Far from the cityscape. Divets on terrain where
our bodies make arcs in the sand. Smell of stale popcorn, beer burps, weariness
cast off at the edge of the city last stop. Coney Island.
I’m
currently going through Brooklyn poet Amanda Deutch’s very attractive chapbook Surf Avenue & 29th Street
Coney Island (Northampton MA: least weasel press, 2018), an extension of a
series of Coney Island-specific projects she’s been working on for some time.
As a recent interview with Ian Drieblatt on Melville House writes, Deutch
[…] is the founder of Parachute Literary Arts,
an eight-year-old arts organization whose straightforward (and wonderful)
mission is “to celebrate the literature of Coney Island.” For the unfamiliar,
Coney Island—not actually an island, though it was before local residents
filled in the inlets separating it from the rest of Brooklyn—is a strip of
beach on the southern shores of Brooklyn, legendary for its seaside boardwalks,
old-school frankfurtiers, and amusements that include the iconic Cyclone roller
coaster and the Parachute Jump, which closed in 1964 but remains the most
visible physical monument to the neighborhood’s history as New York City’s
summertime playground.
Over
the years, Coney Island has received an enormous amount of literary attention
(Lawrence Ferlenghetti’s 1958 title A Coney Island of the Mind being but the most overt of the examples I’m aware
of), but Drieblatt’s interview continues, offering that, as Deutch responds,
“Coney Island also has a personal significance for me. My mother grew up in
Coney Island, on West 29th Street between Surf and Mermaid, along with her
brother, father, and mother.” Deutch’s Surf
Avenue & 29th Street Coney Island, then, offers a lyric
collage that shifts between and amid theme park and family, whether blended together
into singular idea, written as separate threads and even offered as
contradictory effects. As she writes:
My family lived in Coney Island
In the shadow of the Half Moon Hotel
Beyond shards of memory
Stories told in a homeland tongue
Mother
Uncle
Bernie
Nana Betty
Grandfather Sol
on West 29th Street, Coney Island
amidst kitchen grease, cockroaches, knishes
roller coasters and factory jobs
as half moons halted
& Jewish gangsters mysteriously
fell from 6 story windows
upside down
a family
Hers
is a lyric of theme park and working class roots, and New York histories both
public and personal, much of which has faded away into memory, and much of that
fading as well.
An arcade, an arc, gallery, walkway beeping
with mechanical sounds Hit em Hard, Hit
em Hard, I’m Popeye the Sailor Man goes the song of the High Striker on
West 12th Street deep into the night. A jungle of stuffed tigers
with Mardi Gras beads crouch at the High Striker’s base ready to pounce. Monica
who runs the game, her hair changes color every week with the tides. Half pink half
blond, today. She fights for her space on West 12th Street, claims
her turf between the Ghost Hole and the Wonder Wheel laden with tigers and
inflatable pirates
I’m
curious to know if this is part of a larger work-in-progress, her fragments
gathering together to form a whole that seems unfinished, even incomplete. There
seems a great deal more material to be gathered around such a project, and it
does feel that Deutch has barely scratched the surface. There is also something
around the last few pages of the short collection that feels unfinished as
well; while one doesn’t necessarily wish for a “conclusion,” there is something
of the final few pages that don’t quite push far enough to hold the fragments
together. Perhaps this, itself, is worth pushing this project into something
book-length (which might already be in-progress, but unknown to me)? And yet,
in certain ways, such an excavation/historical project involving memory, combining
collective and familial, could potentially be life-long.
collect thoughts, gather fragments of history
misleading me along my family tree
their tongues lead me on a path
to where I am now
my own two feet in the wet sand
heads bob in the water
illuminated pink from the sun glow
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