Review of the Way It Ends by Ted Jacobs in Scarsdale Inquirer

Click Here to Read:  Review of the Way it Ends in the Scarsdale Inquirer.  

Ted Jacobs’s new novel, The Way it Ends, grips the reader from its opening pages. Jacobs’s protagonist Dr. Strickman, a psychoanalyst turned amateur gumshoe, sets off to uncover how his brother died–murder or suicide? A subplot of Israeli Palestinian conflict masterfully adds depth and tension to this engaging, dark and, yet, humorous tale.
—KERRY MALAWISTA, PHD author of the novel, Meet the Moon.

“A great read that touches the heart. As moving as it is intriguing.”
—ANDREW POTOK, author of Ordinary Daylight

THEODORE J. JACOBS, MD is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Emeritus, at The Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Training and Supervising Analyst at The New York Psychoanalytic Institute and The Institute for Psychoanalytic Education where he is also a child supervising analyst.

Dr. Jacobs attended Yale University (BA) with a major in English, and The University of Chicago School of Medicine, MD, 1957. He took his training in psychoanalysis (adult and child) at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute and his psychiatric residency at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. He is the author of Communication in the Analytic Situation and The Possible Profession: The Analytic Process of Change, 70 papers, his first novel The Year of Durocher, and also republished The Use of the Self: Countertransference and Communication in the Analytic Situation with IPBooks. He is on the editorial board of several analytic journals.

Poetry Monday: April 3, 2023

Remembering Gwendolyn Brooks

Good morning, everyone.

Some of our regular readers may remember meeting Gwendolyn Brooks in this column back in 2015, but it seems appropriate to remember her once again, as she shouldn’t ever be forgotten.  Also, this, as you may know, is National Poetry Month here in the U.S., a time when many readers may, we always hope, at least glance through a book of poetry or even take one up to the cash register. It’s also a year when, looking back, we realize how many fine poets, well-known and lesser-known, we have lost recently – almost an entire “greatest generation.” Now I would like to look back a bit further, to share some very personal memories of a poet who became much more to me than someone I encountered only on the page.

First, a brief biography. Born in Topeka, Kansas in 1917 and with no more than a high school and junior college education, she became the first African-American to win a Pulitzer Prize, which was awarded for her book, Annie Allen. Later she was one of the only women and the first Black woman to become Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress, a position now known as Poet Laureate.

But here’s what I remember, other than the powerful impact her poems always had on me. My husband and I driving down to New York City from our home n Princeton, New Jersey, to pick her up at Penn Station in the mid nineteen-eighties. At that time I was curating a reading series for the Arts Council of Princeton (the town, not the University). She was to be our next reader, and we were sharing her with the university. She had taken the train from Chicago, because she would never fly.

What I hadn’t realized is how much she would have with her, but I soon found out when I trotted down to get her as her train doors opened. I picked up her two suitcases and almost fell to the floor. “Books!” she said, when I asked her what was in them. “I always travel with books.” Later I learned that she also traveled with peanut butter and crackers, in case her hosts forgot that she should be fed as well as feted, which of course we didn’t.

I had reserved a room for her at the Nassau Inn, and after we checked in, went up to help her get settled and was surprised at how small the room was.  She gave a marvelous reading that evening, and I called her the next morning to thank her again and to apologize for the room. “Oh, but I love this little room,” she said, explaining that she was tucked up cozily in bed, reading and surrounded by books. We said goodbye, and she was picked up by a representative from the university group for her afternoon reading.

The next time I saw her was at the Dodge Poetry Festival in September 2000, which at that time was still held in Waterloo, New Jersey. She was the featured reader and, because the festival was especially targeted but not exclusively attended by an audience of high school teachers and students, she began by reading poems that had been written by youngsters. She extolled them, and insisted that we listen carefully to how much these young people had achieved, before she went on to read her own poems. This was not an act. This was who she was, as I learned more forcefully a few weeks later, when she was the first poet to read in a new series I curated with local poet and English department chair Hilary Russell at Berkshire School in Sheffield, Massachusetts.

