"Antisocial", David Blaine

Connie Stadler (Calliope Nerve) reviews David Blaine’s new chapbook from Outsider Writers Collective: “Antisocial”.

David’s Blaine “Antisocial” is a hidden treasure. You expect poetic diatribes and rants, you get wonderful wit laden bites that must be read a second or third time or the rich profundity/in-your-face irony will surely be missed. Though seeming toss-offs ,these are multi-faceted, rich gems.
There are many targets here, but not specific “causes”, Blaine rather wishes to probe the fertile underbelly of the genesis of our sequential stupidities: Continue reading

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"Ceilings" by Jeffrey S. Callico

Ceilings, by Jeffrey S. Callico. Poetry. Reviewed By Lynn Alexander.

Ceilings is not at all what I expected from Jeff Callico, but there it is: simple language, clear, cool, basic. They sit there, these short lines on these open white pages. You are alone with the poems.

I am familiar with a lot of Jeff Callico’s short fiction at this point, he has a certain way of presenting language, and he is not one to embellish. He has a style that is recognizable to me now, made up of linking certain lines, his repetition, this strange deconstruction of his observations of behaviors, reducing things down.To what? To their basic elements. Continue reading

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A Brief Compilation And Other Absurdist Offerings, polycarp kusch

Manila Six Pack Test DummyA Brief Compilation, by polycarp kusch. Reviewed By Lynn Alexander. polycarp kusch has an ebook collection housed at The New Absurdist, featuring an assortment of writers, misanthropes, and malcontents.

A Brief Compilation is an ebook offering at The Absurdist Monthly Review, and features collected shorts by polycarp kusch, who claims to have invented the letter D and emancipated himself as a young child to live as a hobo in New Jersey. Only polycarp knows the extent to which the miseries that befell him in those formative years took their toll on his creative processes and subsequent rise to prominence. Only polycarp knows if that Stormtrooper he stuck in his pocket that day at Bobby’s did in fact turn out to be valuable despite having been removed from it’s original packaging.

What is apparent is that poor polycarp was permanently and irreparably demented socially, such that he remains incapable to this day of performing essential tasks in public such as grocery shopping, Chinese food ordering, parking spot selection, negotiating postage. Continue reading

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The Giant's Fence, by Michael Jacobson

The Giant’s Fence by Michael Jacobson. Reviewed by Lynn Alexander.

The Giant’s Fence is a visual novella by Michael Jacobson, eighty pages of something many people have not experienced before: asemic writing.

I’ll get back to what “asemic writing” is and what it isn’t to the extent I can, but The Giant’s Fence is an asemic work comprised of what Jacobson calls “trans-symbolic script”. The symbols are laid out in rows as many traditional texts might be, and eyes prone to English habits might indeed follow their paths in a linear way. They don’t have to, however, as there is no natural beginning or end outside of those habits or defined by the binding, the author has said that it is not intended to progress in a way that coincides with pages, to start at page one and proceed. You could start in the middle and come back around if you wanted to or experience the symbols in blocks, aggregate. The manner of “reading” and approaching the text is individual and the meaning is derived intuitively, the experience is subjective.

Discussing such work cannot be undertaken in the same way as we might start other reviews. It is necessary to explain some of the background of asemic writing right at the onset, in order to try to talk about what Jacobson is doing- as best we can. Continue reading

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"Ghost Town, USA" by Christopher Luna

I admit that I’m biased. I have been a fan of Christopher Luna’s poetry for years and I have high expectations, particularly since I know how dedicated he is- not only to the craft but to the communities that can be formed and nurtured around creative work.

