Conjunctions: 71 / A Cabinet of Curiosity

Fall 2018

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Transfer
Laura van den Berg

Why Brother Stayed Away
Ann Beattie

How Tsala Entered the Spirit World and Became a Hawk
Brandon Hobson

In the Great Hall of Bones
Eleni Sikelianos

A Curiosity of Spies
Greg Jackson

Plastics
Julianna Baggott

Big Dark Hole
Jeffrey Ford

Waiting For Kizer
Joyce Carol Oates

Soldier’s Handbook
William Lychack

Infidels
Joanna Scott

Idylls of Curiosity
Catherine Imbriglio

Once More to the Beach
Dave King

Mona Sparrow
Lauren Green

Her Old Home
Translated by Chen Zeping, Translated by Karen Gernant and Can Xue

Untitled Original 11386i
Nathaniel Mackey

Days of Heaven
A. D. Jameson

The Fisherman Bombardier of Naval Station Norfolk
Quintan Ana Wikswo

The Wanting Beach
Lynn Schmeidler

Reflections on the Real Joe Dicostanzo
Samuel R. Delany

The Unsent Letters of Blaise and Jacqueline Pascal
Kelsey Peterson

Untitled or Not Yet
Sarah Blackman

Three Poems
Gerard Malanga

An Anatomy of Curiosity
Martine Bellen

Father, Ether, Sea
Maud Casey

The Empyrean Light
Gregory Norman Bossert

Coyotes
Stephen O’Connor

Fur, Bark, Feather, Leaf, Faun
Matt Bell

Tattersall
Madeline Kearin

Three Poems
Bin Ramke

A Visit to Fredrik Ruysch’s Cabinets
Diane Ackerman

Henry’s Room
Elizabeth Hand

Description

Conjunctions: 71, A Cabinet of Curiosity

Edited by Bradford Morrow

Cover art by Farid Rasulov: Cats in the Lounge, digital print, 2014. © Farid Rasulov 2018, all rights reserved by the artist.

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Curiosity is as central to life as breathing. And like breath itself, when it ceases, the vibrancy of life fades and disappears. Curiosity leads to discoveries both beneficent and, at times, destructive. It often occasions wonderment, but also terror. It prompts the precise scientist, but also the nosy gadfly. A double-edged sword, curiosity has forever held a crucial role in myth, literature, science, philosophy, history—nearly every field of human endeavor. While most of us know the old saying about curiosity killing the cat, we must also remember that “satisfaction brought it back.” Curiosity incites and compels, taketh away and giveth.

In this issue, curiosity impels a personal assistant to learn hidden truths about her deceased employer—a famed playwright—and his relationship with the woman who directs an Italian arts foundation to which he donated his priceless library of first editions. A novelist, inspired by a different kind of curiosity, studies the traditional teachings of his Cherokee forebears after reading the notebook his beloved grandfather possessed when he died. Elsewhere, a young boy removes his clothes and, driven by dangerous curiosity, crawls into the gaping darkness of a sewer pipe, where he mysteriously vanishes, altering the lives of everyone who knew him. While most of the stories, poems, and memoirs here investigate the places where curiosity transports us—from forgotten burial grounds to natural history museums, from alluring lakes to postapocalyptic seaside shanties—A Cabinet of Curiosity also features a singular visit to an archetypal curiosity cabinet in Amsterdam with its treasury of specimens, of oddities in jars and on shelves, of things pinned and things afloat.

Curiosity in all its guises is the wellspring of revelation. It is a prime mover behind our deeds, good or evil, simple or complicated. While the thirty-one writers gathered here individually explore many of the ways in which curiosity drives and defines us, together they propose that the realms of curiosity are, finally, inexhaustible.