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TTTTTTTT AA PPPP RRRR OOOO OOOO TTTTTTT
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T A A P P R R O O O O T
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T AAAAAA PPPP RRRR O O O O T
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T A A P R R O O O O T
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T A A P R R OOOO OOOO T
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Issue #2.0, section a 4/93
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TapRoot is a quarterly publication of Independent, Underground,
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and Experimental language-centered arts. Over the past 10 years,
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we have published 40+ collections of poetry, writing, and visio-
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verbal art in a variety of formats. In the August of 1992, we
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began publish TapRoot Reviews, featuring a wide range of "Micro-
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Press" publications, primarily language-oriented. This posting
|
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is the first section of our 2nd full electronic issue, containing
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all of the short ZINE reviews; a second section contains all of the
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chapbook reviews. We provide this information in the hope
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that netters do not limit their reading to E-mail & BBSs.
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Please e-mail your feedback to the editor, Luigi-Bob Drake, at:
|
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au462@cleveland.freenet.edu
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Requests for e-mail subsctiptions should be sent to the same
|
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address--they are free, please indicate what you are requesting--
|
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(a short but human message; this is not an automated listserve).
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I believe it is FTPable from UMich, which also archives back issues.
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A cummulative, searchable, and x-referenced HyperCard version is
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under development--e-mail for status & availablility information.
|
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Hard-copies of TapRoot Reviews contain additional review
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material--in this issue, reviews & articles by Jake Berry, Tom
|
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Beckett, geof huth, Kurt Nimmo, Tom Willoch--as well as a variety
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of poetry prose & grafix. It is available from: Burning Press,
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PO Box 585, Lakewood OH 44107--$2.50 pp. Both the print &
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electronic versions of TapRoot are copyright 1993 by Burning
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Press, Cleveland. Burning Press is a non-profit educational
|
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corporation. Permission granted to reproduce this material FOR
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NON-COMMERCIAL PURPOSES, provided that this introductory notice
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is included. Burning Press is supported, in part, with funds
|
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from the Ohio Arts Council.
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Reviewers are identified by their initials at the end of each review:
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Tom Beckett, Jake Berry, Luigi-Bob Drake, R. Lee Etzwiler, Bob Grumman,
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Roger Kyle-Keith, Bill Paulauskas, John Stickney, Nico Vassilakis,
|
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Thomas Wiloch, and Ron Zac
|
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*** Many thanx to all contributors. ***
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'ZINES:
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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&, A MAGAZINE OF PARAGRAPHS--(Vol. IV, #2, Fall 1992), 92 Manning
|
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St., Providence RI, 02906. 38 pp., $3.00. Exactly as advertised,
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a collection of single-paragraph prose pieces. Mostly narratives,
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fully complete and self-contained. Several strong, believable real-
|
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life stories; others with the twisted linearity of dreams--bathtubs
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full of snakes, blue wolves falling on you, that sort of thing.
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Language & images honed and sharp, trimmed of all fat, as appropriate
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to the limited space allotted. Fine.--lbd
|
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|
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ABACUS--(#71, Jan 93), 181 Edgemont Ave., Elmwood CT, 06110. 18 pp,
|
|||
|
$3.00. Ten mostly introspective poems from Nick Piombino's The Frozen
|
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|
Witness that generally deal with literature and related topics and
|
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|
range from rhymed (!) verse through free-verse (and prose) to a poem
|
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|
that alternates between free-verse and obliquely-resonant-therewith
|
|||
|
lists of words that (except in two or three such lists) all begin with
|
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an "f," or a "c," or an "f" or a "c".--bg
|
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|
|
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ANTISKIOS--(#s 60-62, Jan. 1993), 4143 F. St., Bremerton WA, 98312.
|
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|
1 pp., $.29@. Each issue is a legal-sized broadsheet with a varied
|
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clutter of poems, aphorisms and illustrations. The poems in these
|
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|
three issues, and others I've seen, are all omni-lexical (words only)
|
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|
but range from traditional free-verse to surrealism. Random fragment,
|
|||
|
from Diane Webster's "Spirit of the Night" in #61: "Spirit of the
|
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night wanders/ between wolf howl and rooster crow/ dragging her
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moonbeam hem/ across the lake like a lover's whisper."--bg
|
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|
|
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Usually single double-sided oversized sheets filled with original
|
|||
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drawings, poetry, free-form style that I like to see being done with
|
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|
such enthusiasm: drawings by Blair Wilson, poetry by such as Paul
|
|||
|
Weinman, Larry Randle, T.N. Turner. Invites folks to write, submit
|
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|
poetry, drawings. Obviously open to new ideas and a nice place to
|
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|
start publishing.--bp
|
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|
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ASYLUM ANNUAL--(1993), PO Box 6203, Santa Maria CA, 93456. 153 pp.,
|
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|
$12.95 ($10 to subscribers). Edited by Greg Boyd, this is the first
|
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|
issue of the annual, replacing the former magazine of the same name.
|
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|
The poetry, fiction and artwork featured here is first rate, drawing
|
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|
heavily on the neo-surrealist vein in flavor and the prose poem in
|
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|
particular. Prose poems by Russell Edson, Brian Swann, Jessica Treat
|
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|
and David Henson stood out. The poetry mixed Rene Daumal (in
|
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translation from the French) with Cynthia Hendershot, some Buk with
|
|||
|
Ruben Dario and others, equally known and unknown. Fiction was also a
|
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strong component in both short short and longer form. With some
|
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|
art/lit criticism (Kirby Olson on the Marquis de Sade was
|
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|
exceptional), some collages and clipped graphics, it is beautifully
|
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|
laid out, kind of a cross between old faves KAYAK and GARGOYLE.
|
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Though it may seem pricey, you're getting more than you paid for.--js
|
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|
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B CITY--(#7, Fall 1992), 517 N. 4th St., DeKalb IL, 60015. 48 pp.,
|
|||
|
$5.00. One poem after another, the editor does a masterful job of
|
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ignoring boundaries, bandwagons and schools, and jumps on anything
|
|||
|
that strikes her fancy. The surprize is that it all hangs together,
|
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|
somehow. The names I recognize range from Lydia Tomkiw (lead singer
|
|||
|
in the band Algebra Suicide) to Stuart Friebert (professor at Oberlin
|
|||
|
& editor of the prestigious journal FIELD). The wide range seems to
|
|||
|
let in both the mundane and the Big Picture, tying 'em up in an
|
|||
|
appropriately complex, and inexplicable web.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BACKWOODS--(#18, Winter 1992), PO Box 445, Athens GA, 30603. 62 pp.,
|
|||
|
$10/yr. If there were such an animal as a classic underground mag,
|
|||
|
BACKWOODS would probably fit the bill. It seems to bridge the gap
|
|||
|
between '60s radical publications and '80s/'90s marginal press. Full
|
|||
|
of stories, screeds, comics, ads for alternative businesses, poetry--
|
|||
|
beat, experimental, hip-pastoral--great earthy graphics and crude
|
|||
|
scribblings. Anyone thumbing through BACKWOODS and not finding at
|
|||
|
least a couple of things to enjoy could pretty much be written off as
|
|||
|
a hopeless asshole. A good dose for an anxious age.--jb
|
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|
|||
|
BAKUNIN--(#2, fall 1992/winter 1993), PO Box 1853, Simi Valley CA,
|
|||
|
93062. 108 pp., $8.00. Not a simulation, but an actual magazine
|
|||
|
published to appeal to "the dead Russian anarchist in us all." While
|
|||
|
not all that anarchist, it does present work--poetry and fiction--that
|
|||
|
has some political outlook, and some that does not. Featured work by
|
|||
|
not the usual suspects, a comic strip called "Anti-Communists of
|
|||
|
Doom," and a strong review section by editor Jordan Jones and
|
|||
|
contributing editor Hugh Fox. Next issues will focus on the relations
|
|||
|
between all races in the wake of the LA Riots (Simi Valley was the
|
|||
|
site of the infamous Rodney King trial).--js
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BANAL PROBE--(#3, July 1992), 115 E. 49th, Austin TX, 78751. 8 pp.,
|
|||
|
$1.00. How could anyone dislike a magazine called "bANAL Probe," that
|
|||
|
bills itself as "The Rectal Thermometer of a Dying Planet?" Anyway,
|
|||
|
this issue contains about forty nicely-written brief reviews of
|
|||
|
(mostly) 'zines and comix, almost none of which I'd ever heard of.
