Black Market Re-View

Issue 4 out now, with Jim Zola, Niamh McMullan, Richard M Thompson, Torkel Tennberg, Sally Barrett, Aviva Treger, John Grey, Walburga Appleseed, Susan McCraw, Brindley Hallam Dennis, Natalie Crick, Fabrice Poussin, Tom Cowin, Jamie Stewart, Mark Russell, Nick Power, P.J. Kryfko, Susan McCraw. Robert Beveridge, Bill Wolak, John Short, Jamie Stewart, Rose Knapp and A J Taylor.

New books from MA BIBLIOTHÈQUE

New books from Sharon Kivland’s excellent press, including Other Room reader Claire Potter. More details here, here and here.

Sean AshtonLiving in a Land
 ––Living in a Land is a novel written almost entirely in the negative, consisting mainly of things the narrator has never done, no longer does or will never do. Given that what he has not done is more diverse than what he has, there is much ground to cover, and he approaches the task with arguably greater zeal than a conventional diarist. A study of the conceivable versus the actual, the personal versus the universal, idiocy versus logic, black versus white, circles versus squares, renting versus buying, Living in a Land is a chronicle of a mind fighting its own oppositional nature, a portrait of a hypothetical man.

Buster V. DachyThe Crumpled Envelope
 ––Buster V. Dachy pays homage to Poe, Gombrowicz, Godard, and Lacan’s destined ‘purloined letter’. This unusual novel follows the structure of a play, with acts and scenes, but it entertains a rather ambiguous relation to narrative. Although there is one (a detective story even), with beginning and end, it appears to be distributed between a number of characters and voices, which are not always clearly distinct. Yet, the characters are assigned in the ordinary way of a play: they have names, roles, titles, and functions. Undoubtedly the main male character is rather sophisticatedly grotesque and the lead female character rather elegantly contrived. Visitors sound like shadows, which leaves the stage to four museum guardians who are the true heroes of this melancholic comedy. It finishes as it started, with a categorical sense of insignificant necessity.

 Sarah WoodCivilisation & Its Malcontents
 ––Caught up in the vortex of this bellicose age, adrift on the sea of digital information and misinformation, without perspective enough to glimpse the future that is actually forming, I am finding it hard to think.

Here is a book about thought right now and about how to think in a world that asks us at every level not to. Discontent? Malcontent? Sarah Wood looks at the world through Freud and fraud.

Claire PotterRound that way
 ––But the air lays thin and low in the towns around here. Precipitation from the hills causes the pressure to drop off, it puts distance between the air’s molecules, bringing on headaches and low spots where storms kick up.

Round that way is Claire Potter’s second published book. It brings together CHAVSCUMBOSS, a poetic experiment in writing while watching the performance of masculinity by the YouTube user of the same name—and a short story, PRESSURE, in which a house fire raises painful heat in the residents of a small northern town.

Sharon KivlandFreud’s ViewsFreud on Holiday Appendix V
––Almost every year Sigmund Freud went on holiday, often accompanied by his brother Alexander, an expert on railway transport, timetables, and travel tariffs. Freud made a distinction between the holidays he spent with his family during the month of August, usually in the Alps, and those voyages he took later, most often in September, with complicated itineraries. The fifty-six letters and hundred and eighty-nine postcards of his travel correspondence with his family and reveal his enjoyment of these holidays. Herein Freud’s views, as both prospects and opinions.

Tim Allen – Under The Cliff Like out now from if p then q

under cliff cover V3

Tim Allen’s latest book is out now from if p then q.

‘Under The Cliff Like’ is constructed from the ‘Title And First Line Index’ in the 1962 edition of ‘Granger’s Index To Poetry’ (Columbia University Press. U.S.A.) which was found in a junk shop. It was written in 1996. In alphabetical order all entries beginning with ‘Like’ are juxtaposed with the equivalent number of entries beginning with ‘Under’. There are no alterations other than elimination of commas and the capital letter of the juxtaposed line plus the insertion of full stops at the end of each pairing.

196 pages
£8.00 (£5.60 with discount until end September via the link below)

LINK

 

Andrew Taylor: March

Building on his debut collection Radio Mast Horizon (Shearsman Books, 2013) Andrew Taylor takes the reader on a journey through landscapes and places such as the Welsh hills, the West Coast Mainline and the north docks of Liverpool.

