A Brenda Changed My Life
Transcription
A Brenda Changed My Life
BOOG CITY Issue 11 November 2003 Free A Brenda Changed My Life BY JON BERGER A Brenda changed my life, once. I was still living in my old college town, when Alex suggested that we see the “All Strung Out” show at a nearby school. I had nothing better to do, so I agreed to see these three major label acts doing solo acoustic shows. First up was Brenda Kahn. ‘Mint Juleps and Needles,’ has the memorably slutty line, ‘You’re cracked, you’ve gone mad. It’s hopelessly sad, but I like you better than most of the men I’ve had.’ She was gorgeous, she was diminutive, she was a ravenhaired Jew, and she approached the mic to say, “Is Chaz here? I was playing pool with Chaz before, and I told him to come to the show. Chaz, you out there?” Brenda Kahn was featured on this bill of Columbia acts with other important songwriters, playing at this prestigious school, and she was asking about some schnook she’d just met. This semi-celebrity before my eyes had already personalized her performance, as if she were in some coffeehouse. That was so cool. Her set was cool, too. She played songs from her recent Columbia debut, Epiphany in Brooklyn, the cover of which featured a photo of her bangy knees trying to remain in frame. That cover was like her voice, which ranged from squealing and shouting to moaning. (I liked the moaning best.) The other acts on the bill were good, but, well, they weren’t Brenda Kahn. I was exceedingly taken with Ms. Kahn and got her album right away. Probably the strongest cut was “Mint Juleps and Needles,” which Brenda produced, and included the memorably slutty line, “You’re cracked, you’ve gone mad. It’s hopelessly sad, but I like you better than most of the men I’ve had.” There was a New York feel to the album. When I moved to New York soon N A N C Y S E E WA L D is Eating Well on a Lousy But Steady Income I wanted to try Itzocan Café (438 E. 9th St.) for a while because I had heard a lot of buzz about the place from friends. It’s small, the staff is friendly, and they serve Sangria. Go early to be seated immediately, otherwise plan to wait. Though they serve burritos and quesadillas for lunch, dinner fare is more interesting, with offerings you won’t see at your average burrito joint. The first time I went, my friend and I ordered two entrees to split—chicken stuffed with goat cheese and vegetables ($12.50), and the flank steak with semolina dumplings ($13.95). Both were good, but neither had a real kick. I thought the dumplings were interesting, but bland. As a New Yorker, I’m admittedly not too familiar with Mexican cooking, and it’s quite possible that the jalapeno-laden red sauces I’m accustomed to were actually created in the U.S.A. I went back another time, however, because I couldn’t stop thinking about the appetizers I hadn’t tried. Who can resist Mexican-style cheese fondue? I also realized I could afford four appetizers, which would be about the same price as, if Brenda Lee in concert BLP, Inc. photo after, I saw she played one week at the historic CBGB’s and the next at the unknown Sidewalk Café. That’s where I learned about Antifolk and other hidden musical genres. I discovered that behind every corner you can find a thousand hidden prizes, if you knew how to look—a lot of times, even if you didn’t. My infatuation with Brenda’s music didn’t last at quite that fevered pitch. No album amazed me as much as Epiphany, and how could it? That album and that artist were vital in my development. Who would I be without Brenda Kahn? I can only answer the opposite. Probably, I wouldn’t have become such a proponent of independent music. It’s unlikely I would have started a fanzine. I never would have become a poet, or a bandleader, or met most of the people I know now, or gotten that neat job desktop publishing, or gone to Brazil or Hong Kong. And it all started with a girl named Brenda. I don’t see her much now. These days, Ms. Kahn doesn’t play many shows. After releasing five full-length albums, Brenda Kahn has begun to devote herself to other projects. She’s the brains behind www.womanrock. com, a webzine devoted to independent women artists. “We can change the way music is heard, film is seen, and art is experienced,” she says in her womanrock.com editor’s message. It’s a pretty big vision for such a small person, but I figure she’ll do it. After all, Brenda Kahn changed my life. Not Your Average Mexican Food not less than, two entrees. Speaking from a purely economic standpoint, the entrees would probably make better leftovers. In addition to the fondue, my friend and I chose the crispy goat cheese ravioli, tortilla with shredded chicken in tomatochipotle sauce, and a soufflé made with sweet corn and huitlacoche mushrooms. All of the appetizers were $6, except for the tortilla, which was given in quite a generous portion, and for only $4.50. The fondue was the best, because underneath the cheesy exterior was a spicy red sauce thick with mushrooms, poblano peppers, and chorizo. The fondue was really the only dish that had that spicy kick I associate with Mexican food. The ravioli speaks for itself—it was fried and filled with cheese. My friend was unimpressed by both the soufflé and tortilla. I liked the soufflé because I never eat it, and the tortilla because its tomato-based sauce and black beans helped cut the egginess of the former. I made the mistake of ordering too many cheese-based appetizers. There were other options, including a green salad, guacamole, soup of the day, or one of the specials. Asparagus with mango and a Mexican cheese was a special on both of the nights I ate at Itzocan. For dessert, the waitress suggested that