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   Also by Marge Piercy
   Novels
   Going Down Fast, 1969
   Dance the Eagle to Sleep, 1970
   Small Changes, 1973
   Woman on the Edge of Time, 1976
   The High Cost of Living, 1978
   Vida, 1980
   Braided Lives, 1982
   Fly Away Home, 1985
   Gone to Soldiers, 1988
   Summer People, 1989
   He, She And It, 1991
   The Longings of Women, 1994
   City of Darkness, City of Light, 1996
   Storm Tide, 1998 (with Ira Wood)
   Three Women, 1999
   The Third Child, 2003
   Sex Wars, 2005
   Short Stories
   “The Cost of Lunch, Etc.”, 2014
   Poetry Collections
   Breaking Camp, 1968
   Hard Loving, 1969
   4-Telling (with Emmett Jarrett, Dick Lourie, Robert Hershon), 1971
   To Be of Use, 1973
   Living in the Open, 1976
   The Twelve-Spoked Wheel Flashing, 1978
   The Moon Is Always Female, 1980
   Circles on the Water, Selected Poems, 1982
   Stone, Paper, Knife, 1983
   My Mother’s Body, 1985
   Available Light, 1988
   Early Ripening: American Women’s Poetry Now (ed.), 1988
   Mars and Her Children, 1992
   Eight Chambers of the Heart, 1995 (UK)
   What Are Big Girls Made Of, 1997
   Early Grrrl, 1999
   The Art of Blessing the Day: Poems with a Jewish Theme, 1999
   Colors Passing Through Us, 2003
   The Crooked Inheritance, 2009
   The Hunger Moon: New and Selected Poems, 1980–2010, 2012
   Made in Detroit, 2015
   Other Works
   “The Grand Coolie Damn” in Sisterhood Is Powerful, 1970 (pamphlet)
   The Last White Class, (play coauthored with Ira Wood), 1979
   Parti-Colored Blocks for a Quilt, (essays), 1982
   The Earth Shines Secretly: A Book of Days, (daybook calendar), 1990
   So You Want to Write: How to Master the Craft of Writing Personal Narrative, 2001; Enlarged Edition, 2005
   Sleeping with Cats, (memoir), 2002
   Louder: We Can’t Hear You (Yet!), The Political Poems of Marge Piercy, 2004 (CD)
   Pesach for the Rest of Us, 2007
   My Life, My Body (Outspoken Authors), (essays, poems, and memoir), 2015
   Gone to Soldiers
   A Novel
   Marge Piercy
   The survivors have written their own books
   and those who perished are too many and too hungry
   for this to do more than add a pebble to the cairn
   So this is for my grandmother Hannah
   who was a solace to my childhood
   and who was a storyteller even in the English
   that never fit comfortably in her mouth
   for the moment when she learned that of her
   village, none and nothing remained
   for her weak eyes, strong stomach and the tales
   she told, her love of gossip, of legend
   her incurable romantic heart
   her gift for making the past
   walk through the present
   CONTENTS
   LOUISE 1: A Talent for Romance
   DANIEL 1: An Old China Hand
   JACQUELINE 1: In Pursuit of the Adolescent Universal
   ABRA 1: The Opening of Abra
   NAOMI 1: Naomi/Nadine Is Only Half
   BERNICE 1: Bernice and the Pirates
   JEFF 1: Emplumado
   RUTHIE 1: Ruthie’s Saturday
   One Cold Sunday
   JACQUELINE 2: Of Chilblains and Rotten Rutabagas
   RUTHIE 2: Of Rapid Pledges
   ABRA 2: Stories to Make the Ears Bleed
   BERNICE 2: Bernice on Patrol
   DUVEY 1: Many a Stormy Sea Will Blow
   LOUISE 2: The Dark Horse
   NAOMI 2: Today You Are a Woman
   DANIEL 2: The Great Purple Crossword Puzzle
   JEFF 2: The Creature from the Logey Swamp
   JACQUELINE 3: A Star Shaped Like Pain
   ABRA 3: Such a Roomy Closet
   NAOMI 3: The Jaws Close
   LOUISE 3: Afternoon Sun
   JEFF 3: High Tea and Low Tricks
   DUVEY 2: The Maltese Crossing
   RUTHIE 3: Of Good Girls and Bad Girls
   BERNICE 3: Bird on a Wire
   MURRAY 1: One More River to Cross
