
|
Los Angeles City Guides
|
Article History
BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Madeleine Mysko stares into the distance of 40 years from the window of her writing room in Towson and sees young men burned so bad their limbs have to be amputated.
She sees herself as a 23-year-old Army nurse fresh out of training at Mercy Hospital, the former Madeleine Seipp, no more than a girl.
A poet trained in the hard science of medicine, Mysko looks out toward the old Indian trail called Joppa Road and knows that fiction is the lie that tells the greater truth.
“That was a great surprise to me,” she said of her journey as a writer.
More than three decades after the fall of Saigon — after years of “bottling up” what happened in Vietnam, of not finding the courage to go to pay respects to the Wall — Mysko has written about her experiences at the Fort Sam Houston Army hospital in San Antonio.
The result is her debut novel “Bringing Vincent Home,” released this past October by Plain View Press of Austin, Texas.
“At 23 I was tending to the deaths and mutilated bodies of kids who were the age my boys are now,” said Mysko, a mother of four who has taken to the streets in quiet protest of the war in Iraq. “I wanted to tell the story of the people I took care of. This is the book I had to write.”
So why not a memoir, just the facts ma’am?
“By releasing myself from the worries about remembering exactly how it really was, I tended the story in a way that was somehow more pure,” said Mysko, who wrestled the facts of the experience 15 years ago and failed.
“It's not really my story anyway,” she said. “It's larger than that.”
The tale begins with the mother of a soldier in Vietnam, frying chicken when the phone rings. It's the Army calling. Her son Vincent was being shipped from Southeast Asia to the burn ward at Fort Sam Houston. The only thing worse than a call is when officers come to the door.
“And I remember staring at the flame under the old black skillet, thinking about the pain of just one little spit of grease on the forearm. I had no idea where Vincent had been burned — his arms, his hands, his face? I only knew I had to get to wherever he was, and see for myself.”
And thus, Kitty Duvall finds an old suitcase and heads for San Antonio to bring her beloved home to their Gardenville neighborhood in Northeast Baltimore.
If there is a soundtrack for this novel, it would be the song “John Brown” by Bob Dylan. Look around for the version by the Staple Singers with the stately Pop Staples on lead vocals. Then sit down and cry.
“When I asked a Vietnam vet in Baltimore to read the manuscript I asked if I got the details right,” said Mysko, whose father served on an aircraft carrier during World War II.
“He said, 'You don't think I remember, do you?' I was traumatized, you were traumatized.' ”
A contemporary of Mysko in the business of spinning truth from the lies of Vietnam is Tim O’Brien — they are both 61 — one of the finest novelists alive.
The author of “The Things They Carried,” and “In the Lake of the Woods,” among other novels, O’Brien almost never promotes other people's books. But the National Book Award winner took the time to give a quote for the back of “Bringing Vincent Home.”
“Rarely does a book of any sort touch me as this one did,” wrote O’Brien, who pulled duty as a foot soldier in Quang Ngai in 1969.
In the autumn of 2000, I interviewed O’Brien at Texas State University in San Marcos where he teaches. At the time, Bill Clinton became the first president to visit Vietnam since the war.
Vietnam, said O’Brien, “is the backyard where my generation spent its bad childhood.”
The childhood of everyone connected, however indirectly, to the 58,152 Americans who died there. Like Mysko, O’Brien took up storytelling — the lie that tells the truth — to deal with the horror.
“As a boy, I practiced magic but discovered it was trickery,” he said. “Why not someday use my wand to wake up the dead? So I took up a new hobby — writing stories."
Mysko at Minas Gallery, Ivy Book Shop
Madeleine Mysko will read from her novel "Bringing Vincent Home" at 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Minas Gallery, 815 West 36th St. in Hampden. Also on the bill are Savannah Schroll Guz and Joseph Young. The event is free. For information, call 410-732-4258. On Saturday, Jan. 26 — from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. — Mysko will sign copies of "Bringing Vincent Home" at the Ivy Book Shop, 6080 Falls Road in the Lake Falls Village Shopping Center. For information, call 410-377-2966.
