Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Anna Akhmatova

*This poem concludes my daily poem postings for National Poetry Month. I hope you enjoyed reading poetry by the poets that I recently discovered as much as I did.
In Memory of M. B.
by Anna Akhmatova
Translated by Max Hayward and Stanley Kunitz
Here is my gift, not roses on your grave,
not sticks of burning incense.
You lived aloof, maintaining to the end
your magnificent disdain.
You drank wine, and told the wittiest jokes,
and suffocated inside stifling walls.
Alone you let the terrible stranger in,
and stayed with her alone.
Now you're gone, and nobody says a word
about your troubled and exalted life.
Only my voice, like a flute, will mourn
at your dumb funeral feast.
Oh, who would have dared believe that half-crazed I,
I, sick with grief for the buried past,
I, smoldering on a slow fire,
having lost everything and forgotten all,
would be fated to commemorate a man
so full of strength and will and bright inventions,
who only yesterday it seems, chatted with me,
hiding the tremor of his mortal pain.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

William Barnes

Zummer an' Winter
by William Barnes
When I led by zummer streams
The pride o' Lea, as naighbours thought her,
While the zun, wi' evenen beams,
Did cast our sheades athirt the water;
Winds a-blowen,
Streams a-flowen,
Skies a-glowen,
Tokens ov my jay zoo fleeten,
Heightened it, that happy meeten.

Then, when maid an' man took pleaces,
Gay in winter's Chris'mas dances,
Showen in their merry feaces
Kindly smiles an' glisnen glances;
Stars a-winken,
Day a-shrinken,
Sheades a-zinken,
Brought anew the happy meeten,
That did meake the night too fleeten.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Kalamu ya Salaam

haiku #100
by Kalamu ya Salaam
what we know limits
us, wisdom loves everything
not yet understood

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Are you in the mood for a short story?

* These three collections have been getting rave reviews, so check them out soon!

by John Kessel

by Elizabeth Berg

by Etgar Keret, Miriam Shlesinger, and Sondra Silverston

Graphic Novel Movies

*There are a few really cool movies coming out this Summer based on some awesome graphic novels. Here are links to some of my top picks so far. Enjoy!

My Sister's Keeper- the movie

by Jodi Piccoult


Coming in 2009, starring Cameron Diaz, Abigail Breslin and Alec Baldwin this movie is based off of the book "My Sister's Keeper" by Jodi Piccoult.

Frances Richey

To My Son In Iraq
by Frances Richey

There's a new space show
at the Rose Center.
It's all about collisions,
how one little particle, or
cosmic rock thrown
off course, can make
a moon, or tilt a planet
into life. And though
I felt comforted among
the stars you love,
I'm beginning to accept
we're never safe,
the universe always
in motion, even when
we sleep, particles
making and re-making
our bodies, the world
between us a fire
that burns away
the planks of the heart.
I don't know how
they calibrated those
holographic comets and
asteroids with the
thunder of impact,
each explosion just
bearable. I tensed up
anyway, as I do
when cars and trucks
blow up on the news.
I almost closed my eyes,
but I could feel you
in the empty seat
beside me, shake
your head, and say
You're too timid,
the way you did when
you were twelve
and I was afraid to open
the door I'd forgotten
to lock. You
went in ahead of me.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Haiku

by
Buson, Yosa

At the over-matured sushi,
The Master
Is full of regret.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Six Poems

* This past week has been crazy! I spent a few days packing and unpacking, with a trip to Vegas in between, so here are the daily poems I missed posting this week.
(Sunday April 20-Friday April 25)

This Life
by Grace Paley
My friend tells me
a man in my house jumped off the roof
the roof is the eighth floor of this
building
the roof door was locked how did he
manage?
his girlfriend had said goodbye I'm
leaving
he was 22
his mother and father were hurrying
at that very moment
from upstate to help him move out of
Brooklyn
they had heard about the girl
the people who usually look up
and call jump jump did not see him
the life savers who creep around the
back staircases
and reach the roof's edge just in time
never got their chance he
meant it he wanted
only one person to know
did he imagine that she would grieve
all her young life away tell everyone
this boy I kind of lived with last year
he died on account of me
my friend was not interested he said
you're always
inventing stuff what I want to know how
could he throw
his life away how do these guys do it
just like that and here I am fighting this
ferocious insane vindictive virus day
and
night day and night and for what? for
only
one thing this life this life

Heaven for Stanley
by Mark Doty
For his birthday, I gave Stanley a hyacinth bean,
an annual, so he wouldn't have to wait for the flowers.

He said, Mark, I have just the place for it!
as if he'd spent ninety-eight years

anticipating the arrival of this particular vine.

I thought poetry a brace against time,
the hours held up for study in a voice's cool saline,

but his allegiance is not to permanent forms.
His garden's all furious change,

budding and rot and then the coming up again;

why prefer any single part of the round?
I don't know that he'd change a word of it;

I think he could be forever pleased
to participate in motion. Something opens.

He writes it down. Heave steadies
and concentrates near the lavender. He's already there.

