Big thanks to my sister's boyfriend, Michael Book (my sister and Mike live together, and their mailbox reads: Beeny/Book — I like that), for borrowing his brother's camera and filming this. It's a little grainy, a bit shaky, but I'm trying to be okay with that. It's set to a piece of music I wrote called "Labyrinth." Thank you for watching...
'Snowing Fireflies' 'Promotional' Video
Big thanks to my sister's boyfriend, Michael Book (my sister and Mike live together, and their mailbox reads: Beeny/Book — I like that), for borrowing his brother's camera and filming this. It's a little grainy, a bit shaky, but I'm trying to be okay with that. It's set to a piece of music I wrote called "Labyrinth." Thank you for watching...
Upcoming Reading and Hip-Hop/Art Show
The Buffalo Small Press Book Fair is a regional one day event that brings booksellers, authors, bookmakers, zinesters, small presses, artists, poets, and other cultural workers (and enthusiasts) together in a venue where they can share ideas, showcase their art, and peddle their wares.
Sounds fun. Greg Gerke asked me to participate in a reading he’s organized to be held that evening at a place called Sugar City, also in Allentown. Including Greg and myself, there will be 8 other readers. Here’s the line-up:
Ted Pelton (editor/publisher of Starcherone Books)
Geoffrey Gatza (editor/publisher of BlazeVox Books)
Barry Graham (editor of Dogzplot)
Peter Schwartz (art editor of Dogzplot)
Eric Beeny (author of a blurb for Surface Tension by David Peak, and a blurb for the forthcoming novella Grease Stains, Kismet, and Maternal Wisdom by Big Melly-Meltron Bosworth)
Jessica Smith
Jeannie Hoag
Stu Stevens
Andrew Rihn
Greg Gerke (of awesomeness, There’s Something Wrong with Sven and Big Other)
Also, I’m going to be spittin’ some flows with my friend and fellow MC, Nate, at an art show for tattoo artists converging in Buffalo on April Fools’ Day. Nate works in a tattoo shop called Madd Tat2 (Madd Grafix) owned and operated by our good friend Mark Madden, one of the dopest tattoo artists in the whole wide world. Nate and Mark also form the core of an anarchic metal band called Angry Soil. Mark is hosting the event.
Corium Debuts at #1
Many wonderful writers adorn the halls of this first issue, including the very short fiction of my former professor, fiction editor for elimae and author of a beautiful book called Pretty, Kim Chinquee, Wigleaf editor Scott Garson, Andrea Kneeland, Kathy Fish, Sheldon Compton, Julie Babcock, Ryan Ridge, Beth Thomas, Laura Ellen Scott, Christina Murphy and a story of mine called "Unbreakable" (Big thanks, Greg, Lauren and Heather...)...
Also, walk a little further through halls to find short fiction from Stephen Elliott, Donna D. Vitucci, Sean Lovelace, Alec Niedenthal and Adam Moorad. Still further, poetry from Shaindel Beers, Corey Mesler, Sam Rasnake, Night Train editor Rusty Barnes and Cami Park. The artwork is spectacular, with works from James Roninger, Ernest Williamson III and Christopher Woods. Come on in. There’s plenty of refreshments and cookies over there on the table by the hat rack…
New Stories in PicFic
A Poem Today in unFold
Five 'Creatures' in ditch
Who Got Beef Wit’ Writers’ Bloc (Rutgers)
Becoming Aware of One's Ignorance
Also, I’m a not-so-good writer. I’ve done plenty of readings, many of them back when I drank. Here’s one that was actually recorded of me after I sobered up, and without my glasses. It’s at the 2007 Urban Epiphany, which I believe is still held every year here in Buffalo. Each reader got like 5-10 minutes, if I remember correctly, but I was cut off after 4 very short poems (I read some socio-political poetry, or poultry (chicken-shit scribblings)). Someone, I have no idea who, posted my segment as an MP3 online. Here it is.
I started off with a good, rather ambivalent poem, “Altruistic Narcissism” (listen to Mel Bosworth read it here). Everyone laughed, though I always thought of the poem as sad. Anyway, it gave me a boost of confidence, because it is kind of a funny poem, so I really had the crowd there—for a moment. Then, the next poem I read was “Wal*Mart Families for Friendly Fire” (read it here, along with some other poultry), and they didn’t seem to like that. The crowd’s liveliness turned immediately to quiet animosity.
