Showing posts with label MadHat Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MadHat Press. Show all posts

Sunday, June 2, 2024

J-T Kelly : A Conversation with Poet Jordan Davis

 

 

Brooklynite Jordan Davis and Hoosier J-T Kelly are acquainted by the magic of the internet and a shared love of poetry. Davis’ CCCP Chapbooks published Kelly’s debut chapbook. Here, Kelly interviews Davis about his newest book of poetry. Kelly in italics.

There's no New York School of Poets right now. Alice Notley is still writing, Ron Padgett. But you write in their shadow, don't you? You studied under and worked for Kenneth Koch for example. You have other connections. Do you consider yourself a product of the New York School—a result? How does Yeah, No—your latest book of poetry, which you dedicate to New York—build on, argue with, relate to that tradition?

Oh! The “school”... New York has been through a lot but it’s still here, for now — there are a few other poets from Ron’s and Alice’s generations around and publishing … Maureen Owen and Charles North come to mind, and Johns Godfrey and Yau, for example. I wait patiently for new work from Tony Towle and David Shapiro, and while I wait I reread their books, and Kenneth’s, James Schuyler’s, Bernadette Mayer’s… I like poetry to be flexible and irascible, to have a little bite to it. That’s what I want my poems to be like, and early on I got the idea it would be easier for my poems to be like that if I went to live where people’s poems are like that. It was a silly idea — for it to work I would have had to move to New York in the sixties or seventies — but it wasn’t totally wrong, and besides, I was born here, and most of those poets weren’t. If you hear some New York poetry in my poems, that makes me smile.

 Here's "Poem" from Yeah, No.

Poem

The ink we dignify
what camera-heavy
dictaphone as charged up
framboise wolf in shine
jabber consolable macaronis
floozy-letch totally system

it vacuums spurious
cantatas for local script
nunchuks, clack farms
for fat-fingered readiness
photographs in certain
horizontal pause swans

reading the grid portends
is arbitrary pouts
for mix of toggled
triplicate gurney gaga
soon lessen the toro
fabulous snowdown

The title comes across almost as a dare. It spouts questions as you read it. What is a poem? How is this a poem? Why such regular stanzas? It sparks observations and suggests patterns. Look at all those -u's in line 7! All the -g's in the 3rd stanza! Is there a syllable count? No. Some kind of twisted abecedarian structure? No. —So here's my question. Is everything the reader needs on the page? And how do you think about what the reader needs?

I think the reader needs to relax and not be so anxious to know what’s going on right away all the time. I like to read poems that fall in the Goldilocks zone between “I don’t get it” and “I get it,” at least for a while, which is probably why I get restless when I write too many examples of a kind of poem I’ve already written. But what do you think about what the reader needs, do you have an ideal reader?

I think there's an invitation the reader needs. Sometimes, it's “Look at this.” Sometimes it's a dare. As a reader I feel aggressive toward poems that are opaque. But I usually find a way in. I thought I hated L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry, and then I read Rae Armantrout. I enjoy that Yeah, No has many different kinds of poems. I can hop back and forth, and eventually I feel good enough to look at the more difficult ones with curiosity. If I have an ideal reader, they are more patient than I am, more willing to be delighted or intrigued while still saying, "I don't know."

Many of the poems in Yeah, No are geographically specific. Sometimes seasonally specific, too. Do you make notes on the spot? How strong are the ties to the places and times you mention? Could you go on a walking tour of the New York of Yeah, No?

I don't know whether the reader needs an invitation or a dare. I know I wanted to feel like part of a group when I started reading poems. Then, when I found out what being in groups was like, the kinds of behavior they tolerated or encouraged, egged on, I thought maybe it would be ok to let groups have their natural lives, and just find friends to accompany and possibly help survive. Sometimes those are friends who live nearby, and sometimes they're in other states or countries. New York has an advantage of being enormous and unknowable and also famous and (until you know too much about it) attractive. It's possible I'm relying on its faded toxic glamor a little. I try to wring it out of the poems.

Rae’s an interesting point of reference. What I liked at first in her poems was the angular syntax and how the apparent non sequiturs resolved most of the time, but what I found I related to in her work over time was more the pointed affect and investment in making a paraphrasable point in each poem. She seems to go back and forth in her work between investigating subjects and waging campaigns, though I suspect she wouldn’t agree at all, which is also something I like about her.

