On
November 22, 2014, above/ground press participated in our first ever Indie Market in Toronto, hosted by Meet the Presses, and had a magnificent day! We’re
hoping we might even be invited back, possibly. And of course, there was far
more than this at the fair that I was able to pick up (and even more I didn’t get
a chance to get near). So many amazing publications! There is simply never
enough money, and never enough time.
Already
there are a couple of post-fair reports online by others, including those by
Ryan Pratt, Kate Sutherland and Stuart Ross, as well as a photo by/of Lorette C. Luzajic; given that I currently work at the
whims of the wee babe, perhaps I’m lucky to get mine posted at all.
London ON: I’m
constantly amazed by at least one title by Baseline Press every season, and the
crop this time ‘round included the new chapbook by Montreal writer Sarah Burgoyne, Love the Sacred Raisin Cakes
(2014) [see my recent review of her previous chapbook, here]. Unlike the
prose-works of her previous chapbook, Love
the Sacred Raisin Cakes is a small collection of more traditional-looking
lyric poems, yet poems rife with narrative longing, from the stretch of the
title “his death left no capital of the world, neither here / nor anywhere else,”
“prophecies of my youth fulfilled but not in the way / one expected” or “it was
not in parks that i learned humility,” many of which, her acknowledgments tell
us, are borrowed “from lines of Czeslaw Milosz’s poetry.” It is as though each
title clears the way for a narrative framing or thread merely hinted at within
the body of each piece; as though she writes each poem not to tell a story, but
to suggest, and even fragment. Even her poems want to tell you stories, which
she responds to by breaking them down into smaller, disconnected portions.
the
word revealed out of darkness was pear
someone has been
writing
on your perfect menu
and your spirit has
left you
for a stranger passing
by your home
in the basement
you brew tea
and a list of rebuttals
a shadow hums in your
window
as dusk la-tee-das
behind the mountain
the fruit was bold
to appear that way
you think
and no one prepared
for the smaller wars
LaFarge WI/Hamilton ON: From XEXOXIAL Editions, comes Hamilton writer and composer Gary Barwin’s “the wild & unfathomable ways” (2014), produced as the fifty-eighth issue of Xerolage. The description of the journal
reads: “Visual poetry, copy art & collage graphics, each issue devoted to
the work of one artist. Xerolge is a word coined by mIEKAL aND to suggest the
world of 8.5 x 11 art propagated by xerox technology. ‘The mimeo of the 80s.’
The primary investigation of this magazine is how collage technique of 20th
century art, typography, computer graphics, visual & concrete poetry
movements & the art of the xerox have been combined. 8.5x11, 24 pages each.
Subscriptions $24/4 issues. For overseas delivery, add $15 for airmail printed
matter.”
[the poem above is reprinted from NEWPOETRY]
There is something of Gary Barwin’s concrete and visual poetry that has been
developing over such a long period that it feels as though it has always
existed, and hasn’t been appreciated nearly enough. Given his work as a lyric
poet, fiction writer and composer of music, the thread of his wonderfully
playful and inventive letter-poems deserve far more serious consideration and
appreciation than what has occurred so far. It’s curious to see: derek beaulieu
might build some of his visual and concrete poems (specifically, the letraset
poems) using the individual letter-forms themselves as building-blocks, but
Barwin’s attention is far more specific, often focusing on a single letter or
character or two, and making the slightest, smallest twist. Might a selected
works be in the cards, possibly? I really think a healthy collection of Barwin’s
visuals is seriously required, with a good-sized critical introduction.
Vancouver BC: Given that it won this year’s bpNichol Chapbook Award (announced mid-day during the 2014 Indie Market), I suppose I’m rather late on getting to the party on Vancouver poet Christine Leclerc’s Oilywood
(Nomados Literary Publishers, 2013), a title that has actually been sitting on
my desk for some time.
We listen to water.
We go float in it.
The ocean makes us
giggle.
We giggle when we’re in it.
But no matter how
advocacy demands
our sketches, the future
is far from
shapeless—already flush
with months,
minutes and—
hear
something
—
assholes. It has power,
movements,
press releases. And it’s
full of sound-
tracks to make you feel
you’ve just seen
a movie, like your life
is something—
hard to leave
—like a supertanker.
Composed
as a reaction to the Kinder Morgan Pipeline pipeline debate and protests, the collaborative
structure of Oilywood was discussed recently in an article in the University of British Columbia’s campus newspaper, The Ubyssey, written by Jamey Gilchrist. As Gilchrist writes:
“One of the idea’s was
to put a giant “Oilywood” sign on the North Shore mountains as that image would
act as a mirror to the Hollywood hills sign and its associations with a
pro-development and a pro-oil stance that we are seeing in Western Canada and around
the world,” said Leclerc.
Leclerc found
inspiration for her poetry when she spent a summer around different regions of
the Burrard Inlet. During her time there she went to the beaches, collecting
interviews, pictures and water recordings. She noticed how many people spent
their time there and if they knew about the proposal to expand the pipeline
significantly. This curiosity led to community workshops where “people were
asked to write down some memories and knowledge about the inlet on a rough map.
These sorts of community input[s] were used to create the chapbook, in addition
to Kinder Morgan news releases,” said Leclerc.
I’ve
long been aware of a grouping of poets and poetics in Vancouver specifically,
and British Columbia generally, engaged in their immediate social and political concerns in a way I don’t really see happening (certainly not at the same
level, if at all) in the rest of the country. Given the recent protests around
the pipeline, writers, academics, poets and many others have jumped feet-first
into the fray, living their politics in a way that has deeply impressed me, and
even made me challenge my own actions—how does one attempt to further live and
act in ways that might actually affect positive change? Leclerc’s sixteen-section
Oilywood is reminiscent of another
Vancouver poet’s work, Cecily Nicholson’s From the Poplars (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2014) [see my review of such here]
that also worked, via a poem constructed out of a collage of sources, including
archival and interview, to document the activities of a particular a geographic
space (albeit over a far longer stretch of time) and the actions of outside
interests that attempted to profit from actions that not only occupied but
devastated that same space. Can a poem affect change? Perhaps it can, if it
forces open a conversation. One can only hope.
For me, the saddest
thing about being
human is the—
shifting baseline
—
It’ll be weird to be
like, remember the
polar bears? Or,
remember when we
would swim here?
I’d be traumatized if I
couldn’t go to
the beach. I mean,
people pay stupid
amounts of money to live
here. It’s not
like the nightlife is
tops in Oilywood.
It’s not like there’s
tons of jobs here,
or so much stimulation.
We have—
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