   DANIEL 3: Daniel’s War
   JACQUELINE 4: Roads of Paper
   JEFF 4: A Few Early Deaths
   ABRA 4: Hands-on Experience
   NAOMI 4: Home Is the Sailor
   LOUISE 4: Something Old and Something New
   JACQUELINE 5: Of Common Wives and Thoroughbred Horses
   DANIEL 4: Their Mail and Ours
   DUVEY 3: The Black Pit
   RUTHIE 4: Everybody Needs Somebody to Hate
   BERNICE 4: Up, Up and Away
   ABRA 5: What Women Want
   LOUISE 5: Of the Essential and the Tangential
   JEFF 5: Friends Best Know How to Wound
   NAOMI 5: One Hot Week
   JACQUELINE 6: Catch a Falling Star
   RUTHIE 5: Candles Burn Out
   BERNICE 5: The Crooked Desires of the Heart Fulfilled
   LOUISE 6: The End of a Condition Requiring Illusions
   ABRA 6: Love’s Labor
   DANIEL 5: Working in Darkness
   MURRAY 2: A Little Miscalculation of the Tides
   JEFF 6: A Leader of Men and a Would-be Leader of Women
   NAOMI 6: A Few Words in the Mother Tongue
   RUTHIE 6: What Is Given and What Is Taken Away
   LOUISE 7: Toward a True Appreciation of Chinese Food
   JACQUELINE 7: The Chosen
   BERNICE 6: In Pursuit
   ABRA 7: The Loudest Rain
   DANIEL 6: Under the Weeping Willow Tree
   JEFF 7: When the Postman Passes at Noon, Twice
   NAOMI 7: The Tear in Things
   JACQUELINE 8: Spring Mud, Spring Blood
   RUTHIE 7: Woman Is Born into Trouble as the Water Flows Downward
   BERNICE 7: Major Mischief
   LOUISE 8: I Could Not Love Thee, Dear, So Much
   ABRA 8: The Great Crusade
   JEFF 8: The Die Is Cast
   RUTHIE 8: Almost Mishpocheh
   MURRAY 3: Return to Civilization
   JACQUELINE 9: An Honorable Death
   LOUISE 9: Rations in Kind
   NAOMI 8: The Voice of the Turtledove
   DANIEL 7: Flutterings
   JACQUELINE 10: Up on Black Mountain
   BERNICE 8: Of the One and the Many
   LOUISE 10: The Biggest Party of the Season
   ABRA 9: The Grey Lady
   RUTHIE 9: Some Photo Opportunities and a Goose
   JACQUELINE 11: Arbeitsjuden Verbraucht
   MURRAY 4: The Agon
   BERNICE 9: Taps
   DANIEL 8: White for Carriers, Black for Battleships
   NAOMI 9: Belonging
   JACQUELINE 12: Whither Thou Goest
   ABRA 10: When the Lights Come on Again
   RUTHIE 10: A Killing Frost
   LOUISE 11: Open, Sesame
   MURRAY 5: An Extra Death
   JACQUELINE 13: Tunneling
   DANIEL 9: Lost and Found
   BERNICE 10: Some Changes Made
   LOUISE 12: The Second Gift
   RUTHIE 11: The Harvest
   JACQ 
					     					 			UELINE 14: L’Chaim
   ABRA 11: The View from Tokyo
   NAOMI 10: Flee as a Bird to Your Mountain
   AFTER WORDS: Acknowledgments, a complaint or two and many thanks
   About the Author
   LOUISE 1
   A Talent for Romance
   Louise Kahan, aka Annette Hollander Sinclair, sorted her mail in the foyer of her apartment. An air letter from Paris. “You have something from your aunt Gloria,” she called to Kay, who was curled up in her room listening to swing music, pretending to do her homework but being stickily obsessed with boys. Louise knew the symptoms but she had never learned the cure, not in her case, certainly not in her daughter’s. Kay did not answer; presumably she could not hear over the thump of the radio.
   Personal mail for Mrs. Louise Kahan in one pile. The family stuff, invitations. An occasional faux pas labeled Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Kahan. Where have you been for the past two years? Then the mail for Annette Hollander Sinclair in two stacks: one for business correspondence about rights, radio adaptations, a contract with Doubleday from her agent Charley for the collection of stories Hidden from His Sight. Speaking engagements, club visits, an interview Wednesday.
