Tag Archives: Shearsman Books

Blue Bus at The Lamb

The sixty-fourth Blue Bus poetry reading took place last night upstairs at The Lamb in Lamb’s Conduit: a joyous evening! D.S. Marriott read first and I was immersed in a richness of language that left me haunted. As well as reading some new work that is as yet unpublished he took us back to the Shearsman publications, Hoodoo Voodoo (2008) and The Bloods (2011). It was Romana Huk who raised this idea of spectres in Marriott’s work when she did the introduction to the 2008 collection:

 

‘In a sense, all of Marriott’s books are about spooks and specters—‘haunted life, as his last book of prose names them.’

 

Robert Sheppard’s most recent book is The Only Life, a collection of three stories about poets, which is published by Knives Forks and Spoons. They also publish his The Given, a piece of ‘autrebiography’, a mode of writing he has been extending in recent months. Berlin Bursts came out from Shearsman last year and A Translated Man will appear soon from there as well. Last night’s reading was sharp, witty and reminiscent of a high-performance steam-roller.

 

Sarah Kelly presented some astonishingly powerful pieces of poetry which seemed to merge the art world of Cy Twombly with the fragmentary history of the Lascaux cave paintings. They were moving and transient as she prepares to return to South America and as Charles Olson wrote of Twombly in 1952:

‘honor &elegance are here once more present in the act of paint’.

 

A great evening of word-hammering!

 

Robert Vas Dias

Last Friday, June 8th, Robert Vas Dias launched his new collection of poems from Perdika Press, London Cityscape SIJO. The event at The Rugby Tavern, Great James Street, London, was packed and Robert read quite a few of these new poems. He pointed out that after he had started writing a sequence of short poems about the city, specifically his North London street and neighbourhood, ‘they began to want to arrange themselves into six short lines of observations, episodes, vignettes.’ His conception of sijo reflects its classical Korean character as the popular form that superseded the courtly poetry of the previous age, i.e., before the late fourteenth century; it became the predominant form and was Korea’s chief contribution to world literature. It’s more subjective, lyrical and personal than haiku, and, for Vas Dias, it offers more scope than the Japanese form to employ metaphor, symbol, allusion, and other figurative language.

This is another volume in the excellently produced series of chapbooks published by Perdika Press to which I refer in my article on ‘Pods, Presses, and Pamphlets: Poetry in England Today’ in last September’s issue of World Literature Today (Volume 85, Number 5), the bimonthly journal issued by the University of Oklahoma.

Robert Vas Dias published another collection, from Shearsman in 2010, titled Still. Life and the comments included on the back of that selection include those of Robert Duncan and George Oppen. Duncan’s comments on the earlier work of this prolific poet capture one of the essential qualities of this lively and engaged poetry: ‘What means most to me is how at once humorous (alive to the humours of what was going on in the expression—re-creation—of feeling) and personally engaged you keep the poem.’

Peter Larkin’s Lessways Least Scarce Among

Lessways Least Scarce Among: Poems 2002-2009

 

Peter Larkin’s new volume from Shearsman Press is sheer delight. The volume opens with ‘Turf Hill’, an interplay between the wild and the industrial, the electricity pylon and the tree:

‘How the boles thin to the widener of tracking turf, pylon by terrace of heeded instrument! If the tree-standing for wire is the pull of cantileaf, what can indent its continuous ornament looping on power line? The trees are resident by unavailing advantage, full technical sorrow lattices their derivative store of staying beside-hand a cloaked way below. Each wafer strut as actuator, soft spring between wing and store. Field follower across overhead pitch, into the straits which fertilise a neb of impasse, but where wire cups to its beak, a lift of towers inciting local spine, so spike your green along. Forked untransformable at heel of branch, trees topped for their sail-at-root, they bare these iron masts whenever nothing can have happened to the great limb.’

Here vulnerability threads its way through ‘unavailing’ to the word ‘sorrow’ before shifting to the association of the human traveller (‘cloaked’) which suggests both secrecy and protection. The density of this rich passage concludes with a further shift towards commercialism as the verb ‘topped’, associated with the wood management of pollarding, moves towards the pun on ‘sail’/sale and the voyaging image of ‘masts’ pushing on wards with human commercial enterprise.

This new volume from Shearsman gives us a comprehensive account of how Peter Larkin’s landscape is not so much a thing as a process.

Shearsman in London on May 8th

At the last of this season’s Shearsman readings at Swedenborg Hall Paul A. Green and Laurie Duggan read from their recently published volumes, The Gestaltbunker (Selected Poems 1965-2010) and The Pursuit of Happiness. Paul’s reading was edgy and exciting and promoted the aptness of the blurb comment about his briefings on nuclear apocalypse, global meltdown and ‘intensifying torsion of language.’ Gesticulating and shouting ‘Horus Promo’ Paul made words jump: this boy with a nose job keeps rapping / swing into hi-fi with hot wire-tapping / We heard it through the grapevine 

Laurie Duggan took us along ‘The London Road’: westward, / hands pull rope around a sheaf of / what? / wheat? asparagus? / Lamb’s Conduit / FOUNDED 1843 / old hinges of a / former door /painted over

Laurie’s dry wit, delivered as though the words had taken him by surprise, was caught in his short ‘Bin ends’:

       A salute to the Cambridge Marxists

If you’re not at the High Table / you’re not in the room

Robert Vas Dias was in the audience and I reminded him of the review of Paul Blackburn’s Journals he wrote for Peter Hodgkiss’s  Poetry Information 17, 1977, in which he had commented on the American poet’s method of taking a road ( ‘a direction and follow it where it leads’) where details are accumulated not for their own sake but ‘to reveal the state of mind’.

Both these books are available on the Shearsman website www.shearsman.com

The Pursuit Of Happiness and Others

Three splendid new publications which are worth looking out for:

 

Laurie Duggan’s new collection of poems from Shearsman, The Pursuit of Happiness, has just appeared and as Tony Baker’s comment on the back cover makes so clear these poems have the virtue of never abandoning the local. They shift from Robert Creeley, burgers and South African wine on Charing Cross Road to images of Santa Claus in Anglo-Greek Paphos and Japanese tourist signs in the countryside of Haworth.

 

Another distinctive voice from Australian poetry is Ken Bolton whose Selected Poems 1975-2010 has also just appeared from Shearsman: ‘slippery, rapid-fire conjunctions—from savage to deflationary, pathetic to hilarious…there’s a deeply serious–& flip, gauche, & witty & almost self-canceling—consciousness at work’.

 

Selected Letters of Michael Rumaker is an absolute delight from Lost & Found: The CUNY Poetics Document Initiative. Under the general editorship of Ammiel Alcalay these finely produced chapbooks  illuminate unexplored terrain of an essential chapter of 20th-century life. In this one there are letters to Robert Creeley, Donald Allen and Charles Olson with many references to Ed Dorn, Robert Duncan, and John Wieners alongside many others.