|
|||
|
One example: FANZINE CULTURE, in one issue of which 13 different
|
|||
|
fanzine editors discuss their careers. The magazine also has an
|
|||
|
interesting selection of letters, illustrations and process pieces
|
|||
|
about life in general.--bg
|
|||
|
|
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|
BIG ALLIS--(#4, 1991), 139 Thompson St. #2, New York NY, 10012. 56
|
|||
|
pp., $5.00. All women poets, all more-or-less second wave LANGUAGE
|
|||
|
folks, and all fine work--yet still such a wide variety of styles and
|
|||
|
voices, it hangs together tenuously, by a thread. Elaine Aqui's words
|
|||
|
float singularly in space, threading together like a dream; Mary
|
|||
|
Rising Higgins twists haiku form, stringing 17-syllable lines together
|
|||
|
to form a prose-poem; Elizabeth Willis fractures individual words as
|
|||
|
well as line & linearity. Several excerpts from longer works,
|
|||
|
including a chunk from Colleen Lookingbill's INCOGNITA (now available
|
|||
|
from Sink Press). Beverly Dahlen's excellent "For Laura Moriarty's
|
|||
|
like roads", goes beyond response or criticism to create a new whole
|
|||
|
from parts.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BLACK BREAD--(#2, Nov. 1992), 366 Thayer St. #3, Providence RI, 02906.
|
|||
|
88 pp., $5.00. A fine collection of work by a dozen women, thoughtful
|
|||
|
and stimulating. Combines innovative formal techniques and a warmth
|
|||
|
of human emotion. Several selections each from most of the
|
|||
|
contributors, and some longer pieces given space to stretch out and
|
|||
|
work. Kimberly Lyon's "Vestive" and "Six Poems for Rosa Luxumburg" by
|
|||
|
Jennifer Moxley particularly striking, weaving together history &
|
|||
|
everyday life, memory made physical.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BOLD PRINT--2602 W. Main St., Richmond, VA, 23220. 42 pp., $3.00.
|
|||
|
There has always been something wonderfully unpretentious about BOLD
|
|||
|
PRINT. Page after page you get the sense of people living, struggling
|
|||
|
to survive, struggling for identity, yet retaining a sense of humor.
|
|||
|
Most of these poets and story tellers aren't concerned with loft
|
|||
|
literary aspirations, they're writing to come clean with themselves
|
|||
|
and the world. The graphics generally come closer to graffiti, which
|
|||
|
enhances the streetwise aesthetic. Reading this stuff makes you feel
|
|||
|
less alone, gives you a sense of the community. Kyle says they need
|
|||
|
cash to help keep it going. This is important stuff, so if you a
|
|||
|
couple of extra bucks...--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CAMELLIA--(Year 4 Fall/Winter 93), PO Box 4092, Ithica, NY, 14852.
|
|||
|
20 pp., $.52 and SASE. Poems by 18 writers, including Jeff Vetock,
|
|||
|
Miriam Sagan and Wade Bell. Nicely produced, with a light but intense
|
|||
|
esthetic. The poetry seems of a piece, the editors having chosen
|
|||
|
works that compliment the sense of winter stillness without making it
|
|||
|
an obvious device. Nothing very weird or experimental here, but it's
|
|||
|
authentic and it shows. -bp
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CRASH COLLUSION--(#2), PO Box 49233, Austin TX, 78765. $2.00. A
|
|||
|
relatively new mag of alternative science, philosophy, and behavior.
|
|||
|
Beautifully produced, utilizes ritualistic artwork both ancient and
|
|||
|
modern. The writing is thoughtful and provocative, choosing to leave
|
|||
|
the ideas it explores open for further discussion instead of drawing
|
|||
|
hard conclusions. This issue concentrates on UFOs, hallucinogens, and
|
|||
|
the Marfa Mystery Lights. Also, some Reichian poetics, quite good. A
|
|||
|
list of potential subjects in the front includes lucid dreams, sacred
|
|||
|
sites, shamanism, and conspiracies among others. Classic fringe.
|
|||
|
They are seeking articles and correspondence.--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CROTON BUG--(#2), PO Box 11166, Milwaukee, WI, 53211. 56 pp., $8.00.
|
|||
|
A handsome & spacious mag of mostly experimental textwork, mostly by
|
|||
|
pretty Big Names, tho not all from the same camp. A number of
|
|||
|
aleatoric/program-driven texts (Jackson Mac Low's computer-derived
|
|||
|
"Forties", f'rinstance) seem connectedly fragmented & disjoint. A
|
|||
|
similar experimentalism shows in Charles Stein's graphic Zaumisms
|
|||
|
("Zenacious", "Yendrarchy"). Contrasting are Eileen Myles' (poet &
|
|||
|
lesbian who ran for president) personal-political graduation address,
|
|||
|
Antler's eco-sexual "Waterfall BoyJackoff Offering", and the
|
|||
|
minimally graphic & powerfully political "500 Years of Resistance" by
|
|||
|
Clemente Padn.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CVS BULLETIN--(#1, Feb. 1993), Copyright Violation Squad, Box 227,
|
|||
|
Iowa City IA, 52244. 24 pp., $2.00. A serious newsletter on the
|
|||
|
(mis)use of copyright law by the large and established against the
|
|||
|
small and marginal, particularly when the latter appropriate
|
|||
|
trademarks, song lyrics, etc. for the purpose of parody or social
|
|||
|
commentary. One of its articles, for instance, tells of Meridenth
|
|||
|
(BETTER HOMES & GARDENS) Corporation's suing a queerzine called BETTER
|
|||
|
HOMOS & GARDENS. It'd be nice if CVS Bulletin were able to influence
|
|||
|
somebody in the establishment, for our copyright laws are clearly both
|
|||
|
unfair and outmoded; it's not likely, though.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CWM--(#1, Summer 1992), 1300 Kicker Rd., Tuscaloosa AL, 35404. 32
|
|||
|
pp., $3.00. Outside: a stiff color cover and a back pocket containing
|
|||
|
two hand-decorated matchbooks and a folded narrow piece of cover stock
|
|||
|
inside of which G. Huth has rubber-stamped, "watearthm," water being
|
|||
|
the theme of this issue. Inside: a nicely eclectic range of poems
|
|||
|
including some quite traditional ones, 6 reviews, a striking Guy
|
|||
|
Beining collage, and an excerpt from, apparently, a novel--that sums
|
|||
|
up this handsomely-produced new 'zine.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CYANOSIS--(#1, 1991), 318 Mendocino Ave., Ste. 30, Santa Rosa CA,
|
|||
|
95404. 108 pp., $7.00. Wide-ranging variety magazine for the '90s.
|
|||
|
Cyberpunk prose & an interview with Russian poet Mikhail Epstein, more
|
|||
|
of Colleen Lookingbill's Incongnita & portraits with lots of exposed
|
|||
|
inner organs, review of a recent industrial music CD & an interview
|
|||
|
with proprietors of a Death-Art gallery--all over the map, all smartly
|
|||
|
laid out in the best DTP style.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DADA TENNIS--(#3, spring 1993), Box 10, Woodhaven NY, 11421. 16 pp.
|
|||
|
A barrage of wordage from a handful of contributors, some of whom are
|
|||
|
regulars on the DreamWorld BBS, also operated by editor Bill
|
|||
|
Paulauskas (1-718-849-3232, 8-1-N; a source for much more of the same,
|
|||
|
& participatory too!). You might suspect amphetamine &/or alcohol as
|
|||
|
contributors due to the velocity & dislocation of the textstream--tho
|
|||
|
such substances disrupt the REM sleep necessary to enter the
|
|||
|
DreamWorld. Actually, less beholden to the Dreamy Surrealists, and
|
|||
|
more akin to the (anti-)political Dada Daddies. Maybe best to blame
|
|||
|
it on brain-wave disturbances from staring at the computer screen for
|
|||
|
too long...--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DIE YOUNG--#3, August 1991, 420 Orangewood, Lafayette, LA, 70503. 48
|
|||
|
pp., $5. Proclaims: "DIE YOUNG is a little magazine of vast
|
|||
|
pretensions. A powertool amid the squalor of political thought... "
|
|||
|
I think it's great. It has a sense of humor, and still manages to
|
|||
|
publish very good poetry. Steven Petroff's "Mongolian Proverbs" is a
|
|||
|
nice example of wit and poetry at its best. And the rest of the crew
|
|||
|
were enjoyable to travel with. Hey, how can you resist a poem with a
|
|||
|
title like "The Ten Best Things" by Joe Sheffler, or Darrell Bourque's
|
|||
|
"My Mother's Right Foot"? The last is not funny... nor drearily
|
|||
|
poetic. These are exciting writers--may none die young.--bp
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DREAMTIME TALKINGMAIL--(#3, Spring 1993), Rt. 2 Box 242W, Viola WI,
|
|||
|
54664. 30 pp., $3.00. The newsletter for Xexoxial Endarchy's
|
|||
|
Dreamtime Village project, a collective outpost in the wilderness of
|
|||
|
Wisconsin devoted to experimental intermedia and sustainable
|
|||
|
permaculture. The newsletter has information on their varieties of
|
|||
|
workshops--which range from Arborescence and Straw Bale Construction
|
|||
|
to Bookmaking and Pyrotechnics--as well as reports from past
|
|||
|
festivities & articles from visitors. Proprietors Liz Was and Miekal
|
|||
|
And are aware of how much this all sounds like the old hippy-commune
|
|||
|
stuff from the 60's, and are at pains to differentiate themselves
|
|||
|
("village living, not communal living!"). An adventurous & ambitious
|
|||
|
project, looking to give & get some participatory energy.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EXILE--(Vol. 1, #1, Jan.-Feb 1993), 149 Virginia St., #7, St. Paul,
|
|||
|
MN, 55102. 4 pp., SASE. A newsletter of "Reviews*Essays*
|
|||
|
Information", this premier issue features a half-dozen reviews of
|
|||
|
serious non-mainstream books (Bruce Andrews, Thom Metzger, Colleen
|
|||
|
Lookingbill); and an impassioned essay called "Reading Between the
|
|||
|
Lines: Is There a Place in Minnesota for Alternative Literature?"
