Are
you keeping safe where you are? Are you washing your hands?
A
few days ago, our young ladies decided to pick all the dandelions from our
front yard for some reason. They filled up my pockets.
Vancouver Island BC: Vancouver Island poet
and translator Hamish Ballantyne’s chapbook-length debut is the forty-four page
IMITATION CRAB (Toronto ON: knife|fork|book, 2020). Ballantyne is a poet
I’d only first heard of quite recently, via Slow Poetry in America [see my notes on his pamphlet through them here], with this new publication arriving
in a package from Toronto that included a small handful of other really lovely
titles alongside. IMITATION CRAB is a book of small but densely packed lyric
poems, each of which portray and examine the moment. Ballantyne’s meditations simultaneously
move at the speed of thought and require a slowness, focusing on each and every
essential word. The structure, lyric flow and density of his poems, as I’ve suggested elsewhere recently, are comparable to the work of his good pal and former
co-hort Michael Cavuto, but I might also suggest worthy comparisons to some of
what Cameron Anstee, Jack Davis and others have been working on over the past
few years. There is an enormous amount of activity in Ballantyne’s few lines. There
is exactly what he presents to you, also. And that is, gloriously, wonderfully,
enough.
AFTERNOON
he is gone
and something wavers
in oak’s few
hairs
it is a murder
it is not—all is
still still and
the snow
snow quiet
Vancouver BC: The second issue of Rob Manery’s SOME
has appeared, with new work by Alan Davies, Nicole Raziya Fong, Nora Collen Fulton, Mark Francis Johnson, Dorothy Trujillo Lusk, Robert Manery, Gustave Morin and Fred Wah. As Manery has mentioned before, the “SOME” is a play off
Wah’s own SUM, a poetry journal “published in Buffalo, NY and Albuquerque, NM from 1963-1965 that ran seven issues.” Given Manery’s previous
work as part of a duo, along with Louis Cabri, through the Ottawa-based hole
magazine and the chapbook press hole books throughout the first few years
of the 1990s, I find it interesting that he has re-emerged as the editor and
publisher of a small magazine. It would be interesting to hear some of Manery’s
thoughts at some point on what he might see as the difference between putting a
journal together then, and putting one together now. Perhaps I should get on
that.
I do not speak of why
(why (of why)) writing happens.
It is common to speak of
the pantheon of questions with reference to some that occur quite frequently –
who / what / where / when / why. The first four of these can be answered with
reference to our senses – but with the advent of the question why we are thrust
securely into the realm of the mind (of thinking).
And I for one find the
why question almost stultifying – it leaves me feeling stuck. The reason for
this is that when we do answer it we choose from among the many causes only one
or a few that seem most salient to us in the circumstances of the moment. But the
reality is that everything is the cause of everything else – and it is being
thrown again against the wonderment of that unrealizable realization that leaves
me speechless (and not unhappily so).
Alan Davies, “How Writing Happens”
A
large part of the appeal of hole magazine was in the realization that it
was one of the few Canadian venues publishing work by the writers in and around
The Kootenay School of Writing, some of whom didn’t publish much or at all in
Canadian journals, especially since the demise of KSW’s own WRITING magazine.
Whereas SOME continues along the lines and threads of some of that aesthetic—given
Manery’s own interest in such, obviously—the differences over those years mean
that other journals are open to publishing such work, and, possibly, this
current journal doesn’t require itself to hold to the same kind of boundaries. Perhaps
writing itself has evolved from that point thirty years ago, more open to the
larger field, and the larger field to it. Either way, there is some remarkable
work in this issue that I am very pleased to be able to interact with, and you
should pick up a copy of both of the first two issues. How often are new poems by
Dorothy Trujillo Lusk, for example, put out into the world? Not nearly enough. As
the ending of her two-page poem “Low Function” reads:
Keep Off the Landscape,
sketch a curtsy
within the inherent vice
I retreat into perplex;
circumx
Cruder stupider
Don’t just sit and stare
at anything coming down
Teeth of the wind but
lucid interval
Cat gets scared
Inching, continuing
towards the edge
of the nearest pond
—beaver template
not actually thinking
He
hasn’t constructed a web page for such, but in a recent email, he mentioned: “Correspondence
should be addressed to Some Magazine, c/o Robert Manery, 225 W 18th
Avenue, Vancouver, BC V5Y 2A8. Email can be sent to rob.manery@telus.net. Subscriptions
are $24 for two issues. Single issues are $12. Please make cheques payable to
Robert Manery.”
No comments:
Post a Comment