Saturday, April 4

Reading these Outstanding Books received recently:

Alex Gildzen's It's All A Movie:
This is a classic "one of a kind" book, like Michael Murphy's Golf in the Kingdom, or Henry Miller's The Colossus of Maroussi, or Edwin LeFevre's thinly-disguised biography of Jesse Livermore’s trading life Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, or any given volume from Anais Nin's incomparable Diaries.

Alex Gildzen's is a craftman's fine, precise, and exact ear. You can hear his natural, careful counting of syllables, or just his supremely balanced superb feel for it, a cadence, a quiet mathematic, a very fine metric that always and at all points declines to broadcast desperate muzaks as it simply, consistently filters out all that would merely function as noise. There is no noise here. Do note the gentle, silky registers of his elegant list poem "In the beginning," which prefaces the rest of the collection:
In The Beginning

Richard Barthelmess wearing a barrel
Rod LaRocque a towel
William Haines with his trousers down

in Doctor Reefy's parlour on Third St
I leafd the pages of Blum
till his pictures of lost motion
spun a world I wantd

somewhere between Valentino smolder
& Gloria Swanson allure
I learnd an alphabet

memorizing those still images
from Fatty Arbuckle in drag
to May Allison sipping a soda
I began a quest to bring them to action

& so I found Lillian Gish slipping on ice
Lois Wilson breaking dishes
Mae Murray waltzing into eternity
"Wearing" and "barrel," "towel" and "trousers" and "down," "Blum" and "spun," "Lillian" and "Gish" and "slipping" -- nowhere does "sound" overpower or clash; nowhere is rhyme and alliteration forced or artificial; and nowhere does the intelligence of the sensibility and import not also gain precise accentuation from the poet's fine, subtlety-attuned instinct for what exact meaning he hears with both his mind and his ear. If you don't get the perfectly mellifluous pitch in those last two lines of that last stanza, "Lois Wilson breaking dishes / Mae Murray waltzing into eternity," especially indeed the way those y's from "Murray" and "eternity" slide off the tongue of your mind's EAR, well, then, you're probably tone deaf. They're just positively exquisite!

It's All A Movie combines select, unique poetry with vintage autobiography, personal cinema-history photography, and a vitally dedicated archivist's personal and professional, private and public indispensable expertise -- all in one timelessly vital inventory of irreplaceable movie memorabilia and cinema lore.

There's no way to quite categorize this kind of book. You might find it in the Poetry section, you might find it in the Cinema section, you might find it in the Autobiography/Biography section; it would do any such sections of Barnes and Nobel or Borders infinite justice. And then, of course, if they had a special section for unique and "one of a kind" type books that you simply cannot locate if you're looking for generic, dime-a-dozen reading, that'd be the section where it should be located.

It's available through Australian Mark Young's smart, grand Otolith's press. At $12.50, It's All A Movie is a complete steal.




Tom Beckett's ThisPoem/WhatSpeaks?/ADay:
ThisPoem/What Speaks?/ADay, as the title suggests, consists of three fine and substantial "medium length" poems, the kind that good poets (usually) work through for days, weeks, even months, at a time. That is, these kinds of poems, these medium length poems are NOT simply "everyday" (nor "every day") or "occasional" poems. They're the kinds of poems one actually prefers to call "poetry" or "poming" instead of "poems." This is NOT to say that there's anything wrong with so-called "occasional poems," or any poems that arise and evolve quickly, in a burst of enthusiasm and inspiration, and get onto the page and largely finished in minutes or otherwise very brief, immediate actualizations/realizations of urgent inspiration. It's just to say that these particular Beckett poems here have at least the feel of "more sustained and extended concentration/commitment of Focus." And I believe that that is the way he, Tom Beckett, works, frequently, which is absolutely fabulous. The art of poetry is so abundantly democratized and, alas, so happily decentralized that infinite new brands of the stuff every day pop up on our beautiful blogs and other social networks as if the entire manufacture of "poetry" is now (over?) determined by the various and sundry technologies of the American Daily Narcissism Industry. It is thus always enormously consoling to see that at least one old-school practitioner of sustained concentration can maintain his standard and a focus on subject matter(s) or form for more than twenty-minutes of Starbucks caffeine rush. (Again, I have n=o=t=h=i=n=g against the penning, or even the speed-typing, of really, really fast, lightning-quick-thinking poming that produces said-and-done pieces of the one-two page varieties in seconds, and I write a lot of that kind of stuff, myself, sometimes very satisfyingly. I'm just saying that Beckett's poming here presents us ADHD and non-ADHD readers and consumers alike with old-fashioned sustained focus poetry that we know and trust required Unconscious processing (that is, full sleep and rest cycles) and time encompassing days and nights plural.

