Posts Tagged ‘Argos Books’

This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, June 2nd, 2013

Sundays, Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough NYC readings. Check out this week’s picks.
 
 

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Hatchet Job XVI: Cruz, Dimitrov, Waters, & Amling
Tuesday, June 4th @ 7:30pm
Suburbia330 Melrose Street, Basement, Brooklyn, NY

Hatchet Job is a monthly reading series in which poets of all persuasions don’t let the sun go down on their love and read in a punk house where dreams are made. It’s free until forever. The beer costs dirt.

Join us for Hatchet Job XVI, the second month at our new venue, Suburbia.

Cynthia Cruz is the author of Ruin and The Glimmering Room. Her poems have been published in the New Yorker, the American Poetry Review, Paris Review, Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, Field, Kenyon Review, and others.

Alex Dimitrov is the author of Begging For It and American Boys. His poems have appeared in The Yale Review, Kenyon Review, Slate, Poetry Daily, Tin House, Boston Review, and the American Poetry Review, which awarded him the Stanley Kunitz Prize in 2011.

Jacqueline Waters is the author of One Sleeps the Other Doesn’t and A Minute without Danger. Her work has appeared in 6×6, The Poker, Zoland Poetry, Chicago Review, Realpoetik, Boston Review, and The Poetry Project Newsletter.

Eric Amling is the author of the chapbook Legal Pure. His poems and prints appear widely and some are forthcoming in Fence and The Brooklyn Rail. His art book, Big East Limousines, will be published in Fall 2013.

Hosted by Danniel Schoonebeek

 

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The Obscenity Party
Wednesday, June 5th @ 6pm
Cornelia Street Cafe, 29 Cornelia Street, New York, NY

The Obscenity Party – In celebration of Angelo Nikolopoulos’ publication of OBSCENELY YOURS with special guests Wayne Koestenbaum and Edmund White, and a cabaret performance by Daniel Isengar.

Daniel Isengart has performed his solo act Off-Broadway, in countless supper clubs and cabarets, multiple art museums and theater festivals abroad. Isengart has been called the Darling of Café Sabarsky, the city’s only established German Cabaret venue, where he has presented a record of over 9 different programs, including a highly controversial solo-version of Weill and Brecht’sSeven Deadly SIns. He has also been a mainstay and star at the annual Museum Mile Festival on Fifth Avenue.

Wayne Koestenbaum is the author of several collections of poetry, including Blue Stranger with Mosaic Background (2012), Best-Selling Jewish Porn Films (2006),The Milk of Inquiry (1999), and Ode to Anna Moffo and Other Poems (1990), which was named one of the Village Voice Literary Supplement’s Favorite Books of the Year. His prose works include Humiliation (2011); Hotel Theory (2007); the novel Moira Orfei in Aigues-Mortes (2004); Cleavage: Essays on Sex, Stars, and Aesthetics(2000); and National Book Critics Circle Award–nominated The Queen’s Throat: Opera, Homosexuality, and the Mystery of Desire (1993).

Angelo Nikolopoulos’ first book of poems is Obscenely Yours, winner of the 2011 Kinereth Gensler Award (Alice James Books 2013). His poems have appeared in Best American Poetry 2012, Best New Poets 2011, Boston Review, Fence, The Los Angeles Review, The New York Quarterly, Tin House, and elsewhere. He is a winner of the 2011 “Discovery” / Boston Review Poetry Contest and the founder of the White Swallow Reading Series in Manhattan. He teaches at Rutgers University, New Brunswick and lives in New York City.

Edmund White has written over twenty books. He is perhaps best known for his biography of French writer Jean Genet, for which he won the National Book Critics Circle Award. He is also the author of a trilogy of autobiographical novels: A Boy’s Own StoryThe Beautiful Room is Empty, and The Farewell Symphony. His most recent novel is Jack Holmes and His Friend. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, he teaches writing at Princeton and lives in New York City.

$8 cover includes a drink

 

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“COUPLET”
Thursday, June 6th @ 7 to 10 PM
The Delancey, Lower live performance level, 168 Delancey Street (Between Clinton & Attorney), New York, NY

A Poetry and Music Series at The Delancey, LES. Quarterly.

Hosted by poet Leah Umansky, Couplet is a quarterly reading series held on the Lower East Side featuring both emerging and established poets. Every event features music & after-party by DJ Ceremony. No cover.

#CoupletNYC (Instagram/Twitter)

This edition’s featured poets:

J. Bradley is the Web Editor of Monkeybicycle. He lives at iheartfailure.net.

Jillian Brall is co-editor of the poetry journal, Lyre Lyre, and co-curates the Earshot reading series. Her poems have appeared in journals such as Ragazine, Esque, Connotation Press, Ping Pong Magazine, Unshod Quills, and others. She is also a visual artist.

Jackie Clark is the series editor of Poets off Poetry and Song of the Week for Coldfront Magazine. She is the recipient of a 2012 New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship in Poetry and is the author of three chapbooks: Office Work (Greying Ghost Press), Red Fortress (H_NGM_N), and I Live Here Now (Lame House Press). Jackie lives in Jersey City and can be found online at nohelpforthat.com. Her first book, Aphoria, was recently published by Brooklyn Arts Press.

Adam Fitzgerald is the founding editor of the poetry journal Maggy, and teaches at Rutgers University and The New School. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in A Public Space, Boston Review, The Brooklyn Rail, Conjunctions, Fence and elsewhere. His first book of poems, The Late Parade, is forthcoming from W. W. Norton’s Liveright imprint in June. He lives in the East Village.

Dolan Morgan lives and writes in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where he is an editor at The Atlas Review. His work can be found in The Believer, Field, Pank, The Lifted Brow, Red Lightbulbs, Armchair/Shotgun, The Collagist and elsewhere.