I know what you mean about feeling aggressive toward opaque writing. At the moment I’m harboring intense anger for the poets who hold up theorists of opacity as models of social resistance — like Glissant, for example. I probably just need to read more Glissant and less of those poets (don’t ask me to name names). But, and I think this is to the point of your question, I think what not knowing is good for in poems is for figuring out how the poet feels and how I feel about that in return.

A theorist — would she call herself a theorist? I don’t know — I admire, Jade Davis (no relation) writes against the ideology of empathy, and how it intensifies the disparities between the empathizers and the objects of their pitying observation. I sense that most MFA poetry cultivates this kind of abject display of the poet’s suffering for the pitying comprehension of the reader, and while I get the pleasure of understanding the narrative arc and turn in a well-made poem, I can’t avoid anticipating the resentment that has to follow anyone’s performance of a generalized version of their pain.

But I got off the subject of poem as travelogue. The collected poems of John Betjeman I think has an index of places in the poems, and I could show you some times and places where many of the poems in Yeah, No were sketched — I think that McDonald’s in midtown closed, though.

How do you categorize kinds of poems? Do you come across a poem you really like and think, "I'm going to write one of those." Do you think of something like a poem with really long lines, or a poem without any grammatical connections between words—and think "that's a type of poem?" Or maybe, "there's a feeling I haven't tried to put into writing yet." When you think about the kinds of poems you want to write, what are you thinking about?

When I was a baby poet I was crazy about the lengths of the lines of CK Williams — he had these spectacularly long lines with line-overs that looked like short lines. I thought he was making a long-short music, and I imitated it for half a year until somebody pointed out that it was basically the same as Allen Ginsberg with different typesetting. So yes, I think there is a monkey-see attraction-imitation aspect to it for me.

But one of the other things when I was a baby poet was a terror of categorizing, classifying, as a substitute for experience. There was a lot of Foucault in the air, and we were led to believe classifying was bad for you. I wrote a poem then called “Gangster of Categories” that was going to rescue experience from the tyranny of social knowledge… until I realized this character was actually also me, and that to not be a gangster I simply had to not go around collecting protection money and shooting people.

Anyway if I see somebody doing something that seems like fun, or challenging, I want to try it. Don’t you?

Imitation is a lot of fun! Even when my imitation falls apart, I learn new things—one of them usually being “Oh! There's more going on here than I realized!”

Your first full length collection of poetry came out 20 years ago—ish? What're some differences for you as a poet now versus when you were a baby poet? Are you driven by the same things? Have some interests fallen away? Do you still love your first poet-loves? Are you now writing the kind of things you dreamed of writing back then?

A lot has changed in my life in those twenty years. I still read O’Hara and Ashbery, but more now as special cases and less as available examples. I still write with the people I care most about in mind, but that includes some new people since then, new to my life, or to consciousness (my older son was two when my first book came out), or to the earth (my younger son is barely a teen now). I don’t make a living in anything directly connected to poetry anymore, though I did like teaching in public schools when I worked at Teachers & Writers Collaborative. I know as a baby poet I admired poets who integrated special specific knowledge into their work — a poem I wrote just before leaving T&W predicted a life of governance all day and context in the evening, which came true, but really I just liked the sound of “governance” (I read a lot of business periodicals before I started a big company — now, who has the time).

The main thing that has changed for me since then is that I’ve tried to get better at listening to my own poems the way I listen to others’, to allow a period of not understanding if I have a reasonable hope of getting to something worth the work, not stuffy or important-in-quotes, but real and usable in my life. Kenneth makes a great sincere/ironic attempt at examples of one kind of knowledge in his poem “Some General Instructions”; he was a good example of someone paying attention to his own experience and trying to learn from it to be better with other people. I don’t think I need to write an advice poem like Kenneth’s or like Alice Notley’s in “How Spring Comes,” but I like the impulse. The late Noah Eli Gordon made fun of it when he saw me engaging in it — “ok, Polonius,” was I think how he put it. I wish I’d worked harder to cultivate that acquaintanceship.

Have you read any Proust yet? This is his beat.

I'm listening to Remembrance of Things Past here and there—while driving, before sleep if my wife is up late working. So, in the background I'm cultivating this experience of a thing resurfacing, and you recognize it, but it appears different now.

I want to ask you about this collection. Yeah, No. My favorite poem in here is "Think Tank Girl," possibly because my wife worked at a think tank in her youth but certainly because it expresses something of my experience finding my way in a world that tells you to get along to go along, while you can't help but wonder where everybody's going and whether or not they really care if you come, too.

