[the room, preparing: including Karl Jirgens, Denis De Klerk and Noelle Allen]
See the first part here.
Toronto ON: If you
aren’t already aware, Catriona Wright (poet and former Ottawa resident) has
co-founded a new publishing venture, Desert Pets Press, with Emma Dolan, and
some of their first publications include the anthology 300 Hours A Minute (2015) and E. Martin Nolan’s Poems From Still (2015). As their
website informs: “Desert Pets Press was founded in 2015 by illustrator Emma
Dolan and author Catriona Wright. Based out of Toronto, Ontario, the press
publishes limited edition poetry and prose chapbooks and strives to combine
exciting contemporary writing with innovative design.” Subtitled “Poems About
YouTube Videos,” the chapbook anthology 300
Hours A Minute includes a series of playful poems (being exactly what the
chapbook title suggests) composed by a variety of predominantly-emerging
Toronto poets and fiction writers including Michelle Brown, Kathryn Mockler,
Vincent Colistro (he has a first poetry collection due in spring with Signal
Editions), Andy Verboom, Daniel Scott Tysdal [see my review of his most recent poetry collection here], Laura Clarke, Jess Taylor, Suzannah Showler [see my review of her first poetry collection here], Matthew R. Loney and Spencer Gordon.
Ted
Talks
then TED foams at the
mouth
forgetting to stop. TED
co-opts cud as a fertilizer
two point oh. Won’t
hold a microphone so one
is fastened to TED’s
head. TED says hands are keyboards,
keyboards are dead
phonemes. TED walks
atop a ramp atop the universities,
whose popinjays cock
their heads up and
balk. Cued to a power point,
TED points to its
hegemony, Gemini, Jesus, Fancy Pants,
the real regressives. TED shocks she who opens
herself to touching it.
Insteads are part of the prix fixe
of TED, such is its
kindness, to offer hope. TED knocks
on my wall, in the
voice of a friend, who shared this article,
who shared this
article, who aired this sharticle,
who dares this icicle
of shart? TED talks
and before long we’ll
all be forced
to listen. Full stop.
(Vincent Colistro)
The
argument of the collection, “poems about YouTube videos,” is reminiscent of the
anthology Dinosaur Porn [see my review of such here], with the argument/prompt that sparked the project
seemingly as random, but for the fact that the Ferno House anthology had
submissions that were much further “out there” than the poems collected here.
Wright, an emerging poet herself, appears to favour a particular flavour of the
short, observational lyric, one that would fit very much in that space where
the editorial visions of publishing houses Vehicule Press, Nightwood Editions,
ECW Press and Wolsak and Wynn might meet. Along those same lines is E. Martin
Nolan’s Poems From Still, a
collection of short, meditative lyrics that weave through a gentle pacing. His
poems reference hurricanes, including Katrina, and the resulting damage left
behind. Nolan’s poems are thoughtful and empathetic, and centred very solidly
in concrete facts and situations.
KATRINA
FAR AWAY
I
In Detroit, on TV, they
show the storm after.
It goes on, moves
north, still the shape it was.
In Ohio they read of
it,
how it’s coming there,
feeding that recently
droughted land.
In Katrina’s rain the
small hard flowers
of Ohio’s weeds rejoice.
II
IN OHIO
The man turns from the
window, the same
rain hard on the window
he’s stopped at
to see the storm die
over land.
The woman on the stairs
stops.
She holds folded
clothes.
III
A: To get the real
Taino god
of the storm take the
wooden face
carved into mid-scream,
face the storm
and forget any carved
wood.
What
appeals about this press, apart from the strong work and the graceful design,
is in seeing how they work to engage with their immediate, local community, and
producing work by numerous poets, many of whom haven’t yet made a name for
themselves. There is much here worth paying attention to.
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