Posts Tagged ‘Sampson Starkweather’

Holiday Cheer From Birds, LLC = Mini-tour And New Books

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

Just in time for the holidays, Birds, LLC have released Emily Pettit’s first full-length book, Goat In The Snow. If you purchase the book now they’ll also ship a limited edition broadside with art by Rachel B. Glaser. More information on the book and the broadside can be found here. You can read poems by Pettit here.

In addition to the book some of Birds, LLC’s authors and editors are embarking on a mini-tour.

Birds, LLC is pleased to announce their mini tour in celebration of Emily Pettit’s Goat in the Snow!

Poetry readings by
Justin Marks
Emily Pettit
Sampson Starkweather
Paige Taggart
Chris Tonelli

December 9th, Friday, Kansas City, MO. Facebook Event info can be found here. And here: http://acommonsenseseries.blogspot.com/

December 10th, Fayetteville, AR. Facebook Event info here. And here: http://improvedlighting.blogspot.com/

December 11th, Lawrence, KS. Facebook Event info here. And here: http://taproompoetry.blogspot.com/

In a last bit of news, Birds, LLC have also debuted the cover of Dan Magers’s forthcoming book, PARTYKNIFE. The cover was designed by the artist, Matt Bollinger.


VIDEO: Birds, LLC poets in Brooklyn

Monday, March 28th, 2011

Below you will find our video coverage of the The January 28 installment of the Stain of Poetry Reading Series featuring Birds, LLC poets. Video coverage by DJ Dolack features Dan Boehl, Sommer Browning, Emily Pettit, Steven Karl, Justin Marks, Christie Ann Reynolds, Sampson Starkweather and Chris Tonelli.

Birds, LLC is an independent poetry press based out of Austin, Minneapolis, New York, and Raleigh. The January reading was held in part to celebrate the release of two new titles, Sommer Browning’s Either Way I’m Celebrating and Dan Boehl’s The Kings of the F**king Sea, with images by Jonathan Marshall.

Video filmed and edited by DJ Dolack. (Watch it in HD!)


3rd Annual Chapbook Festival, NYC

Monday, March 7th, 2011

The Third Annual Chapbook Festival was held last week at locations throughout New York City, with the CUNY Graduate Center’s Center for the Humanities serving as home to a bookfair featuring chapbook publishers from around the country.

“I love the composition and texture of chapbooks, and I love that they can be a single-sitting read,” said Sampson Starkweather, who organized the event with Festival founder Ana Božičević. “They stop time a little bit more.”

The Festival, which also featured workshops and readings, was designed to “celebrate the chapbook as a work of art and as a medium for alternative and emerging writers and publishers,” according to its Web site.

In addition to selling chapbooks, representatives from Belladonna Books accepted donations that will be used to reprint Akilah Oliver’s chapbook The Putterer’s Notebook. Oliver died unexpectedly in late February, and there are only “two or three copies” of her chapbook left, according to the press.

Jamila Wilberly, a Belladonna Books intern, studied with Oliver at Eugene Lang College. She expressed that Oliver’s death means a big loss for the literary community, and a bigger loss for those who knew her.

“It makes you feel almost angry, because you want to know more about her. We’re really sad,” she said, noting that hearing Oliver read from The Putterer’s Notebook was a one of a kind experience. “Nobody can quite read like her.”

Anyone interested in donating can contact Belladonna Books here.

The bookfair recalled last month’s AWP Conference in Washington DC, except that AWP’s sprawling, convention-style bookfair was replaced by a single room of chapbook vendors.

“It feels like a little family room,” said Starkweather, who also is an editor for Birds, LLC.

Zachary Schomburg of Octopus Books said it was sort of like an AWP “aftershock.”

“In poetry, geography doesn’t matter,” said Schomburg, who was passing through on his way back to Portland after spending three weeks reading and writing in Weld, Maine.

Chapbook publishers and authors agreed that the proliferation of chapbooks signals a vibrancy in the contemporary poetry community, especially since bookmakers are typically poets themselves.

“Poets are so D.I.Y. [do it yourself],” Starkweather said.

Chapbooks also provide a useful forum for younger, unpublished poets.

“You can introduce a young poet to a reader in more than a single-poem format,” said Brett Fletcher Lauer of the Poetry Society of America. The PSA publishes four chapbooks each year as part of its annual Chapbook Competition.

