SHOUT

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SHOUT Page 13

by Laurie Halse Anderson


  what she’d been through. She used to say

  “Affection is a sign of weakness”

  which totally baffled me because she could be

  both affectionate and strong. I’d give anything

  to understand all of the layers

  of tragedy that forced

  her shell to become so hard.

  After Mom’s last supper, that homemade

  mac and cheese,

  relatives from beyond the grave came calling:

  her parents, grandparents,

  and Mom’s favorite dogs.

  She greeted them with delight, chatted happily

  as she drifted to sleep.

  Hallucinations, the hospice nurse said,

  but she wasn’t there

  when the five never-borns arrived: tall and strong,

  salt-and-pepper hair, ice-eyed like Daddy,

  high cheekbones like Mom,

  and I knew it was time to release our mother

  so she could cross the river home

  to where the rest of the family was waiting.

  tangled

  I have two bookcases

  filled to spilling

  with balls of yarn entwined

  with dreams and schemes

  for a life creative

  enough to knit, stitch

  all my prayers into sweaters

  and socks and hats,

  I have a faded plastic grocery bag

  brimming with my most

  favorite skeins,

  audacious schemes.

  Kin unpinned, my mother

  was 100 percent wool, unprocessed

  and itchy as hell, a hair shirt unraveled

  then rerolled like razor wire

  —carefully—

  into a porcupine abristle

  with resentment,

  protecting her underbelly

  resisting all attempts to untangle

  her complications.

  That’s the story I am dying

  to knit together,

  if I could only find

  the pattern.

  blood moon

  I had my last period the month

  before my mother died

  but years later I still dream

  about bleeding,

  the alarming crotch trickle

  racing to the toilet

  berating myself

  cuz I didn’t replace the emergency

  tampon in my purse

  In the dream

  I pull down my pants

  cursing the useless, translucent

  toilet paper

  but I stop

  cuz it’s not blood,

  not anymore

  The only thing that flows from my womb

  in that dream

  and in this waking

  is thick, dark ink

  word-fertile and raw

  ordinary damages

  My father lived for five years after my mother died

  nobody was more surprised about this than he

  three days a week, I’d pick him up at dawn

  and we’d head to the gym, where I’d work out

  while he sat on the bench, coffee in hand

  charming the ladies

  then we went to the diner for a delicious,

  unhealthy breakfast, I’d read the paper,

  he did the crossword puzzle in pen

  and we talked

  unrolling our family legacies

  of trauma and silence

  the stoicism that alternates with rage

  the kindness that hides anxiety

  the struggle to balance darkness with light

  walking in the world and hiding from it

  the cost of numbing pain,

  the weariness of wrestling

  the hungry need for forgiveness

  the redemption of offering it with no strings

  my nephew came home from Afghanistan

  in the middle of those years

  lots of soldiers from our village were returning

  looking much, much older than when they left

  I realized that their children would be crippled

  by the ghosts of their parents’ war

  like I was. I wrote The Impossible Knife of Memory

  with those kids in mind. I talked about the book

  to my father all the time. He approved,

  knowing full well

  it was ripped from the pages of our lives.

  My favorite scene in that book

  takes place in the graveyard

  where Hayley ponders the impact of the dead

  on the living

  how the things once done shape

  the not yet dreamed of

  she learns how to remember

  without being destroyed

  Before she died, my mother told me that Daddy

  had been institutionalized

  diagnosed as manic-depressive

  when he was studying

  to be a preacher and she worked to pay the bills.

  This was right after he beat her

  and broke her teeth,

  when the ghosts and the dust of war cycloned

  through him

  and pushed him over the edge.

  After that asylum stay

  he never received counseling or medication

  or therapy

  instead, he gutted it out on his knees in prayer

  and in long walks by the Erie Canal, begging

  for the strength to stay alive

  I am eternally, ridiculously grateful

  that he found it.

  At the end of his life, my father’s mind frayed

  at the edges

  sometimes the ghosts appeared to be real,

  as the veil between the worlds grew thin.

  His heart was tired, too.

  When a cardiologist suggested a pacemaker

  Daddy asked if it would clear the fog

  from his brain,

  erase the hallucinations, and tame the monsters

  busy throwing off their chains,

  opening the army trunks

  where the real horrors were buried

  the doctor said possibly, but probably not

  My father stood and said,

  “I will not live without my mind,”

  then shook the doctor’s hand and told me

  it was time to go home.

  beeched

  Beech forests dance

  so slowly, only the wind

  can see their grace

  patterns slow-gliding

  synchronized swans

  on a still, dark lake

  of dirt

  Most trees take care of each other

  and the beeches are no exception.