   The second pile for Annette was fan mail, ninety-five percent from women. Finally a few items for plain Louise Kahan: her Daily Worker, reprints of a Masses and Mainstream article she had written on the Baltimore shipyard strike, a book on women factory workers from International Publishers for her to review, William Shirer’s Berlin Diary.
   Also in that pile were the afternoon papers. Normally she would pick them up first, but she could not bring herself to do so. Europe was occupied by the Nazis from sea to sea, an immense prison. Everywhere good people and old friends were shot against walls, tortured in basements, carted off to camps about which rumors were beginning to appear to be more than rumor.
   She leaned on the wall of the foyer, gathering energy to resume her life, to walk into the emotional minefield that lately seemed to constitute her relationship with Kay. The foyer was the darkest room of the suite, for the living room, her office and Kay’s bedroom enjoyed views of the Hudson River, and her own bedroom and the dining room looked down on Eighty-second Street. She had lightened the hall with a couple of cleverly placed mirrors and the big bold Miró with the spotlight on it, which she contemplated now, seeking gaiety, wit, light.
   The talk she had given two hours before had bored her, if not her audience. Passing the shops hung with tinsel, she found Christmas harder to take than usual. The world was burning to ash and bone, and all her countrymen could think of was Donald Duck dressed in a Santa Claus suit. She ought to cross town to the East Side soon to get lekvar for a confection she liked to bake at Chanukah, a Hungarian-Jewish treat her mother had made, but the shop that had it was in German Yorkville. She needed a belligerent mood to brave the swastikas openly displayed, the Nazi films playing in the movie theaters, Sieg im Westen, Victory in the West, the German-American Bund passing out anti-Semitic tracts on the corners.
   Next to the mail was a list of phone calls, scrawled when Kay had taken them: Ed from the Lecture Bureau called. Call him tomorrow A.M. He sounds bothered.
   Some lunatic called about how she wants you to write her life story.
   Daddy called.
   The notes from her secretary Blanche or her housekeeper Mrs. Shaunessy were neater:
   Mr. Charles Bannerman, 11:30. He wants to know if the contracts came.
   Mr. Kahan, 2:30. He is in his office at Columbia.
   Mr. Dennis Winterhaven, at 3, said he would call back.
   Miss Dorothy Kilgallen called about interviewing you December 12.
   Oscar had called twice. She tried to treat that as a casual occurrence, but nothing between them would ever be reduced to the affectless, she knew by now. At the simple decision that she must return his call, her heart perceptibly increased its flowthrough, damned traitorous pump. She cleaned up the business calls first, straightening out her schedule, glancing at the contracts and initialing where she was supposed to initial and signing where she was supposed to sign. She certainly could use the money.
   She also decided she would talk to Kay before taking on her ex-husband. She knocked. At fifteen she had longed for privacy with a passion she could still remember. She granted Kay the sovereignty of her room, although it took restraint. Louise knew herself to be an anxious parent. She wanted to be closer to Kay again, as close as they had been when Kay was younger, even as she knew Kay needed to assert her independence. Somewhere was the right tone, the right voice, the right touch to ease that soreness.
   “Gosh, that’s an Annette hat!” Kay said. She was sprawled on the floor, all legs and elbows and extra joints in a pleated skirt that was rapidly losing its pleats and an oversized shirt in which her barely developed body was lost, as if dissolved. She turned down the radio automatically when Louise came in.
   Louise touched the hat: a cartwheel in pink and black, with a loop of veil over the eyes. “I was addressing a literary club in Oyster Bay.”
   “Literary?” Kay screeched. “What do they want with you?”
   “That’s what they call themselves, but they aren’t reading Thomas Mann.” Unpinning the hat, she balanced it on two fingers, twirling it. She stepped out of her high heels and sank in the rocking chair to massage her tired feet. “Did your daddy say what he wanted, Kay?”
   Kay giggled. “I told him about my essay and he practically wrote it for me on the phone.”
   “I’m sure that was very helpful,” Louise said, tasting the vinegar in her voice. “Did he volunteer anything else?”
   Kay shrugged. Clearly she did not care to share the riches of a private conversation with her father.
