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  • December 10, 2004

    a crick in my neck

    Just returned from my pilgrimage to The Bookshop in Chapel Hill. Turned in Paul Hoover’s _Postmodern American Poetry_, some Derrida and Frederic Jameson. Used my in store credit and spent $29 from turning in college textbooks and got: 1) paradise…

    Read more: a crick in my neck
  • December 9, 2004

    Read more: untitled post 3538
  • December 9, 2004

    countdown

    One week from today gonna take an airplane . . . I’m a going (to my second) home. From Greensboro to Boston to Dublin for a few days. Tour the Guinness factory. Walk around St. Stephen’s Green and think of…

    Read more: countdown
  • December 8, 2004

    New Futures

    Ruth Dickey, a friend and fellow poet, moved to Seattle recently to help run this program called New Futures. Good things happening. Check it out : New Futures

    Read more: New Futures
  • December 6, 2004

    first 3 pages of my Campanology long poem

    &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& the bell is known in all cultures – but not known when invented mission bells sing from strange halls during the recession of 1890 mission halls overflowed with harmonic convergence bargain bells buy now easy cheap & quick bells…

    Read more: first 3 pages of my Campanology long poem
  • December 6, 2004

    Patrick is discussing some great issues of power/poetry and more specifically next years festival over at his newly created Carrboro blog spot. Check it out. Join the discussion: <a href="http://carrboropoetry.blogspot.com/&quot; >Carrboro Poetry

    Read more: untitled post 3542
  • December 5, 2004

    juggling routine

    I used to feel compelled to start and finish one book before starting another. Now I feel compelled to juggle many books (and ideas and languages) at once. Still, there is the residual guilt. Finish what you start. Finish every…

    Read more: juggling routine
  • December 4, 2004

    Listen

    Head over to Aaron McCollough’s blog and listen to his songs. I love Via Positivia and Fire’s on the Phone. I also like Big Star Cover. Song for Puckheads is my favourite so far. Two great voices. ALL THE SONGS…

    Read more: Listen
  • December 2, 2004

    Backwards City Review

    There’s a hot spanking new mag out of Greensboro called Backwards City Review. Comics, poetry, fiction, non-fiction. The first issue should be available soon. I’ve had a sneak peak (in pdf form). It’s very very good! Check out the table…

    Read more: Backwards City Review
  • December 1, 2004

    professional poets in demand in Britain

    poets in demand

    Read more: professional poets in demand in Britain
  • November 28, 2004

    Maurice Scully and Liverpool FC

    Just ordered maurice Scully’s Livelihood from Wild Honey and Rosmarie Waldrop’s Blindsight from New Directions. I am really excited to read some more Maurice Scully. check out some of his poems: here and here I am excited to be in…

    Read more: Maurice Scully and Liverpool FC
  • November 28, 2004

    Grand Master Flash & The Furious Five – The Message

    Broken glass everywhere People pissing on the stairs, you know they just don’t care I can’t take the smell, I can’t take the noise Got no money to move out, I guess I got no choice Rats in the front…

    Read more: Grand Master Flash & The Furious Five – The Message
  • November 25, 2004

    Tubulence by Pierre Joris

    Just finished Turbulence by Pierre Joris and I am charged. Fully charged. I search and search for the right book at the right time and this is it. The movement (architectonics) of the book is dead-on. First, clouds and the…

    Read more: Tubulence by Pierre Joris
  • November 25, 2004

    Figures One

    FIGURES 1 A figure of feeling is not a single tree a set of lines an occasion of words. A figure of feeling is a system of roots, a bloodline, re-invented events. And we know now the clay as first…

    Read more: Figures One
  • November 24, 2004

    building

    The interconnections of blogs. I was just surfing a little and found Josh and Jordan are both talking about audience (as well as Silliman). Josh and Jordan are both very articulate. Their responses full of passion. I especially found Josh’s…

    Read more: building
  • November 22, 2004

    on audience

    Silliman’s post about audience today was very interesting. I’ve noticed the same thing. A lot more people laughed when I read to a mix of poets and non-poets at a coffee shop than when I’ve read to a room full…

    Read more: on audience
  • November 22, 2004

    on another note

    do you know the difference between a camel and a child? A lion and a camel? CLICK HERE FOR ANSWER

    Read more: on another note
  • November 22, 2004

    art as an end in itself?

