Indie book flea market:

It is Friday: Go Right Ahead

Civilization ends at the waterline

Floating horror of a 35 mph red-light

Your pelvis aches in your hands, too?

You can turn your back on a person, but never turn your back on a drug, especially when it’s waving a razor sharp hunting knife in your eye


Get drunk. Get naked. Fall

Despite your refusal

Who can control themselves around so much “rough trade”?

There is nothing more helpless and irresponsible than a man in the depths of an ether binge

It was embarrassing

When black-dog down, get your tires changed. It will make you glow 2 hours

Gobble

Sloppy drunk and starting to sink into the winged chair

Electric monkey

Fly

Random / 14 Comments
July 23rd, 2010 / 7:41 am

Colson Whitehead has a fantastic essay in The New York Times on writing in Brooklyn.

Live Giants #7: Mairéad Byrne

The seventh installment of Live Giants will feature Mairéad Byrne, a va-va-voom poet and professor and all-around great person. She will be the first in the series with an accent.

Her latest book, The Best of (What’s Left of) Heaven, was just released by Publishing Genius.

Her earlier book, Talk Poetry, had me in stitches, but when I saw her read from it in Chicago I was like, what, wait, these prose poems is kinda sad.

Tune in next Thursday, July 29, at 9pm to find out if it will be funny or sad or what-all. No cover.

Author Spotlight / 8 Comments
July 22nd, 2010 / 3:37 pm

Richard Yates | Story Prize | Fence

1. Tao Lin is hosting a huge Richard Yates contest at his blog, with cash and books and other things to win. I am reading Richard Yates right now. It’s kind of crushing and insane. Emotional-minimalist brutalism? It’s good.

2. The Story Prize has a blog, where they are hosting authors talking about their nominated books. Our man J.T. is all up in it, as are several others. Do a look!

3. New issue of Fence is out, and as always looks amazing. Checking my mailbox daily as I do during this time. My local homeboy Chris DeWeese has some poems in it from his Alternative Music series, wherein he tries to remember the lyrics to rad songs from the 90s without really relistening to the songs. I am ready to see that project become a book that I can hold.

Roundup / 38 Comments
July 22nd, 2010 / 12:13 pm

Ars Poetica

Because I’m doing a presentation today on Horace’s “Ars Poetica” I’ve been reading various other versions of the poem about poetry. Horace, of course, being that dastardly villain who has filled countless heads with the tedious idea that literature should not just delight but also educate, who reached back to Aristotle and pulled those cumbersome ideas about unity, clarity, decorum, and morality up through the ages for people like Sidney, Pope, and Sartre to latch onto and pass along. Horace, who opens his version of the “Ars Poetica” (circa 30-10 BCE) with a preemptive attack on Surrealism:

Suppose a painter to a human head
Should join a horse’s neck, and wildly spread
The various plumage of the feathered kind
O’er limbs of different beasts, absurdly joined;
Or if he gave to view a beauteous maid
Above the waist with every charm arrayed,
Should a foul fish her lower parts infold,
Would you not laugh such pictures to behold?
Such is the book, that like a sick man’s dreams,
Varies all shapes, and mixes all extremes.

Horace, who liked his shapes and extremes clearly separated.

Anyway, I thought I’d share a few of the other Ars Poeticas I’ve come across. It’s an interesting form that allows for a wide range of approaches.

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Craft Notes / 22 Comments
July 22nd, 2010 / 11:03 am

The Center for Writers Loses Barthelme; Rick Magazine Is Born

Frederick Barthelme will soon leave The Center for Writers and the Mississippi Review, and it seems that he’s taking the Mississippi Review Online editorial staff and vision with him in order to create a new online magazine.

A few weeks ago, The Hattiesburg American ran this article about Frederick Barthelme’s leaving The Center for Writers and the Mississippi Review. There was a little bit of a spat in the comments section of that article, then Brevity picked up the news, as did the MFA blog, but that’s about all the coverage the story received (that I could tell from briefly clicking around yesterday). Then, several days ago, The Chronicle of Higher Education published a story about how Barthelme’s departure will directly affect the status of the Mississippi Review:

The Chronicle asked Barthelme via email what’s going to happen with the Review. “At present, then, there is no staff at all, and there is no one here who has actually run a magazine previously,” he responded. “The interim department chair has been talking to other English faculty (non-creative writing) about taking over the magazine.  He is also talking to the remaining CW faculty about the same thing, and it’s unclear which way the tree will fall.”

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Uncategorized / 27 Comments
July 22nd, 2010 / 10:52 am

Popsickle: A poetry event

This weekend in Brooklyn:

POPSICKLE 2010 is two-day festival of readings, performances and screenings that will take place at Market Hotel in Brooklyn, 1142 Myrtle Ave, Bushwick.

SATURDAY | July 24

3:00 – 4:00 PM            WHAT’S UP + Brandon Downing—video

3:45 – 4:15 PM            Parker Phillips & Jesse Gold

4:15 – 5:00 PM            Lauren Russell, Marc Nasdor

5:00 – 6:00 PM            Brett Price & Dani Levanthal—video, Nicole Trigg, Alaina Stamatis, Jamie Peck

6:00 – 7:00 PM            Michael Barron, Eddie Hopely, Anna Fitzgerald, Jordan Michael Iannucci

7:00 – 8:00 PM            Jarrod Shanahan, Gina Abelkop, Timothy Donelly

SUNDAY | July 25

1:00 – 2:00 PM            Evan Burton, Carter Edwards, Paige Taggart

2:00 – 3:00 PM            Ben Fama, Natalie Lyalin, Emily Pettit, James Copeland

3:00 – 4:00 PM            RAFFLE + SNACK TIME

4:00 – 5:00 PM            Dan Magers, Leigh Stein, Joshua Mehigan

Events / 14 Comments
July 22nd, 2010 / 9:02 am

D-Nice

The greatest second act career in hip-hop history? I’d go with middle of the pack Boogie Down Productions rapper and DJ D-Nice, who for the last few years has been directing a series of sit-down interviews with golden age hip-hop artists like Big Daddy Kane, Masta Ace, Sadat X, Special Ed, Monie Love, and more. Note that not only are the short True Hip-Hop Stories fun and kind of informative—Monie’s behind the scenes story of Big Daddy Kane’s play for her affection, Special Ed’s sweet and sort of sad insistence on his contemporary relevance—but the pieces are really beautifully shot and edited.
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Film / 6 Comments
July 21st, 2010 / 6:08 pm