Your Hostess:
Leah Umansky is a New Yorker by birth, a teacher by choice, and an anglophile at heart. Her first collection of poems, DOMESTIC UNCERTAINTIES, has been published in 2013 by BlazeVOX Books. She earned her MFA in Poetry at Sarah Lawrence College and is a recipient of a 1-week fellowship at the Norman Mailer Writers Colony. She is a contributing writer for both BOMB Magazine’s BOMBLOG and for The Rumpus. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in: Barrow Street, Cream City Review, Women’s Studies Quarterly, The Paterson Literary Review, Magma Poetry (UK),and Harpur Palate. She is also a contributing writer for The Rumpus and BOMB Magazine ‘s BOMBLOG. Find more of her work at: www.iammyownheroine.wordpress.com

Your DJ:
DJ Ceremony has played at well over 100 venues in and around New York City since 2001, at both public & private events. He is the producer & DJ of “Oscillate Wildly”, a monthly Smiths & Morrissey tribute dance party in the Lower East Side, among other special one-night-only themed events. His sound often culls from Postpunk, Glam Rock, Indie, Haçienda, Britpop, Factory Records, Shoegaze, Manchester, Dreampop, & British Invasion.www.djceremony.com

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Lauren Russell & Friends
Friday, June 7th @ 7pm
Unnameable Books, 600 Vanderbilt Ave., Brooklyn

Edmund Berrigan is the author of two books of poetry, Disarming Matter (Owl Press) and Glad Stone Children (farfalla press/McMillan & Parrish), and a quasi-memoir, Can It! (Letter Machine Editions). He is editor of the Selected Poems of Steve Carey (Sub Press), and is co-editor with Anselm Berrigan and Alice Notley of The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan and The Selected Poems of Ted Berrigan (both University of California Press). He is an editor for poetry mags Vlak and Brawling Pigeon, and on the editorial board of Lungfull!.

Jessica Fiorini is the author of two chapbooks, Sea Monster at Night (Goodbye Better) and Light Suite (Pudding House Publications). Hew poems have appeared in Lungfull!, The Brooklyn Rail, The Poetry Project Newsletter, and Vlak. She lives in Brooklyn and makes video games.

Joanna Fuhrman is the author of four books of poetry, most recently Pageant (Alice James Books) and Moraine (Hanging Loose Press). In 2011, Least Weasel published her chapbook The Emotive Function. She is the poetry editor for the journal Ping Pong and used to host readings at the Poetry Project at Saint Mark’s Church. Recent poems appear in Volt, The Believer, Hanging Loose, and Maggy. She teaches poetry writing at Rutgers University, in her apartment, and in New York City public schools through Teachers & Writers Collaborative. Her essays on teaching appear regularly in Teachers & Writers Magazine.

Robert Kerr is a playwright living in Brooklyn. He was in the band Alien Detector while he lived in Minneapolis, where he also served as musical director for Bedlam Theatre’s production of Land Without Trees. He wrote the book and lyrics for the 10-minute musical The Sticky-Fingered Fiancee with composer Mat Eisenstein, and often writes songs for his own plays.

Lauren Russell is the author of the chapbooks Dream-Clung, Gone (Brooklyn Arts Press) and The Empty-Handed Messenger (Goodbye Better). She is an M.F.A. student at the University of Pittsburgh, where she also teaches writing and serves as a poetry editor of Hot Metal Bridge.

Hosted by David Kirschenbaum

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CLMP + WONDER present: SUMMER CRUSH
Friday, June 7th @ 8pm
LA SALA at Cantina Royal, 58 N. 3rd St, Brooklyn, New York

TICKETS NOW FOR SALE at http://clmp.org/crush !! ~*

CLMP + WONDER present
~*SUMMER CRUSH*~
a fundraiser to benefit CLMP

fatal attractions include:

♥ KATE DURBIN ♥
♥ ROB FITTERMAN ♥
♥ ARIANA REINES ♥
♥ KIM ROSENFIELD ♥
♥ MAX STEELE ♥

&

♥ C. RYDER COOLEY & HAZEL (feat. Jeffrey Lependorf) ♥

w/ your gorgeous host
♥ LARA GLENUM ♥

dance party to follow
DJ sets by Silent Drape Runners, Andrew Shuta and Wonder

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special pamphlet with original txt by ♥ KEVIN KILLIAN ♥ generously provided by UGLY DUCKLING PRESSE, ARGOS BOOKS, FUTUREPOEM, and WONDER; included with admission.

tickets to the ~*SUMMER CRUSH*~ fundraiser, as well as the interactive crush list, are now available (clmp.org/crush) !

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generously sponsored by The Segue Foundation; beer lovingly provided by Brooklyn Brewery.

 


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, April 28th, 2013

Sundays, Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. Email listings for consideration to stephanie(dot)whited(at)gmail.

Check out this week’s picks.

 
 
 
 
 
CUNY Chapfest
May 2nd – 4th, 2013 
City University of New York, 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY

The fifth annual City University of New York (CUNY) Chapbook Festival will be held from May 3 to May 4 at the CUNY Graduate Center in New York City. The program features workshops on producing chapbooks for writers and publishers, as well as readings and a bookfair. All events are free and open to the public. Visit the website for information about the 2013 festival.
 
 

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Argos Books Spring Reading; Fundraiser; Text Appreciation Social
Thursday, May 2nd @ 7:30pm
Mellow Pages Library, 56 Bogart St. 1S, Brooklyn, NY

Spring is upon us, lambs, and we at Argos Books are so excited to celebrate the fairest of the seasons with a fundraiser reading in support of our second full-length collection! http://rkthb.co/22653

Come hear work from Argos all-stars ANDREW DURBIN, JOSH EDWIN, CAITIE MOORE and BIANCA STONE.

We’ll have snacks! and libations!, and an iPad station open to accept contributions to our forthcoming project, j/j hastain’s phenomenal Forensics of the Chamber!

[Q: What is Forensics of the Chamber?
A: A glittery panting beast, a convocation of the visual and poetic. Language and collage make this rich, sharp sort of nest; it is expansive and playful and provocative and important.]

We intend to do our part in realizing a book that is aesthetically and conceptually profound. Forensics of the Chamber will be printed in color and perfect-bound. We hope to use support from our rockethub page—bolstered by this event!—to help cover the cost of printing (with 20+ full-color images) and shipping.