I remember the organizer/host/MC, Celia White, waving at me from the back of the room to stop after the fourth poem, which I kind of figured would eventually happen after the Wal*Mart piece didn’t go over so well. I'm not sure if this was an ideological clash, or just something she deemed inappropriate at a poetry event. Either way, I got the hint. So I said, “Time’s up,” and sat back down, feeling a little embarrassed.
I’d been sort of shunned before, but never while reading. People clapped, I feel, mostly because I wasn’t going to read anymore—or just to be polite. I have no idea who posted an MP3 of this on the internet, because it seems separate from the photo gallery of all the readers from that day. Anyway, thank you, whoever you are.
I wasn’t really even writing fiction then, as my focus was mostly politics. Not that politics are absent in fiction, but I think fiction, for me, offered a more subtle outlet for expressing political ideology while, if at all possible, contradicting that same perspective. I’ve since gotten away from feeling it necessary to incorporate socio-political convictions into a text, when it will obviously emerge somehow unconsciously, despite my intentions.
Does that mean authorial intentions are unintentional? How ignorant am I compared to Kant, Hegel, Marx, Adorno, Propp, Parker, Berube, Freud, Lacan, Derrida, Foucault, etc? Quite, though they can all be just as silly as I am.
I’ve still got a lot to learn. I once heard a scientist on television say, “You’ve got to know an awful lot to be ignorant.”
Reading to My Daughter
A Field of Colors:-Finding a rainbow stick in a field, licking it, and the rainbow stick tasting like pancake syrup-Rabbits the size of houses-A field of empty chairs and sitting in each oneWhen the Cats Razzed the Chickens:-The wonderful names, like "Glitterbug" and "Hucklebuck," "Hambone Sizzlewitt"-A beard giving hugs and kisses, chewing gum, coming children’s hair-Someone melting into a beach, and wearing a seaweed necklace while teeth drip down your throatA Cake Appeared:-One of the characters’ names is “Pants”-Taking a dinosaur to the zoo to meet the gorillas-Blocks of wood falling like cubes of ice from a twisted bird, a cake appearing out of nowhere-Taking a dinosaur to the zoo to meet the gorillas-Blocks of wood falling like cubes of ice from a twisted bird, a cake appearing out of nowhere
Nine 'Creatures'
Eight more poems from Of Creatures are also now up at Counterexample Poetics in the ‘Featured Artists’ section (big thanks, Felino). This section also contains artwork and words from the likes of Duane Locke, Jeff Crouch, and others.
A 'promotional video' for Snowing Fireflies is hopefully coming soon...
New 'Immortal' in Emprise Review / 'Of Creatures' to be Published by Gold Wake Press
In other news, J. Michael Wahlgren, founder/editor/publisher of Gold Wake Press, has a new book out called Valency from BlazeVox Books. It’s available on Amazon.com US. Free shipping is available if purchased with Silent Actor, his first book of poetry.
(Also, scoop up David Peak's collection Surface Tension. David's MLP chap, Dreams from the Darklands, is awesome, too.)
Jared has published three e-chaps of mine: “Satin Anvils,” “Wounded Rainbows” and “From Of Creatures.” After publishing the third one, he asked me to co-edit for Gold Wake’s e-chaps, and I happily accepted. I've been doing that for a little over a year now, helping him read for our online series of e-chaps, and it's been great.
But recently, Jared started a print poetry series for Gold Wake, publishing full-length collections. The first publication will be Zachary C. Bush’s The Silence of Sickness, and the second will be Donora Hillard's Theology of the Body, both of which are now available for preorder at BN.com. Jared alone is heading up Gold Wake's print offshoot, so I give him big props for that.
Jared recently asked me to submit a manuscript for the print series, so I sent him Of Creatures (five of which can be read here, one of which can be read here, another is forthcoming in The Adirondack Review, and eight of which are forthcoming in Counterexample Poetics). This is a collection of poems which, for me, are very different from my usual work, as they feel like an experiment in aesthetics, and, more importantly, in optimistic existentialism.
Jared accepted the Of Creatures, and it will be published some time in early to mid 2011. (Big big thanks, J…). So, this will be my first book of poetry. Published. Book. Existing in the world. I feel this is a book my mom will like, as opposed to all my stories about genitals and things…