John Balaban, author of Empires (Copper Canyon Press, 2019), has written numerous other books of poetry, as well as fiction, nonfiction, and Vietnamese translations, and his work has been awarded the Academy of American Poets’ Lamont Prize, a National Poetry Series selection, and two nominations for the National Book Award. His Locusts at the Edge of Summer: New and Selected Poems won the 1998 William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America. Balaban lives with his wife and daughter in Raleigh, North Carolina, where he teaches at North Carolina State University.

Photograph by Carolla Clift.

School’s Out

A Writer’s Tribute to Libraries

by John Balaban

This was in the 1950s. Our barracks-like, World War II bungalows had been laid out in Pennsylvania farmland seized for dependent families at the Navy bases nearby. Postwar, it became cheap rentals for the urban poor drawn out from Philadelphia to the various industries: LaRosa Foods, Stanford Pressed Steel, and some nameless coffee factory that spewed its sour aroma twice a day into the local air where 200 years before a local militia fought the British.

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