In addition to our gratitude and that peaceful slumber that follows helping the poetic community, your contribution will garner you TREASURES. Goods include:

- a black and white Super 8 film/video link of poet Brenda Iijima’s performative dance piece, filmed by poet and filmmaker Stephanie Gray, created just for this occasion
- a limited-edition j/j hastain broadside
- beautiful Argos titles
- (and, of course) Forensics of the Chamber itself when it is printed

Love,
Argos
 

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The Poetry Project: Clark & Stone
Friday, May 3rd @ 10pm
St. Mark’s Church, New York, NY 

Jackie Clark is the series editor of Poets off Poetry and Song of the Week for Coldfront Magazine. She is the recipient of a 2012 New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship in Poetry and is the author of three chapbooks: Office Work (Greying Ghost Press), Red Fortress (H_NGM_N), and I Live Here Now (Lame House Press). Jackie lives in Jersey City and can be found online at nohelpforthat.com.  Her first book, Aphoria, was recently published by Brooklyn Arts Press.

Bianca Stone is the author of several poetry chapbooks, as well as an ongoing poetry-comic series from Factory Hollow Press. She is the illustrator of Antigonick, a collaboration with Anne Carson (New Directions, 2012), and her poems have appeared in journals such as Tin House, APR, and Crazyhorse. Her first full-length collection of poetry Someone Else’s Wedding Vows is forthcoming from Tin House/Octopus Books. She lives in Brooklyn.

 

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Bushwick Sweethearts
May 4th @ 7pm
Molasses Books, 770 Hart Street, Brooklyn, NY

Bushwick Sweethearts 1.5 will be held at Molasses Books on May 4th at 7 p.m. Our headliners are Jason Koo (of Brooklyn Poets) and Dolan Morgan (of The Atlas Review). We encourage everyone to get there early to snag a free, hand-screened “pop-up” zine featuring our readers/artists’ work.
More details and RSVP are here. 

 

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TOTEM VI: Place, Corrigan, Bernstein
Saturday May 4th @ 8pm
Catina Royale, 58 N 3rd St (btw. Wythe & Kent), Brooklyn, NY 

TOTEM, a multimedia film and reading series, returns with VANESSA PLACE, CECILIA CORRIGAN, and FELIX BERNSTEIN performing their work.

VANESSA PLACE killed poetry–Anon., via Twitter.

CECILIA CORRIGAN lives in New York. Her first book Titanic was awarded the Plonsker Prize, and will be published by &Now Books in 2014. Her current research interests include Alan Turing, immaturity, Ludwig Wittgenstein’s adolescence, Alice James, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and therapeutic cosmetics. Her work has appeared in The Journal, Death and Life of American Cities, O’Clock Press, The Awl, The Nicola Midnight St. Claire, Glitterpony, and Emergency Index. She wrote for HBO’s show Luck.

FELIX BERNSTEIN is a filmmaker and writer.

 

 


This Week in NYC: Featured Readings

Sunday, February 3rd, 2013

Hatchet Job Each Sunday, Coldfront features five upcoming cross-borough readings in NYC. Email stephanie(dot)whited(at)gmail to submit a listing for consideration.

Here are this week’s picks:

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Hatchet Job XIII – Kearney, Dolack, Melnick, & Landau
Tuesday, February 5th @ 7pm
Public Assembly, 70 N 6th st, Brooklyn, NY

Hatchet Job is a monthly series in which poets of all persuasions don’t wanna work, they just wanna bang on the poems all day. It costs zero dollars. In this way it doesn’t resemble the booze. Confidantes, join us for the first reading of Hatchet Job’s second year. RSVP on Facebook

Simone Kearney is a poet and visual artist. Her poetry has appeared in Boston Review, Bridge Journal, Ragazine, Post Road Magazine, Maggy, and elsewhere. Her chapbook In Threes is forthcoming with MinuteBooks Press. She was a recipient of the Amy Awards in 2010.

DJ Dolack is the author of No Ser No, a chapbook from Greying Ghost Press, and Whittling a New Face in the Dark, forthcoming from Black Ocean. His poems have appeared in DIAGRAM, Diode, Sink Review, and elsewhere.

Lynn Melnick is the author of If I Should Say I Have Hope. Her poetry has appeared in Antioch Review, BOMB, Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, Guernica, Gulf Coast, jubilat, Narrative, Paris Review, Poetry Daily, A Public Space, and elsewhere.

Deborah Landau is the author of The Last Usable Hour and Orchidelirium, which won the Anhinga Prize for Poetry. Her poems, essays, and reviews have appeared in Grand Street, The Paris Review, Tin House, The Antioch Review, The Kenyon Review, TriQuarterly, The Best American Erotic Poems, The Wall Street Journal, and The Harvard Review.

Hosted by Danniel Schoonebeek

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Greenlight Poetry Salon
Wednesday, February 6th @ 7:30pm
Greenlight Bookstore, 686 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY

Featuring:
Ocean Vuong, author of Burnings
Jessica Greenbaum, author of The Two Yvonnes
Ishmael Islam, author of Meet At Greene

Created by Greenlight’s own Angel Nafis, Greenlight Bookstore’s quarterly poetry series, the Greenlight Poetry Salon, welcomes locally and nationally celebrated poets. Tonight’s reading features three amazing poets with diverse backgrounds and strong ties to Brooklyn. Vietnam native and Brooklyn resident Ocean Vuong is the author most recently of the chapbook Burnings; a Kundiman fellow, he is also the recipient of an Academy of American Poets prize and six Pushcart Prize nominations. Passionate Fort Greene dweller Jessica Greenbaum was a Discovery / The Nation prize winner and recipient of PEN’s Emerging Writer Award. Her second poetry collection, The Two Yvonnes, was chosen by Paul Muldoon for Princeton’s Series of Contemporary Poets. Brooklyn native Ishmael “Ish” Islam is the current NYC Youth Poet Laureate, and a champion of the youth poetry scene through Urban Word NYC. Meet at Greene is his first poetry collection.

