Archive for October, 2010

Lepson, Reid, Schiavo, Sharif @ Stain

Sunday, October 31st, 2010

On Friday, October 29th people came out for another installment of the monthly reading series, Stain of Poetry. The reading took place at Goodbye Blue Monday in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, NY and was hosted by myself and Erika Moya. The readers were Ruth Lepson, Rick Reid, Michael Schiavo and Solmaz Sharif.

Ruth Lepson read poems with Ben Davis on electric bass. Rick Reid read a new poem, as well as a section from his book, To Be Hung from the Ceiling by Strings of Varying Length. Solmaz Sharif dazzled the crowd with poems from her manuscript which uses language from the Department of Defense and Michael Schiavo read new poems. I think Schiavo wins for best titles! Here’s his set list:

1. Aubade Admitting Lovers Don’t Part Always Always
2. Johnny & the Mothers are Playing “Stompin’ at the Savoy” in Vermont Tonight
3. High Noon in Maine Without Birthday Suit or Birch
4. Patton Oswalt While the Oligarchy Funk Refurbishes the Rumpus
5. Farrago for Henry Gould Not Henry Gould But Henry

Steven Karl


Poets Forum: Kinnell, Koethe, Mattawa

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

The Academy of American Poets celebrated its 2010 award winners in a ceremony at The New School’s Tishman Auditorium in Manhattan last night. Set lists below. Wallace Stevens Award winner Galway Kinnell read three poems, as well as an excerpt from Stevens’s “Sunday Morning.” He was introduced by Sharon Olds, who read a playful poem that referenced Kinnell’s work.

Other readers included Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize winner John Koethe, Academy Fellowship winner Khaled Mattawa, Walt Whitman Award winner Carl Adamshick,  Raiziss/de Palchi Translation Award winner Paul Vangelisti, and Morton Landon Translation Award winner Stephen Kessler. Beth Harrison read for James Laughlin Award winner Michael Dickman, who was not present.

Sets:

Galway Kinnell

1. Sunday Morning (excerpt)
2. Wait
3. Oatmeal
4. New Poem

John Koethe

1. The Menomyny Valley

Khaled Mattawa

1. On the Difficulty of Documentation
2. Tocqueville
3. Before

Carl Adamshick

1. Even Though

Paul Vangelisti

1. Assassins in Love

Stephen Kessler

1. The Desolation of the Chimera

Beth Harrison (for Michael Dickman)

1. The Sea


Kentucky Reading Series Report: Sarabande Books and 21c Museum Hotel

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

by Christopher Walker

If a native Louisvillian had to take an out-of-towner to a classy and hip space, the former would most likely take his or her guest to 21c. The combination museum-hotel-restaurant & bar (Proof on Main), at the corner of 7th and Main streets, is smack dead in the heart of “Museum Row” in historic downtown Louisville. 21c hosts the Sarabande Books Monthly Poetry Series on the last Monday of every month, January through October.

21c is a unique museum dedicated to collecting and exhibiting the very best work of living artists from all over the world. This mission is handled exquisitely through meticulous placement of exhibits throughout the entire building. 21c doesn’t seem to grasp the concept of a blank wall; everything in the hotel has a purpose and every inch of space is used to exemplify this idea. The galleries change approximately twice a year.

The mission and atmosphere of 21c acts as a naturally-fitting location for the Sarabande reading series, which switched locales from the Pink Door because of their complementing missions and desire to display the creative works of modern artists. Sarabande Books, a nonprofit literary press founded in March 1994 in Louisville, focuses on publishing poetry and short fiction, but also puts out some great creative nonfiction, as well. They have since garnered much renown and become a widely recognized independent publisher, releasing work by Jenny Boully, James Kimbrell, Cate Marvin, Ander MonsonAleda ShirleyJulia Story, Jean Valentine, and many others.

In the south atrium of 21c, in one conference room about the size of an average university classroom, the walls hold a border by the photography of Gabriel Wrye’s “Tout Se Moun” (or “Every Person is a Person”). It was dedicated to hosting the reading. All the chairs were filled, and the multiple pitchers of water, drank to their empty bottoms.

Every Sarabande reading opens with a musical guest; this time around it was local artist Heather Summers. She pleased the crowd of fifty plus—a few only left with room to stand—with a few original songs, a few covers, playing both piano and guitar.

The poets came next. New Yorker Jason Schneiderman read a few selections from his 2004 collection Sublimation Point, then continued on to read from his new book, Striking Surface. Schneiderman’s poetry seemed to have a necessity to be read aloud. His opening poem, the self-deprecating “Schneiderman” garnered audience chuckles. This was in juxtaposition to the majority of elegiac poems referring to his late mother. These poems, such as “Elegy I (Work)” and “Elegy III (The Kübler-Ross Joke),” displayed a realistic feeling of grief but also a sense of morbid, ironic humor.

Following Schneiderman’s reading, ex-New Yorker (now in Louisville by way of St. Louis) Jennifer Kronovet read selections from her 2009 collection Awayward. The book is Kronovet’s compilation of her experiences living in a foreign country and culture. Her masterful use of prose elucidates her culture shock in the opening poem “Weekend.” She also read a piece on the degradation of language—“Excuse Me”—and a few poems (“System”, “Basic”, “Order”) concerning motherhood.