|
|||
|
Apparently fed up with the strictures of the local Poetry
|
|||
|
Establishment, the editor decided to try to shake things up a little
|
|||
|
and call attention to newer trends that seem dissed in St. Paul.
|
|||
|
Admirable commitment to a hometown scene, although the problems of
|
|||
|
conservative provincialism are everywhere (the grass might look
|
|||
|
greener in NYC, but it's artificial turf).--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FEH!--(#14), 147 Second Ave. #603, New York NY, 10003. 54 pp., $2.00.
|
|||
|
Alas, according to an announcement in the editorial section this is
|
|||
|
the last issue to be edited by Simeon Styleites. But as it becomes a
|
|||
|
monster of Morgana Malatesta, Simeon's companion for some time now, I
|
|||
|
doubt it'll change much. I hope not. This issue continues in classic
|
|||
|
style the odious traditions of its predecessors. Simeon's editorial
|
|||
|
is one of the highlights--his obsessions with DITS (devils-that-
|
|||
|
infest-my-tortured-soul) and sin provide some tremendous
|
|||
|
entertainment. And Morgana's idea of a romantic dinner is
|
|||
|
delightfully disgusting. Bob Z appears and reappears to bitch and
|
|||
|
endarken. And there's much much more--from the sweltering erotic to
|
|||
|
the sickmaking. High perversion.--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FINE MADNESS--(winter/spring 1993), PO Box 31138, Seattle, WA, 98103.
|
|||
|
64 pp., $9/yr. They seem to favor a more widely published assortment
|
|||
|
of poets, which gives the magazine a professional feel. This presents
|
|||
|
the reader with a rather balanced range of styles. There are no
|
|||
|
amateurs here... made me wish for a touch more "madness" at the risk
|
|||
|
of less finesse. The Carol Knox' poem "A Rune" was especially
|
|||
|
refreshing.--bp
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FISH WRAP--(#4, Fall 1992), 921 1/2 24th Ave., Seattle WA, 98122.
|
|||
|
4 pp., $1.00. Poetry tabloid that includes illumagery and a short
|
|||
|
story. In my favorite of its poems, a visual one by G. Huth, a large-
|
|||
|
lettered "CIAO" juts out from such kinds of military printout as
|
|||
|
"MSYSYSYSYS" collaged with something about Venus and "Roma," and a
|
|||
|
vivid description of a streetscene after gunfire. Most of the other
|
|||
|
poems are straight-forward free verse about everyday concerns, but--
|
|||
|
usually--with a snap.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOUND SHEET--(#3, January 1993), 14492 Ontario Cir., Westminster CA,
|
|||
|
92683. 2 pp., $2/6 issues. This issue features a characteristically
|
|||
|
brain-charging collage by Malok about God, Man, having a fun car, and
|
|||
|
several varieties of who-knows-what. It also contains one of
|
|||
|
Bennett's recent apostrophe-littered poems, an arresting visual poem
|
|||
|
by G. Huth, and a poem by Guy Beining about, among other things, a
|
|||
|
"morning moon... (that is) no more than sky marrow."--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOUND STREET--(Vol. 2, 1993), 14492 Ontario Cir., Westminster CA,
|
|||
|
92683. 24 pp., $3.00. The full version, for which the FOUND SHEET
|
|||
|
broadsides are maybe a teaser (catalog of all available for SASE).
|
|||
|
Most (but not all) work is "found," or based on found sources via
|
|||
|
dtournement, collage or aleatoric composition. The pure text pieces
|
|||
|
(by Tom Willoch, Jack Skelly, and Musicmaster) seemed strongest (tho
|
|||
|
it's not always clear if/how they are "found"). Some of the graphic
|
|||
|
pieces are pretty conceptual, such as Brooks Roddan's "The Genius of
|
|||
|
Glenn Gould", which consists of a xerox of the bar-code tag from a
|
|||
|
Bach cassette. Inventive layout with hidden pages, so the reader is
|
|||
|
in on the "finding".--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FREE LUNCH--(#10, Summer 1992), Box 7647, Laguna Niguel CA, 92607.
|
|||
|
32 pp., $10/3 issues. Excellent 'zine to send poems to, for editor
|
|||
|
Ron Offen painstakingly comments on everything he receives, and
|
|||
|
rejected poets win free subscriptions to the magazine if Offen thinks
|
|||
|
them deserving. Of course, this can mean double-rejection if he
|
|||
|
declines your work AND rates you unworthy of a free subscription. The
|
|||
|
poetry in #10 is mostly conventional free verse, but much of it
|
|||
|
clicks, like Billy Collins's "Refrigerator Light," which I quote in
|
|||
|
full: "I stop thinking/ about her/ the minute/ she slams/ the door."
|
|||
|
--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FUEL--(#2, 1992), PO Box 146640, Chicago IL, 60614. 44 pp., $3.00.
|
|||
|
The image on the cover (& centerfold) is a guy at the gas pump, about
|
|||
|
to light a cig after dousing himself with gasoline. On the surface,
|
|||
|
that fits w/ most of the work inside, which is often from a kind of
|
|||
|
down & out regular-guy persona--plenty of dishwashers, smack-addicts,
|
|||
|
ex-cons, & pick-ups. (It's not always clear the material comes from
|
|||
|
personal experience, & for the sake of the cover-boy i hope not.) On
|
|||
|
second glance, tho, it seems that many of the writers are more
|
|||
|
optimistic & hopeful than they let on--certainly Sesshu Foster's
|
|||
|
opening "How a Man Getting Off a Bus is Like a Fruit, a Flower" is
|
|||
|
seeing the brighter side. Even Jay Marvin, with "...& fuck you
|
|||
|
amerika/ for taking jack, martin, bobby,/ malcom, huey, & leaving us
|
|||
|
with/ dick, ronnie, george to preside/ over our crumbling desires"
|
|||
|
seems to see a glass full enough to propose a toast.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
GREEN Z ERO--(#11, Fall 1992), Box 3104, Shiremanstown PA, 17011.
|
|||
|
24 pp., $1.00. The second space in this zine's title is no typo; and
|
|||
|
it typifies the kind of vernal end-of-alphabet/beginning-of-counting/
|
|||
|
almost-Eros micro-concern with language that it's poets seem most
|
|||
|
devoted to. It's most far-gone exemplar is Paul Collier, as in "13.":
|
|||
|
"onyx bet'n/ robing/ rush statix/ ein hook a bronze/ orange bellie
|
|||
|
flame/ fish sich hard/ I never/ non dat tame/ radice red booms"--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HAIGHT ASHBURY LITERARY REVIEW--(Vol. 12 #1, 1993), 558 Joost Ave.,
|
|||
|
San Francisco CA, 94127. 16 pp., $2.00. A diverse and conscientious
|
|||
|
journal from the San Francisco area. This issue includes one short
|
|||
|
story and seventy-two poems intermixed with black and white art. Well
|
|||
|
done and alive with the muse. Around for twelve years and still going
|
|||
|
strong. Various free verse imagism and experimental word-slinging,
|
|||
|
idolizing Jack Kerouac-like beat mystery and correct punctuation most
|
|||
|
of the time. It includes variety within this sub-genre. "Your
|
|||
|
fingers grip the wheel/ feel the wanderer's void/ up black mountains/
|
|||
|
you see/ the bones of your fathers". Many poems like this are
|
|||
|
included and excite the mind with vivid surprises and twists.
|
|||
|
Includes a sense of cultural awareness and diversity. Well thought
|
|||
|
out, this is a mellow collection.--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HAMMERS--(#6, 1992), 1718 Sherman, Suite #205, Evanston, IL, 60201.
|
|||
|
92 pp., $5.00. Bill Hennessey's opening "This Light Of Physics", with
|
|||
|
its picture of a Japanese woman cradling her irradiated baby in the
|
|||
|
bath, sets the tone of commitment & intensity. Lisa Buscani's closing
|
|||
|
"Solidarity", a song for AIDS victims (all of us), has the force &
|
|||
|
directness that won her the National Poetry Slam title last year. In
|
|||
|
between are a wide variety of voices, all accessible and working hard
|
|||
|
to communicate. Craft meant as a vehicle, not decoration or dazzle.
