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12 or 20 (second series) questions with kathryn l. pringle

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kathryn l. pringle lives in Oakland, Ca. She is the author of fault tree (winner of Omindawn’s 1st/2nd book prize selected by CD Wright), RIGHT NEW BIOLOGY (Heretical Texts/Factory School), The Stills (Duration Press), and Temper and Felicity are lovers.(TAXT). Poems can be found in Denver Quarterly, Epiphany, Fence, Phoebe, horse less review, and other journals. Her work can also be found in Conversations at the Wartime Cafe: A Decade of War(WODV Press), I’ll Drown My Book: Conceptual Writing by Women (Les Figues), and forthcoming in The Sonnets: Rewriting Shakespeare (Nightboat Books).

1 - How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?
it calmed me down... for a couple of reasons.

1. after getting my mfa i felt this enormous pressure to get a book out... if only to justify having spent so much time and money going to grad school to be a poet. 

2. i wasn't sure there was room for my work in the publishing world. RIGHT NEW BIOLOGY ended up becoming my first book, but it wasn't my first manuscript. and i had achieved some success getting pieces of RNB published in journals... but i wasn't sure it would ever get published as a book because i thought it might be too weird. what do i know? anyway, RNB is stylistically very different from fault tree--fault tree is more narrative... but the concerns are the same: how people create and occupy space, how space can dictate action and how actions can dictate space.

2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?
i think my attraction to words as units made me a poet first. i've slowly learned the value of content-driven work and am writing a novel now. i was fascinated with the dictionary growing up so i think it would be safe to blame Merriam-Webster for my poetic aspirations.

3 - How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?
it takes me about 2 years to finish a manuscript... i first come up with a sort of grand theory for the book (ie what if sound had mass?) and then i do a lot of research [that i call writing] around my theory... so by the time i begin a ms i have a pretty good idea of its shape and aim. i draw a map of the ms before i start writing, too. [the map for RNB is in the I’ll Drown My Book, Conceptual Writing by Women anthology and the map for fault tree is overlaid on its cover] maps allow me to move in and out of the ms a little more easily. the actual writing doesn't take very much time... i think i wrote fault tree in about 5 days... but i did many months of research and reading around before i sat down to write. 

4 - Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very beginning?
i'm always working on a book. the environment of the work is pretty critical to my work so i think in terms of book, always. i wouldn't know how to begin to put discrete poems in the same book. i admire those that can.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?
public readings are totally fun and i love reading. readings help me figure out how the work is hitting an audience--or not hitting an audience. also the sound of the work is really important to me... and the rhythm... readings give me a chance to build a different kind of environment for the work. 

6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?

my writing is mainly concerned with identity [individual and/vs cultural and political] and how we form/are formed by our environments.

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?
i think writers have roles in society but i would hate to define them or make any statements about what a writer should or should not be or be doing in the larger culture. i have my preferences, of course... i know what my own role should be/is... and that's good enough for me. 

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?
not at all difficult! but i've never had an intrusive editor... if someone told me to rewrite or cut a couple of things, i'd consider it... but if they had many ideas like this i wouldn't be very happy, no. at that point the editor becomes the writer and then i just figure: put yr own name as the author.

if this novel i’m writing ever makes it into a published state… i might have a different answer for you. BUT… WITH POETRY…i think editors should tread lightly.

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?

just write.

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to critical prose)? What do you see as the appeal?
they are such different animals for me. different animals with the same philosophical intention. with poetry, my writing depends a lot on the reader's participation. with prose, my writing leaves the content assessment to the reader but is more controlling. both modes are very satisfying to my writer self.

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?
i can't afford to have a typical routine that translates into daily or even weekly writing, but often i begin with research on whatever theme i want to explore [both of my current manuscripts involve a lot of civil engineering and placemaking ideas] and read, read, read. then think. then try to make a writing weekend or mini-vacation for myself and write the book.

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?
science and philosophy.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?
grass right after it has been mown. [and then my allergies go insane and there goes the whole fond memory thing...]

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?
film, for sure. science fiction films. the film Dark City was/is hugely important to almost all of what i write. and of course, science  and architecture as mentioned above.

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?
Edward S. Casey's philosophical texts, arakawa & gins, hannah weiner, stacy doris, erika staiti, judith goldman, tyrone williams, clark coolidge, david foster wallace,  too many to name, really… but almost every person i meet influences some aspect of my writing, somehow.

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?
travel North America by rail.  one day i WILL do this. and literally WRITE the region.

17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?
i'm currently in school taking prereqs to get into physical therapy school... so... doctor of physical therapy! 

18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?
for most writers i know, they are always writing AND doing something else... so... what i want to know is: what do nonwriters do with their time? i don't understand. how do they fill in the space that writing occupies?

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?
i'm reading Infinite Jest again and loving it again. poetry: patty mccarthy's marybones; judith goldman's l.b; or, catenaries; laura walker's follow-haswed; tyrone williams's howell; andrea rexilius's half of what they carried flew away; elizabeth robinson's counterpart; erika staiti's unpublished but completely brilliant texts; and a few others. as for film... christian marclay's the clock! i couldn't/wouldn't sit through hours of it... but loved what i did sit through. was very pleased to be in L.A. when it was at LACMA.

20 - What are you currently working on?
i'm writing a novel and a new poetry manuscript. both are concerned with placemaking and dislocation and biopscyhosocio concerns that arise from dis/location. both are centered around this working theory i have re: cities as physiological structures... organisms themselves. the novel is incredibly fun and frustrating to work on... and the poem/book [called civil engineering]  is not getting enough of my attention lately... but my research lends itself to both manuscripts, so hopefully writing will happen more often in the near future.

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

Jenna Butler, seldom seen road

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Legend, 1942

saskatchewan in autumn
war & harvest
fields given over to
air basses

times like these
where you come from less important than
how strong your shoulders
& how willing

& your name
falling unnoticed in
the wake of the threshing crew

heritage here
in the hands
     scythe in churchyard grass    the arc
     of axe & mattock

this land’s bones
too stubborn for words

Edmonton poet Jenna Butler’s third trade poetry collection seldom seen road (Edmonton AB: NeWest Press, 2013) is a book of disappearance, as she composes poems on ghost towns, forgotten figures and those who have been otherwise lost. The author of Aphelion(NeWest Press, 2010) and Wells (University of Alberta Press, 2012) as well as nearly a dozen shorter collections [including one with above/ground press, posted online as a free pdf], Butler’s short poems read like pencil sketches, deceptively quick but skillfully formed poems that present the essentials of what each poem requires. Her lines are quick, and require space to stretch out, and know exactly how to make the best of subtle motion. As Andy Weaver once paraphrased Eliot, these are poems that make nothing happen.

Constructed in three sections – “Inbound,” “Lepidopterists” and “The Home Place” – Butler explores less a sense of geography but a sense of grounding against the feeling of being unmoored, tracking and tracing lines that have long faded and been forgotten. It’s as though she grounds herself specifically through these lost and fading touchstones, returning to each of them a strength and purpose simply for reaching out to them.

5.

because marriage is less
about rings than
spirals     the fretworked granary floor
when the cats have been in

moonhued garden snails
plucked & dropped into
saltwater     dim reprimand of
shells against the bucket’s tin

     you take home with you
     when you go (“Seven Ways of Leaving”)

In the second section, “Lepidopterists,” Butler composes a poem or two each for various historical figures that have slipped just outside of view, including Samuel Hearne’s wife who starved to death, Mary Norton (1708-1728), one of the “Famous Five,” Nellie McClung (1873-1951), Margaret Fleming (1901-1999), Dr. Elizabeth Beckett Matheson (1866-1958) and “The Wives of Crowfoot” (1830-1890), a group of “up to ten wives” of Crowfoot, many of whom have been long forgotten. The poem “Arrowhead Blue” is for “Manitupotis’ Women” (1873), as Butler writes, “Cypress Hills / Southern Alberta floundering under the whiskey trade / Several members of the band led by Manitupotis / (Little Soldier) and his band massacred by American wolfers [.]”

Arrowhead Blue
(Boisduval, 1852)

the lupines’ bloom
stills at dusk

all day   they have thrust
silvery-purple against
the hills’ spine
their scent
tearing the air like clamour

angling her wings
she dips amongst
violent petals
     patina the depth
     of a new bruise
a perennial ache

The poems in this collection can be described as both meticulously carved and quickly sketched, and the best pieces are the ones that remain shorter, boiled down to their essence, from pieces such as “Inbound” to the sequence “Seven Ways of Leaving.” As the press release tells us, this is “a collection of sharply observed and understated poems about the land and its people,” writing the landscape from not only the ground up but from the perspective of those who have helped in the long-thankless task of building up from what was once nothing. The poem “Alchemist” is written with the sub-title “Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park, 1999,” a site long explored by poets, including Andrew Suknaski and Monty Reid. The piece holds up well against the comparison, and holds within it the entire scope of the collection, writing out loss, absence and discovery. The single-page poem opens with:

the irony is
I come into being when called
     bucking like Sisyphus this
     unloved summoning

your voice
the wind     polytonal over
one stone or another

William Hawkins introduction for the VERSeOttawa Hall of Honour inductee ceremony & reading,

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Here is a link to a short report (with pictures) I posted on the above/ground pressblog on a couple of the events at our third annual festival. Pearl Pirie and Amanda Earl were also good enough to write up short reports on some of the events as well. The Hall of Honour event included short readings by both inductees. Hawkins’ reading was one of the finest I’ve heard in some time.

Here is what I read as my introduction:

From 1964 to 1974, William Hawkins was a considerable presence in Ottawa, from publishing poetry, composing songs for the band The Children (which included a young Bruce Cockburn), and organizing events at the infamous coffeehouse, Le Hibou, hosting poets, musicians and writers alike, including Leonard Cohen, Gordon Lightfoot and Michael Ondaatje. Since that period of activity, Hawkins has published sporadically, yet has managed to influence the activity of numerous writers and musicians across the country since. Two months away from his seventy-third birthday in May, William Hawkins becomes one of the first two inductees to the VERSeOttawa Hall of Honour.

