Pearl Pirie’s lists, reviews, interviews, etc. since 2005

Weston Book

frontenac books westonPoetry Book Links: Joanna Weston’s poetry book, A Summer Father released in November. I’m a fan of how she turns words, pithy and eloquent, understated and revealing. Her elegiac book of remembrances called a A Summer Father is from Alberta’s Frontenac House, the same press as published Sheri-D‘s re:Zoom, a playful exploration of language. Both are about $15 Cnd. My book buying list keeps getting longer and longer.

Her poems centre around memories of her father and his poems of time as a soldier. The poem Violent Poetry begins with an epigraph from her father’s poems then continues in her own spare measured strides with a powerful control,

…the smooth bright shapely shell
And the great gun lifted gleaming in the air,
Perfect with all the skill of men’s contriving.

war was the longest poem
I ever lived:
words blew apart
in my mind
the letters settling
in torn ditches

K.I. Press

K.I. Press’ 2nd poetry book Spine has re-envisioning of new testament stories .

Her phrasings are tight without being hollowly terse. There’s has a playfulness, energy and momentum that made me stop and read as I flipped though half a dozen titles in the bookstore, being less impressed with each one until spine.

That’s my third whistle stop at that writer. I remember taking note as her being of interest from what Amanda said about her Types of Canadian Women book and at that point the name bouncing off a pleasant vague memory of having liked something else Press had written.

Does that mean that 10 contacts had passed before then to trough out a neural impression? How many more before the landscape is washed out by being completely taken with her style? This one I loved thinking, a past self would have loved this book to bits. It still sets off the religious fascination but not as it would have once had. The writing is compelling. In one poem describes not books as being like people, but each person being a book, a reversal I found interesting. For me, interesting can be high praise.

Author's Den

I discovered from doing a vanity search that New Jersey spoken word artist Nordette Adams at Author’s Den advised people read “my article” (aka several year old ramble). It was up for discussion 6 months ago.

I’m hesitant to even link to “my article”. Even though I put it on a public forum in 2000, and knew some people were still googling into it, I thought it was clearly play, not to be taken seriously as “real writing”. I mean, after all, it starts and ends with comic strips. It was more intended to get my head into the layman, non-writer’s and that view of non-rhyming poetry as deficient. It wasn’t meant for poets to discuss. It’s called “informative and provocative”(?) People seemed to find it useful thought fodder in general. I find that baffling but it’s good someone found it interesting, (or inflammatorily “pseudo-intellectual” as the case may be).

I’m not sure how to classify the Author’s Den. It’s not a BBS. It’s not a static site although there are home pages for writers. It’s called a community for writers. There’s over a million articles so it’s a rather large site.

Articles are categorized by genre. Looking around it looks like a web-based blogspace with Live Journal-like members-only comments. There are message boards. There’s the possibility, like myspace, to post music. People can link to their books, (some I saw are Lulu self-published books) with a bookstore on site for promoting site writers. It has over 2000 titles. There’s an area where you can put reviews of each other as well.

Browsing around different categories, it seems rather like a supportive workshop group with comments heavy on the effusive “LOVE it!!!!”, “very true” and “marvelous!”, (more so for the poetry than the articles). [see comments for clarification on this]

I’ve never seen such a concentration of rhymed poetry online before. For example, Looking for Romance is an Edward Lear-like verse by British English teacher Paul Williams.

It’s a whole other world over there.

btw, How bizarre is this? My poetry writing statistics were deemed interesting enough to be listed in the UK under writer resources of someone called Tim Love who has an extensive set of quotes about poetry.

legacy

From that haiku of literacy

The past is dead and since we must speak well of the dead, we are mute? My family isn’t big in legacy that anyone has told me about. We have no traditional trade, crafts, stories. No narrative collective history. No particular land. We used to have gatherings for music but those dispersed and the notes have been lost. The next generations were never taught how to join in. It was deadheaded and the seeds never collected or spread.

Any legacy I leave may be exclusively potential, not genes. But then who would want the genes of flat feet, irregular teeth, wide haunches on men and women, short stature, blindingly white skin, skin cancer on every twig of the tree, hand tremours, some odd preoccupying fear of water common to both sides of the family, or the social habit inheritance of family being people you love but that doesn’t presuppose you have to like each other? Eugenics is looking good but there are 100s of us. Luckily most have the sense to have good taste in spouses to disperse and weaken the genes by diversity.

That seems harsh and one-sided. I suppose it is.

Better to have a legacy of potential, makers of concepts picked out from the wider world, generations going from farmer to gardener to separator of figurative wheat from chaff? I hope at least literacy will continue, although on one side of my family, I am only the third generation to not sign my name with an X.