special, the pumpkin crème brulée. It was made perfectly, but after all that dairy at dinner, I probably would have enjoyed another option, like the mole chocolate cake with hazelnut sauce. As I write this review, I feel within myself a growing determination to develop an appreciation for the more subtle flavors that Itzocan uses in its cooking. The cactus leaf burrito awaits my return. FYI, Itzocan Café does not accept credit cards. Brenda Bordofsky Fort Greene, Brooklyn Happy I ran, I walked in the free public who is curvy and intelligent relax, it’s relief happy is relief sometimes it sits in your neck, waiting for pacific oceans leave the grovel of cities and lot’s wife for mist in the morning a child body surfs in America among past, resistance and deed and recently I’ve figured out deed BOOG CITY EDIT Issue 11, November 2003, free editor/publisher David A. Kirschenbaum editor@boogcity.com copy editor Corina Copp music editor Jon Berger poetry editor Stephanie Young small press editor Jane Sprague columnist-at-large Greg Fuchs poetry calendar editor Rj Gambale counsel Ian S. Wilder First printing, 2,000 copies. Additional copies of this issue may be obtained by sending a $3 ppd. check or money order payable to Boog City, to the address below. Paper is copyright Boog City, all rights revert to contributors upon publication. Boog City is published monthly. Boog always reads work for Boog City or other consideration. (Send SASE with no more than 5 poems or pages of any type of art or writing. Email subs also accepted. Please put Boog City submission in subject line and email to editor@boogcity.com) Send SASE or email for Boog catalog. BOOG CITY 330 W.28th St., Suite 6H New York, NY 10001-4754 T: (212) 842-BOOG (2664) F: (212) 842-2429 www.boogcity.com • editor@boogcity.com Brendamania L adies and gentlemen—Welcome to the Brenda issue. Why a Brenda issue, you might ask? Why not I say. It started like this. There are three poets who I know in the scene that revolves around the Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church who have the first name Brenda—Bordofsky, Coultas, and Iijima. And I’d hear people mentioning Brenda said this, and I’d be, which Brenda. I thought wouldn’t it be fun if we had a Brenda issue and gathered work on and by a whole bunch of Brendas. And so, that is what we have done. I must, however, address a Brenda we neglected to write upon, a Miss Brenda Walsh. She may have just been a character on Beverly Hills 90210 portrayed by Shannen Doherty, but she was always more than fictional to me. Letters to the Editor: letters@boogcity.com Elliott Smith, 1969-2003 I stumbled upon Elliott Smith because I went to a Mary Lou Lord show and he was on the bill. It was a quick sell, hearing him sing about his troubles with junk, love, really just life in general. After that I saw him play whenever I could—the since-closed Tramps on West 22nd Street here in NYC; opening for Beck and Ben Folds Five at Jones Beach, where he had his sometimes backing band, Quasi’s Sam Coomes and Janet Weiss, she also of SleaterKinney; and New Year’s Eve 1999 at the Knitting Factory, when he yelled out at two minutes to 2000, “I need a two minute song,” and I yelled out “Say Yes,” my favorite song of his, and he played it before bringing his girlfriend on stage, counting off from 10, yelling happy new year, and swigging from a just-popped bottle of champagne before passing it to us to swig from. If you don’t know his music, pick something up, with my choices being either/or or Elliott Smith if you want something sparse. If you want something harder and a bit fuller and faster, his work with the band Heatmiser, which also featured Coomes, is great. There I’d pick Mic City Sons. It’s a sad time on this end, even sadder than Cobain really. d.a levy lives each month celebrating a renegade press in america Thursday Nov. 6, 6:00 p.m. TOUGHER DISGUISES • OAKLAND, CA POETS REFINE MONEY There are thousands of Americans everyday who are looking for a safe place to invest their money. Poets are the best source for removing negative charge from your wealth, and raising the collective conscience of the planet. You can change your life FOREVER by sponsoring a poet today! CA Conrad is one such American poet serious about making poetry a lifelong quest, ready and willing to refine your money! If you are interested in sponsoring this poet, call 215563-3075, or write CAConrad13@aol. com, you won’t believe the difference a poet will make! ACA Galleries 529 W.20th St., 5th Flr. (bet. 10th and 11th avenues) hosted by BOOG CITY editor David Kirschenbaum For information call 212-842-BOOG (2664) • editor@boogcity.com UNIQUE GREETING CARDS R THE SOURCE UNLTD 75¢ COLOR COPIES 331 EAST 9th STREET New York, NY 10003 Tel: 212 473 7833 Fax: 212 673 5248 10 AM - 6 PM Mon - Thurs 10 AM - 5 PM Fri “It’s Worth The Trip Down The Street” 4¢ OVERNIGHT MANUSCRIPT RATE 2 BOOG CITY NOVEMBER 2003 ALL THIS & MORE AT COPIES & MORE SINCE 1982! $5.99 FILM DEVELOPING 2 SETS of prints or FREE film Oakland Press Tougher Than The Rest BY JANE SPRAGUE W hile pursuing a Master of Fine Arts at Mills College in Oakland, California, James Meetze studied with Kathy Walkup in the Book Arts Program. Investigating the history and practice of typography and letterpress printing, he printed an edition of his own work, A Race of Effort. Pleased with the results, he decided to start his own press. He found himself faced with a dilemma not uncommon to small independent presses. “My intention with the press was really to focus on emerging and amazing poets,” said Meetze. “But, in reality, how many people will buy a book by someone they’ve never heard of, published by an imprint