Townships
ISBN: 9781587291425
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Iowa Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: City and town life -- Middle West; Middle West -- Social life and customs; Middle West -- Biography;

The Midwest, says Martone (editor of A Place of Sense ), has never had a distinctive regional identity. To redress that situation, he invited 24 of the area's best writers to focus on its townships, six-mile-by-six-mile squares arbitrarily defined by government surveyors. Unfortunately, everything about this volume seems arbitrary. The editor decided by fiat which states composed the region (Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa), and no unifying bond is ever revealed. As Martone himself asks, ``what links the autoworker in Detroit with the actuary in Des Moines?'' What does Ray A. Young Bear, writing poignantly about his tribe's creation myth, have in common with Anthony Bukoski relating his passionate attachment to the Superior Bay wetlands? What does Carol Bly, learning about a blond-haired Jesus in Duluth, share with Deborah Galyan, whose black high school teacher taught her about Joseph Conrad and about life in Bloomington, Ind.? The reader may recall Gertrude Stein's remark about Oakland, ``There is no there there.'' Photos by Raymond Bial not seen by PW. ( Feb. ) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved


Midwesterner Michael Martone is the author of three collections of stories, Alive and Dead in Indiana , Safety Patrol , and Fort Wayne Is Seventh on Hitler's List . He is associate professor of English at Syracuse University.
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