Rafael Alvarez is an author and screenwriter based in Baltimore and Los Angeles. His books — fiction, journalism and essays — include “The Fountain of Highlandtown” and “Storyteller.” He can be reached at ralvarez@baltimoreexaminer.com.
Not ranked |
EMAIL ME THIS STORY |
ARTICLE HISTORY |
Sports
Business |
Real Estate Family Movies and Books Venues, Sports and Music Concerts, Artists and Tickets Be Inspired - Quotes and Stories |
Comments from Examiner Readers
1:43 PM MST on Fri., May. 9, 2008 re: "Robbed of his life’s purpose, this sailor becomes lost at life"
Report as inappropriate
7:30 PM MST on Mon., May. 5, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
7:01 AM MST on Mon., May. 5, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
6:54 AM MST on Sun., May. 4, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
8:30 AM MST on Sat., May. 3, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
6:19 PM MST on Fri., May. 2, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
1:28 PM MST on Fri., May. 2, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
10:02 AM MST on Fri., May. 2, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
7:20 AM MST on Fri., May. 2, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
4:57 AM MST on Wed., Apr. 30, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
8:34 AM MST on Mon., Apr. 28, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
5:06 AM MST on Mon., Apr. 28, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
10:24 PM MST on Sat., Apr. 26, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
2:51 PM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
2:48 PM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
2:47 PM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
11:49 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008
re: "Robbed of his life’s purpose, this sailor becomes lost at life"
Report as inappropriate
10:23 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
6:58 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
4:56 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 25, 2008
re: "Highlandtown hot dogs — from the heart"
Report as inappropriate
3:58 PM MST on Tue., Apr. 22, 2008
re: "Rotary’s commitment to peace"
Report as inappropriate
1:58 PM MST on Tue., Apr. 22, 2008
re: "Rotary’s commitment to peace"
Report as inappropriate
1:12 PM MST on Sat., Apr. 19, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
9:34 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 18, 2008
re: "Rotary’s commitment to peace"
Report as inappropriate
7:42 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 18, 2008
re: "Rotary’s commitment to peace"
Report as inappropriate
7:19 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 18, 2008
re: "Rotary’s commitment to peace"
Report as inappropriate
6:05 PM MST on Tue., Apr. 15, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
12:12 PM MST on Mon., Apr. 14, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
11:36 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 11, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
11:32 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 11, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
10:15 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 11, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
9:35 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 11, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
7:35 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 11, 2008
re: "Centennial quilt patches together Linthicum’s suburban history"
Report as inappropriate
10:26 PM MST on Wed., Apr. 9, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
8:30 PM MST on Sun., Apr. 6, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
10:03 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 4, 2008
re: "Once lost, an old sailor has found his bearings"
Report as inappropriate
9:27 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 4, 2008
re: "Once lost, an old sailor has found his bearings"
Report as inappropriate
6:52 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 4, 2008
re: "Once lost, an old sailor has found his bearings"
Report as inappropriate
5:20 AM MST on Fri., Apr. 4, 2008
re: "Once lost, an old sailor has found his bearings"
Report as inappropriate
7:20 PM MST on Mon., Mar. 31, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
2:34 PM MST on Sun., Mar. 30, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
5:57 PM MST on Sat., Mar. 29, 2008
re: "Fan keeps museum dream alive"
Report as inappropriate
5:56 PM MST on Sat., Mar. 29, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
5:55 PM MST on Sat., Mar. 29, 2008
re: "Fan keeps museum dream alive"
Report as inappropriate
1:15 PM MST on Sat., Mar. 29, 2008
re: "Fan keeps museum dream alive"
Report as inappropriate
9:19 AM MST on Sat., Mar. 29, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
7:01 AM MST on Sat., Mar. 29, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
10:20 AM MST on Fri., Mar. 28, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
8:57 AM MST on Fri., Mar. 28, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
5:32 AM MST on Fri., Mar. 28, 2008
re: "Hope springs eternal, except in Birdland"
Report as inappropriate
Storyteller Groupie said:
word is that Alvarez will ride again!
