legendary Asheville author Wilma Dykeman for her seminal work, The French Broad, and has since been bestowed on such luminaries as Wayne Caldwell (Requiem by Fire, 2010), Charles Frazier (Cold Mountain, 1997), Gail Godwin (A Southern Family, 1987), and John Ehle (Last One Home: A Novel, 1984).


[www.wnchistory.org/awards-2/thomas-wolfe-memorial-literary-award/]


The book


Published in December 2017, Gabriel’s Songbook is a living portrait of the artist as a wayward musician. Gabriel Tucker is a young man whose talent and ambition carry him from the hills of Appalachia to the grime and glamour of Nashville … and back home again. Gritty and lyrical, rock ‘n’ roll and old-time country, it transports the reader deep into that age-old dream of making the big time, and shows us the beauty, pathos, and psychological danger that lurk underneath.


The author


Cody is a longtime professor in the Department of Literature and Language at East Tennessee State University. After working as a songwriter in Nashville, he earned his PhD in English from the University of South Carolina. His short fiction has appeared in The Tampa Review, Yemassee, and other publications, and his albums include Homecoming and Wonderful LifeGabriel’s Songbook is his first novel.


The recognition


Other writers and reviewers have praised Gabriel’s Songbook. Jeff Mann, author of Country, calls the novel “gripping, poignant, and unforgettable … Artistic ambition, first love, small-town Appalachian life, along with the image-obsessed machinations of the Nashville music industry: all ring so true.”



Mark D. Baumgartner, editor of Aethlon: The Journal of Sport Literature, notes that “Cody writes with the vivid clarity of one who has made it through the punishing Nashville grind and survived, and the passion of a true believer in the power and beauty of the music itself. Behind the glaring lights of Nashville, the late nights, seedy managers and bad deals, is a beautiful tale of redemption and a love story that will stick with you long after the novel is finished.


“Cody is not just a wonderful writer but a top-notch musician and songwriter as well, and that musicality is in evidence on every page—from the heartfelt lyrics that occasionally punctuate the action, to simple moments like a haircut shared between estranged lovers. This is the best novel of the music business I’ve come across in a very long time.”


Charles Dodd White, author of A Shelter of Others and Lambs of Men, describes Gabriel’s Songbook as a novel “full of heart and longing … [that] deserves its distinguished place on the shelf with some of the best stories of the region.”



The publisher


Pisgah Press was founded in 2011 to publish books offering original ideas and insight into the human condition, the realm of knowledge, and the world around us. Pisgah authors include


– Robin Russell Gaiser, whose memoir Musical Morphine: Transforming Pain One Note at a Time was a 2017 American Book Awards finalist in Alternative Medicine;


– Dave Richards, a 2014 National Book Awards finalist in History for Swords in Their Hands: George Washington and the Newburgh Conspiracy;


– Sarah-Ann Smith, author of the acclaimed Trang Sen: A Novel of Vietnam;


– A. D. Reed, whose Reed’s Homophones was recently featured on the nationally syndicated radio show Says You!;


– RF Wilson, creator of the Rick Ryder mystery series (Killer Weed, 2014; Deadly Dancing, 2016);


and poets


– Donna Lisle Burton (Way Past Time for Reflecting, 2016; Letting Go, 2012) and


– Nan Socolow (Invasive Procedures: Earthquakes, Calamities, and Poems from the Midst of Life, 2016).


All Pisgah Press books are available through local bookstores (in stock or special order), direct from the publisher (www.pisgahpress.com), and from Amazon.com in print or eBook format. Contact Editor-in-chief A. D. Reed at pisgahpress@gmail.com for more information.


-30-



Title:               Gabriel’s Songbook                                                                         300 pp.


Author:           Michael Amos Cody


Print ISBN:     978-1942016366


Print price:      $17.95


e-book ISBN:  978-1942016434


e-book price:  $2.99


LCCN:            2017946781


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Published on July 20, 2018 07:32

July 14, 2018

Prayer at Zdíkov

Prayer at Zdíkov (11 July 2018)


To the Great I Am – Just as your being everywhere is mirrored in the grasses that cover this field, this Czech countryside, this globe, just as your strength is like but far greater than that of the trees that surround this field and fill the forests of Šumava, just as your spirit is felt in the winds that tumble the flowers among the grasses and the leaves in the trees, just so are your being and strength and spirit among us, your loved human beings, here on this field in Zdíkov, Czech Republic, Europe, Earth.


Many of us here know you no better than we know the grass and trees and the winds pushed along by distant storms. Many of us understand you in word alone, as we might understand what we read in textbooks about agrostology and dendrology and anemology.* But regardless of what we see and feel and know and understand, you are here in these things that surround us. You are here in us – in all of us. You are all.


Amen.


 


*I knew the second of these terms via research done on my in-progress short story “The Witness Tree.” I google-found the other two. The three are, in order, the study of grasses, the study of trees, and the study of winds.

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Published on July 14, 2018 12:54

July 4, 2018

The 4th of July from the 5th

I’d hoped to write this yesterday – on the 4th of July – but wasn’t able to do so as international flying had my head in a swirl. So, a day late . . .