Hawkins’ exploits are as legendary as they are apocryphal, including tales of facilitating Jimi Hendrix’ recording of a Joni Mitchell performance at Le Hibou on his reel-to-reel (later recording Hawkins performing a new song on guitar at the after-party), a run-in with Mexican police at the Mexican-American border involving a pick-up truck of weed (and Trudeau’s subsequent interventions on their behalf), and a day-long reading at the site of a former hotel in Ottawa’s Lowertown. Another story has Hawkins sitting on stage reading quietly to himself in a rocking chair during a performance of The Children at Maple Leaf Gardens, as they opened for The Lovin’ Spoonful.

Hawkins and Roy MacSkimming raised funds to get themselves out to Vancouver for the sake of the infamous Vancouver Poetry Conference of 1963, asking his friends and enemies alike for money to help him leave town. Once there, he was able to study with and engage with Allen Ginsberg, Robert Creeley, Charles Olson and Robert Duncan, returning home with an Olson edge and incredible energy, producing, reading and publishing, it seemed, non-stop for more than a decade. During that period, his poetry appeared on a series of poetry posters around town, in Raymond Souster’s seminal anthology New Wave Canada: The New Explosion in Canadian Poetry (Toronto ON: Contact Press, 1966) and A.J. M. Smith’s Modern Canadian Verse (Toronto ON: Oxford, 1967). His books include Shoot Low Sheriff, They’re Riding Shetland Ponies! (with Roy MacSkimming; 1964), Two Longer Poems (with Harry Howith; Toronto ON: Patrician Press, 1965), Hawkins: Poems 1963-1965 (Ottawa ON: Nil Press, 1966), Ottawa Poems(Kitchener ON: Weed/Flower Press, 1966), The Gift of Space: Selected Poems 1960-1970 (Toronto ON: The New Press, 1971) and The Madman’s War (Ottawa ON: S.A.W. Publications, 1974). His poems in New Wave Canada sat alongside the work of Daphne Buckle (later Marlatt), Robert Hogg, bpNichol and Michael Ondaatje, who later included his own “King Kong meets Wallace Stevens” poem in Rat Jelly (1973), influenced, perhaps, by Hawkins’ “King Kong Goes to Rotterdam.”

Hawkins didn’t publish another book for thirty-one years, before I saw the publication of his second selected poems through my Cauldron Books series, Dancing Alone: Selected Poems (Fredericton NB: Broken Jaw Press, 2005). A double album of the same name appeared a year later, including nearly two dozen covers of Hawkins’ songs by various friends and admirers, including Lynn Miles, Murray McLaughlin, Sandy Crawley, Ian Tamblyn, Suzie Vinnick, Neville Wells, Sneezy Waters, Bruce Cockburn and others, as well as a new song performed by Hawkins himself. Without Hawkins, Bruce Cockburn said, I never would have started writing songs.

Since then, there’s been a small resurgence of interest in Hawkins’ work, with the publication of a chapbook of recent poems, the black prince of bank street(above/ground press, 2007), as well as the release of Wm Hawkins: A Descriptive Bibliography (Ottawa ON: Apt. 9 Press, 2010) by Cameron Anstee, who also produced the chapbook Sweet & Sour Nothings (Apt. 9 Press, 2010), a “lost” poem from the 1970s, reissued two weeks ago for the sake of this event. Held together as a folio, Wm Hawkins: A Descriptive Bibliographylists Hawkins’ work over the years in trade, chapbook and broadside form, as well as a list of anthology publications. The small folio also includes reissues of the infamous poetry posters of the 1960s.

William Hawkins is not only from here, but remained here, influencing and celebrating the City of Ottawa during a period that had very few poets known outside of the city’s borders, and remarkably few avenues for publication. The plaque we present to William Hawkins includes lines from the fourth poem of Ottawa Poems, that reads:

            What had she, Queen Victoria, in mind
            naming this place, Ottawa, capital?

                        Ah coolness, he said,
                        who dug coolness.

            This crazy river-abounding town
            where people are quietly
            following some hesitant
            form of evolution
            arranged on television
            from Toronto.

            where girls are all
            possible fucks
            in the long dull summernights

            & Mounties more image
            than reality.

I present to you, William Hawkins.


12 or 20 (second series) questions with Melanie Hubbard

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Melanie Hubbard won the 2011 Book Award in Poetry from Subito Press for We Have With Us Your Sky (2012). A chapbook, Gilbi Winco Swags, was published by Cannibal Books in 2008. Poems have appeared in Fence, Swink, Typo, horse less review, Cannibal, and Strange Machine. Reviews, scholarly articles, and personal essays have appeared in a variety of periodicals. She has taught at New College of Florida, Eckerd College, and the University of Tampa. She received a PhD in literature from Columbia University and is writing a book on Emily Dickinson’s poetics and practices in manuscript.

1 - How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?
You know, with We Have With Us Your Sky, I have felt so very welcomed by other poets, as if the circle widened just a bit to include me, and I feel so connected now, nearly daily, through FaceBook (I had been a FB denier!), to peers I hadn’t previously known. It’s as if I had been waiting to be asked to the dance, and now that I’m dancing, I’m doing all these other things poets do, like interviewing, reviewing, and administering a reading series at my town’s cultural center. These were things I did sporadically or had the potential to do, and honestly I wish I hadn’t waited so long to sort of let myself be a poet. I am a recovering academic, and I think having the poetry book come out has been a tipping point: I need to trust this other vocation—not to make me a living but to be how I live.

My current project, conceived as a book from the get-go (which is unusual for me), has me working with found material—an outgrowth of my fondness for sampling. Called Auto-Suggestion for Mothers, it’s an erasure, and painted treatment, page by page, of a 1924 book of the same name, in the spirit of Tom Phillips’ A Humument and Ronald Johnson’s Radi Os. I have loved A Humument for so very long, and hardly dared dream I might do something like it. Since the work has a visual-arts component, it’s very different from my previous. But these are poems, and there’s an air about ‘em that is probably all  mine. Part of the reason I chose to work on pages, I think, was to open my writing to an even greater range of thought and experience: the book, and my operations upon it, takes me places I wouldn’t necessarily go on my own, allows odder ways to say unsayable things, and fosters greater leaps between image-idea-feeling complexes. Also I get to blow up the lyric enclosure.

2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?
I think it was probably through my religious upbringing; being read to from the gospels or psalms really puts a rhythm into you, and an appreciation for the piquant image: that plus the soulful side of rock in the 1970s. I was given Dickinson early, and felt (as one does) known by her. My family put a premium on both word-play and music, and everything about my adolescence was inexpressible; so poetry was a lifeline. That may be a poet-making formula.

3 - How long does it take to start any particular writing project?
Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?

Quickly, I’d say; no notes! I used to have to write very quickly before my aperture, as it were, would close up again; I was that uptight. I still think of writing as a process, pretty much a spiritual process, of being open, so a lot of it is getting myself into a relaxed and ready frame of mind. But I sure do revise.

4 - Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very beginning?
Usually a poem will begin with a line, or even just a phrase. I once was out walking and an old lady on a bike crossed my path; we stopped to chat about the wind-storm and suspected tornado of the night before, and she said, “I just pray a hedge around me.” And I think I literally said “thank you,” and ran right home and began writing “The Supple Hellion.”

Usually I have short pieces that I can combine because they begin to want to be together. So this ‘book project’ lately is quite different for me. Still, I am in effect writing short pieces on each page, and I have to trust that they have something to say in toto.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?
I expect that my poems really need to be read aloud by a person, perhaps as Pinter’s plays need to be acted; many people who are not ordinarily poetry readers have told me that my readings helped them ‘get’ the poems, that the voice brought inflections, stops, and turns, attitudes and tones that they hadn’t, maybe, ‘heard’ in the printed text. At any rate, I cannot do without the sound of the human. I love speech. In fact maybe I’d state more strongly that the subaltern can speak, that there is no system and it is not total, that the imperfections and slippages of systems, histories, and languages are exactly where you put the spanner in the works. I identify with Caliban: “You taught me language; and my profit on’t. Is, I know how to curse.”

6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?
I’ve been thinking about linguistics lately—I read an article in the New Yorker about a fellow, John Quijada, who has invented a philosophically comprehensive and clear language, so that you can express anything expressible by meditating upon the essential attributes and inflections of your subject, picking the appropriate phonemes and particles, and in effect putting together a word or short series of words to articulate your perception. It’s as if he’s blocked out a periodic table of the elements of linguistic apprehension, and by the way mapped out all the empty squares. Poets are amateur linguists, because our task is to articulate the as-yet-unarticulated, to think the perhaps nearly impossible thing to think given our current structures of perception. But I’d say, too, that poets are actually expert linguists and philosophers, because the linguistic turn in our accounts of reality necessitates a self-conscious account of mediation, that is, the materiality of our systems of representation. Language is a thing, and it isn’t transparent, though a linguist like Quijada has done his best to make it so. So poets have an advantage in that for us language is already acknowledged as a material with a complex political, cultural, and philosophical history, and the task is to see how the tool has already shaped our consciousness, and to use consciousness to reshape the tool. Performing complex operations on ourselves in the dark, as Berryman says. The other thing is, poets recognize some basic brain-moves composing reality—we perceive by way of contiguity, resemblance, and cause-and-effect (metonymy, metaphor, narrative)—so that the metaphoric leap is not only a shorthand way of saying something, it is probably the only way; we fill in a square in the table of the unsaid, and we also experience a primal delight in perception. Furthermore (she said, warming to her topic), language isn’t static, and neither is experience; we do not use language simply for descriptions of reality. Poetry has the advantage, as an approach to understanding, because it plays with tone, movement, relationships, time—all elements of embodied, social being that a philosophically ‘clear’ language cannot hope to either model or intervene upon.

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?
Writing is one form of action, and politics is another form; for the good of the writing, it cannot become propaganda; and even engaged literary writing is not, from a political point of view, enough, by way of action. It might be a prelude to action, renovating the perceptions on a socio-political level, as analysis and critique, but written things tend to operate one person at a time. I do not underestimate the political power of attempting to ‘make’ truly enlightened individuals, who may then act with incredible finesse to move others. But so many problems are systemic and call for direct action, which often enough involves writing, but not of the literary kind. I think a poetics can hold or imply a politics, but I wouldn’t want to essentialize (or demonize) any one way of writing; writing has to be situated, rhetorical, in response—as does politics. So I am a pragmatist.