  Underground tendrils secretly feed

  the girl rooted in the sterile glacial till,

  old ones lean to the side

  so the boy burned by lightning

  gets more sun than his brothers.

  Survival of the fittest

  is a recipe for loneliness,

  the beeches susurrate

  if you know how to listen,

  guaranteeing a nasty life,

  brutish and short. When one

  suffers,

  all are weakened,

  but when everyone thrives,

  we dance.

  say my name

  Halse rhymes with faults

  assaults, vaults

  halts close to scalds

&
nbsp; and haunts

  then salts confusion for the unwary

  cuz no one can pronounce it

  ’cept kin

  Names have roots deep

  like family trees in graveyards

  tapping endless wells

  guarded by Norns, wyrd sisters

  word sisters charged with our fates

  Old English roots of

  Halse

  are tangled in gehálsian

  a verb that means “to implore

  or invoke the gods;

  to speak,”

  in Danish, hals means “throat”

  William Chalker Halse

  fled England in 1798

  to Nova Scotia, where he married

  a girl named Sarah

  her last name

  was

  . . . . wait for it . . . .

  Story

  Sarah Story

  if I put that in a novel, my editor

  would make me cut

  it out as too ridiculous to be true

  but it is

  Halse rhymes with waltz

  watch me dance

  and don’t forget it

  reminder

  the wings of angels connect

  to their backbones

  just behind

  their steadfast hearts

  tree trunks connect

  sun-breathing leaves

  chlorphylling with life

  to their roots, muddy-dark

  the spines of books connect

  page to page

  writer to reader

  teacher to student

  page to page

  past to future

  pain to power

  page to page

  rage to peace

  this note about anatomy

  from me

  to you

  is for the remembering

  that after you speak

  after you shout

  your open mouth

  will breathe in

  the light for which

  you’ve hungered

  and your backbone

  will unfurl until

  you can again dance

  to the beat

  of your steadfast

  heart

  POSTLUDE: my why

  stories entertain

  engage, outrage

  uplift, help us

  overcome

  our troubles

  writing rage-poems by the sea

  pen, hands, claws stained with ink

  until the bottle runs dry

  and then I write in blood, spit, and fire

  lantern’s light in the mirror

  scattering the dark

  stories activate, motivate,

  celebrate, cerebrate,

  snare our fates

  and share our great

  incarnations of hope

  thanks for listening.

  Resources for Readers

  SEXUAL VIOLENCE

  RAINN: RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network) is the largest anti–sexual violence organization in the United States of America. In partnership with more than 1,000 local sexual assault service providers, it operates the National Sexual Assault Holtine: 800-656-HOPE (4673), online.rainn.org. En español, rainn.org/es.

  END RAPE ON CAMPUS: End Rape on Campus works to end campus sexual violence by supporting survivors, education, and policy reform. endrapeoncampus.org.

  FORGE: FORGE is a national transgender anti-violence organization. They help transgender, gender nonconforming, and gender nonbinary survivors of sexual assault. forge-forward.org.

  IGNITE: IGNITE Supports survivors of sexual violence and domestic violence who are Deaf, DeafBlind, or Hard of Hearing. deafignite.org.

  1IN6: 1IN6 supports male victims of unwanted sexual experiences, sexual abuse, and sexual violence. 1in6.org.

  NATIONAL SEXUAL VIOLENCE RESOURCE CENTER: A national information and resource organization that works with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to collect and share resources with people and organizations working to understand and eliminate sexual violence. nsvrc.org.

  MENTAL HEALTH

  TO WRITE LOVE ON HER ARMS: To Write Love on Her Arms works to help people who are struggling with depression, addiction, self-injury, and suicide find help and hope. twloha.com.

  SUICIDE PREVENTION LIFELINE: National network of crisis centers that offer free emotional support 24/7, including specific resources for kids, LGBTQ+ people, Native Americans, Deaf and Hard of Hearing people, loss survivors, attempt survivors, disaster survivors, and veterans. suicidepreventionlifeline.org. 800-273-TALK (8255)

  THE TREVOR PROJECT: Crisis intervention and suicide prevention for LGBTQ+ youth, offering a hotline (phone, text, and online chat), and educational resources for family and allies. thetrevorproject.org.