Ghost Town, USA refers to the poet’s town of Vancouver, Washington, a town in the shadow of the infamous Portland. The name comes from his first impressions of the town- a place without people, even in the middle of the afternoon. For a transplanted New Yorker, this can be unsettling, and for a poet like Christopher Luna who writes from a place so rooted in observations of the tangible, one can imagine how difficult it must have been in the beginning as he struggled to get used to the silence. Continue reading

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"A White Girl Lynching" by Elizabeth P. Glixman

Cover, A White Girl Lynching“A White Girl Lynching” by Elizabeth P. Glixman is an offering from Pudding House, an independent publisher of poetry with a reputation for selecting manuscripts from poets who “do right” by their art, meaning poets who give dutiful consideration to the process in terms of poetry as craft. Glixman’s commitment is apparent in this chapbook, as she accomplishes what she set out to do: explore “our ‘feeling’ natures as symbolized by poetry”.

In particular, Glixman looks at human dignity, and how the affirmation of dignity relates to her hopes for a more just and united world where people are better able to coexist peacefully mindful of the validity and benefit of our differences. When Glixman speaks of “lynching” she is no doubt aware of the historical context of the word and it’s connection to violence, persecution, violation. She seems to have chosen the word to suggest in a very powerful and forthright way that lynching is both a physical act and a social act, whereby people are stripped of an “important element of individual dignity”.(Preface,Glixman) Continue reading

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Falling Forward by Rebecca Schumejda, Sunnyoutside, 2008.

falling-forward-cover-for-foc-1

“Falling Forward” is the first full length collection of poetry by Rebecca Schumejda and it does not disappoint.  This beautifully crafted book, by Sunnyoutside from Buffalo, features the artwork of Ed Herrera.  The stark imagery of a tree above ground and its roots below say a lot about what you will find inside in Rebecca’s book; poems which are culled portions of her life that shed light and reap darkness.

 

This book is divided into several sections with each one being dedicated to someone in her family:  her husband, her brother, and her mother.  Rebecca is not afraid to look at herself critically or turn that eye on her family members, all of which are still in different stages of grieving at the loss of their husband and father.  She recalls her childhood in each of these sections, save the one to her husband, but even in that one she looks forward to the upcoming childhood of her unborn daughter.

 

In The Truth is Too Heavy, we find very strong poems about the quietness that creeps into a marriage in various stages of dilapidation, despite paled efforts to fix it, and a child on the way.  It speaks to those things we all look for in a long standing relationship, things we think show that we have reached a higher plane of love, like silent explanations between two lovers and gestures of body that tell more than words, but time makes us realize that these are the pulled cotter pins from the grenade that lies in the center of marriages.  Rebecca’s poems show us what is relinquished in communication breakdowns that can never really be gotten back.  She crafts these truths in poems such as “Tree of Knowledge”, “Divorce”, and “Four Months From Now.”  My favorite poem of this section is “Scrambled Eggs”:

 

“When you pull your toast apart,

I surrender my fork,

fashion my thumb and index finger

into a beak and pick at your crust:

 

this is how I tell you

that I don’t need anything

besides reassurance.

 

You stir your coffee

with the handle of a butter knife:

this is how you tell me

that you’re not listening.”

 

The second section in her book “Falling Forward” is called Folded Like Two Hands in Prayer and is filled with remembrances of her father who passed away, but these poems have a much different feel than those in a previous collection called “Dream Big, Work Harder” which is also available at Sunnyoutside.  These poems have a more shared feeling.  Many of them include, or are directly about, her brother’s reaction to the death of their father and how each of their adjustments to this loss net them differently, even when they are swimming in the same sea of grief.  These poems speak to the challenges between them and touch on an unspoken hostility.  This is pretty evident in poems like “Wet Paper Planes” and “Rock, Paper, Scissors”, but the most touching poem is “Workman’s Prayer” that spans religion and choices and hard love:

 

“That afternoon I understood

my father’s vision of god

when the sun’s haloed head

bowed down

behind storm clouds

and the distance between

thunder and lightning,

father and daughter,

folded like two hands in prayer.”

 

In true form, Rebecca never disappoints and saves the best for last in a section dedicated to her mother called Overgrown with Weeds and Regrets. We see the other side to her emotional puzzle and can revel in the trinity of her family.  These poems are strong in conviction and heart showing the degradation of her mother’s personality in the face of loss, or allowing this devastation as a way to give her mother a touch of grace.  Rebecca tackles sensitive issues about regret in the poem “The Recipe Calls for Two Eggs”:

 

“Before she gave birth

she wanted more;

she spent hours blending watercolors

to match the intensity of her dreams:

magenta, teal, canary, violet…

Because before was easier—

she depended on preparations

rather than outcomes.”