|
|||
|
Fans of SLIPSTREAM magazine will find find this one equally
|
|||
|
compelling.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HOUSE ORGAN--(#1), 1250 Belle Avenue, Lakewood, OH, 44107. SASE +
|
|||
|
donation. This is a new magazine. A tapestry of Modernist, Post-
|
|||
|
Modernist, and Jungian Poetic idea. A constellation of prose poems,
|
|||
|
poem poems, articles, comments and poetic insights. A woven collage
|
|||
|
of language play by loom operator Kenneth Warren. Poetic origins in
|
|||
|
Pound, Olson, Duncan, etc. All engaging poetics by committed authors.
|
|||
|
These titles reveal some of the metal: "Nothing to Worry About in
|
|||
|
Heraclitus," "thINK," "13 Lines from Fortune Cookies I Opened Last
|
|||
|
Week," "The Episteme of the Serpent," "Nymphactra," "Usufruct," "98.6%
|
|||
|
Loaded." This is all a magazine of poetry. Now, while all of this
|
|||
|
intoxicates the imagination it is not a pretentious or pompous
|
|||
|
presentation. The magazine's glyph conveys the playfulness of poetry,
|
|||
|
the limitless of possibility of language, and the fashion in which
|
|||
|
word defines reality.--Michael Basinski
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HOUSE ORGAN--(#2, Spring 1993), c/o Kenneth Warren, 1250 Belle Ave.,
|
|||
|
Lakewood OH, 44107. 12 pp., SASE + donation. A small, xerox 'zine,
|
|||
|
that primarily features poetry. This issue has poems by Russell
|
|||
|
Atkins, George Myers Jr., Joe Napora, Vincent Ferrini, Michael
|
|||
|
Basinski, Clayton Eshleman and others. It is packed with superior,
|
|||
|
solid work. Editor Kenneth Warren contributes an essay on Napora's
|
|||
|
take on "The Walam Olum." Receiving something like this in the mail is
|
|||
|
reason enough to get up in the morning.--js
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
INDEFINITE SPACE--(Vol. 1, #2; Autumn 1992), PO Box 40101, Pasadena
|
|||
|
CA, 91114. 39 pp., $3.00. A graceful collection of impressive poems,
|
|||
|
musical, thoughtful, bordering on surrealism with a touch of improv-
|
|||
|
jazz. A bright spot of intelligent works which are not fierce, but
|
|||
|
calming. Included: some experimental works, odd spacing, lack of
|
|||
|
capitalization and punctuation, even a collage poem--nothing
|
|||
|
oppressive. Everything fits to form a mood of veiled understanding,
|
|||
|
almost reaching for omniscience at times. To look behind the veil is
|
|||
|
to be forbidden understanding. But the urge is still there. And so
|
|||
|
is the potential. Each poem has a calm power building within, a lusty
|
|||
|
paean of oozing images nailed swiftly into a fortress of wonder. From
|
|||
|
Carrie Etter's "Miscarriage: "Monday I had found out. It had been/
|
|||
|
eight years and Dad's layoff since/ the last child, and I wept,/ Tell
|
|||
|
me, what are the rules?/ . . . on a pale winter night, empty roads/
|
|||
|
lead back to memory." This is only one example of the passion
|
|||
|
contained in this publication, a mournful passion at times, a passion
|
|||
|
compounded by youthful images lost and found, but a worthy passion.
|
|||
|
--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
INDUSTRIAL SABOTAGE--(#53: The Zoo Issue), 1357 Lansdowne, Toronto,
|
|||
|
ONT, CANADA, M6H 3Z9. 19 pp. A thematic issue, a beastiary, from
|
|||
|
ants to vultures, & the human animal too. Each poem has its own
|
|||
|
specie, is it's own page/object, rubber-stamped onto a separate card,
|
|||
|
various colors & sizes, collected in an envelope. Beautiful as a
|
|||
|
thing-in-itself. Each voice stands on its own, distinct & deserving
|
|||
|
of the individualized attention, unified by the pared-to-the-bone
|
|||
|
Essence that marks traditional haiku. Tho linguistically more playful
|
|||
|
than most haiku, in general not as radically experimental as some past
|
|||
|
issues of this mag. Can't resist quoting the late bpNichol's
|
|||
|
contribution, a version of Basho, "The Queerness of It All":
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
frQg
|
|||
|
pQnd
|
|||
|
plQp
|
|||
|
--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
KETTLE OF FISK--(Vol. 3 #1), PO Box 42872, Philadelphia PA, 19101.
|
|||
|
$1.00. afungusboy has always made great mailart and since he got a PC
|
|||
|
the quality has improved and issues seem to be coming more rapidly.
|
|||
|
This issue even contains a review section. The best part of this one
|
|||
|
though is a mail interview with John M. Bennett--allowing us a glimpse
|
|||
|
into some of his methods and ideas. Also excellent graphics, and
|
|||
|
articles by Geof Huth among others on archiving, and there's more.
|
|||
|
Quite a lot for a buck or a trade--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LIFT--(#1O &11, Fall 92.), 10-rear Oxford St., Somerville MA,
|
|||
|
Somerville MA. 129 pp., $9.00. Devoted to the work of Stephen Jonas.
|
|||
|
Jonas, who died 'in 1970, was a black, homosexual, self-educated poet
|
|||
|
I'd never heard of 'til getting this magazine but who wrote at the
|
|||
|
level of his friend Jack Spicer, as this scrappy collection of funk-
|
|||
|
to-Plato-wide, "bam-a-lam-lam" splattering of poems proves.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LILLIPUT REVIEW--(#s 41 & 42, March 1993), 207 S. Millvale Ave., #3,
|
|||
|
Pittsburgh PA, 15224. 12 pp., $1.00. Tiny, straightforward poems in
|
|||
|
small unassuming packages. Not as spartan as haiku (tho sometimes
|
|||
|
shorter), nor sentimental greeting-card verse, but usually limited a
|
|||
|
single image or incident. Lyn Lifshin's feature poem in #41 weighs in
|
|||
|
at 2-dozen lines, several times the average, and packs an extra punch
|
|||
|
thanx to sex, death & enjambment.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LOGODAEDALUS--(#3, Nov 92), Box 14193, Harrisburg PA, 17104. 28 pp.,
|
|||
|
$2.00. Fascinating abstract drawings by (I think) editor Paul Collier
|
|||
|
and such dislocational poems as Ficus Stangulensis's "Staid Greyface,"
|
|||
|
whose final stanza is: "KillFaceRockWest/ satis Kali fry/
|
|||
|
Scichismafecal/ snow voilet," and William B. Keckler's "The White
|
|||
|
Feather" with its "Frozen command, rippled, conchoidal/ Blue launched
|
|||
|
birds, Latin frescoes/ Quails feather air's glow/ Refraining bone's
|
|||
|
flowering..."-bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LOGODAEDALUS--(#4, Dec 92), Box 14193, Harrisburg PA, 17104. 28 pp.,
|
|||
|
$2.00. Possibly America's leading magazine of microherent poetry--
|
|||
|
which is what I call poetry of intentionally distorted words like the
|
|||
|
five here in Tio Veracols "Etude 230b:Cathe" (with "wind"):
|
|||
|
"perpelo/slooke," "silva," "tieir" and "winsbloe"--which puts me back
|
|||
|
in the middle ages, turning from Dante's dark wood onto a better path
|
|||
|
than he took--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LONG NEWS: IN THE SHORT CENTURY--(#2), PO BOX 150-455, Brooklyn NY,
|
|||
|
11215. 108 pp., $5.00. Centered on the theme of mourning, this is a
|
|||
|
high powered literary magazine with many big guns from the New York
|
|||
|
and Language schools. Good work by Bernadette Mayer, Fanny Howe and
|
|||
|
new-comer Wang Ping. The theme got lost or I missed the point of some
|
|||
|
of the pieces. Wouldn't be the first time.--js
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LONG NEWS: IN THE SHORT CENTURY--(#3) , PO Box 150-455, Brooklyn, NY,
|
|||
|
11215. 125 pp., $5.00. A very solid magazine of innovative writing
|
|||
|
and art. There are over forty contributors to this issue and all of
|
|||
|
the work sustains interest. I was particularly taken by Tyrone
|
|||
|
Williams' lyrically enthusiastic "Eleven Sentences," an extraordinary
|
|||
|
essay on a one line poem by Chris Tysh. Also of note are the
|
|||
|
contributions by Johanna Drucker, Harryette Mullen, Nicole Brossard,
|
|||
|
Chris Tysh, Carolee Schneeman, Lewis Warsh and Clark Coolidge. LONG
|
|||
|
NEWS: IN THE SHORT CENTURY is a magazine to keep on your desk and to
|
|||
|
keep an eye on.--tb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
LONG SHOT--(Vol. 13, 1992), PO Box 6238, Hoboken NJ, 07030. 127 pp.,
|
|||
|
$6.00. When time travel is perfected, someone will go back and
|
|||
|
attempt to smash Bukowski's first typewriter. Probably the wrong
|
|||
|
tactic, maybe get him a date to the senior prom or just get him laid
|
|||
|
early enough to put a stop to it! Anyway, this could be subtitled
