Reviews

25 Points: Factory Hollow Press/Northampton, MA

FO

1. Factory Hollow is the publishing division of Flying Object, which is located in Hadley, which is an over-the-bridge walk from Northampton, which is probably my favorite place in the world.

2. I love Northampton so much that I once kidnapped Mike Young and held him up in Baltimore for ten months. Every day, he had to interact with a dog. The two of them got along just fine.

3. Dick move alert—I waited until the last day of AWP before picking up Mark Leidner’s and Seth Landman’s books. They’re $15 a piece, but I think I got them for $20 total. Take that, capitalism.

4. Before AWP, I had pre-ordered Rachel Glaser’s new book and Heather Christle’s new chapbook. I paid full price for these. Take that, Mark’s Paypal balance.

5. I’m about to review all four of those books in one LeBlog James.

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7 Comments
June 5th, 2013 / 10:37 pm

Best of Twitter (1)

twitter bird

Since most of you probably don’t have time for bullshit Twitter (or if you are a tweeter then you know that it all goes by in a terrible whir) I’ve decided to post up, periodically, a Best of Twitter that features best and helpful tweets. This is part of the “new Rauan.” The helpful and gentle Rauan. Awwwww.

And, so, anyways, here’s the first installment!

 

1) “The issue of POETRY that you’re sorry you haven’t seen yet  #landays”   ……..  (Poetry Foundation — @PoetryFound)

Rauan’s Comment: no comment

2) “Time to fuck shit up Shakespeare I’m coming for you brah”   ……..  (Kalen O Donoghue — @Kalen_ODonoghue)

Rauan’s Comment: Brava! Brava! We should all have such attitude (& diction)!

3) “The depth of reality is ■ many shadows weave ■ ebbing love and bonds ■ plowing emotions to leave.”   ……..   (Denise —  @Moinees13)

Rauan’s Comment: a Classic

4)  “covered in stars

the jewel of

the night

stares

from those eyes..#museinlove”   ……..   (S.E. Thompson — @dreamersteve_99)

Rauan’s Comment: a Classic with impressive line breaks

5) “@Klassnik marry american or get the fuck out of our country”   ……..  (Reb Livingston —  @rebliv)

Rauan’s Comment: this, shudder, is a note from an “abusive” friend

6) “morning opens you up like a toddler with a blowtorch”   ……..  (Scribble — @scribblymouse)

Rauan’s Comment: the Mouse doing what the Mouse does best

7) “AMAZING NEWS ! We have secured our Opposition Day debate on the Badger Cull. Wednesday! PLEASE WRITE TO YOUR MP NOW. #stopthecull”   ……..  (Dr. Brian May —  @DrBrianMay)

Rauan’s Comment: Save the badgers, God damn it!

8)  ” ‘Cum For Bigfoot’ is free as a bird! Grab a copy today and “Whoooaaaarrrr…. #free #bigfoot #monstersex #sasquatch”   ……..  (Virginia Wade —@VirginiaErotica)

Rauan’s Comment: this is an excellent read

9) “Remember how Commander Data in Star Trek TNG could listen to eight symphonies simultaneously? I can do that with Mexican food.”  (Eric Raymond —  @pontiuslabar)

Rauan’s Comment: genius

10) “A-Rod has disgraced the blessed @Yankees organization, lied to the fans & embarrassed NYC. He does not deserve to wear the pinstripes.”   ……..  (Donald J. Trump —  @realDonaldTump)

Rauan’s Comment:  nugget from the gold mine (seriously,everyone should follow this guy)

11) “Dammit, my baby’s eating dog shit again.”   ……..   (Trailer Swift —  @IamTrailerSwift)

Rauan’s Comment: yeah

 

 

twitter bird

And since I know I’m going to get thousands of thank-you notes for this let me, in advance, say “You’re welcome! You are very, very welcome”

Tweet-Tweet

Random / 5 Comments
June 5th, 2013 / 4:27 pm

Dress Up with Willa Cather’s O Pioneers!