    I’ve been trying to figure out how one could make a contemporary argument for art as an end in itself (not a cultural production). As in Kant’s notion of personhood. Perhaps the doing of art as an end in itself?

    Read more: art as an end in itself?
  • November 22, 2004

    Incest and Audience

    Finally got around to reading Carl Martin’s _Genii Over Saltzburg_. Terrific book. I was really taken back by the elegant surrealism. I felt like I was reading some strange combination of Charles Simic and John Ashberry. I also had to…

    Read more: Incest and Audience
  • November 21, 2004

    Falluja in pictures

    If you haven’t already seen this, take a look. Horrific. Falluja

    Read more: Falluja in pictures
  • November 17, 2004

    christian science monitor review of swensen

    GOEST, by Cole Swensen, Alice James Books, 63 pp., $13.95 “Cole Swensen leads readers through history as she explores the subject of light, both natural and man-made. The poems in “Goest” travel back and forth through time – from the…

    Read more: christian science monitor review of swensen
  • November 16, 2004

    chris cheek and Leonard Schwartz

    Been reading coductors of Chaos for a while (an anthology of outsider/experimental poetry from the U.K.). I am really digging Chris Cheek. His poem “Stranger” got the engine roaring tonight. It’s not reproducable in parts. it’s the total effect of…

    Read more: chris cheek and Leonard Schwartz
  • November 13, 2004

    cat stress

    For the last couple of weeks our cat iris is been in and out of the vet/hospital. Earlier this week she underwent exploratory surgery and they diagnosed her with a severe case of Irritable Bowel Disease. The vet wants to…

    Read more: cat stress
  • November 11, 2004

    Joseph Donahue poem at Verse

    check out the new poem from Joe Donahue over at the verse blog <a href="http://versemag.blogspot.com/2004/08/new-joseph-donahue-poem.html&quot; >Joseph Donahue Poem

    Read more: Joseph Donahue poem at Verse
  • November 11, 2004

    solaris reading

    Good time reading at Solaris last night. Angie Decola took the photos below. A guy videotaped the reading and is sending the readers a free DVD of the night (he is a local fella that lives off taping and selling…

    Read more: solaris reading
  • November 11, 2004

    more friendly audience members Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3562
  • November 11, 2004

    Tom Christopher Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3563
  • November 11, 2004

    Rhett (the third poet of the night) and Marcus not sure what we are looking at Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3565
  • November 11, 2004

    Ezra and Fay (lovers galore) Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3564
  • November 11, 2004

    marcus reading a few poems Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3567
  • November 11, 2004

    Jake and Angie (the photographer) Jake's lucky hat is also in display in this photo Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3566
  • November 11, 2004

    Marcus Slease Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3569
  • November 11, 2004

    marcus and ezra relaxing before reading Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3568
  • November 11, 2004

    ezra explaining the etymology of world(s) Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3571
  • November 11, 2004

    some of the crew an audience of friendly friends Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3570
  • November 11, 2004

    ezra reading Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3572
  • November 11, 2004

    someone's cool red shoe Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3573
  • November 11, 2004

    unconcede?