...Don't think about it, think tank girl,
you have the right idea: can't be a free agent
until you've starred on a team.

What are your favorites here? When did these poems start to coalesce into a book? How do you think about books? [Relatedly, do you prefer books as they entered the world? (Or do you prefer chapbooks?) Or do you like Selecteds and Collecteds? Do you look forward to or dread a Collected of your own?] Can you describe the good feelings for you of pulling a book together and defining a group of poems as a collection?

I’m glad you like that poem — I started writing it around when my first book came out, while I was at a panel discussion on the future of social security. I saw all these ambitious well-put-together young people carrying cartons of pamphlets and setting up folding tables, and I must have seen the comic Tank Girl in a store. What organization was your wife with, can you say. I was moved by the problems of making a living and feeding my young son and trying not to destroy the world while I saved for retirement, and my marriage was collapsing, and I was in a suspended, perplexed state.

How I think about books keeps changing. I tend to think poets take greater risks and include less filler in chapbooks, that books are treated more as prerequisites for grant and tenure track job applications than whole experiences of perplexity and devotion. When I was a regular reviewer my second wife and I would call the books I would never get to that had to be sold to bookstores so we didn’t drown in books “ham sandwiches” — stores paid about enough for lunch meat and bread for a month’s surplus mail. I don’t get that many review copies since I let go of writing a column, and for that matter I stopped eating ham a while before I married again last year. I think books have generally gotten a little better since 2010, actually. But it’s rare for me to find a book where I want to reread more than say 40% of the poems. That’s obviously true of collected poems but also of selected poems — I think everybody ought to make their own selected poems of every poet they love, as many poems as staples will hold. As for me and a selected, I had better publish a few more collections before I think about that. (I might have another new book coming out later this year — I don’t want to jinx it so I will say no more.)

Jordan, I'm really enjoying this, and I hope you are too. I think I want to take it in for a landing with a couple final questions.

How do you describe what it is you like when you really like a poem? And what's one poem, or one part of a poem, that you love that you can quote here to close?

It’s more of a family resemblance of experiences than a litmus test — I used to say that a good poem read quickly will slow the reader down to focus on each word and every part of the experience, and then a popular poetry podcast started using a similar idea for its title and I felt a little like one of the many simultaneous inventors of the zipper. But I think it’s still about right — an indifferent poem rolls off the mind but a poem with something to it will attract someone looking for poetry sooner or later, and they will have a different experience of time while they’re reading it.

I’m part of a group planning some events to celebrate Kenneth Koch’s 100th birthday next year, and one of his short poems keeps coming to mind:

Poem

The thing
To do

Is organize

The sea

So boats will

Automatically float

To their destinations.

Ah, the Greeks

Thought of that!

Well, what if

They

Did? We have no

Gods

Of the winds!

And therefore

Must use

Science!

 

 

 

 

Jordan Davis is the author of three collections of poems and several chapbooks, including Noise (above/ground, 2023). His prose has appeared in Fence’s Constant Critic, Boston Review, and the Times Literary Supplement, and he was Poetry Editor of The Nation from 2010 to 2012. A long poem titled Involuntary Memories of the Road will appear before too long.

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

J-T Kelly is the author of the chapbook Like Now (CCCP/Subpress, 2023). His poetry appears in The Denver Quarterly (upcoming), Bad Lilies, and elsewhere. He is an innkeeper in Indianapolis.

Thursday, January 4, 2024

Kyla Houbolt : Yeah, No by Jordan Davis

Yeah, No, Jordan Davis
MadHat Press, 2023

 

 

 

 

 

This is a book that ages well. I mean, reading this collection repeatedly becomes like coming home to a familiar arrangement of rooms in a familiar landscape, albeit a landscape crafted from a relentless imagination which permits little immediate ease. Instead, it invites you in to a unique space where unexpected juxtapositions require a quality of alertness. "Don't get too comfortable," say these poems while also saying "come in, come in, sit down, have some tea" and the tea turns out to be some exotic blend from elsewhere, possibly off-planet.

Within this realm there is also a recurrent tenderness, and surprising expressions of vulnerability. Why surprising? They are set off, these moments of vulnerability, displayed as they are in a context of nearly acrobatic inventiveness. A whole mind is revealed. Or is it? There is also a mystery here.