A Certain Slant of Sunlight
by Ted Berrigan
In Africa the wine is cheap, and it is
on St. Mark's Place too, beneath a white moon.
I'll go there tomorrow, dark bulk hooded
against what is hurled down at me in my no hat
which is weather: the tall pretty girl in the print dress
under the fur collar of her cloth coat will be standing
by the wire fence where the wild flowers grow not too tall
her eyes will be deep brown and her hair styled 1941 American
will be too; but
I'll be shattered by then
But now I'm not and can also picture white clouds
impossibly high in blue sky over small boy heartbroken
to be dressed in black knickers, black coat, white shirt,
buster-brown collar, flowing black bow-tie
her hand lightly fallen on his shoulder, faded sunlight falling
across the picture, mother & son, 33 & 7, First Communion Day, 1941--
I'll go out for a drink with one of my demons tonight
they are dry in Colorado 1980 spring snow.
A Little Tooth
by Thomas Lux
Your baby grows a tooth, then two,
and four, and five, then she wants some meat
directly from the bone. It's all

over: she'll learn some words, she'll fall
in love with cretins, dolts, a sweet
talker on his way to jail. And you,

your wife, get old, flyblown, and rue
nothing. You did, you loved, your feet
are sore. It's dusk. Your daughter's tall.

Section VII from The Scarlet Ibis
by Susan Hahn
Bird

Once, I got lost,
flew over that place,
saw the tourists in their wrinkled pastels.
The memorial between the barracks B
The bronze barbed-wire figures twisted
to torment, the wedged-shaped
building, its barred entrance,
the strip of marble extending
through a hole in the roof,
the menorah resting at the top.
I felt weak
and landed on it.
No one could believe what they saw B
me resting there B
so they pretended not to see.
(pause)
I stood for much more than a moment,
watched all those bare legs
move from spot to spot,
thought how much I needed
to find a way back
to my flock.
Lady

And you expect me to believe this?

Bird

As I do you
(pause)
and do not.

Song
by Frank Bidart
You know that it is there, lair
where the bear ceases
for a time even to exist.
Crawl in. You have at last killed
enough and eaten enough to be fat
enough to cease for a time to exist.
Crawl in. It takes talent to live at night, and scorning
others you had that talent, but now you sniff
the season when you must cease to exist.
Crawl in. Whatever for good or ill
grows within you needs
you for a time to cease to exist.
It is not raining inside
tonight. You know that it is there. Crawl in.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

The Book of Other People

by Zadie Smith
Review:
This is a collection of fairly odd characters from modern writers, edited by Zadie Smith. Smith along with 22 other authors, mostly 21st-century geniuses better known for novels than short fiction, make up the wackiest stories about believable cartoon characters. Also, a few of the authors are known mainly for graphic novel fame or appearances in short story anthologies.

I really enjoyed a majority of this book, but was disappointed by some. I was psyched to read a lot of the stories based on who was telling the tale, yet I felt the most hyped authors had the worst stories. Below are my favorites and if you choose to pick up this book, you should read these first.

1. "Gideon" by ZZ Packer
2. "Justin M. Damiano" by Daniel Clowes
3. "J. Johnson" by Nick Hornby with Posy Simmonds
4. "Jordan Wellington Lint" by Chris Ware
5. "Cinby Stubenstock" by A.M. Homes

New York at Sunrise

New York at Sunrise
by Anna Hempstead Branch

When with her clouds the early dawn illumes
Our doubtful streets, wistful they grow and mild
As if a sleeping soul grew happy and smiled,
The whole dark city radiantly blooms.
Pale spires lift their hands above the glooms
Like a resurrection, delicately wild,
And flushed with slumber like a little child,
Under a mist, shines forth the innocent Tombs.
Thus have I seen it from a casement high.
As unsubstantial as a dream it grows.
Is this Manhattan , virginal and shy,
That in a cloud so rapturously glows?
Ethereal, frail, and like an opening rose,
I see my city with an enlightened eye.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Ferrum

*I couldn't resist posting this poem straight from www.Poets.org.
Follow the link below and enjoy!
from "Ferrum"
by M. NourbeSe Philip

In order to remain faithful to the adventurous formatting of today's poem,
we have it posted here.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Ruth Stone

Up There
by Ruth Stone

Belshazzar saw this blue
as he came into the walled garden,
though outside all was yellow
sunlight striking the fractals of sand,
the wind striating the sand in riffles.

Land changes slowly, the fathoms
overhead accruing particles,
reflecting blue or less blue.

Vapor, a transient thing; a dervish
seen rising in a whirl of wind
or brief cloud casting its changing shadow;
though below, the open-mouthed might stand
transfixed by mirage, a visionary oasis.

Nevertheless, this deep upside down
wash, water color, above planted gardens,
tended pomegranates, rouged soles of the feet
of lovers lounging in an open tent;
the hot blue above; the hareem
tethered and restless as the camels.