willa+cather

Like Disney movies, creamy coffee desserts, and many other things, Willa Cather is a terrifyingly terrific treasure. Being a boy, it’s somewhat bothersome to admit to admiring a girl, especially since nearly all the boys the I look up to don’t really look up to girls. “Woman is natural, that is to say abominable,” declares French boy poet Charles Baudelaire in his Intimate Journals. “She is always vulgar; the opposite, in fact, of the Dandy.” Then there’s the American boy novelist Norman Mailer. In An American Dream, Norman’s semi-doppelganger throws his ex-wife out the bathroom window after she admits to partaking in the type of act that Dan Savage and Frank Bruni revere. But, as with Emily D, Charlotte B, Annie F, and tons more, Willa is simply too wonderful to cast aside just because she’s the opposite of a boy. Her stories and novels are grumpy, moody, severe, ascetic, and fashionable (Antonia’s friend Lena becomes a dressmaker in San Francisco and Professor St. Peter composes his Spanish adventurer study in the same room as a seamstress).

As for the characters Willa compels, they’re cuttingly on the button in their evaluations of people-centric societies. Reflecting upon his prior city life, the eponymous boy of Neighbour Rosicky remarks:

In the country, if you had a mean neighbour, you could keep off his land and make him keep off yours. But in the city, all the foulness and misery and brutality of your neighbours was part of your life. The worst things he had come upon in his journey through the world were human, — depraved and poisonous specimens of man.

What to do when beset by corrupt, indelicate, inconsiderate creatures? Why… destroy, of course! Violence is enthralling, enlightening, and entertaining. It’s allotted a starring role in Willa’s world. In My Antonia, Jim slugs a rattlesnake to death in front of Antonia, her father also hangs himself, and her family is friends with a couple of Russian boys who were ostracized by practically every European country for throwing a newlywed couple off a sled and to the wolves so that they themselves wouldn’t be eaten. Some stories start out serene only to become violent later on. The Enchanted Bluff is about a bunch of boys on a camping trip. The trip’s tranquility is toppled when one of the boys tells of a Cliff-Dweller society whose men were massacred and whose women and children were left to starve. Keeping children’s tummies empty is obviously wrong, but violence is right. There are few better means to upending uppity control (i.e liberal America) than violence, and there is such an abundance of this trenchant tool in Willa’s tales.

Basically, Willa is sort of one of the best. Formerly, I dressed up The Professor, but someone as sensational as the Nebraska girl certainly deserves to have her universes adorned much more than once, which is why I’ll now deck the characters from O Pioneers!

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I Like __ A Lot / 2 Comments
June 5th, 2013 / 3:24 pm

“Furthermore, the amateur poets were more likely to use more emotional words, both negative and positive.”

sciencebarrowY’all relax OK Australia finally figured out contemporary American poetry y’all. Post your scores, losers. > 0.5 is professional and < 0.5 is amateur. Be sure to read the, um, “methodology.” According to poetry journalist Patrick Gaughan, the highest so far (at 4.2) is WCW’s good old wheelbarrow coloring book, and noted anti-poetry skeptic/fiction engineer Jonathan Volk reports that “an untitled Jewel poem just got a 1.17.” Stay tuned for breaking developments. (Discovery credit goes to poetry scientist Anne Cecelia Holmes.)

Craft Notes / 47 Comments
June 5th, 2013 / 2:20 pm

Shanna Compton, Designer

Photo on 6-5-13 at 11.31 AM
I just got the new Peter Davis book in the mail, Tina, published by Bloof Books.

I haven’t read it yet. This is just to say that Shanna Compton is one of my new favorite designers for poetry books. Her own book, Brink, is also wicked handsome. She has successfully rethought every element of a good book design. Why put what where? The advance praise is at the end. The copyright data gets a line at the bottom of the Table of Contents because that stuff is ugly.

Also, I love Peter Davis’s poetry. Get this for your summer shelf, silly. Review it for HTMLGiant, whydoncha? Watch the trailer, which is better than your average book trailer:

Author Spotlight & Behind the Scenes / 1 Comment
June 5th, 2013 / 11:41 am

HTMLGIANT Features

Joe Milazzo’s SUMMER READS

Summer reading picks from Joe Milazzo:

***

ABookBeginningWhatA Book Beginning What and Ending Away by Clark Coolidge (Fence Books, 2013)

Partly out of excitement to have this work restored to print; Coolidge is neither understood nor celebrated enough as a prosodist, or, if you prefer, prose thinker, à la Stein (I know this mostly from his writings on jazz / improvised music); the book itself just long and packed / impacted enough to occupy a season.