|
|||
|
"Buk's Kids," it takes much the same stance, throws in some New York
|
|||
|
school writers--Eileen Myles, Orlovsky, and Ed Sanders (he's also
|
|||
|
interviewed)--some aware art, and tops it off with a piece on Wild
|
|||
|
Girls A-Go-Go, a performance dress-up goof. It has an awful lot of
|
|||
|
energy, eroticism (see Tsaurah Litsky's poems), street smarts
|
|||
|
(Hiphoprisy & Paul Beatty), and a Jack Wiler poem on exterminating
|
|||
|
what in Tibet is called a god. Not bad at all.--js
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MEAT EPOCH--(#10, Jan 93), 3055 Decatur Ave., apt. 2S, Bronx NY,
|
|||
|
10467, 2 pp., SASE, Poetry that ranges from C. Mulrooney's direct but
|
|||
|
crackling mordancies to such nondirect work as Michael Basinski's
|
|||
|
"Spell of Quince" (Ist line: "low olo ore odil") and St. Thomasino's
|
|||
|
"Ekphrasis No. 811 (which ends "Glottis/ Hic/ Cough/ Angel" . . . but
|
|||
|
wait, those are all real words!) with Crag Hill's fascinatingly
|
|||
|
lyrical/political "Spring Wound" and some astronomical illustrations
|
|||
|
of the solar system in between.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MEAT EPOCH--(#11, Jan. 1993), 3055 Decatur Ave., Apt 2S, Bronx NY,
|
|||
|
10467. 2 pp., SASE. No criticism in this issue, but a computer-
|
|||
|
scanned reproduction of a ten-dollar bill by William Conlon; two short
|
|||
|
evocative poems by the editor, a mathematical poem (in which a snow-
|
|||
|
obscured island is raised to the power of one over "Persephone") by
|
|||
|
m'self, and two fine philosophical poems, one by Spencer Selby (in
|
|||
|
which "Meaning gathers in emptiness/ and waits on all things"), the
|
|||
|
other by A. L. Nielson (about a "context (which) rose in the eastern
|
|||
|
window").--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MESHUGGAH--(#6), 147 Second Ave. #603, New York, NY, 10003. 32 pp.,
|
|||
|
$1.00. A rapidly growing and improving mag, MESHUGGAH brings together
|
|||
|
all manner of radical text. This issue is much commentary and
|
|||
|
complaining about the state of things, liberation rants, and bizarro
|
|||
|
fiction. Also, a few articles & etc. culled from elsewhere. A higher
|
|||
|
than usual amount of seriousness for MESHUGGAH , but in combination
|
|||
|
with some of the more deranged material it works quite well, moving
|
|||
|
away from the fiction collective it once was to a powerful document of
|
|||
|
the times.--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MODERN HAIKU--(Vol. XXIV, #1), Box 175, Madison WI, 53701. 92 pp.,
|
|||
|
$4.85. A magazine of long duration that is devoted to traditional
|
|||
|
haiku. Too many clunkingly old contrasts for me (e.g., spring vs.
|
|||
|
mortality), but I liked George Swede's "spring moon/ under the alley
|
|||
|
tomcat's fierce eyes/ a nametag glows" and a few others, and this
|
|||
|
issue also has some excellent articles on the haiku, and--as always--
|
|||
|
many informative reviews that cover haiku of all schools, even LeRoy
|
|||
|
("onde omb elleelle") Gorman's.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
MOLECULAR JUICE GLUE: DECENTRALIZED NETWORKER CONGRESS, 1992 DREAMTIME
|
|||
|
CORROBOREE--Xexoxial Endarchy, Rt. 1 Box 131, Lafarge, WI, 54639. 48
|
|||
|
pp. This is a 81/2 X 7 booklet documenting a Decentralized Networker
|
|||
|
Congress held Aug. 22, 1992 at Miekel And's and Liz Was's Dreamtime
|
|||
|
Village. Includes a long introduction to the participants in this
|
|||
|
particular event and to networker culture in general by John Held, Jr.
|
|||
|
The rest of the book has graphic pieces and collaborations by the
|
|||
|
participants and mail art from others. Includes a bibliography and
|
|||
|
address lists. Judging by this book, a great time was had by all.
|
|||
|
--jmb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NEW AMERICAN WRITING--(#10, Fall 1992), 2920 West Pratt, Chicago IL,
|
|||
|
60645. 150 pp., $6.00. NAW is put out by the people who brought you
|
|||
|
OINK, poets Maxine Chernoff and Paul Hoover. They've dressed up the
|
|||
|
name and package, but inside there's the same mix of strong poetry
|
|||
|
running across the best lines from Language, NY School, and the
|
|||
|
independents. As always, the best here are by female writers--Lydia
|
|||
|
Davis in some short short prose, Connie Deanovich and Elaine Equi...
|
|||
|
in fact, this is the place where I first read Equi. Funny, ironic and
|
|||
|
not too tragically hip, a good mix.--js
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NOTUS--(#11, Fall, 1992), 2420 Walter Dr., Ann Arbor MI, 48103.
|
|||
|
118 pp., $6.00. The opening essay waits 'til the second paragraph
|
|||
|
torefer to Barthes; the closing essay cites Derrida & Baudrillard.
|
|||
|
In between, the poetry is polished clean, but not as difficult as
|
|||
|
the bracketing erudition might have suggested. Many are almost
|
|||
|
anecdotal, if fragmented. I appreciated again Charles Bernstein's
|
|||
|
humor, and wanted to get the whole of Myung Mi Kim's "Bounty",
|
|||
|
portions of which appear in BLACK BREAD as well as here. Translations
|
|||
|
from Blaise Cendrars & Appollinaire, too.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
O!!ZONE--(#2, Feb. 1993), 1266 Fountain View Dr., Houston TX, 77057.
|
|||
|
18 pp., $2.50. A new 'zine devoted to unconventional writing. This
|
|||
|
issue features poems by Guy R. Beining and Ken Brandon--with
|
|||
|
illumagery by the authors as as an added attraction. Beining's poems
|
|||
|
are what I'd call "compound disjunctional," for they combine
|
|||
|
syntactical unorthodoxy and surrealism; but they include at least one
|
|||
|
fine traditionally-lyrical passage: "solvent edge of moon on/ blush of
|
|||
|
lake/ green veins of may in/ chalk of birch." Brandon's poems, on the
|
|||
|
other hand, are fairly straight-forward, but flirt slightly with
|
|||
|
surrealism as when, in his first poem he describes how he is dying...
|
|||
|
himself green & purple.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OSTENTATIOUS MIND--224 82nd St., Brooklyn NY, 11209. 24 pp., $3.00.
|
|||
|
A valiant attempt to get the poetry to the people. A folded journal
|
|||
|
of submitted poetry using paste and copy machine. Gives address of
|
|||
|
each poet so you can contact your favorite. A large selection of
|
|||
|
poems, by people from all over and in all walks of life. Very
|
|||
|
diversified in content. The addresses allow you to contact poets you
|
|||
|
like and tell them so--nice touch.--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
OXYGEN--(#6, Autumn 1992), 535 Geary St. #1010, San Francisco CA,
|
|||
|
94102. 40 pp., $3.00. Bracketed by long quotations from Toni
|
|||
|
Morrison and Ted Berrigan, the writers here take on "the aesthetic,
|
|||
|
political, and religious dimensions of life" --a tall order, and they
|
|||
|
are sincere rather than ironic. The poetry usually reachs high and
|
|||
|
sometimes exceeds its grasp, while the prose more often is content to
|
|||
|
just hand over the story. If they could get together somewhere
|
|||
|
inbetween...--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PARADOX--(#2), 49 Pine St. Apt 1, Saranac Lake NY, 12983. 20 pp.,
|
|||
|
$2.50. Somewhat innovative in that the cover is dense line drawing on
|
|||
|
a transparency. The poetry, prose and graphics move around from
|
|||
|
experimental to confessional--most of it quite good, and generally
|
|||
|
with only one piece to a page. Very accessible for something this
|
|||
|
deviant, and a good ride from one muse to another.--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PHOTOSTATIC--(#41, Jan .93) , Box 227, Iowa City IA, 52244. 22 pp.,
|
|||
|
$10/yr. Back after three years on Art Strike, as good as ever though
|
|||
|
now much more a discussion than art 'zine. This issue has some
|
|||
|
excellent audio cassette and 'zine reviews; a discussion of poetry in
|
|||
|
code by Tom Wiloch; two pages from Ross Martin's intriguing collagetc.
|
|||
|
book about books, Your Name Here; and news from editor Lloyd Dunn that
|
|||
|
Penguin Books has recognized the 'zine scene with The World of Zines
|
|||
|
by Mike Gunderloy and Cari Goldberg Janice. Does that mean it's time
|
|||
|
for authentic 'zine people to mosey on?--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PICKLES & OLIVES--(#l, 1992), PO Box 2382, Janesville WI, 53547.
