Elizabeth Hughes’ Book Periscope

The Girl From Copenhagen by Glenn Peterson

Glenn Peterson’s The Girl from Copenhagen


The Girl From Copenhagen by Glenn Peterson is a memoir of his mother, Inge. This memoir is very interesting and is a first hand account of when Hitler occupied Denmark and her life during WWII. She was born and grew up on her father’s farm in Denmark along with her siblings. She went to nursing school but had to give up her nursing career when she began experiencing severe edema in her ankles. She then went on to become a bookkeeper at the largest ship builder in Denmark. She met Bob Peterson at a dance in Copenhagen. After only a short time she left her life in Denmark and set off to America to marry Bob Peterson. This is the story of a small family living frugally, but very happy. This memoir will keep the reader interested from the first to the last page. I personally, found her account of life during WWII extremely interesting. This would be a perfect gift for someone you know who loves historical books or for your own home library.

The Girl from Copenhagen is available here.

SeaCity Rising by Elika Ansari

Elika Ansari’s Seacity Rising


SeaCity Rising by Elika Ansari is a wonderfully, delightful book about the lives of sea creatures that live in a pond in a city called Sea City. An old turtle is the King who has a daughter named Princess Dolores and also raising his niece Lenore. Babak is a timid little frog, the only one in the pond. Dr. Goldberg is a goldfish and a genius that is always inventing all kinds of things. One day Babak takes a walk and walks a bit too far to the Dark End, the SeaCity dump. He finds a piece of paper with a dire warning written on it. Some of it is written in Dot, the language of the water Deities. Babak decides he should take it straight to the King. The King decides that he should send someone to look for the Old Woman beyond the sea for answers. Since most of the SeaCitians cannot live on dry land Lenore, Babak and Dr. Goldberg, the goldfish is selected. Dr, Goldberg invents a kind of bowl that allows him to move about on dry land. While they rest, Babak discovers Princess Dolores has come along to be with Lenore. They meet many delightful land creatures on their adventure. This is not only a cute book for children but also contains a message of the importance of taking care of the earth and forests. Young children and elementary age will enjoy the story of these sea creatures and their adventures. I absolutely loved it.

Elika Ansari’s SeaCity Rising is available here.

The Spitting Post by Jason R. Barden

Jason Barden’s The Spitting Post

This book is a fantasy filled with more twists and turns that will really keep the reader on their toes. When you think you have it figured out another twist pops up to keep you intrigued and wanting more. The Spitting Post is about an insurance adjuster named Vincent Carpenter whose ten year marriage has crumbled. When his wife takes off to meet her lover, he decides to follow her. A car careens out of control coming at him. When he comes to, he does not remember his name or what has happened. He finds himself in a bizarre place. Then his nightmarish journey begins. He comes across a beautiful woman he knows as the Green Maiden. Then in order to find her he must go through terrors and nightmares to try to reach her. If you love bizarre fantasies that will intrigue your imagination and keep you guessing. This is the book for you. I loved it and found it hard to put down until the end.

Jason Barden’s The Spitting Post is available here.

The Dirt Girl by Jodi Dee

Jodi Dee’s The Dirt Girl


The Dirt Girl by Jodi Dee is a lovely story with bright beautiful illustrations that young children will love. It is about a young girl named Zafera that is quite different than the other children in her school. She wears twigs, flowers and leaves in her hair. She loves to play with bugs and insects. When the other children make fun of her, she does not understand so she smiles sweetly back at them. Then one day she brings to school homemade invitations to her home. The others accept out of curiosity and are very surprised that her home is beautiful and made into the side of a hill. Everything is natural in her home. The children love it so much they all want to be like Zafera. This is a beautiful story about how its okay to be different and be yourself. It teaches children how wonderful everyone is in their own way and how everyone matters.

Jodi Dee’s The Dirt Girl is available here.

The Little Green Jacket by Jodi Dee

The Little Green Jacket


This is a wonderful story about the journey of a child’s jacket. The illustrations are unique in that they are in black and white except for the bright green jacket. A little boy receives the jacket as a present. It is his lucky jacket. Then one day he outgrows it. His mother donates it so another child can wear and love the jacket just as much. This is a great book that teaches children about the importance of recycling. It teaches children the importance of giving clothes to others that we no longer wear. Children will delight in the story and love the illustrations.