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?
Helpful. And most appreciated. Probably the best editor I’ve ever worked with is Mike Wilson of the St. Petersburg Times; we found I could write personal essays, which he edited with a light but firm touch and much praise—praise is so important. I have had lovely perspicacious editing from scholarly colleagues, the kind that makes you make your sharpest, most thrilling case. For poems, my first editor is my husband, the poet A. McA. Miller, and it is usually both difficult and essential; he is ‘outside’ enough, because he’s a different sort of poet and a very demanding reader. Often enough he’ll get me to see something, and I’ll either be glad for the hand or, honestly, I get a little cranky! I seem to think that I should be able to see everything, every possible implication of the choices I’ve made on the page—when really another pair of objective eyes can point out that trail of toilet paper  . . .

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?
“Learn a trade.” And I am eternally grateful to whoever first told me to read and do The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron.

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to critical prose)? What do you see as the appeal?
Recently I spent far too many hours poring over photocopies of archival material—people’s compositions and sermons from the mid-nineteenth century in New England—and really had a quiet little blast confirming my earlier perceptions of certain aspects of these writings. These minutiae are historical bedrock; my project seeks to go from certain physical traces and practices in Dickinson’s manuscripts to their cultural contexts and thence to the philosophical principles inhering in them—so I really am getting to be Indiana Jones and Daniel Dennett both; in my case I hope to detect what Dickinson thought about language, and more specifically writing, by a sort of deep looking into her practices and into the cultural contexts that fostered them. Serving Dickinson is a way of doing my dharma to the art, not to mention having an awesome guru, while clarifying, through the study of another’s poetics, my own.

It’s not that my poems want to be philosophical treatises, but I hope that by thinking theoretically, really learning what it is I think, I can leave behind any temptations to persuade. As Keats said, we hate poetry that has designs on us. But if the design is inherent, if it is truly a pattern, it is music not idea. Poetry is a form of thinking wed to its embodiment; there is really no other way to think. So I guess I think my way out of thinking to poetry. Or, poetry saves me from so much thinking.

I usually toggle back and forth, over months and years, between them.

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?
I get up and do all my morning things, usually including a walk and journaling and some stretches, then do the scholarly writing or at least try for several hours before lunch. I read in the afternoons and evenings, or, these days, sometimes, I paint for hours on end (or try to) over an entire weekend. For a good while, I drafted poems (as erasures) for the first ‘good’ writing hour of the morning, then switched to prose. I felt so very productive! But now the poetry project really needs longer stretches of time, because it is revision, and so I’ll set aside a morning, and I wish it were every week, but it’s not. I’ll get two or three erasures into some kind of shape (in typescript) and then show them to Mac. When I had a teaching schedule, all the really heavy lifting had to wait for winter and summer breaks, and I’d tend to write poems on the fly, even during meetings and quizzes.

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?
When I need to take a break in the midst of writing, and this is the scholarly writing, which I find hardest, I get up and eat candy. I love Bit O’Honeys, and also licorice, real licorice, which you know generates this incredible liquor. It is disgusting, like chaw. I wander around a little bit, then I sit down again and see what I can do. Writing poems (and personal essays, I used to) is not hard in the same way; it’s like painting, it’s all in the (unconscious) prep work; once I’m there, it goes on smooth, which is not to say perfectly; but even revision is a pleasure, and I go hard until I have to take a break and then I’m just done for a while. The whole issue is really procrastination. Which is fear of failure, mostly, but also perhaps a certain temporizing until the elves on the inside are truly ready. B.F. Skinner wrote a slim volume called Intellectual Self-Management in Old Age, and that’s a handy term for both the discipline and slack necessary to bring art about. The trick is to know which is needed—discipline or slack.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?
Chicken shit. Alas. But the fragrance of my heart’s home is probably emanating from beds of brown pine needles, warm in the sun, on a light breeze, and the soapy musk of palmettos blooming, and later in the year, the ultra-sweet scent of hog plum blossoms by the river, and of course orange blossoms.

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?
Yes. I was going to be cheeky and stop there! I love all of the above. Because of my current project, I’m especially tuned into the visual arts right now, crazy for images and ideas, and learning so much; I’ve been going to museums a lot more, but also just experimenting at home. In fact this art-making feels very like a chemistry lab, trying out cause and effect, and I feel extra-professional if I’m wearing my apron.

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?
I’ve been reading haiku for a while now, in R. H. Blyth’s translations, and it’s like fishing. I don’t need to catch the fish. I just sit out there and drift, track butterflies and birds, rather like a cat. I guess you could call that meditating! Or I get all into trying to read the Japanese, which Blyth provides both in transliterated syllables and in ideograms; nouns are the easiest to spot, and certain inflections such as the genitive particle, and sometimes I just enjoy the fact that, to me, the ideogram for rain looks like splats on a window. I’ve also been looking at Anne Carson’s Sappho in Fragments, and thinking about these as erasures, and the legitimacy of our constructions and impositions on this material over milennia; also I can’t help trying to learn the Greek, and will soon enough get the alphabet straight so I really can see ‘kallistos’ and think ‘beautiful.’ (Erm, I hope that’s right!)

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?
That is the hardest question on this test! I would like to travel more, maybe even live in an entirely different culture for a while; that is the easier answer. My life’s deeper answers will, I think, reveal themselves the more I truly come out and play.

17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?
Perhaps ‘being an artist’ is the path I’ve never trusted to actually earn me a living; ‘being a poet’ I never expected to earn me a living. Teaching is so satisfying, so challenging, a spiritual path in its own right. If I were not a writer at all, I think I could still be happy as a teacher. I am happiest when I am doing and being both.

18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?
Writing is very safe. You can hide. You can formulate your thoughts, or articulate your feelings, safe in your abandon cave; no one will bother you. Until, that is, you let others in. But still you can hide. I think I never got the hang of having and articulating feelings while I was having them, and being received with them fully and unconditionally, and so the whole ‘self-expression’ thing was thwarted, frustrated, complicated, impossible. There’s a saying that writers are people for whom writing is more difficult than it is for others. That fits.

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?
Anvil: The Story of Anvil has a permanent place in my heart for its mock-doc and totally sincere depiction of middle-class, middle-aged artistic failure and striving. I just love those guys; and if you’ve ever been a ‘finalist’ for a prize, say, more than once, you begin to think you’ll never make it, and maybe you rethink what ‘making it’ really is. Lately I’ve been so impressed with two books: Michelle Naka Pierce’s Continuous Frieze Bordering Red, and Anthony Madrid’s I Am Your Slave Now Do What I Say. Each is a tour de force. I believe we’re living in a very rich era for poetry, right this second.

20 - What are you currently working on?
Naming my perfectionism as the soul-sucking killer it really is.

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

Ongoing notes: late March, 2013

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Toronto ON:Toronto poet Mat Laporte has been producing increasingly interesting work over the past year or two, the result of which is the chapbook Billboards from Hell (Toronto ON: Ferno House, 2012), currently enjoying a second printing. Billboards from Hellis Laporte’s second chapbook, after Demons(Ferno House, 2010). What intrigues, in part, is the range of structures Laporte attempts throughout the short collection of poems, really stretching out the possibilities of the work. Not all the poems achieve what they attempt, but when they do, they strike perfectly, such as this poem, with a title borrowed from W.G. Sebald:

The Rings of Saturn

I fear I maybe put too much stake in books
What is loneliness but the mind’s estrangement

from the chest? Breaking loose from sheer inertia
and the capital of youth is angst. It is Canada Day.

The mall is closed. Is everybody with me? A bridge
through the physical world is taken with frequent stops

for snacks. It has been a beautiful dream. Though
the body is open to contemplation, it is, in a sense

excluded. Nothing beats a cohesive statement
As in a theatre, the actors appear

to complete the great catastrophe of this piece.
You are an uprising in yourself.

jwcurry once told me that bpNichol wasn’t a great poet because everything he did worked, but that he was willing to fail, and there is something to be admired by any writer constantly willing to stretch out their own skills. Laporte is willing to stretch out and attempt, and there is a great satisfaction to seeing just how clearly and openly his poems attempt, from list poems to short lyrics to the pared-down sequence of the title poem. Not everything might work, but sometimes one can achieve magnificent things that couldn’t have been possible otherwise, an aesthetic openness Laporte shares with Ottawa poets Amanda Earl and Pearl Pirie. I am enjoying these poems, and am very interested to see where Mat Laporte’s writing continues to go.

Judgement Day

The day is a dog without skin
There is a constant kick in the ceiling
Red stool, black book, grey cup, red stone
Potlights or portholes into oblivion
I could stare at this monkey for millions
Watching him dance is like
The most beautiful expression of
I will never love you, signed, the Truth
As if naked hysterical guacamole
I’m sweating hot dogs on the floor
DJ Unidentified Flying Organ vs. DJ Ball-Shaped Head
The State is an illegible tank
Each day plows instead of no-head
Nowhere. Buckets of mitochondria,
Prehistoric man, and the whole shipful of meaning
Pulling in to Main St. Station
We shouldn’t even sleep
We should all just scream all the time

Windsor ON:Produced for a reading Dennis Cooley did in Windsor in March, 2012 is every tuesday (Wrinkle Press, 2012), produced by Nicole Markotić’s Wrinkle Press (see their relatively new website here). The stretch of the three pages make it difficult to tell for certain if the chapbook is made up of a single poem composed out of small fragments, or three distinct pages, part of an ongoing tweak of Cooley’s to not title certain of his pieces. The poem begins with the title, writing: “every tuesday / also thursday every thursday too / and sometimes wed / nesdays hang // my heart in the window / my shadow on the snow[.]” Cooley’s poem (or poems) jam, enjamb and twist, rife with puns and slips that make one groan as much as breathless, turning lines on coins far smaller than a dime. As in much of Cooley’s writing, every piece ties into structures far larger than they could ever appear, stretching far wider and deeper than even the consideration of the trade volume, which makes me wonder what this fragment might eventually be part of.

watch for the sudden flare when
my wicked tongue catches fire
flumes up the tunnel of my waiting
with what it wants
to say

would the light be swollen
would we with it skip
to a gassy balloon
so bulky it was
about to explode
let go and spray

                                                                        happiness all over

                                                the darn place
                                                all over our as
                                                tonished faces


Six poems for King Kong

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for William Hawkins,


1. King Kong Goes to Cambridge

Washed ashore in statehood, long escaped from Rotterdam,

what might he know of low-hung rooftops, turret-stone, a bridge
held down eight centuries

of charter. Neither New York, nor his Island hideaway,

beyond his reach, a bray of school-bells,
silent throng of students cross the football fields.