|
|||
|
12 pp., $1.00. This is an admirable first attempt by a young teen-
|
|||
|
punk flexing her creative muscle. Xeroxed drawings, photos, letters,
|
|||
|
and articles make P&O an eclectic and lively 'zine. The mix of typed
|
|||
|
and handwritten copy includes instructions on making a cherry bomb,
|
|||
|
satirical political essays ("Punx for Vegetable Rights" and "The
|
|||
|
Caimanist Manifesto."), and both serious and humorous rantings of
|
|||
|
tortured teen-aged minds in the form of poems, short stories, and
|
|||
|
quotes.--rz
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
POETRY FLASH--(Number 237, December 1992), PO Box 4172, Berkeley CA,
|
|||
|
94704. 28 pp., $1.00. Jampacked with news and poetry of the West
|
|||
|
Coast, what's going on and where to submit, reviews and personal
|
|||
|
accounts of the poetry scene, last minute breakthroughs and personal
|
|||
|
insights. Mainstream but not stuffy. Has a monthly calendar of
|
|||
|
readings and events. This issue included an indepth article on
|
|||
|
"Cowboy Poets" and their works in progress; an interview with Robert
|
|||
|
Hunter (songwriter for the "Grateful Dead"), many poems, and much
|
|||
|
more. If you want to know what is going on on the West Coast, this is
|
|||
|
for you.--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
POETRY MOTEL--(#19, 1993), 1619 Jefferson St., Duluth MN, 55812.
|
|||
|
52 pp., $5.95. Raw, naked poetry you could probably read outloud at
|
|||
|
the corner bar and not only not get laughed at or punched, but
|
|||
|
probably be understood. Easy to "get" but not simple; tough-hearted,
|
|||
|
violent & sexy, full of juice... reminds a little of Bukowski but not
|
|||
|
so goddam self-absorbed, and more insightful to boot. Editor Pat
|
|||
|
McKinnon got a computer and a new book of Mayan glyphs to cut-n'-
|
|||
|
paste, the layout is still slapdash but ever easier to read. Special
|
|||
|
bonus: blue basset-hounds on the cover!--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
RED DANCEFLOOR REVIEW--(Vol.#2 Issue#4), PO Box 7392, Van Nuys, CA,
|
|||
|
91409. 5.00. Flat-spine, slick cover, nice art and a high class
|
|||
|
format make this one of the finest new poetry magazines on the West
|
|||
|
Coast. The power of the poetry and it's intensity will enthrall any
|
|||
|
poetry lover. Classy but not stuck-up. This issue includes a review
|
|||
|
by an Ohio poet, as well as an interview with Beat poet Allen
|
|||
|
Ginsberg. This is a tastefully done softcovered book which will last
|
|||
|
for years on your bookshelf. Very enjoyable.--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
RENOVATED LIGHTHOUSE--(#36, Summer 1991), PO Box 100. Riparius, NY,
|
|||
|
12862. 30 pp., $2.90. Poetry, prose, reviews, haikus, social
|
|||
|
commentary, and black and white fantasy art encapsulated into a pro-
|
|||
|
nature, pro-animal format, utilizing a selfproclaimed unconventional
|
|||
|
attitude in their editorial policy. One example of this
|
|||
|
unconventional policy appears to be a short story which is "concluded
|
|||
|
in the next issue." While this transition of a short story from one
|
|||
|
issue to another can be accomplished smoothly, in this case it is
|
|||
|
abrupt and disturbing. Some of the rhymes seem forced, but the free
|
|||
|
verse and prose are flexible and lucid. Don't expect scintillation,
|
|||
|
or even liberation. However, a celebration of life exists here, a
|
|||
|
small celebration but a celebration none-the-less. lt is obvious these
|
|||
|
people are headed in the right direction and with a little support
|
|||
|
they might make it.--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SCREECHOWL--(Feb. 1993), PO Box 1473, Russellville AR, 72801. 1 pp.,
|
|||
|
SASE?? All forms, styles, etc. accepted. Contributors receive ten
|
|||
|
copies of this delightful single sheet. This issue is buzzing with
|
|||
|
neatly scattered engravings of bugs, insects and owls... as well as
|
|||
|
poetry by John M. Bennett, Jessica Goad, and others. I think Jessica
|
|||
|
is someone to watch. I liked the voices of the other poets and their
|
|||
|
feel for the music in language. I think with Bennett in their midst
|
|||
|
they may grow more experimental and benefit from the risks.--bp
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SHINY INTERNATIONAL--(#7/8, 1992) , 39 E.12th Street, Suite 603, New
|
|||
|
York NY, 10003. 161 pp., $10.00. Subtitled "The Magazine of the
|
|||
|
Future," this is a slick, literary with a capital L magazine,
|
|||
|
beautifully done, and appropriate for any coffee table. Inside, with
|
|||
|
large white pages, are lots of big names from the Language crowd and
|
|||
|
those NY School graduates, in a lay-out that gives each poem some
|
|||
|
space to breathe. Notable work by everyone's favorite deviant Bob
|
|||
|
Flanagan, Tom Clark and Lewis Warsh, some art portfolios, a collection
|
|||
|
of new Berlin poetry (which seem remarkably American) and an in-depth
|
|||
|
interview with Jackson Mac Low.--js
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SHORT FUSE--(#52), Box 90436, Santa Barbara, CA, 93190. 6 pp, $1.00.
|
|||
|
A lot of interesting stuff in a small space. Excerpts from
|
|||
|
contributor's dream journals, tributes to John Cage, theories,
|
|||
|
screeds, poems, excellent graphics. Another enticingly active neuron
|
|||
|
in the fringe of liberation xerology.--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SITUATION--(#1, Dec. 92), 82 Fargo Ave. #3, Buffalo NY, 14201.
|
|||
|
16 pp., $8/yr. Omni-textual poems, most of them by the people
|
|||
|
involved with POETIC BRIEFS. Mostly about everyday concerns, but
|
|||
|
unobtrusively expression-concerned, too, as when Elizabeth Burns
|
|||
|
brings her scatter of unheightened but affecting thought-fragments
|
|||
|
about being in the hospital with a friend who has breast cancer to
|
|||
|
"a room at the top of my head/ where I open drawers and closets/ and
|
|||
|
birds and letters fly out/ and flock to you."--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SLAM Newsletter--(Vol 1. #3, March '93), 945 Main St. #807, Worcester,
|
|||
|
MA, 01610. 4 pp. , $1.25. The Poetry Slam is a peculiar genre of
|
|||
|
performance poetry with peculiar rules: 3 minute time limit; no props;
|
|||
|
judged olympic-point style by members of the audience. Spawned in
|
|||
|
Chicago, it's a phenom that's spread to over 30 cities nationwide &
|
|||
|
international. It promotes & popularizes poetry (where else have you
|
|||
|
ever seen 2000 people on their feet screaming for poetry?); purists
|
|||
|
sometimes have reservations about the restrictions & the competitive
|
|||
|
aspects, which can get pretty cut-throat. Easily understood &
|
|||
|
accessible poetry, as well as dramatic monologues & humorous material,
|
|||
|
tends to go over well; quieter & more thoughtful/complicated work
|
|||
|
sometimes gets lost in the crowd. This newsletter provides networking
|
|||
|
& access information for Slams in various cities, as well as reports
|
|||
|
from the most recent national Slam and news of upcoming nationals (to
|
|||
|
be held in SanFran--get on the stick if you plan to organize a team).
|
|||
|
If you're tired of the usual poetry reading format, this might be the
|
|||
|
spur towards something more energetic & alive.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SLUG & LETTUCE--(#28, 1992), c/o Christine, PO Box 2067 Peter Stuy.
|
|||
|
Stn., New York NY, 10009. 8 pp., SASE. The multi-talented Chris
|
|||
|
Boarts puts together an entertaining and informative collection of
|
|||
|
news on the NYC punk scene (with implications for far beyond), 'zine
|
|||
|
and record reviews, classifieds, and probing photos.
|
|||
|
The issue opens with Christine's pleasantly rambling thoughts on
|
|||
|
a variety of topics--like stepping into her personal journal--a
|
|||
|
compendium of sincere introspection mixed with items from the scene.
|
|||
|
Dan Werle's column launches from a touching account of a nursing home
|
|||
|
death into an editorial on health care, right-to-die and meaning-of-
|
|||
|
life issues. The center of the tabloid opens into a photo-essay on
|
|||
|
the now defunct Fetus Squat, an abandoned house that had been home to
|
|||
|
a group of industrious punks, and the front page offers advice on
|
|||
|
saving the environment.