Mid-Atlantic

To feel as you swim through it
that your summer is with its shoulder

Blackbird hovering into a cold ocean
wind turns aside and goes back

some songs
some parts of songs

The gentleness of those last two lines oddly and perfectly completes the weathery ("cold ocean wind") and sort of laboring ("swim through it") first two couplets, and lands the poem in a quiet breath. Nothing more need be said.


Water, as a conveyer of vulnerability shows up again here:

Poem

I heard a bee
and I walked into the ocean

The roses had all been cleared

The purple body of a jellyfish went by
and as the sun set to my right

I climbed out of the water awkwardly like a dog

and here:

The water alone is comforting
My face on my hand

(from "A Little Gold, A Second Song".)

In this age of the instant, where speed is a value unto itself, we're losing the awareness that poems are meant to be returned to, read more than once, experienced over slow time. Even poems that show up on the page as brief, or as hot takes, must have the kind of layering that opens inner doors, or they might as well be ad copy for the emotions. Yeah, No rewards the reader who returns.

Eleven Forgiven

A pirate in a repeat environment
plays tag in the ironing.
Entangle the raiments.
Peeved, tap clogs
the livery of pillory talk
evangel living as foreign
as the driver of the Rangers' van.
Drying, grieve,
vend the dove in hand
to a liar ring for an Ellery Queen.
England is davening.

One thing that happens in this poem is a rhythmic beauty. The flow of the first three lines is punctuated by the drum beats of "[p]eeved, tap clogs"; then again three lines trip along to be brought up short by "[d]rying, grieve," before returning to the flowing quality. The poem having begun in broadly drawn wordplay ends with prayer, contrasting a profoundly traditional verb with the previous unconventional cleverness. Have some tea, but don't get too comfortable.

A similar contrast also appears connotationally: "Drying" wants to be read as "dying" when paired with "grieve", (dry your tears) and "vend the dove in hand /to a liar ring for an Ellery Queen" displays the human reaching for peace ("dove in hand") embedded in a market ("vend") of lies ("liar ring") and spy tales ("Ellery Queen")

And so, England would well be davening -- praying, returning to a fundamental depth.

Yeah, No is also happily leavened with humor, as here:

Bad Poem

Put that rock down

Three cute trochees, but don't you wonder now about poems that carry rocks? Would that always be a bad thing? Is the rock a threat to be thrown at a target? Or a heaviness that keeps a poem from properly taking flight? Who cares? Just enjoy the joke.

 

 

 

 

 

Kyla Houbolt has been writing poems all her life, and began publishing in 2019. Her first chapbook, Dawn’s Fool, was published by Ice Floe press and is sold out; her second, Tuned, was published by Sedition Editions/CCCP Chapbooks + Subpress. Surviving Death, from Broken Spine, is her third. But Then I Thought, from above/ground press, is her fourth. Her work has appeared in numerous publications including Sublunary Review, Barren, Janus, Juke Joint, Moist, Neologism, Ghost City Review, and Stone Circle Review. Most of her online work can be found on her Linktree: @luaz_poet | Linktree Her current social media presence is on BlueSky Social (still in beta as of this writing), here: @luaz.bsky.social, and on Instagram @kyla_luaz. She currently lives and writes on the San Juan Ridge in California, USA.

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Frank Rogeczewski : Introduction to “Gratia, Poeta!” in Glorious Past-O-Vision!

 

 

 

 

Day four of my PhD exams: Poetics. I’ve pretty well aced the first three and this one should be a proverbial stroll in the park.  Five or ten minutes of mulling over the prompts and I boldly begin this final exam with what I consider an O’Hara-esque sendup/tribute to the history of poetics. No ideas but in thinks. However, after a page or so I begin to worry that perhaps some part of my committee will perceive this supposed-to-be serious examination essay a bit too much like one of my prose poems and by way of argumentum a simili downgrade or diss this last of my final exams. As my alma mater is the University of Illinois–Chicago, what then is Michael Anania but “my brudder from anudder mudder”? But also, my mentor and at times my proverbial model.

Anania warns a Modern Poetry class that Ezra Pound was not just fooling around with fascism; he informs a workshop student who’s written a quasi-surreal garden poem that she really shouldn’t title it “Strange Fruit.”  [During discussion of] one of my lefty poems in a graduate workshop, he likens the radicalism of Percy Shelley to the Communist Party, William Blake’s to the Trotskyites. He suggests I might somehow get into the poem the look or feel of the woodcuts that appeared in New Masses or Rebel Poet. Michael Anania knows where a poem wants to go.