Castle Hill, no trace of Viking rule. Once more, into the breach.

King Kong, inclined to lechery, a lack of forethought,
keeps close to ground, displaying Newton’s accidents of gravity.

A million miles between: a sense of fair play, given
existential due. If he could, ignite the football fields. He chews

the stupid mint.



2. King Kong Goes to Parliament Hill

When you were young and in your prime,

a battle of wills between you and Trudeau, Laurier LaPierre,
the American National Guard. Deflecting gains

from Empire State.

No flies on you, who once kicked dust from ancient tavern floors,
played Lowertown games of telephone and poems, walked

French Catholic blocks, tracked Sol’s sundial jaunt

across Sisters of Mercy. Now, you labour atop Peace Tower’s peak,
seemingly invisible.

Remain there long enough to count the strands of traffic
bridge the river Grand, now seven deep,

criss-crossing Chaudiere’s diminished boil.



3. King Kong Sketches out his Memoirs

One was neither moon, banana, idle threat,

nor sunlight. Monkey recollections. It begins
with a woman, this: his abject paw-pain, stench

of hair scorched short, these bi-plane flashbacks
of staccato fire. A pretty blonde to catch his eye

and chain, awarded less the mantle of grand beast

than curiosity, verging on cliché. A king
without a country. Ignored by National Geographic,

replaced instead by youngers; Coco paints, he signs,

he strokes his kitten; illiterate King Kong’s insight
no more legible than ice.



4. King Kong Goes to Stratford

Forget the appeal of Basque temples, foreign women,
the disappointments of Rotterdam, or the score

of Saudi-Arabian tributes; plenaries revealed during
a Shawville Fair lost weekend. Success breeds imitation,

and imitation, breeds; copies overwhelm the tabloids, distract
the purity of beasts. Come witness the original! King Kong,

Lord of Stratford. Daily matinee as Lear,

he begins to comprehend his offspring; perhaps,
how best to love them.

He reflects on age and wisdom, vanity.
They ask: what news of home, good sir?

Your faith will bring you nowhere.



5. King Kong Goes to Sleep,

Was it Monster Island,
Inlet, or Peninsula? Old King Kong, Caliban of movie beasts,

dreams abandoned trees and sunlight, morning dew
replaced by screams of flood lights, endless traffic,

brambles, fog of toxins. Who might even realize, now,

his long-lost ambitions to Regal England? Another island
set in sleepy stone, as water surrounds, envelops. Once protected

with the promise of boundary. Fixed
and held to centre, safe,

unable to cross.



6. King Kong Goes to Outer Space


Dawn, you told me, stings. Turbulence cultivates
the same blue as substratosphere, until

the stomach finally empties. Motion-sick, a memory
from another time, repeats: Dorothy, surrender.

An ocean he can’t fathom but for ocean. Sees stars,

adjusts his reading specs, accordingly. From here,
each patch of earth an island, equal. Surrounded

by expansive blue. Explorer Laika, astrochimps
like Ham and Enos. Save me. Kong,

absolute ape of empty space,
of all he sees, ahead. White knuckled,

hairs on end, how exactly

did you get here?


Arielle Greenberg, Shake Her

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Arielle Greenberg was raised in Niskayuna, New York, home of the first Shaker community in America and eight and a half miles from where Mother Ann Lee is currently buried. She was pregnant with her second child when she conducted the research for this book in the summer of 2007 at the Shaker Heritage Society in Colonie, New York and at the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village in New Gloucester, Maine, home to the only living Shakers left in the world (four at the time of Arielle’s visit, including a recently arrived young novitiate). She tried to keep this pregnancy a secret from her mother, from whom she was estranged, but her mother found out about the pregnancy in early November 2007, when Arielle had just entered her third trimester. Arielle began having nightmares and visions of the pregnancy being cursed, and about two weeks later, the baby died in utero at thirty-one weeks. He was named Day, and was born and buried in Maine in December of 2007. (More of the story of his birth and death can be found in Arielle’s book with Rachel Zucker, Home/Birth: A Polemic.) (“ABOUT THE AUTHOR”)
I don’t often begin with such biographical detail, but the new edition of American poet Arielle Greenberg’s chapbook Shake Her(Brooklyn NY: Ugly Duckling Presse, 2012) appears to require it. Originally produced as part of the 2008 dusie kollektiv, Shake Her is a startling, heartbreaking and complex collection of poems. Constructed as a scrapbook of poem-sketches and footnotes as part of ongoing studies into the American Shakers, Greenberg’s Shake Her feels very much part of a much larger frame than the boundaries of the immediate publication. At roughly thirty pages, this is a book that ties the narrator as mother to her own mother to the historical figure of Mother Ann Lee (1736-1784), founder of the American Shakers. Through the narrative of the poems, the connection is one that binds the three throughout, eventually moving into the loss of Greenberg’s second child. In one of the first poems, she writes: “I’d be stupid to pretend there wasn’t all that sky-writing / when I was a child and you were my mother.” (“SKY-WRITING”), and the loss of her mother (“to California, and to illness physical, and to illness mental, and to general anger,” as she writes in the poem “THIS IS WHERE I CAME TO KISS (ALBANY, NY)” ) is deeply felt .
FORGOTTEN
My mother has a lovely face of fur, I once wrote,
and has to go to a meeting.
As in a fairytale, there’s a hole in my book where a mother should be,
a hole in my head, caught in my throat,
a hole in my fine felt heart worn on a fob.
There’s a hole big enough to push my finger through
and flex to feel the flood of air I am damming.
This hole die-cut in my life and peered out
to an illuminated page with a castle and a rook,
this round, voided space, my mother.
The hole that hills yell through.
If I followed the familiar paths—was orphaned,
taken to the wolves or the witches or left in spindled knots—
well, as inI am living the good life without,
The author of two trade poetry collections, My Kafka Century(Action Books, 2005) [see my review of such here] and Given(Verse, 2002) [see my review of such here] and the chapbook Farther Down: Songs from the Allergy Trials(New Michigan, 2003), as well as the co-author, with Rachel Zucker, of the hybrid genre nonfiction book Home/Birth: A Poemic (1913 Press, 2011), Greenberg has written numerous poems on mothering and motherhood, and her work compares with some of the rare best of a genre that far too often falls into sentiment and cliché. This short chapbook is stunning, and works, in part, to highlight how long it has been since a trade collection of her poetry appeared. Shake Her feels like something much larger that we haven’t yet been able to see, whether still in-progress or left waiting, unfinished. I want to see what the rest of this looks like.
THIS IS WHERE I CAME TO KISS (ALBANY, NY)
Some Hints of a Religious Scheme, Taught and propagated by a Number of Europeans, living in a Place called Nisqueunia, in the State of New-York, Valentine Rathburn (Salem, 1783): “They begin by sitting down and shaking their heads in a violent manner; turning their heads half round…their eyes being shut.”
I walk the ground for once a childless mother. The thistle, clover, wind and bug-sticky heat are all what I communed from when I was young. The roosters look like perfect folk paintings of roosters, almost kitsch, almost sacred. It is as if the present tense were itself trembling.

Around the corner, the small airport where I used to come to kiss, when I was a virgin and my boyfriend had a hatchback and we both lived at home with our families. It is as if the tide of my next child is already breaking, did break, will break, because waves are just a thing the water does again and again.

I think of myself as a person who, if no path is clearly marked, simply will not start walking. But here I walk, because I am a mother with no child with me. A mother enveloping a secret next child. A child with no mother, with a mother who will not walk beside me. Simple is a fallacy.

A big bee bumbled by from the pages of a children’s book I read to my daughter last night at bedtime. I could sleep or die or birth here, out in the open, in this forsaken and holy farm, its medicinal herb garden still tended, made to look new by volunteers. I could be, finally, that orphan, a free spirit, and bound only to this plot of star flower, Indian cup, and ghosts.

Except, of course, that I was raised up here, daughter to a mother now departed (to California, and to illness physical, and to illness mental, and to general anger). Except, of course, that this is where I came to kiss.







______
I want to go to my Mother; I am sick to see my Mother; I had no God till I had a mother; how could I be born without a Mother? What reason I have to bless God for my mother.


12 or 20 (second series) questions with Gillian Savigny

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Originally from Vancouver, Gillian Savigny has spent the last twelve years studying and working in cities across Canada. She holds a B.A. Honours degree in English Literature from Queen’s University and an M.A. degree in English Literature and Creative Writing from Concordia University. She has served as Editor for ultraviolet Magazine, Managing Editor for Delirium Press, and Contributing Editor for Matrix. From 2007 to 2008 she worked as a speechwriter for the Leader of her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition in Ottawa. Her first collection of poetry, entitled Notebook M, was published by Insomniac Press in 2012. She lives in Toronto where she works in the non-profit sector.

1 - How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?
Before my first book, I felt like I couldn’t think of writing poetry as anything more than a personal hobby—something I did alone in my spare time. Now I feel more a part of a community of other writers and more willing to set aside other pursuits in order to focus on writing.

2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?
I have a short attention span and writing fiction, even short fiction, seems like a pursuit that requires both the ability to multi-task and the ability to sustain concentration over a long period of time. For someone who is easily distracted that seems like trying to juggle while balancing something on your head. Plus the elements of writing that I most enjoy are the language, imagery, turns of phrase—less so character and plot.

3 - How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?
It varies from poem to poem, but I have found that once everyone’s finally out on the page I’m often a lot happier with the poems that came quickly than I am with the ones that took their time. I guess because they can still surprise me, whereas I know all the painful secrets of the slow ones.

4 - Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very beginning?
Writing usually begins with an idea that for whatever reason catches my attention and makes me want to tease it out in different ways. It’s usually something that I can’t resolve after a single poem, that I want to go back to and explore but using a different approach or form or conceit and so I guess in that sense I’m writing a book from the beginning, but the book shifts as the poems take shape. When I was starting the project that would eventually become Notebook M I wanted to write generally about the scientific sensibility. It took awhile for the Darwin poems to emerge and for his writing to become a kind of frame for the whole book. In the book, those early poems appear toward the end, making it seem as though the Darwin voice is fading, being replaced by a more modern and general scientific sensibility when in fact the opposite happened as I was writing.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?
So far readings haven’t been a big part of my creative process. When I was writing Notebook M, I spent a lot of time thinking about the page as an environment and about how poems have adapted to the page. Notebooks, like journals, are books that aren’t really meant for public consumption so I wanted to explore what elements could be built into a poem that would keep it on the page and make it difficult to adapt into a performance. That said, I do enjoy readings. I find them nerve wracking, but it’s always exciting to share your work with an audience and see how they react to it.