Travel is a recurring theme throughout these poems, alongside music and the seasons and the shifts they bring. From having coffee in quiet city-centre cafés to travelling around complete rail networks, Taylor invites the reader into a world that is both personal and universal. Out now on Shearsman.

The book will be launched on 28th September at Five Leaves Bookshop in Nottingham, with readings also by Rory Waterman and Kathryn Daskiewicz. Details of that here.

Datableed #8

 Out now, with Brenda Iijima, Beth Hopkins, Catherine Wagner, David Buuck, Aristilde Kirby, James Goodwin, Colin Lee Marshall, Florence Uniacke, Allen Fisher, Black Ponds], Oscar Towe, Victoria Ward, Jonathan Skinner, Patricia Farrell, Angus Sinclair, Jill Khoury, Jennifer MacBain-Stephens, bruno neiva, Kathrine Sowerby, Sean Bonney, Lucia Sellars, Ethereal], Sarah Cave, Geoffrey Gatza, Ellen Dillon, hiromi suzuki, Will Maclean, Florence Lenaers, Robert Kiely, Rebecca Close, William Fuller, Tessa Berring, Carol Dalton, cris cheek, Saskia McCracken, Keith Tuma, Eleanor Careless & Dominic Hale.

Zarf nine

poems by

adam warne, vik shirley, eley williams,

julius smit, nat raha, edric mesmer,

katy lewis hood, tom crompton, lana hughes,

katie fanthorpe, ellen dillon, gloria dawson,

william fuller, ian cross, rey conquer,

imogen cassels, and eleanor careless

PLUS nisha ramayya reviews eley williams

AND maria sledmere reviews emilia weber

More here.

The Lost Signals Collection

Signals.PNG

For two days–September 11 and 12–Lost Signals will be accepting submissions:

  • please submit either an image, audio file, or text fragment that you have discovered
  • the archivists will examine your submission and cross-reference it with the over 6 million fragments in our collection
  • we will then attempt to decipher your submission
  • if that proves successful, we will publish your submission along with our commentary here at the site
  • please send your submissions to the Supervisory Archivist, care of Nicholas Rombes: nrombesudm@gmail.com
  • submissions are open from 5:00 am EST 11 September through 11:59 pm EST 12 September

More here.

Two new open calls on 3am magazine

Duos: collaborative poems written / made by two poets. There is no criteria for the poems or process. Please send a single bio and single photo for both authors.

Poem Brut: poems exploring handwriting, abstraction, illustration, asemic and pansemic writing, visual poetry and material process, colour, scribbling, scrawlings, crossings out, ink, forgotten notes, found text, interaction between paper and pen, and pencil, geometric poems, inarticulate poems, minimalism, collage, toilet wall writing. No works produced on a computer.

More details here.

Iain Britton book launch

“Iain Britton’s poetical writing entangles the personal human condition with natural process and cultural artifice. Human problems, frequently a question of reconciling self and other, are read in terms of place, landscape, image, the clutter and scenery of civilisation including gods and arts, to form a kind of totalising theatre of perception which can be close to emblematic. Actual and figurative remain perfectly distinguishable, but interact with each other in every detail, in an open theatre where acts are free to display their full nature and origins, the vast width of the inner life.” Peter Riley
Iain will be reading poems from his latest collection THE INTAGLIO POEMS at TIME OUT BOOKSTORE in Mt Eden, which will also involve six of the very finest poets in and around Auckland. The reading will start at 7pm on Friday 11 August. Phantom Billstickers will generously be helping to promote the reading by placing posters around the city.
The Intaglio Poems by Iain Britton price £9.00 + postage worldwide from https://hesterglockpress.wordpress.com/iain-britton-the-intaglio-poems/

Blackbox Manifold issue 18

With poems by Zohar Atkins, Louis Armand, Alan Baker, Charlie Baylis, James Coghill, Helen Charman, Aidan Coleman, John Goodby, Dominic Hale, Caleb Klaces, Daisy Lafarge, Robert Lietz, Medbh McGuckian, Anthony Madrid, Kate Noakes, Mary Noonan, Karl O’Hanlon, Dan Raphael, Cal Revely-Calder, Aidan Semmens, Paige Smeaton, Cherry Smyth, David Wheatley & John Wilkinson, plus Chinese poetry in translation by Eleanor Goodman and a tribute to Tom Raworth. More here.