Monday, July 31, 2006
By request
Sleep late down south
"Is it almost over?"
"Almost. Are you not liking it?"
"No, I like it. It's just a little too exciting."
She's sweet and quiet that way.
***
Ok, maybe that's the plan for tomorrow. Shopping for school clothes today.
***
Mel Gibson, I salute you. With a bazooka.
***
I think I might be beginning to break through the mental block I've had about cover art for Notes. It's daunting, scary. So much depends, etc.
***
I got a postcard from Italy in the mail Saturday. From Bologna, I think. How neat is that?
Friday, July 28, 2006
Days roll into days
One point of concern: has Colin Farrell ever been in a good movie?
***
I'm thinking maybe I'll fingerpaint the cover to Notes. That would be great. An artless smear. Apropos, you're all grumbling.
I took some art classes in middle and high school because it was required in the state curriculum. Having no discernible ability coupled with the fact that I had to hold the pencil/brush/random artistic implement in my mouth did not, as you might guess, produce anything the masters in their cold graves would envy. I did produce one passably crude drawing of a bird. Which my dad, in his fatherly pride, took with him to work to show off but instead left in his car with the window down. At this point, dear reader, I know you're already of me so, yes, it rained. An ink sketch, the bird became positively Rorshachian. Even I, who cared nothing about it all, was less than pleased.
My parents still have, I know, all that stuff. I'm going to have to have it destroyed.
It's funny: the middle school art teacher, who I'm fairly certain depended upon on gaudy baubles for life support, freaked out on the first day of class, seeing me there. She didn't want to let me stay. There was no way I could complete the class, she said.
Off to the side, it was all amusing to me, this conflagration of hokey art teacher, school principal, and occupational therapist. I would have been happy to let her have her way. The art room was this tiny, cramped, boiler-room-like enclosure. It wouldn't have been terribly surprising if Hephaestus had stumped in at some point.
She had no choice, of course, and by the end of the year loved me. If not my art.
***
I'm not sure why I wrote all that.
***
Traded a copy of my book with Kathleen Flenniken, whose Famous was last year's Prairie Schooner Prize winner. Another gorgeous production. Looking forward to reading it.
***
Back to Venture Bros.
Thursday, July 27, 2006
She don't care about time
Headed back down south
Gonna see my daddy's mistress
Gonna buy back her forgiveness
Gonna pay off every witness
Well, that's some kind of perfect and I'm instantly charmed, won.
***
Talked at length today with a friend about an old love. Which was both good and sad. As is it should be.
***
Tell me about your love life, in 1 sentence or less. Anonymous is ok.
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
Is it getting heavy?
At any rate, I like her poems.
***
I received an email this morning in which someone used the word turth. Is that a word? I don't think it is. I'm puzzling over it.
***
I'm freaking out, just a little, mind you, with manliness still ridiculously intact, over cover art/design ideas/suggestions for Notes. I'm corresponding a little with the U. Nebraska Press people, who are great, but I'm just no good at this sort of thing.
So I'm enlisting you, people. Because you're all depressingly smarter than me. Point me in the way that I should go and I will not depart from it.
Well, I might.
Tuesday, July 25, 2006
Love makes no sense
Well aware of the romantic comedy cliche of the long-deferred declaration of love, Kevin still uses it but subverts it, maybe even perverts it, like no other film in mainstream movies. I kept waiting for the girl to walk out. Or me. But we stuck with it.
Bottom line: not bad, but not really essential. Look for a blink-length cameo by Viggo Mortenson.
***
Formatting Notes for UNP. They want it double-spaced and in 12 pt. Courier for proofing, which knocks it over one hundred pages. Wild.
I agreed to the contract today. Wilder still.
