Blas Manuel's blog

Bush Fails Again

Far from deferring to state or local officials, FEMA asserted its authority to make things worse, said Aaron Broussard, the president of Jefferson Parish, south of New Orleans. When Wal-Mart sent three trailer trucks loaded with water, FEMA officials turned them away, he said. Agency workers prevented the Coast Guard from delivering 1,000 gallons of diesel fuel, and on Saturday they cut the parish's emergency communications line, leading the sheriff to restore it and post armed guards to protect it from FEMA, Mr. Broussard said.

Poem of the Week: "The Consolations," the Second Version

Last week, people, I posted the first stanza of The Consolations, the poem that, if I ever get another poetry collection published will be both the title poem and the first poem in the book. There's going to be a poem by that same name as the last poem in the theoretical collection.

Story of the Week: "If God Will Give Us License, part IV"

From the ground, Benjamin lunged at his brother's legs, and David went down on his back. David got a leg free and started kicking Benjamin on the top of his head with the heel of his shoe. He kicked until he felt Benjamin go slack.

I Was So Much Younger Then

I was walking around Stanley Park, talking with my homegirl about everything. Then she asks me, apropos of nothing, if I’d ever been in a fight. Es is cool, but she’s a private schooler/Ivy Leaguer, and I doubt that she’s ever slugged it out with anybody, so maybe she wanted to live vicariously through her friend who grew up in the barrio.

It Hurts to Have to Be This Funny

On Fridays, my writer sits next to me, lawyer-style, whispering suggestions for jokes and witty comments into my ear or handing me legal pads on which he’s furiously scribbled funny lines. Then if I stiff, I can blame him, throw a tantrum (talent can be so moody sometimes), fire him, tell him he’ll never work again, bad-mouth him all over town, say he's a thieving cokehead, try to write new material myself, fail miserably, call and beg him to come back, and then pretend that nothing ever happened.

The Soft Revolution

This wasn't just a song being sung, but a story being told, full of specific, writerly details. Early on the narrator brings the girl a gift of a flowerlike herb called goldenrod, placing the season as late summer. By early spring, she succumbs to the cancer that's invaded her bones, and on the day she dies, a cardinal crashes into her hospital window.

Story of the Week: "If God Will Give Us License, part III"

His wife wasn't talking, was standing a little bit behind him with her head down. She wore a long, faded, purple and burgundy long-sleeved dress, and she had a blue scarf tied around her head. Benjamin could see her sneakered feet under the gate. He was surprised that they weren't carrying a picture with them, but then he realized that they probably didn't have a picture of their child.

Poem of the Week: "The Consolations"

My homegirl is dropping hot fire on her blog, as usual, and, on today's post, I got name-checked.

Story of the Week: "If God Will Give Us License, part II"

Neither David nor Benjamin had ever been tested. They had managed to get through their lives without ever having to make a decision that would change everything—how they would view their pasts and their futures, how and what they thought of themselves and each other. They had gotten off free.

Poem of the Week: "Letter to Sonya, After Everything Came Apart"

1999. I was back in Madtown, watching baseball with my dad and reading a really lousy poem in a literary journal, a pen in my hand. The poem made me think of a friend of mine from grad school because I knew that she would have disliked the poem, too.

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