That said, initially, I am turned off by any "poetry," "poming," or writing that would title itself with the word poem or the word poetry. Or that would use the word poem. Or that would take as its subject matter such a thing -- "poetry." But this is Tom Beckett, and he's quite different, so I take both the pen and the whole electric typewriter out from up my arse and relax a little bit. I know that as soon as I get past my usual impatience with so many run-of-the-mill "poetries" that never neglect to remind us that they're poetries by using poet and poem and poetry as key terms, I'll enter the Beckett poem with my wits about me and the proper patience I'll need to take in what for most readers is stuff just way too difficult for everyday narcissistic reading engagements... Beckett's poetry will yield substance, always, regardless words like poem and poetry might obtrude upon my sometimes ridiculously tight-assed sensibility and the chip I always place on my shoulders to tempt friend pomers to flick off, fuck off, beat off, chew off...

After all, "This poem / Proffers / its ass " (right straight from the get-go, in fact) and that "penetrates me" immediately, too. And yeah, it's "blue," both sad and faux-porno, among other things. And "colored / Outside / Its lines," which is (also) to say alienated like blacks in the U.S. were so agonizingly alienated; as well as "outside" of what's in and in fashion and immediately accessible and acceptable; as well as, like a deliberately misbehaving OR like an innocently under- or pre-coordinated school child, UNABLE TO STAY WITHIN THE PRESCRIBED "margins"; as well as readable between the lines, not just at their surfaces or at their solid, obvious periods. And it's "parenthetical," as so much exceptionally good poetry is; that is, there's so much depth and breadth to what the lines/words offer, one needs yards and yards of parentheses to contain and to extrapolate what meaning has become facilitated; plus, well of course there's a little of the pomer's "parents" in the poem, no doubt, and no doubt, a little of mine and yours and what was (unfortunately, surely) absent in our parenting, as well -- let's face it, this poet hits notes universal, notes relevant to all of us.

So maybe "This poem / Is fucked" and maybe "This poem / Sucks," but "This poem / Requires a / Degree / Of leniency." No, NOT "a degree" from the University, though most of us even minimally "ready" to read something this sophisticated DO have college degrees, maybe not Ph'Ds that would in some cases preclude us from writing something as courageous and pure as "This poem / Is fucked," but, Yes, college degrees, nonetheless. It's just that our college degrees don't work against us (the way too many college degrees work against too many straight members of college "educated" classes of our society and impair their psyches' abilities to appreciate the kind of intelligence that can produce this kind of substance): "This poem / Sleeps with / Its dreams. // This poem / Sleeps with / The fishes" and "This poem / Stares into / A mirror." And guess what ALWAYS? "This poem / Is taking / A chance." And thus, "This poem / Multiplies," and at the same time that it "Subdivides," and in fact it DOES do this, also; it "Posits / A rhetorical / Stance." Hmmm, now that's not an everyday occurence, is it, positing a rhetorical stance? You know what, "This poem" has got guts, and legs, and balls, as well as eyes and ears and brain.


"What Speaks?" has got legs, too. How could it not, with lines like "Letters splatter in a puddle" (Jackson Pollock School of Avant Po gone wrong?) and "Graphite nights," which are, for this reader, poems in themselves. (Oh, graphite, you know, Next Generationeers, is the lead in old-fashioned pencils, what previous generations still use to pen their poems because in many cases the mind moves more slowly and in tune with the body and the heart and the breath, or so the theory would go, and Yes, that doesn't mean that using a typewriter in order to keep up with a brain that wants, or may want, to move even faster than the heart and hand and pen can move cannot be equally effective in other writing situations...)

Actually, the complete line is "Graphite nights / Going down / On erasers," but I didn't like the "going down / On" part, but that's just stupid me trying to alienate some of the same "sex" that Beckett, I believe, wants to UN-alienate, address and undress the Puritan and the Puritanical in all of us -- Goddesses Bless Him! And heaven knows that (one of) the other meanings there is that the poet is (perhaps furiously) wearing down the pen from the lead/graphite end until it gets to the eraser end, too. And there is nothing sensationalistically (hyper) "sexed up" about that kind of image; rather, the poet is truly working honestly hard and seriously (and should be taken seriously).