    From: Judith Barrington Date: 2004/11/10 Wed PM 08:35:38 CST To: WOM-PO@LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU Subject: POL: THIS SEEMS VERY IMPORTANT: Will Kerry Un-conceed? Please forward to all who have specifics on vote fraud. The send-to address below is John Kerry’s brother at his…

    Read more: unconcede?
  • November 8, 2004

    Beverly Dahlen and Leslie Scalapino

    I stumbled on a book of Beverly Dahlen’s _A Reading 1-7_. So far, I am really enjoying it. I just finished reading Leslie Scalapino’s: 1) Way 2) How Phenomena Appear to Unfold 3) New Time. I’ve also listened to the…

    Read more: Beverly Dahlen and Leslie Scalapino
  • November 6, 2004

    reading this wednesday 9PM at Solaris in Greensboro

    If anyone is free and lives near Greensboro, I am reading with two excellent poets (Don Ezra Cruz and Rhett) at Solaris (a restaurant/night club in downtown Greensboro) at 9PM Wed Nov. 10th. I guess a band is going to…

    Read more: reading this wednesday 9PM at Solaris in Greensboro
  • November 6, 2004

    On the Cave You Live In

    “And cast down me wretched / sinner unto thee I am / slightly different from / a corpse at a funeral / in that I am less made up / but made up worse.” “The spaces between the aura /…

    Read more: On the Cave You Live In
  • November 3, 2004

    devastation

    It’s hard to even begin today. My friend Gerry helped me to feel a little better if only to express my own shock, disbelief, horror, and fear: LONG ROAD

    Read more: devastation
  • November 2, 2004

    levels of abstraction

    had to get my mind off the big countdown. Worked for a few hours on Campanology. Refound my pace. I’ve felt for about a month (after trying it out on an audience) something was amiss. More than amiss. Way off…

    Read more: levels of abstraction
  • October 31, 2004

    Eliot Weinberger’s "Freedom is on the March"

    Many of you’all may have already read this over at Possum Pouch, but in case you haven’t: Freedom is on the March by Eliot Weinberger Among the things the second term of the Bush junta will bring is the New…

    Read more: Eliot Weinberger’s "Freedom is on the March"
  • October 31, 2004

    Untitled 2004-Oct-31 Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3582
  • October 31, 2004

    Untitled 2004-Oct-31 Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3581
  • October 31, 2004

    Untitled 2004-Oct-31 Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3583
  • October 31, 2004

    Untitled 2004-Oct-31 Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3584
  • October 30, 2004

    Inherited form

    Just finished Angelus Bell by Edward Foster and it reminded me in some ways of Daniel Zimmerman’s Post-Avant with its formal density. I was really drawn into Angelus Bell by the reflexive gestures and overarching themes and links from poem…

    Read more: Inherited form
  • October 26, 2004

    How to Draw A Bunny

    Just watched a new release DVD called How to Draw a Bunny. It’s a documentary on the pop artist Ray Jonhson. Really fascinating and eerie. for some reason I can’t get the visual of two Ray Johnson performance piecesout of…

    Read more: How to Draw A Bunny
  • October 25, 2004

    Ken Rumble’s Desert City Reading Series

    Another great reading on Saturday. Ken Rumble really brings the heat to town. Tony Tost read some great prose poems. Dense in the sense of including various lives (reading life, dreaming life, love life etc.). Maximalist. funny. Profound. I especially…

    Read more: Ken Rumble’s Desert City Reading Series
  • October 25, 2004

    Randall Williams in the act of it Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3588
  • October 25, 2004

    Randall Williams waterworks performance piece I am still processing this performance. Tiffany loved it as well. Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3589
  • October 25, 2004

    Aaron McCollough with deep voice (manly) Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3590
  • October 25, 2004

    tony tost (ex)pounding Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3592
  • October 25, 2004

    tony tost (ex)pounding # 2 Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3591
  • October 25, 2004

    ken Rumble introducting Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3593
  • October 20, 2004

    NY Times article on potential draft

    Feeling the Draft By PAUL KRUGMAN Published: October 19, 2004 Columnist Page: Paul Krugman Forum: Discuss This Column E-mail: krugman@nytimes.com TIMES NEWS TRACKER Topics Alerts United States Armament and Defense Military Personnel Those who are worrying about a revived draft…