David Ray Vance and Catherine Kasper will fall in love in these workshops. I will try to take Anania up on the woodcuts idea. I will write an essay on the raging debate: is LANGUAGE poetry a revolutionary disruption of the commodification of language or is it pretentious moving wallpaper? Mike Barrett and I will have a beer upon arriving at the UIC Writing Program’s student and faculty readings at the campus lounge one evening. Michael Anania will read the silence and music of his lines.

Coming from a working-class background—as did many of us—Anania reacted to the university with the proper amounts of respect for intelligence and creativity and irritation with academic applesauce (it’s not made from real apples). He handled the academic milieu with confidence and he built with us a camaraderie poetical ever after. He dedicated the poem “Considerations in Time” in Heat Lines to David and Catherine. Anania argues the LANGUAGE poets are postmodern surrealists. In workshop he tells the story of Carl Sandburg at an event for the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Sandburgh is up on the stage repeating the union’s name again and again to hear the music, the beauty of the name and what it stands for. The Brotherhood. Of Sleeping Car. Porters. The Brother. Hood of Sleep. Ing Car Porters.  “It’s something a poet would do,” Anania explains, “but it didn’t go over well with the whole audience.”

This is the fate of my final essay as well. One [doctoral committee] party pooper misconstrues my serial sketches as moving wallpaper. Then there’s the clatter and clamor of my heart in my brain as I get nervous at the first of the oral exams. But years later when Michael Anania retires, I take up the argumentum a simili as sword and shield—or maybe crucifix and wooden stake—and do us both proud.

 

Gratia, Poeta!

Well, that settles it. I looked up her website and there’s not one
mention of Charisma Carpenter, who plays the role of Cordelia
on the TV show Angel, being the daughter of John Carpenter

(director of Vampires, Ghosts of Mars, Prince of Darkness, the
original Halloween, and the remake of The Thing). This means the

greatest father/daughter horror team of all time existed only in
my imagination, a word for a concept that has pretty much always

been with us poets, albeit in a somewhat ambiguous relationship
with fancy, that being an abbreviation of fantasy, from the Latin

phantasia
, itself a transliteration from the Greek, making all these
terms more or less kissing-cousins, but I don’t want to get all

ancient aesthetically philosophical or etymologically medieval
on you, so I’ll skip right to the part where Michael Anania used

to mention in workshops that getting into and out of the poem
were two of the most difficult tricks for a poet. Also, he made it

clear that you have to earn your O’s. In the postmodern world
of today the time’s long past when the poet can get away with

exclaiming all over the poem, let alone apostrophizing this, that,
and the other Muse. People just can’t suspend disbelief in your

transmogrification of an abstraction. When I first signed on as
an undergrad, I was like, “Yeats, Yeats, Yeats.” I sounded more

like a poodle than a poet. Michael Anania and Ralph Mills were
kind enough to bring me over to America and plant me a bit

more firmly in the 20th century—William Carlos Williams, Ezra
Pound, Frank O’Hara, Susan Howe. It’s a good thing too. I stopped

dreaming of ascending in the ranks of The Hermetic Order of
the Golden Dawn—from novice to cloak-holder, I’d fancy—and

started thinking more seriously about poetics in the late 20th/
early 21st century, which, of course, reminds us that Angel is a

spin-off from the TV version of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which
stars Sarah Michelle Gellar and apparently is going off the air this

spring. The character Angel, played by David Boreanaz on the
eponymous TV show, is a vampire cursed with a soul so that he

suffers remorse over the evil he has committed and now wants to
fight for justice—and also for truth and beauty, I like to think, you

know, being a poet and all. In his role as professor of literature, if
Michael found you reading Nova in class, instead of, “That doesn’t

go here,” it’d be, “You read Chip Delany?” He wouldn’t express
the same enthusiasm for, say, Stephen King. I’m on my own there.