Monday, July 24, 2006
Bring your lovin' over
***
Yesterday I watched Ken Burns' documentary on Superman, Look, Up in the Sky - The Amazing Story of Superman, and it's pretty great, the first half especially, documenting the character's origins, initially, as a villain holding the earth in a kind of fascist thrall. Also interesting were the many different iterations on radio and television, including the George Reeves show, which I remember seeing some when I was a kid. Following his suicide, there was a never seen pilot produced: The Adventures of Superpup. It's no wonder this never made it past pilot stage. With sets and stages still standing, the show's producers decided to, uh, hire midgets, dress them up like weird dog people, and act out Superman storylines. I kid you not, my friends. The weirdest thing I've ever seen, like some acid trip gone horribly, horribly wrong.
At two hours, it could stand to be longer: it seemed to me Christopher Reeve's injury could have stood a little more focus, though I know why it didn't receive more. More as well on Richard Donner being fired from Superman II, though he shot 70-80% of it.
At any rate, I loved it.
Saturday, July 22, 2006
Friday, July 21, 2006
Grr
Sure thing, man.
I could go on. I like three of his movies quite a lot. But Shyamalan's fallen down some rabbit hole he might find hard to climb out of.
Thursday, July 20, 2006
Those words we said
Ok, not really on the roses or the Secretariat thing. But untold thanks all the same.
***
It's kind of strange: I hadn't expected the posting, either here or on Prairie Schooner's website, to re-ignite that giddy feeling I first got when I got the phone call two weeks ago today. But now that it's out there, it's kind of great. Those feelings had subsided a bit: I'd celebrated with family and many of you already knew. If I emailed you or you emailed to ak, I'd tell you. So another volley of thanks to people like Aimee, C. Dale, Eduardo, for being good stewards of the particulars while it was still secret.
***
Tomorrow: Lady in the Water. Terrified. I don't want to see a bad M. Night Shymalan film. The Sixth Sense and Unbreakable were terrific, and Signs was good despite massive plot holes. The Village, however, was one of the most misguided efforts I've ever seen. Lady looks like it continues that sad arc.
You know you've been burned when My Super Ex-Girlfriend looks more attractive.
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
Right on time
Notes for My Body Double was awarded the Prairie Schooner Book Prize. That link isn't updated as I'm writing this; I'm told there's a delinquent bio note yet to come in.
But the point is I can go public with it now. The hold-up was due to extra tough competition over on the fiction side of the contest. That's resolved, however, and here we are.
Notes for My Body Double will likely appear in the fall of 2007, published by the University of Nebraska Press
I'm thrilled beyond belief.
Update: the page is up now, with info about the fiction winner and the runner-up's.
Monday, July 17, 2006
Pop quiz kisser
Almost.
***
Spent the day revising poems in this improbable third manuscript, which I still cannot believe exists, though there it is to my right, all 60 pages. Many of the poems were written quickly, in between classes, back when I was, you know, a productive member of society, so there's a strange quality to them. I'm trying not to revise that out of them.
"Something Happy" is essentially a new poem now. So too "To Beth, whose Photo Reveals Snow and a Passing Train.
I tidied up the endings to "Against Science" and "On Learning the Luna Moth Has No Mouth," though I didn't quite nail "Against Science." I'll try again tomorrow.
Poems that yet require work (or outright banishment): "If Only You Could Give Me an Oracle to See How it All Ends," a poem I wrote for Ali Stine, and "Parts of the Body by Name," a poem written for another distant (though beloved) girl that needs an injection of ... sand. Grit. Something extra.
I'll attempt to knock those out tomorrow. Which is crazy but kind of fun, in the spirit of this.
***
Good night.
Sunday, July 16, 2006
Now through the smoke she calls to me
***
Hard to believe, but I mailed off 90 pages of my memoir yesterday, in between all the birthday-palooza.
Said printing of all those pages made me decide it was time for a new printer. My old inkjet had hung in there for ten years and God only knows how many drafts of books (I still find drafts of my first book stuffed places) and individual poems. I hiked over to the Office Depot, spending a bit more than I wanted, but left with a swank printer. It's almost too fast. I printed out a new draft of One More Theory About Happiness and the sheets were fairly shooting out of the bay. Still, it's nice to be done in two minutes, compared to the old mark of ten or fifteen minutes at best.