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The Atlas Review Launch Party
Wednesday, February 6th @ 7pm
Housing Works Bookstore Cafe, 126 Crosby St, New York, NY

Celebrate the first issue of The Atlas Review with the contributors and music at Housing Works. The Atlas Review is a new, independent literary magazine, comprising poetry, short stories, essays and visual art. RSVP on Facebook. With readings by contributors:

Caitlin Dube (poet)
Matthew Zingg (poet)
Ken Walker (poet)
Brandon Kreitler (poet; author of Dusking [Argos Books])
Kathleen Ossip (poet; author of The Cold War, Cinephrastics)
Justin Boening (poet; author of Self-Portrait as Missing Person [Poetry Society of America])
Robert Ostrom (poet; author of The Youngest Butcher in Illinois [YesYes Books])
Sam Allingham (fiction)
Michael Simon (poetry)
Kendra Grant Malone (author of Everything Is Quiet) reading for Catherine Lacey
Ana Božičević  (poet; author of Rise in the Fall) reading for Eileen Myles

and music by Alex Simon.

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THE NEW SALON: Edward Hirsch, with Charif Shanahan
Thursday, February 7 @ 7pm
Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House, NYU, 58 W 10th St, New York, NY 

Edward Hirsch has published seven books of poems: For the Sleepwalkers (1981), Wild Gratitude (1986), which won the National Book Critics Circle Award, The Night Parade (1989), Earthly Measures (1994), On Love (1998), Lay Back the Darkness (2003), and Special Orders (2008).  He has also written four books of prose: the bestseller How to Read a Poem and Fall in Love with Poetry (1999), Responsive Reading (1999), The Demon and the Angel: Searching for the Source of Artistic Inspiration (2002), and Poet’s Choice (2006). Since 2003, he has served as the fourth President of the Guggenheim Foundation

Co-sponsored by the NYU Creative Writing Program. Admission is free.

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Pete’s Reading Series: Schaap & Schrank
Thursday, February 7th @ 7:30pm
Pete’s Candy Store, 709 Lorimer St, Brooklyn, NY

Rosie Schaap has been a bartender, a fortuneteller, a librarian at a paranormal society, an English teacher, an editor, a preacher, a community organizer, and a manager of homeless shelters. A contributor to This American Life and npr.org, she writes the monthly Drink column for The New York Times Magazine. Her memoir, Drinking With Men, will be published in January by Riverhead Books.

Ben Schrank‘s latest novel is titled Love Is a Canoe. Schrank has taught at the MFA program at Brooklyn College. He was for some years the voice of Ben’s Life, a fictional column for Seventeen magazine. He is currently publisher of Razorbill, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers. He grew up in Brooklyn where he now lives with his wife, Lauren Mechling, and son.

Hosted by Mira Jacob and Alison Hart.

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– SAW


Holiday Shopping Guide

Wednesday, November 28th, 2012

As we move into the month of December many of you will begin to assemble holiday shopping lists for your friends and family. Here are some suggestions which will allow you to give the gift of poetry and support small presses and independent businesses.

Octopus Books

It should come as no surprise that Octopus Books has fans over here at Coldfront. Check out DJ Dolack’s video interview with Ben Mirov here or my interview with Jenny Zhang here. This year Octopus has two subscription offers. #1 . Both OCTOPUS BOOKS + POOR CLAUDIA. $136 (at least a $220 value): Receive everything Octopus Books and Poor Claudia publishes in 2013 and 2014. Click here for titles.

#2. Only OCTOPUS BOOKS. $88 (at least $130 value): Receive everything Octopus Books publishes in 2013 and 2014. Click here for titles.

Letter Machine Press

3 books for $35 (limited time offer). Titles include Ode: Salute to the New York School by Peter Gizzi, Half of What They Carried Flew Away by Andrea Rexilius and More Radiant Signal by Juilana Leslie. Click here for details.  For $500 you can gift someone (or yourself) a lifetime subscription to Letter Machine Press.

Black Ocean

Black Ocean has a variety of subscription packages including $60 for 2013 which includes the following titles: The Next Monsters by Julie Doxsee, The Devotional Poems by Joe Hall, Swamp Isthmus by Joshua Marie Wilkinson, Handsome #5, Whittling A New Face In The Dark by DJ Dolack (Coldfront Editor!!) and Self Unstable by Elisa Gabbert. Click here for details.

Horse Less Press

For a limited time you can order any two chapbooks for $10. Click here for details.

No Dear Magazine

$16 gets you issues 10 and 11. The journals are hand-made and feature poets from New York City and its boroughs. Click here for details.

Wave Books

Wave Books has subscriptions for both hardcover and soft back. The hardcover subscriptions are discounted until Nov. 30 so you’ll want to act fast. The complete list of titles and subscription prices can be found here.

Argos Books

Argos Books has a 13 month hand-made calendar for $12. Check it out here.

Argos author, Bianca Stone, has artwork for sale here.

Berl’s Brooklyn Poetry Shop

If you find yourself in Brooklyn over the weekend swing by Berl’s and purchase one their tote bags then fill it up with books from a variety of small presses. Not sure what to get, ask either Jared White or Farrah Field (Berl’s owners) for suggestions.

Saturday and Sunday@ One Hanson Place, Fort Greene, Brooklyn

Mactaggart Jewelry

How about some jewelry made by the poet Paige Taggart. You can also purchase gift cards! Click here for details.

Saltlickers

Poet Jennifer L. Knox has a line salt and sugar blends for foodies.  An ideal gift for both poets and non-poets! Details here.

 

-steven karl

 


Snapshot: No, Dear Magazine

Thursday, May 24th, 2012

Brooklyn-based No, Dear magazine is edited by Emily Brandt and Alex Cuff. Each print issue is hand-sewn and features original cover-art. On Friday they will celebrate the release of Issue 9 with a 7pm reading at Pete’s Candy Store featuring the following readers: Franklin Bruno,  MRB Chelko,
Barry Denny, Tyler Flynn Dorholt , Natalie Eilbert, Alina Gregorian, Mike Lala, Aubrie Marrin, David McLoghlin, Amy Silbergeld, and Sampson Starkweather.

