
Stephen Emmerson’s Letters to Verlaine has been released as a free download by Deep White Sound. Full length album and 60 page PDF poetry collection.

Stephen Emmerson’s Letters to Verlaine has been released as a free download by Deep White Sound. Full length album and 60 page PDF poetry collection.
Join us at The Castle Hotel, Oldham Street, Manchester, M2 4PD at 7pm for readings by Joanne Ashcroft, Lila Matsumoto and E.J. McAdams.
7.30pm, Wednesday 18th February
Upstairs at the Fly in the Loaf
13 Hardman Street, Liverpool, Merseyside L1 9AS
Free Entry
Pairings to include…
Tom Jenks & SJ Fowler (launching 1000 Proverbs)
Robert Sheppard & The European Union of Imaginary Authors
Scott Thurston & Steve Boyland
James Byrne & Sandeep Parmar
Patricia Farrell & Joanne Ashcroft
Steve Van Hagen & Michael Egan
Lindsey Holland & Andrew Oldham
Elio Lomas & Luke Thurogood
Hosts: SJ Fowler Fowler and James Byrne
“A gatherer of fragments, Harwood’s writing is a mode of slow accretion, of building blocks of poetry (and prose), and presenting them in relationship with others, to allow them to resonate with one another. We think of collage as a technique of rip and tear, shuffle and paste, fix and finish, but for Harwood it is more like a slow game of chess.”
Robert Sheppard on Lee Harwood’s The Orchid Boat, online now at Stride.
Other Room reader Sandeep Parmar launches her second collection, Eidolon, on Tuesday 20 January 2015, 7:30pm, Swedenborg Hall, 20/21 Bloomsbury Way, London WC1A 2TH. The event is part of the Shearsman reading series and also features Timothy Adès (reading translations of Alberto Arvelo Torrealba) and Peter Robinson.
Steve McCaffery reading at The Other Room in November 2014
Five sessions; five great, European avant-gardes. Explore contemporary innovations in European poetry with British vanguardist S J Fowler, and discover how their remarkable explorations in the written word often compliment, rather than antagonise, more formal writing practice. A course stressing the contemporary, Maintenant! will introduce 5 great poetic movements that will springboard you into new writing techniques, stressing the possibility amidst the history. Covering Oulipo, Austrian modernism, Concrete poetry, CoBra and the British poetry revival, this course – with the energy, dynamism and invention of the movements it explores – will enrich anyone’s poetry horizons. More at the Poetry School website.
Grenier’s important poem/collection/poster is back in print after some 30 odd years. It’s a must have. It’s been republished by the American press Convultion – http://www.convolutionjournal.com/cambridge-mass/
CAMBRIDGE M’ASS should have won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award and gotten Grenier a MacArthur too. But it didn’t work out that way. Don’t miss it this time around.
Charles Bernstein
Issue number 23 of the superb online reviews magazine features reviews of books by P. Inman, Tom Jenks, Lisa Jarnot, Aram Saroyan and lots, lots more.
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7th, 7:00 PM
THE EDGE READING SERIES
at Bridge Street Books presents
A party and reading for P. Inman’s Written 1976-2013
P. INMAN
& DOUG LANG
Please join us to celebrate the publication of P. Inman’s collected poems, Written 1976-2013, recently published by the UK press if p then q. This book is truly a landmark in the history of DC poetry. The volume offers an incredible introduction and reappraisal of the work of one of the twentieth and twenty first century’s most outstanding poets. It includes the collections: Platin, Ocker, Uneven Development, Think of One, Red Shift, Criss Cross, Vel, at. least., amounts. to., Ad Finitum and Per Se in ‘final’ versions, as well as a number of other previously uncollected poems. The volume also includes a sumptuous, lengthy essay by Craig Dworkin covering Inman’s career to date.
Longtime Inman friend and collaborator DOUG LANG: Born and raised in Wales, came to DC in 1973, ran Folio Reading series in the 1970s, edited and published Dog City magazine and Jawbone Books, taught writing at the Corcoran 37 years, most recent book is Dérangé. His selected poems, In the Works, is forthcoming from Edge Books.
PETER INMAN (writing as P. INMAN) was born in 1947 and raised on Long Island. He is a graduate of Georgetown University. Since 1980 he has worked at the Library of Congress, where he has been a union activist (i.e. shop steward, executive officer, union rep and contract negotiator) for Local 2910 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees AFSCME. He has described his politics as “class-based & socialist”. In addition to the books collected in Written his work has appeared in magazines and anthologies including the seminal anthologies In the American Tree and From the Other Side of the Century. He resides in Maryland with the poet Tina Darragh.