This quick vision between walls, event,
freak ball, shook jar of vapor,
all those whose eyes were not gouged out,
have looked up and seen within the cowl
this tenuous wavelength.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Ilya Kaminsky

Author's Prayer
by Ilya Kaminsky
If I speak for the dead, I must
leave this animal of my body,

I must write the same poem over and over
for the empty page is a white flag of their surrender.

If I speak of them, I must walk
on the edge of myself, I must live as a blind man

who runs through the rooms without
touching the furniture.

Yes, I live. I can cross the streets asking
"What year is it?"
I can dance in my sleep and laugh

in front of the mirror.
Even sleep is a prayer, Lord,

I will praise your madness, and
in a language not mine, speak

of music that wakes us, music
in which we move. For whatever I say

is a kind of petition and the darkest days
must I praise.

Kurt Vonnegut

by Kurt Vonnegut

This book comprises 12 previously unpublished and new essays on topics close to Kurt Vonnegut's heart, as well as an introduction by his son, Mark.
Listen to an interview or read an excerpt from NPR

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Fons

Fons
by Pura López-Colomé
Translated by Forrest Gander

Reanimated, spirit restored,
reincorporated, body restored,
I contemplate between dreams
the scene I've stolen
like the one who took fire,
like the one who opened the devil box
out of curiosity,
like the one who saw her equal
and her life's love
were the same and so effortlessly
brought them together.
I took exactly
what was not mine,
with my eyes.
I saw the sea inside you:
on your surface, mud.
I kissed you like a shipwreck,
like one who insufflates the word.
With my lips I traveled
that entire continent,
Adam, from dirt, Nothing.
I knew myself in your substance,
grounded there,
emitting aromatic fumes,
an amatory banquet of ashes.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Stanley Kunitz

An Old Cracked Tune
by Stanley Kunitz

My name is Solomon Levi,
the desert is my home,
my mother's breast was thorny,
and father I had none.

The sands whispered, Be separate,
the stones taught me, Be hard.
I dance, for the joy of surviving,
on the edge of the road.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Nadine Gordimer

Review:
This is a collection of thirteen new stories from South African Noble Prize winner, Nadine Gordimer. Even though, this book is categorized as a collection of short story fiction, it reads like a memoir. Gordimer's writing is complex and simply genius! I found myself enjoying the style much more than the actual story lines. I can now understand why Gordimer has won a Noble Prize, yet have to admit, that this is the first time I have ever been exposed to her. The themes alternate between politics, history, dreams and love, but not in a typical fashion. One of the best in the collection is "Tape Measure", in which the whole story is told from an odd point of view, that makes you laugh out loud. It is rare that I laugh while reading and when a book can do that, it is a keeper for me. "Gregor" is another great read and should be devoured in a low lit room, with you under the covers. Although you do not have to read this collection in order, I strongly suggest you do. I love the flow from story to story and overall think that this is a magnificent collection.


About the Author
Nadine Gordimer, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991, is the author of fourteen novels, nine volumes of stories, and three nonfiction collections. She lives in Johannesburg, South Africa.

The Invisible Wall

*I saw this book listed in an advertisement for the store Target and thought I would do some investigating. Looks pretty good. Enjoy!
by Harry Bernstein
About the Author
Ninety-six-year-old Harry Bernstein emigrated to the United States with his family after World War I. He has written all his life but started writing The Invisible Wall only after the death of his wife, Ruby. He has been published in “My Turn” in Newsweek. Bernstein lives in Brick, New Jersey, where he is working on another book.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Chapter One
It was one of those rare summer evenings when it did not rain, and the smoke cleared from the atmosphere, leaving the sky a deep blue color, and the air soft and fresh and balmy. It was the kind of evening when people brought their stiff-backed wooden kitchen chairs out to the front to sit and smoke, and perhaps listen to the Forshaws’ gramophone. They were the only people on our street who had one, and they left their door open so that everyone could hear. In the meantime, the sun would sink, a huge red ball, behind the square brick tower of the India Mill. After it disappeared, there would be fiery streaks in the sky, and these would fade gradually as the sky became very pale, and twilight would fall gently, and you would see the glow of pipes or cigarettes along both sides of the street.


We had finished our tea, and my two sisters had quickly disappeared before my mother could get them to clear the table and wash up. My two brothers were about to do the same. Having gulped down the last of their tea, and still chewing on their bread and butter, they were halfway out the door to join their friends in the street when my mother stopped them.


“Take ’arry with you,” she said.


They stared at her in astonishment, not believing what they had heard. Well, I too was surprised.


But my surprise was a pleasant one. Until now I had been the baby of the family, too young to go out and play with them, though I’d always wanted to and had watched them go with silent yearning. Now suddenly all this was changed. I looked up at them, my finger in my mouth, waiting, hopefully, for my fate to be decided.


“Him?” said Joe. He was the oldest of the three boys, big for his nine years, and handsome, too. He spoke as if he couldn’t believe what he had heard. “Him?” he repeated.


“He’s only a baby,” screeched Saul in his high-pitched voice. Saul was a bare year and a half older than I, but considered himself my senior by far.


“He’s not a baby anymore,” my mother said, firmly. “He’s old enough now to go out and play with you and the other boys.”