no one’s heard of?” Citing Clark Coolidge as a significant influence on his evolution as a poet, and considering Coolidge’s extensive volume of unpublished poetry, Meetze approached him about publishing a letterpress edition of some of his work. Coolidge’s On The Slates and Meetze’s mentor Peter Gizzi’s FIN AMOR were published in 2002. Generous friends helped catch the pages as they came off of the press, as well as with the folding and sewing. With these publications, Tougher Disguises Press was born. (The imprint takes its name from the first three lines of Jack Spicer’s poem, “Thing Language”: “This ocean, humiliating in its disguises/ Tougher than anything./ No one listens to poetry.” Meetze admits a deep love for handmade books, but the labor-intensive aspect of publishing them can be problematic. Wanting to move beyond what is possible with handmade publications, he began approaching poets about book-length manuscripts for publication as trade paperbacks. “If a manuscript provokes me to think of it in book form, and perhaps challenges my ideas of what form it should take, that’s a major part of it,” he says. “I look at the book as the perfect—or in many cases, not-so-perfect—conjoining or blending of two art forms, the text and the vehicle, or book.” Meetze’s commitment to design and “contemporary writing that is informed by and simultaneously incorporates the work of the avant-garde movements of the past 100 years” works to create an aesthetic evident in Tougher Disguises’ recent publications, The Frequencies, by Noah Eli Gordon, and K. Silem Mohammad’s Deer Head Nation. Deer Head Nation is a spooky smashing of all things creepy in American culture and their infinite creep into the national consciousness. It takes on everything from redneck freak-outs to the pervasive slick sickening violence that somehow might embody, or embalm, our post-millennium American soul. From wet panties to Palestine, Iraq to “antler chandeliers,” “put a girl on your desktop” and watch the Technicolor ghost of North America’s ruinous ever-present-past gloat its guts all over the page. “Puppy Craziness” what we all really need is love in these horrendous times in this toxic atmosphere some believe this thing, some believe that people here think they need a new car and new clothes but we see that what we really need is something adult sinister and just a little bit dark Deer Head Nation takes on everything from redneck freak-outs to the pervasive slick sickening violence that somehow might embody, or embalm, our post-millennium American soul. Deer Head Nation delivers exactly that Mohammad flashes a floodlight on the spurious consequences of American brand-name globe-trotting capitalist consumption, run amok with a spooky, bedeviled, and ironic eye, offering an unsettling tour through the opaque underbelly of our gruesome citizenship. Gordon’s book-length poem The Frequencies charts the twisting of lovers caught between mixed signals, messages, and misunderstandings, tweaked by more than the amplitude of mouths, with a poetic tour through pop culture, the secret life of ornithologists, and playlist politics. Gordon’s work is marked by lines of clean, complex prose, while he stages radio frequencies as conduits to human intellect and tricky hearts. The Frequencies deftly maneuvers links of language, to theory to literature to love to the possibly unutterable idea of comfort as a live thing, inside the radio box. … Sure, the reception really has no written language, nothing but a speaking voice & the impossible idea of empty space, nothing but the room inside the way we read the radio toward our own nowhere. It’s the only thing I ever really wanted to give you. I’m sorry love is sometimes so abstract. Cool, wry, and incisively dubbed, The Frequencies perfectly dizzies the places it takes you to and tunes you back in again. … Pardon me while I cover the incision lines on your bookshelf sentimentality, drink the tea you left at the station. So sweet. So cold. I know you said the past always catches up with us, that there’s nothing wrong with a little radio. After all, it’s how you hear it that counts. Forthcoming Tougher Disguises books include Chris Stroffolino’s Speculative Primitive, Cynthia Sailers’ Lake Systems (whose cover graphic is featured above), and Stephanie Young’s Telling the Future Off, due out in late 2003 and spring of 2004. Tougher Disguises books are distributed by Small Press Distribution (spdbooks. org) and are also available directly from the publisher (tougherdisguises.com). Stop the Presses! It’s Brenda Starr BY JOEL LIPMAN Brenda Starr: Girl Reporter Whitman Publishing, 1943 orget the storyline of this out-of-print, wartime edition, which involves the “beautiful and clever” Brenda, “the girl reporter of the New York Flash,” Muggs Walters, her boss (“He had a pretty fancy set-up there, didn’t he?”), and Larry Nickels, the novel’s male love interest. (“He picked her up in his big, strong arms as though she were a toy, and held her high in the air, grinning broadly, while she kicked and struggled and beat at him with her small fists.”) The rest of the furniture includes Tom Taylor; Flurry Snow; strange potions; spies; semidarkness; popular dance tunes; mad Professor Squell (“Why, the old looney was double crossing us!”); Daphne Dimples; Bill Bailey; Pesky Miller (“Get him, Pesky, Tom ordered”); gorgeous gowns; flights to Sun Valley, New York City, and Chicago; 19 illustrations, and 248 pulp pages. But don’t forget Racine, Wisconsin’s Whitman Publishing Company—Hardy Boys, Tom Swift, Doctor Dan the Bandage Man, the Campfire Girls series, and a World War II list of novels for boys and girls, built around popular