 


In 1979, I, like the proverbial prodigal son, requested my inheritance early and went into a far country. I signed up with AESU (American-European Student Union) to spend that summer traveling around Europe on a tour with forty-some other college students from across the USA (and one from Argentina and another from Canada). My group and I (codename: AESU 616, because our departure date was June 16) ended up in Prague, Czechoslovakia, on Wednesday the 4th of July – perhaps a day just like 2018’s Wednesday the 4th of July. I was twenty years old and in the middle of my unsuccessful run as a first-time college student. Here’s my journal entry from that day when we traveled from West Berlin in East Germany (in the DDR – Deutsche Demokratische Republik or German Democratic Republic) to Prague.


4 July (Wednesday): Day 18


West Berlin – Prague, Czechoslovakia


JOURNAL: Happy Birthday, America! And here I go plunging in to Communist country heading for Prague, Czech. We’ve been gone from the hotel for two hours, got slightly lost, and now we’ve sat at the border for an hour. I took pictures out of window of guard tower and Iron Curtain; may not come out. Sand between sections of curtain is very tilled so that one would have a hard time running to escape. We got out and built a pyramid, then played “Simon Says.” We’re wondering if we get fireworks tonight in Prague. I read some, slept, then woke up to a heavy political discussion, I take no part. Talked to an East German lady today at a truck stop; she was very nice and understood all of my Deutsch. We passed through the outskirts of Dresden, a rather large city in DDR. People stop and stare. Michael* says: center of city new because of heavy bombing (3 days & 1500 planes). Where we passed, very old and shabby; to many we seem from the future or another planet. Michael is very bitter toward Russia and socialism & a little against USA. We came to Czech, after 2½ hr wait at border (plus 1 hr for daytime), and soviet control is so obvious here; red stars, memorials, forced tour guide, etc.; Laterna Magika, 4th of July party on top floor.


NOTES: Many signs—Long Live Friendship DDR-USSR


I saw boys working on railroad for summer vacation—no pay


Southern DDR beautifully forested and hilled—forests not as dark as BRD/Evergreens


#11 at border of West Berlin


(* Michael was our Austrian AESU tour guide. Between him and kids on the tour, we had four Michaels, so I became Moose for that summer – and forever for my AESU friends.)


That was thirty-nine years ago, and much has changed. The USSR broke apart. So did Czechoslovakia, which is now two countries, as it had been in the past, Czech Republic and Slovakia. I haven’t broken apart yet, but I’m fifty-nine years old.


On American Independence Day in 1979, whenever we were outside our hotel we were completely under the control of the Communist regime. If I remember correctly, a man or two got on our bus as we entered Prague and directed our driver through the streets, controlling what we saw of the city. When we went out that evening, the “forced tour guide” again directed our limited experience of Prague. And the next morning, we were directed to Prague castle, and then the guide exited the bus as we left the city.


In our hotel on the night of 4th of July, a group of us went to the bar on the top floor, where we must have been quite obnoxious young Americans – drinking beer and singing songs like “Yankee Doodle Dandy.” The reasons I think we were probably obnoxious is that, first, Americans traveling over here can often be that way (in a number of ways) and, second, the local patrons of the hotel bar all left the place to us.


My 2018 Prague experience of the 4th of July was really quite different. After we arrived early in the afternoon, our group went to a hotel near the airport and checked in. No forced guides. Then Leesa and I traveled on our own by bus and subway into the heart of Prague, where we met friends and went to a music store and to a bar. We ran into a trio of young Czech and American friends. We casually experienced a beautiful historic city – the City of Love, the guard checking our passport at the Amsterdam airport called it – with only the adventurous fear of getting lost or missing a train we needed.


And on this 2018 4th of July, I again finished the day in a hotel bar and restaurant, but the experience was quite different. Of course, being fifty-nine in the 21st century was part of the difference. Unlike 1979, the phrase “Happy Birthday, America!” never entered my mind. My friends and I ate great food and drank beer and talked. We sang no “Yankee Doodle Dandy.” Our table was near a large flat-screen TV set to CNN, which at one point reported that a Republican-led Senate panel determined that Russian president Putin helped – or tried to help – Donald Trump win the US presidency in 2016. So instead of 1979’s “Long Live Friendship DDR-USSR,” it now seems to be “Long Live Friendship Trump’s USA-Putin’s Russia.” Weird changes.


At fifty-nine years old, I now try to see the world as one and its people as human beings and children of God. I try to see human beings stripped of all the racialized, gendered, political, national, and economic labels that can be attached to them, labels that deemphasize – even undermine – their humanity. I try to see color only as variety and diversity and a mirror of these in the greater creation. I try to see not Americans and Russians and Czechs but people who live in America and Russia and Czech Republic. I try not to see people as poor, as immigrant, as privileged, as ignorant, but as human beings often blindly being trapped by a (largely American, I think) power structure that perpetuates these conditions in the service of a collection of greedy and Godless few that are ultimately ignorant of anything beyond their own basest desires.


All these things are too big for my little mind and limited life to battle against hand-to-hand, mano-a-mano. I’ve come to believe that all most of us can do is as the old song says, “Brighten the corner where you are.” So, I teach in classrooms, write here and elsewhere, and live as best I can to enlighten and speak truth, not indoctrinate. And so, I come to the Czech Republic, to share the English language with friends who want to learn, to sing songs and play softball with children and young friends who like to sing and play as children tend to like to do around this one world.


 


(NOTE: By “inheritance” above, I mean about $2,500, which was half of what Mom and Dad had received from the sale of a piece of land.)


 

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Published on July 04, 2018 22:46