Through a Mobile Lens, Brooklyn, Illinois
Janice N. Harrington
                                                               In the distance, our Emerald City
                                                               and  its  Arch:  "gateway  to  the  West,  national
                                                               expansion, and what not," said the architect.

                                                               A Crime Stoppers billboard as you enter.
                                                               Barges bearing corn hybrids, coal,
                                                               recycled plastics.



Trust God                    Gun Show July 9 & 10  

                                                                                               
                                                               Scabs of linoleum atop a cement slab.
                                                               Everywhere: once or used-to-be,
                                                               the mobile present and its double wide.


                                                                Soft drink and chips
                                                                passed through a slot
                                                                in the bulletproof glass.

Home is not a place,
Baldwin wrote, but .  .  . an irrevocable condition.

 

. . . . . .



The face peering
out of the driver's window
of a speeding patrol car.

                                                            Projects? Turn west after Lovejoy Elementary School.
                                                            Elijah Lovejoy: I shall hold myself at liberty to speak,



Quinn Chapel AME                                                Fantasyland
Lovejoy Temple                                                      ROXXX
Transforming Word Church                                Bottom's Up
First Free Will Baptist Church                             Dawg Pound Gentlemen's Club
St. Elizabeth Temple                                              Peek a Boo
First Corinthian Missionary Baptist                   Pleasure Palace



                                                                                   Before the war, Robert E. Lee
                                                                                   fixed Bloody Island to Illinois.

                                                                                   A matter of where you redirect
                                                                                   the currents: what gets by-
                                                                                   passed or who.


Oldest Black Town in America

Folks always watching.
Sunlight fills the empty lot.
from the journal THE KENYON REVIEW
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With a fellow writer, I visited Brooklyn, Illinois, the state’s oldest Black town, to interview residents and to investigate Black midwestern place-making. We found a proud, neighbors-looking-out-for-each-other vitality. But we also saw a well-balanced tension between faith and violence, loss and rigorous enduring, pride and caution. As with many Black communities, Brooklyn’s Quinn Chapel AME is one of its oldest structures, but all of Brooklyn’s many churches stand as bulwarks of faith and resilience.

Janice N. Harrington on "Through a Mobile Lens, Brooklyn, Illinois"
"Double Dreaming, Double Imagining: A Profile of Douglas Kearney"

"Kearney’s work is influenced by many musical genres, including hip-hop, jazz, and ragtime. As a librettist, he has garnered rave reviews for his staged operas, including Sweet Land, which was named 2021’s Best New Opera by the Music Critics Association of North America. Optic Subwoof (Wave Books, 2022), a collection of talks he presented for the Bagley Wright Lecture Series in 2020 and 2021, won the Poetry Foundation’s 2023 Pegasus Award for Poetry Criticism and CLMP’s 2023 Firecracker Award for creative nonfiction."

viaPOETS & WRITERS
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cover of Aharon Shabtai's (translation by Peter Cole) Requiem and other poems
What Sparks Poetry:
Peter Cole on Translation


"The Hebrew word tikkun means, simply, 'repair,' but it is best known beyond spoken Hebrew as a kabbalistic term that has seeped into the popular imagination. In that context it alludes to course corrections of consciousness that lead to tikkun olam—repair, mending, or even healing of a broken world. Rooted in the tradition of the biblical prophets, and critical to classic rabbinic considerations of social viability and harmony, tikkun has, arguably, become a core Jewish concept that calls for working toward a more compassionate social fabric, in part by identifying and combatting injustice."
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