This time she came by both train and bus.  My husband and I picked her up in Pittsfield and put her up at a small bed and breakfast near the prep school campus. Again I went upstairs to settle her in, and found the room to be quite chilly. Since I lived in nearby Great Barrington then, I drove home to get her a sweater of mine-a warm one that wrapped around her at least twice. She seemed to be much more frail than I had remembered.

Her reading was the next evening, and it was preceded by a question-and-answer session with teachers and students in a lecture room that afternoon, which as customary for our visiting poets. That night she again read brilliantly and was given a standing ovation by a full house of mostly white prep school boys in navy blazers. The poem they seemed to respond to most powerfully was “The Mother,” which can move even those who don’t agree with its premise to tears.  Billed as lasting from seven to nine p.m., with the reading followed by a q. and a. and book-signing, that evening lasted till 11:30 pm. as students queued up to talk to her and get their books signed. I discreetly tried to pry her away, because she was 83 and frail, had a reading at Smith College in Northampton the next day and I felt responsible for getting her there safely – but she wouldn’t budge until the very last student had reached her. That was who she was. She loved students, and they loved her.

She gave back my sweater. We saw to it that she got fed. I don’t think she had to eat her peanut butter. I remember that my husband and I took her to dinner in Gt. Barrington the first night and that she and I had lunch at a nice little place in town on  one of those days and one more – really big thing. As we sat at lunch we looked  around the room and saw a lovely exhibit of framed small quilts. “Did you see that one?” I said, pointing to one in red, white and blue, with horizontal rows of Black men in Uncle Sam pants and top hats.

“Oh!” she said. “You saw that, and I didn’t!” Then she gestured for the waitress. “How much is that?” she said, taking out her checkbook.  She wrote a check, then, after the waitress took the quilt down from the wall and handed it to her, Gwendolyn handed it to me.  “This is for you.”

Overwhelmed by the gesture and in love with her and the little quilt, I said, “Why are you doing this?”

“Because you’re so good to me,” she said.

Gwendolyn Brooks died a month or two later. She was still 83.

The quilt is hanging on the wall outside my study in Lenox.

Here is a link to my favorite poem by Gwendolyn Brooks, “The Lovers of the Poor.” If you have time, you may also want to read “The Bean Eaters,” “Kitchenette Building” and “Sadie and Maud.”

            –Irene Willis
             Poetry Editor

Click  Here to Read:  The Lovers of the Poor on the Poetry Foundation website.

Click Here to Read: The Bean Eaters on the American Academy of Poets website.

Click Here to Read: Kitchenette Building on the Poetry Foundation website.

Click Here to Read: Sadie and Maud on the Poetry Foundation website.

How the Great Depression shaped people’s DNA

Click Here to Read: How the Great Depression shaped people’s DNA: Epigenetics study finds that children born during the historic recession have markers of accelerated ageing later in life by Freda Kreier on the Nature website on November 21, 2022.

Unemployed men queued outside a depression soup kitchen opened in Chicago by Al Capone, 1931 Image: National Archives at College Park  Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division  Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Of Fear and Strangers with presenter George Makari, M.D at NYPSI

NYPSI’s 1051st Scientific Meeting:  Of Fear and Strangers with presenter George Makari, M.D. and discussant Sander Gilman, Ph.D. Of Fear and Strangers Presenter: George Makari, M.D. Discussant: Sander Gilman, Ph.D.

The second in a series of three meetings devoted to the notion of conflict, both small-scale and large-scale, intra-institutional and inter-national.

Tuesday, November 9, 2021 | 8:00 – 10:00 pm (EST) (Held Virtually on ZOOM)

$35 – General Admission $25 – Student Admission No charge for NYPSI members and students Register HERE, visit  nypsi.org or call 212.879.6900 Continue reading Of Fear and Strangers with presenter George Makari, M.D at NYPSI