Randomly selected excerpt: “Door only to be taken in. Mingles into the corner as it comes. Enough, and green, and by and large, were familiar.”

 

 

 

 

 

lawless_mydeadMy Dead by Amy Lawless (Octopus, 2013)

Have you seen the table of contents? The volume opens with 8 individual poems, all entitled “One Way to Write a Sonnet Is To Number the Lines.” This appeals to me, and aligns with my own formal / lyrical interests.

Randomly selected excerpt: “Night is ugly as all the other shit / I just mentioned”

 

 

 

15647100688120LAm I A Redundant Human Being? by Mela Hartwig (Dalkey Archive, 2010)

I picked this up at the open of the year courtesy Dalkey’s annual sale, but have not yet been able to see if the book itself satisfies the expectations (high-ish… is this Madame Bovary without the self-delusion, an early negation of the novel [an imitation of Arthur Schnitzler tangenting itself into anticipations of Tao Lin], or a Modernist self-help manual?) I have for it based on the title.

Randomly selected excerpt: “Of course, his obvious attraction flattered me. But, then again, maybe it didn’t.”

 

 

 

 

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Comments Off on Joe Milazzo’s SUMMER READS
June 5th, 2013 / 11:00 am

Reviews

25 Points: Regard (25 parentheticals)

regard7Regard
by Pablo D’Stair
KUBOA, 2013
280 pages / $7.50 buy from Amazon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. (all of blue)

2. (having to dig it out of the soil at the base of one of the tree trunks)

3. (of what variety she couldn’t quite make out in the dim lighting)

4. (tipped out of its holder)

5. (transparent yellow with the appearance of bubbles throughout it)

6. (interested that the hole proceeded more straight down than she’d thought it was going to)

7. (she couldn’t seem to settle the question in her mind if this was the usual way of things)

8. (she leaned against not very often)

9. (like the man had in imitation of the dog)

10. (not loudly, but not self-consciously enough to be whispering) READ MORE >

6 Comments
June 4th, 2013 / 3:11 pm

HTMLGIANT Features

Debra Di Blasi’s SUMMER READS

Debra Di Blasi

Debra Di Blasi’s summer reading recommendations:

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9780393073775_198The Bonobo and the Atheist: In Search of Humanism Among the Primates, by Frans De Waal (Norton, 2013)

The most recent book by hands-on primatologist de Waal once again successfully argues that the study of primatology is not how apes behave like humans, but how humans behave like apes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

9780465033294_p0_v1_s260x420Regenesis: How Synthetic Biology Will Reinvent Nature and Ourselves, by George Church and Ed Regis (Basic Books, 2012)

Predicts how current and future biological research will lead to transhumanism, genetic regeneration and mutation, and living products that reproduce and redesign themselves. The eugenics potential would make Adolf Hitler proud.

 

 

 

 

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1 Comment
June 4th, 2013 / 11:00 am

Help Kenneth Goldsmith Print The Internet, or Petition to Prevent Him From Doing It

Conceptual provocateur Kenneth Goldsmith’s new project involves printing off the entire internet. You can follow his Tumblr about it. There you’ll see he’s getting a lot of press for this idea. Some of it positive, some of it negative.

Change.org is actively seeking to stop Goldsmith from going through with his proposition. They’ve started a petition, which you can read here.

If you’re opposed to Goldsmith’s project, you can sign that petition.

If you support Goldsmith’s project, you can join him, and according to his proposal, “Every person who contributes to Printing out the Internet is listed as a participating artist in this group show. LABOR is the best young gallery in Mexico — everyone gets a great line on their resume.”

If you don’t care, you can obviously ignore the whole thing.

 

Massive People / 9 Comments
June 3rd, 2013 / 2:35 pm

My Pet Serial Killer Video

Check out this My Pet Serial Killer (by Michael Seidlinger) Video Review by Angela Xu and Peter Tieryas Liu. Starring Hannah Lee. Read Peter Tieryas Liu review on HTMLGIANT here.

Author Spotlight & Random / Comments Off on My Pet Serial Killer Video
June 3rd, 2013 / 11:50 am