Slog

News & Arts

The Stranger Suggests

Critics' Best Bets
Music Arts & Food


Line Out

Music & the City
at Night

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Poet Missing

Posted by on Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 5:47 PM

Slog tipper Eric forwarded this e-mail to me. In order to save time, I'm going to run it as-is, in the hopes that it will get forwarded.

I'm writing because a dear friend of mine and an exceptionally talented poet, Craig Arnold, whom some of you know, has gone missing on a small volcanic island in Japan while on a creative exchange fellowship. Craig, an experienced explorer of volcanoes, never returned to his inn after leaving alone to research the island's active volcano for the afternoon. The authorities are on the third day of searching for Craig, and are scouring the small island (of only 160 inhabitants) with dogs and helicopters. If he is not found by the end of the day, the authorities will call off the search.

We need your help to insure that the search will continue. The island and areas surrounding the volcano are small enough that an extended search will surely lead to Craig's discovery. WE NEED PEOPLE TO CONTACT THEIR LOCAL CONGRESSPEOPLE AND SENATORS TO PRESSURE THE JAPANESE STATE DEPARTMENT TO CONTINUE THE SEARCH. WE ALSO NEED HELP SPARKING MEDIA ATTENTION FOR THIS STORY, WHICH WE ALSO HOPE MIGHT INCREASE PRESSURE ON JAPANESE AUTHORITIES TO FIND CRAIG

Please take a minute to contact your senator and congressperson via telephone or even email to explain this problem and insist on their help. A phone call is best, but even a short note ia your representative's Internet site might help.

We are so hoping to find Craig today, God-willing not seriously injured. If so, this will not be an issue, but we must ensure that if this isn't resolved today, Craig doesn't end up an unsolved mystery. He is too important to too many people, not to mention to arts and letter generally, for this to happen.

We appreciate your help, good wishes and prayers.

More information about the incident is after the jump.

Craig Arnold, Ph.D., is the author of two award-winning volumes of poetry: Shells, chosen by W.S. Merwin for the Yale Series of Young Poets in 1999, and of Made Flesh (Ausable, 2008). His poetry has been anthologized in several volumes of the Best American Poetry Series, and his poems, articles, and translations from the Spanish have appeared in such publications as The New Republic, Paris Review, Poetry Magazine, Yale Review, and many more. He is the recipient of numerous prestigious awards and honors, including a Fulbright Fellowship, the Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Alfred Hodder Fellowship in Humanities from Princeton University, an Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Scholarship, and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Dr. Arnold did his B.A. at Yale University and received his Ph.D. from the University of Utah. He is presently an Assistant Professor at the University of Wyoming. Craig is currently in Japan with the U.S.-Japan Friendship Commission's U.S.-Japan Creative Artists Exchange Fellowship and has been missing since April 26th (evening Monday April 27th Japanese time).

THE DETAILS:

Monday April 27th (Japanese time) he arrived with the 2:50 pm municipal ferry from Yakusima on the island of Kuchino-erabu and checked in to the local "Watanabe" inn, the only one on the island. He was with 2 Japanese tourists who had reservations. He did not have one. (They must have helped him check in.) He had traveled to the island to visit the volcano, as he has been working on a book on the subject of volcanoes for some time.
His plan was to stay only one night and leave the next day. (Craig has visited many volcanoes around the world in recent years as is very experienced with visiting them.)

He immediately left his 3 bags at the inn and departed around 3 pm on foot to the next village, taking only his walking sticks. He was wearing black or dark colors: long pants, a dark hat, a nylon jacket. His Japanese iPhone was on his person but has not been reachable due to inconsistent reception on the island. The exclusive provider of IPhone service, Softbank, has been contacted by the police in an attempt to utilize the built-in GPS capabilities of the phone.

At the village, someone with a car drove him to the entrance to the path leading up the mountain to the volcano. There are 4 paths to the volcano which are obvious and in good condition. He was taken to the entrance of a path next to a dam where evidence collected by the police suggests he ascended. His footprints have been found. The police have not found evidence of a return trip along that path. The area is densely forested until reaching the summit area, caldera, of the volcano where there is little vegetation.

The police stated that the path to that area is clear but that finding the path on the descent could pose problems so it is likely that he may not have found his way back to the path he entered by.

When Craig did not return to the inn by 8 pm, the inn staff searched for him by car, driving to the village. Unsuccessful, they returned to the inn and called the local fire brigade at 9 pm who responded immediately and searched until midnight.

