Saturday, June 30, 2018
Friday, June 29, 2018
Ongoing notes: the ottawa small press book fair (part one,
Hard
to believe another fair has come and gone so quickly (and this fall will mark
the fair’s twenty-fourth anniversary)! But it was a good one: here are a couple
of the items I managed to pick up throughout the day.
[Chris Johnson at the Arc Poetry Magazine table, grimacing]
Ottawa ON: It’s good to see
Marilyn Irwin continuing to produce items through her shreeking violet press,
and her latest is the chapbook Eleven Elleve Alive : poems, “Original poems & translations by Stuart Ross
& Dag T. Straumsvåg & Hugh Thomas,” and, at fifty-six pages, sits as her
heftiest production yet. The publication stems from Thomas’ ongoing work
translating poems from Swedish, a language he doesn’t understand, deliberately
not looking up words, but taking what he sees and composing an English-language
poem in response (for example, see his chapbook Six Swedish Poets from above/ground press, 2015). This chapbook, I suspect,
came from an exchange between Thomas and Ross during a pre-fair reading, about Hugh wishing to translate some of Ross’ poems into
English, and the results are quite striking. So the book itself contains twelve
poems: an original poem by Stuart Ross, a translation of that poem into Nynorsk
by poet and editor Dag T. Straumsvåg, and then Thomas’ “translation” of Straumsvåg’s
translation back into English. For example:
Landscape
after Larry Fagin
The bright green apple sails over the white
fence.
The small running shoe lies in an overgrown
field.
The man rappels down the side of a sidescraper.
The happy mice burrow through the rotting
garbage.
The Latvian hairdresser leaps with joy.
Malarial flies float dead in the gutter.
A paperboy takes a bow.
Landscap
etter Larry Fagin
Det Lysegrøne eplet seglar over det kvite
gjerdet.
Den vesle joggeskoen ligg i ein overgrodd åker.
Mannen rappelerer ned sida a vein skyscraper.
Dei lykkelege musene grev seg gjennom den
rotnande søpla.
Den latviske frisøren hopar av glede.
Malariafluger flyt døde i rennensteinen.
Ein avisgut bukkar.
Landscape
Larry Fagin, otter
A green light shines over the planet.
A yoga studio starts to grow in the vacant lot.
A man remembers a disease and a skyscraper.
The happy muses bury themselves in the road
map.
The freshly washed hairdresser flaps in the
breeze.
Maria flies in the open window.
Both
Ross and Thomas’ works have long been known for their engagements with
surrealism and sense of play, so the interplay between the two is entertaining
to see, especially with the added element of Dag T. Straumsvåg.
[Kate Siklosi at the Gap Riot Press table]
Ottawa ON: Cameron Anstee’s Apt.9 Press has been known for some time for producing lovely handmade books and,
given he’s been producing less the past year or two, it was good to see a new
item of his at the fair this year: Peterborough writer, publisher and artist
Elisha May Rubacha’s chapbook, Too Much
Nothing (2018). Rubacha, along with her partner, Justin Million, run
readings in Peterborough, Ontario, as well as co-publish the small press, bird, buried press.
some smoked
right up to the launch pad
there is no smoking in space
there is no smoking in the barn either
I’m
impressed by the amount of activity Rubacha manages to contain within these
small, deceptively straightforward poems, writing short observational musings on
space, childhood and Roberta Bondar, and her poems close well before they end,
leaving the rest of each piece to sit in the thoughts of the reader for some
time after. These are poems that might be small in size, but contain
multitudes, composed as quiet, thoughtful pieces I would like to see more of. I
am hoping there might be more.
little girls
little girls bring their parents
to the opening of Dr. Bondar’s photography
exhibit
she autographs their drawings
of rocket ships and planets
while their brothers wait impatiently to leave
Thursday, June 28, 2018
12 or 20 (second series) questions with Daniel Perry
Daniel Perry is the author of the short story
collections Nobody Looks That Young Here and Hamburger. His fiction has been
short-listed for the Carter V. Cooper Prize, and has appeared in more than 30
publications in Canada, the U.S., the U.K. and the Czech Republic. He lives in
Toronto.
1 - How did your first book change your
life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel
different?