   Louise remembered. “Here’s a letter for you from your aunt Gloria.”
   Gloria, Oscar’s sister, had been caught by the outbreak of war in Paris. Gloria was Kay’s favorite aunt, the glamorous other she longed to be: a chic black-haired beauty who worked as a stringer reporting French fashions for stateside magazines. Gloria, like Oscar, had been born in Pittsburgh, but the only steel remaining was in her will. Louise admired her sister-in-law’s willpower and her style, although Gloria had no politics besides opportunism and had married a vacuous Frenchman with more money than sense and more pride than money.
   Gloria took her aunt’s duties seriously. She was childless, for her French husband, some twenty years her senior, had grown children who obviously preferred that he propagate no more. As Kay knocked through a rocky adolescence, Gloria sent her inappropriate presents (either too childish—stuffed bears—or sophisticated beaded sweaters) and anecdotal letters, which Kay cherished.
   Now Louise stirred herself, sighing. She brushed a cake crumb from the skirt of her rose wool suit and looked at herself in Kay’s mirror. “You look elegant, Mommy. Why are you still dressed up? Are you going out again?”
   “No, darling, not a step. I just wanted to check in with you.” She did look reasonably soignée, her complexion rosy above the rose suit, her hair well cut, close to the sides of her oval face whose best feature was still its finely chiseled bones and whose second best feature was the big grey eyes set off by auburn hair. Louise had always taken for granted being attractive to men; it was a given, not worth much consideration, but an advantage she could count on. Now she examined her looks warily, as she did her bank account each month. Expenses were high for their fatherless establishment, and the cost of living could write itself quickly on the face of a woman of thirty-eight. Little vanity was involved. She reasoned that when an advantage was lost, it was well to take that into account. But the mirror assured her she remained attractive, if that was of any use.
   When she thought of marrying again, she wondered where she would put a man. After Oscar had walked out, she and Kay and Mrs. Shaunessy and her secretary Blanche had quickly filled the space. She would not give up having an office to work in, never again satisfy herself with a dainty secretary in a corner of the bedroom behind a screen. She smiled at the 
					     					 			 reflection she was no longer seeing, thinking how that setup was a symbol of the way she had had to pursue her work in a corner while living with Oscar. Everything had been subordinated to him at all times.
   “Mother! You use that mirror more than I do.”
   She realized Kay was sitting with Gloria’s letter unopened in her lap, waiting for her to leave so that she could engorge it in private. Feeling shut out, Louise departed at once. Supper would be better. She and Kay would talk at supper, for often that was their best time. She would turn her afternoon into a string of funny stories to make Kay laugh, then ask her about school and her friends. She was always courting her daughter lately. She had to restrain herself from buying too many presents, but maybe Saturday they could go shopping together, in the afternoon. She could remember their intimacy when she had known all Kay’s hopes and wishes and fears by heart, when she had held Kay and sung to her, “You Are My Sunshine,” and meant it. Her precious sun child whose life would be entirely different, safer and better than her own, poor and battered, growing up.
   Now she could not put off calling Oscar. She thought of questioning Mrs. Shaunessy about his exact words, but her procrastination and anxiety were not yet totally out of control. Door shut, she put her bedroom telephone on her lap, then changed her mind and decided to call him on her office phone. Desk to desk. That felt safer. Louise sat in her swivel chair looking with satisfaction on the little kingdom of work she had created and then reluctantly she dialed Oscar’s number at his Columbia University office.
   “Oscar? It’s Louise. You called?”
   “Louie! How are you. Just a moment.” He spoke off-line. The voices continued for several moments while she sat grimacing with impatience. “Sorry to keep you waiting, but I wanted to pack off my assistant to the outer office.”
   “Assistant what?”
   “I’m running an interview project on German refugees. I have a student of mine interviewing the men, and a young lady of Blumenthal’s who’s going to start on the females. How are you, Louie? I spoke to Kay earlier. We had a quite intelligent conversation about the meaning of democracy.”
   “Kay said you’d blocked out her essay for her over the phone.”
   “Isn’t the news rotten these days? I turn on the radio expecting to hear that Moscow has fallen.”
   “They’re fighting in the suburbs. I keep waiting for the legendary Russian winter to do its historic task and freeze out the Nazis—”