Sunday, May 31, 2009

Searching "Brian Campbell Passenger Flight" on Google, I round this odd little tidbit:

... She waded through chest high water, unaware she sustained a gash to her leg, and herded folks forward to get out on the wing.
Brian Campbell, a passenger in the rear of the plane, said, "Turn around, you’ve got to get out on the wing."
Upfront were Dent and Dail who got folks out on the wing and into rafts.


Seems, unbeknownst to me, that I was on US Air Flight 1549 that crashed into the Hudson.

Apparently my book is available not only at Chapters Indigo and Amazon, but at sites I never heard of: Books XWZ, Keenzo, Hard Cover Deals, AllBookStores.com. Of course, no reviews as yet, but that's hardly to be expected.

back...

My computer crashed again, this time fatally -- so I got another one, a 2-year-old HP Workstation XW 6200 with a new 250-gig hard drive & CD burner for about $400, taxes included (according to the link above, this thing once retailed for $5,500... hard to believe the depreciation). My repairman gave me a rebate on much of the cost of the previous repair (about $300), which really didn't work out. This one is a solid, highly rated beast that nevertheless runs very quietly, more quietly than my laptop -- and he tells me it should keep me happy (can any machine keep you happy?) for years to come... I'll keep my fingers crossed. I've been saying PC stands for Piece of Crap; if this one doesn't work out any better I'm definitely moving to Mac.

I've been busy customizing the system, reconfiguring e-mail, etc. (Second time this week.) I lost Dreamweaver, so it may be a while before I am able to update my website.

There's a poem in this drudgery, I'm sure. May Sisyphus be my muse.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

in flight...

Sasquatch Literary & Arts Performance Series

Featuring yours truly reading from Passenger Flight
(& playing some songs as well)

&Jocelyne Dubois reading from her chapbook, Hot Summer Night

Royal Oak II (map), downstairs, 161 Laurier East,
between Cumberland and King Edward, Sandy Hill

Ottawa, Sunday, May 24 @ 2 pm

Friday, May 22, 2009

Some poetry reading secrets


I find it really frees me to prepare the reading beforehand: to time with a stopwatch (easily found online) all the poems I intend to read (good reading practice anyway), and then plan the performance down to, say, the half-minute. (I also plan for alternative poems I might feel like reading.)

On stage, with no distractions related to time, I know exactly where I am in the performance, and can focus entirely on delivery, etc. Believe me, uncertainty about time -- how much you have left, whether you're in danger of running over -- can affect your focus more than you even realize.

One large bookmark with the poems, times, page numbers and talking points is better than all those silly little bookmarks or post-its poets often use.

Some moderators, owing to personality or circumstance, can be time Nazis -- again, best not to go through the humiliation of being told you have time left for just one short poem, etc.

Don't read too fast. Don't use what Mayhew calls "poetry voice".

Better to recite poems than to read them, actually -- that's the way it was done by the Ancient Greeks and other oral cultures, as well as, of course, by the best performance poets today -- but with so few gigs, it seems a questionable investment of time (time again: seems an obsession in this post!). Reciting one or two poems can be pretty dramatic.

Back

I've got my computer back -- suddenly it wouldn't start because of an "error or missing file" in the registry -- but a power outage while the repairman was reinstalling Windows caused an even worse crash, resulting in major complications. I've lost a lot of files including my most recent backups (it seems my backup disk was damaged beyond repair), and the rest, recovered, are so scrambled that... well, it's as if someone took all my file cabinets of 20 years, dumped them on the floor and shuffled all the papers. Also largely gone or scrambled: my email address book, my bookmarks, most programs.This will guarantee lots of hair-pulling over the next months.

The Toronto reading went well. Joe Rosenblatt, his delivery slowed by a recent minor stroke or heart medication (I never got that clear), delivered a curmudgeonly performance of witty, self-deprecating animal poems. Ed Nixon was decent in content and better in delivery. My reading was -- blow own horn for few seconds -- as good as ever, and I sold ten copies to family, friends, and a couple of strangers, now new acquaintances.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

The tour continues...

I'LL BE READING FROM PASSENGER FLIGHT AT

The Art Bar Poetry Series

Clinton's, 693 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Tuesday, May 19 @ 8 pm

Also featured: Joe Rosenblatt, Edward Nixon

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Considerations of cliche: Paul Laurence Dunbar ("the mask")

We Wear the Mask

We wear the mask that grins and lies,
It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,--
This debt we pay to human guile;
With torn and bleeding hearts we smile,
And mouth with myriad subtleties.

Why should the world be overwise,
In counting all our tears and sighs?
Nay, let them only see us, while
We wear the mask.

We smile, but, O great Christ, our cries
To thee from tortured souls arise.
We sing, but oh the clay is vile
Beneath our feet, and long the mile;
But let the world dream otherwise,
We wear the mask!

Paul Laurence Dunbar

Here's a poem that grabbed me from PoemHunter.com, which sends me (mostly) stilted classics every day. I don't know how I got on their mailing list. The blend of rhyme (a kind of mask in itself), theme and diction is perfect until, for me at least, the sympathetic contract is strained by the trite "tortured souls" and "vile clay" in the final stanza ... . But it could be argued that that too -- and the belief system behind it -- is Dunbar's mask, and the rhetoric of the poem does demand that kind of emotional crecendo at the end. If the poem seems dated, well, Dunbar did live between 1872 and 1904. One of the first African American poets to achieve prominence in white-dominated American and European literary circles, his bio is fascinating. More Dunbar poems can be found here.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Considerations of Cliche: Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Poetry as Insurgent Art [I am signaling you through the flames] by Lawrence Ferlinghetti


I am signaling you through the flames.