In one
sense, my newest book Nobody Looks That
Young Here is actually my first collection of short stories—it was accepted
for publication before Hamburger, even
if it’s the second to be published. I mention this because having NLTYH accepted changed one thing for me:
my level of confidence in this other collection I had pending at Thistledown
Press, which was about half of Hamburger.
When Thistledown offered to publish a full-length collection, provided I had
more stories, I didn’t hesitate to accept even though I knew it would mean
having to rather quickly finish some back-burner drafts, salvage some abandoned
ones and even write-brand new stories on a deadline. Without the option of
wasting energy wondering if the prospective stories would ever be published (in
a book, or at all), I felt freer to just write them.
Regarding what’s
actually inside the books, the biggest difference is that the stories in Hamburger aren’t linked, whereas the
stories in NLTYH together form a
larger narrative. Hamburger mainly
contains urban stories, “from” where I live now, whereas the stories in NLTYH are “from” a rural area like the
one I grew up in.
2 - How did you come to
fiction first, as opposed to, say, poetry or non-fiction?
Though
almost none of them were published, nor deserved to be, I wrote poems before I
got serious about fiction. I also wrote and edited in the newspaper business
for a short time. I came to fiction deliberately when I finally got to it, but
I think what actually happened is that I fell into a crevasse between soppy
expression and cold journalism.
3 - How long does it take to start any
particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it
a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or
does your work come out of copious notes?
I don’t
make many notes—to me, a fleeting idea feels likely to result in a disposable
work—and I take a long time to start. Usually a story I want to write will
follow me around for a while and eventually cut off all my escape routes,
muscle out any other stories I might want to write and then throw me down front
of my computer. My most recently written story didn’t change much from draft to
final—I went into a trance one Saturday morning and came to after sundown with
5,000 words I didn’t hate—but that story’s been rejected by 11 magazines now,
so I might be doing it wrong.
4 - Where does a work of fiction
usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining
into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very
beginning?
I realized
early on that the first stories I was writing—those in Nobody Looks That Young Here—were linked thematically and geographically
and so should probably follow the same characters throughout, too. At the same
time, however, I was trying out other, one-off stories I collected in Hamburger, a book that found its thematic
label only once the collection was assembled. My next project, a novella, is
the first I’ve begun with the declared intent to make a “book”.
5 - Are public readings part of or
counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing
readings?
I enjoy
doing readings, but I think they’d be more entwined with my creative process
were I a poet—prose has its rhythms and cadences, but I don’t think it gains as
much when read aloud.
For my own
readings, I’ll usually choose a flash story or one with a lot of dialogue, as
these will usually have more orality and immediacy than longer or denser prose.
6 - Do you have any theoretical
concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer
with your work? What do you even think the current questions are?
Presuming
that I ever had any, I think I unlearned my theoretical concerns in the years
between obtaining an MA in Comparative Literature and making my first serious
attempt at writing fiction. The only question I tend to ask myself when I write
now is, “Am I pulling this off?”—do the characters feel real, is the story
believable, should anyone care, etc.
7 – What do you see the current role of
the writer being in larger culture? Does s/he even have one? What do you think
the role of the writer should be?
I think
that depends on the writer, not to mention the culture, but I think a writer’s
main responsibility is to do something other than replicate—perhaps to say
something “new”, or just as likely something we forgot long ago, but in any
case to help us listen for voices that aren’t being heard.
8 - Do you find the process of working
with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?
It’s
essential. An editor’s job, I read somewhere, is to do everything that’s
necessary and nothing that’s not. The editor wants your work to be as good as
it can be, and no matter how much editing is done, it’s your work that benefits
and your name still goes on the book cover. Leaving aside the possibility that
a publisher assigns an editor to a book that the editor truly doesn’t
understand—so, author, ask for a different editor—I think an author saying that
having an outside editor is in itself difficult says more about the author’s
ego than about editors.
9 - What is the best piece of advice
you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)?
“Keep
working until you find yourself working”—relayed to me by an actor, but I think
it translates to any vocation one seriously wants to adopt.
10 - What kind of writing routine
do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you)
begin?
