Lynne Sharon Schwartz is the author of numerous books, including fiction, nonfiction, essays, poetry, and translations. Her wide-ranging body of work includes the coming-of-age novel Leaving Brooklyn; the poetry collection In Solitary; the memoir Not Now, Voyager; and the essay collection This Is Where We Came In. Schwartz is on the faculty of the Bennington Writing Seminars and lives in Manhattan.

Intimacy. Anger.

An Essay

by Lynne Sharon Schwartz

I stood on the sidewalk as the movers hauled my family’s belongings up the cement stairs fronting our new house. They were preparing to move the piano, an old black baby grand, and this promised to be dramatic. The legs had to be unscrewed and the body brought through the front casement windows of the living room, which gave onto the porch. An audience of curious neighbors had gathered to watch. In the midst of this scene I was surrounded by a clump of girls just my size, all telling me their names at once. It was my future, come to greet me. I was three and a half years old.

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