Lucille Lang Day's Blog
February 18, 2015
Cousin Jan
My personal essay "Cousin Jan," which is about mental illness, has been published in Ghost Town: http://ghosttownlitmag.com/lucille-la...
Published on February 18, 2015 20:01
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Tags:
creative-nonfiction, lucille-lang-day, mental-illness, schizophrenia
December 12, 2014
Poet as Scientist
My personal essay "Poet as Scientist" has been published in Waccamaw: http://waccamawjournal.com/nonfiction....
The essay tells about my experience being a poet and writer while making my living in science-related jobs.
The essay tells about my experience being a poet and writer while making my living in science-related jobs.
Published on December 12, 2014 11:03
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Tags:
lucille-lang-day, poetry, science
September 24, 2014
Watershed Festival, Sept. 27, 2014
This Saturday, Sept. 27, 2014, I will be reading at the Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival with many stellar poets, including Kay Ryan, Anne Waldman, Dean Rader, Randall Potts and Al Young. The event is from noon to 4:30 p.m. at Civic Center Park in Berkeley.
For more information, see http://poetryflash.org/programs/?p=wa...
For more information, see http://poetryflash.org/programs/?p=wa...
Published on September 24, 2014 13:11
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Tags:
environment, lucille-lang-day, poetry
July 30, 2014
Short Story: "The Painter"
My short story "The Painter" appears in the 2014 issue of Green Hills Literary Lantern: http://ghll.truman.edu/ghll25/GHLL%20...
Published on July 30, 2014 11:51
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Tags:
fiction, lucille-lang-day, short-story
July 13, 2014
Two Poems in Blue Lyra Review
Two poems from my upcoming collection, Becoming an Ancestor, appear in Blue Lyra Review: http://bluelyrareview.com/lucille-lan...
Published on July 13, 2014 11:27
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Tags:
lucille-lang-day, poetry
Books by Lucille Lang Day's Bed
Books by my bed! Read about them here: http://wewantedtobewriters.com/2014/0...
Published on July 13, 2014 11:21
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Tags:
alicia-suskin-ostriker, daniel-langton, lucille-lang-day, michael-stocker, naomi-ruth-lowinsky, patricia-damery, stephen-d-gutierrez, susan-gubernat
April 23, 2014
Northern California Book Award Ceremony
If you live in the San Francisco Bay Area and are free this Sunday, April 27, I highly recommend the Northern CA Book Award Ceremony at 1:00 p.m. at the San Francisco Main Library. It's always an exciting event and a great opportunity to learn about many wonderful books by Northern California authors. This FREE event is sponsored by Poetry Flash and other local organizations: http://www.poetryflash.org/programs/?...
Published on April 23, 2014 20:18
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Tags:
northern-california-book-award
January 12, 2014
What Have We Learned?
Reading Fathers and Teachers, Belden Johnson’s novel about growing up in the late 1940s and early 1950s, is like stepping into a series of Norman Rockwell paintings: there’s a small town, a country store, a house with green shutters and a wide front porch, a happy mom and dad with four children, a man who still plows with a team of horses, and a boy and his dog. Johnson captures both the idyllic aspect of this period and the dark underside, including racism, greed, and anti-Communist paranoia. The setting, Pohick, Virginia, is described in such detail that the town itself is like a character in the book.
Without judging, Johnson shows things that are socially unacceptable today but were considered a normal part of life at the time. For example, the father in the happy family beats his son Billy with a belt. Today most people would call this child abuse. I grew up in the 1950s myself, and I know that back then many, maybe even most, people hit their children with their hands, their belts, or their yardsticks to make them behave. Johnson describes this as though it were perfectly normal, and at the time it was. The man who beats his son is a good and loving father.
Bullying is also accepted and taken for granted. In the first of many bullying episodes in Fathers and Teachers, Billy meets up with four bullies who first taunt him, then jump him. In this situation—which would now require action by the school, the bullies’ parents or guardians, and maybe even the police—Billy’s father says kindly, “I’ll teach you how to box…so you can defend yourself.”
When Billy is nine years old, his father gives him a rifle, and when he is eleven, he uses it against a soldier who has killed a friend of his, an odd and gentle older man. In the book this feels justified, but in real life, I do not think a nine-year-old or an eleven-year-old should have access to a gun, let alone have his own. Thus, Fathers and Teachers keeps us asking questions: Were the 50s the good old days? What’s wrong with this picture? Are things better now?
There’s a great deal of humor in the book and several memorable, eccentric characters, such as a man who sings to his bees and a plumber who recites Shakespeare. But, above all, Fathers and Teachers is Billy’s coming-of-age story, and it is reminiscent of such classics as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Catcher in the Rye. Definitely an entertaining and thought-provoking read!
Without judging, Johnson shows things that are socially unacceptable today but were considered a normal part of life at the time. For example, the father in the happy family beats his son Billy with a belt. Today most people would call this child abuse. I grew up in the 1950s myself, and I know that back then many, maybe even most, people hit their children with their hands, their belts, or their yardsticks to make them behave. Johnson describes this as though it were perfectly normal, and at the time it was. The man who beats his son is a good and loving father.
Bullying is also accepted and taken for granted. In the first of many bullying episodes in Fathers and Teachers, Billy meets up with four bullies who first taunt him, then jump him. In this situation—which would now require action by the school, the bullies’ parents or guardians, and maybe even the police—Billy’s father says kindly, “I’ll teach you how to box…so you can defend yourself.”
When Billy is nine years old, his father gives him a rifle, and when he is eleven, he uses it against a soldier who has killed a friend of his, an odd and gentle older man. In the book this feels justified, but in real life, I do not think a nine-year-old or an eleven-year-old should have access to a gun, let alone have his own. Thus, Fathers and Teachers keeps us asking questions: Were the 50s the good old days? What’s wrong with this picture? Are things better now?
There’s a great deal of humor in the book and several memorable, eccentric characters, such as a man who sings to his bees and a plumber who recites Shakespeare. But, above all, Fathers and Teachers is Billy’s coming-of-age story, and it is reminiscent of such classics as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Catcher in the Rye. Definitely an entertaining and thought-provoking read!
Published on January 12, 2014 13:31
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Tags:
belden-johnson, coming-of-age-novel
October 24, 2013
Poetry and Dreams
Joan Gelfand interviews me on Kelly Sullivan Walden's radio program, the D-Spot: http://www.kellysullivanwalden.com/Lu...
Published on October 24, 2013 17:15
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Tags:
dream, joan-gelfand, kelly-sullivan-walden, lucille-lang-day, poetry
October 4, 2013
The Prophet
My short story "The Prophet" just came out in SNReview: www.snreview.org/0213Day.html
Published on October 04, 2013 16:36
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Tags:
lucille-lang-day, short-story