Jodi Dee’s The Little Green Jacket is available here.

Poetry from Michael Agee

A Wall

I have a wall, and I shall paint it with all the colors of freedom and of friendship and trust. This wall shall be a lasting testament to the eternal power and magic of love.

I have a wall and it will be covered with images of windows filled with beauty and doorways of all sizes that open to gardens and cities and rolling hills filled with earth’s rich bounty, given to all.

This wall shall come from my heart and faeries shall sit lightly on mushrooms and beckon weary travelers to rest a while under shady trees and by laughing brooks filled with trout.

The foundation of this wall shall be wonder, its stones and mortar the quintessence of every shared delight, and running in eternal spirals it shall be crowned o’er top with the radiance of glory and truth and loving kindness.

Keys to the doors will grow like flowers on both sides of this wall, and every person who approaches with any need, or feelings of pain, fear, or defeat shall be uplifted and fulfilled by attaining its presence.

This wall-of-the-heart joins, not separates. This wall rises as testament and monument to the bonds that free rather than shackle. This wall is built by approaching with clear eye the difficulties and differences that seem to drive us apart but that, when touched by the delicate, sure hand of the Artist, reveal our deepest humanity.

Poetry from Shelby Stephenson

CHANNEL CAT

Fish, a foot long, tail
Forked, that dot a sign:
Horn, will work alone to hurt
Instinct no bar to boy with pole.
He’s daydreaming on the bank,
His shadow a most elemental thing
More than his room at home
A strike might prove no brain. 
More than skin allows the hands
He worries about the size of something
To annoy the threshing out of the marsh
The train-whistle never tells him more. 
What aura the fins experience,
The lightest finger on the line,
Lead-line of fairest less or more
Than one fisherman might stand. 
Quietude’s an elucidation of detail:
One long flail of bones, needle-sharp,
Deep inside something a good deal more
Than gills (must grab them behind). 
If it bites it swallows bait and hook.
A towel won’t work to uplift the headline:
Boy cannot use tweezers or pliers.
All hands and eyes, he stays faithful. 
To create, he says, living is possible.
The table’s set without modifications.
In his heart the channel makes its bed.
The boy sees flicks of the invisible, 
Even as he cuts his cat behind the gills
So that he can pull the skin toward the tail,
Down with the pliers the way a sock
Tends to slide away from the heel. 
The head he tosses into the hedge.
Catastrophe purrs and dances with bees
For a mouth full of whiskers and eyes
Glazed with nature’s gifts in progress.  

BLISTERED  

Words!  Get on, involved in particulars!
Throw that pallet down in the sand and wait!
Enjoyment’s identity burns pigment.
The girls pass me by for long sleeves, a cap. 
Watch the red fox and possum prance and shine,
Unselfconscious as I would like to be. 
Learning’s variation becomes some rules.
Words may be true as very rotten wood. 
There may be deep streams in your complexion.
There may be light darkness, like poetry. 
Frightening, to be in the sun too long,
Fair-skinned, red haired, freckle-faced, pearly brown. 
Without a lesson-plan, go for the pier.
Lie down under it:  hard at seventeen. 
Body hard, muscles swelling – jumping round,
The Charles Atlas course, come-on, one mag ad. 
Hype charges on before us, though I am
The one blistering in the hot, beach sun. 
Two books in the plankhouse I was born in,
Sears Catalogue and the Holy Bible. 
Peeled skin is the life of apprenticeship.    

LIBBY CAMPBELL

Libby Campbell’s a wonderland
In and of herself, her tutelage
Bringing currents warm to Cool Spring Elementary
Because she believes in helping
Young people, third-graders, especially. 

County Iredell’s vibrant with words
And promise when Libby promotes and
Manages the hunger every soul finds in
Poetry:  consider her love of children.
Behold, she volunteers to help them
Easily as she creates an atmosphere,
Leading them to orchestrate their writings for assisted-living                                           residents,
Letting them appreciate the need to remember and create.     