The North Pole is not where it used to be.

Manifest Destiny is no longer manifest.

Civilization self-destructs.

Nemesis is knocking at the door.

What are poets for, in such an age?
What is the use of poetry?

The state of the world calls out for poetry to save it.

If you would be a poet, create works capable of answering the challenge of apocalyptic times, even if this meaning sounds apocalyptic.

You are Whitman, you are Poe, you are Mark Twain, you are Emily Dickinson and Edna St. Vincent Millay, you are Neruda and Mayakovsky and Pasolini, you are an American or a non-American, you can conquer the conquerors with words....

Got this from poetry.org, which continues to send me daily poems ... for them, I guess, Poetry Month is about 40 days long. I remember enjoying Ferlinghetti's early stuff, but this is, mildly speaking, not him at his best. The best line -- the only line worth retaining, to my view -- is the first one. The rest is -- if I may press on -- a bunch of tired cliches, name-dropping and irrelevancy. "The North Pole is not where it used to be" -- how does that contribute? "Manifest Destiny is no longer no longer manifest" -- I'm inclined to shout "Horray!"-- creepy, imperialist doctrine to begin with. "Civilization self-destructs." Absolute Deadsville. Was it George Bernard Shaw who said civilization was a good idea, we should try it some time? "Nemesis is knocking at the door." This is a little better. I might keep this one, if I were him. But I want to say, come on, more flames -- is there any fire here? Only stale rhetorical questions, tiresome qualifying phrases, the hollow pronouncement at the end... well, this poem fails to conquer me, let alone the conquerors. Although I do appreciate the sentiment. Somewhat.

The interesting thing about this poem is that it shows Ferlinghetti is still writing -- lame drafts, at least -- and that because he has (and deservedly so, I might add) a much-beloved name, poetry.org thought it was worthy to send to all and sundry.

The use of cliche interests me. There are a bunch of so-called "plain-language" poets -- I can think of not a few that appear quite frequently on our local scene, and I'm sure they are to be found on every scene, stalwarts who seem to have have little trouble breaking into print, or even printing book after book -- who appear to actually relish the "howling winds" and "driving rains" in their poems. As long as their heart and politics are in the so-called "right place", this kind of stuff is considered fit to publish. To a reader like me, it's plainly speaking, unacceptable. (Normally, if it hadn't been Ferlinghetti, I wouldn't have read past "Civilization self-destructs.") But at times, cliches actually work -- their common touch actually touches. This does interest me.

It seems to me that a poem has to have a certain "zinger quotient" of linguistic freshness to sustain a dead or half-alive metaphor -- even though most of the time dead metaphor or tired phrase will automatically second- or third-rate a poem. It could be an unusual concept or slant, a formal mastery or otherwise saving grace. When examples come up, I'll explore this. Indeed, I've already found one. But tomorrow.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Passenger Flight tour

Tonight I'll be interviewed and read some poems from Passenger Flight on Howl, CIUT 89.5 FM. (That's University of Toronto campus radio.) The show runs from 10:00; Nik Beat, the host, tells me I'll be on at 10:30 for 20 minutes.

Other dates this month:

The Art Bar Poetry Series, at Clinton's, 693 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Tuesday, May 19 @ 8 pm Also featured: Joe Rosenblatt, Edward Nixon

Sasquatch Literary & Arts Performance Series, Royal Oak II (map), downstairs, 161 Laurier East, Ottawa, Sunday, May 24 @ 2 pm Also featured: Jocelyne Dubois

Book signing at the Canadian Library Association conference and trade show, Palais des congrès, Montreal, Sat. May 30 @ 1 pm

Monday, May 04, 2009

Frederick Seidel

Today's poetry.org daily poem is an engaging oddball choice. I had never heard of this guy, but would like to read more of his work. Click on the his name to read about the extreme controversy his first book stirred up.

Ode to Spring
by Frederick Seidel


I can only find words for.
And sometimes I can't.
Here are these flowers that stand for.
I stand here on the sidewalk.

I can't stand it, but yes of course I understand it.
Everything has to have meaning.
Things have to stand for something.
I can't take the time. Even skin-deep is too deep.

I say to the flower stand man:
Beautiful flowers at your flower stand, man.
I'll take a dozen of the lilies.
I'm standing as it were on my knees

Before a little man up on a raised
Runway altar where his flowers are arrayed
Along the outside of the shop.
I take my flames and pay inside.

I go off and have sexual intercourse.
The woman is the woman I love.
The room displays thirteen lilies.
I stand on the surface.

Saturday, May 02, 2009


LEAGUE OF CANADIAN POETS
(W)RITES OF SPRING
POETRY READING/FUNDRAISER


Arts Café
201 Fairmount Ave

Sunday, May 3
7 – 10 pm

$5 suggested donation
Featured Readers:
Kaie Kellough,
Maxianne Berger, Angela Carr, Charlotte Hussey, Michaela Sefler,
Stephen Morrissey, Carolyn Zonailo
Johanna Skibsrud, Lesley Pasquin,
Brian Campbell, Sonja Greckol
Books/feedback raffle

General public open mike


May your poetree burgeon into bloom!