Guernica Magazine

How We Drink Now

Eight writers discuss drinking during lockdown.
Photograph by Thomas Hawk | CC

In my apartment in Brooklyn is a blue-and-white china vase. It once held a geranium but is now a receptacle for my wine corks, which overflow onto the lightly worn oak of my kitchen table. I assume it is still there, anyway, the corks lying scattered as they fell, as I haven’t been in that apartment since the beginning of February. For four months, I’ve been on a long and unanticipated hiatus at my mother’s home in Maryland. I came here to help her through cancer treatments, a bag of laundry in the car, anticipating months of back and forth during her long battle. But she was hospitalized three days after I arrived and I had to go on immediate leave from work. The laundry was done and packed in my trunk, where it has been ever since; the pancreatic cancer claimed her life in six short and vicious weeks. When we buried her on March 10th, the country was beginning to shutter. So I stayed, confined to and quarantining in my childhood home, forced to use my time to go through her things, our things, my family’s things, room by room, with many tears. In some ways it’s been helpful, confronting all that grief head-on. In others, it is a hell I can’t escape.

Sometime in March (who knows when; “time is a suggestion,” my aunt said when this all began and the hospital days were blurring together, a statement that fits Quarantine Time, too) I began a cork vase here, this one clear glass with a scalloped rim. I remember when it was filled with fresh cuts from my mother’s well-tended garden, sitting in the center of our old kitchen table where I am writing this now, the table around which we breakfasted and dinnered and homeworked for thirty years and more. The small vase was quickly overrun, the corks spilling onto the shelf where it bookends her cookbooks as my family and I (and eventually just I, when they went home at last) went through the supply of wine I had driven down from Brooklyn,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guernica Magazine

Guernica Magazine7 min read
“The Last Time I Came to Burn Paper”
There are much easier ways to write a debut novel, but Aube Rey Lescure has decided to have none of ease. River East, River West is an intergenerational epic, the story of a single family whose lives span a period of sweeping cultural change in China
Guernica Magazine10 min read
Black Wing Dragging Across the Sand
The next to be born was quite small, about the size of a sweet potato. The midwife said nothing to the mother at first but, upon leaving the room, warned her that the girl might not survive. No one seemed particularly concerned; after all, if she liv
Guernica Magazine13 min read
The Jaws of Life
To begin again the story: Tawny had been unzipping Carson LaFell’s fly and preparing to fit her head between his stomach and the steering wheel when the big red fire engine came rising over the fogged curve of the earth. I saw it but couldn’t say any

Related Books & Audiobooks