Thursday, September 29, 2005
Once more
Monday, September 26, 2005
Ask me
*Edit: I originally meant questions about me, but the oracular angle is fun, too... ;) *
Thursday, September 22, 2005
Rita
Monday, September 19, 2005
Tentative Meacham schedule
For the uninitiated, here's more info. And, maybe, just maybe, a pic of Laurel Snyder walking with Mark Jarman. And some other dude I'm not recognizing, but probably should.
Saturday, September 17, 2005
Paulcast
***
How fun to be sending out poems again! All last year, I never really had to. Several editors asked for work, miracle of miracles, so I went the whole year without the kind of lovely tedium of getting submissions together. Getting these out reminds me of so much: those heady days in awful Alabama. There were so many wonderful poets there. I'm going to brag on the gang:
Eliot Wilson, The Saint of Letting Small Fish Go
Ander Monson, Vacationland and Other Electricities
Josh Bell, No Planets Strike
Leah Nielsen, No Magic
Sophia Kartsonis, Intaglio, which just won the Wick first book prize
Tim Earley, Boondoggle
That's everyone with books, I think. I'm leaving out people who will, any day, have books too. People like Ted Worozbyt and Abraham Smith. I'm proud of, and miss, them all.
Friday, September 16, 2005
What to do
Such as they are.
So should I read? What would you do? Advise, please.
Wave
Saturday, September 10, 2005
Toilet literature
When you come back, what's your bathroom reading consist of?
Thursday, September 08, 2005
Even though
As for "Happiness," it's a response to a poem by my good friend Ted Worozbyt (himself an honorable mention in the Burnside contest) called "Sadness." C. Dale might remember Ted's poem, as it appeared in NER.
I swear, one of these days Kevin Bacon will publish a book of poems.
Then the cosmos will implode.
Wednesday, September 07, 2005
Octopoem
THESE ARMS OF MINE
Let’s promise never to love like the octopus:
floating in darkness, in jellied ink,
its beak the only hardness it knows,
and though I can’t imagine how
it helps matters, in the eight-armed
midst of its mating, a limb
will often fall away, separate from the body,
by ecstasy amputated to the silt.
All morning I’ve failed to find
why, though no one fails to mention
that death soon follows all
this armlessness. It’s fascinating but a mess.
Imagine if each time we kissed
my ear fell off. If the morning
was not so much for brushing
the fog of the night from the mouth,
but reassembly. You might go
out into the day with my bad ankle.
I’d never hear the end.
What would there be to talk about
except that we were falling
apart, and too soon, and how dull
it had all become, this entropy, this shedding,
this habit of the cephalopod
no one can explain. Maybe
it’s like the threatened sea cucumber
everting its guts, to leave
less to hunger’s hunger. Maybe
eight arms is one arm too many to bear
in the alien instant
of that inscrutable love.
That I would understand, that I could recognize
in the mirror of my skin,
in yours, there in the crushing depth
of the night. There we’d find
each other like exotic gods,
our hands manifold, our fingers infinite—
well, almost. Soon:
the subtraction, the severing, the silence like a wave.
Lost
One thing I love already about the first disc is its menu: a low shot of the doctor lying unconscious in the bamboo where the first episode begins. His chest rises and falls. The green stalks of bamboo sway in the breeze. Minimal music plays, before the sounds of something trampling through the foliage begins. It's spooky and hypnotic, all at once. I'm looking at it now, can't look away.
***
As long as we're talking Lost, I might as well mention J.J. Abrams, its creator, and also the man behind Alias, probably my favorite thing ever. I've never really watched it on tv, though, catching it instead on dvd. I tried to watch it each week last year but things like AWP and readings knocked me out of the loop, so I reverted back to dvd only status. And it grieves me that the fourth season seemed pretty off, aimless, at least from what I saw. I know ABC had demanded more standalone episodes, denaturing what had been one of the show's strongpoints: the epically involved plotlines, backstories, vendettas, alliances, etc. Taken with the third season, which, while very good, made a few wrong steps, I'd be embarassed to admit how depressed I'd be if the show limped to an end.
So I'm a nerd. Moving on. If C. Dale can have his Carnivale, I can have my Alias. It all strikes me as funny because I never watch tv.
I'm rambling.
***
Second blurb received.
***
I need a job.
***
I'm beginning in my advanced age to make a kind of peace with autumn. It's a gorgeous season, yes, but I've never been able to forgive it for letting winter slip in the back door.
But, here, summer is oh so slightly beginning to recede. Just by a scant few degrees. And I'm enjoying it, trying not to think about the dull grey rain that winter means here. No snow, just dull and drizzly. Bah, I say.
But, for now, I'll manage.


