Issue 201 | The Sun Magazine

September 1992

Readers Write

Lipstick

Cherries In The Snow, Plush Purple, Orange Flip

By Our Readers
Quotations

Sunbeams

“You seem to be reacting to your boyfriend as if he were your father,” your shrink may say stonily (unless she is a strict Freudian, in which case she’ll shut up and wait until you think of it yourself, a process that usually takes ten years. This is why strict Freudians have such lovely summer houses.).

Cynthia Heimel

The Sun Interview

Replacing Therapy

A Conversation Between D. Patrick Miller And Tom Rusk

When a person agrees to accept this value system — which means pursuing respect, understanding, caring, and fairness within oneself, while also requiring them from others — I can use that agreement to great effect.

By D. Patrick Miller
Essays, Memoirs, & True Stories

An Unbelievable Illness

There’s a lot wrong with me. Researchers in Maryland have cultivated several viruses from my blood and spinal fluid, revealing that those viruses are rampant in my body. My body’s immune system flails away at them without success.

By Floyd Skloot
Essays, Memoirs, & True Stories

My Campaign Diary

I run for president the same way. Every few weeks, I go to St. Mark’s Church (a half block from my house), mimeograph leaflets, and stick some in my attache case. Whenever it comes up in a conversation that I’m running for president, I take one out.

By Sparrow
Essays, Memoirs, & True Stories

Forever And A Day

This moment, I realize, with all its ludicrous and painful imperfection, is as perfect as any other. It doesn’t need to be improved; I don’t need to be better.

By Sy Safransky
Fiction

Last Year’s Poverty Was Not Enough

The day hadn’t begun well, but it was just another day in a long line of mean, anxious hours. Time mashed in on her like a couple of hands folded hard in prayer.

By Ashley Walker
Fiction

Siren’s Song

Solitude seems possible; the sea and sky are wedged into the cove by two walls of volcanic rock. The horizon is broken only by an occasional sail.

By Ronald B. Fink
Fiction

Talk

My father brought Jake’s body home from Colorado in a record-breaking blizzard.

By Lisa Horton Zimmerman
Poetry

Hard Bargain

Two head masks from West Africa, / helmets of rough wood, / hang on my study wall.

By Ken Autrey
Poetry

My Savior Jesus

Not Jesus on the cross / but Jesus the boy / by himself, shivering, gazing into the water, / his hand cupping his scrotum, / the puzzling extra organ / attached outside his body. / I could believe in this Jesus.

By Chris Bursk
Poetry

Blood At Solstice

A little death or at least no possibility / of birth, it gives up on you the way / your mother did.

By Karen Blomain
Poetry

She Said, Can’t We Just Be Friends?

After a week of sleeplessness / he dozed off at last / in the hammock and was / awakened by the sound of dead leaves / dancing.

By R.T. Smith
Poetry

Selected Poems

Tonight the trees bend over like broken / old women picking up their husbands’ / empty whiskey bottles.

from “Drunk Again, I Stumble Home On Euclid And Cut Across Thornden Park Baseball Field”

By BJ Ward