comic strip characters like Brenda, Steve Canyon, Invisible Scarlett O’Neil, Dick Tracy, Blondie, and Tillie the Toiler; as well as a list including novels based on film stars, including Ann Sheridan, F Betty Grable, Ann Rutherford, and Ginger Rogers. They’re all there on the musty Whitman backlist, titles that offer previews of Shock and Awe—April Kane and the Dragon Lady (a Terry & the Pirates Adventure), Joyce and the Secret Squadron (a Captain Midnight Adventure), or Smilin’ Jack and the Daredevil Girl Pilot. The list includes titles from “the Exciting New Fighters for Freedom Series: War novels of adventure for boys and girls” (Norma Kent of the WAACS, Sally Scott of the WAVES, Barry Blake and the Flying Fortress, Sparky Ames and Mary Mason of the Ferry Command). Eventually Whitman became a Western Publishers subsidiary. The company still tracks the flicks—licenses include Disney and Warner Brothers. They even published Liz Taylor and Jane Powell paper doll cutouts in the ’50s and early ’60s. Even if only for one animated glimpse of a storyboard’s frame, remember Dale Messick, the first woman to snag a regular strip (Sunday’s NY Daily News, 1940), and who drew the independent, adventurous, sharp-dressing Brenda to flash some cartoonish glam across news pages drab with war reports. “Give us some leg, honey!” And Brenda did. Dalia Messick assumed the sexually ambiguous Dale after unsuccessfully struggling to launch a regular comic strip. Her unpublished early efforts included “Weegee,” “Mimi the Mermaid,” the sassy “Struglettes,” and “Streamline Babies.” Influenced by Hearst cartoonist Nell Brinkley, whose curly- haired, glamorous Brinkley Girls influenced Charles Dana Gibson and foreshadowed Messick’s Brenda, Messick drew the strip until 1980, when she retired. Since then, the still-running Brenda Starr has been drawn by Ramona Fradon and, most recently, June Brigman. Messick’s illustrations are fashionable, flaky, heroic, teasing. Brenda always looks super—her suitcase never empties out its frocks. Tom is rugged, his pipe clenched in a steel, square jaw. Larry Nickels is tall, blond, rich, smug. The newspaper background and the reporter’s high-energy dash for the hot story are nostalgic, charmingly silly. Ah, comics and fifth-grade reading levels. Brenda’s skirt snaps just above her knees. Her hats are turned for feathers and pins. Brenda’s hair is deliciously red, curly, and full of angles and perfect poses. She’s pure stardom, tinsel-tease, the dame who’ll get you in and out of trouble just in time for more. And if there’s jingoism, evil sexism, nasty politics, and wartime censorship, this reviewer will giggle, smell the old newsprint, and accept the bunk. Brenda, vintage 1943, trumps goofy George W. Bush, the non-president, a truly vapid cartoon drawn to pose like Ken on steroids stuffed in a flight suit. Come back, Brenda! And bring with you Deanna Durbin, Polly the Powers Model, Bonita Granville, the Outdoor Girls, Invisible Scarlett O’Neil, even hunky Rex, King of the Deep. NOVEMBER 2003 BOOG CITY 3 Brenda Weiler ou think you’ve seen her before. Brenda Weiler’s got that look, like she’s someone you sort of know, hauntingly familiar. Maybe a girl from high school: cute, so she was always on the periphery of your thoughts, but also strange, like she wrote arcane words in charcoal in the parking lot—or on her arm. (Anyway, the name “Brenda” just sounds like one you know really well, right?) Brenda Weiler sounds familiar, and odd, too—at least, she does on her brand new, nationally distributed, Virt Records debut Cold Weather. It’s the Fargo native’s fifth record since she graduated from high school and smashed her college plans and became a full-time musician. The vocals on Cold Weather are warm, the music memorable, and all of it sweetly weird. The beautiful “Sacred” tells us, “Some woman stepped up once to tell me that all this was just in my head, but I was not convinced of that, so I simply stepped away.” The lines don’t rhyme, their meaning is opaque, but the rhythm, the melody, and the ache within the words all stick with you, days after listening. Most of the new album, like her earlier releases, remains on the folk-rock section of the Venn diagram— subtle, minimal, but with a grander musical scope. The anthem-like army of voices in the chorus of “Trouble,” the full-on rock attack of “Scatter,” and the creepy sound affects on the opener, “Faucet,” all represent the sense of exploration Weiler must be experiencing, touring incessantly these last eight years, even moving from her recent home of Minnesota’s Twin Cities to Oregon. Or maybe that’s just projection. It all sounds good, of course, and it sounds like you’ve heard it before, these biting tales of disappointment and love. You must know the songs, this sweet voice. Maybe it was in the back of the school, maybe in an old coffee house, maybe on your sister’s stereo. Or maybe it’s just that you should know them. —Jon Berger Brenda Strong I f you’re a student of popular culture, you’ve seen Brenda Strong between the cracks, which is strange, because she’s a big woman. She’s substantial, impressive. Brenda Strong is Amazon hot. Here are the places I witnessed Strong without realizing it: Seinfeld, where she played Sue Ellen, “The Braless Wonder” (she’s in that reverse episode, too); Gilmore Girls (she asks Luke out, even though he’s so totally hot for Lorelei); Sports Night (as Sally Sasser); Starship Troopers (she’s a captain that gets killed by the bugs); and Seventh Heaven. (Hey, do I seem like I watch Seventh Heaven?) In most of the roles I’ve seen her, Brenda Strong plays a sexpot. But she’s more than that, as her statuesque beauty and her