“But he’ll get in the way,” they both wailed. “He doesn’t know how to play.”


“He’ll soon learn,” my mother insisted. “I don’t want him to stay in the house on a nice night like this, and I’ve got a lot of work to do in the house, otherwise I’d take him out myself. Go on now, take him with you, and mind you keep an eye on him and don’t let him wander off by himself."


They had no choice, and each one of them took a hand savagely, bitterly, and pulled me out with them. But once outside, and once they caught sight of the other Jewish boys from our side a little distance off, they dropped my hands and rushed toward them, forgetting all about me and ignoring my mother’s warning completely. I trotted after them, and that was about all I was able to do throughout the evening. I was not able to participate in any of the games they played. I simply hung on the fringe of the group. I was ecstatic at having that much, though, at simply being allowed to be with them. I shouted when they shouted, jumped up when they jumped, and imitated all their sounds and movements.


I forget the games they played that night, but the locale was constantly shifted from one part of the street to another. We drifted down to the bottom, then back upward. Eventually we landed at the very top, at the corner in front of the Harris’s house, where they began a noisy game of hopscotch.


This one I do recall, and also that it had grown darker. Twilight would linger for a long time yet, until almost midnight, but it had reached the stage where the sides of the street were becoming hidden in shadow, and the glow of pipes and cigarettes stood out strongly. The sky looked almost white in contrast to the earth, and the outlines of roofs and chimneys were etched sharply against it. We could barely see the chalk marks that had been scribbled on the sidewalk, but that made no difference, and the players hopped madly from square to square, shouting to one another.


In that moment of our midsummer night madness, we had failed to see two people seated outside, a little off to the right on the other side of the doorway. These were the Harrises—old Mr. Harris, who could not have been much more than forty, a squat, heavy, bearded man wearing a bowler hat beneath which was a yarmulke, squinting down at a Jewish newspaper in the fading light, and Mrs. Harris, barely forty perhaps, a little woman wearing the orthodox Jewish woman’s wig, beneath which tiny hen’s eyes peered disapprovingly across at the Christian side.


The Harrises were perhaps the most religious couple on our street. He was an important official of the little synagogue over on Chestergate Avenue that we all attended, and the yarmulke he wore beneath the bowler hat was concealed only because such things could draw laughter or jeers from the Christians, especially from the direction in which Mrs. Harris’s eyes were cast. This was the Turnbull sweets shop. Nothing was to be feared from the immobile figure of the man seated there next to the window. Mr. Turnbull had suffered a stroke some time ago, and was brought out here by his wife to sit, usually for hours, and wait until she was good and ready to bring him in. And at the moment she was in the back room drinking beer with her boarders.


The sounds of their raucous laughter and the clinking of glasses drifted out into the street. The boys Mrs. Turnbull took in were a rough lot, and a blot on the street’s reputation. They were young navvies, the ones who cleaned out the middens, or chimneys, who drank and swore, and who, when they were out on the street and in a ripe mood did not hesitate in hurling slurs about the Jews, and at the Harrises in particular if they happened to be sitting out as they were now.


Tonight, fortunately, they were indoors, but the lovely summer evening must have been marred anyway for the Harrises by our noisy presence. However, they said nothing, and tried to ignore us while the game proceeded right next to the window. As usual, I was kept out of the game, and simply added to the din by joining in the shouting and screaming now and then. But after a while I must have grown tired of this—and perhaps it was getting a bit late for me. My attention began to wander away from them, and suddenly it was caught by a movement from the window. The blind was being drawn up, and the white lace curtains were being parted, and a face showed dimly. It was smiling right at me, and a finger was beck- oning.


I didn’t need to be told who it was. It was Sarah, the youngest of the six Harris girls, and a favorite among us and everyone on the street. She was a sweet, gentle, perpetually smiling girl with lovely features, dark hair, an oval face, and a smooth, delicate complexion. She had been ill lately, and was recovering now. She spent much of her time on the red plush couch in the parlor next to the window, reading one of her little yellow-backed novels, and dipping her fingers daintily into the box of chocolates that was always at her side.


Sometimes, during the day, if we happened to be going by, she would open the window to smile and speak to us, to send some boy or girl on an errand for her perhaps, or simply to talk and to pop one of her chocolates into a lucky mouth. I had often been one of those lucky ones. I think I was one of her favorites. I know, when she was younger, perhaps even as little as a year ago, she used to come into our house to play with my sisters, and would always hug me and kiss me and call me her baby. Then she had stopped playing with my sisters, and had put her hair up. On our street this meant that you were grown up and could go to work. She had gone to work for a while in one of the tailoring shops where all the Jews worked, and then had taken ill. Here she was convalescing, and I was staring at her stupidly through the semi-darkness, wondering what all those signals meant. She was also putting a finger to her lips and shaking her head.


Then, at last, I understood. She wanted me to come in to her, but to do so quietly and secretly without anyone seeing me. That’s what it was, and I hesitated. It was much easier said than done. In the first place, her parents sat near the door. In the second place, you did not walk into the Harrises’ parlor that easily.