Nate Pritts of H-ngm-n Bks thinks chapbooks are as important as traditional full-length collections, finding it is not always necessary to distinguish between the two formats.

“It’s all poetry,” he said. “It needs to get out there whether you publish a book or staple it and mail it to a friend.”

The Festival, designed to “celebrate the chapbook as a work of art and as a medium for alternative and emerging writers and publishers,” also featured a roundtable and launch of Series II in Lost & Found: The CUNY Poetics Documents Initiative.


City of Moths

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

by Sampson Starkweather
Rope-a-Dope Press 2008
Reviewed by Dan Magers

7

Come Back to Me

city of mothsSampson Starkweather’s chapbook City of Moths attempts relentlessly to blur the distinction between words and things. Unlike bodies in space, which can be registered immediately, language must be actively and continuously attended to in order for it to register. The futility of using language to prioritize objects over language is this work’s driving force. The generally conversational style and discrete blocks of prose suggest an epistolary work, letters to an absent lover. But as much as our narrator wishes to speak her into existence, he is only speaking to himself.

There is no deliberate movement of logic, but two steps gradually emerge: he cancels the distinctions between words and objects, then dares us to ignore the objects. As for the first, he writes, “No difference between a poem and a tree,” or

“Poetry, she says, is a mountain. An actual mountain. A thing that fools climb simply ‘because it’s there.’ “Poetry is there, but why do we constantly feel the need to prove it exists?”

By “we,” the poet means “I”.  He answers by offering a guiding example of “Wolves in the city, wandering around abandoned monuments and subway stations without any sense of fear or resistance.” When they attack,

“It’s hard to pretend the shrieks are not happening, but most people are trained by now to drown out the sounds. Need I remind you that most of the time, they simply walk through the city, peacefully, with nothing at all to do.”

We want to prove poetry (like emotion) exists because it can be neglected, ignored. With the wolves, Starkweather emphasizes the absurdity of ignoring a tangible thing, and suggests we do it all the time with intangible things, like emotions. “The perfect poem you can walk inside of,” he writes; “watch yourself from above on a series of TVs.”

These are poems conceived and collected under the guiding thread of a city, giving Starkweather room to not only populate the poems with objects, people and actions, but also events, suggesting memories, which hectically turn emotions into things. There is less concern about creating a defined time and space than there is in populating it:

“In the dream, we’re at a party in a trailer park. No, the ceiling isn’t low, that’s regret. I know, it looks a lot like metal, but it’s actually closer to mist.”

This constructed world, therefore, is very fragile—half-remembered at times or half-imagined, coming apart in our hands.

With images and ideas careening back and forth, some stick better than others. In lines like “The way ‘terror’ has lost its meaning in America,” or “there are trees in the trees,” there is less emotional investment than shorthand for tasteful political sentiment on the one hand and metaphysical shadow-play on the other. Starkweather’s poems are most his own in his strains of humor and levity that do not really look on the bright side, but lash out, retaining the whole of their weirdness: “I wanted to be a robot-cop, until I saw the scene when the politician did all that blow off the blonde’s tits at the top of some city. Look what dreams lead to.”

The most indelible comment made to the “absent other” is bristling, flip and sincere:  “Tell me, what do you think, when you talk freely, without reservations, without fear, when you speak of me with your heart wide open, theoretically speaking, obviously?” Humor and desire intermingle in one of the book’s best moments:

“Did I tell you I was watching Game 2 of the Playoffs between the Pistons and the Orlando Magic…[and] this skinny little white boy with glasses, a Pistons fan, maybe 10 years old, shirtless…and painted on the entirety of his chest, in glittery pink and blue spray-paint was the message, ‘There’s No Such Thing as Magic’ and POOF – you were beside me, naked and trembling in my arms?”

He has summoned his “other” – at least, the idea of her, which is something. The other best moment takes this humor into the abyss, owning completely his weird and private world. But maybe it is not so private. Maybe some day you will be talking to a man in a bar, and in talking to him, you will have more in common with him than you think. And maybe you will even buy him a drink, but eventually you will have to say goodbye, and maybe you will ask him off-handedly where he is going, and he will answer, “I am going on a journey where all possible outcomes will end in fire.” Maybe. If not, you can imagine it.

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