 

She explores alcoholism in “Halloween Costumes” and “When the Check Clears”, and cold disregard for pity in “Evictions”, but Rebecca sums up the essence of her constitution in the poem “Coney Island”:

 

“I have never been afraid of tides,

waiting out storms, or aluminum cans.

I seesaw tabs until they snap.

I’ve run away from everything that

means anything to me at some point;

I always end up back where I started.”

 

Rebecca Schumejda is a valuable assest to the small press and to modern poetry.  Her words are raw and truthful and she is never afraid to turn the mirror on herself and get the truth in return.  Her work is emotional without being sappy and her language causes chemical reactions in the brain that make one think about how the transgressions of our lives give us character and ultimately make us exactly who we are meant to be.  You need this book on your shelf, in your backpack, in your hand.

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Amor de Lonh, by Gabriel Olearnik

Amor de Lonh by Gabriel Olearnik, Guest Reviewed by Grace Andreacchi
Andromache Books, London, 2009
The composer Robert Schumann once described the music of the man who is still arguably the Pole par excellence to the non-Polish world, Frédéric Chopin, as ‘a cannon buried in flowers’, and this isn’t a bad description of what the Polish-British poet Gabriel Olearnik is up to either. To carry the analogy a bit further, as Chopin built upon the old classical style with new, exciting harmonies, so Olearnik makes use of the rich traditions of the medieval troubadours as well as those found in such deeply reflective and intellectual poets as T.S. Eliot and Zbigniew Herbert to create a burning bright new poetry of the mind.
There is of course an earlier poetical work known as Amor de Lonh, that of the twelfth century prince, Jaufré Rudel. His enigmatic verses on the theme of distant love serve as a template for this new Amor de Lonh, in which every kind of obstacle, both internal and external, must be vanquished before the soul is free to fly upwards towards its goal. Olearnik’s book opens with a translation from the French troubadour. Continue reading

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this is it…..by Geraint Hughes, Blackheath Books, 2008

As with all the chaps to be born at Blackheath Books, Geraint Hughes hand-crafted collection “this is it….,” has a warmth both inside and out.  This 20 poem collection speaks to personal journeys in times of change that can really only be traversed alone.  It recounts touching moments prior to and after the death of Geraint’s father.

 

The work ranges from introspective questioning in poems like “poem on the night I heard my father will die” and “the journey” to the subconscious tensions that surround a person in grief in poems like “hammering the nails in” and “I know what men are like”.  Interspersed  in between are hints of joy and shadows of anger.  He finds comfort in the paper and pen at a time when nothing one can say will ease the projected burden of death.

 

Geraint is at his best in “as Thoreau said” and in the very touching poem “the old wardrobe”:

 

“I thanked you for everything

Not just for what you’d done

Mostly what you hadn’t

Just for being there

 

I kept checking, as you cooled

And when they came for you

Mum asked for your wedding ring

And I got it for her”

 

Geraint Hughes’ collection “this is it….” Speaks to the rollercoaster ride that is loss, how in it there are moments of quiet contemplation, sadness, joy, anger, and hope, even if it feels backhanded.  This is a fine chap to place on your nightstand to just remind you of what you have and to be thankful.

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Escapades: Selected Prose Poems 2007 by Roger Aplon

I received in the mail a package from Roger Aplon, who is a participant in this year’s OW Chap Swap, and was pleasantly surprised.
He is a well educated writer from many places around the world, but makes his home now in San Diego, CA. I was drawn to the brilliantly red cover of Escapades which was designed by Jane Darroch Riley. For the life of me, I could not find a publisher on this little chap so one must assume he has produced this himself. It is a beautiful book for being self published with richly textured cardstock and crisp white pages laced with delicate typeface. Continue reading

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