|
|||
|
All this and much more make this a worthwhile publication
|
|||
|
reaching far beyond its native NYC. In fact, it would be worth a look
|
|||
|
if it only consisted of Christine's energetic action photos that
|
|||
|
capture the essence of concerts, concert-goers, and the vibrant
|
|||
|
diversity of the Big Apple--rz
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE SOW'S EAR POETRY REVIEW--(Vol. III #3; February 1992), 245
|
|||
|
McDowell St., Bristol TN , 37620. $3.50. This is an innocent
|
|||
|
quarterly which often has bite. Its large format makes it a pleasure
|
|||
|
to hold and its neat, well-spaced layout is pleasant to the eyes,
|
|||
|
dignified. Poetry, short stories, art, photographs, and reviews
|
|||
|
provide a well-rounded selection of diverse works. There is work by a
|
|||
|
fifth-grade student, a literature professor, a Polish poetry
|
|||
|
translator, a Native American, a high school student, and many others,
|
|||
|
including many new poets first-time publishing their work. This
|
|||
|
southern-based poetry review will not insult anyone's taste or
|
|||
|
sensibilities and includes thoughtful and intriguing works which range
|
|||
|
from a Haiku about McDonalds to an amusing and quite sardonic poem-
|
|||
|
curse on the topic of editorial misuse of "Mr." and "Ms." This is a
|
|||
|
positive work, one which will delight parents and teenagers alike.
|
|||
|
--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
STROKER--(#50, 1992), 124 N. Main St. #3, Shavertown, PA, 18708.
|
|||
|
48 pp., $3.95. The editor doesn't hide his predilections: in his own
|
|||
|
excerpt-from-a novel contribution, he's painting Tristan Tzara's old
|
|||
|
flat, he conjures the names of Balzac, Verlaine, Victor Hugo, Tristan
|
|||
|
Tzara, & Hemingway--finally, he goes on to "quote form the Master...
|
|||
|
Or a man of genius--also one of the great writers (and a poet!) of all
|
|||
|
time--who has best put a finger on a country of genius: Henry Miller."
|
|||
|
More than just a Miller fanzine, STROKER strikes a balance between the
|
|||
|
old warriors (Miller, Tommy Trantino, Bukowski) & new voices in the
|
|||
|
same vein. From-th-gut spirituality, holiness seen in the body as
|
|||
|
well as the soul--even the saints had to take a shit sometimes.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
sub-TERRAIN--(#9, Dec. 1992), PO Box 1575, Sta. A, Vancouver BC,
|
|||
|
CANADA, V6C 2P7. 30 pp., $2.50. About half of this is devoted to a
|
|||
|
coupla excerpts from the winners of their annual 3-Day Novel Contest
|
|||
|
(which i can't quite imagine--what do they do, sit there & watch you
|
|||
|
while you write?). The rest is fairly straight-talkin' poetry in
|
|||
|
which work and/or sex seem to be popular subjects. A fine tuff one
|
|||
|
from Pat McKinnon, consoling his kids in the face of starving
|
|||
|
"ballooned-out babies" in Africa.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TEKELI-LI!: Journal of Terror--(#4, Winter/Spring 1992), c/o Jon B.
|
|||
|
Cooke, 106 Hanover Ave., Pawtucket RI, 02861. 128 pp., A horror
|
|||
|
'zine, it features some fiction and poetry but really shines in the
|
|||
|
area of non-fiction. Heavy contributions by practitioners in the
|
|||
|
genre. An interview with short story master Thomas Ligotti (Song Of A
|
|||
|
Dead Dreamer and Grimscribe) reveals his influences to include Bruno
|
|||
|
Schulz, E.M. Cioran, Thomas Bernhard. The section on Ligotti includes
|
|||
|
a story and an essay by Ligotti, a bibliography and two critical looks
|
|||
|
at his work. Cover artist Harry O. Morris is featured and also
|
|||
|
interviewed. Terrific art, good critical reviews, and articles
|
|||
|
entitled "Vampires: Why They Matter," all add up to a pretty good
|
|||
|
read.--js
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TIGHT--(Vol. 3 #5, October 1992), PO Box 1591, Guerneville CA, 95446.
|
|||
|
75 pp., $4.50. Full of a variety of poetry from all over. Some
|
|||
|
abstract sketches and collages. Lifshin's here, and so is Surbanum,
|
|||
|
Bigiorno, Thomosine Reed, and Mandy Y. Khaiyat. There are poems about
|
|||
|
every thing imaginable; oranges, clouds, nuclear holocaust, 1944,
|
|||
|
Native Americans, the Garden of Eden, dozens of poems. It is a good
|
|||
|
read, a biodegradable magazine meant to be passed around, enjoyed and
|
|||
|
not retained for too long. This is poetry from and about the people
|
|||
|
who count; common, every day, working class human beings who love
|
|||
|
poetry. This one is for quantity, you can't help but find something
|
|||
|
you like.--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TIGHT--(Vol. 4 #1, Jan. 1993), PO Box 1591, Guerneville, CA, 95446.
|
|||
|
74 pp., $4.50. One poem after another in the pure poetry-mag
|
|||
|
tradition. A labor of love for the editor, and love--love of
|
|||
|
language, human love, or at least compassion & heart--plays a part in
|
|||
|
many of the poems. Plenty of image, plenty of straightforward stories
|
|||
|
to tell, and the occasional disquietude. Many poets are represented
|
|||
|
by a selection of several poems, which gives you a chance to get to
|
|||
|
know 'em a bit better.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TO: A Journal of Poetry, Prose + the Visual Arts--(#1, Summer 1992),
|
|||
|
Box 121, Narbeth, PA, 19072. 141 pages, $7.00. This promising first
|
|||
|
issue features a wealth of recent writing, plus a very beautiful
|
|||
|
portfolio of nude photographs by, and interview with, Jock Sturges.
|
|||
|
There's also work by John Ashbery, Charles Bernstein, Leslie
|
|||
|
Scalapino, John Taggart, Rod Smith, Michael Heller, Raymond Federman,
|
|||
|
Stephen Dixon and many others. All of the work printed testifies to
|
|||
|
the editors' stated strategy of presenting material "that intersects
|
|||
|
and renegotiates the modernisms of Stein, Williams, Duchamp,
|
|||
|
Stieglitz, et al." Best of all, though, are the essay and poem
|
|||
|
contributed by Rachel Blau DuPlessis. "On Drafts: A Memorandum of
|
|||
|
Understanding" documents originating impulses behind her ongoing long
|
|||
|
poem DRAFTS. "Conjunctions," the poem, enacts "part of a running
|
|||
|
script on the running subject." Pithy and pivotal, this work alone is
|
|||
|
worth the price of subscription.--tb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TRANSMOG--(#9, Jan 1993), Rt. 6, Box 138, Charleston, WV, 25311.
|
|||
|
28 pp., SASE. Wide variety of good otherstream matter by names
|
|||
|
unfamiliar to me, always a sign of worthwhile activity, I think.
|
|||
|
Poetry as deep as Tom Wiloch's "soft ticking/ of the/ eloquent
|
|||
|
street// (night steps)" (quoted in full) and as comic as Paul
|
|||
|
Weinman's "Count-Down to Lift-Off," whose protagonist, while having
|
|||
|
sex, "howled out/ memorized list/ of Fortune's 500./ Got to #15." Lots
|
|||
|
of intriguingly weird illumagery, too.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TRANSMOG has evolved from the computer scramblings of editor Ficus
|
|||
|
Strangulensis himself to a document of some of the more absurd Dada
|
|||
|
poems and graphics currently materializing. We need more mags like
|
|||
|
this one. A host of contributors keep the pace rapid and gleeful
|
|||
|
and more than a little maddening. This stuff is guaranteed to crack
|
|||
|
a few delusions and compel you to think from multiple perspectives.
|
|||
|
Powerful medicine for a couple of Elvis stamps.--jb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THE VILLAGE IDIOT--(#16, May-August 1992), PO Box 66, Harrison ID,
|
|||
|
83833. 48 pp., $3.00. More words per square centimeter than any
|
|||
|
other little (literary) magazine, interesting black and white art,
|
|||
|
some color, and a money back guarantee. Strong poetry and prose,
|
|||
|
mostly short stories, full of vigor, brutal realism, and often...
|
|||
|
social revelations! This publication is anything but light. These
|
|||
|
stories draw you in, perforate your empathy, twist you around, and
|
|||
|
surprise you at the end. The protagonists are everyday people,
|
|||
|
observed through a critical magnifying glass, engaged with the word in
|
|||
|
some intense manner, slightly distorted but interesting. They labor
|
|||
|
life making valid observations drawn from the psyche of anguish and
|
|||
|
painted with vivid metaphorical significance. This publication is not
|
|||
|
for everyone, it has an edge, an outspoken candor, a degree of
|
|||
|
unconformity which appeals to those with a risque nature. THE VILLAGE
|
|||
|
IDIOT might be one of the more unusual and interesting little magazines
|
|||
|
of its day..--rle
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIVISECTION: EVISCERATING THE LIVING WORD--PO Box 6571, Richmond, KY,
|
|||
|
40475, , $1.00 ea.?, Each is a single folded sheet and suggests in
|
|||
|
form and content one of those tiny religious tracts you pick up off
|
|||
|
the cigarette machine at a truck stop. There's more than meets the
|
|||
|
eye here, though: one is an illustrated poem or chant titled "The
|
|||
|
Snake God's Salvation" and the other intercuts "salvation" rants with
|
|||
|
a Burroughs-like text:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
... In
|
|||
|
_____________________________
|
|||
|
S:::LAST CHANCE:::NO SALVATIO
|
|||
|
_____________________________
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
heavy antedeluvian accent the
|
|||
|
Kid drawls, Bad bardo, bad ka
|
|||
|
rdo, he looking like Alan Lad
|
|||
|
d in greenface-white Latinc
|
|||
|
rosses rain down on dunes lit
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Fine additions to the free tract genre!--jmb
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIZ--(#4, Nov 92), Box 1584, Hattiesburg MS, 39403. 62 pp., $3.00.