Unique to this season’s readings have been the question-and-answer sessions. This time around, both poets discussed their involvement in a workshop with the Kentucky School for the Blind among many other taste-related inquiries.

The new season will begin on January 24th, and if the series picks up some momentum, one thing is certain: they’ll need more chairs.

Performers are listed below:



Whiting winners announced

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Ten writers, including three poets, were announced winners of $50,000 Whiting Awards at a ceremony in New York City last night. The poets are Matt Donovan, Jane Springer and LB Thompson. A complete list of winners can be found here.

The awards go to writers who are in the early stages of their careers and who show “extraordinary talent and promise.” The Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation has presented literary awards since 1985.  

Here are bios for the three poets:

Matt Donovan, poetry. His first collection of poetry, Vellum, was published by Mariner/Houghton Mifflin in 2006. He lives in Santa Fe, N.M.

Jane Springer, poetry. Her first poetry collection, Dear Blackbird, was published by University of Utah Press in 2007. She lives in Clinton, N.Y.

LB Thompson, poetry. Her poetry chapbook is entitled Tendered Notes: Poems of Love and Money. She lives on the North Fork of Long Island, has completed a poetry collection and is at work on a book of essays and a novel.


Angelou’s papers to Schomburg Center

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

The New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture has acquired and will archive 343 boxes of Maya Angelou’s “personal papers and documents.” According to reports, these include drafts of her writing, as well as correspondence with Martin Luther King Jr., James Baldwin, Malcolm X, Langston Hughes, Coretta Scott King and others.

Angelou, 82, says she’s been planning on donating her papers for years. The Schomburg Center, located in Harlem,  will take at least two years to archive the materials, but will display some of them right away.

The Schomburg Center has “collected, preserved, and provided access to materials documenting black life, and promoted the study and interpretation of the history and culture of peoples of African descent” for more than 80 years.


‘Weeds’ star on contemporary poetry

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Weeds star Mary-Louise Parker is “almost always” reading contemporary poetry despite the fact that it might not be “fashionable,” she tells movies.ie in a recent interview.

Parker says that she reads Dennis Johnson, Charles Simic, Mark Strand, W.S. Merwin, and Andrew Zawacki, among others.  From the interview:

“I like our Poet Laureate at the moment – W.S. Merwin. I like Charles Simic, Mark Strand and Andrew Zawacki. I actually think Dennis Johnson writes very good poetry. A lot of people say they can’t understand it; they are trying to figure it out. I just think it’s like a song – you read it and let it wash over you. I think poetry is more rhythmic, in a way… There is a line in an Andrew Zawacki poem that I tried to figure out for like, seven years. And I love the poem, and I went back and read it again because I really did want to get something from it. He had this phrase… ‘an imminent leftover love’. It took me a long time to digest that… Maybe I’m not very bright! [laughs]”


Youn, Tobin to read at Four Way launch

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

The Annual Four Way Books Launch will feature readings by Debra Allbery, Priscilla Becker, Daniel Tobin, Megan Staffel, and Monica Youn at McNally Jackson Book Center in Manhattan next Thursday, November 4.

Youn’s new book Ignatz, which was released in the spring, was announced as a National Book Award finalist earlier this month. The winner will be announced on November 17.


Hartley, Languell to read @ Earshot

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Heather Hartley, Krystal Languell, Sarah Levine, JC Longbottom and Lindsay Turner will read at the Earshot Reading Series on Friday, November 5 at Rose Live Music in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

Says the Web site: “The EARSHOT Reading Series is dedicated to the work and presence of the most gifted and exciting emerging writers in the greater New York City area. The series, founded in early 2005, provides an opportunity for graduate writing students to share their work with an audience that reaches beyond the MFA community. Each reading also highlights the literary merits of two non-MFA writers, some breaking out and some firmly established in the literary community. EARSHOT allows writers of different levels of achievement and varied styles to mingle freely. Poets and prose writers (both fiction and non-fiction) are equally encouraged to submit and participate.

Readings are bi-monthly, featuring a diverse range of voices. All EARSHOT readers are welcome to sell or distribute copies of their work at readings, provided the material is not copyrighted to others elsewhere.

Past EARSHOT readers include superstars such as: Elaine Equi, Sharon Mesmer, Mark Bibbins, Mónica de la Torre, David Lehman, John Weir, Jennifer Michael Hecht, Jennifer L. Knox, Anthony Tognazzini, Joshua Ferris, Noelle Kocot, Shanna Compton, Amy King, Marissa Walsh, and many, many more!”