Below is a brief interview (conducted via email) where we discuss everything from community, aesthetics, and geographic constraints.

SK: When was No, Dear started and who were the founding editors?

EB: Alex and I met when we were both in the NYC Teaching Fellows program, trying to survive our first years as public school teachers while maintaining our identities as writers. I had been in a poetry workshop for a few years at that time, and I invited Alex into the workshop, which used to meet at the now closed Stain Bar in Williamsburg. We founded No, Dear in 2008 along with Jane Van Slembrouck and Katie Moeller, who were also solid members of the workshop. We thought it would just be one or two issues to showcase work from the workshop and some of our friends and acquaintances. Then it kept growing.

SK: No, Dear is a journal of restraints, by which I mean the contributor must reside in one of New York’s five boroughs and submit poems that fit into the issue’s theme. Can you talk a little bit about how and why you set geographic and thematic guidelines for No, Dear?

EB: No, Dear grew out of a close and evolving community of writers. We wanted the publication to foster the local writing community, which is why we limited it to work by NYC writers, and chose not to publish online. The content would be local and tangible. Everyone in the issue should be able to easily come together to celebrate the issue launch and get to know each other a bit, in hopes that paths will get crossed and friendships will develop. Our first theme was “flight” and we figured it would somehow unify the submissions. We like that some writers create new work especially for the theme, and others use the theme as a lens to cull from their existing work. The resulting issues create a unique dialogue among the selected poems.

AC: The NYC constraint fosters the poetry community that we are interested in supporting, dipping into and building. There is something really special about the launch readings in which all the local poets come together and learn about one another’s work. There are definitely benefits in reading and publishing the work of poets around the country and beyond and its wonderful that lots of journals already do this. I like knowing that the poets we publish are in our community and most likely going to attend the reading and bring their friends. Recently we collaborated with the wonderful women behind Argos Books, Iris Cushing and Elizabeth Clark Wessel, both of whom we met when their poems were published in No, Dear.

I’m personally overwhelmed by the availability of online poetry journals and I think the local constraint makes that feel less overwhelming. We’re already separated from other writers and communities by the great internet and for me the local aspect of No, Dear lessens this feeling. (I also recognize the community that results from the internet.) It’s a question that we return to from time to time. We’ve talked about publishing an issue of poets solely outside of the five boroughs or an issue dedicated to one other city. And if we did that, I’d definitely want to travel to that city for the reading to meet the poets.

I see the issue’s theme as less of a constraint than geographic constraint. Most of the writers take the thematic guideline pretty loosely and often in ways we hadn’t anticipated which is an amazing part of reading submissions. So the thematic constraint is fun. Regardless of the theme, the individual poems and their dialogue with one another create the issue, which often redefines our initial idea of the theme. Also, I think that both constraints limit the amount of poets who blindly send poems to the magazine. Not that we want less submissions. It is such a privilege to have poets send us poems. But it is nice to know that there’s been a great deal of thought in the process of sending us work.

SK: Can each of you talk a bit (as concretely or abstractly as you’d like) about your aesthetic taste?

AC: This is a hard one for me.  Certainly there’s subjectivity in regards to our taste in everything but I don’t have a set of criteria for a good poem. And I’m hoping my taste will continue to shift and broaden as I continue to experience the work of new artists. I certainly haven’t read enough poetry in my life to have that figured out. I like to be surprised. A few books I’ve read and loved and reread this year are Lisa Jarnot’s Amedillin Nosegay Cooperative, H.D.’s Helen in Egypt, Jon Sand’s The New Clean, Adam Falkner’s WHAT IS NOT YOURS, Dan MagersPARTYKNIFE and Anne Carson’s Autobiography of Red. All of which vary greatly in terms of style and subject matter. I don’t find myself looking for a certain style when I’m editing No, Dear and I don’t set out to write a certain type of poem. I think something that makes each issue strong is that Emily and I don’t always share the same taste in poems which always results in spending a great deal of time carefully reading and discussing the submissions. I learn a great deal during each editing session.

EB: I’ve never been one to have a regular hangout. As such I don’t adhere to any stylistic camp, at least not that I’m aware of. My own writing has a pretty wide range. I read around and like a pretty huge aesthetic range. However, I always respect poems that have something at stake. Style is wonderful. But substance over style.

SK: No, Dear has had a guest editor work with you for the last three issues.  Each of the guest editors has been a poet who has previously been published in the journal. Can you talk about how you two arrived at the idea of having guest editors?

EB: Originally, Alex, Katie, Jane and I were editors. Over the years, Katie and Jane both moved on to other pursuits. Alex and I could have continued on our own, but fostering community is hugely important to us, and so the idea of rotating guest editors seemed like a perfect way to incorporate other voices into the issues and extend the reach of the journal. We always learn so much from our editing conversations.

SK: The ambition of No, Dear does not seem to be limited to being solely a print poetry journal. You two seem committed to No, Dear being an active and exciting invitation to an ever-expanding community of poets in New York. Could you touch on this and share with us your vision for No, Dear?

AC: I think I already touched on this when discussing the NYC constraint. I think that many of us can agree that despite the sheer volume of people in the city and its rich arts community, New York can be a pretty alienating experience. I’m not interested in creating another Facebook community in my life. And although the act of reading a poem is often a wonderfully solitary one, the community, the friendships, collaborations and dialogue that result from a project like this are equally important.

EB: I love looking back at how much we’ve grown and at how many NYC poets we’ve connected with. But we still have so much more to do! There are so many poets and communities of poets that we have yet to connect with, and that, to me, is the most exciting part.

 

-steven karl


Argos Books and The ‘Matter’ of Poetry

Monday, February 13th, 2012

Matter CoverThis month, independent Brooklyn press Argos Books is set to release Matter: A Picture Book. It’s the second installment of  the collaborative series Side by Side and features poems from Dorothea Lasky and “gestural abstract paintings” by Matthew Fischer in response to each of Lasky’s pieces. The resulting folio is a guidebook of “territories to wander into” with “intersections of light and sound” and pathways “to picturing the ‘matter’ of poetry.” Physically, Matter will be hand-sewn with a silkscreened cover. Visit Argos’ website to pre-order a unique copy.

