All posts tagged: Aidan Cooper

Before They Traded Devers

By AIDAN COOPER

Fenway Park

Photo courtesy of author.

Boston, MA
After Frank O’Hara

Father’s Day, it’s 8 a.m. & I’m late on the road
to Boston because I drooled too much sleeping
I’m driving to a Red Sox game, yes I’ll go
because my dad at one point liked the pitcher 
& the tank’s too full to not go 

when I reach the MFA beehiving with students
I wonder what’s on & it’s Van Gogh’s Roulin Family Portraits 
& I want to park there in case I have time to peruse
but it’s 50 bucks & I’m seeing my family anyway
so I circle Huntington until I find an empty spot 
on Parker & it’s Sunday so I’m off the hook 
& I don’t thank God pay a thing

I meet Mom & Dad & Brigham (their Bronco’s on Hemenway
by the Temple Bell) & my mom asks about the jean jacket 
I bought from L-Train Vintage in Bushwick 
& about my girl haircut & I nod with the drip coffee
I got from Pavement, it’s terrible, I spill a bit
on the sidewalk & I end up with I think it looks nice
& the suspicion I might be drifting too far into an archetype
through which my mom can’t see her child but it’s okay, it’s noon
& the air’s pretty & hush here
                                                on the Fens there’s a mallard
philandering another duck 
                                           when an Irish guy says 
had to go to a funeral yesterday the other guy
looks down says oh I’m sorry & the Irish guy says it is
what it is

& later after visiting Brigham’s apartment building 
I’m in the Fenway bleachers for the first time since 2011 
when you could see the Citgo sign though now 
construction’s blocking it & everything’s smaller & below
the boys throw and catch and throw a white orb around
from up here you don’t see the ball’s red latticework
& I don’t know I’m not paying attention I’m crunching
peanut shells thinking Murakami began to write novels
because of baseball why don’t I
                                                      my dad’s grumpy 
I’m vegetarian now & didn’t want a frank & yes it’s probably
a phase he’s probably right but it’s a good phase & his friend Dale
(who came along for a signature on his mint-10 rookie card)
stands over my shoulder jabbering he wouldn’t mind being gay 
to dress how gays dress & the peanut shells speak for the floor 
whenever anyone steps

after the game (the Sox won 2-0 against the Yanks
thanks to Devers I think) I hug my dad & my mom & Brigham 
& my mom hands me the coat hangers I asked her for 
& it’s thank you I’m sorry have a safe drive
                                                                      & I get in the 
car but before going home I detour a Used Book Superstore 
30 mins away because I’ve got the time & I pick up 
a 5-dollar copy of Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley 
in Search of America because Mariana whom I’m crazy
about said her life changed & because it says “Darla
let’s travel together love Johnathon” on the inside flap

& I think about how much I think about my life changing
as the radio runs Van Morrison over the horizon rising
over the sun & it makes sense finally what Ibn al-Haytham was
saying when he said all anyone ever sees is light

a day later the Sox trade Devers for someone I’ve never seen
& I text my dad & he says he already saw on the news.

 

Aidan Cooper is a senior at Amherst College and the third annual David Applefield ’78 Fellow at The Common. They are a recent recipient of the Five College Prose and Poetry Prize.

Before They Traded Devers
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The Common Magazine Announces 2025-26 David Applefield ’78 Fellow

(Amherst, Mass.) — Award-winning, international literary journal The Common announced today that Aidan Cooper ‘26 will be the third recipient of the David Applefield ’78 Fellowship. The fellowship, the magazine’s first endowed student internship, was established in 2022 by a group of friends and family of David Applefield, a literary polymath who attended Amherst College and founded Frank, an eclectic English-language literary magazine based in Paris. 

The David Applefield ’78 Fellowship funds one student intern annually who possesses exceptional editorial and leadership skills to work alongside the magazine’s other student interns and magazine staff on editorial and promotional assignments. Among other responsibilities, the Applefield Fellow coordinates the Weekly Writes Accountability program, leads the Level I section of the Young Writers Program for high school students, and provides research and production support for podcasts. In addition, the Applefield Fellow trains and mentors other interns, and organizes events for the Amherst College community.

Headshot of Aidan Cooper

Aidan Cooper ‘26 enters the role following a year as an editorial assistant. They’re the acting President of Amherst College’s Poetry Club, Editor-in-Chief of The Lilac magazine, and a bearer of various literary positions around the college and beyond. They’re in the midst of many writing projects, from a research paper on early modern horsemanship and mercantilism begun at the Folger Shakespeare Library, to an English thesis on nothingness in avant-garde poetry.

Cooper thanks the more than fifty friends, classmates, and family members of David Applefield who contributed to the fellowship fund for their generosity and trust, as well as the magazine’s staff for their mentorship. “The Common, through its mission and care, champions such a worldly and passionate writing community,” Cooper said, “and I’m so thankful to immerse myself in it.”

 

The Common Magazine Announces 2025-26 David Applefield ’78 Fellow
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What We’re Reading: July 2024

Curated by SAM SPRATFORD

July in Western Massachusetts is a month of heightened sensation. Perceptions are focused by the burning and buzzing heat, until it bursts in its own excess, dripping or pouring from the sky. It is an excess that ferments rather than rots, and it is what makes July so intoxicating. The onset of climate change, bringing merciless humidity and monsoon weather patterns, has deepened and darkened this character. Amid this, our Editorial Assistants AIDAN COOPER, CIGAN VALENTINE, and SIANI AMMONS have been reading books that match the month’s potency: storytelling that dazzles, prose that floods and sweeps away the sane, and historical truths delivered in lightning-bolt cracks. 

What We’re Reading: July 2024
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