Posts Tagged ‘Peter Davis’

spotlight: Vouched Atlanta

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Interview by Jenny Sadre-Orafai

I recently caught up with the always delightful Laura Straub of Vouched Atlanta. Vouched Books seeks to “promote small press literature.” Their strategy is three-pronged. First, they are masters of the guerrilla book store. They set up tables of books at various craft, art, and literature events. Here’s the catch:  They only carry books that they have read and love. Prong two is Vouched Presents, their reading series. Vouched brought Tyler Gobble, Melysa Martinez, Christopher Newgent, Amy McDaniel, Brian Oliu, Jesse Bradley, and Matt Bell to Atlanta last month. And, finally, is Vouched Online in which they keep Vouched followers in the loop with where they’re setting up and when readings are. They also maintain a consistent ethic in promoting work they enjoy online. Vouched is a real gem for both readers and writers.

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JS: How did Vouched Atlanta get started?

LS: Vouched Atlanta officially launched last July. After the success of the first Vouched table in Indianapolis (operated by good friend and Vouched Founder, Christopher Newgent) I began to toy with the idea of launching my own table–a desire rooted in wanting to become more involved with Atlanta’s lit scene as well as wanting to help independently published literature in front of new audiences. Christopher agreed it was time for Vouched to colonize and Vouched Atlanta was born!

What are some poetry titles you carry? And, can you review each of these in one word?
The Trees, The Trees (Heather Christle, Octopus Books) — Incantations.
Correct Animal (Rebecca Farivar, Octopus Books) — Sinewy.
I Don’t Mind if you are feeling Alone (Thomas Patrick Levy, Yes Yes Books) — Distressed.
We Take Me Apart (Molly Gaudry, Mud Luscious Press) — Enchanting.
Bend, Break (Robert Pfeiffer, Plain View Press) — Honest.
Where We Think It Should Go (Claire Becker, Octopus Books) — Instinctive.
Just a Little Piece of Heartburn (Tom Cheshire, Safety Third Enterprises) — Debauched.
People Are Tiny In Paintings of China (Cynthia Arrieu-King, Octopus Books) — Delicate.
The Difficult Farm (Heather Christle, Octopus Books) — Whimsical.

Promoting online publishing is important to Vouched. Are there any specific presses and journals that can do no wrong?

Wigleaf really busted out some hefty goodness recently with their top 50 list this year. PANKthe Collagist, and Elimae never fail.

Can you tell us about Vouched Presents?

Running the reading series is one of my favorite parts of running Vouched Atlanta! At Vouched Books we joke that we are “where literature goes to shake its ass,” and the reading series is a testament to that. It is wonderful to host and promote touring/visiting authors when they come to Atlanta and introduce them to the Atlantan literary community, which is really booming right now. I hope to have more and more visiting writers in this year’s readings. That being said, Atlanta has a wide variety of incredible wordsmiths and I’m excited and honored to continue giving them a venue to share their work.

What new titles does Vouched plan to offer?

I have some really great stuff coming to the table: False Spring by Gina Myers (Spooky Girlfriend Press), Poetry, Poetry, Poetry by Peter Davis (Bloof Books), and Fjords Vol. 1 by Zachary Schomburg (Black Ocean). I’m also introducing a few new prose titles: Falcons on the Floor by Justin Sirois (Publishing Genius Press), Cataclysm Baby by Matt Bell and [C.] by Various Authors (both from Mud Luscious Press).

Where can we find you?

Write Club Atlanta, True Story, and Solar Anus reading series have all been kind enough to invite me to set up the table at their reading series regularly, which I am eternally grateful for. On June 2nd I’ll have a booth at Artlantis–an arts festival organized by Mark Basehore and the folks at Beep Beep Gallery. There’s the possibility for more readings to come about in the meantime, but right now the next reading I have scheduled is the first annual Very Vouched Birthday Party at the Goatfarm on July 18th. That reading will serve as a fundraiser for WINK and the Wren’s Nest Kipp Scribes tutoring programs. More information about that event can be found at Vouched in the upcoming weeks.


Hitler’s Mustache

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

by Peter Davis
Barnwood Press 2006
Reviewed by John Deming

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Hitler’s Mustache: The Review

davis hitler coverWe can generally agree that even if Jason Lee (as Earl) brings the mustache back to the mainstream—if the mullet cascades its way back into our hearts, if modifications to jeans command perpetual flux—there’s one look that will take at least a few hundred more years to find its way back: the small, sub-nostril’d bar code stache.

I generally roll with the ethic that the imposition of Adolf Hitler on a work of art is a logical fallacy: the classic signifier that an artist is out of ideas and relying on Hitler’s evil to carry the workload.