INDEPENDENCE 

You raggedy flag of July’s minions,
Come higher from the dirt and let waving
Be holiday you salute with plenty
Of hats of straw and maids and men merry.
Let bells ring echoes over the cow-barn
At the Tink and Addie Coats Estate set
Aside this day for things windy and warm,
The Boy Scouts pulling ropes to raise their sweat
Upward the bells many timed tones downward
From full force to the hidden, yet still found
Once more on every summit and sound toward
The sky all the way, the stars, stripes around,
The twinkles rankling up unbottled heat
Nights fill with rockets showering
The Milky Way with swats
On the way to what heavens rise and bear
Fruit and, at last, support discord’s absence,
When light shines on Dame Hymen’s tight lips
To lap and lamp every Tuesday morn,
When I was a boy, before dreams took me
Asleep or awake and left me in bounteous
Recall of wrong numbers and poverty
And wilt in hills becoming mountainous,
Desire lounging big in weather’s bounty,
Rules, too, searing how not to burn biscuits
Lovers miss while singing songs of  sunshine. 
Bring on the brainstorm, then, babe, and remove
The high chair for crowds to lean and pitch in
To tie a ribbon round the old oak, one
Of rainbow’s hues for July, slave girl’s few
Years as full person instead of three-fifths.
Let zippity spout without gagging
On popcorn and beer while boys play nifty
Stobs at horseshoes, one throw, success tilling
Real veins in a town hurting to be born,
Taken over by ones in time seeking
The school for shelter and some unforlorn
Adults on crutches imbibing as chiefs
Mark and swing inside their heads for the score.

LOVE WORKS

There, summer briars sample air hotter than visitors
Can stand.  Buried in the cooler ground
Lies our July.  The blistering
Sun sings along with children,
hey-diddle diddle, the cat and the fiddle – fond
Of time they do not understand. 
There is no moral.
Art is not all nursery rhyme, but a sorrowful
Beauty in atmospheres sharp as a razor.
No one comes to mourn what history sent
Bullying its way to bring the slaves here.
Great-great-grandpap George got caught up in what to do, then went
Along with the laws.  Maybe he was that rare
Master who was good to a fault; how will I ever know
The thicket ahead of my mower now
Will spare more than stones and lichen-etchings.
What belies the bellies in their cramped graves?
Rats, the prowling cat, the waves
The sun slants in salty smears to brave
August on?  Today’s news fishes for days
When my country will put its money for the right
And leave economics under the starry night
To long for clear and obvious love.
Leave July to sleep with her family.
Let the possum trail for love as it plays dead.
It needs no mere recognition as North America’s one native marsupial.
Its holdings span country and suburbs,
Where the fox and coyote, too, make their dens
For all to see now and then
To aid Love’s contrast, Hate, toward extinction.

Essay from Chimezie Ihekuna

This is part of an eleven-segment relationship advice column from Nigerian author and Christian motivational speaker Chimezie Ihekuna, where he identifies and debunks certain beliefs he disagrees with on the topics of relationships, marriage and sexuality.

Chimezie Ihekuna (Mr. Ben)
Chimezie Ihekuna

Deception 10

I’ll become sexually faithful when the right man or woman comes

By deduction, you are presently exploring your sexual prowess with different individuals.   In other words, you are obviously an infidel. Sexually, are you going to be faithful to your Mr. or Mrs. Right in the making? Time will reveal the answer.

In fact, the issue of Mr. or Mrs. Right is being approached by young men and women by a vague selection of ladies and men they have slept with.   In other words, people choose the ones they intend spending the rest of their lives with on the grounds of sexual interaction-probably on the best of competent individuals they have slept with.   We must, in concrete terms, based on this context, define the terms “Mr. right”. Mr. Right is that man who practically believes in chastity and self-control instead of promiscuity while Mrs. Right is the woman who demonstrates a chaste disposition and is never willing to let go of her body to gratify her admirers’ flirtatious desires in the name of a deceptive life-long union.      

