An Anatomy of Friendship
Darcey Steinke and Rick Moody
From Huck Out West
Robert Coover
Useful Knots and How to Tie Them
Rachel Blau DuPlessis
Where You Go I’ll Go
Elizabeth Gaffney
Roll for Initiative
Andrew Ervin
The End of the End of the World
Stephen O’Connor
From Amitier
Gilles Tiberghien and Translated by Cole Swensen
All of Us
Michelle Herman
Trailer
Robert Clark
Plane Light, Plane Bright
Jonathan Carroll
Gaijin
Sallie Tisdale
For Sandra
Robert Duncan and Margaret Fisher
Hansel, Gretel, Grendel
Jedediah Berry and Emily Houk
Jackals
Diane Josefowicz
The Cardinal
Brandon Hobson
Your Friend Forever, A. Lincoln
Charles B. Strozier
Glenn Gould Syndrome
Spencer Matheson
Head Full: Prelude to a Friendship
Paul Lisicky
Two Poems
John Ashbery
The Soft Disconnect
J. W. McCormack
Passages
Isabella Hammad
The Spinal Descent
Tim Horvath
Need
Roberta Allen
Goodbye, Mister Starfish
M. J. Rey
Four Poems
Elizabeth Robinson
Mass
Matthew Cheney
Friend of My Heart
Joyce Carol Oates
From Red Bird Most
Liza Birnbaum
From Red Bird Most
Liza Birnbaum
Cover art: Zach Horn, detail from The Garden of Nocturnal Delights, acrylic on canvas, 2015. © Zach Horn 2016; all rights reserved by the artist.
Along with love, friendship is the most universal, enlivening, challenging, mercurial, and genuine of human experiences. Whereas
blood kinship is fated—our ancestors are our ancestors, like them or not, and so it is with parents and siblings—friendships are forged with people we choose, and continue to choose. People who become, in essence, a free-will kind of family, which, like our blood family, can be a strong source of happiness and, sometimes, of grand miseries. A friend is also one who becomes, as Aristotle proposed in his Nicomachean Ethics, essentially “another self.” But just as we have the capacity both to embrace and torment ourselves, so can Aristotle’s other selves do the same. Friendship, like selfhood, is a complex enterprise, a mixed bag.
This issue is a gathering of writings that address some of the myriad ways in which we encounter one another as friends. The
nimble dance between love and friendship is part of the dialogue. Staunch friendships and fraught ones. False friendships and fading ones. Friendships brought into being in the cauldron of illness, friendships that make us feel most alive. Friendships between people long dead and friendships that are still going strong. It’s a theme about which, over the millennia, much has been written, but one I believe readers of this issue will find framed and investigated in new ways.
Many of us involved with Conjunctions, writers and readers alike, unexpectedly lost a very dear friend earlier this year in the extraordinary poet, publisher, teacher, and longtime contributor to these pages, C. D. Wright. It is to her that Affinity is dedicated.
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