intelligence somehow set her apart. There’s a sensitivity to her role in Sports Night that makes the seemingly manipulative schemer very identifiable. Plus she’s smokin’! Brenda Strong is multitalented. She’s produced yoga videos and is even in the Los Angeles Millennium Choir. I don’t know much about yoga or choral music, but with this powerful presence involved, I could imagine taking an interest. She’s also featured in Harry Shearer’s recent Teddy Bears’ Picnic. —JB Brenda Lee T here is one woman and one woman only in both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Country Music Hall of Fame, and her name is Brenda Lee. She has been making hit records for over 40 years, sold more than 100,000,000 records, and one of her signature hits, “I’m Sorry,” is one of the top-selling records of the 20th century. All this from a lady who’s not even five feet tall. Back when Brenda Lee was new at the whole rock and roll thing, in the wake of Jerry Lee (no relation) Lewis’s marriage to his 14-year-old cousin, Lee’s management decided to say that the tiny 15-year-old was, in fact, a 32-year-old midget. That went over really well in France. Known as Little Miss Dynamite, Brenda Lee (born Brenda Mae Tarpley) has recorded such substantial numbers as “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree,” “Sweet Nothin’s,” and “Is It True?” She continues to tour after 45 years, and, after a recent “appearance” (played by Kelly Clarkson) on NBC’s American Dreams, is it possible there might be a resurgence of interest in this international celebrity? Might we be witnessing the beginning of a new wave of Brendamania? Only time will tell. —JB 4 BOOG CITY NOVEMBER 2003 The Grand Permission: New Writings on Motherhood and Poetics Edited by Patricia Dienstfrey and Brenda Hillman Wesleyan University Press, 2003 few months ago, I dreamt that had I googled “motherhood AND sleep,” which directed me to a site listing “Five Foolproof Ways to Get Your Baby to Sleep So That You Can Finally Get Your Mind Back And Maybe Get Some Writing Done.” Alas, I was awakened from this dream, as I have been from dozens of others, by the sound of my infant son crying. While The Grand Permission does not offer any sleep recipes, it provides a wide range of food for thought. In the 32 essays comprising the anthology, the most interesting ones are those preoccupied with the time/space necessary for any artistic endeavor. Pam Rehm confesses: “I’ve learned to take a day and run it into the night. I cope with time in that way. But I’ve also learned how to take a day and curse it the whole way to bed.” Maureen Owen describes writing under the influence of exhaustion. “I would keep typing even in a halfasleep state,” says Owen. “A sort of somnambulant verse evolved.” Alice Notley relates how living in a cramped apartment “under salon conditions” with a husband and two young sons informed her work. “[My sons] were as inventive in conversation as all the poets who visited were; they made themselves just as high talking, were less melodramatic and intense; their feelings were cleaner and there was a pure clean light around their talk which I liked to be near and which I liked to include in my work.” C.D. Wright’s hilarious account of her son’s early years is summed up by this statement: “He is. Therefore and nevertheless, I poetry.” Other standouts include essays by Stephanie Brown, Claudia Keelan, Kathleen Fraser, and co-editor Brenda Hillman. As with any anthology, there are a few clunkers swamped in abstraction and pretentiousness. And curiously, there aren’t any essays that focus on the economic realities of being a poet and a mother. Some mention the subject in passing, but, overall, it is treated like the proverbial elephant in the living room. In any case, this collection is a must-read for women poets who have, or are thinking of having, children. —Kristen Hanlon A Coultas Exhibits Characters A Handmade Museum Brenda Coultas Coffee House Press, 2003 ith A Handmade Museum, Brenda Coultas catalogues the detritus-filled wake of “progress” (“as a person one paycheck away from the street”), assuming the oral and objective histories capitalism has consigned to public character (“the person on the street who knows everyone and whom everyone knows”), and in the process, expelling poetry from its own kind of privacy: “to think about the possibility of leaving the anonymity of the page and becoming … a public poet.” For Coultas, there is no refuge in wilderness, not to speak of suburbia, only the two landscapes of poor America. From Gary Snyder’s “Bubbs Creek Haircut”: “Goodwill … room of/ unfixed junk downstairs … finally freed/ from human need … room of empty sun of peaks and ridges/ a universe of junk, all left alone.” One landscape has little room for the obsolete (“and, having no place for them, out onto the street they went”) and one has “space for both new and old things” where “people, if they really want, can have (keep) it all” (a barn full of push mowers). Of course, these are the places where the stray, the retarded, the sick, the crazy, and the dead are either allowed to stick around or to get thrown onto the street. But this is no simple division between urban and pastoral. Coultas instead brilliantly applies the methods of nature writing, after Gilbert White or H.D. Thoreau, to the urban landscape. Coultas’s rural meditations (the “farming poems”) combine hayrolls, cows, and John Deere like some Joseph Cornell box of the cornbelt in the book’s “The Bowery Project” section. But what emerges is a singularly unromantic view of the “American” century—from the bottom-feeder-cam, as it were, of those living off waste rather than profit. Geopolitical