6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?
Aside from thinking about poems as adapting to different environments and the content of poems adapting to different poetic forms, when I was writing Notebook M, I spent a lot of time thinking about whether writing poetry is a process of making or collecting. The word ‘poetry’ comes from the Greek word that means “to make” and I think many poets think of themselves as “makers” that is creators, people who bring things into existence out of the thin air of individual experience. But that idea makes me kind of uncomfortable. It feels bound up with monotheistic worldviews where the poet is cast as a God-like figure. In a book about science and Darwin I wanted to question that conception of the poet and try to figure out what could replace it and this idea of the poet as collector—of writing as a process of bringing together found objects either to show contrast or affinity—seemed like it might be a workable alternative.

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?
I don’t know what the role of the writer should be, particularly the role of poets. The average person probably thinks of the poet the way they might think of a broach—as being a totally superfluous adornment. I don’t know if I could put together a case that would convince them otherwise, but I find it oddly comforting to think of the William Carlos Williams line: “It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there.”

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?
Essential. I think everyone can benefit from a good editor who understands what you are trying to accomplish and can help you achieve it in a way that will clarify your intentions for your audience. Working with Sachiko Murakami on Notebook M was a wonderful experience. She helped me give all my darlings a good death and made a much better book in the process.

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?
This isn’t the best piece of advice I’ve ever received, but it is my favourite: write with a pen that makes you feel good. It sounds totally trivial, but it reminds me that writing should be enjoyable. And while many parts of the writing process are out of your control, the pen you choose to use definitely isn’t.

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to fiction to critical prose)? What do you see as the appeal?
I haven’t really done much moving yet, but I hope to do some experimenting in the near future. I’m interested in how form influences thought expression so in that sense it is appealing to think about exploring narrative forms.

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?
My writing routine has typically been as follows: do a lot of thinking about writing, research things I’m interested in, wait until I can arrange some kind of deadline that is out of my control, then let the deadline pressure crystallize my thinking on the page. I would love to be the kind of writer who has a daily routine. I have tried many times to get myself into this kind of routine, but I think I’m doomed to be daydreamy, erratic and last minute.

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?
Walking helps. I find moving sometimes makes it easier to think. It also helps to open a book I’ve never read before. I don’t find going back to books I’ve already read helpful. I need to move forward, find something new. So perhaps the best thing would be to walk to a bookstore to buy a new book. I’ll have to try that the next time I hit a wall.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?
I don’t have very distinct smell associations with home—though for some reason I do with my late grandma’s house in Medicine Hat: pink lemonade, garden fresh stewed tomatoes, Hawaiian tropics sunscreen—but I do have strong sound associations. I grew up on the west coast where it felt like it would rain non-stop from the beginning of November to the end of February. I live in Toronto now, but I find I sleep better when it rains through the night. For the same reason, I have an unusually high tolerance for the squawking of seagulls and crows.

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?
Science is a big one.

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?
The writers who have most influenced my work are the writers I worked with in workshops. Carolyn Smart, Moez Surani, Alex Porco, Mary di Michele, Stephanie Bolster, Sachiko Murakami, Kate Hall, Jani Krulc, Susan Gillis, David McGimpsey, Jon Paul Fiorentino, Steven Heighton, and Josip Novakovich.

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?
Change a tire. Build a cabin. Visit the Galapagos.

17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?
Evolutionary biologist. Psychiatrist.

18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?
Writing is challenging, but the effort feels worthwhile. Also, I always found other writers to be such interesting, thoughtful, funny people and continuing to write seemed like a good way to stay in their company.

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?
I just finished reading Last Evenings on Earth by Roberto Bolaño. I admire the subtlety of his storytelling and how gracefully he resists tidy resolution. For the film, I’ll choose Take Shelter by Jeff Nichols. It tells the story of a father and husband experiencing the symptoms of schizophrenia for the first time and the impact that has on his family. I admired how the director intertwined realism and delusion. 

20 - What are you currently working on?
I’m in the very early stages of a new poetry project. It’s one that will allow me to keep thinking about collecting—in this case hoarding or the pathology of collecting and what that means when the thing collected is alive and wild.

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

new from above/ground press: new titles by mclennan, Sand, Gelèns and Lindner + O’Connor, and The Peter F Yacht Club,

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Trace,
rob mclennan
$4

A Tale of Magicians Who Puffed Up Money that Lost Its Puff
Kaia Sand
$4

Two Dutch Poets: Hélène Gelèns and Erik Lindner
translation by Anita Dolman
$4

damascene road passaggio, selections
Wanda O’Connor
$4

The Peter F Yacht Club #18
VERSeFest 2013 special!
$5

published in Ottawa by above/ground press
March 2013
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy of each

To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; outside Canada, add $2) to: rob mclennan, 402 McLeod St #3, Ottawa ON K2P 1A6 or paypal (above). Scroll down here to see various backlist titles (many, many things are still in print). And don’t forget, 20th anniversary/2013 annual subscription, still available!

Review copies of any title (while supplies last) also available, upon request.

my Electronic Poetry Center - EPC author page has finally been updated,

Charles Bernstein, Recalculating

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Imagine poetry as a series of terraces, some vast, some no bigger than a pinprick, overlooking the city of language. The sound and light show begins in the dark: sentences dart by, one by one, forming wave after wave of the rag and bone shop of the quotidian, events passing before our eyes like the faint glimmer of consciousness in an alcoholic stupor. Facts, facts everywhere but not a drop to drink. (“The Truth in Pudding”)

In his third poetry collection with the University of Chicago Press, New York poet Charles Bernstein’s Recalculating(Chicago Il: University of Chicago Press, 2013) reinforces his exploration of the procedural, the shifting sands of what exactly poems are made of, and how they are constructed. Bernstein’s oeuvre is a constant recalculation, even as the title refers to a technology that didn’t exist when he first began composing and publishing poems. There is something exciting in the way his poems work to keep up with and even ahead of not just technology, but the culture itself. Take the poem “Poem Loading…” made up of the single line, “please wait” (p 12), or a longer poem that harkens back to his previous collection, “The Most Frequent Words in Girly Man,” that opens: “the / is / of / to / in / and / like / you / that / it / on / for / but / with / not / as / war/ no” (p 141). Something of this piece is reminiscent of a poem from the “sound poetry” issue of Prism International from decades back, when a poet I can’t recall the name of reworked Robert Frost’s “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening,” reordering the entire poem’s words in alphabetical order. And yet, Bernstein composes poems from a series of foundations, including “translations and adaptations of” pieces by Sylvia Plath, Paul Celan, Cole Porter, Pessoa, Baudelaire, Marjorie Perloff, Wallace Stevens, Robin Blaser and Apollinaire, among so many others. This collection manages somehow to contain the multitudes of constant questioning and re-questioning and a considerable re-grounding.

Todtnauberg

after Paul Celan

Arnica, hold-in-trust, tear
Trump out dim Bruise admit dim
Stern waffled drought,

indigo
Hut,

die in that Bush
—lesson Naming nouns off
where dim mines men—
die in die’s book
gust’s ribbons fail one
I’m an huff-none, hurt
Oaf I’m a dunken den
commends
Wart
in heart’s end

World-wizened, uneyed and bent
Arc is un-arc is, eye’s realm,

Crude, spatter in führer
Deutsche light,

Tears a fog, dear Mensch,
dares admit abort

die halved
beschmuddled Cudgel
fade in Hock’s moor

Folded,
veil.

Always admirable in the work of Charles Bernstein is the sense of play and wry humour, and the wide variety of forms he is willing to explore. Part of his exploration of the poem relates very clearly to how poetry is not only composed, but in how it is read, and the shifting ways the internet has shifted the contemporary reading of the poem, such as in the piece “This Poem is in Finnish”:

This Poem is in Finnish

Translate it by toggling here

While I remain in English, either stranded
Or as one drunken and wheeled to a paddy
Wagon. There was a time I drank blueberry
Wine but that was long ago and my powers
Of recollection are still too strong to forget.
As one overcome by waves of wanton flash-
Backs, acid dreams of moments all too real,
Finds himself mirrored by the mind of a very
Little boy trapped in the body of an old man.

This is an age where the evolution of the internet has increased poetry production and readership, as opposed to what had been earlier feared, and Charles Bernstein has long been at the forefront of such, as both writer and reader. Even this review, one might say, which will most likely receive more “hits” than most literary journals have print runs. Charles Bernstein works a pretty big canvas in his writing, far broader in scope than what lives within the boundaries of Recalculating, a collection that contains a constant movement. The title of the collection reads as the perfect metaphor for Bernstein’s work as a whole, moving in one direction until he takes a deliberate turn and adapts, all the while driving, constantly driving, never lost, but confidently searching, seeking and wondering.


12 or 20 (second series) questions with Tamas Dobozy

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TAMAS DOBOZY was born in Nanaimo, BC. After receiving his Ph.D. in English from the University of British Columbia, he taught at Memorial University. His work has been published in journals throughout North America, and in 1995 he won the annual subTerrain short fiction contest. When X Equals Marylou, his first collection of short fiction, was shortlisted for the Danuta Gleed Award. His Siege 13 was winner of the 2012 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, and a finalist for the 2012 Governor General's Literary Award for English-Language Fiction. Tamas Dobozy now teaches in the Department of English and Film Studies at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario.

1 - How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?
My first book was a mistake. It made me aware of what was at stake in writing. The company went bankrupt, so I'm safe. No one will ever put that book out again. I think this recent work is stylistically an extension of "Last Notes and Other Stories" but also a departure into a lot of 3rd person writing, so in that regard a return to the book before that, When X Equals Marylou. It's the first time I've tried to put together a book of stories that has a cohesive subject matter, so in that way it's different.

2 - How did you come to short fiction first, as opposed to, say, poetry or non-fiction?
I started as a poet, actually, but sucked at it. So I turned to short fiction because novels take too long to write, and I get bored. A short story is like a poem in a way, highly compressed, except that it has a plot (or at least mine do).