It was the only real parlor on our street, thanks to the Harris girls and the one boy, Sam, working and bringing in money. It was furnished in red plush, including even the carpet, a truly elegant place, but reserved for members of the family and special occasions. None of us had ever been invited into it. All we knew was what we’d glimpsed through the window and what we’d heard of it being spoken with awe.


There was something else. Sam’s bike stood in the hall, shiny and gleaming, when Sam was not using it. We’d often peeped in at it when the door was open. It was Sam’s great treasure, and he guarded it as fiercely as a lioness guarded her cub. Let one of us so much as dare creep an inch beyond the doorstep toward it, and he’d come roaring out from the back of the house, his bushy red hair standing up like a wild golliwog.


I’d seen it happen two or three times already and I was terrified of going anywhere near it. Yet I’d have to pass it if I went into the parlor. I stood hesitating for a long time, my finger in my mouth, my eyes glued on her face at the window and the beckoning, beseeching fingers, while the others hopped and screeched madly over their game of hopscotch, and the light on the street grew dimmer. Finally I decided to chance it and slipped in.


Mr. Harris was still peering down at his newspaper, closer to the print than ever, and Mrs. Harris was still burrowing with her hen’s eyes thro...


*All information above is taken from Amazon, go to www.amazon.com for reviews.

Nika Turbina

I like the night for loneliness
1982
Nika Turbina
Translated by Ljubov V. Kuchkina

I like the night for loneliness,
When with it alone
I speak of what
my destiny wishes
and does not.
I may think of the impossible,
that
there is no end to the night.
And I may believe in
happy days.
And I may cry endlessly.
There is no need to listen to reproachful words.
The stare of troubled eyes
There is no need to hide
behind a hand,
when it gets dark.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Tao Lin

when i leave this place
by Tao Lin
the distances i have described in my poems
will expand to find me
but they will never find me
when my head touches your head
your face hits my face at the speed of light
holding it a little
i want to cross an enormous distance with you to learn
the wisdom of lonely animals with low IQs
i want to remember you as a river
with a flower on it

Friday, April 11, 2008

Ishmael Reed

Jacket Notes
by Ishmael Reed
Being a colored poet
Is like going over
Niagara Falls in a
Barrel
An 8 year old can do what
You do unaided
The barrel maker doesn't
The you can cut it
The gawkers on the bridge
Hope you fall on your
Face
The tourist bus full of
Paying customers broke-down
Just out of Buffalo
Some would rather dig
The postcards than
Catch your act
A mile from the drink
It begins to storm
But what really hurts is
You're bigger than the
Barrel

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Taylor Graham

LISTENING TO THE DOG

It’s been a bad old year,
just listen
to the news, you can’t even trust
a painkiller anymore.
Just look at this binder full
of drafts that might become
a poem.
But the dog is whining at the door
so I turned the knob
and felt the wooosh of wind
in my face, my dog full-sail
out of the doldrums,
the straits of blank paper,
the dead-horse latitudes.

Head up, nose to the news
of a brisk breeze rising, my dog
leads me out into
the beautiful whole
speechless world.We’ll walk it
without a word.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Jim Daniels

Mega Everything
by Jim Daniels
Generals gathered in their masses
Just like witches at black masses
Evil minds that plot destruction
Sorcerer of death’s construction

Black Sabbath, “War Pigs”

The kid with stringy, blond hair
and torn MEGADEATH T-shirt
plagiarized song lyrics for his poem.
Black Sabbath? I asked. In my tiny office,
he idly kicked the metal desk, not meeting
my eyes. But then, he never did.
*
1972, Michigan State Fairgrounds.
Black Sabbath ripped through the sharp
muffle of “Paranoid” on the distant stage
while I guzzled malt liquor from quart bottles
on a gloomy Saturday afternoon.
Ozzie stalking onstage scared the shit
out of me in a familiar Detroit way—
like a biker gang crashing a high school party—
so I could smirk the shiver from my spine
and raise my fist in the air.
*
He told me turning in the lyrics was a test,
but would go no further. Had I passed?
Those lyrics, the only semi-coherent thing
he’d turned in all term.
He could’ve fooled me with Megadeath lyrics.
Perhaps he had. We agreed that he should
drop the class. He hesitated at the door,
like there might be one more thing.
*
Sixteen. My ears buzzed
with dark-star feedback—
barking dogs, bloody teeth, fragments
of a thorough ass-kicking.
Ozzie’s wire-cutter voice asked
what happened when we died
and where exactly was the soul.
The bitter mascara of the unrepentant
and the flawed jewel of self-absorption.
A thunderstorm erupted
but no one fled to the grandstands.
*
Poetry was all I had that wasn’t toxic.
I should’ve been easier on the kid.
His name was Chris. He slumped away,
black boots clumping the floor,
and I never saw him again.
*
Ozzie’s damaged beyond coherence
And yet kids like Chris memorize old lyrics.
Ozzie hadn’t bitten the head off a bat
back in ’72. He only had to do it once.
The rest of us, Chris, we think about it
every day, under the black incoherent moon.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Lydia Davis