    Read more: NY Times article on potential draft
  • October 15, 2004

    bring back the lion

    I am not sure why there is sometimes so much build up before writing. It’s usually when I am revising/restructuring. The intial writing phases are no pressure/no problem. But getting the structure! There’s some anxiety. And the perrenial questions. Mostly:…

    Read more: bring back the lion
  • October 13, 2004

    KYBERNEKYIA AS HYPERVORTEXT

    check it out: Ezra Pound

    Read more: KYBERNEKYIA AS HYPERVORTEXT
  • October 10, 2004

    Watchfulness

    I am amazed, blown away. Peter O’Leary’s _Watchfulness_ has changed my landscape. Really fired me up to keep moving with my book length poem Campanology. king Midas Gold, man of light (gnostic light), transfigured light A few of many lines:…

    Read more: Watchfulness
  • October 7, 2004

    Mode versus System

    Been reading a lot of Nathaniel Mackey and Leslie Scalapino lately. In _How Phenomena Appear to Unfold_ Scalapino writes, “The writing is a mode, not a system.” So mode versus system. When I think system, I think systematic reasoning (and…

    Read more: Mode versus System
  • October 6, 2004

    City of Carrboro dropped the ball

    After an amazing first festival, the city of Carrboro has decided NOT to allow another festival next year. Where did the funds go? Another national/international festival? Patrick Heron received this reply: Patrick: I wanted to answer your recent question to…

    Read more: City of Carrboro dropped the ball
  • October 3, 2004

    draft

    Draft is a really interesting word. As in: rough. As in: cold wind down the hallway. I think Evie is right. A draft might wake more people up.

    Read more: draft
  • October 2, 2004

    Potential Draft

    I handed out this information to my students in class yesterday. Most of them were surprised. Especially the female students. Not sure if Kerry is all for this or not. POSSIBLE MANDATORY DRAFT for boys and girls (ages 18-26) starting…

    Read more: Potential Draft
  • September 28, 2004

    Emotion and intellect

    I am wondering whether or not to buy the new Interpol? Am also wondering about jobs for next year. Contract runs out. Jobs jobs jobs. Agh. Gotta watch some Godard. Also gotta figure out how to pronounce French words. Took…

    Read more: Emotion and intellect
  • September 27, 2004

    film, cinema, movies

    I am going to teach a film class in the spring. It’s exciting putting together the syllabus. Going to use Monaco’s How to Read a Film and a selection of articles from Film Quarterly. Still thinking through film selections. It’s…

    Read more: film, cinema, movies
  • September 25, 2004

    circles

    In constructing my disruptive narrative of influences, I’ve come full circle. I really came to poetry after leaving the comfortable world of a fundamentlist religion. After the leaving, I studied a lot of world mythology, philosophy of religion, and eastern…

    Read more: circles
  • September 22, 2004

    parts and wholes

    finished Burger’s Theory of the Avant-Garde last night. I’ve been pondering the non-organic versus organic (language as artifact). Burger says, “The organic work intends the impression of wholeness. To the extent its individual elements have significance only as they relate…

    Read more: parts and wholes
  • September 21, 2004

    Some Penguins for Basil Bunting

    I just ordered the complete Basil Bunting. I’ve only read/heard a little of Briggflatts. I am excited to sit down with him. Also ordered Watchfulness by Peter O’Leary and John Taggart’s Pastorelles. It’s nice to get this perk with teaching.…

    Read more: Some Penguins for Basil Bunting
  • September 20, 2004

    Desert City Reading Series, The Blue Door, Backwards City Book Sale

    The a Desert City Readng Series kicked off again this past Saturday. James Brasfield and Joe Donahue read. Joe read some hot new poems. Lots and lots of voices. My spine always reacts to Joe’s poems. Mystery, awe etc. Everything…

    Read more: Desert City Reading Series, The Blue Door, Backwards City Book Sale
  • September 16, 2004

    Jorie Graham answered my question

    Strange connections. The conversation over at Tony’s blog really picked up with the issue of responsibility. Over at Smartish Place (http://www.smartishpace.com/home/poetsqa/graham_answers.html) I asked Jorie Graham a question about influence and responsibility (after reading Tost’s piece in Typo about the mongrols).…

    Read more: Jorie Graham answered my question
  • September 16, 2004

    give me some cream!