***
I've been listening a lot to the soundtrack for Once More, with Feeling. It reminds me of how much I miss that show.
***
I've been sitting on this for a few days, not terribly disposed to disclosing, but I guess now is as good a time as any. No, not the albatross-like details regarding the publication of Notes, which I promise is forthcoming. That Memphis job I interviewed for?
Didn't get it.
Probably because I end sentences with prepositions.
***
If I'm forgetting anyone, please forgive me, but people like Victoria Chang and Jeanine Hall Gailey read drafts of Notes last spring or summer, making wise suggestions about what to cut and why. To those of you who were so helpful, I wanted to thank you again. I was at my wits' end last year, dispirited, discouraged, distended--no, wait, I wasn't that, but who knows how far off from that I was. I appreciate you all.
Saturday, July 15, 2006
Qin
A BRIEF HISTORY OF HISTORY
If alchemists ever surrendered to common sense,
I’m not sure my mailbox noticed,
everyday coughing up a wealth
of free credit, a siren’s song of silk
in the free bras promised me
(or current resident) by each coupon
in touching good faith. The infinite
has never to me beckoned
so well I want to follow
after it into further confusion. If by that
confession I’m coined a curmudgeon,
what can I do? The Chinese
in searching for life
eternal found instead galvanic blackpowder.
For whole years potions
were heated over low fires
set in clay earth, tended to
at the cost of their lives. Sent to the green
eastern seas with five hundred
boys and five hundred girls,
Xu Fu never returned. Who can blame him?
This was never my dream,
to live beyond the code
coiled in my cells,
to live longer than the mountain
above me or the river
at my side like a woman, like you in moon-
light. Except we never
sleep with windows up
or the shades drawn
so it’s a lie to say I’ve seen you glowing
like the harmless half-life
of the clockface
counting out the measure of irradiated time.
Better to say I’ve seen you
barely at all. Better to say
the lost moon will never
guide us. Better to cover you
beside the eastern sea
in lapidary jade
fat emperors ate hoping not to die.
Friday, July 14, 2006
About you
***
I'm still waiting for an ok to reveal my new press. I'm anxious to share. I may just have to break the rules if this embargo lasts much longer....
***
To that end, a few more presses who will not be publishing me this time out: not Four Way Books. Not Alice James Books. Not the University of Illinois Press. Not New Issues, my old home.
***
Slow this morning.
Thursday, July 13, 2006
I have been a rover
That the sexagesimal calendar had no zero
was reason enough for me to grouse
four thousand years too late, in September,
in
with ancient
except in the past tense cast upon
the silt-sewn shores of the
and not the two distant rivers
I swore at night we could hear
running away when we were through
with each other’s skin. Little
everything there was called:
the place that took my film,
the cabs I had to dodge in the dark
carrying home some drunken
boy with his freight of vomit in tow—
Little
and our mascot was the Saluki,
a long-haired Egyptian hunting dog
trotted around the arenas
of our ineptitudes. Not until one Sunday
morning when we drove west
beneath mottled, Midwestern dawn
towards
the
than we could see with fog twill
rising from the water’s passive face,
not until I thought backwards
to the
in coming there, in love with the imprecision
of words, did I make sense
of that little name, that borrowed
history, that endlessness slowly passing by.
Time can only make demands
Sigh.
***
Anyone cheap? In regards to web design, I mean.
Ahem.
I'm looking to put up a modest little homepage and if anyone is good with html, etc., and would like to help me out, give me a shout. I appreciate it.
One time one night
***
I've a friend who's being mysterious. Which is, in fact, mysterious.
***
Who should I go to for domain name registration, web hosting, all that? GoDaddy?