Given those definitions, it is anticipated that individuals portray a chaste attitude rather than sexually around while awaiting their so-called Mr. and Mrs. Rights. As an employer, the vacancies you place on bill boards, newspapers and other media outfits  job offers  instructing interested applicants or prospective employees to come with necessary requirements for interested applicants because you have what it takes to fully employ their services.   Similarly in wanting to get a chaste woman or a man with self-control, it is expected of you to be self-controlling or chaste. Unfortunately, it is the other way round- people want chaste woman or men of great self-control without possessing these qualities.

If you influence people with promiscuity, how you do intend getting your Mr. or Mrs. Right? You are like the employer not having what it takes to be one. In the first place, what makes you think that your right man or woman will come to you, given your not- chaste behavior?

When do you think your Mr. or Mrs. Right will come? Do you think the people you slept with are not the so called Mr. or Mrs. Rights?

To an extent, people who are sexually unfaithful have unknowingly be seen as sex objects. Hence, they become “used and dumped” by their partners. Simply, they are “replaced” by other believed-to-be-better individuals by breaking up or demise, separation and even divorce.  Eventually, these imbalances become eminent.

Don’t you think it is more upright to be chaste and self-controlling, preparing you for your Mr. or Mrs. Right than depriving people their sexual worth by displaying promiscuity, vaguely pointing the possibility of meeting your Mr. or Mrs. Right, denying people the worth of chastity and respect?

Poetry from J.J. Campbell

Author J.J. Campbell
Author J.J. Campbell

a series of small tragedies 
darkening skies 
doom and gloom 
i gave up on happiness
years ago just about the same time
god gave up on me 
the holidays are coming up 
a series of small tragedies while
hanging the lights
with glee desperation
is the last sign of hope that clings in the chilly
night air

these are the mornings
one of those mornings 
where you can’t make it to the bathroom in time
and as much shit that makes it in the bowl, 
the same amount is in your underwear 
and eventually the floor
these are the mornings where i completely understand
why it makes more sense to choose death

a million better places 
another waiting room 
listless women behind the glass 
the annoying drone of the television
in the background 
i can think of nearly a million better places
i could be right now but my imagination
likes the back roads and taking its fucking time

the inevitable reality 
laughter from the back rooms 
i suppose it beats the inevitable reality of death 
i lost my ability to be light hearted a few deaths ago 
i always wonder where the first misstep took place 
every shrink i’ve seen has told me
it all goes back to childhood of course it does

that sad reality 
i try not to remember
the last time i kissed a woman 
i would love to bury that sad reality
but i’m not exactly interested
in a future all by myself 
i refuse to count the voices in my head
until i absolutely have to

Poetry from Marc Carver

ORDINARY LOVE

I went up to the boy and got a ticket for the film.

He told me the name of the film

and I said what other love is there.

Unrequainted he said yea I can’t spell it

but I sure have had plenty of it 

but you know every now and then

you have to chance your arm

the women asked me what I wanted

I said coffee she told me she would make it with love

I said only if it is with requainted love.


MARRIAGE

I told her that was what marriage is 

watching you screw up your face

like a wild animal

while you put your bra on or your deodorant.

Things that other people didn’t know

but I had seen you do it a thousand times or more

and each time it still fascinated me.

I can steal these things from your life

so I don’t have to live my own

I only wish I had more people to steal from

EVERYBODY NEEDS A FRIEND

Part one

I walked into the closing down ladies shop

not sure why went to the back

and saw a row of mannequins. 

I had been after one for a while 

didn’t buy it straight away though 

but knew I would take it home paint her

then I would think about driving around

with her in my car see if anybody would notice 

I even thought about getting some roller skates for her  

and walking around with her.

“HI have you met my friend,”

Yea I could have some real fun with people

with that after all I have to get something

from them and besides I get lonely it good

to have someone to talk to even if they don’t talk back.


Part two

I went into the shop and gave them the money

the young woman asked me if I wanted a receipt

and I said I should be okay.

She pulled it into three parts

and said I can come back for a bit later if I wanted.

I said I should be okay so off

I went through the shopping mall

with the crutch through one hand

and the other around the tits with the base.