3 - How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?
Sometimes it's fast, sometimes slow. This time around it took me seven years to put together the book. I guess that's slow, though it didn't feel that way to me at the time. Sometimes stories come whipping off my fingers, sometimes they are an agony of snail's pacing. "Rosewood Queens" took 27 drafts, and I'm not talking proofer's drafts, where you're changing the "the's" to "a's," but serious ground-up rewriting each time. It eventually turned into two stories, "Rosewood Queens" and "Old Water." I make lots of notes, go back and delete stuff, shift things around. It's a terrible process. I hate it. But there's no other way.

4 - Where does a story usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very beginning?
Lately stories begin with a title or first line. I usually write discrete stuff, and publish more of it in journals than eventually come together in a book. I love publishing in journals more than anywhere else. I take breaks from the "big book" and work on discrete stuff as it comes to me. It's pretty random, though the final book is a very carefully shaped object.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?
I like the travel, but I'm not a big fan of readings. But at least readings are easy. What I really hate are giving lectures. They take so much time to write up and organize, and I have so little time already. I'd rather be working on my own fiction. I've decided not to do them anymore unless I'm offered so much money I can't say no, and who in his right mind would offer me that kind of money anyhow?

6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?
I like Benjamin, Agamben, Blanchot, De Certeau. Those are theorists I read a lot of. But when I'm writing a story the main questions are just, "How am I possibly going to make sense of all this stuff? How is this going to end? When can I move on to something else?" The questions are all issues of problem solving, very practical, even pedestrian. There's very little magic. I don't know what the current questions are in general, but my own all revolve around how awful human beings are, and why can't they be made a little better.

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?

Other writers can do whatever they want. I have no prescription for them. It's their business. I like to attack certain kinds of truths or certainties and demonstrate how they're never absolute, and how uncertainty is really the best position to assume in almost all instances. That's a political, cultural and epistemological project. I also really like to entertain readers, make them interested in how a story is going to turn out. Entertainment above all else, I say, but of course there's entertainment and then there's entertainment.

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?
Essential. I have always liked working with editors, and been lucky to have worked with some good ones.

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?
"You will never make any money at this." This is a liberating statement; there's no money in writing, so you get to do whatever you like. How many other occupations offer such liberty?

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between genres (short stories to critical prose)? What do you see as the appeal?
I do critical prose for my job. If it wasn't required by the university I'd never write another scholarly essay in my life. It's a totally different thing. You drop the quarter in, the machine moves across the page, out pops a critical piece. Stories are totally different, not mechanical at all, susceptible to the vagaries of accident, weather, mood, etc. I can force out a scholarly piece no problem; but I can't force out a story, no matter how I try.

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?

If I get an hour a day I'm lucky. No routine. I write wherever and whenever I get a break. A typical day for me begins with dragging four kids out of bed to get to school, and then a pile of committee meetings at the university, and then a big glass of Redbreast at night to get me to sleep.

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?
Self-flagellation, usually. I just keep attacking the page until I get a breakthrough, or I throw the whole thing away and start something new. There is no such thing as inspiration. It's all just work. Sometimes you think you've been inspired, and then you realize it's just the announcement of a big job that needs to get done.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?
The sea.

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?
Music is a big part of my life, and my working life as a writer, mainly jazz and classical. I used to love Pop music, but it bores me very quickly now; it doesn't present enough information. Two weeks of listening and the CD's ready for the garbage. Maybe that's the point of Pop Culture, instant recycling, I don't know. I also love visual art and spend a fair bit of time looking through it.

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?
I like Alvaro Mutis, Mavis Gallant, Eudora Welty, Kenzaburo Oe, Mikhail Bulgakov, Claudio Magris. Those are the big ones. There is no distinction between the work and the life in that regard.

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?
It would be great to learn to skate very well. I'd love to be able to do that.

17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?
I would love to be an electrician, something that's definite, hands-on, that at the end of the day produces something of actual effect in the world. If I hadn't been a writer I'd probably be a scholar, which I am anyhow. I was no good at dealing with the material world.

18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?
It was the only thing I loved unequivocally.

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?

I can't remember the book, there's so many. I loved The Changeling by Oe. The last great film was just a few nights ago: Insignificance by Roeg. Marilyn Monroe explains relativity to Einstein. Fantastic.

20 - What are you currently working on?
Just stories, really. A bigger project hasn't yet fully emerged. The story I'm working on right now is called "Ileo." I may have to throw it away. At this point it would be a relief.

[Tamas Dobozy reads in Ottawa as part of the ottawa international writers festival on April 26 and again on April 27]

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

Profile of Karl Jirgens' Rampike magazine, with a few questions,

12 or 20 (second series) questions with Howard Chaykin

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Howard Victor Chaykin has been a comic book professional for over forty years.  forty years.  Think about it.  He took a hiatus from the comics’ industry for about fifteen years, to work his way up the ladder of television, on shows which he’d never watch—while keeping his hands in the comics business, because he knows nothing lasts forever.  He has a terrible reputation among fans for profanity, limited patience with nonsense, and spite, an attitude he’s finally and gratefully aged into. 

1 - How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?
It's been a long time--nearly 42 years--but I can truly say that I was daunted by that first job.  I had no work ethic, and little skill, so that job--and much of my first ten years of work--makes me cringe.

2 - How did you come to writing and drawing for comics, as opposed to, say, prose fiction or non-fiction?
I never dreamed of doing anything but comics.  Until I was in my mid 30s, I was never able to visualize myself as any other kind of talent.  I first came to Los Angeles as a visitor in the early '70s, but was incapable of translating what I saw as my skill sets into a money making proposition in Hollywood until the late '80s, after FLAGG! had generated an interest in me as an exploitable property.

3 - How long does it take to start any particular project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?
My process as a writer is informed by my long experience as a cartoonist, and by the fifteen years I spent as a journey television writer/producer.  It's all about a germ becoming a sentence, then a paragraph, then a page, until I've got a rough beginning, middle and end.  At this point, I begin to apply the tropes and necessities of the delivery system.  In comics, this rough document becomes a series of (frequently cryptic, often nonsensical) sentences on individual index cards, each representing a page.  This process evolves geometrically, from page to panel to final dialogue, at which point I do pretty much the same thing visually--thumbnail, layout, rough, pencil, rough ink, polish, finish.  It sounds like it takes forever, but it's actually a very time serving efficient approach,  For me.

4 - Where does a story usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very beginning?
The context of story dictates its volume.  As I speak, I'm doing precisely what I describe above with a project to be drawn later this year.  I'd had an eight page outline in my book for awhile, and had presumed, based on the volume, that it would break down into eight parts.  When I started carving, however, the natural breaks came to five issues--but issues that were a bit longer than the current standard.  After confirming with my publisher that this would work, I proceeded.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?
Oh god--not a chance on this specifically, but I will admit, once you put me near a microphone, my natural oralalia, tinged with a touch of tourette's, takes over.

6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?
None of the above impacts on my comics stuff.  On the other hand, when I'm solicited to provide introductory essays, I believe it's my responsibility to do more than talk about brushes, ink, and drawing technique.

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?
I believe the role of the writer in contemporary life has been profoundly diminished by the internet and blogs. It's along the lines of what's happened in the legitimate theater over the last two decades.  The audience gives everything a standing ovation--which, of course, leaves no room for a response to genuine excellence.  By democratizing opinion, an actually informed opinion gets lost in the shuffle.  I've always felt my tombstone should read "My informed enthusiasms found wanting by your ignorant indifference."  Snobbish?  Sure.  Elitist?  Fucking A.

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?
Both.  For the past year, and for the foreseeable future, I'll be working with companies where I've had to hire an editor myself.  Thus, I find myself fighting hammer and tong with someone I'm paying to fight me.  Go figure.

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?
Humility is best defined as being comfortable with one's own insignificance.  And secondly, serenity is learning to live with Plan B.

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between writing a story and drawing a story? What do you see as the appeal?
Writing and drawing your own stuff is a control freak's wet dream.   That said, I still love drawing other people's stuff.  It keeps me from getting stale.

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?
Whatever I'm doing, writing, drawing, yelling, my day begins at around 5:30 AM.  I do my clerical stuff, then take two hours off for breakfast with colleagues and friends.  then my desk from 9:00 AM until 5:00 PM.  Yes, I'm that organized--this, to deal with my natural bent toward chaos and distraction.

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?
Never happens.  And when it does, you can't beat Count Basie's old testament band.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?
The sea.

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?

I'm a product of television, movies, comics, crime fiction, the American popular song, and the American musical theater--all of which have lied to me about my entitled expectations in the realm of happiness and romantic love--and all of which have been forgiven as I've gotten over my own collusion in my own delusional expectations.

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?
I'll only list the dead, in no order--Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Dawn Powell, Gore Vidal, Frank Loesser, Lorenz Hart, Donald Westlake, Fritz Leiber, Philip Farmer, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Cole PorterS.J. Perelman, Patrick Dennis...more will occur to me later, but since they're all dead, no hurt feelings from omission.

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?

I'd very much like to live abroad for a few years.  This has been a life long dream.  Personal circumstances which are no one's business have taken this off the table, at least for the foreseeable future.

17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?

I'm afraid I'm unemployable, so my other dream, becoming a working musical comedy actor, is a perfect choice.

18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?
See above in re: unemployability.

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?
Great?  I loved a novel called RULES OF CIVILITY by Amor Towles, which got me rereading Dawn Powell. I loved Wes Anderson's MOONRISE KINGDOM, the best romantic comedy made in what feels like decades.

20 - What are you currently working on?
I'm reviving BUCK ROGERS in a four issue miniseries for Hermes press.   I'm drawing SATELLITE SAM, a crime thriller taking place in the world of 1950s children's television, written by Matt Fraction.  I'm writing a drawing a crime piece entitled MIDNIGHT OF THE SOUL, the story of a damaged war vet who finds a spiritual awakening.  And finally, I'm doing a BLACK KISS CHRISTMAS SPECIAL, and a sequel, BLACK KISS3--which, if history repeats itself, will also be unavailable to Canadians everywhere.

For fuck's sake, I'm incredibly busy.  I'm exhausted thinking about it.

Thanks for your kind attention.

