July 2009

Frederick Seidel Redux: In Which We Attend to Some Cart-Before-Horse Issues We Were Having

So the other day I linked to Ange Mlinko’s Seidel piece at The Nation website, where she comes down pretty hard on Frederick Seidel, as well as a number of critics who have praised him. It was just a snippet link, because I don’t know the first thing about Seidel or his work, but I thought her piece was interesting in its own right, and so I passed it along. Since then, I’ve been reminded that the best solution for un-acquaintance with a subject is acquaintance, and so here then are several Seidel-related links for your weekend-

Seidel’s author page at Macmillan is loaded with audio.

“Hell on Wheels” by Christian Lorenzten; this was one of the reviews with which Mlinko took issue.

Frederick Seidel poems at Harper’s (you have to be a subscriber to view these)

David Orr reviews Seidel’s Poems, 1959-2009

“Poem by the Bridge at Ten-Shin” by Frederick Seidel


Author Spotlight / 4 Comments
July 3rd, 2009 / 4:31 pm

Fence 21

fence21Reading and enjoying muchly the new issue of Fence, #21, which is full of fresh and good and fun, one of their best issues of late. It has some wonderful work from Giant friends Sean Kilpatrick, Colin Bassett, Janaka Stucky, as well as new by Rachel Sherman, Dean Young, Eugene Ostashevsky, and Ben Black, and a roundtable on nonrealist fiction with Brian Evenson, Laird Hunt, Joyelle McSweeney, Kate Bernheimer, and Eric Lorberer, and a lot more. I haven’t read a piece yet that I haven’t enjoyed and felt cooled by.

While you are at it, the friends at Fence are still offering a really great deal in that if you subscribe for 2 years (only $30, which is a steal), you get a free book of your choice (another $15 value, at least) from their excellent of array of past titles, including, among my favorites, Joyelle’s Flet, Daniel Brenner’s The Stupefying Flashblubs, Aaron Kunin’s The Mandarin, and their many new titles. If I weren’t already a subscriber, and have most all of their books, I would have done it again now twice.

Not sold yet? Fine. If that won’t do it, try on this sentence cut from Kilpatrick’s poem (1 of 3 from him), ‘Gay Trade.’:

Same old fears kind of save the day, / or make you look vacuously sane / in this light, eyelid small, giving / handshakes of solid milk, warmed / by crack-lighters drying your reflection / on a buried clothesline.

If you aren’t ready now, you never will be.

Uncategorized / 30 Comments
July 3rd, 2009 / 1:24 am

A new DecomP.  Brandi Wells. Meg Pokrass. Good stuff.

Butler gets some New York free-alternative-weekly love. Interview in L magazine hitting plastic orange newstands and subway cars all over New York right about now.

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Clerihew Thursday

resource.aspxFollow this link for a series of clerihews by my friend Brad.

A clerihew is a four-line biographical poem. They are characterized by a whimsical tone, and I thought maybe today we could use some whimsy. Included is this one about Dennis Cooper:

Party-pooper,
Dennis Cooper:
First violent erections…
Then, alas, vivisections.

(For the record, Brad is a big fan of Cooper’s work. Whimsy.)

More (including Foucault) after the jump READ MORE >

Uncategorized / 31 Comments
July 2nd, 2009 / 3:05 pm

Writing Spaces at Fictionaut Blog

baby_slothFictionaut has announced a new blog feature, Writing Spaces, “dedicated to the desks, cafes, libraries and retreats where Fictionaut writers work, providing a window to the physical places where some of the stories on the site originated.” The first featured writer is Stephen Stark, whose writing space appears to be a tiny barn.

Those of you interested in writing spaces might want to check back every now and then to see what goes up. Should be a cool time over there.

(via Monkeybicycle)

Word Spaces / 22 Comments
July 2nd, 2009 / 10:30 am

Alice Hoffman has apologized, but the fact that she tweeted angrily and made public the reviewer’s EMAIL AND PHONE NUMBER  is beyond weird.

Check out these lame ass books.