My
favourite time to write is weekend mornings. Monday to Friday, I come home from
work having looked at a computer screen most of the day and usually don’t want
to spend the evening doing the same (so I look at Netflix or sports on a
screen, but anyway…). On a Saturday or Sunday, I can settle in for a few hours
(at home, or in a library or coffee shop) and bang out a good number of words.
I’m pretty happy if I get to 1,000.
11 - When your writing gets stalled,
where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?
I play
guitar, and rather badly, but as a hobbyist (as opposed to a musician) I think
I feel freer to try things, play around and fail at that than at writing. I
think that when my writing gets moving again, it’s at a moment where I’ve regained
this free feeling about my work and can say things to myself like, “Just get
through this scene, you can fix it later,” instead of putting pressure on
myself to write the scene perfectly the first time—the kind of pressure that,
of course, can only lead to walking away again.
12 - What fragrance reminds you of
home?
Manure,
unfortunately.
13 - David W. McFadden once said that
books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work,
whether nature, music, science or visual art?
I’ve taken
a lot from popular music, I think—rock, folk, and somewhat unconsciously,
country, too. Lately single lines from acts like The National and Father John
Misty have been following me around.
14 - What other writers or writings are
important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?
I’m
realizing more and more that I most enjoy reading my writer friends’ books. I
think that knowing the person doing the writing helps me pay attention to the
choices the author’s making in their work. I have a hard time picturing brand-name
authors working on a manuscript night after night (though I’m sure they do!),
but when I go to a launch I see the book as the product of my friends’
decisions to sacrifice long weekends, earn no money for a few weeks or months, get
up at five every morning, leave a spouse and/or child at home for a long time
or whatever it is they end up needing to do to finish a book. I also find this
energy contagious, and it tends to help me keep up my own work.
15 - What would you like to do that you
haven't yet done?
Visit
Japan.
16 - If you could pick any other
occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you
would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?
The English
and French departments at Western granted me my BA, but out of high school I
was actually accepted into Economics—I applied there because it sounded like a
more lucrative career path than literature (and it still does), but also
because I was fascinated with questions of how we organize our world,
consciously and unconsciously. I didn’t have the math skills, plus I finally saw
the light and allowed myself to study what I wanted to instead of what I
“should”, but in recent years I’ve noticed that initial interest coming back.
I’ve read a lot of popular money-and-power books lately—Dark Money, Flash Boys, The Hidden Wealth of Nations, Plutocrats, Saving Capitalism—and I’ve also come to almost enjoy working out my
taxes every spring. I’d need a team of number-crunchers, but I bet I’d enjoy
chasing down stupid-rich tax cheats or something like that.
17 - What made you write, as opposed to
doing something else?
I think I
was always a writer, but I tried to escape it in a few ways (acting and singing
in bands) before I ran out of road. I don’t like to think of destiny or higher
callings or other self-justifying “explanations”, but eventually I accepted
that this was the best way I knew to express myself. Also, I do plenty of
something else: I’ve had the same nine-to-five office job for 10 years now.
18 - What was the last great book you
read? What was the last great film?
Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad
deserves all the Pulitzers and other prizes it got—it’s timeless and searing
and inspiring and many more words that I genuinely mean even if they sound like
publicists’ clichés. Movie-wise, I thought Call Me by Your Name was beautiful and moving like Moonlight, Mommy and 120 Battements par minute were.
19 - What are you currently working on?
I’m nearing the
end of the novella manuscript I mentioned above, in which a man moves into an
old apartment building after a long-term relationship ends and a supernatural
woman begins assaulting him in his sleep. I don’t know that it’s properly a
horror novel, but I don’t know that it isn’t, either—I’ve restarted it three
times since 2014, so for now I’m mostly looking forward to actually finishing
this “first” draft and letting it sit before I come back to it and start
shaping it into its ultimate form.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
two new broadsides of mine, published by Ottawa's Coven Editions!
I had two small broadsides released this past weekend at the ottawa small press book fair, each in an edition of forty copies, produced by Ottawa's own Coven Editions! Thanks thanks! If you have a chance, you should look at their website or their etsy shop or their facebook group, and see what else they've been making lately, and give them your dollars!