tides and the shock of events, including 9/11, are charted in “The Bowery Project” in entropic exfoliations: “Two matching sofas with TV resting on seat. A day later, TV on sidewalk between them and only the wooden skeletons of couches remain.” The “Bowery bum” who ends up sleeping inside of these wooden skeletons is no more or less visible than the dead of the World Trade Center or the terrorists themselves: “Were they ever visible from this street? Does it matter if I say they were visible from Houston & Bowery if they weren’t? But most certainly they were.” Those hungry for another serving of Coultas’s American gothic pie (her dismemberments and burials, as in, “I threw [money] a bone … I could have it buried with me. We’d rest on my grandma’s grave. I’d be in a little box, my bone an amulet of DNA on top”); her exquisite music—a poet fishing in prose, her words hook, cut, and release the cadences of sentences more alive than any written today; or for her oddball humor will not be disappointed. But the real service of this book—the best of 2003—is in devoting that sensibility to an accounting of our endangered public lives, the “human need” we ignore at our peril. —Jonathan Skinner W Bob Gwaltney photo Y Mother May I Prospect Heights, Brooklyn from Animate & Inanimate Aims O pupils Of oppression Destroy your want of big things Inscrutable personal nothingness Or have a cheap machine. Nude Harmonious now out of scale. Balking at physics I bite into the big picture This tease is on view at the American Folk Art Museum Coda: continuing fluttering Movement and intervening Bulwark of forms. Iconic like Fright. Max of the maximum Fear factor. Iron grillwork I Hurl over my heel a foot on The face. Do you know anyone pricked Its stigma who is enlightened At the brink who has reached This higher plane of being In the real world (ly) (ing) (s) (ate) And going with this the worship And suffering as an end in itself. The Incas versus the Aztecs Abjectly and they at least abolished Human sacrifice, on a colossal scale Look at Rome. Savagery is always taken seriously Torture as cultural treasure. Self Flagellation is no archaeological Remain. Moribund not at All. Leonine nature. Germane. Thine and thy hence the maker Wherast dearest a tulip today seen Scarce ere I’ th’ I virgin thee and weep a kind a taper’s Light not wake or knew’st when Not excess knew else die coming I no we too strong for fantasy Enter dream arm in arm Aqueduct To ocean. I am a machine of growing cells And my essence is weak. Now I live in Crete. After the auto Biography of Cronos. He ate all of His off spring except Zeus. I prefer My parties without full armor the Lions are enthusiastic. A fallacy Could be grosser. Ecstasy as they Say, a demonic mood. Looking closely at similar Designs. Bronze motivations Stone urges. Dolomites Determined and mined. Anyway You might call a still life By Caravaggio a form of pornography. Gluttonously the ripe fruit rot is splayed. How engorged the grapes are. Technicolor Sense of succulence with no flavor just the Topmost oily sheen seen. Bones to prop up Flesh filled out with pink malaise or the Sacrifice religiously. Penthouse still. Still I Appreciate its meditation On color and the molecular disturbance of Oozing fruit in relation to meat. A shank of ham. Visualize a dark plantation Of firs. A fist Moist. Did (where the painting) a bird Alighting resumes shortly after (I paint myself) as a gap in Nostalgia with wave breaking on it. Observed the sense is. Down A country lane. Talk about the technique. Forging metal, the skills and domain Of the metallurgist That shaft of expertise. The first peopling on this lake Were rave (ens) gift giv (ers) they brought su (n) light with their Wings a footprint Can be found under A wooden bowl swept Out to sea carved Especially capable Of human speech. Short Skirt next to naked skin, In general a Porous grace tinged. Stained glass Wreckage we build Leafy alliances Bilingual collections Door opening edge. Brenda Coultas the East Village A True Account of When We Lived in a Haunted House When I was a welder and a fashion model, I lived on the second floor of a haunted mansion with my sister. From the street the house appeared to be abandoned, it was a three story brick with heavy shrubs, rotting gutters, one block from the river in an old Victorian neighborhood that was half ghetto and half old money where river boat captains and the movers and shakers of 19th century industry had once lived in gilded splendor, those mansions had been chopped up into tiny and sometimes bizarre apartments and were owned by one slumlord who pounded his property signs into the thread bare grass. Our landlord’s daughter was a traveling salesperson who lived in the apartment next door. She said she often heard singing and smelled flowers sometimes and that the place had once been a nursing home. The rent was cheap because of the unfinished bathroom and various broken pipes, yet the apartment had charm. An ornate fireplace, hardwood floors, large living room, old light fixtures. Because the house appeared abandoned, antique dealers would break into the ground floor just to look around, we even joined them sometimes. The ground floor was fully furnished, with more ornate fireplaces and woodwork. Sheets covered the furniture and in one room there was evidence that someone had squatted there in the past. The haunting begin with the sound of rocking, there were Oh Yah; Yah, yah yah yah Yah yah yah (with Heritage) Stave the russet wilted Booth Daring Basilicas in spaces Remain. Declared weathered By faded plaid emblems yielding Heart’s ardor, bulky and damp. As in Hölderlin’s outlook Not tangible Harpsichord