by Lydia Davis
Review:
American writer and humorist, Lydia Davis can be called a legend of the minimalist short story. Some of her stories are only one or two sentences long and so laugh out loud funny that you are caught rereading line after line. Her humor is quick and she is constantly twisting and playing around with words. This collection of short stories is really for the lover of flash fiction and poetry. I loved how quickly I was able to read this book and just how many stories really stuck in my head. When I finished the last story, I found myself skim through the book from the beginning and began rereading a ton of the really short shorts. If you are interested in other works by Davis, check out the links below. She is the author of four collections of short fiction, including Break It Down, Samuel Johnson Is Indignant and a novel, The End of the Story. Her fiction has appeared in The Best American Short Stories and The Best American Poetry series. She is also a translator of classic literature and her own work has been translated into six languages.

sites to check out
audio: http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Davis.html
on the web: www.pages.drexel.edu/~jlc42/davis.html
radio show:www.kcrw.com/etc/programs/bw/bw070621lydia_davis
The Believer:www.believermag.com/issues/200705/?read=review_davis




.

Nelson DeMille

by Nelson DeMille
Review:
The setting is St. Patrick's Day, when a violent nightmare begins and ends in terror. In response to the Northern Ireland conflict, IRA man Brian Flynn has masterminded a brilliant terrorist act. His group have kidnapped four of the city's most prominent citizens and are threatening to end their lives and destroy the cathedral. For those of you who like suspense and stories based in New York City, this is a twisted tale of honor and betrayal. I experienced this story as an audio and wouldn't have had it any other way. This is a quick listen and a great way to introduce yourself to DeMille.


author website: www.nelsondemille.net


Jennifer Kronovet

For Us
by
Jennifer Kronovet

Hard to know—
always at an end—

the reason for
turning towards yet

another alley of him,
while—in the same

mood—I store
myself to have

a past, The Past.
What is a lie

for us is holding
the astounding

private. No more
waiting for feeling

to be knowing
like a blade

against the fruit.
Just the feeling

and then saying—
and then another

reason for turning.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Eavan Boland

The Black Lace Fan My Mother Gave Me
Eavan Boland

It was the first gift he ever gave her,
buying it for five five francs in the Galeries
in pre-war Paris. It was stifling.
A starless drought made the nights stormy.

They stayed in the city for the summer.
The met in cafes. She was always early.
He was late. That evening he was later.
They wrapped the fan. He looked at his watch.

She looked down the Boulevard des Capucines.
She ordered more coffee. She stood up.
The streets were emptying. The heat was killing.
She thought the distance smelled of rain and lightning.

These are wild roses, appliqued on silk by hand,
darkly picked, stitched boldly, quickly.
The rest is tortoiseshell and has the reticent clear patience
of its element. It is
a worn-out, underwater bullion and it keeps,
even now, an inference of its violation.
The lace is overcast as if the weather
it opened for and offset had entered it.

The past is an empty cafe terrace.
An airless dusk before thunder. A man running.
And no way to know what happened then—
none at all—unless ,of course, you improvise:

The blackbird on this first sultry morning,
in summer, finding buds, worms, fruit,
feels the heat. Suddenly she puts out her wing—
the whole, full, flirtatious span of it.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Bob, or Man on Boat

BOB, or MAN on BOAT
by Peter Markus
tentative publication date: June 17, 2008
Review:
Peter Markus is the author of three short books of short-short fiction, Good, Brother, The Moon is a Lighthouse, and The Singing Fish. In Bob, or Man on Boat, Peter Markus creates an obsessive, haunting rant about fish, fishing and fishermen. Oh, wouldn't it be sweet if it was that easy to figure out a Markus book.

This is the third book by Markus that has continued with the story of a man, water, mud and fish. It is so refreshing to finally have Markus dive into the back story of his main characters the way he does in this piece. We are not only introduced to Bob, but many people named Bob and the word "bob" used as a verb. Markus loves to play with language and does a fabulous job in this story. If you like tongue twisters, I dare you to try to read a page of this tome out loud. The words are beyond lyrical and extremely reminiscent of spoken word poetry with a splash of schizophrenic rants. This book is not for the literal thinker. I was having heart palpitations while reading and at times found myself turning the book down to catch my breath. The funny thing is, I wasn't even reading out loud, I was just breathy as my eyes raced through the pages. This is a one sitting read that actually took me small sittings to finish, due to the anxiety it produced. I cannot wait to hear more of what happens to the Bob's and hope that Markus decides to revisit their world.

His second title and fourth story collection overall being published by Dzanc, We Make Mud, comes out in March 2011. This collection will concentrate on his stories of two brothers, the dirty river they live near, mud, fish and stars. I look forward to reading more works by Markus and recommend him to all who are looking for something fresh and unpredictable.

The Memory Keeper's Daughter on Lifetime

*Almost everyone that I've talked to either loves or hates this book. It will be interesting to see how the film adaptation turned out. The cast itself makes it worth checking out, especially Dermot Mulroney. Check out Lifetime for more information.