    If you haven’t checked it out already, click on over to Tony Tost’s blog. A very interesting, provocative conversation happening. Process and product, canons, cult of the author, art that aspires for the eternal . . . So far, 26…

    Read more: give me some cream!
  • September 14, 2004

    Krispy Creme Poets

    The memory of last Saturday feels foggy, eerie. Did it really happen? Lots of glazed donuts (one dollar each). The Krispy Creme poetry tent was a wierd revival type setting. Galway Kinnell read next tent to Maya Angelou (the official…

    Read more: Krispy Creme Poets
  • September 13, 2004

    crystal balls Urim and Thummim

    all sorts of stuff is leaking into my long poem. Such as Mormon doctrine and early mysticism (the mysticism was quickly abandoned for corporation/institutional reasons). But Joseph Smith’s spectacles amaze me. I am still working on this part of the…

    Read more: crystal balls Urim and Thummim
  • September 8, 2004

    writing the long poem

    A little while back a few Lucipo folks (Tony and Ken perhaps?) mentioned how quite a few younger poets are attempting long poems. I’ve been dipping and out of Olson’s The Maximus Poems and the sheer maximalist quality (energy transference)…

    Read more: writing the long poem
  • September 7, 2004

    poetry and difficulty

    We started discussing poetry section in my intro to literature class. I am using individual collections for all the genres, but for poetry I am using an anthology (Allen’s New American Poetry) and we will read Lisa jarnot’s Ring of…

    Read more: poetry and difficulty
  • September 5, 2004

    good trades

    Just traded in a collected Milosz and a collected Wright (I like them both but don’t love ’em) for: 1) The geography of the imagination (essays by Guy Davenport) 2) Theater of the Avant-Garde (1890-1950. Has essays and plays arranged…

    Read more: good trades
  • September 4, 2004

    the overman

    sometimes a little alcohol (or little a lot) helps moisten my mind. Had a good time at a part last night at one of the editors of the new journal Backwards City (see links to the right). In particular, Gerry…

    Read more: the overman
  • September 2, 2004

    great books . . .

    I’ve decided to 5 contemporary books of poetry in my intro to poetry class in the spring. I think I am going to create a blog for the class to allow for informal discussion and supplemental readings. I’m still trying…

    Read more: great books . . .
  • September 2, 2004

    ariel transmissions

    Finally got the ariel. My head is all squirm. It feels good to rework some of the abstractions (i.e. my head banging against a padded cell) in the second MS. I realized after the reading yesterday my antiabsorption killed off…

    Read more: ariel transmissions
  • September 1, 2004

    open eye reading

    Good times last night at the open eye reading ( a series run by Mr. Tony Tost). A real mix. Chris Vitiello read from Nouns Swarm a Verb and Evie Shockley read a powerful poem (“A Thousand Words”) about torture.…

    Read more: open eye reading
  • August 29, 2004

    some recent poems in the new diagram

    I have some recent poems in the latest issue of Diagram. The second poem “Multitide and Miracle” is actually in my current MS Diagram

    Read more: some recent poems in the new diagram
  • August 28, 2004

    forklift, ohio

    Just got a poem accepted by Forklift, Ohio. It’s strange. My last three acceptances have been for poem I cut from my MS (Columbia Poetry Review, Conduit, and now Forklift, Ohio). I’ve decided to reinsert the poems accepted by those…