Michael doesn’t read anything more graveyard than the graveyard
poets, who were a meditative and melancholy bunch, and guess

what was their favorite setting for those meditations—meaning I’m
grateful that a poet who could see exactly where any poem wanted

to go spent time on my poetry, which always wants to go places
like Frankenstein’s laboratory, Dracula’s crypt, Freddy Krueger’s

boiler room, Its sewer main, the Dead’s shopping mall outside of
Pittsburgh, and the Bates’ Motel. Named after an Avon perfume,

Charisma Carpenter began playing the role of Cordelia, a high
school friend of the vampire slayer, on Buffy and then graduated

to Angel with that show’s premiere. And though Charisma had
only a handful of commercials and a guest appearance on Baywatch

on her resume, and though Sarah Michelle Gellar has starred in

Scooby-Doo
, won a Blockbuster Award for Best Supporting Actress
for her role in I Know What You Did Last Summer, and has become
a spokesperson for Maybelline, I’ve always thought Charisma

the more interesting actress. Sexier too, especially now that she’s
impregnated with a demon fetus and positively evil herself. (You

would think people would be negatively evil, but it never works out
that way—some situations simply cry out for an oxymoron.) I guess

you could say that for me Sarah Michelle Gellar is like the fancy
and Charisma Carpenter the imagination. In the Romantic sense

of the terms. You know, where Blake’s like, “Imagination is spiritual
sensation” and Coleridge is like, “It dissolves…in order to recreate

or…to idealize and to unify,” comparing the imagination (in a
more or less roundabout way) to “the eternal act of creation in the

infinite I AM.” Where fancy “is no other than a mode of memory
emancipated from the order of time and space.” Now you can see

why John Carpenter should be her father. With his fine sense of
the horror film ad her presence and acting skill, why, we’d return

to a new heyday of horror, one recalling sublime partnerings of
previous eras—Elsa Lanchester and James Whale, Janet Leigh and

Alfred Hitchcock, Jamie Lee Curtis and John Carpenter. Not that
I’m in any way putting down Sarah Michelle Gellar. Even though

William Carolos Williams says, “Yes, the imagination, drunk with
prohibitions, has destroyed and recreated everything afresh in the

likeness of that which it was,” the fancy is no slouch either. It may
even be—since imagination came to be used by the Romans as a

substitute for phantasia—that fancy and imagination are cousins
that’ve been doing more than kissing. Or they are Siamese Twins.

And if I were still a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden
Dawn, I’d have to wonder whether there wasn’t some cosmic

conspiracy at work when Buffy the Vampire Slayer goes off the air
at the same time Michael Anania retires. Well, there probably is. I

mean, how do you thank someone for sharing his knowledge of
poets and poetry, his way with line breaks and pentameter. Those

of us who’ve learned from Michael Anania consider ourselves
spin-offs from a more critically acclaimed, popular, and longer

running TV show. Coleridge’s secondary imagination related to
the primary imagination, so to speak. Whoa! All these imaginations

and fancies in my head! They’re making me dizzy and I didn’t
even take my antihistamine today. And did you ever notice how

the pharmaceuticals these days sound like something from the old

Flash Gordon
series? With his pals, Dr. Zyrtek and Dale Allegra,
Flash faces the Emperor Ming and the evil Princess Viagra. By
the way, I thought I saw Michael Anania on TV, standing next to

Mayor Daley at a celebration of Chicago’s one hundred and sixty-
fifth year, and I thought, “Wouldn’t that be something if Michael

retired into a whole other career: his own TV show—if not on the
WB, perhaps on UPN, in the time slot Buffy’s left unfilled.” It’s not

unheard of—a poet on TV. Somebody told me he’d seen Charles
Bernstein reading a phone book with Jon Lovitz on a Yellow Pages

Commercial. Can you imagine? Longinus sees in the imagination
the source of the sublime when “moved by enthusiasm and passion

you seem to see things whereof you speak and place them before
the eyes of your hearers.” Anyway, it’s certainly a show I’d watch,

whether Michael played a vampire slayer or a poet/professor. And
O! Charisma Carpenter! If you would co-star with him, that

would be marvelous!

 

 

 

from From the Word to the Place ed. Lea Graham
MadHat Press, 2022
reprinted with permission

 


 

 

Frank Rogaczewski lives with his wife and comrade Beverly Stewart in bee-yoo-ti-ful  Berwyn, IL with their dear dog, Seamus, their dear foster dog, Kitsu,  and their lovely literary cats, Gertrude and Virginia.  Frank is now responsible for two books of prose poetry, The Fate of Humanity in Verse and Jeepers and Criminy! Are You Following This? A Helpful if Inexact Proletarian/ Smart Ars Poetic Manifesto. An adjunct English instructor and leftist for many years, he continues to move to the left.

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