Although Argos represents writers internationally, the press is largely run from editor Elizabeth Clark Wessel’s “big kitchen table” in Brooklyn. Covers are letter-pressed in Brooklyn as well, with “the kind and patient help” of Ugly Ducking Presse.

For more on Argos, see Ken L. Walker’s interview with the editors.

–Stephanie Ann Whited


spotlight: Argos Books

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Interview by Ken L. Walker

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I’m excited to present the next interview in this project of compiling American independent poetry presses into a singularly-formed database. My goal, herein, as hopefully came through with the O’Clock/CLOCK press interview, is to create a solitary space where poets, readers of poetry, archivists, publishers, etc. can all come for information and direct responses (straight from the publishers) regarding poetry, translation and, most importantly, the publishing process . Again, the end goal here is to compile a comprehensive Wiki-type database (by the end of 2012) of American, independent, poetry presses, in order to benefit poets seeking information about presses; but, as well, to produce an ever-growing electronic space for publishing information. The following interview, in particular, takes its stance with the three editors/publishers/poets of the wonderful Argos Books.

The founders of Argos Books (begun in 2010 in New York City) — Elizabeth Clark Wessel, Iris Cushing, and E.C. (Emily) Belli — have managed in the last year-and-a-half to publish more than a handful of amazing books, chapbooks, and broadsides. These texts have featured the multi-talented list of: Bianca Stone, Steve Hahn, Marina Blitshteyn, Guy Jean, Francisca Aguirre, Karin Gotshall, and (out in 2012) Safiya Sinclair. Argos has also published and distributed two anthologies. That’s a particularly strong resume for a mere eighteen months of business. All their releases appear ornate, classically simplistic and display a carefulness that hearken a different era. Artifacts, basically. Artifacts, now. The three women that began the press are poets, as well as, translators, ultimately concerned with language in the sense of task and in the sense of subjective-relation not to mention the sense of cultural-crossing. Their submission process seems to be open all year round but they are specifically seeking works of translation yet to appear in the English language. They view the press as a way to simultaneously express personally poetic viewpoints while establishing and furthering the community we all appreciate so much. Publisher, Elizabeth Clark Wessel, thinks poetry to be a “great place of freedom.”

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KW:  What was the impetus to begin Argos Books?

IMC: When I met Liz at Columbia’s MFA program, one of the first things I learned about her was that she’d started a small press in Stockholm, Stray Dog Press. She’d published one book, the lovely and inimitable A Sky That is Never the Same by Steve Hahn, which featured a beautiful cover hand-stamped in such a way that no two covers are the same. As a lifelong bibliophile and lover of book arts, I was inspired by the obvious love that went into making the book. When Liz said she wanted to continue making books here in New York, I was pretty thrilled about teaming up and creating a new vision for our own press. We had a few very giddy meetings in the spring of 2010 about what to call it …Emily joined us around that time and it all kind of fell into place.

In a way, Argos was started as a response to everything we were experiencing around us: as poets, as women, as students, as translators. If I can speak for all three of us, I’ll say we all share a deep enthusiasm for work that transcends certain boundaries, such as those between languages, communities and “genres” of art and literature. We were all very passionate about books that were already pushing those limits. We started asking, “how can we get more of this out there?” That question quickly evolved into “how can we get our own particular and brilliant vision out there?” For me, it involved a lot of newfound self-confidence and generosity.

ECW: Part of the impetus for Argos was my longing to do a group project. I realized pretty quickly after doing that first book that publishing was not something I wanted to do on my own. Writing is such solitary act, so I feel like I get enough of that.  I wanted partnership and feedback. I heard Anna Moschovakis speak last year at AWP — how mall press publishing is a kind of long-term collaborative art project. I like that idea. That feels right.

Taking the long view, I suppose I’ve had, maybe still have, a kind of romantic notion of what a small press is.  I like the small print in an old book. I like the obscure, the anachronistic. My sense of literary history is that publishers and scenemakers are for the most part forgotten. I like that. I don’t know why. So Argos Books is also, for me, an attempt to be a part of that tradition: the supporter, the maker, the backer, the framer.

KW:  Tell me about the process of making and marketing some of the work?

ECW: The method of production of each book that we’ve done is completely different. Some books have been very DIY, done completely at home on our printers. Some were a combination of home production, with covers letter-pressed, or with the help of the great and kind people at UDP. Some were sewn with the help of friends; some we sewed at home while watching TV over a long period of time. Some were perfect-bound and professionally printed. The needs of each book were different, depending on the aesthetic requirements, timeframe, budget, and length. My husband, Mårten Wessel, is very involved in the design and production side of things. I love his book designs, and I think his eye really helps us to look a little more professional than we are. Most of our marketing is based on events (readings, release parties) and word of mouth. We do send out the books to reviewers as well, and we’re very thankful for those who’ve taken the time to read and write about our books.

EB : It’s a family affair. Liz and Iris are my hotline. I’ve made mistakes. And learning the marketing aspect of things is a trial by fire kind of situation. But the heart is there. And the work is really good. Somehow the final product ends up beautiful despite all the variables.

IMC: In my view, a book as an object has a huge influence on how its contents are read and received. The book-making aspect of this venture was one of its biggest draws, to me, perhaps because I find the experience of holding and reading a beautiful book so pleasurable. Perhaps I enjoy the power of creating that experience for other people. The communal aspect of book-making is wonderful. We’ve gotten to know so many people over the letterpress at UDP, and around Liz and Mårten’s kitchen table, scattered with books and string and sewing needles. The work we’re doing is so intimate; to me everyone involved somehow becomes a friend, and the dialogues that emerge from those friendships are just as much a part of the work as making the books.

KW:  What do you see is the biggest hurdle/dilemma for independent publishers?

EB: Money. Perhaps time too. In my case, I’m going to be contributing remotely for the next few years. So that is an impediment too.

ECW: I’m with Emily. Money. Time. I’d add finding readers to that list.