Hail…steel orbs of ice Crash through impression Fish tank such as this Hermopolis Happens. Blatant tablature chromed Over in an abode built for grammar His gyration grown in house Coupled for eyes that insist sentence. Fury directed at the media hounds. The coming so far for carnage. Carthage. Quandary Known as canyon. two rocking chairs in the hallway outside our door but when we looked out they were silent and motionless. Around midnight, we would hear footsteps in the attic above our bedroom, like someone walking in a circle. The attic door was unlocked and down the end of the dark hall. Millions of pigeons lived and died in it, millions of pigeons raised whole families and fought great battles over territory and love in the our attic. There was a broken window from which they gained entry and the bodies of birds covered the floor. There were so many strange noises that we stopped paying attention. One day a man knocked on the door asking directions, when I looked down I saw his erection and slammed the door. I got my sister and a frying pan for a weapon, and we went looking for him. An elderly man on the street even joined the hunt, but we never found him. The stalking started after my sister moved away, and I was living alone and working at Firestone Steel, one of about five women among of two hundred men. I was nineteen and fresh from the cornfields of Spencer county just like Abe Lincoln, and I wore full makeup everywhere. I had went to a molding school called Beautiful People, and as a result of my model education, I always, even in the steel plant, wore eye makeup, powder, and lipstick. A story had appeared about me in the local newspaper about how I was a welder and a model. I got invited to the Kentucky governors’ mansion and was even made a Kentucky Colonel. The first time someone opened the transom above the door and left my door standing open. The second time it happened I secured the transom with a butter knife, the third time I came home and there were cigarette butts in a heap outside the door like he had been waiting for me. I never spent the night there again. I moved and did not give anyone my address or phone number. I never found out who my stalker was, but years later I heard that a Peeping Tom lived next door. Also there was a man at the This egg like eco System/ is a bastion a/bout To hatch. Or a tornado will wail Nailing poles of telecommunication. I might get out of this Chair back Flip toward the Trees. No hands, head above Loam might dig Hole bury Ear Brazen might cloud Scream cause Rain moment wistful Trouble ample Struggle amplitude Wrangle trial Minuet Minute Simple as circle Swirling only velocity. Brenda Iijima art (2) Brenda Iijima plant, a stranger, who gave me an extravagant Valentine’s day present out of the blue. Years later I met a woman who had lived in the landlord’s daughter’s apartment. She talked about how the apartment was thick with roaches, so much so that they were inside the wallpaper eating the glue. That’s a sure sign of a haunting, masses of uncontrollable vermin. NOVEMBER 2003 BOOG CITY 5 POETRY Brenda Hillman to conceal North Berkeley, California Cascadia Prior to 130 million years ago much of California lay beneath ocean waters. It was bordered on the east by the mainland of North America and on the west by a land mass known as Cascadia. Robert Durrenberger, Elements of California Geography Holiday Inn Lompoc hydrangea one of those teeth bedspreads most natives say Lom-poke made glad Capri Motel Ojai an undernevered spider & pre-Naugahyde chair marbleized sidetable a shape-shaped inner courtyard Country Inn and Suites Costa Mesa couch having its horizon remote control teabag Four Points Saint Monica to sing and In the search for the search During the experiments with wheels After the scripted caverns When what had been attached Was no longer attached After choosing the type of building In which no one has died We recalled a land or condition Whose shape was formal Formality gave pleasure A shadow’s shadow dragged it Back to the sea of eyes A poem floats inside its margins They are death and birth receding Beauty is not an impasse Better not to blame The loved one for a slip God had a slip of not existing All girls are an island Those trucks on 101 with reclining Decals of flame and smoke The willless breath outshocked her In Chualar a boy threw up Behind a case of Coke In the search for the east to admire After reconsidering which was west In an era of not singing At the school of lyric abstraction The skin of an unthought is thought After kissing Los Angeles once The landmass known as Cascadia His parents pick strawberries for us The I caused flagrant slipping Sing sank sunk in the Something-ocene Earth started out loose Pretty loose just debris California motels sometimes have Colonial type scallops in the moulding The boy must have been hot The business of margins waiting What must Drake have thought When he strolled past the bankruptcy office Marigolds on the boardwalk The back of a poem is brighter Than the back of a painting Osiris rode a ferris wheel Ophelia rollerbladed Syntax is the understudy for infinity They don’t know what caused Cascadia As the arrangements became larger The lyric had become depressed Abalone chips in the sidewalk There were little mirrors in his spine As he threw up Do you still love the sentence Aristotle’s four causes of change Formal Material Efficient Final And what of the warbler latitudes And what of the unknown where The inexhaustible plays against form A compass went south of crazy Missions indicated by green squares The skin of a thought is a thought Torn earth is better than conquerors His parents pick