I got some strange looks especially from some old women.

Then I wished I got a receipt

they may all think I am stealing her.

I couldn’t help but think if anybody asks me

I can say it is the wife she has gone to pieces.

The arm fell off a couple of times

and she started to get heavy so I had to put her down a few times

as all the kids started to come out of the college

then this bloke came up behind me. “Nice bit of skirt.”

He said. “It is the wife she is going to pieces.”

I said. I got her to the car exhausted and she fell in the back.

“Get up you silly bitch.” I said.

Eventually I got her home but as I got her out of there

she started to fall to  pieces in the street.

“Come on pull yourself together.”

I got her inside before any of the neighbours

could see now she points east in the front room

I hope the wife doesn’t get jealous. 

TOILET

I walked out the gym late

the woman at reception gave me a wry smile

as I walked out with a towel on my head,

We went to screwfix to pick up the toilet.

I walked in towel still on my head

she and all the butch men started to look at me

staring at the towel. I walked to the counter.

“What is the matter

nobody ever seen a man with a towel on their head before.

“They all looked away and we left with our brand new toilet. 

THE WOMAN

I met the woman again last night

mostly I have avoided her over the years

the way I avoid everybody.

She told me I looked like a skier

I told her I had been known to ski in my past

but everything was in my past now.

She said she liked my short stories from all those years ago

something that was powerful

that lingered around the coffee table for days.

I told her she was kind but of course she wasn’t.

She was in old people’s care homes with a music group 

breathing new life into the old

keeping them alive just that little bit longer.

She didn’t mention why we had not talked in years.

She had that sense about me that something bad was going to happen

the way a lot of people know even if I didn’t know myself.

Not yet. When she said goodbye she did it with that air

that the conversation was not important to her at all

and off she went.

I wonder if I will talk to her next time if there is a next time

LOSE


What do you do when you are alone

that is the real question.

I don’t know what others do.

I can sit in silence writing and there is nothing else in the world

but more times than not I do other things.

Things so I don’t have to write

but why I don’t know.

Things so I don’t have to be alone even though

I run from people I walk the other way when I see them.

I avoid them but that makes me lonelier so lonely I can’t even write.

So what do I do stay alone 

run to people pester them into talking to me.

It is not that I am uninteresting

I can laugh and be agreeable

yeah I can be a good guy but in the end I have to lose 

I have to lose 

TELL ME A STORY

i want people to tell me about their lives

their stories in that way

I want to be a stenographer of other people’s lives

a chronicler.

My life is not important at all only to tell theirs

but the sick part of it all is I am shy,

I can’t talk to people only when I am thrown into life

but life has not done that lately all it does is keep me here

hiding from everybody.

Sleeping and waiting


TODAY

I know life is all in the adversity 

the gut wrenching pain of it all

horrific drunkard dancing in the streets

but you get to a stage when you can’t do it anymore

like June said to Henry

you don’t even know what you are.

You are a masochist.

But one day it has to stop

you just can’t do it anymore.

That day is today.

February 2020: Philosophical Permutations

by Synchronized Chaos Co-Editor Kahlil Crawford

This month we consider nontraditional philosophy across all media. A departure from the stoic philosophy of centuries-old granite statues, our contributors sculpt new outlooks keen on personal experience and (self-)critical observations true to the semantic essence of philo (“loving”) + sophia (“knowledge, wisdom”).

Philosophy is a struggle against the bewitchment (Verhexung) of our understanding by the resources of our language.

– Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations

Norman J. Olson examines his intuitive art philosphy of being a professional hobbyist. He ruminates on his existence as an “old school” artist seeking meaning in the contemporary milieu, and the embrace of his work by the literary set. MA Papić prophesizes the postfuturistic state/fate of our living planet – referencing the limitations of free thought as well as our history of global hysteria and multiethnic anxiety.

Ivan Arguelles’ latest poetry collection HOIL: An Unfinished Elegy, reviewed by Christopher Bernard, highlights the paradox of our existence. No matter how high our creative aspirations soar, we still, like the poet’s son who passed away recently from encephalitis, have to live within bodies vulnerable to illness, injury and age. Doug Hawley elucidates a deistic look at the universe through a humorous interview with God, who set nature in motion and then, bemused, watched it unfold.