The Memory Keeper's Daughter
Premieres Saturday, April 12 at 9 pm et/pt

The New York Public Library

*This is not new information, but I found this really cool link from The New York Public Library website and thought it was worth the mention. I am currently listening to the MIRANDA JULY & Friends: David Byrne & Becky Stark, No One Belongs Here More Than You audio and it is very enjoyable. The link is called Webcasts, Audio and Video and can be accessed from the home page. Enjoy!

Tobias Wolff

Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories

*Check out Wolff's first collection in over a decade. There are ten new stories, along with twenty-one classics that make Wolff one of the most exquisite storytellers of modern times.

April 08, 2008 7:00 PM
Barnes & Noble Booksellers 82nd & Broadway
82nd & Broadway
2289 Broadway
New York, NY

Decline of the picture book

Why storytime may be ending for British children
Apr 3rd 2008


*This article appeared in the latest edition of The Economist magazine and I thought it was very sad to hear that one of my favorite mediums of reading is on the decline. Check out this website for a really cool British book program. http://www.booktrust.org.uk/Home

Medbh McGuckian

The Good Wife Taught Her Daughter
by Medbh McGuckian

Lordship is the same activity
Whether performed by lord or lady.
Or a lord who happens to be a lady,
All the source and all the faults.
A woman steadfast in looking is a callot,
And any woman in the wrong place
Or outside of her proper location
Is, by definition, a foolish woman.
The harlot is talkative and wandering
By the way, not bearing to be quiet,
Not able to abide still at home,
Now abroad, now in the streets,
Now lying in wait near the corners,
Her hair straying out of its wimple.
The collar of her shift and robe
Pressed one upon the other.
She goes to the green to see to her geese,
And trips to wrestling matches and taverns.
The said Margery left her home
In the parish of Bishopshill,
And went to a house, the which
The witness does not remember,
And stayed there from noon
Of that day until the darkness of night.
But a whip made of raw hippopotamus
Hide, trimmed like a corkscrew,
And anon the creature was stabled
In her wits as well as ever she was biforn,
And prayed her husband as so soon
As he came to her that she might have
The keys to her buttery
To take her meat and drink.
He should never have my good will
For to make my sister for to sell
Candle and mustard in Framlyngham,
Or fill her shopping list with crossbows,
Almonds, sugar and cloth.
The captainess, the vowess,
Must use herself to work readily
As other gentilwomen doon,
In the innermost part of her house,
In a great chamber far from the road.
So love your windows as little as you can,
For we be, either of us, weary of other.

What books mean to me or my life with Joseph Conrad.

by John Stape
*I haven't read anything by Conrad since collage, so when I came across this review a flood of memories came crashing down on me. I think I hated Conrad, yet grew to love him by the end of my college career. In my lifetime, I have loaned out many a book and borrowed even more, but for some reason whenever I see a copy of Conrad's Heart of Darkness, I miss the dogeared highlighted copy that I never retrieved back from a high school/college friend, Lisa. Funny enough, I lent her the book and a thin booklet that explained the book in detail, but can not recall if she returned the books or if they are still somewhere in space. It is the only memory I connect with Conrad, which is sad, due to the fact that he is one of the greatest writers of 20th- century literature. It is funny how books play such a strange role in our lives and it amuses me when someone says that they never have time to read. If you want/love/need to read, you will always find the time.

Salman Rushdie

by Salman Rushdie

*Here is the newest book by Rushdie. This title will be released on May 27, 2008. In the meantime, check out The Three Musketeers Reunited: Umberto Eco, Salman Rushdie & Mario Vargas Llosa on Friday, May 2, 7:30 pm at the 92nd St. Y, 1395 Lexington Ave.

Tickets: $20/$15 PEN Members
Purchase tickets from Smarttix:
http://www.smarttix.com/show.aspx?showCode=PEN9 or (212) 868-4444

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Morning Rain

Morning Rain
by Tu Fu
A slight rain comes, bathed in dawn light.
I hear it among treetop leaves before mist
Arrives. Soon it sprinkles the soil and,
Windblown, follows clouds away. Deepened
Colors grace thatch homes for a moment.
Flocks and herds of things wild glisten
Faintly. Then the scent of musk opens across
Half a mountain -- and lingers on past noon.

Friday, April 4, 2008

Peony In Love

by Lisa See
Review:
This is a coming-of-age story, ghost story and a family saga set in 17th-century China. I wasn't too thrilled about reading this book based on the inside flap. The book club that I am in, read this for the month of March, so I decided instead of bailing, I would listen to it during my morning commute. I enjoyed the various accents and think that this was one of the better recorded books I have heard. Today we met and chatted for almost two hours about the story, modern day China and the role that woman play in society in general. I have to say as much as I disliked this book, I loved it! The family dynamics and rituals that the Chinese hold true to are so unconventional for a westerner. There is a story within a story here, that makes you question a lot that is going on and reality and fantasy begin to blend beautifully. We agreed overall, that the author's note should have been in the beginning and that the story really made more sense when you finally read this part. This story is full of rich Chinese history, as well as culture. Although, Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel is See's most popular novel, I still suggest you try this one if you are into realistic fiction with a splash of spiritual, ritualistic fantasy.