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
V
VARIOUS MISERIES
All those times I said the key to Heaven
was right there in my dungarees,
that it was in the Bible and
thus we lacked essential devotion,
you never believed me, you turned back
to the white snow light
of the television, your face
nothing like Helen’s, not the font of all
this war, but lovely enough
to want, to see through the beaded curtains
of rain, to finally find
thanks to a search engine
the verse in Deuteronomy proving me
right. That were I ever
crushed or cut or by white fire cauterized,
I could not enter in
to the assembly of the Lord.
That we’d best be
careful. Never mind that I’ve never
been able to make peace
with this idea of the afterlife
I’m told I must
accept. Never mind that it’s eternal
singing we’re promised
and not an atom
of silence, not so much
as a whisper’s worth of radiant repose.
Never you mind, love,
that love’s no more
our lot. That various miseries
like uncertain weather
appear. That a cartoon cloud
tethered to the tonsured
hair of my head
in the mirror’s mild adumbrations
rains and rains.
That there are whole days
I share with
only the crows
mouthing in the grass
for bread
I broke apart and scattered
with my hands.
For that day
I counted this
as work—
I spoke your name to dry chalk
cool in my fist
like a stone
born in a month of shadows.
Through the dead
field behind
the nursing home
I went, seeking
a little speed
through hip-high grass—
a straight line,
a bit of fact like bone
in my throat.
If –.
If you believe
anything I’ve said,
let it be what I said whenever I was silent.
Would you
I don't think I would. I don't have that much money, for starters.
I would for my book. But that isn't to say I value the chapbook less than the book.
Crap.
In
***
Still, things are good. I'm not sure when I'll be able to give y'all the lowdown on Notes. Surely this week. I think I'll start eliminating presses. Ok, it's not, uh, Norton. I know everyone here just knew it was Norton. Sorry.
And it's not ... Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Amazing, I know. Guess numero dos, right? Thought so.
Stay tuned for more.
***
I have a third manuscript called One More Theory About Happiness. I don't think it's any good.
Sunday, July 09, 2006
Aaarrrr
***
I've bought several books of poems lately, Maine, by Jonah Winter; A Defense of Poetry, by Gabriel Gudding; The Captain Lands in Paradise, by Sarah Manguso; The Legend of Light, by Bob Hicok. A couple others.
***
Bad dreams last night but feeling good.
Friday, July 07, 2006
Smiling skull ring
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Run on for a long time
***
So in thinking how best to decline the other press, I began to wonder how many poems I had between new work written this year and poems just lying around, forgotten. I find a lot of the time I'll write a poem that doesn't strike me in the right way immediately, so I forget about it; I never do anything with it. So I get to rooting around, throwing things together, and soon enough I have a 60 page manuscript of poems written during the same period as Notes. Many of them need some revision, but lots are perfectly fine, and some I'm even tempted to cart over to Notes, though I won't do that. A lot of these poems have even been published. I'm such a dummy. So I don't know what I'll do with it; I offered it to the editor and they're going to look at it but I can't imagine them switching gears.
***
Nice 4th here. You?
Sunday, July 02, 2006
Weird
It's perplexing: for two years I couldn't throw the book at anyone. I mean, that's an exaggeration: it was a finalist several times, was accepted briefly, so it's not like it was repudiated at every turn. But it began to feel that way.
So I began to think, am I making the right decision? But I know I am.
today's bad poem
ELSEWHERE
How long a citizen of that white silence
was I, did I know enough not to name
all things winter, even my own skin,
even the edge of the water, its strangeness,
its molecular tongue, all grief
added to it, all the words I knew,
the ones sewn into my pockets like warding,
how long did I sleep in that life
of night, what did I guard
with my breath while my bones leeched away,
with the salting of love
everything that morning
seemed made of snow, statuaries of vapor,
and you at the center of it
reading about atoms,
about that which has no mass,
displaces nothing,
drifting through all this life and unlife,
to whom could I speak
like a stranger
and in what language
struggle to articulate
even this hour
filling up with the imprimatur of dust,
and when I dream
of my body perforated by starlight
reaching me like pale roots
through dark soil, what am I
except awake, except a name, except lost?