[Howard Chaykin reads in Ottawa at the ottawa international writers festival on Sunday, April 28, 2013]

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

The Olive Reading Series: season thirteen,

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Anyone following this blog for any amount of time might already be aware that I’ve long been a fan of Edmonton’s Olive Reading Series [see previous posts here, here, here, here, here and here], currently held at The Empress Ale House. With a featured reader (or readers) monthly during the academic year, each event also features a new chapbook, which also sees limited distribution within the English and Film Studies Department at the University of Alberta. Frustratingly, I don’t have a full run of the chapbooks, but here are some of the recent ones Olive member Jenna Butler has been good enough to send along:

Season 13-1: Iman Mersal’s Anger in its back roads. (Tuesday, September 11, 2012)

The author of four poetry collections in Arabic, poet and editor Iman Mersal is currently anassistant professor of Arabic literature at the University of Alberta, with one collection of poetry translated into English, These Are not Oranges, My Love (New York NY: Sheep Meadow, 2008). Anger in its back roads. is a short selection of her prose poems from three different translators, including this one, translated by Youssef Rakha and first published in English in Banipal 38 – Arab American Authors:
LOVE

            A man decided to explain love to me. Leftover wine, and noon is crossing over to the other side. He was doing up the last button on his shirt as darkness edged into the corner.
Directionlessness, like the moment the screen fades out, and the viewer has to start looking for the exit. In this way he decided to explain love to me, placing the glasses firmly over his ears while I was still naked.
            The room fogged up when he said, “Love is the search for…” I opened my eyes to see hordes of Spaniards looking for gold in Chile. They were hungry and empty-handed, while a Red Indian hid, terrified, behind a rock. When he said, “Love is being content with…”, my fingers started caressing a mountain of dark chocolate, while Ella Fitzgerald’s wailing slipped into my ears. “And it is happiness…” Then I imagined absolutely nothing.
            It must be that I never saw him again, because I don’t remember ever asking him whether love was forgetting his watch by the bedside.
Mersal’s poems weave their way underneath the skin in the most magnificent ways. Her short, meditative poems also manage the difficult tightrope of prose narrative while maintaining the unmistakable cohesion of poetry. One can only hope that a Canadian publisher might be smart enough to take on a collection of her work.

Season 13-2: Sheila E. Murphy’s I don’t often write on purpose I just write(Tuesday, October 9, 2012)
I don’t often write on purpose I just write

A skein of lariats defames heraldic acquisition
Just right for a glut of storage sheds
Where history will not find them
Or their innards
Or the mind beneath them.
Phoenix, Arizona poet Sheila E. Murphy has been developing quite the relationship with Edmonton over the past few years, triggered by her ongoing collaboration with Douglas Barbour, collected now in two trade books (and counting), their Continuations [see my review of such here] and Continuations 2 [see myreview of such here]. During my time in Edmonton, they were not only launching the first of their collaborative books, but reading together for the first time. Through multiple trade books, chapbooks and other ephemera, Murphy’s solo work is expansive, very much part of the bpNichol mantra of “the poem as long as a life.” Everything, it would appear, fits into a single, never-ending project; but a fragment of something large, the scope of which we can’t yet see.
One Hundred Ninety-Fourth

Tired eyesight, redaction of inaction, as if dream
released its legs, lived on invisibly as the mute key.

The specific horn lived in worn velvet blue
dented where the bell and valves had pressed too hard.

Imprimatur, wisdom presumed accessible
via remote, next best to pure absorption.

People, non-neighborly, refer to brandnames
of their weaponry, in hope of sharing that taut bond.

In music, a challenge occurs, and the conductor
oversees the change in seating for the innocent.
There is always such a lovely cadence in Murphy’s poems, and her language brings such an unexpected music. These are poems that might require to be heard.

Season 13-3: Titilope Sonuga’s Snapshots (Tuesday, November 13, 2013)
Fearless

Tonight
we are fearless

we will run
with scissors

stare down
a spitting cobra

play chicken

with a high speed train

we have known

our share of pain

swallowed a deeper

kind of poison

we are not afraid
to crash

We will walk
naked

into
the eye of storm

call down lightning

and dare it
to touch us
One of the strengths of this series is very much the cultural range of the writers featured, not simply repeating the same English-language Canadian poets again and again, such as Nigerian-born spoken word poet Titilope Sonuga, who left Nigeria at thirteen to live in Edmonton, where she later achieved a Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering. Author of the self-published Down to Earth (2010), the fierce clarity of her poems in Snapshots are striking, and show just how powerful these poems must be when they’re performed.

Season 13-5: Anna Marie Sewell’s Dark Season (Tuesday, January 22, 2013)
things you give up

arranging six small cups on your kitchen window sill so that
the plum blossom design arcs from cup to cup around
a perfect curvature

wondering whether the world has a place for you
that curvature is now perfected
Author of the poetry collection Fifth World Drum(Frontenac House, 2009), Anna Marie Sewell is Edmonton’s fourth Poet Laureate. The strongest pieces in her small collection Dark Season are the shorter pieces, where the strength of her meditative narratives are boiled down to their essence, keeping to the bare bones.

Season 13-6: Jeff Carpenter’s affordances of fear (Tuesday, February 12, 2013)
1:30 AM, November 12, 2012
North Saskatchewan River, Emily Murphy Park, Edmonton

1.

I fear you least of all the fears afforded me. Your ice narrates and
forgets. Its advent meanders through the forest you forged, in the
valley you forged, through the city you forged. I feared my walk here,
alone in the woods at night. I was relieved to step out of the trees onto
your shore. I could see your other side where all the lights downtown
projected an orange nimbus above us.
During my tenure as writer-in-residence at the University of Alberta, I was fortunate enough to see the emergence of Edmonton poet Jeff Carpenter. All potential, raging and exploring and seeking, it’s fascinating to see how his work has been developing since, from a publication in The Peter F. Yacht Club and sound-collaborations (as Tonguebath) with glenN robsoN to work in the manifesto issue of The Capilano Review [see my review of such here] and a chapbook with Red Nettle Press, his malachi on foot (2008) [see my review of such here]. What is compelling about Carpenter’s work is its constant movement, even restlessness, not knowing exactly what might happen next. In this small chapbook, poems include title, notation, visual and text, the latter of which exists as a kind of poetic shorthand, whether sketch or notebook offering, all of which cohere into something difficult to explain or trace, and yet, one can’t look away.
3:00 AM, October 27, 2012
My backyard, Old Strathcona, Edmonton

5.

The concerned firefighter drove down to Emily Murphy Park on his
day off to find me. I was trudging uphill to work. He rolled up beside
me and said, were you walking on the river? My beard was frozen
over. I said, why do you ask? and faced him. It was Brad, Glenn’s
brother-in-aw. He recognised me too and said something that
sounded like the ice talking to itself. He gave me a ride up the hill and
explained the dangers of the frozen river, its inconstancy, especially
in the city. He told me not to walk on the ice anymore.



Pneumatic Antiphonal, Sylvia Legris

A Short Film About My Father -- new short fiction,

12 or 20 (second series) questions with kevin mcpherson eckhoff

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kevin mcpherson eckhoff when new third book by poetry this spring total now, called Forge. Thank you, Invisible Publishing! And editor, too, so check or not out www.kalamalkapress.com. The bestfriend has Jake Kennedy, and together we transgress at gmorningpoetry.blogspot.com! I am still kevin who moonlights at Okanagan College and living with a lovingly lovely Laurel in the Armstrong, BC, with our child of five beauty months and gurgles of mere toe-touching joy laughter!

1 - How did your first book change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?
Yes. And how. And what. Becoming a label of “writer” equaled an uncomfortable mutation at first, for mostly my working class parts (i.e. my liver, gluteus maximus, cerebral cortex, et cetera). Family-like and community-like people made and make and have and do expectations for “poet” and rhymes, therefore and whereas my poetself doesn’t say “poet” but some who loves wording and sharing and uncertainty languaging and laughing and collaborative togethering and amateuring! Which is exact to the lea what my first and second and third and fourth and fifth books! Hopefully, are about. My textplay now feels more public… and moving toward performance-based experiments of equal-space-power-openness!

2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction?
Poetry fewer words offered art-like collage and sound fun. Because of especially bpNichol’s concrete freedoms & possibilities. Diffident and infinitied. Fiction requires confidence of extended reason and logic, or so I originally thoughted. Let’s see. 

3 - How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes?
Gosh. Everything deepens upon a different hallway, one door for each hour! Sometimes, sometimes, and sometimes. One day, one year. Six years. Each book has been a such process of difference and unknowing as exploration of a topic or sensation or time. Take, for instance. And the notes get folded & lost, which means forgotten, yet. Larger shapes prevail with some kind of drafty scaffolding.

4 - Where does a poem usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very beginning?
Every ways, whatev! I fear! In a can of spray paint or in another writer’s uvula or in a piece of white cheddar or another artist’s septum or but since as well as I do tend to dream book-length or chapbook-length recipes more often seeming than single-serving desserts.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?
Community = thought vitality + spirituality + mental health! Readings = community! Math is good! Meth is bad! Vowels are subtle!

6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?
There is no sacred; everything is sacred! Language = ideas + playdough! Twenty-five years ago, I was writing with Derrida in my skull. Thanks, university! Now, I hold much more dire asks in my synapses, like language as light waves/particles, identity as searching, non-poets as inspired geniuses, giggles as productive solutions, holiness as touchable, self as who? Questions are gummy bears! Answers are indigestion!

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?
I was raised on He-man™ and Transformers™ and now I don’t know how to live my life. Writer and poet are increasingly antonymous. Writers should role over less, poets should role under more.

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?
Sure! Is it? My secret is that I like most people and their ideas. This kind of energy is a radical generosity. Gerry Gilbert once called editors “angels from .” No he didn’t. Maybe he did. I bet he did.

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?
Try not to be and to be fucking sincere.  -John Lent (implied advice)

Please stop.  -Laurel Eckhoff McPherson (direct “advice”)

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to critical prose)? What do you see as the appeal?
Sentences are fences, unspaces—chain link is just as obstacle as cedar boards, and their function remains. However, some fences conduct lightning while some require staining… and even if they contain gates, it’s funner to jump over them! Boingo!

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?   
Nope! Deadlines are friendly! Moments pervade! Emails to my mom are the new poetry! Comments on students’ papers are the new poetry! Poetry is the old poetry! Every is where!

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?
My horse is always spinning. The sun has always shone on its back. The grass has always grown right up to its lips. And—oops—I’ve actually always kept more than one horse in my pasture. Usually, any kind of bureaucratic obligations or essay marking inspires my writing to gallop.

13 - If there was a fire, what's the first thing you'd grab?
Oh, why does fire even have to exist!?