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
Today is my father's seventy-seventh birthday,
and he is currently stable after a slate of recent surgeries, still sedated at the Ottawa Heart Institute. His double bypass (and valve replacement) scheduled for the Thursday before last turned into a triple bypass (and valve replacement), which developed into requiring a pacemaker, and short-term kidney dialysis to help clean him out. He's pretty much been sedated the whole time (missing out on Father's Day, and most likely today as well), mostly for the sake of his comfort.
Saturday was bad (real bad), but another surgery that afternoon improved him considerably, putting him back to where he was the day after his original surgery a week-plus ago, which also meant a tracheotomy yesterday afternoon, to assist with eventually removing the breathing tube (over the next day or three, hopefully). The sense is that he should be fine (we're going one day at a time, obviously), but that he's going to be in the hospital for another month, as opposed to the original three days the doctor suggested. Of course, its his diabetes and multiple sclerosis that have been throwing things off, preventing certain treatments from being available to him. He improves, slowly. And he rests.
Saturday was bad (real bad), but another surgery that afternoon improved him considerably, putting him back to where he was the day after his original surgery a week-plus ago, which also meant a tracheotomy yesterday afternoon, to assist with eventually removing the breathing tube (over the next day or three, hopefully). The sense is that he should be fine (we're going one day at a time, obviously), but that he's going to be in the hospital for another month, as opposed to the original three days the doctor suggested. Of course, its his diabetes and multiple sclerosis that have been throwing things off, preventing certain treatments from being available to him. He improves, slowly. And he rests.
Monday, June 25, 2018
Maxine Chernoff, Camera
Gaze
The earliest
pilgrims shared a cathedral for a heart
Jeanette
Winterson
To be the camera for your gaze,
I made myself a candle and a view,
a wish and furtive trees just to the right.
The window, dressed in black, was lifted
like a carpet toward the sky, and feathers
blinked and swarmed around a body meant
to signal flight. The house arrayed for
mourning was too full of ghosts and glass
to feel the ancient history of floorboards’
prelude and retreat. Harsh light filled
the closet with misgivings. Absent
of words, pages were relief from hasty,
moonlit vows. The world, once beaded
with desire, was pale milk-white.
Paper moths were thrown into the fray.
The
latest title from Maxine Chernoff is the poetry collection Camera (Boulder CO: Subito Press, 2017), a book that opens with the
preface/poem, “Preface,” that begins:
The work of this moment: a life is celebrated
and others are born and die as I write this sentence.
There
is a hush and a stillness in the short lyrics that make up Camera, one that holds both breath and the eye. Chernoff writes on
the act of watching, seeing and recording, exploring what is possible,
impossible and even imaginary, in poems that shift in and out of focus in very
precise ways. As her single-page “Preface” closes: “That is the work, giving
voice to itself, holding within itself the deep notions of the moment. The poem’s
attention is also its ignorance. The work is beyond unkind to everything it
omits. The work cannot fulfill its duties of repairing the broken world all
around it. The work struggles to contain itself. It does not bleed to death or
get crushed by an army. The poem sucks the nectar and returns to its hive.”
Cuchulain
You wind up in limbo with liars and thieves who
fear you, then sew your own shroud. The exit is a portal: you must grow wings. And
like crickets in season and crows at dawn, or the moss at your feet finding the
stream, you are small and of things, as if heaven or whatnot were the simple
yard of the house in spring. Must you believe? In sewing, in patience, as vines
cover the windows and you let them. Come in, you say, to the wind at the gate. You
scatter your weakness, splayed on white sheets, no homecomings, hearth, or
register. You mend what needs fixing, taking your cue from autumn’s trick of
divesting, here and hot here at once.
To
watch is to witness, and Chernoff’s poems explore and critique moments large
and small, writing clear and condensed lyrics that accumulate to become a book
on smallness and attention, as well as one on politics, social engagement and
human activity. A hush, and a kick. As she writes in the poem “The Possible”: “So
much to tend, oneself included,” shifting immediately to the recent destruction
of the ancient Syrian city of Aleppo:
Location as anchor and ivy-filled
absence: the spoken as dirt’s surest witness.
Awake to abstractions, seasons of smoke,
Aleppo’s horizons drop from the sky.
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