IMC: The time thing is an interesting hurdle. Most everyone I know who’s involved with a small press not only has some kind of day job, but is also a poet or writer of some sort, and spends time on their own writing. So much of the exciting and necessary work of having a small press can’t be too structured, timewise—it’s spontaneous (meeting people, reading) or it takes an indefinite number of hours (fiddling with subtle font changes). Having the time to make it work requires flexibility, and creativity, at least for me. And patience.

KW:  Tell me some great rewards, benefits, and/or advantages you’ve come across at Argos.

IMC: I’ve always felt a deep kinship with people who love to read and write, and so books are an essential part of that kinship. Making a book from start to finish is a deep and satisfying way to engage with work that I myself would want to read. It’s like loving tamales your whole life, then one day learning how to prepare, cook, and serve them really well. The affinity deepens. My appreciation for books has grown a thousandfold in the year and a half Argos has been around, as has the awe I feel for the work writers and editors and other publishers do. As a poet, it’s gratifying to spend so much time with work I admire, to read it so closely, and help it move into the world. It’s a way to directly influence the thriving of cool poems, of good ideas. It makes me feel more human.

EB: Having complete independence to take on projects that are close to our hearts is rewarding, as is correcting some of the omissions of the larger poetry community (that is sometimes reluctant to move forward and let in new work). I think there’s room for everyone. If the work is beautiful, ingenious, there should be a place for it. If we can help carve out little niches like that, we can leave a trace.

ECW: So far there have been a myriad of rewards — the process, the feeling of making stuff, the relationships formed with authors and other bookmakers. Positive reactions to the books feel fantastic.  Also, one unexpected benefit of working as an editor is that it’s given me some distance from rejection. Rejecting some really great writers, who just weren’t right for us, has expanded the way I view receiving rejections when I submit my own work.

KW:  What would be a good definition of a “poetry community?” (I ask this because I think you all are creating a micro-community while being parcel to the larger more over-arching one.)

EB: Despite using it often, I find the term “community” so abstract. Do you simply have to be writing to be part of the poetry community or do you have to be actively engaged? Different people have different understandings of what it means to belong to a community. And we need that range. In my case, I feel like I want to be a good steward of my peers, and promote the work of people whom I admire. I can’t imagine sitting happily in my corner. That would naturally make me more actively engaged. But we need hermits too! So I guess my idea of community would encompass people who are involved, and people who are less involved.

IMC: I live in Brooklyn and go to a lot of poetry readings. Oftentimes I’ll look around at the audience and realize that I’ve seen many of the audience members give readings, and many of them have seen me read. We may not know each other beyond that, but there’s a thrilling sense of closeness that we share because we know each others’ work. Many of the poets I know have a hand in editing, translating, publishing or teaching. Everything overlaps. It’s very rewarding to get to know people in all these different capacities, to realize the ways they’re all linked. Those linkages, for me, expand the experience of poetry so far beyond the fact of words on a page. They make it multi-dimensional, more of a way of life than an activity. People sharing that way of life in the same place and time—however you define place and time—constitute a community.

ECW: Community is indeed an abstract concept, yet I know it when I’m around it. Recently I went to a round table with the VIDA founders — Erin Belieu and Cate Marvin. The women and men around that table, all of whom are passionate about poetry, were building a community, talking about a community, trying to improve a community, in the same way the kids sleeping in Zucotti Park are trying to make things better for the vast majority of a much larger community. For me there is an ethical dimension to making books because there is an ethical dimension to life. I’m driven by the idea that what we make makes the life of this community of writers better. I know it sounds hopelessly naïve, maybe even pretentious—but then again, why else do it, because we’re certainly not getting paid.

KW:  Are there any poetic, say Modernist or contemporary as a summation, movements that inspire you?

IMC : That last question about community got me thinking about different poets I admire who acknowledge their community in their writing, such as Bernadette Mayer or Alice Notley. New York has a particularly rich history of poets getting together to define and explore aesthetics, tendencies, socio-political situations. It’s so interesting when the dialogue flows over into the actual work. When « real life » penetrates art and vice-versa. I think much of the work we’ve chosen to publish does that, in some way. Translation and collaboration are formal ways of setting up that kind of inter-penetration, but it’s happening all the time. I have long admired the sheer open-mindedness of Language poetry (poets like Lyn Hejinian and Mei-mei Berssenbrugge) and am interested in bringing the valences of translation and collaboration into a similar kind of wide-open space.

ECW: The work and attitude of the New York School writers (first and second generation) have always been very important to me, but I have a wide range of influences. Right now I’m very inspired by the innovative work being done by contemporary women poets (Maggie Nelson, Mónica de la Torre, Harryette Mullen, Eileen Myles, to name a very few). But I think there is so much exciting contemporary work. I love this moment. Also, I’ve always been very interested in and inspired by non-English language traditions, and publishing and supporting translation plays an important role in the ethos of our project.

EB: Woolf, Eliot color so many things for me. As far as contemporary work goes, I find Franz Wright hard to dislodge as one of the greatest poets of our era. His work moves between your fingers—it’s so alive—and yet it’s so ghostly. It’s infused with this soul. As a French speaker, I’d have to name René Char and Francis Ponge as touchstones. Jean Follain remains unmatched in terms of concision. I’ve also started discovering some wonderful new Swiss poets from my own country. I may want to introduce some work by them in the near future. It’s interesting because the whole country is multilingual you know. That must affect the relationship to language in a very precise way. Like, you’re never 100% at home in one language. One year you’ll speak German better, the next you’ll get to speak more French or Italian or whatever. There are also few female poets from Switzerland who get much attention. So maybe I’ll want to do something about that.

KW:  Is there an essential quality to poetry that separates it from the rest of the arts (as in, the craft and practice, itself; but, on the publishing side, as well)?

EB: I think poets work in the shadows sometimes. They’re not always visible but, in the end, I believe they have quite a big impact—because it’s the art that other writers (fiction, nonfiction writers) turn to when they get bored. Or look for some kind of answer. Often poetry can allow itself to be irreverent or curious or experimental because, by already being marginalized, it has nothing to lose. And to a certain extent, I think our limited reach can sometimes free us to do work that has no other purpose than to follow an instinct, to be inquisitive, to test some sounds, to pronounce aphorisms. It’s also very hard to label. The range of styles these days is indescribable. But some readers like to stuff things neatly in a box and put a tag on it. Well, that’s not us. We’re all over the place as a community. But if you can get behind that sort of diversity, you’ll see it makes things all the more exciting.