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art?
The truth of capitalization can be found my eyes by in places of some so many books and unbooks! Musics! Painting! Hiking! Conversations! Sitcoms! Essays! Sciences, yes! Daily news! Gardening! Patriarchies! Dance! Atrocious poetry readings! The clear night sky! Hollywood’s everything! Sculpture! Culinary arts! Love! Walmart! Sewing! Architectures! Storms! Bicycling!

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?
Today, the importance of names and lists believes in the following hugs of inspiration: My bestfriend is Jake Kennedy, and his words are soul envy! Our collaborations are blood carbonation! Also, to forever: John Lent—the giver, the Real Lisa Robertson, Tan Lin, Mr. Dr. Seuss, bpNichol, Zach Galifianakis, Gerty “the Hurty” Stein, Robert Fitterman, Vanessa Place, M. NourbeSe Philip, Jordan Scotty, Jason Christie, Dana Teen Lomax, Mathew Timmons, Sina Queyras, Reggie Watts, Kenny Goldylocksmith, very etc. I will trying to brain handle that, the very Bible, one day in faith and history and hope.

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?
Suddenly, seemingly dropped from a cloud. Also, write a children’s book.

17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer? 18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?
I was supposed to inherit my dad’s concrete placing and finishing business. I may have been a painter, a security guard, a community theatre actor. Writing has side-doored into postsecondary teaching, while concrete placing and finishing would have front-doored into living in my car. Writing requires very few wheelbarrows, canvases and Advil.

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?
Animalway Armfay by Mahala Woodford! And BS Johnson’s The Unfortunates? And Gertrude Stein’s History or Messages from History! Ebbflux also makes my poet tingle! I want to experience Harmony Korine’s Gummo, but don’t know the how-to! I will soon!

20 - What are you currently working on?
I co-tend a horsewith Jake Kennedy—it’s named Death Valley:A Collaborative Community Western Noveland is being being built by soliciting single, western-themed sentences from folks in and around ourOkanagan community. After collecting some couple of thousand lines, the novel will begin to interest our skulls and ribcages because of course will shifts into from poetry qualities (compression; chance; assemblage; disjuncture) into the realm of narrative. Lastly and also, I recently curated their biography, which in asks the anyone and everyone to add words to my lifestory. Simple! Now-also, and even lastly, I am trying the stand-up comedy jokes in public and starting to thinking about translating some poetries by Mario Santiago Papasquiaro. Perhaps should just finish a guest-edited Jake Kennedy withness issue of Open Letter future numinous. Thanks!

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

A series of author photos: rob mclennan by Kerr, McInnes and whist,

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For years, I preferred the idea of cartoon depictions on the back covers of chapbooks and books, as opposed to professionally-done author photos. I spent a long period unhappy with any photographic depictions of myself, and thought that by asking comic artists irregularly to draw me for such would be far more interesting, and make a cool archive down the road. Since the early 1990s, various artists that have drawn or painted me include Greg Kerr, Gavin McInnes, Dave Cooper, Heather Spears, David Cation, Diane Woodward, Tom Fowler [see the amazing "engagement photo" he did for us here] and the artist once known as emily whist (for years, I’ve dreamed of the possibility of an author sketch by Adrian Tomine or Kate Beaton, but so far, nothing yet). There was even a quick sketch once done by the poet George Murray that I used for a chapbook at one point. Here are a couple of examples I’ve discovered, while preparing my archives for the University of Calgary.

I originally met Ottawa artist and musician Greg Kerr through the small self-published comics he sold through Crosstown Traffic, Buncha Stories, immediately reaching out to write a short piece on him for The Charletan, during that period (circa 1993) I was writing regularly for Carleton University’s paper. Kerr drew a number of depictions of me over the years (most of which I’m still digging around my archive for), but he drew this one specifically for my first Broken Jaw Press publication, the chapbook Poems from the Blue Horizon (1994).

The “donut” reference on the coffee cup in the drawing refers to the fact that I wrote for a number of years in a Dunkin’ Donuts on Bank Street, where he used to occasionally visit me (after it closed, the location became a Tim Hortons, currently at the corner of Bank and Gloucester Streets). Without space in my shared house to write, I wrote six days a week, five hours a day in that donut shop (from 10am until 3pm) from roughly May, 1994 (after it opened) to June 2000 (when it closed), and most of my first few published books were composed in that donut shop window. During that period, I wrote poems and reviews in the donut shop, and fiction during occasional evenings at The Royal Oak.

Greg Kerr later on had a comic strip included in the visual art and literary journal I produced in the mid-1990s, Missing Jacket, and above/ground press produced a small comic of his, Drunkboy Stories (May, 1997). For a short time, his strips were included in the Ottawa X-Press, but, despite his loyal legion of Ottawa fans, nothing since.

Gavin McInnes sketched this mocking image of me for the seventh issue of STANZAS (above/ground press, November, 1995). The portrait gives the impression he didn’t have high opinions of either myself, poets or Toronto, but he claimed later that it was mockery, and he was shocked that I had actually published the thing. Why not? At that point, McInnes was self-producing a small comic zine he sold through Crosstown Traffic, but hadn’t yet started up at Vice Magazine. He later appeared on at least one panel on Politically Incorrect, and has recently produced a series of strange, short and amazing videos.

For a period after that, McInnes was co-producing a comic strip with Dave Cooper, who still keeps in touch with him.

emily whist was the pseudonym of the Ottawa artist Rob Nelms, said to be part of the family that owned and operated Nelms Opticians. I originally saw his artwork in the strangest corners of the University of Ottawa during the period I took a poetry workshop there, the 1992-1993 academic year. He had produced a series of very strange images, put them on stickers, and hid them throughout washrooms, on billboards, and various other locales.

I don’t recall specifically how I ended up meeting him, but this image was drawn on a paper placemat as I sat with Rob and his partner for a couple of minutes around midnight, at a Chinatown restaurant at the corner of Somerset Street West and Bronson Avenue. They were having dinner, and I was slowly making my way home from something, slightly or even somewhat intoxicated (I must have been wearing my "Go Fish" t-shirt that night, produced by another Ottawa artist from that period).

He was another who drew me more than once, and he even gifted a package of artwork I was free to use for various above/ground press chapbooks. I used fragments of his artwork on Natalee Caple’s poetry chapbook, The Appetites of Tiny Hands (Nov 26, 1997), the WHIPlash 2 reader (the anthology of the second annual WHIPlash poetry festival, June 1997) and various issues of the long poem journal STANZAS, including meghan lynch (now Meghan Jackson)’s “inside     first floor         at the randomization factory” (issue #13; June 1997) and ryan fitzpatrick’s “further revisions” (issue #25; July 2001).

He had large-scale paintings that once hung in galleries all over Ottawa, and he and his partner were the core of the most amazing noise-band, The Kittenling Foundation, who once performed as part of the second annual WHIPlash poetry festival in 1997. Their performance included a Theremin, singing, noise and a toaster. Stories of what happened to him after that vary, and are mostly unverified. Needless to say he was damned talented, incredibly strange, well-liked, and, bafflingly, simply disappeared.

Etgar Keret, Four Stories

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 Etgar’s stories are a reminder of that rude intangible that often goes unspoken in creative writing workshops: a great work of art is often just residual evidence of a great human soul. There is sweetheartedness and wisdom and eloquence and transcendence in his stories because these virtues exist in Etgar himself.
Reading his stories, we are reminded that what we call “craft” is really just the means by which the writer manages to give clear passage to these positive virtues.
            George Saunders, “Introducing Etgar Keret”

In the absence of a new collection of short fiction by Israeli author Etgar Keret [see my previous piece on him here; see his “12 or 20 questions” interview here], I’ve been reading through his Four Stories(Syracuse NY: Syracuse University Press, 2010), published as part of “The B. G. Rudolph Lectures in Judaic Studies” at Syracuse University. Introduced by George Saunders, the short collection features an edited version of a lecture Keret gave at the university in October, 2009, as well as the four stories he read from. The lecture, titled “Second Generation,” is an absolutely stunning essay on growing up as a child of Holocaust survivors, and how that fed directly into the way he sees the world, and his writing:

            When you read second-generation authors, and there are some wonderful authors—children of Holocaust survivors, like Savyon Liebrecht, Lizzie Doron, Nava Semel, and now, recently, Amir Gutfreund—the thing that they always talk about is the silence. The fact that there was always a silence in their houses. Basically, Holocaust survivors did not talk about the Holocaust experience, either out of some wish to suppress the pain or even sometimes from a feeling of strong, unjustified, shame. They didn’t want to tell those stories. I must say that in my house it was different, different in very strange ways that, as a kid, I was uncritical of—and I guess that also as an adult, I was uncritical. Maybe now after passing forty, I look at it differently, but my parents always had these things. You know, they never denied the horrifying experience they had to go through, but there was something in the way that they told it.
            For example, my father spent almost six hundred days of the war in a hole in the ground, and I asked him, “Father, how did you get through that?” And he said, “You know, son, I have this belief that every person is the world champion in something. But the sad thing about it is, most of us will never discover what we are really good at. There are people who could be amazing tennis players, and they just play piano all their life, and they are mediocre at that, and they don’t know they could be great tennis players. One thing I can say about the war is that it showed me my greatest talent, the thing that nobody in the world can do better than me. And that’s sleep! Throughout this long period, every day, I would close my eyes, fall asleep, wake up six or seven hours later, and I would say to my father, ‘Dad, is the war over?’ And he would say, ‘No.’ So I said, ‘Maybe I should sleep some more.’ This was my way of surviving the war. And all the people who were in hiding with me were jealous of me because they had to be there in a place in which time stood still, afraid for their lives, while I was sleeping.”

Part of what attracts me to Keret’s writing includes the sheer humanity of it, focusing on the important connections and disconnections between people, and the absolute brevity of his writing style, including only what is essential to the purposes of each story. Even through repeating the story of his father’s war experiences living and sleeping in a hole in the ground, a lesser writer might describe the hole, the population of the hole, the circumstances of the hole, or even describe other tangents that would take away from the story’s purpose and power. Thanks to his parents, Keret is able to speak fearlessly about what others can only whisper, openly exploring various dark histories and situations, both large and small. In his lecture, he speaks about the optimism his parents gave their three children, and that is what is most attractive in Keret’s fiction: his clarity, his fearless and his boundless optimism.

There aren’t many things I think everyone should read. This is something I think everyone should read.



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