    Read more: forklift, ohio
  • August 27, 2004

    Innovative poetry and intro to poetry

    I am teaching two sections of intro to poetry in the spring. I’ve taught with a lot of the Norton/Vendler/Gioia anthologies (etc.) in the past and I am very tired of them. I was thinking of just using five books…

    Read more: Innovative poetry and intro to poetry
  • August 25, 2004

    more quick thoughts of/on surrealism

    So there is American surrealism of the deep image and pastoral variety (perhaps Matthew Rohrer is a good example of this tendency although he sometimes moves away from deep image and the pastoral to some kind cyber erotics.) There is…

    Read more: more quick thoughts of/on surrealism
  • August 24, 2004

    surrealism

    I am teaching Jesus’ Son in my intro to lit class and the students often want to know if such and such really happened. The narrator is not reliable, but he is very aware. Oftentimes lucid via drugs. Other times…

    Read more: surrealism
  • August 23, 2004

    Combo magazine WOW

    I am in awe. I just sat down and read Combo Winter/Spring 2004 from start to finish and I honestly loved every god damn poem (and interview and letter). I have never enjoyed reading a literary journal so much. The…

    Read more: Combo magazine WOW
  • August 23, 2004

    some old poems up at Spork

    some poems I wrote about two years ago are in the current issue of Spork. Spork Mag

    Read more: some old poems up at Spork
  • August 21, 2004

    blurg and block and burp

    Inspired by the comments of Ken Rumble, I just re-read My Life and read Chris Vitiello’s Nouns Swarm A Verb. It was a very interesting experience to read those two books back to back. I found Nouns Swarm A Verb…

    Read more: blurg and block and burp
  • August 21, 2004

    Sucking

    Yes U2 currently sucks. In the past they might not have sucked. I think there is a difference between sucks and sucked. It’s sad when something that didn’t suck now sucks. If something sucked and still sucks it is neither…

    Read more: Sucking
  • August 20, 2004

    dreams dreams dreams

    So many strange dreams. An orgy last night. I was ordered to do certain things. I was also ordered to try the new and improved Mormon filter (for Camels only). The filter left a strong minty residue. Then I had…

    Read more: dreams dreams dreams
  • August 17, 2004

    goats head soup

    a collective blog featuring some of the folks of Lucipo poetics is linked to the right. I’ve been reading about Bean News in the Chicago Review. Sounded like an interesting project. A newspaper run mostly by poets. A group blog…

    Read more: goats head soup
  • August 17, 2004

    literary history

    I am still concerned about the conversion narrative (from school of quietude to avant garde). The problem is the narrative is too simplistic. But knowing where you’re coming from doesn’t have to be a bad thing does it? I am…

    Read more: literary history
  • August 14, 2004

    Ed dorn and Tom Raworth

    Chicago Review has some interesting letters between Ed Dorn and Tom Raworth and Dorn and Olson in 1961. So far they are really interesting. Raworth is really funny. I did not realize he had such a complex family background. He…

    Read more: Ed dorn and Tom Raworth
  • August 13, 2004

    chicago review

    Just got the latest issue of Chicago Review from my mailbox. It’s a special issue on Ed Dorn. I am really excited to read it. I love Chicago Review Chicago Review

    Read more: chicago review
  • August 13, 2004

    around the table some of the gang around the table Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3633
  • August 13, 2004

    kathryn taking a break another porch break Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3634
  • August 13, 2004

    Serge, Samantha, and Brian Howe a little porch break Blogged via Fotola.com.

    Read more: untitled post 3635
  • August 13, 2004

    another fascinating Lucipo reading

    The reading took place at Todd and Laura Sandvik’s home. They are amazing hosts. Always great food, liquid, sound, art. I borrowed Chao Manhattan from Todd. Looking forward to watching it later today. Passed around a little notebook and asked…

    Read more: another fascinating Lucipo reading
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