IMC: I like what Emily said about the freedom that poets have, because a smaller percentage of the “reading public” pays attention to poetry. That said, the folks who do pay attention pay very close attention. That seems, to me, to be the main difference between poetry and other arts: the depth of attention it commands, the way it can examine language on even the most microscopic level. I have always been a slow reader. I discovered about ten years ago that I enjoy spending a long time staring at the same tiny group of words. There’s a whole world that opens up inside, around, between words, letters and phrases. I love exploring that world, as I believe a lot of poets do.

That said, I’m really curious (with Argos in particular) about how poetry can work in tandem with other arts, to the point where they’re no longer separate. There’s a series I’m editing, the Side-by-Side series, that brings together poems and visual art. For the first book in the series, This Landscape, poet Paige Ackerson-Kiely and artist Adie Russell each made work in response to each others work. One didn’t “illustrate” the other per se; they managed to make this cohesive whole, in which the distinction between “poem” and “picture” didn’t matter so much. It became a third thing. I think of the collaborations from the 1950s between Ashbery, O’Hara, Koch, and artists like Larry Rivers—that work forms a cohesive whole, as does the visual/poetic work of William Blake. I know those are very exalted figures to evoke, but that’s the kind of work I get really excited about. I want Argos to be a venue for work on that level of innovation, in our particular cultural climate.

ECW: On a prosaic level, poetry is cheap. Pen and paper are easy to come by. Even the cost of making books is low in comparison to making a sculpture or a movie. Anyone can do it, and anyone does. And yet no one seems to be interested. Culturally speaking, we’re flying under the radar, and I think that’s exactly how it should be. It’s a place of great freedom.


chap nook 2: Durbin, Crill, Stucky

Monday, January 31st, 2011

 

Fragments Found in a 1937 Aviator’s Boot, Kate Durbin (Dancing Girl Press 2009)

8Dancing Girl Press has done an admirable job with the neat and attractive publication of Kate Durbin’s chapbook Fragments Found in a 1937 Aviator’s Boot. The title of the work refers to a recent development in the mystery of aviator Amelia Earhart’s 1937 disappearance during an attempted transpacific flight—though this is not made immediately apparent to readers not well versed in Earhart’s history. Earhart is the voice for each poem, narrating the events leading up to her premature death.

Durbin favors prose poems and writes in a sparse language full of bold colors and immediate emotion. Durbin uses some of Earhart’s own words as found in the aviator’s 1937 collection of writings Last Flight, which was compiled posthumously by her widower, George Putnam. She often rephrases them, as in her various “Red” poems: “What did that little plane try to tell me as it swished by?”

Earhart’s thoughts achieve a beautiful, contemplative poetry through Durbin. Some of the earlier poems reflect on Earhart’s domestic situation and her womanhood. For instance, in “Ink” she muses, “Fear of woman’s blood too long has bound us to burning at high stakes.” But this fate is not for Durbin’s Earhart, who finds release in “the indefinite sky” and imagines that these “papers” will be found after her imminent death, affording her forgiveness from her husband and “grace for a woman who fell from the sky.”

Erin Lynn

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The Upstairs Hammer, Hildred Crill  (Argos Books 2010)

Hildred Crill’s The Upstairs Hammer forms an awkward marriage of the abstract and the trite. The opening poem, “Document,” provides a tonal preview for what’s to come. It is vague, yet gripping:

I was a hedged bet, just one
of the holes a rat found
and possessed, a last gulp
from the welling cup.

Crill’s ability to manipulate sound (i.e. gulp/cup) is one of her greatest strengths. Both rhythmically pleasing and full of dark intrigue, “To the Original Tower” provides an exemplary moment:

Unfinished is only completed
as ruins. The task
is neglect. The pause,
oblivion.

However, Crill’s poems are sometimes handicapped by sentimentality. One such poem, “Twofold Tale: Troll With the Cap of Invisibility” is a mythical mini-story, as the title implies:

I believed you unwelcome me

                People think people
                don’t like them
                but it’s themselves
                they dwell on
                and won’t love

But you said nothing
as if layered in shale

                 When people aren’t seen
                 they witness more

Oh, the wisdom of trolls. These tidbits of knowledge from the troll read a little bit like a quote-a-day calendar.  The most interesting parts of this poem come from the narrator, but the italicized Troll-speak ultimately dominates.

While parts of The Upstairs Hammer can be overdramatic,  the majority of the book offers a musicality and controlled rhythm that makes it a worthwhile read.

–Joanne C. Wood

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Your Name is the Only Freedom, Janaka Stucky (Brave Men Press 2009)

“Destroy Song” is the name given to four poems in Janaka Stucky’s Your Name is the Only Freedom. In combination with cover art suggestive of hell and constant talk of destruction, the opening lines of “Hopeful in Spite of Legion” are indicative of the book’s overall mood:

Of beasts, of blood
of devils; of horrid hell

of appetites & passions

Stucky’s language is colloquial and direct– “Buck like fuck as I press / My hands between your breasts.”–but he is able to maintain a light tone in the presence of dark themes. For example, “My broken neck singing / A holocaust of seahorses.”

Certain lines are cliche, and a few lines are extraneous and affected: “Children play with matches /  Planes about to crash.” These lines have little impact amidst images of flames and witches. In a similar fashion, images of locks of hair and honey are juxtaposed with images of beasts and blood.

The Hindu goddess Kali appears in several poems throughout the collection, and the leaflet preceding the title page is stenciled with an image of a dancing creature with four arms and a necklace of  what appear to be human skulls. The symbolism Stucky is conjuring is unclear, but the Hindu text, Kalika Purana, depicts Kali as a four-armed figure, albeit beautiful  and brave, which is perhaps the duality at which Stucky drives.

–Ivana Kilibarda

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