Reading Group Guide: www.readinggroupguides.com/guides_P/peony_in_love1.asp
Author Website: www.lisasee.com/

Phillis Wheatley

On Virtue.
by Phillis Wheatley
O Thou bright jewel in my aim I strive
To comprehend thee. Thine own words declare
Wisdom is higher than a fool can reach.
I cease to wonder, and no more attempt
Thine height t' explore, or fathom thy profound.
But, O my soul, sink not into despair,
Virtue is near thee, and with gentle hand
Would now embrace thee, hovers o'er thine head.
Fain would the heav'n-born soul with her converse,
Then seek, then court her for her promis'd bliss.
Auspicious queen, thine heav'nly pinions spread,
And lead celestial Chastity along;
Lo! now her sacred retinue descends,
Array'd in glory from the orbs above.
Attend me, Virtue, thro' my youthful years!
O leave me not to the false joys of time!
But guide my steps to endless life and bliss.
Greatness, or Goodness, say what I shall call thee,
To give me an higher appellation still,
Teach me a better strain, a nobler lay,
O thou, enthron'd with Cherubs in the realms of day!

Thursday, April 3, 2008

SECRET

SECRET
by Pierre REVERDY
translated by Tom Hibbard-1918
The empty bell
The dead birds
In the house where everything sleeps
Nine hours
The world stands still
It seems someone has died
The trees look as though they are smiling
A drop of water hangs at the end of each leaf
A cloud crosses the night
Outside a door a man sings
The window opens without a sound

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Mother Tongue

Mother Tongue
by Elmer Omar Bascos Pizo
a. Thinking you could purge-out once and for all
the f-words, the s-words, and other demonic
words dwelling free of rent inside your 4-year-old's
mouth, "stick-out your tongue," you commanded,
"and hold it still for the duration of the procedure."

b. Scooping-out with a baby's spoon the paste of ripe
chilies you just ground in a stone-carved mortar,
you spread it the way you often did with guava jelly
on your toasted bread: Thickly over that petrified
tongue.

c. At almost the same moment, the stored-up saliva
overflowed from the sides of his mouth coating
generously the back and the palm of your left hand
steadying that jerking chin. "'Tang Ina!" You yelled
in disgust.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

The Cement Garden

by Ian McEwan
Review:
I am speechless. Not only is this the strangest McEwan book I have read to date, but it is probably the best book I have read so far this year. Although, the majority of the books I read and review are not necessarily released the year I am reading them. It is very rare that I actually read a "new" book. I usually read a ton of reviews, make a list of what I want to read and when the mood strikes, that book is engulfed. Anyway, the plot line in this story is reminiscent of the Oedipus myth. The story is told from the point of view of a young boy. In the first chapter his father dies and we witness a family facing the survival of his death. Next, the mother takes ill and eventually dies, leaving the oldest brother (narrator) and oldest sister to "raise" the family of four siblings. Well, this is when things begin to get interesting and you want to punch McEwan for writing such a sick story. I felt the need to shower many times reading this page turner and often thought of many a John Irving novel in the throes of my disgust. Overall, a classic plot twist that only McEwan could pull off time and time again. I declare Mr. McEwan is officially my favorite contemporary writer of all time. Bravo! FYI, Atonement is a masterpiece, but to really know this author, you have to read some of his earlier work, especially anything before 2000.



Excerpt:
Julie spoke quietly. "You think girls look idiotic, daft, stupid...?"
"No," I said indignantly.
"You think it's humiliating to look like a girl, because you think it's humiliating to be a girl."
"It would be for Tom, to look like a girl."
Julie took a deep breath and her voice dropped to a murmur. "Girls can wear jeans and cut their hair short and wear shirts and boots because it's okay to be a boy; for girls it's like promotion. But for a boy to look like a girl is degrading, according to you, because secretly you believe that being a girl is degrading."

Some things that can happen with a fish

*In celebration of National Poetry Month, I will be posting a poem a day by a poet I have just discovered.
Some things that can happen with a fish
by RIC S. BASTASA
A fish that drinks like a fish, that is a fish in excess
A fish that fishes in troubled waters, that is a fish taking advantage of another fish in trouble
A fish that fishes or cuts bait, well, to be or not to be, to retreat or to attack, that is the fishy question
A fish that is neither fish nor fowl, is a fish that is neither one nor the other, lacking some convictions
A fish out of water, is a fish feeling left out, no longer in his accustomed environment
Do you have other fish to fry for now?
Is there other matter requiring my attention?
Poor fish, the lake is finally fished out from his fishy mind.

Sloane Crosley

“Nuptials. Sounds like something you get a case of. See: I felt a case of the nuptials coming on so I had a full-body fiancĂ©.”

*Today is the release of I Was Told There'd Be Cake by Sloane Crosley. I love this article from The New York Observer, calling Crosley 'The Most Popular Publicist in New York". Check out this website for more information about the author and her upcoming book tour.