Day 2 (Tues, April 28 JT) 5 police officers (under the direction of Mr. Kazuhara) arrived from Yakusima that morning with new assets: cars, search dogs, police persons, a helicopter. 40 total persons now working on this: 30 local fire reserve persons and 10 police persons and officials. They searched the trail he took but did not complete an exhaustive search of all 4 trails. One individual climbed all the way to the top. The area was circled several times by the helicopter and they also flew around the coastline. I contacted them directly at the end of the 2nd search day: 6:30pm. (5:30 am this morning, Wed April 29th U.S. time). They were debriefing and planning for day 3, with a plan to concentrate on the possible alternative paths down from the volcano that he may have taken by mistake and the surrounding area.

Day 3, the official required last day of the search, begins tonight. They are only required by law to search for 3 days. Extension procedures must be arranged with Mr. Kawahigashi and may require payment. Other than the helicopter, no higher level assets have been deployed at this time. Since the focus is on a "boots-on-the-ground" search and rescue (the forest makes visibility from the air limited) more people should be deployed immediately to assist.

 

Comments (18) RSS

Oldest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a comment
1
Do we actually know this is real, unlike say every other email about some missing person or another?
Posted by sgiffy on April 29, 2009 at 5:57 PM
Posted by j on April 29, 2009 at 6:29 PM
3
Good question. I talked with his brother on the phone, and I believe it's on the up-and-up.

I weighed the options and decided that I'd rather look like a gullible asshole with the slight chance that I'm wrong than not post this.

Posted by Paul Constant on April 29, 2009 at 6:32 PM
4
poetry foundation has it on their blog. sadly i think this is true.
Posted by j on April 29, 2009 at 6:37 PM
5
"The island and areas surrounding the volcano are small enough that an extended search will surely lead to Craig's discovery."

Surely? I mean let's say he falls in the volcano and is incinerated. No extended search will find him.

I mean I'm theoretically all for finding the guy, but really don't like seeing these things drag on in the media. Three days is kinda short, but starting a letter writing campaign to pressure a foreign nation into finding one of our citizens is kinda weird, ESPECIALLY WITH SO MUCH CAPS.

That said, hope they find the guy. The blog is extremely good, and I can only imagine his collections are much better still.
Posted by Jason Petersen on April 29, 2009 at 6:54 PM
6
This was part of the second-to-last entry on the blog linked above:

"Danger has a way of cutting through melancholy, the real fear blinding you to the fear dimly imagined. If you could only always just have escaped death, you would never be sad again."

Maybe he was looking for that way to never be sad again.
Posted by ak47 on April 29, 2009 at 8:31 PM
7
wow, I live on one of the islands near there. We have bad snakes, hope he is ok. A big shame he was using a softbank phone, they really don't work very well in the islands compared to the other companies.
Posted by weevz on April 29, 2009 at 9:21 PM
8
I hit up Murray, Cantwell and McDermott. Here's hoping the dude's OK
Posted by Jubilation T. Cornball on April 29, 2009 at 9:23 PM
9
@3 Ok that seem good enough for me. It does read like yet another scam chain letter though, but I think talking to his brother is sufficient verification.
Posted by sgiffy on April 29, 2009 at 10:50 PM
10
This is real. I work in a different department at Wyoming and found out about this today when a colleague in English forwarded it on. It's very scary and we all hope Craig is found okay.
Posted by KJ on April 29, 2009 at 10:58 PM
11
paul and/or eric, please give me money so that i can fly to japan on your dime and bolo in a relevant environment. +$150 per diem is also required for my services.
Posted by mb on April 30, 2009 at 2:45 AM
12
http://findcraigarnold.blogspot.com/2009…

nobody is asking for money or anything here. this is no scam and this is no joke. help find craig arnold if you can.
Posted by r nyc on April 30, 2009 at 5:30 AM
13
I'm impressed by that hotel's staff - he left at 3pm, they started looking for him shortly after 8pm, and had the local authorities called by 9pm. That would never happen here. Perhaps living in the shadow of a volcano boosts one's sense of danger.

I hope with all my heart that they find him today.
Posted by a happy ending, please on April 30, 2009 at 6:56 AM
14
this is not a joke. i hope to god they find him.

Posted by andy on April 30, 2009 at 7:50 AM
15
Hope they find the guy, and that after this he remembers about the buddy system.
Posted by Greg on April 30, 2009 at 8:24 AM
16
I am a relative. This is very real.
Posted by leslie s on April 30, 2009 at 12:18 PM
17
I know Craig; this is absolutely legitimate.
Posted by prinsesstarta on April 30, 2009 at 12:42 PM
18
Reports of his disappearance have been released by major news media and the University of Wyoming, where Craig Arnold teaches in the MFA program. And his son, Robin, and friends have set up a page on Facebook, where many of us first found out.
Posted by mountaingirl on April 30, 2009 at 1:01 PM

Add a comment

Advertisement
 

All contents © Index Newspapers, LLC
1535 11th Ave (Third Floor), Seattle, WA 98122
Contact Info | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Takedown Policy