Come on All You Ghosts

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

by Matthew Zapruder
Copper Canyon Press 2010
Reviewed by Kathleen Rooney

8_5

“…a little digital hope.”

zapruder ghosts cover“Growth is always loss.” So says psychologist James Hillman in his book We’ve Had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy and the World’s Getting Worse. His statement is probably pretty true in general, but it also seems particularly applicable to Matthew Zapruder’s third collection, Come On  All You Ghosts. Because what Hillman also means is “The imagination changes.”  Yes. Zapruder’s hip, lyrical imagination, the one that powered his first two books, American Linden and The Pajamaist, is still in force here, but it is different: older and not necessarily wiser, per se, but even more open than before. The speaker of these poems admits he is no longer young, but he remembers that he once was, and he writes of those who still are, speculating in the poem “Global Warming”: “The young. / Maybe they’ll let us be in their dreams.” Meanwhile, he acknowledges that he is becoming, or has become, one of the “people of middle/indeterminate age” of whom he also writes.

The edgy and Post-Avant sensibilities for which Zapruder has come to be known are still present as well, but they have been tempered with elegy and aging. The book is in large part “about” the biggest loss of all: death, including those of the poet’s father, of David Foster Wallace, of Robert Creeley, of Kenneth Koch and numerous others. But the collection is also about a loss of certainty, and a shift to an older perspective in which the observer gets stripped of his youthful confidence, thereby becoming better able, as he puts it in the poem “Pocket,” to try “standing in an actual stance of mystery / and not knowing towards the world.”

Zapruder begins one of the book’s most lovely and representative poems, “Grace Paley,” with the blunt statement that “People say they don’t understand poetry,” then continues, “Meaning how must we proceed.” Zapruder proceeds with a graceful movement back and forth between the past of his youth, and the present of his middle-age. Here is a lengthy passage, but the length is necessary to capture the sense of motion, of growth and loss:

                             I was thirteen, Earth
was a couch, without any irritable reaching
after fact or reason I placed thousands of
Sweet Tarts into my mouth. Five years
later someone said they saw Diane P.
kissing a girl in a car, and they punched
the window on the passenger side
in and I laughed, and it’s all been as
people say downhill from there, meaning
until this moment I have been coasting,
but from this one forward Grace I vow
I shall coast no more.

This section is typical of the gentle slaloming feeling—inevitable, never forced—that Zapruder’s poems have as they slide toward conclusions that are surprising, but apt.

Other reviews have already said that these poems are beautiful, and they are. As in his previous books, Zapruder delivers erudite descriptions of such things as “the hoarse glassy call / of the black American crow” and a colleague’s desk, which “is a medium-sized wooden lake / on which float two staplers.” He sounds like a discerning critic—a refined reviewer of life itself—when he observes in the poem “Prelude” that Diet Coke:

                                        …tastes
like nothing plus the idea of chocolate,
or an acquaintance of chocolate
speaking fondly of certain times
it and chocolate had spoken of nothing,
or nothing remembering a field
in which it once ate the most wondrous
sandwich of ham and rustic chambered cheese
yet still wished for a piece of chocolate
before the lone walk back through
the corn then the darkening forest
to the disappointing village and its super
creepy bed and breakfast.

At the same time, though, these poems also wonder what the point of any of this—of beauty, of thinking, of writing poems, of living, etc.—really is.  

In “You Have Astounding Cosmic News,” for instance, he writes, in an ostensible open letter to sociologists, “we’ve been conducting field experiments into our private thoughts. One / faction next to the soul shaped watercooler wonders whether / there’s any reason at all to remember the feeling of being a child.” These are thoughtful poems, which is to say they are poems in which the speaker frequently mentions his own act of thinking, declaring at one point, “I am getting ready to have important thoughts,” and at another, “I see sad crushed plastic / everywhere and put / some thoughts composed / of words that do not / belong together / together and feel / a little digital hope.” And, perhaps in keeping with his shift from a youthful knowing to an older wondering, as he thinks about his thoughts, they become less and less familiar. “When I think very hard / about my thoughts,” he writes, “they seem / to me to be very small horses / attached to invisible reins / attached to facts.”

Throughout the collection, Zapruder’s poetic persona seems concerned with its own authority: What can he say? What should he be saying? Plenty of poems and poets have covered this turf, with the more language-y ones tending to conclude that there is little to no such authority to begin with—that words inevitably fail, that communication is bound to break down. Yet while Zapruder’s poems are playful and funny, he makes it clear he’s not just playing around. His poems posit that something is at stake, or at least that something ought to be. And the book, though not linked together with any overall story or clearcut throughline, does suggest an arc, the speaker starting out with these doubts, grappling with them, and concluding: yes, I can make meaning and I can make it in such a way that this meaning can keep being made after I am gone. Communication can, does, and should occur. In a way, Come On All You Ghosts poses, wrestles directly and indirectly with, and finally answers yes to the question of whether poetry can matter.

Zapruder ends the book with the 14-page title poem whose last stanza expresses a satisfaction of sorts about what he—as a person and as a poet—is trying to do, and that when it’s his turn to become a ghost himself, he will:

…have done my best to leave

behind this machine
anyone with a mind
who cares can enter.

*


VIDEO: Donnelly book release in Brooklyn

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Timothy Donnelly read the long title poem from his new book The Cloud Corporation (Wave Books) at his book release party, which was held at A Public Space in Brooklyn earlier this month. Our exclusive video coverage, filmed and edited by DJ Dolack, includes interviews with Mary Jo Bang, Joshua Bell, Brett Fletcher Lauer, Lytton Smith and Mark Strand.