Chimezie Ihekuna espouses his philosophy of sexual chastity in pursuit of “Mr/s. Right” across dimensions, whether it be professionally or personally. J.J. Campbell continues his explorations into domestic angst. Physical and emotional pain powers his poetic suite in an intimate manner devoid of companionship. Poet R.M. Englehardt explores physical death in his poetic suite. The darkness of music and his Southern Goth aesthetic emanates through words filled with bitterness, rage and personal nostalgia.

…and philosophy is nothing else, if one will translate the word into our idiom, than “the love of wisdom.”

– Cicero, De Officiis

Poet Susie Gharib takes us on a contemplative retreat thru her celestial monastery alongst a water sphinx and cerebral historian. Daniel DeCulla bemoans the vagaries of an unsuccessful fishing trip and the unpredictability of the natural world. Joan Beebe illustrates the simplistic beauty of nature with succinct descriptions of flower, bird, star, sky, sun, and soul. Conversely, poet Jake Cosmos Aller provides a retrospective account of complex, global affairs and personal transformation, which all fuse together in a fateful dream.

Visual artist B.T. Lowry postulates a “polyculture of complementary knowledges” to ensure human sustainability and honor inspired by “badland landscapes with knobbly stone hoodoos and deep ravines.” Neila Mezynski offers a poetic catharsis in the spur of the moment akin to the transience of Mark Young‘s graphic photography. Their creative nontraditionalism is further echoed by the surrealistic poetry of Husain Abdulhay and John Dorroh.

Philosophy is the question: from which side shall we look at life, God, the idea or other phenomena.

– Tristan Tzara, Dada Manifesto 1918

Author Cliff Garstang provides culinary and commuter backdrops for his short story and novel excerpts exploring familia and human dynamics. D.S. Maolalai’s poetry celebrates the beauty of moments of ordinary life with regular people: drinks with friends, the moment just before a couple gets engaged, father’s perfect turkey soup. Even an ordinary moment can be quite lovely with time and care.

Book columnist Elizabeth Hughes introduces us to the work of Glenn Peterson as he chronicles his Mother’s journey from Nazi-occupied Denmark during WWII to the safer shores of North America. Meanwhile, Jeff Rasley takes us through the streets of Kathmandu wherein the ramblings of his emerging culture shock quake beneath the lives of regular people. Mahbub also finds inspiration through travel, visiting gardens, temples and elephant sanctuaries in Thailand and wishing for the same peace and posterity as the resting cats he sees.

Essayist Abigail George evokes literary modernist Franz Kafka in her autobiographical tale of monstrosity, abuse, pain, love, and healing. Similarly, the poetic determinism of Mickey Corrigan evokes Rimbaudian symbolism, as he captures our participation in the cycles of nature.

“…philosophy arises from awe, a philosopher is bound in his way to be a lover of myths and poetic fables.”

Thomas Aquinas, Commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics

Film critic Jaylan Salah illustrates the appeal of the movie adaptation of Sophie Kinsella’s romantic comedy Confessions of a Shopaholic to Egyptian young adults as more Western consumer products became available due to economic globalization. Yet, economic reversals in the country rendered the seeming prosperity and the culture that grew up around it a mirage, tempered by reality in the same way as the book character’s credit-card financed lifestyle.

Actor Federico Wardal describes a performance where he intentionally blurred the distinction between illusion and reality to delight the audience. San Francisco poet Joan Gelfand likens the local tech scene to a bovine pasture – is the Silicon Valley tech dream really all its cracked up to be? Or is it merely an insomnia-induced illusion as described by poet Henry Bladon?

“…begin the long, slow process of reintegrating the Eastern philosophical tradition with the Western one…by restoring the application of theory to practice as a central measure of philosophical worth…”

Adrian Piper, Yoga vs. Philosophy?

Finally, and poignantly, returning poet Joan Beebe contributes a wistful piece where she remembers the simpler and happier days of her past.