1 agree | 0 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Frieda said:
What's all this about somebody eating the Eastpoint Mall penguins?
2 agree | 0 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
Why don't my "I agree" votes count? I have tried to agree with Shorty, with Rafaelfanclub and the other Examiner Readers who all think Alvarez is an asset. But none of my votes show up. Makes me think only the "I disagree" votes are getting through... hmmmm We need a recount!
3 agree | 33 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Shorty said:
Best hot dog scribe in the biz.
5 agree | 19 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Rafaelfanclub said:
One less reason to read the newspaper.
4 agree | 8 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
He is the very best writer they will ever have! Do they not realize what a treasure they had in Alvarez?
3 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
denniskleen said:
I have heard that they have canceled his column. It was the best column here I think. Will really miss it!! Please bring it back!
6 agree | 9 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Big John said:
Where's my hot dog?
3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
Where is Rafael's column today?
4 agree | 1 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
This is the best writing about hot dogs I think I've seen anywhere. Keep 'em coming, Ralph.
7 agree | 18 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
This is the best writing being done anywhere in Baltimore right now. The Examiner is setting a standard for all the other publications to follow. Your readers thank you and I can tell by all these comments on Rafael Alvarez's columns that they look forward to his writing each week.
2 agree | 8 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
Mr. Baltimore is like the Tony Orlando or the Slim Whitman of Baltimore--singing the heartfelt songs that inspire us to go on in the face of Crabtown's idio-syncrasy.
32 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
Bless you, Mr. Baltimore.
2 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Unnamed Source said: said:
The doggies, not the penguins!
3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Big Joe said:
Why would anybody want to eat the poor little penguins?
2 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I can't wait to read more about hot dogs.
19 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
no wonder the former mrs. alvarez left him. there WERE penguins there. men never listen.
3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
There were penguins at Eastpoint shopping center long before it became a mall. They were there for years.
3 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
yes, presumptuous, George would be the Greek name one would think of, not Gregory! This newspaper comes to my doorstep, and I have heard it is because my neighborhood is "preferred" and we will patronize the advertisers? Well, it's the storytelling columinst Alvarez who will persuade me to try out his preferred Coney Island hot dog.
2 agree | 1 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
presumptuous Hellenists?
3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I can't wait to read more about the Rotary.
18 agree | 15 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
Why do you make it so hard to find Alvarez's column? What, you don't want to attract more readers?
5 agree | 10 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
i know the Janis girls. i just met them recently at my best friend's Laurie's son's wedding. They are all happy,like to dance and are doing well.
3 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
looks like Jimmy is in trouble again.
4 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Kermit T. said:
What I want to know is: At the end of "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," James Mason as Captain Nemo gets shot near his secret hideout in the volcanic crater in the Gulf of Mexico and goes down with the Nautilus, right? But then, in the pseudo-sequel "Mysterious Island," there's Herbert Lom playing Nemo AGAIN, living alone on the island nursing a junked Nautilus in the underwater cave. How'd he pull that off? And did Nemo ever give up on his vision of world peace?
4 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
To think this great inspiration came from an ad in The Paris Review. Amazing. I'd like to know how the candidates answer the question of how they would end this awful war, too, And,as always, Alvarez's poetry is the reason why the Examiner's Friday issue is the best one of the week! "...back when a spice factory perfumed the night air above the Inner Harbor."
8 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I squandered my college years with Rafael at Loyola College during the Carter administration. I grew up just a few miles from him in a once sleepy railroad hamlet by the name of Dorsey. I wish I knew him and Loren when I was younger, however, I would not have had our long friendship any other way.
3 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
denniskleen said:
Since I found this site, I look forward to Friday even more! You don't write articles, you tell stories. Love the work!!!
