Chris McCabe – Two new titles

Cenotaph South: Mapping the Poets of Nunhead Cemetery is now out in paperback. Penned in the Margins are offering a copy Francis Ives’ gorgeous map of the project (see below) with each copy of the book. This is available from the Penned site here

The Affairs of Dylan Thomas, a limited edition book of collages and visual poems, has just been published by Red Fox Press. The main sequence of poetry collage explores the obsession of critics with Dylan Thomas’s private life. This is available from the publisher’s website here 

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.

Launch of Swims by Elizabeth-Jane Burnett

26th September at 18:30–20:30, Tamesis Dock, Albert Embankment (opp no 9), between Vauxhall and Lambeth Bridge, London, SE1 7TP.

Join Penned in the Margins on the water of the Thames to celebrate the debut poetry collection from Elizabeth-Jane Burnett. A lyrical celebration of wild swimming, Swims will be official launched aboard Tamesis Dock in Lambeth. Join us from 6.30 for a reading by Elizabeth, drinks and your chance to pick up a copy of the book.

A long poem taking many forms, Swims begins and ends in Devon, moving across the waterways of England and Wales: from urban pond to open sea. The poet swims among fishermen on Grasmere, reimagines the body as bottle cap in the Channel, and clambers down the bank of the river Ouse with words scrawled on her swimsuit.

As political as they are personal, these meditations are conceived as environmental acts that probe the relationship between landscape, memory and the self. A sinuous, innovative debut, Swims reminds us of the power of swimming to transform the human spirit, registering what the water gives to us and what it takes away.

“These poems flow and sing through salt and sweet water, connecting time and place and spirit in an electric gesture of natural unity. Swims is a wondrous, perfect thing.” –
PHILIP HOARE, AUTHOR OF RISINGTIDEFALLINGSTAR AND LEVIATHAN, OR, THE WHALE

Free entry, but please RSVP to james@pennedinthemargins.co.uk

You can also watch Elizabeth reading from Swims for us at The Other Room here.

 

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

 

Antony Rowland – M

The third poetry collection from Antony Rowland, Professor of Modern and Contemporary Poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University, whose work has been compared with poets as disparate as John Ashbery and Ezra Pound. This collection includes the poems that were awarded the Manchester Poetry Prize in 2012.

It will be launched 28th September, Manchester Met Number 70, Oxford Street, Manchester, 6 PM start, with novelist Tony Williams. More details about the launch and the book here.

Free Verse Poetry Book Fair

Free Verse is an all-day bazaar, market, library, meeting place, performance venue, information resource and more. Celebrating the vitality of contemporary poetry in the UK, publishers both large and small, both experimental and traditional, display and sell their work direct to the public. This year’s Free Verse: Poetry Book Fair will take place on
Saturday 30th September 2017 at Conway Hall in London! More details, including a list of publishers attending and readings, here.

 

 

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.

Peter Barlow’s Cigarette #24

Saturday 23rd September
An afternoon of alternative poetries
4.00 – 6.00, Deansgate Waterstones
Free entry, free wine

Sally Barrett, Cathy Butterworth, Calum Gardner, Judith Goldman, Claire Potter

~~~

SALLY BARRETT ~
lives and writes in Manchester, works in Salford and is from the right side of the Pennines (Leeds). She has been published by Redceilings blog, 3am Magazine (in collaboration), Hypnopomp magazine and will be published in Picaroon magazine later this year. She has self-published a booklet titled ‘They’re coming to take me away’ and one in collaboration: ‘67, 100, sometimes 10’. Her blog can be found at mcbarrettblog.wordpress.com.

CATHY BUTTERWORTH ~
is an artist who makes work at the intersection of writing, performance and visual art. Her recent pamphlet Cimmerian was published by Dock Road Press. Performance actions, writing and visual art projects include: Sketches for Britain (Bridewell Gallery, Liverpool, 2010), 22 Mondays (durational performance with Mark Greenwood, 2015), Everyone in Your Life is a Figment of Your Imagination (Delhi, 2015), Elective Affinities (Tate Liverpool 2016) and True Blue: 26 Lost Performances (2016). Her literary object, Fortunate, was published by zimZalla in December 2016.

CALUM GARDNER ~
is a poet and the editor of Zarf magazine, and currently teaches at the University of Leeds. Calum’s poems have been published in places like datableed, Poetry Wales, The Literateur, and Jungftak.

JUDITH GOLDMAN ~
is the author of Vocoder (Roof), Deathstar/Rico-chet (O Books), l.b.; or, catenaries (Krupskaya), and agon (The Operating System). Her current project _______ Mt. [blank mount]: “Mont Blanc” + Mont Blanc / light + color / grieving Earth writes through past futures and future histories of ecological catastrophe, using the lens of Mont Blanc. She is core faculty in the Poetics Program at SUNY, Buffalo and Poetry Features Editor for Postmodern Culture.

CLAIRE POTTER ~
Born in Merseyside, Claire Potter is an artist writer working across performance, publication, installation and film to reconsider modes of reading, writing and speaking by giving precedence to forms of vernacular and modes of articulation. Author of Mental Furniture (VerySmallKitchen, 2014) and Round That Way (Ma Bibliotheque, 2017). Collaborates with all necessary difficulty and joy on trauma-focused sonic works with artist and musician Bridget Hayden. More info at clairepotter.net

Canalchemy Nantgarw

Nantgarw China Works Museum, Tyla Gwyn, CF15 7TB Nantgarw, Rhondda Cynon Taff. Saturday, September 23 at 2 PM.

Canalchemy at Nantgarw China Works Museum Saturday 23rd of September 2-4pm. Poetry performance and exhibition of the Canalchemy project so far: including live performances, as well as images and films of previous performances by Lyndon Davies, Rhys Trimble, Nia Polly Watts Davies, Chris Paul, Wanda O’Connor, John Maher, Julia Lewis, John Goodby, Mamta Sagar, Allen Fisher, Anthony Mellors and Steven Hitchins filmed on location at sites along the route of the Glamorganshire canal. Arrive before if you want a look around the china works.

 

Judith Goldman & Eley Williams

Monday, September 18 at 7 PM. Royal Holloway Poetics Research Centre, 11 Bedford Square, Bloomsbury, London, WC1B 3RF. Free.

JUDITH GOLDMAN is the author of Vocoder (Roof, 2001), DeathStar/rico-chet (O Books, 2006). l.b.;or catenaries (Krupskaya, 2011) and agon (The Operating System, 2017). She teaches in the Poetics Program at SUNY, Buffalo and is the Poetry Features Editor for the online journal Postmodern Culture. She is currently at work on —- Mt. [blank mount], a critical-creative project that writes through P.B. Shelley’s ‘Mont Blanc’ and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein in the context of past futures and future histories of ecological collapse, and she recently performed a collaborative digital poetics project Ice Core Modulations, at The Ammerman Centre Biennal Symposium on Arts and Technology (2016). Her scholarship focuses on contemporary poetry as “extinction sink.”

***

ELEY WILLIAMS debut prose collection Attrib. And Other Stories (Influx Press) was chosen by Ali Smith as one of the best debut works of fiction published in 2017. Twice short-listed for the White Review Short Story Prize, works have appeared in the London Review of Books, the White Review, Ambit and the Cambridge Literary Review. Currently co-editor of fiction at online journal 3:AM Magazine, a new pamphlet of poetry Frit (Sad Press) was published in July 2017.