This is what Michael Golston has to say about Written 1976-2013:
The collected P. Inman! It’s about time—and a lot of other words—many of which have never been seen or heard before. Inman’s half-century project of the complete dérèglement de tous la langue marks one of the endpoints of the great arc of American poetry, where the bow bends all the way to touch the ground. You’ll find a pot of linguistic gold there: Written is writing written at the limits of written writing. Accompanied by Craig Dworkin’s fantastic introductory essay, this book is sure to become a classic in the ongoing history of the avant-garde.
BRIDGE STREET BOOKS
2814 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Washington, DC 20007
ph 202 965 5200
Located in Georgetown, next to the Four Seasons Hotel, five blocks from the Foggy Bottom Metro, blue & orange lines.
Karen Mac Cormack will perform at the next Other Room on Thursday 29th November, The Castle Hotel, Oldham Street, Manchester, M2 4PD. 7 PM start, free entry, book stall. The other performers are Steve McCaffery and Claire Potter.
The above clip shows her reading at Birkbeck in London in 2012. For more about Karen, see her page at the Electronic Poetry Center.
Redstone Launch
The launch of an exciting new publication from Redstone Press, a box and book by Mel Gooding, called:
ART RULES! (AND HOW TO BREAK THEM) by Mel Gooding
Mel Gooding and Sophie Herxheimer will be reading, announcing, and riffing off the ideas in the box at three events over the coming weeks. Each one starts at 6.30, performances at 7.15.
Monday 20st October, The Hospital Club, 24 Endell Street, WC2H 9HQ
Wednesday 29th October, Camden Arts Centre, Arkwright Road, NW3 6DG
Friday 7th November, GRAD gallery for Russian Art and Design, 3-4a Little Portland Street, W1W 7JB
Join us in celebrating a decade of innovative publishing and performance, with readings and live sets from poets and authors including Ross Sutherland and Hannah Silva, plus DJs, roundtable discussions and one very large birthday cake.
Date & time
Saturday 6 September, 6pm till late
Rich Mix
35-47 Bethnal Green Road
London E1 6LA
£5

Including Charles Bernstein, cris cheek, Tony Conrad, Loss Pequeño Glazier, Steve McCaffery, Myung Mi
Kim, Tammy McGovern, Joan Retallack, Laura Shackelford, Danny Snelson, Dennis Tedlock, Cecilia Vicuña, Elizabeth
Willis, & Wooden Cities with Ethan Hayden, in a dazzling array of stellar talks, performances, and conversation.
Junction Box 6
Is Now Live
Peter Finch: Asheville
John Goodby: Translations from Pierre Reverdy
Steve Boyland interviewed by Scott Thurston
David Rees Davies: Human/Nature
Rhian Bubear: RS Thomas: ‘The Echoes Return Slow’ as a poet’s autobiography
Frances Presley: Dancing the Five Rhythms with Scott Thurston
Chris Paul: The Bosch Collective
Ric Hool: Last Fair Deal Gone Down
Chris Vine: Notes from Brazil
Wu Fusheng and Graham Hartill: Translating Chinese Poetry
John Freeman: Holiday Reading
TO SEE JUNCTION BOX 6, CLICK HERE: glasfrynproject.org.uk/w/category/junction-box/
The latest issue of the Journal of British and Irish Poetry is now out, featuring articles on Tambimuttu (Matt Chambers), J.H. Prynne and The English Intelligencer (Ryan Dobran), Ian Hamilton Finlay and Thomas A. Clark (Ross Hair) and Denise Riley (Samuel Solomon). The issue also features conference reports on the Allen Fisher symposium @ Northumbria (SL Mendoza), Literary Collaboration @ Edge Hill (Tom Jenks) and Nomadic Poetics @ Bangor (Steven Hitchens). The reviews section covers The Salt Companion to Maggie O’Sullivan (Joanne Ashcroft), An Andrew Crozier Reader (Alex Latter) and The Ground Aslant (James Wilkes). More here.
Wowee. Not to be missed. See below.
Tim Atkins will read the whole of his Collected Petrarch published by Crater Press.
30th July 2pm-2am
8 Kennington Park House
Kennington Park
London
SE11 4JT
New issue out now, plus e-chaps by Eileen R. Tabios and David Berridge.