[Hazel Miller and Gary Barwin announcing the winner of the 2017 bpNichol Chapbook Award] Further to my previous set of notes (and, see, I’m writing about the ottawa small press book fair as well), here are a few more items I picked up at the most recent
Indie Literary Market:
Toronto ON: Anstruther Press’
chapbooks are becoming increasingly known for their lyric, narrative precision,
as well as focusing on producing only a couple of titles per year, most
recently Krischan Stotz’s Brother Magnet
(2017) and R.P. LaRose’s A Dream in the Bush (2017). Krischan Stotz, according to the bio, is “a young gay Canadian
writer who lives in Berlin as a freelancer,” and at the back of Brother Magnet is a sequence of seven
short lyrics composed in tight lyrics with the energy of a tightly-wound steel
cable:
(II)
A painting I’d like to see: a young man, any young
man,
his face the face of an eternal child with his
father
at midday walking the red-brown bars while I,
who myself am in the painting run past them,
the pressure of my feet causing the sand to
liquefy,
alerting a razorfish who, digging to safety ejaculates
a thin spout of water that the young man
flings himself to dodge, with a half-smile,
seemingly aware of the humour like a magnet
between us—
look at him—and all the while his father
notices nothing,
neither the clam nor the boyish brink I’ve come
to
in his presence, a brink I’d like to push the
son past,
but for the posture of his dad, who looks
straight ahead
and keeps walking. So I run, back tensed and
stomach
coiled.
LaRose’s
A Dream in the Bush engages with the
land and landscape, one that doesn’t live separate or passively distant from the
narrator, but part of his own internal landscape. As he writes in the poem “Under
the Snow”: “What’s outside the bedroom window / looks inside.” There are some
really striking lines in LaRose’s poems, one that make me pause, or even stop
dead in my tracks, including this little sequence from the poem “Some Words
Held in a Love Poem”:
Women and men exist but
only in sentences.
We
could be words in those sentences.
Held to each other
semantics and grammar
Toronto ON: Jeff Kirby [who reads in Ottawa for TREE in January 2018], the proprietor
of Toronto’s already-infamous poetry-only bookstore, Knife|Fork|Book, has started producing small chapbooks, and one of his first [I reviewed his Dale Smith title here] is his own She’s Having A Doris Day (2017), following on the heels of his earlier chapbook-length poetry
titles: Simple Enough, Cock & Soul, Bob’s boy and The world is
fucked and sometimes beautiful (1995). The simplicity and grace of the
design of this small title is quite striking, and the poems within are lyric
narratives that play with the gleefully positive imagery of iconic American
actress Doris Day against the darker impulses that coincide with such a simple
version of American life. There is a playfulness here, even through a
thinly-veiled rage; these are poems that proclaim a victory through perseverance,
survival and a refusal to not exist loudly and joyously, as he writes to end
the poem “ADAM’S FEET”:
I left America
I knew I had no future
that Americans mean it when they say
“Love it or leave it”
that Nancy’s Ronnie and his kind wilfully
turned left us to die
and I ill.
A nancy boy. A faggot.
One. Glorious. Flaming. Faggot.
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