JAPAN
I have never been to Japan
but I’m sure they’re doing their best
over there.
:::
Briefly I consider Paris.
I considered it as a place for birds
and then I considered it as a place for
buildings. (William Minor)
With summer comes a number of things, including
the summer issue of Ugly Duckling Presse’s 6x6,
a journal with lovely letterpress covers produced out of Brooklyn, New York. As
each issue includes roughly six pages of poetry each by six authors, this issue is the first I’ve seen (admittedly, I’ve only seen about four issues) without a
single author I’ve previously heard of: Steve Muhs, Dot Devota, William Minor,
Martha Ronk, Levi Rubeck and Abraham Adams (although there is always the
possibility I’ve seen one or two of their names in a journal and managed to let
their name slip away from me). After having gone through the issue a couple of times, I have to admit that I’m stuck on the work of William Minor; who is William Minor? His use of repetition is lovely, and his poems evoke a
particular kind of rare subtlety that ease into startling places, while leaving
plenty of open space in such small containers, spaces that could easily go in a
number of directions. I would sure like to see more. His pieces here are
reminiscent of some of what I’ve seen from Rae Armantrout, Sarah Mangold and
Marilyn Irwin, and suggest far more than they manage to say, and what is said
is delivered deceptively straight. Listen to this, the first section of the
three-poem “BEIJING,” that reads:
The spectacle of a woman on fire is an
ordinary spectacle. Though it takes many flames for a woman to disappear
publicly, it only takes one flame for her to disappear psychologically. For
some women, standing in a fire acts as a cushion against not standing in a
fire. People point this out when pointing to a woman on fire.
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