  SAFE HORIZON: Offers resources to survivors of domestic violence, human trafficking, child abuse, stalking, youth homelessness, and domestic violence. safehorizon.org.

  SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION: This agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services provides services for people struggling with mental health or substance abuse issues. samhsa.gov.

  Acknowledgments

  The curious practice of turning ideas into poetry and poetry into a book like this one requires a chorus of people whose names must be shouted loudly.

  All hail the patient copyeditors! Ryan Sullivan and Marinda Valenti tried their very best to keep me corralled with decent punctuation and grammar, but opened the gate to my stylistic quirks when I asked. The cover designer, Jessica Jenkins, and the designer of the interior, Nancy Brennan, created stunning art that amplifies my words—thank you!

  Lindsay Boggs and Kaitlin Kneafsey are Publicity Miracle Workers. Thank you both for helping to put SHOUT into the hands of readers. I’d also like to give a huge shout-out (ha!) to Viking Books publisher Ken Wright, for his constant patience and kindness. A standing ovation goes to all of the other random Penguins who have been cheering on my work for nearly two decades, especially Jen Loja, Carmela Iaria, Erin Berger, Felicia Frazier, Emily Romero, Eileen Bishop Kreit, Shanta Newlin, Mary Raymond, and—last but not least—Trevor Ingerson. Being a part of your family makes me feel brave, and for that I am eternally grateful.

  Tusind tak to Pernille Ripp, incredible teacher and founder of the Global Read Aloud (theglobalreadaloud.com) for kindly correcting my Danish spelling and grammar mistakes. Eric Gansworth (Onondaga), Lowery Writer-in-Residence at Canisius College, generously helped me work through the issue of properly centering the violence perpetrated on the Mohawk nation by settlers like my family. Thanks also to G. Donald Cribbs, counselor and author, who helped me develop the robust list of mental health resources.

  My agent, Amy Berkower, has listened to me rant, fantasize, rage, and mutter for years, while waiting for books to be born. Thank you, dear friend, for your support and unflagging good cheer. Huzzahs to everyone else at Writers House, especially to Cecilia de la Campa, Executive Director, Global Licensing and Domestic Partnerships, for finding so many homes outside the United States for SHOUT and my other books. I’d also like to give an overdue shout of appreciation to Michael Mejias for his work to make publishing better reflect our country, and who warmly made me feel so welcome when I started working with Writers House.

  The writing of this book began at the home of my buddies Greg Anderson and Sue Kressley. Thank you both for the space, the sunrises by the beach, and helping make our family whole. My assistant, Jenn Northington, is equal parts brilliant and magical; capable of creating time and space for me to do the working of writing—THANK YOU, Jenn! I could not have done this without you. My chil
dren and grandchildren are all poetry in motion. They are the light that keeps me going when darkness threatens. My sister-girl Deborah Heiligman is always there for me; in silence, in conversation, in disagreement, in growth, and in love. Thank you for everything, Debi.

  This book would not, could not, have been written without the support and encouragement of my editor, Kendra Levin. She shall ever be called Kendra of the Keen Eye and Gentle Heart. Thank you, thank you, thank you, for helping me do this work, and for being such a warrior midwife.

  Finally and forever, thank you to my oldest friend, my husband, Scot. Thanks for listening, for wiping away my tears, for bandaging my bruises, for supporting my art and my voice, and for lending me your strength when I couldn’t find my own. This world and the next, my love.

  About the Author

  Laurie Halse Anderson has received both the Margaret Edwards Award and the ALAN Award for her contributions to young adult literature. She has also been honored by the National Coalition Against Censorship in recognition of her fight to combat the censoring of literature. She is the author of the groundbreaking National Book Award finalist and Printz Honor Book Speak. She is also author of the critically acclaimed YA books Prom, Twitsted, Catalyst, Wintergirls, and The Impossible Knife of Memory. She has also authored a number of middle grade titles including The Vet Volunteers series, and the historical fiction Seeds of America Trilogy, which includes Forge, ALA Best Book for Young Adults Fever 1793, and the National Book Award finalist and Scott O’Dell Award-winner Chains. She and her husband live in northern New York State. Follow Laurie on Twitter @halseanderson and visit her at madwomanintheforest.com.

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