But Adolf Hitler the man plays at most a bit-part in Peter Davis’s debut, Hitler’s Mustache. There’s no penetration of World War II or Nazism, just a lot of surface-level, large-scale metaphor on the part of Hitler’s famous fashion statement—the black square of hair itself and nothing more. Yet inevitably the very thought of Hitler ghosts the whole book—perhaps too much so, leading to the ever-lingering question: is he taking the issue too lightly?

I don’t think he is. That question, and the overall craziness of the concept, had an interesting effect on the online poetry world; people were at least a little stupefied by the book as chunks of it surfaced in nearly every online journal in the land. Read through it, though, and you’ll find Davis, in his own way, allows for the pang of murderous evil. However grave the tone of each poem, our narrator sees mustaches everywhere (even the mustache on the cover is represented as a barcode, for your metaphorical pleasure): “She ordered a cup of mustache from the mustache who worked behind the mustache.”

It is without question that Davis has bitten off more than he can chew, though of course the largesse of his topic was part of the point.  More a distraction than an obsession, the mustache stands in for anything unsettling or uncomfortable—and anything obsessed over to the point of mania and absurdity. Here’s one of my favorite passages, from the prose poem “Hitler’s Mustache: A Mustache Confession”:

I feel like a bad mustache a lot of the time. With
no friends, and for good reason, greedy and mean
and not worth the time…Who knows about masks?
Not me. I’m moving at the speed of light and the
occurrence of seeing light gets mustache, etc. I want
to tell something about myself, but, mustache.

Most of the book is at least as confounding as this passage, but that’s the trouble: it maintains one level and becomes repetitive. The word “mustache” is scattered across every poem, so repetitious it becomes vapid as a blank line in a Mad Lib. Apart from “mustache,” Davis peppers the almost pleasant poems with occasionally violent images, perhaps to justify the weight of relying on Hitler for a whole book (“lopping off lots of little fingers”, “pianos made of skin”).

There’s “Hitler’s Mustache: The Ode,” “Hitler’s Mustache: Frank ‘Mustache’ O’Hara,” “Hitler’s Mustache: The Sestina,” “Hitler’s Mustache: The Journey Tribute Band,” “Hitler’s Mustache: Mustache Begins in Martin’s Ferry, Mustachio.” The poet proves himself both clever and versatile. But rather than emerging as a rapt, engaging obsession, this mostly floats on top. Hitler’s mustache, rather than an embodiment of unease, starts to feel like an attempt to anchor a bunch of unrelated poems, like the obsessive need for direction alone.

On his blog, Davis describes Hitler’s mustache thusly: “an emblem of the complete folly of his ideas and an example of the anomaly that is seemingly always in our mist.” I’m okay with this, even though I didn’t need to be reminded of “the complete folly” of Hitler’s ideas. I also don’t mind this, from the book itself: “Hitler’s mustache is the comet that nobody sees because everyone is watching its furry tail.” Okay, let a vague sense of Hitler terror sweat through the walls of the book, fill the holes in your life—it’s an idea at least.

But idea-wise, Davis crosses the line here: “The Mystery of Hitler’s Must Ache.” Surely everyone has a “must ache,” right? In its sweetness, the metaphor suffocates.

Still, the fact he had the stamina to maintain his mustache-talk for 80 pages at least calls to mind Ashbery’s notion of “the perfectly plausible accomplishment of a purpose.” Hitler’s mustache was in there when this poet was writing this manuscript, and it wasn’t going to go anywhere until the manuscript was done. The mustache is a crutch, but not so much that it prevents all lyric moments from shining, as in these lines from “Hitler’s Mustache: The Basic Situation for the Clandestine Mustache”:

A grueling gargle gurgles up from
the lagoon mustache.
In your memory, the childhood
moment in which you discovered
a number of live frogs trapped
in a drainage thingy behind
a school. You lifted the metal grating
and pulled a few frogs out.

This is an aggressive first book project; any use of Hitler is a gamble, surely Davis knew this all along, and the result is a peculiarly obsessive book. I know this sounds like bullshit reviewer-speak, but now that this is out of the poet’s system, I’m very interested to see what he does next; he’s undoubtedly skilled enough to rely on tone as the anchor for a book rather than everyone’s preconceived notion of terror. The mustache just becomes too deeply symbolic and ultimately, a distraction. Whether he works best with series and obsession or with spontaneity remains to be seen, but some new poems he’s posted on his blog outrun pretty much everything in Hitler’s Mustache. Look at “How Today Becomes a Creepy Spider”—obsessive repetition flavors the poem. Davis presents a unique voice and perspective, and perhaps more importantly, a willingness to pursue some peculiar impulses.

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