8 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Master of the Technology said:
All you have to do is bookmark--or "favorite"--this page...it's faster than a speeding baklava!
4 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Cheese Doll said:
I can't wait to read more about Linthicum.
22 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
i only read the examiner on line said:
so why do you make it so hard to find the alvarez column every friday? you've got deford's mug with that stupid erroll flynn mustache but i've got to search for storyteller. for pete's sake.
4 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
He has the gift of poetry: "a short block to a bowl of lemon rice soup and a plate of dolmathes at Samos." BUT! Why can't we find a link on the front page today? I am lucky I get a paper, so I can just turn to page 6 every Friday. I never miss his column.
9 agree | 14 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
RPY said:
It's a true poet who can write a sincere ode to a suburb.
4 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Wyman Park said:
The Hopkins Blue Jays and the Baltimore Orioles have switched souls. Not sure if it's a fair trade.
3 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Amee said:
we are off to a pretty good start....i will leave it at that so i do not jinx anything!!! i HATE fair weather fans!!!
4 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
In Memory of Sonny said:
one day at a time . . .
5 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I cried because had I already read this story back in early February. Go Wain. Let's move on...
4 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
RPY said:
Thanks for this one. It's good to know Wain's still trying. Godspeed to him.
3 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
Rafael, this made me cry. You are a good man. A special person and one incredible writer!
9 agree | 9 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
It's the curse of the Nationals that done it. And they stole our beer name, to boot. Bring back Wild Bill, or a facsimile thereof.
7 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
The Bird said:
It's CBS Radio's WHFS 105.7 FM TALK, the flagship station of the Baltimore Orioles. Go to war, Miss Agnes!
7 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
A buddy of stan's buddy said:
Mr. Oktavec says you never paid for that birthday card, young man!
5 agree | 6 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Stan's Buddy said:
Alvarez hits a home run with his look back at past Oriole glories and the pessimistic future for the Birds. The fans deserve better. The ending quote by his mother says it all. I agree. Alvarez won't be suffering through another season of play by play if he tunes into WBAL radio via the internet. The Flagship Station of the Baltimore Orioles is WHFS 107.5 FM
4 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Rafael Alvarez said:
mea culpa for flubbing the radio station carrying Oriole games - it's 105.7, as thousands of you have pointed out. score it: E - utility reporter.
5 agree | 6 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Bunk said:
I always look forward to viewing Baltimore through the eyes of Rafael Alvarez - who conveys tales where truth is often stranger and always more interesting than fiction.
7 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Jeff in New Freedom said:
I feel bad for my 10 year old son & others in his age group who have never known the real Baltimore Orioles. He only knows them from the stories I have told him of my youth or by looking at the pictures, newspapers, magazines hanging on my basement wall. It is sad, I have no desire to go watch this team with him @ the Yard. I get my kicks with baseball coaching Little League now. Maybe 1 day I'll return, & hopefully the Dreaded Angelos family will no longer own the team.
4 agree | 6 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Abner Doubleday said:
For perspective, ya gotta think back to the losing streak back in 'the 1988 season--0 and 21-- the longest losing streak in club history. It almost took a human sacrifice--Billy Ripken being beaned in the head--to break the streak. We were beyond despondent, remember? I agree with RPY: re-read "Casey at the Bat" and sit back in the sunshine, sip your $5.50 beer, and love every slow slow minute of it.
5 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
orioles fan said:
just like the beatles, half of those 4 20 game winners from 1971 are dead. bamberger is dead. belanger is dead. curt blefary is dead. the Orioles are dead.
4 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
RPY said:
I'd let him clean my toilet for free. Baseball is all about keeping faith when things look hopeless. Welcome to the new season.
4 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
M Douglass said:
Ralph - you're right, I wouldn't want a fella like that cleaning my 'turlet' - Here's to Bamby...and the Birds from way back when..(seems so long ago now..)
3 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree