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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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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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Issue #2.0, section b 4/93
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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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 CHAPBOOK reviews; a second section contains all of
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the zine 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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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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'CHAPS:
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Al Ackerman: PROUD CRAY--Popular Reality, Box 2942, Ann Arbor MI,
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48106. 30 pp., $4.00. Ackerman's reminiscences of Crowbar, the
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founder of Popular Reality, and Keester House, the combination
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flophouse, youth hostel, warehouse for stolen appliances, amatory
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chiropractic clinic, home for the feeble-minded and insane asylum that
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Crowbar runs with the help of a spirit guide he contacts by inserting
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his finger into an actual hole in his head and twirling it. In short,
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standard Ackerman humor, which is to say, an absolute howl.--bg
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Curt Anderson: BENT ANTENNA--e.g. press, 1506 Grand Ave #3, St. Paul,
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MN, 55105. 44 pp., $5.00. A series of prose vignettes, each based on
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a "classic" 60's TV series (Gilligan's Island, Twilight Zone, Hogan's
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Heros). Each one is as inspiring & deeply philosophic as their mass-
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culture predecessors. In the Get Smart episode, Max & Agent 99 are
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called in to fight a new, more depraved chapter of K.A.O.S.:
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L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E. Agent 99 draws out the villains by reciting work by
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Sylvia Plath & Robert Penn Warren at a poetry reading--once the evil-
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doers are identified by their hysteric reaction, they're rounded up,
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while Max & 99 go back to the apartment and do what we all knew they
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did but never saw. Great.--lbd
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Bruce Andrews: STET, SIC & SP--Case Books, PO Box 292, Salisbury CT,
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06068. 18 pp., $6.00. Four recent texts by so-called L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E
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poetry's Ayatollah of political scat song.
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The first piece, "Time Expansion," explores in twenty short
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sections the microtechnics of reading through an aesthetic of delay.
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It was originally presented to the public as part of the music
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accompanying the choreography of Sally Silver's "Oops Fact."
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"Secret Refracted Somewhere Else" is a vintage Andrews collage
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poem -- short, quickwitted rhetorical jumpcuts.
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"Improvisation," the transcript of a thirty-five minute
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performance piece, is the heart of the book. Improvised in the act at
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St. Marks Poetry Project in NYC during the first week of the first war
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with Iraq it crackles with humorous rage and some of-the sassiest and
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most refreshing political backtalk I've heard in a long time.
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The volume closes with "Black" an elegant abecedarian list poem
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which effectively and economically underlines the basis of racism in
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America in the first half of each line. The last five lines:
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white vote
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white who
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white xerox
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white yanking
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white zeitgeist
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STET, SIC, & SP. is a bulletin from the frontlines of politically
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committed formally innovative writing. It's a rare bargain.--tb
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John M. Bennett: LEG--Luna Bisonte Prods, 137 Leland Ave., Columbus
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OH, 43214. 8 pp., $1.00. A 5-poem sequence whose first poem ends:
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"like the window's seen from inside the wall where/ the damp dreams
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bloom like the mold pressed in where my/ lack churns like an I thinks
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in." Most of this makes normal sense, even the image of a "lack" that
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"churns"--or an agitating awareness that something's missing; but
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"like an I thinks in," in typical Bennett fashion smears us whereless.
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An eventual semi-comprehension is possible, though. For instance, the
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"I" might be sinking into the persona's mind as pure thought, but
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doing so in the churning way some sense of incompleteness might emerge
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into consciousness. Yes, very mold-murky, but engrossing for those of
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us that like this kind of adventure.--bg
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John M. Bennett: TOXIN--Luna Bisonte Prods, 137 Leland Ave., Columbus
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OH, 43214. 4 pp., $1.00. Two inimitable Bennett poems that,
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characteristically, seem raved from the mind of an amoeba with a
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human's viscera--or the thought of some mineral writhing toward
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semblance of life--or... whatever. The poems are semi-coherently
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scrawled, with doughnuts, bugs, a skull and other decorations--but
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typed translations are provided. Also included, two revealing
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appraisals of his poetry by Susan Smith Nash.--bg
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John M. Bennett & Susan Smith Nash: OUTLIERS OF EXTINCTION--Luna
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Bisonte Prods, 137 Leland Ave, Columbus OH, 43214. 4 pp., $1.00.
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Bennett's poetry is so wonderfully pre-logical, slithery and large
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that it lavas on regardless of any non-Bennett boulders it picks up.
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So his many collaborations, like the five here with Susan Smith Nash,
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are almost always as fascinating as his all-Bennett benders--not to
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diminish the added boulders. One title from this set should give a
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taste: "LIKEN PHYSIOGMETRICS SUNLIGHT, HOME & MY HAND HOLDING SERUM,
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SOFT W/HOWLING." This pamphlet also has another worthwhile prose
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observation by Nash on Bennett's poetry.--bg
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Lynne Micon Bruno, Cindi Brockett & David Goldschlag: UNRAVELLED--
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PO Box 7392, Van Nuys CA, 91409. 20 pp., $2.00. This set of poems,
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actually three sets by three different poets, covers a wide area of
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interest. From drive-by shootings to grandmother memorials,
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alcoholism to Greek gods; death, executions, Jamaican Dubs, and AIDs.
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lt is neatly done, clean, and the art work is by Wayne Hogan. Poetry
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from a keen eye and a cool mind, it makes you think. For two bucks
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how can you miss?--rle
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Didier Cahen, translated by Cid Corman: A WORLD IN PROSE--tel-let,
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1818 Phillips Pl., Charleston, IL, 61920. 34 pp. Poems that tick off
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various greys and nullities in flat usually two- to four-word
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sentences like- "all secret/ sky infirm/ distant runs the other
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shore." But the poems, in sequence, subtly (and secularly) sneak from
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genesis ("Man comes/ day breaks") to a poem in which "the fable is
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renewed" and "all is carven in you/ life envelops night/ dying is
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impossible."--bg
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jw curry: RE: VIEWS: RE: SPONSES: COLLECTED CONCRETE CRITICISMS, 1981-
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1990--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621, Port Charlotte, FL, 33949.
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$10.00. An 8 1/2 X 11 book of visual poems, each one being a "review"
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or response to a different book. The pieces are in response to works
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by Miekal And, bill bissett, Charles Bukowski, d.a. levy, Frank Zappa,
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and several others. Regardless of their "usefulness" as reviews,
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these are all lively and inventive poems, using a great variety of
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techniques and approaches: no two are alike in fact. This is work
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from one of the liveliest and most experimental minds around.--jmb
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jw curry: THAT FUCKING LINE THAT--Writers Forum, available from
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Rm. 312 Books, 1357 Lansdowne Ave., Toronto ONT, CANADA, M6H 3Z9.
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At long last curry has collected his poetry into a single volume: most
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of it is from the 1980's, much of it previously published in scattered
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journals and broadsides. Having his work together is a great
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pleasure, as it reveals a distinct intelligence at work, combining,
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often in the same poem, a lively concern with visuality, deliberate
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processes of thought, and a zen-like delight in the ineffable
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juxtapositions of words. The poems range in length from one word to a
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full page, and many are collaborations with other writers. An
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essential collection.--jmb
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Daniel Davidson: WEATHER--Score, 125 B Bayview Drive, Mill Valley CA,
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94941. 26 pp., $5.00. This long poem of short, linked segments has a
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peculiar sort of Raymond Roussel meets Bert Brecht with Basho quality.
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Parentheses continually interrupt the text's flow creating a surreal
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alienation effect haiku sequence that's really quite fascinating.
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There are so many parenthetical partitions it is almost as if the
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other materials have leaked out in loco parenthesis. This is an
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innovative little book.--tb
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Mike Davis: BEYOND BLADE RUNNER: URBAN CONTROL, THE ECOLOGY OF FEAR--
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Open Media, PO Box 2726, Westfield, NJ, 07091. 22 pp., $3.50. What
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will Los Angeles (or any major city) be like in the year 2109? Davis
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sorts out the possibilities in this chap, the 23rd in OPEN Magazine's
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pamphlet series. While it probably won't be like that depicted in the
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film Blade Runner, it probably won't be any better either. Projecting
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a "Gibsonian" map of future L.A. and drawing somewhat from the work of
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Ernest W. Burgess and his diagram projection of Chicago from the
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1920's, Davis brings current socioeconomic-political factors to bear
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on his vision. From this basis we see our cities becoming
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technologically and physically segregated into zones of protection
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and/or terror. We have begun to build cages to sustain ourselves in
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an urban landscape grown increasingly hostile due to vast economic
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disparities. The rich live in gated protected regions while the poor
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are relegated to a high-tech maintained urban wasteland that amounts
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to an anarchic prison colony. Current and potential municipal
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strategies provide ample evidence that these agencies of control are
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already established and need only augment themselves to "perfect" the
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dystopia.
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The most provocative aspect of the whole thing however is that
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this may be the future not only of the megalopolis, but small cities
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and towns as well. Does your town have Neighborhood Watch, or a SWAT
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team? These ideas originated from the Los Angeles Police Department's
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||
attempt to control the burgeoning multi-ethnic population. As always
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with the OPEN series of pamphlets, this is a chilling indictment of
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the forces of control. Ignorance is slavery.--jb
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Bill Dimichele: HEART ON THE RIGHT--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621,
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Port Charlotte FL, 33949. Very tight literal surrealistic images that
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want to involve the reader in the poet's interior turmoil. This is
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||
somewhat of a painful trip... not too many laughs here. Has a
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political edge and combined with the apocalyptic visions this kind of
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writing can wear one down if you're looking for a romp in the hay with
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*LANGWIDGE*. But then, Garcia Lorca wasn't exactly a Groucho Marx
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||
either. Large fullpage format. --bp
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Lainie Duro & Edward Mycue: A MURDERED ETERNITY/GRATE COUNTRY--Oyster
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||
Publications, 1015 E. 49th., Austin, TX, 78751, 56 pp., , A dos-a-dos
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||
chap, each poet starting at one cover of the book and working towards
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the center. The dos-a-dos format always reminds me of "69" oral sex--
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the head of each at the tail of the other--and while sexual imagery is
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abundant in the poetry, such equality & mutual satisfaction is not.
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Lainie laments love lost or lacking; Edward's woes are added to by
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homophobia and AIDS. Honest rather than polished--Lainie is the rawer
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of the pair, while Edward wraps his wounds in wordage--in the end,
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we're not sure if either one is healed in the process.--lbd
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john e.aton: EUROPE'S LOWER EAST SIDE and BROWN, MANUSCRIPTS ON
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MEXICO--Shattered Wig Productions, 523 E. 38th St., Baltimore MD,
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21218. 40 pp., $3.00. Right away this book strikes you as peculiar
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because it contains large fold-out maps inside either cover. One of
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the U.S. and Mexico, one of Hungary. But these are more than a
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traveler's observation of the people and land he visits--these poems
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are rich with a life all their own. In terms of both substance and
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technique the words and phrases flow and work around one another. The
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boundary between inner and outer reality dissolves and we are drawn
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through a world of images charged with emotion. These poems are
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explorations of what it means to be in these places, confronted with
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these circumstances. e.aton has done his work well and Shattered Wig
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should be commended for bringing it to light.--jb
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Evert Eden: I'M NOT A WHITE MAN--G. Marie Press, PO Box 211, East
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Meadow NY, 11554. 4 pp., $2.00. In two parts: "Song of the White
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Man/Curse of the White Man"--the first part running down all the
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cliche bad things white men are/do, the next repudiating the same.
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The author is from South Africa, which makes it all the more pointed.
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He runs one of the Poetry Slams at the Nuyorican Cafe in NY, and these
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would work well in a Slam: accessible, PC, and under 3 minutes.--lbd
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Theodore Enslin: GAMMA UT--tel-let, 1818 Phillips Pl., Charleston, IL,
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61920. 32 pp. Deftly, even masterfully, inept attempts to
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communicate, as an the following untitled poem: "So much/ to think/ to
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say of it// I cannot/ words excuse/ me simple// diction/ yet I
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have not said." Wonderful epiphanies occur, such as a look through
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branches "to catch the glint of light/ that follows water/ out
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where more than water is."--bg
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Csar Espinosa (ed.), translated by Harry Polkinhorn: CORROSIVE
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SIGNS--Maisonneuve Press, PO Box 2980, Washington, DC, 20013, 129 pp.,
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$9.95, A welcome dose of international perspective on experimental
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underground literature. Visual & concrete poetry has a strong
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heritage in Spanish-speaking countries, and this anthology presents a
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variety of essays on it's history & practice. They are collected from
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a variety of sources, and don't hang together in any kind of order,
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but taken as a whole seem to cover a lot of ground. Includes a
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couple-dozen examples of work, which mostly serve to whet the appetite
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for more--a 50/50 mix of samples/essay would've been nice.--lbd
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David Gianatasio: BEND BACKWARD FOR SHARPER RECEPTION--Runaway Spoon
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Press, Box 3621, Port Charlotte FL, 33949. $3.00. A series of short
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poems making use of various forms of minimalist and elliptical
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expression. Most of the poems also make use of an implied narrative
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or discursive structure. The contrast (or balance) between that and
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the haiku-like techniques can be extremely effective:
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the deserted parking lot
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engine regards a vacant space
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"grrrbrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr," it says
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"grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr"
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it's saying your name
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no it isn't
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--jmb
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David Goldschiag & Lynne Micon Bruno (eds): DIAMONDS IN A FROZEN
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CAVERN--PO Box 7392, Van Nuys, CA, 91409. 20 pp., $3.00. "Nine Los
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Angeles Pierce College Poets Speak Out On AIDS." If you are socially
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aware this chapbook will send your thoughts nebula. It creates a
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flame which begins mentally, becomes physical, and ends up altering
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one's social concerns. Poetry can indeed alter the way we view the
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world. It can alter this view forever and become an enlightening,
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spine-tingling (I mean literally) adventure of learning, changing, and
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evolving socially. I guess art does free the spirit and enlightens
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the masses as a friend of mine once said. A friend I loved dearly. A
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friend who died of AIDS. I prefer to think of it as "Harsh art for
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harsh times." This becomes a chant which rumbles through my mind
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whenever I read something which affects me as deeply at this chapbook.
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Yes, these are harsh times, and Diamonds in a Frozen Cavern is a work
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which will awaken the reader with it's indicators of the heart and
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||
mind. These are words bound by our society's press of necessity.--rle
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LeRoy Gorman: HEAVYN--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621, Port Charlotte
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FL, 33949. $3.00. A thick little book of one-line texts consisting
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of what at first glance look like words with arbitrary spaces between
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the letters. For example:
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sur plu sti des ubs eed
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Each of these texts, however, is a protean object for meditation.
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Different words appear and/or are suggested to create the effect of a
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much larger and more complex work. A maximum example of minimalism.
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||
--jmb
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Robert Gregory: BOY PICKED UP BY THE WIND--English Dept., Emporia
|
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State, KS, 66801. $9.95. How does all this fit together and work so
|
||
well? Zany, tender, surreal, curious, imaginative. How do these
|
||
poems sound conversational and/or informative while taking such abrupt
|
||
shifts in scene/tone/angle so seamlessly? Poems entitled "They Wash
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||
Their Ambassadors in Citrus and Fennel" and "Thomas Jeffersons's
|
||
Garden of White Machines." A sense that this language sees, opens and
|
||
cuts through, maybe sometimes victimizing/stranding the poet. A wide
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||
range of emotions and of questions, but I want to got there, a net to
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||
fall up from. "The doctor's yard is full of bones/ and the dream-work
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||
is just a kind of golfswing, by father said." It amazes and
|
||
encourages me that a book as avant and energized as this won a
|
||
university press competition.--dan raphael
|
||
|
||
Jessica Grim: THE INVETERATE LIFE--O Books, 5729 Clover Drive,
|
||
Oakland, CA, 94618. 61 pp., $7.50. This is a volume of prose format
|
||
poems, a newer sentence, if you please, enacting a kind of drama of
|
||
the daily fact transmogrified. Jessica Grimm's work shirks nothing.
|
||
It's always on, attentive to synapses and lapses of thought, sounding
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||
well-envisioned thinking, feeling out amongst a thorough listening.
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||
Recently I read Twyla Tharp's autobiography and wanted to dance.
|
||
THE INVETERATE LIFE makes me want to write--it is that inspiring.--tb
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||
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Bob Grumman: MATHEMAKU 1-5--Tel-Let, 1818 Phillips PI., Charleston IL,
|
||
61920. $4.00. A small book of six (1 is in 2 parts) haiku-like poems
|
||
constructed as if they were mathematical formulae. They are amazingly
|
||
effective in eliciting a sense of place/time using the barest of
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||
means. No. 2 reads:
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||
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March=
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(meadows.)(:/.),
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slowly
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--jmb
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Fritz Hamilton: NO DIFFERENCE--5976 Billings Road, Parkdale OR, 97041.
|
||
25 pp., $2.50. Ten poems composing a mini-chapbook and devoted to the
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||
testimony of helplessness, dereliction, and addiction. The characters
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||
are winos, a Vietnam vet, and a woman amidst family tragedy. Their
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||
stories are combined into a Beat-Rant style similar to a subjective
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||
Gonzo Journalism where Hamilton has immersed himself in the scene,
|
||
becomes deeply involved, and passionately spews out the frustration
|
||
and anger in long, unpunctuated, rants; with long flowing cadences and
|
||
repetitions. There is a touch of divine nothingness here as it
|
||
appears all are abandoned, trapped within a life of selfdestruction
|
||
and decay. Jesus in a Detox Center, and a dead wino in a plastic bag
|
||
waiting for the garbage truck to pick him up are just two examples of
|
||
the frightening symbolism here. The connotations are not subtle,and
|
||
futility is the icon of repetition. This poetry is dark and
|
||
depressing, evoking fears of failure with visions of street people as
|
||
powerful as a national disaster. This then is why No Difference is an
|
||
important work. It has the ability to draw the reader into the scene,
|
||
this device creates a potent self-awareness. For example these lines:
|
||
"Old Joe Corbett sleeping/ on a pile of plastic/ garbage bags filled/
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with winos' souls..."--rle
|
||
|
||
W. Joe Hoppe: HARMON PLACE--Primal Publishing, 107 Brighton Ave.,
|
||
Allston MA, 02134. 76 pp., $5.95. In this collection of short
|
||
stories Hoppe confronts some of the nastier elements--landlords, bad
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||
hotels, drunks in the hall, brutal poverty, etc. Occasionally he
|
||
breaks into Kerouacian euphony and beatitude, but for the most part
|
||
it's beat dead on. No melodrama, no romanticization, Hoppe is a man
|
||
unafraid to witness the horrors in front of him for what they are and
|
||
then bring it home in our face. To say he lives his work is a gross
|
||
understatement--there appears to be no difference between the two. In
|
||
case you haven't noticed, if you turn off the TV there's a real world
|
||
out there. These are tales of that world.--jb
|
||
|
||
Marshall Hryciuk: THE GATHERED GALLOPING SYNTAX STRANDS--Runaway Spoon
|
||
Press, Box 3621, Port Charlotte, FL, 33949. Mysterious experimental
|
||
poetry and xerox visual overlays and scrawls on found text and it's
|
||
got a unity which is Hryciuk's intelligence and ability to outwrite
|
||
any naive attempt to fit the images together into Procrustean sense...
|
||
whatever THAT is. It reads like a 19th century transcript of a mad
|
||
alchemist's diary/secret formula hoard. This is an original voice
|
||
that reaches out and grabs you. Large format, full of ideas and
|
||
language-rockets. --bp
|
||
|
||
Albert Huffstickler: WORK--312 E. 43 St. #103, Austin TX, 78751. 8pp.
|
||
A tantalizing taste of Huff's experiences over the past 20 years and
|
||
more. The most recent addition to his incredibly prolific output,
|
||
WORK documents some of the many jobs that Huff has held in poems
|
||
titled "Day Labor," "First Day at the Furniture Factory,"
|
||
"Apprenticeship," and "Short Order Waiter." He has clearly been
|
||
inside and felt what the average worker feels but often cannot
|
||
express--the pain and sweat, the relationships, the liberation and
|
||
frustration that can only come with the exhaustion of hard labor.
|
||
"Skirmish" describes an experience in a day labor office after someone
|
||
is kicked out for wearing a marine field jacket--attire the dispatcher
|
||
felt was disrespectful. The frustration and pain of fellow laborers
|
||
is felt, yet they all are resigned to go on to the jobs they so
|
||
desperately need "...the stranger in the field jacket forgotten,/
|
||
another nameless casualty in the war against the system." In
|
||
"Sanctification" he compares writing poetry to the grease, sweat, and
|
||
long hours of restaurant work--In either job, the speaker learns from
|
||
Holmes, the 14 hour a day cook, that it is necessary give oneself
|
||
fully. The speaker chooses poetry, "...it was the only thing I/ ever
|
||
found that I could give myself / to the way Holmes gave himself to/
|
||
restaurant work: it was the only way/ I could ever be sanctified."
|
||
--rz
|
||
|
||
Geof Huth:I'TS--eXpeRimeNtaL (basEmeNt) pReSs, 3740 North Romero Rd.,
|
||
#A-9191, Tucson AZ, 85705. $1.00? A series of distorted and highly
|
||
suggestive (like the title) printed on a cleverly cut and folded
|
||
single sheet, so that any number of different arrangements or
|
||
sentences are possible. For example, one might begin, "Its fhe mesure
|
||
ofor lvl..." The possibilities are endlessly folded, unfolded,
|
||
closing, opening...--jmb
|
||
|
||
M. Kettner: FULL PENNY JAR--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621, Port
|
||
Charlotte FL, 33949. $3.00. Intros. by Noemie Maxwell and Nico
|
||
Vassilakis; computer illus. by Mike Miskowski. A collection of
|
||
Kettner's haiku--he's written hundreds over the years--that includes
|
||
some of his best. Some of these are essentially traditional haiku in
|
||
form and perception, though eschewing the cornball "fireflies and
|
||
sunset" content: "house to be demolished:/ on its side,/ refrigerator
|
||
in the front doorway." Others break new ground: "siren distant
|
||
pine tree." This is haiku not as a "literary" exercise, but as a
|
||
practice in attention and expanding awareness.--jmb
|
||
|
||
David C. Kopaska-Merkel: UNDERFOOT--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621,
|
||
Port Charlotte FL, 33949. $3.00. Intro. by G. Huth; illus. by Sheila
|
||
Kopaska-Merkel. Many of these poems arise from the world of
|
||
speculative and fantasy poetry, but avoid the excesses of much of the
|
||
work in that genre. The best of Kopaska-Merkel's work in that vein
|
||
shows a concision that pulls toward the other pole of this book, a
|
||
kind of minimalist expression that betrays an interest in language as
|
||
a means of expressing the inexpressible: "wrong side of the/ white
|
||
sky surf/ knife edge over mountains."--jmb
|
||
|
||
Stephen-Paul Martin: THE FLOOD--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621, Port
|
||
Charlotte FL, 33949. 100 pp., $7.00. Intro. by Richard Royal,
|
||
afterword by Harry Polkinhorn. Represents six months of experimenting
|
||
with a SmithCorona 2500 typerwriter by Martin, in which time he has
|
||
covered scores of pages with concrete typetics, prose, and verse which
|
||
seems to "center" on biblical/presidential moments. The presentation
|
||
is greatly enhanced by the quality of Martin's use of language and
|
||
imagery. Visual puns, cutups, letters overlaid on each other, it's
|
||
all here and in a format large enough to give you the feel of seeing
|
||
it in its original size.--bp
|
||
|
||
A thick 81/2 X 11 sequence of visual texts (really one long work) all
|
||
created using a Smith-Corona electric typewriter. The work refers to
|
||
the story of Noah and to "the President" among other things, and
|
||
combines a narrative flow with the more suspensive or static approach
|
||
one may take with each page. Noah and "the President" are topics of a
|
||
dialectic between the world destroying itself and moving toward hope.
|
||
A major work in a genre Martin excels in.--jmb
|
||
|
||
Larry McCaffery (ed): AVANT-POP: Fiction for a Daydream Nation--Black
|
||
Ice Books, PO Box 241, Boulder CO, 80306. 250 pp., $7.00. Fictions
|
||
ranging from cyber-punk SF to PostModernLiterature, with plenty of sex
|
||
& violence and enough sense to laugh at it(self) sometimes. Some
|
||
older hands like Kathy Acker & Samuel R. Delany, lots of newer punks,
|
||
and some surprizes like Harry Polkinhorn in the SciFi mode. Bite-size
|
||
bits make this easy to get into and out of--if you like, say, Wm. S.
|
||
Burroughs, it makes for a "pleasant read". One of the initial
|
||
offerings from Black Ice Books, somehow in cahoots with a resurrected
|
||
Fiction Collective, which has seen several incarnations.--lbd
|
||
|
||
Thom Metzger: THIS IS YOUR FINAL WARNING!--Autonomedia, 55 South 11th
|
||
St., PO Box 568 Williamsburg Station, 11211. 181 pp., $6.00. A
|
||
collection of unrelated rants, roars and other misc. stuff culled from
|
||
Metzger's Zigguart Press. Advertised as a anarchist horror novel
|
||
(it's not). Still, anyone who chooses James Brown, not Jean
|
||
Baudrillard, is on the right tract. Ouch.--js
|
||
|
||
Judy Murray: HE SOFT SIGHS OF IF--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621, Port
|
||
Charlotte FL, 33949. $3.00. Poetry, with photographs of highway
|
||
scenes. These poems are suffused with a playful surrealism that
|
||
expresses a pleasure in being in the world:
|
||
|
||
Oh you have a silly buckle in your mouth
|
||
this morning
|
||
Did you swallow a pillow of happy as you lay down
|
||
my love
|
||
Beside Churgle and Who Hah and Howdey Legs
|
||
I think I'll take a sun tickle bath myself
|
||
Pull out the Wha Hoo plug
|
||
|
||
--jmb
|
||
|
||
Stanley Nelson: IMMIGRANT, BOOK II--Birch Brook Press, PO Box 81,
|
||
Delhi NY, 13753. 110 pg. The second of 4 installations, this series
|
||
is a valuable guide to the mystique of Brooklyn, New York. Like
|
||
William Carlos William's Paterson, there is rich historical support,
|
||
as well as contemporary reportage. Ten years in the making, Nelson
|
||
has fashioned an homage to Brooklyn. Immigrant is a 400 page poem
|
||
which chronicles the poet's memories alongside Brooklyn's own past.
|
||
It is written in a very readable cut-up verse that welcomes both
|
||
linguistic and ludic reader. There is an ease and effortlessness that
|
||
shines through; the mark of a strong writer.--nv
|
||
|
||
F.A. Nettelbeck: ECOSYSTEMS COLLAPSING--Inkblot, 439 49th St., #11,
|
||
Oakland, CA, 94609. $10.00. An elegantly produced perfectbound book
|
||
containing "expanded and rejuvenated" (the author's words) sections
|
||
from his well-known BUG DEATH (1979). This book functions as a single
|
||
whole, however, and provides an excellent taste of Nettelback's art,
|
||
which is perhaps harder to appreciate through short takes appearing in
|
||
magazines. ECOSYSTEMS COLLAPSING is really a single long poem,
|
||
creating through a variety of literary and visual techniques the
|
||
impression of a multitude of voices speaking through a single
|
||
totalizing consciousness, a consciousness that judges while at the
|
||
same time being all it contains:
|
||
|
||
exciting intriguing breathtaking
|
||
sleep "Best/
|
||
legs twitch in blasting dreams
|
||
new character, good. we'll
|
||
see"
|
||
|
||
Essential reading.--jmb
|
||
|
||
A.L. Nielsen: EVACUATION ROUTES--Score Publications, 125 B. Bay View
|
||
Dr., Mill Valley CA, 94941. 28 pp., $5.00. A series of 13 "routes",
|
||
with occasional sidetrips, each originating in a letter:
|
||
|
||
ROUTE U
|
||
|
||
Rub
|
||
|
||
Not seen since page one? "There's the erase." He
|
||
broke hiscollar-bone swimming with an abandoned baby.
|
||
A pal; an ode. AMr.and Mrs. Van Winkle died in their
|
||
sleep last night in a four alarm blaze which destroyed
|
||
their home...
|
||
|
||
This beginning is typical of the work in this compelling book:
|
||
coherent sentences juxtaposed often with little in the way of
|
||
"logical" discursive relationship. The logic, however, lies in a
|
||
subjective linking: one thing suggesting another, sometimes by the
|
||
sound of words, sometimes by conceptual opposition. At other times
|
||
one feels that perhaps a paragraph of exposition has been removed
|
||
between sentences. There is a kind of deadpan surface to these texts
|
||
which does not prevent them from being quite humorous at times; or
|
||
eerie, or desperate, or sarcastic, or...--jmb
|
||
|
||
Kurt Nimmo: SUSAN ATKINS--Persona Non Grata, 46000 Geddes Road #86,
|
||
Canton MI, 48188. 64 pp., $4.95. This is a novella which looks like
|
||
a chapbook, composed of nineteen sections and a variety of writing
|
||
styles and techniques; from courtroom entries to journal entries, from
|
||
scatological ravings to bizarre sexual fantasies, from play scripts to
|
||
multiple choice quizzes, from nihilism to exploitation, and all of the
|
||
paths and layers and levels which pile-up and cross the weird
|
||
landscape of Nimmo's making. This is indeed an eclectic montage of
|
||
exuberance and eccentricity. A fable built of the boldest name-saying
|
||
where movie stars, murders, politicians, and princesses rub body parts
|
||
and fantasies across our minds. The central icon of this fantastic
|
||
delirium is Susan Atkins, Charlie Manson's Femme Fatale, murderer
|
||
turned convict, and idolized sexual object. This is pop-cultural
|
||
sensationalism at its finest, you couldn't have this much fun with a
|
||
ten foot stack of National Enquirers. Kurt Nimmo's ability to
|
||
transpose cultural images and unexpected atrocious behavior creates a
|
||
fertile ground for epiphany. Once again, this is Nimmo at his best,--
|
||
not for the weak-of-heart or close-minded.--rle
|
||
|
||
Stephen Peters: DIVERGENT TALES FROM A MAN WITH THE SMELL OF BOOZE ON
|
||
HIS BREATH--105 Betty Road, East Meadow NY, 11554. 32 pp., $?. Hard
|
||
hitting nihilistic poetry which races through a postmodern landscape
|
||
of alcohol haze spiked harsh and fluent realism. Experimentally
|
||
structured and punctuated, capitalization optional. Black and white
|
||
art throughout. Unemployment, garbage, dead cats, sweat, death,
|
||
blonds, loneliness, love, liquor, and sex embroiled in decadent
|
||
abandon, Nice dose of real images smeared with a youthful fetish and
|
||
played like white-boy blues. Recommended for those who don't like
|
||
their poetry pretty but do like it honest.--rle
|
||
|
||
Brian Richards: EARLY ELEGIES--Bloody Twin Press, Box 253 Rte. 1, Blue
|
||
Creek OH, 45616. 28 pp., $12.00. The cover photo of Bill Evans at
|
||
the piano is cast in deep blues, the mood and music of these personal
|
||
elegies for the lost vibrance of the late 60's--early 70's. Richards
|
||
mixes detail and dialogue in the fast dance of meaning and emptiness.
|
||
His opening quote from old Beat, Zen poet Han Shan foretells a kind of
|
||
Taoist unravelling of facts that somehow rise to a heart break of
|
||
moment and memory. This beautifully crafted letterpress book
|
||
concludes with the long prose poem "Tommy" which caps an era when
|
||
risks spoke a sweet madness 'til friendships vanished before our
|
||
eyes.--larry smith
|
||
|
||
Franklin Rosemont: LAMPS HURLED AT THE STUNNING ALGEBRA OF ANTS--
|
||
Surrealist Editions, 1726 West Jarvis Ave., Chicago IL, 60626.
|
||
48 pp., $5.00. Twenty-seven poems which touch the marvelous, in the
|
||
tradition of the continuing surrealist revolution, they relocate you
|
||
among the dreams. With pen and ink drawings by Czech artist Karol
|
||
Baron.--js
|
||
|
||
Penelope Rosemont: BEWARE OF THE ICE & Other Poems--Surrealist
|
||
Editions, PO Box 6424, Evanston IL, 60204. 64 pp., $6.00.
|
||
Beautifully produced, with drawings by fellow Surrealist Enrico Bai,
|
||
this collection seem a bit more lyrical than the above collection but
|
||
just as surprising. Powerful work.--js
|
||
|
||
Leslie Scalapino (ed): WAR (O/3)--O Books, 5729 Clover Dr., Oakland,
|
||
CA, 94618. 32 pp., $4.00. The first two anthologies in this series
|
||
were thick perfectbound productions filled with fine fine writing,
|
||
dance (i meant to type "dense", but maybenot) with language & its
|
||
illusion. The writing's still here, tho less illusive & more direct--
|
||
but the package is fragile & immediate, letter-size pages xeroxed
|
||
direct from manuscript, staples already tearing thru the black
|
||
construction-paper cover. It all works to re-call the urgency of
|
||
action & emotion brought on by the Persian Gulf War, all too soon
|
||
forgotten. Impassioned work, as it/we should be. From Norma Cole:
|
||
"Walk in beauty like the dead/ the dark is at its zenith, etc./ a kind
|
||
of iridescent/ or even near blur/ given for possibilities/ forgive the
|
||
echo". Other contributors: Jerry Estrin, Alan Davies, Laura Moriarty,
|
||
Fanny Howe, & editor Leslie Scalapino.--lbd
|
||
|
||
Sam Silva: DE LA PALABRA--5976 Billings Rd., Parkdale OR, 97041.
|
||
37 pp., $4.00. A deeply philosophical, Christian-based work of
|
||
romanticism revisited. The poet guides us through his agenda of
|
||
faith, nature, and spirit in three chapters (Faith Of Our Fathers; An
|
||
Act Of The Sun; A Spiritual Revolution) totaling twenty-eight poems.
|
||
Although this chapbook is described in the forward as a work of it
|
||
sensitivity, a "Work of grace and pain and wisdom," its lyrical nature
|
||
tends to dull the senses and fails to provide surprise, mystery, and
|
||
the edge needed to push/pull the reader towards a climatic catharsis.
|
||
lt is pretty poetry, yes; subtle in meaning, obscure in image, but
|
||
crisp in metaphor, and touching in its degree of spiritual fervor.
|
||
This is a vastly different work than a lot of other poetry today. At
|
||
first read, one wonders where is the tension, the interplay between
|
||
mind and reality? A second read shows it is indeed there, cloaked in
|
||
the beat, images peering out from behind rhythmatic slants. If you
|
||
are looking for nice examples of rhyme, off-rhyme, and alliteration in
|
||
a lyrical free verse format give Sam Silva's DE LA PALAMBRA a try.
|
||
--rle
|
||
|
||
Herschel Silverman: BLUE LUDES--The Beehive Press, 47 E. 33rd St,
|
||
Bayonne NJ, 07002. 60 pg., $5.95. Beat literature is both word and
|
||
image rant. The rant is an ancient technique. With BLUE LUDES we have
|
||
a language that slices through, perpetuated by its very design. There
|
||
is a restless attraction toward contact. There is a field of sound,
|
||
of verb--an immediacy of moment that riles the reader. It is jazz and
|
||
blue, NYC and beat. They are poems of skin, worn on skin where the
|
||
present tense conducts its business. There is a zeal for life here.
|
||
Silverman writes his life in this place.--nv
|
||
|
||
Nathaniel Tarn: DRAFTS FOR: THE ARMY HAS ANNOUNCED THAT "BODY BAGS"
|
||
WILL FROM NOW ON BE KNOWN AS "HUMAN REMAINS POUCHES"--Trout Creek
|
||
Press, 5976 Billings Rd., Parkdale, OR, 97041. 8 pp., $1.50. The
|
||
horror of modern warfare is only compounded by the official newspeak
|
||
euphemisms that try to cover up what would be intolerable if
|
||
confronted honestly. Tarn makes the honest call & calls mechanized
|
||
murder what it is--not valor or patriotism, but only death. The
|
||
language harks back to Whitman, but where Walt could see heroism mixed
|
||
up in the carnage, here we only see "where there had been the
|
||
principle of hope,/ not there is none--/ nor human nor divine,/ no
|
||
condition forward."--lbd
|
||
|
||
Cheryl Townsend & tolek: PARALLELS & REBUTTALS--xib Publications, PO
|
||
Box 262112, San Diego, CA, 92126, 20 pp., $2.00. Call & response form
|
||
collaborative poetry--Cheryl paints a soft-porn scenario, tolek
|
||
repaints it from the male point of view. In the intro, Cheryl makes
|
||
plain the impetus for (at least some of) her poetry: "I want women to
|
||
know that it's okay to "want it" and more so to "get it." She is the
|
||
editor of IMPETUS magazine, which often pursues a similar agenda;
|
||
tolek edits XIB, which is not exactly a monastery newsletter.--lbd
|
||
|
||
Thomas Vaultonburg: POEMS AT THE END OF THE WORLD--PO Box 9101 ,
|
||
Warwick RI, 02889, 11 pp/, $2.00. Twelve poems lightly assembled into
|
||
a chapbook without a strong theme. A touch of the suburban
|
||
intellectual. The first poem is strong, using fellatio as a metaphor
|
||
for oppression in America, but from this strong start the following
|
||
works seem to drift aimlessly through the miasma of the middle class.
|
||
But Valtonburg's attempts at social statements sometimes ring hollow--
|
||
for example, in "Ionic Matriculations" he states, "There's a death
|
||
match on TV, and they're/ selling me the universe with garlic./
|
||
American Indians want me to buy a Honda/ maybe with four doors, so I
|
||
can drive/ my two blue-eyed boys to a school where/ we have stolen the
|
||
dreams of his children." Vaultonburg does hit a fine note once in a
|
||
while, like in "Lost and Found" where he shows a momentary
|
||
passion,"Ignoring sad son-of-a-bitch Frost/ Who hid his son's Prozac/
|
||
and never raised a tent/ any living being could sleep under." Here I
|
||
applaud this rare bold stroke of iconoclastic plunder. Still, at only
|
||
two dollars this chapbook is worth a read.--rle
|
||
|
||
Rosmarie and Keith Waldrop: LIGHT TRAVELS--Burning Deck, 71 Elmgrove
|
||
Avenue, Providence RI, 02906. $5.00. LIGHT TRAVELS is a
|
||
collaborative poem of fifteen parts in a beautifully produced
|
||
letterpress edition.
|
||
Repetition is used section-to-section as propellant and as
|
||
framing device, in aid of reflection, underscoring the dialogic nature
|
||
of this project--as in repeating what another has said to be sure one
|
||
has heard correctly. Here, by way of example, are sections four and
|
||
five:
|
||
|
||
4. close the curtains but
|
||
playful elaborations of otherwise
|
||
arrogant variation keeping
|
||
the window open
|
||
|
||
as it's wrong to shut
|
||
one's eyes to dream
|
||
it's raining while it is in fact raining
|
||
|
||
|
||
5. as it's wrong to shut
|
||
one's eyes to dream it's
|
||
raining while it is in fact raining
|
||
|
||
ears busied with hearing more than
|
||
one voice the stream our tears unmirror
|
||
|
||
Throughout the poem alludes to its own creation. It alludes, too, in
|
||
a fractured way to its Outside. It is always well sounded, always
|
||
particular.
|
||
I treasure this book not least because I prefer duets to solos.
|
||
Together you can get to places you cannot go alone.--tb
|
||
|
||
James L. Weil: IN ART--tel-let, 1818 Phillips Pl., Charleston, IL,
|
||
61920. 12 pp. Six conversational poems in couplets, for example, "As
|
||
Bill Says...":
|
||
|
||
Actually, there
|
||
is very little,
|
||
|
||
to be said about
|
||
poetry--which is
|
||
|
||
to say, already
|
||
too much has been said
|
||
|
||
about it. What there
|
||
is to say, it says.
|
||
|
||
Thoughtful, easy-to-like stuff, even if you disagree with it.--bg
|
||
|
||
Gail Whitter: INSULAR POSITION--PO Box 64026, 555 Clarke Rd.,
|
||
Coquitiam BC, CANADA, V3J 7V6. 64 pp., $7.95. A series of inter-
|
||
connected poems on an abusive relationship and codependency.
|
||
This is a powerful work due to it's perspective: the linking of
|
||
pain/hate/love into a solid atlas of abuse. This is not pretty
|
||
poetry. It is potent poetry which is sharp of metaphor and forces the
|
||
reader to think, to compare their own lives to this. "Pain is an old
|
||
cave/ you always have/ to come back to" It is a work for those who are
|
||
involved in a relationship in the 1990's; it is too important to
|
||
ignore.--rle
|
||
|
||
Thomas Wiloch: LYRICAL BRANDY--Found Street, 14492 Ontario Circle,
|
||
Westminster CA, 92683. $1.00. A kind of pleated mini-broadside
|
||
containing 6 dreamy/surreal freeform haiku, e.g., the title-piece:
|
||
"warm hands/ of/ sleep// (invisible garden)."--bg
|
||
|
||
A series of six minimalist haiku-like poems, printed on a single sheet
|
||
of paper folded in a delightfully ingenious manner to create a small
|
||
booklet. The poems form a sequence with erotic undertones: "entice/
|
||
the keyhole/ overture// (noctural caress)" Each of the poems contains
|
||
its own implied narrative, but also forms part of the larger narrative
|
||
of the sequence. A perfect blending of content and format.--jmb
|
||
|
||
Jeff Zenick: PROTOPLASM and BECAUSE--Wheatcake Productions, Box 877,
|
||
Tallahassee FL, 32302. 8 pp., $.29@. Two micro-comix of loony
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drawing's that ooze through dream-logical narratives. Just one clump
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of text emerges from the two books--from PROTOPLASM, protoplasmically:
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"IT'S NOT TOO LATE TO CHANGE YOUR MIND." The drawings are a little
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primitive here and there but densely active and well-integrated.--bg
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end TapRoot Reviews Electronic, issue 2.0 section b (CHAPBOKS)
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