|
|||
|
Too many pages not printed on both sides, but otherwise a nice
|
|||
|
collection of otherstream works that include a neato collage narrative
|
|||
|
by Stephen Young, and something by Reed Altemus I hesitatingly
|
|||
|
classify as a microherent visual poem. A stack of variably-sized
|
|||
|
nonsense-words on graph paper whose lines are variably-spaced, it can
|
|||
|
get a brain whirly after a while--and the letters of its text can be
|
|||
|
used to spell, "GIRLZ AT," if that means anything.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?--(#l, Oct.1992), PO Box 6424,
|
|||
|
Evanston IL, 60204. The first issue of a new newspaper-format
|
|||
|
periodical published by "The Surrealist Group in Chicago." The center
|
|||
|
piece is an international surrealist manifesto against the "Columbus
|
|||
|
Quincentennial" which notes that "poetry--an authentic act of total
|
|||
|
insubordination--continues to explode the foundations of a stifling
|
|||
|
totalitarianism." Equally significant are the poems by Penelope
|
|||
|
Rosemont, Jayne Cortez, Mary Low, Franklin Rosemont. Includes a
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|
listing of works by participants in the Surrealist Movement in the
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|
United States since Jan. of 1989. WHAT presents a glimpse at a
|
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uncompromising, serious commitment and an authentic vision, not often
|
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found among our artists, one much missed.--js
|
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WHITE WALL OF SOUND--(#8, Winter 1992), 1320 W. 116th St. #9,
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Cleveland OH, 44102. 18 pp., $5.00 ($8.00 in NYC). The "Photo
|
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Essay/Visual Poetics/Cinema of the Imagination" issue. Twelve actual
|
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|
B&W photographic prints (5x7") present a disjointed urban landscape of
|
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|
troubled beauty. I think the reference is to Alfred Stieglitz's mag
|
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|
CAMERA WORK, which also included photos tipped in--the identification
|
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|
is with Dada, more political than Surrealism. Also includes a reprint
|
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|
of an article by Clive Philpot (librarian at MOMA) on artist's books.
|
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|
--lbd
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THE ?WHY? PROJECT--(Anabasis Project #1, 1992), P0 Box 8766, Portland,
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OR, 97207. 104 pp., $8.00. Thomas Taylor, editor; Susan Smith Nash,
|
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contributing editor. A well-produced, perfectbound volume of essays,
|
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|
poetry, and texts circling about the concept of "why," by some 28
|
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|
contributors, including Rochelle Owens, John Byrum, Peter Ganick, Dan
|
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|
Raphael, M. Kettner, Harry Polkinhorn, Susan Smith Nash, John M.
|
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|
Bennett, and Crag Hill. Contributions range from the visual poetry of
|
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|
Byrum and Hill to essays like the one by Nash on the relationships
|
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|
between poetic and geologic paradigms of causality. There is a strong
|
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|
"LANGUAGE" flavor to many of these works, but none of them are sterile
|
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|
or merely academic. In fact, the whole collection is lively and
|
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|
stimulating and contains a remarkable variety of approaches to a
|
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|
difficult and elusive topic.--jmb (the 1993 edition will be The Love
|
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|
Project).
|
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|
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|
THE WINDLESS ORCHARD--(#56, Fall/Winter 92), Eng. Dept., Indiana-
|
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|
Purdue U., Fort Wayne IN, 46805. 34 pp., $4.00. Technically-
|
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|
conventional poems that mostly discuss reality rather than ascend from
|
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|
it, but are nonetheless often effective: for example, Lora Dunetz's
|
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|
elegy for her storm-loving father, and an amusingly chagrined plaint
|
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|
by Lawrence Watson about how hard it is for him to get more of his
|
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|
physicality than his brain and hands into his poetry.--bg
|
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|
|
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|
THE WORLD--(#44), The Poetry Project at St. Mark's Church, 10th St.
|
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|
and 2nd Ave., New York NY, 10003. 72 pp., $5.00. The old WORLD was a
|
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|
mimeo magazine; this new, updated version keeps the same feel, like
|
|||
|
hand to hand circulated copies. If there was an MFA program from the
|
|||
|
New York School this would be it's IOWA REVIEW. Featuring members of
|
|||
|
that poetic's grouping from the first to what must now be the fourth
|
|||
|
or fifth generation, you always know what you're getting when you pick
|
|||
|
it up. This issue: Baraka, Coolidge, Nauen, Sanders, Towle, Waldman
|
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|
and Ward, to name a few.--js
|
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|
|
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|
THE WORLD--(#45), The Poetry Project at St. Mark's Church, 10th St.
|
|||
|
and 2nd Ave., New York NY, 10003. $5.00. Strong issue with prose
|
|||
|
poems by Kenneth Koch, selections from Jerome Rothenberg's LORCA
|
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|
VARIATIONS, James Graham's meditation on his balls ("My balls are two
|
|||
|
iron ingots caught in a vise... two green felafels waiting for the
|
|||
|
sauce"), and Hal Sirowitz''s childhood poems: "Don't swim in the ocean
|
|||
|
while it's raining,/ Mother said. Lightening can hit the water,/ &
|
|||
|
you'll be paralyzed. You don't like/ to eat vegetables. Imagine
|
|||
|
having/ to spend the rest of your life being one..." (from "Damaged
|
|||
|
Body"). Highly recommended.--js.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WRAY--(#IV, March 1993), PO Box 91052, Cleveland OH, 44101. 88 pp.,
|
|||
|
$3.00. Continued concatenation & cacophony from the SlowHouse--this
|
|||
|
one subtitled Crying Out Loud. Contributors about evenly split
|
|||
|
between folks well-known (Robert Ashley, Dodie Belamy, Robert
|
|||
|
Kostelanetz, Denise Dee) and local friends (John Stickney, Jessica
|
|||
|
Grimm, Tom Beckett--famous in their own right). Moving away from some
|
|||
|
of the punkier (& funnier) work they've used in the past, towards more
|
|||
|
serious and (self?)-important. Despite that, the whole seems less
|
|||
|
coherent than the parts--an "eclection" (=eclectic selection, w/out
|
|||
|
the oxymoron). Beautiful cover--black with blind-stamped relief
|
|||
|
lettering.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
XEROLAGE--(#23, Dec 92), Rt. 1, Box 131, Lafarge WI , 54639. 24 pp.,
|
|||
|
$10.00. Some nice visual poems, many of them flavored with the long-
|
|||
|
ago, particularly the Egyptian and sub-Saharan long-ago. And gems
|
|||
|
like "Logos Spermatikos," in which a kind of porridge of 3-D c-shaped
|
|||
|
tubes unjumbles into the beginnings of 2-D abstract letters. An
|
|||
|
important collection for anyone interested in contemporary American
|
|||
|
Visual Poetry.--bg
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
xib--(#4), PO Box 262112, San Diego, CA, 92126. 52 pp., $4.00.
|
|||
|
Gutbucket poetry & the occasional short prose. Sex & violence, with
|
|||
|
occasional respite in drinking, depression or death. Tightly written
|
|||
|
& laid out, with plenty of stark graphics to match.--lbd
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ZYX--(#5, Feb. 1993), 58-09 205th St., Bayside NY, 11364. 5 pp.,
|
|||
|
$.52. A one-man (Arnold Skemer) review ''zine in small print that is
|
|||
|
full of provocative impressions of cutting edge fiction, poetry, and
|
|||
|
criticism, such as: books of essays on Djuna Barnes, Gertrude Stein
|
|||
|
and Monique Wittig, the latter a kind of lesbian Rabelais; two studies
|
|||
|
(from 1976, which shows how serious Skemer is) of language; a book on
|
|||
|
the future of poetry from Australia; some critical essays by Richard
|
|||
|
Kostelanetz, a study of laughter; a Canadian anthology of miniature
|
|||
|
literary works, and a surrealistic novel written in 1928, Michael
|
|||
|
Leiris's Aurora. Whew.--bg
|
|||
|
|
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|
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|
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end TapRoot Reviews Electronic, issue 2.0 section a (ZINES)
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