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The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: The Spring by Megan Weiler


This selection, chosen by guest editor Joey Gould, is from The Spring by Megan Weiler (JackLeg Press 2022).

I: Summer 1996
1

(excerpt)

I finish unloading the car, carry my suitcase and my satchel filled with books and notebooks upstairs. Sealed up in one of the steamer trunks I find clean sheets, pillows, and a blanket smelling of mothballs. I make up the bed in the largest bedroom, with its sloping roof beams that are like the ribbing of an enormous wing.

As a child, I had mixed feelings about this place. We used to come several times a year, driving down from Germany. I didn’t share my parents’ enthusiasm for working on the house, for stripping wood and painting and digging drainage ditches. I sometimes wished that we could have spent our vacations on a beach or in the mountains like other people.

But now an emotion fills me as I move through the rooms—like coming home. Or rather, it’s as though I’d never left; as if, throughout all the changes in my life, in some part of my brain I have always been here.

I go back down to the kitchen and make strong coffee using bottled water. I heat milk on the gas burner, frothing it with a whisk. I cut slices of bread from the big loaf I’ve bought and spread them with jam. I eat my meal outside on the terrace, a rectangle of lichen-covered stones facing west. In the stillness, I hear a mockingbird and a woodpecker on the hill above the house, and then a human cry somewhere in the distance below. Probably Renato shouting to his son Lorenzo, as they work together on a field.


Megan Weiler was born in Philadelphia and grew up in Konstanz, Germany. She returned to America after high school and studied English literature at Bryn Mawr College and Yale. She has held many different jobs while writing, from serving beer to the yodeling club in Altnau, Switzerland, to helping foreign nationals in Philadelphia with immigration procedures and applications for political asylum. Her first novel, The Night Bell, was published in 2001 by Picador UK. Her stories and excerpts have appeared in Mississippi Review, Nimrod, and Common Knowledge. She lives with her husband in Nashville.


Joey Gould, who is Sundress Academy for the Arts Spring 2024 Writer in Residence, wrote The Acute Avian Heart (2019, Lily Poetry Review) & Penitent>Arbiter (2022, Lily Poetry Review), while their recent work has appeared or is forthcoming in Meow Meow Pow PowMiniskirt Magazine, & Persephone’s Fruit. They also serve as Poetry Editor for Drunk Monkeys.

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