Oh, I know that I've been on a Post-structuralist RAID (redundant array of insipid dissing) or rampage, of late... And maybe that obsession would explain my finding this line troublesome at first: "You-bris. Check Derrida on circumfession/circumfictions." Don't get me wrong! I love the puns: Hubris. Cum. Confessions. Cum-fiction. Circumcision. Circumspection. But who can ARGUE against intelligence that reads Nietzche so brilliantly and so sensibly: "knowledge = paralysis. Action = epilepsy = involuntary." // (S)he can't remember the convulsions."

And that's BEFORE he, Beckett, writes this immaculate, daunting SELF-awareness: "Parent-thesis: maybe I should interview -- no, interrogate my own / fucking selves (deliv, deliber-atively -- damn it = misspelled, but not salvaged) at the edge of the plural, almost raveling." EXACTLY! Like R. Silliman -- the poet wants to allow the misspellings because they are, for lack of more modernized and less loaded terminology, "Freudian slips" which the very best process pomers/poets recognize as alerts to meaning worth salvaging or meaning that leads to other meaning that the Unconscious is trying to salvage. Or at least that's my interpretation of "not salvaged," and indeed in this case, evidently, Beckett's "deliv-, delibera-tively == damn it - misspelled, but not salvaged)" was NOT able to grab the whole enchilada of what he sensed was there out from his deliciously accessible because long trusted and coordinated Unconscious...


This third "medium-length" poem, "A Day," is not, I think, my favorite of the three. ("What speaks?" is certainly my favorite.) "A Day" is not even, I think, my second favorite of the three. Why not? Is it thus, perhaps, the one that I should pay most attention to, the one I should take more time with?

Surely "A Day" is the most unequivocably autobiographical of the three poems in ThisPoem/WhatSpeaks?/ADay. Oh, the others can be intimately tied to Tom Beckett, and there are no bones about that -- if anybody, or at least any male, in America is intimate, it's Tom Beckett -- but with the other two poems, it can be argued that "a speaker" narrates, or filters, the material. In "A Day," the speaker, per se, is Tom Beckett, and he's "all in," as the Poker expression/term for risking one's entire wad, goes. He's ALL IN "A Day"; the poem couldn't really work any other way. It's part narrative, part story of a man's life from waking in the morning to retiring for the night, part chronicle of the most unromanticized and least glamorous iota of the pomer's existence; it is thus the most intimate, most genuine, most authentic, and least "marketable," least "commercial," least narcissistic, least extravagant, and most thoroughly unavoidable, routinely responsible, "disciplined" aspects of his existence and life. Vintage INTIMACY, vintage vulnerability, vintage risk-taking where other poets so industriously impress upon us how like Frank O'Hara's their flip, carefree, exhuberantly unmessy and unassailable lives are:
Right hand
shaving, left
hand caressing
oneself
a bit --
idly, really,
almost
to see
if one
still feels
at all
for oneself
*
Irritation of
having to dress,
literally to
pull clothes
from the closet
& drawers,
slap public
self together,
inhabit colors,
& textures
that drag
& move
damn it
out
into cold
cruel whirl [world]
of wage
earning ethos,
or of
weekend errandcies.
Depressing? Yeah, a little bit. At least I think so, but then how different is my own life some days, many days, if looked at through the same clear lens and no rose-colored glasses. Oh, I see some other windows and I don't want to plaint them black or any other colors, but I'm not going to deny that - I CANNOT deny that -- they are pretty damn grey, and occasionally gray, and frequently, like Tom Beckett's, at best pale. But then, I live in western New York, not far from T.B.'s own "rust belt" Kent, Ohio, not NYC or LA or Hollywood, or wherever LIFE is apparently any arbitrary, post-structuralist color or shade in the seemingly innumerable rainbows we choose from.







Alex Gildzen's Beth


K. Silem Mohammad's Breathalyzer


Meg Wither's A Communion of Saints


Susan M. Schultz's Dementia Blog


Eric Selland's The Condition of Music


Eric Selland's Inventions


Hoa Nguyen's Red Juice


Clayton A. Couch's Artificial Lure:


Dale Smith's Black Stone:


the journal Area Sneaks, edited by Joseph Mosconi & Rita Gonzales:


the journal Abraham Lincoln, #4, edited by K. Silem Mohammad and Anne Boyer:

Skip Fox's Delta Blues:

Skip Fox's For To:

Judith Roitman's No Face:

John Roche's Topicalities:

Bill Lavender's While Sleeping:

Bill Lavender's I of the Storm:

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