AnOther
  • Essay
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Fiction
    • Nonfiction
    • Poetry
  • Reading Lists
  • About
All Content
Nonfiction
View Posts
Fiction
View Posts
Poetry
View Posts
Interviews
View Posts
Essays
View Posts
A Journey of Wonder
Writer's Journey
View Posts
Reading Lists
View Posts
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
0
6 Followers
Subscribe
AnOther

Culture, Music and Art Magazine

AnOther
  • Writer’s Journey
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Nonfiction
    • Fiction
    • Poetry
    • Longform
  • Essays
  • On Reading
    • Reading Lists
  • Poetry

Flutes and Tomatoes: A Memoir with Poems

  • October 6, 2015
  • P. J. Lazos

I became sensitive to every vibration in the air, to every nuance of the changing light. It would be late afternoon. It was then that the snake of emptiness would tighten around my throat. It was hard to breathe. I didn’t know if I could make it to the next day. There was a bottle of red wine on the chair. I grabbed and gulped it and enjoyed the warm swish of the liquid down my throat.” – Wade Stevenson, Flutes and Tomatoes: A Memoir With Poems

Flutes and Tomatoes: A Memoir With Poems by Wade Stevenson is not at all what I imagined it would be. Let me start with a confession: poetry confounds me. It’s not that I don’t appreciate the cadence, the sentiment, the succinct nature of the writing; it’s just that I don’t always understand it. Without a context, it could be a metaphor for anything which is exactly the commonality of human emotion the poet intentionally taps into, but for a reader like me who wants certainty, assuredness, a good clean ending, the myriad possibilities that poetry presents can be downright frightening. That’s why I love this hybrid memoir/poem combo platter by Wade Stevenson. There was no guessing as to what had happened to make the poet lock himself in a basement studio in Paris with a bunch of tomatoes and a flute because he tells us, straight off, that he’s in mourning, that his lover has quite unexpectedly died, that he’s not coming out of the basement until he discovers the meaning of it all, or alternatively, learns to live with it. Having been apprised of the situation from the offset, I could relax, free to roam the pages of Stevenson’s poems, spending as much or more time on each as I felt necessary to understand because I’d been released from the chore of deciphering the code. I already had the rudimentary understanding; the rest was pure — wait for it — poetry, and it was illuminating and lovely.

I think poets, more than novelists, are the epitome of private people. Full disclosure is near impossible which is why they cloak everything in layers of metaphor. As with all good poetry, Flutes and Tomatoes is no exception. Stevenson keeps the details, crushing as they were, in the safety of his private zone. We have no idea, despite the broad brush of events, as to what actually happened in the atelier in Paris: how the lovers met, whether they were young or old, how long they were together, whether they spoke the same language or were perhaps the same sex, whether the trip to the countryside would have been the first or the last. All we know is that the flute and more than a dozen tomatoes remained, the flute maybe because Stevenson and his lover shared a flat. The tomatoes because, as he discloses, they were gathered/stolen from a farmer’s field on a trip that should have been but was/not.

Judge for yourself what could possibly happen to you that would cause you to spend a day, a week, a month, perhaps an entire summer living a solitary existence, just you and an external object(s) of your choice. How devastating the shock? How debilitating the news? It’s unclear from the text how long Stevenson remained underground. Long enough for the tomatoes to rot, for grief to move in with its own baggage and take up excess floor space in his sparsely furnished apartment, for questions of the existential nature of reality — living as he was, at the time, in Europe, the birthplace of existentialism — to be answered, or go unanswered, for him to turn on a tomato or two, to watch them rot and fester and disintegrate into nothingness, to violently throw one against a wall, to embrace his own darkness and ultimately his own light. It’s not an existence for a cowardly heart, perhaps not even a tomato heart. In the end, only the experience remained, and the words, resonating with an emotion the color of tomato.

Tomatoe Heart

If you choose not to eat it
A tomato quickly becomes useless
Unless by chance you learned to love it
Knowing buried deep inside
Are seeds of water and sunlight
To you it is transformed, a crimson flower
You watch its pink petals fall
Think of everything that might have been
Desires, sorrows and regrets
How to reconcile the shadow of your soul
With your real self? Tenderly, with blind
Fingers you touch the precious skin
As it swells and dilates
Like some enormous empty heart

P. J. Lazos

P. J. Lazos is the author of Six Sisters and Oil and Water, an environmental murder mystery about oil spills and green technology. P. J. is an environmental lawyer in Philadelphia. Read more of her work at Green Life, Blue Water.

Previous Article
  • Fiction

Falling Out of Time

  • May 15, 2015
  • Sandra Squire Fluck
View Post
Next Article
You'll Find Me in the Darkness
  • Poetry

You’ll Find Me in the Darkness, If I Let You

  • November 14, 2015
  • Sandra Squire Fluck
View Post
You May Also Like
View Post
  • Poetry

Grave Seas and A Syrian Riddle

  • Sandra Squire Fluck
  • October 25, 2021
View Post
  • Poetry

From Glasgow to Damascus

  • Sandra Squire Fluck
  • October 24, 2021
Parts Per Trillion
View Post
  • Poetry

Parts per Trillion

  • Melissa Chappell
  • October 25, 2019
View Post
  • Poetry

The Scent Of My Skin: From Libya, London and every world I live in

  • Sandra Squire Fluck
  • October 16, 2017
View Post
  • Poetry

The Absence Of The Loved

  • Sandra Squire Fluck
  • February 9, 2017
View Post
  • Poetry

The Stick Soldiers

  • Leilani Squire
  • November 1, 2016
View Post
  • Poetry

Dear You

  • P. J. Lazos
  • September 21, 2016
View Post
  • Poetry

Chapbook 2011

  • Sandra Squire Fluck
  • December 9, 2015
Author
P. J. Lazos
P. J. Lazos is the author of Six Sisters and Oil and Water, an environmental murder mystery about oil spills and green technology. P. J. is an environmental lawyer in Philadelphia. Read more of her work at Green Life, Blue Water.
View Posts

Subscribe

Subscribe now to our newsletter

  • Fiction
  • Nonfiction
  • Poetry
  • Reading Lists
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Writer’s Journey
  • The Write Launch
Originally created as a Featured Writers section on bookscover2cover, we decided that writers and poets needed their own site. Thus, The Write Launch, a subsidiary of bookscover2cover, LLC, was born. The Write Launch is a monthly literary magazine that publishes fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by selected writers and poets. Visit thewritelaunch.com and read original work by talented writers and poets from around the world.
Read more at The Write Launch
AnOther
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
Books to power the mind, feed the soul

Input your search keywords and press Enter.