strawberries for us He picks strawberries for us On where Cascadia slid We found a glassy spot to be assembled A merging subverts the categories 6 BOOG CITY NOVEMBER 2003 Motel 6 Lost Hills dandelion seed cream shower Fame corrugated wind Best Western Village Inn Fresno our girl such a Neo-Platonist song not a thought Then did La Quinta Inn Redding nun-colored channel-changer magpie nunning by Radisson San Diego To will the future panicked anti-song post-Naugahyde truth Country Inn And Suites Some words shouldn’t marry Consider flow for example And the unmarried rocks In the east for the search to admire We spoke the stuttering the slurred Spiky poplars near Atascadero Rose to protect the empty Some moths live only two hours Formal cause means definition Means ask your friend in the blue shirt Why Cascadia’s hair is noisy In issues of representation He threw up from being sick When the land mass had slid under After a feathered response Water running in the motel To get the being stained out The immortal precedes the left margin A million pagers not working A satellite had turned left Into a round-sided life A truck turned left at the Pacific A sofa-unit in its flat-bed A line is a unit of attention California’s lines so separate The dirt was heard chip-chipping Silicon A forbidden wren The second cause of change said the search Material cause what it’s made of The Countess of Tripoli listened Don’t try to get the stain out The red made you live faster No longer eating strawberries He had another call coming in Nestled down in the paisley pattern The island proposed a merger Half-moon Dewy and the Secret Julys Cascadia didn’t merge it floated His song survived his supply She peeled back the skin of meaning Change has four causes slid Aristotle The boy hardly bent throwing up He had little mirrors in his spine Material cause means why Because of what All boys are an island In issues of representation Had a pretty good head on her shoulders His head made up of singing Loss of meaning is made up Of two things loss and meaning Phenomenal accuracy as a moral stance Kildeer love the really shitty fields Near the missile-testing site in Lompoc They run past drought tolerant gardens The talk of the town Shirley flies a plane in that one Nail City Bravo Pizza Taco Loco The beyond sang the anti-lyric His parents pick strawberries for us He picks strawberries For us World champion Nafta unacceptable stain The cloud of unknowing knew In the search for the C in Cascadia She felt chastened by angularity Credit unions offering farm credit Damselflies over ferrous chloride The land mass coddled the sea trench They turned right into the argument Switching to de-caf was the problem Cercamon and Peire Cardenal Material cause what it’s made of Fat-free chocolate envelope I’ll be good mama you can come out In heaven we’ll be recognized The left had a fear of margins Some moths live only two hours From flying low in the fields The face-shaped vault of infinity Her address was mad at her Powerbar I laughed or it cried Ellis Motel Tulelake Formica kitchenette after the owl true Naugahyde Quality Inn bath gel Executive Inn shower cap Country Inn And Suites shoe cloth under soap little soap little soap It wasn’t just the not singing We anguished it up and released it Whatever gets old and scary Baja snapped off at Malibu Which rhymes with pale blue Tattoos on the backs of nymphettes We could have been happy sooner Californians aren’t good at merging Little mirrors in his spine Cascadia didn’t merge it floated Why did the chicken cross the ocean Get someone to help you do it A poem touches its margins gently Twelve=the waltz X 4 causes The scrub jay cracks seeds for hazel Thought it was Charlie knocking We’ll eat no more strawberries She thought envelopes are fattening Her letters arrived unsealed In the trench for the east to admire In one motel was a gooey spirit Read The Highwayman as children Black-haired woman tied up Shoots herself to warn him They’ll write in the noir of heaven The Ojai mountains near Jane’s house Quiet as the soul of Because Too much earth for each strawberry The little seeds get stuck in your teeth On earth they will be noticed And all the human themes In recognized it will be heaven The final cause of change said Aristotle The reason to which things tend The beyond is made of the beyond She had a face lift on her hands Space prone punctuation driven The change didn’t sink it floated You of missing cities The island sang right in slow motion They’d call this their great lost love But the cliff knows Where to find the ocean People think poets make poems Poems make poems lying down The final cause the Goddish reason There’s a song that sang all night There were mirrors in his spine He bowed like California Todos los dios estan una isla This accidental May Didn’t fear the right margin The reason to which things hover In the next millennium Don’t wake your sleeping brother In the earth for the search After considering which was west They came upon a piece of land It had fragments in its spine It had everything you wanted In the tablets on which it was written There’s a space that sings all night Not knowing the lyric was broken The sun looking pretty strange Lying down on 101 it floated You want to or you don’t Want to change but you’ll change Brenda Bordofsky Fort Greene, Brooklyn Happy After Gregory Corso I have refused to underestimate I know this estimate and these arms are not mine by judgment, but given by accident no love and no thieves how this day the matchmaker glows when she has dressed all in town or how a box of standard letters from one soldier in Vietnam to one woman we shall call my motherqueen (afraid equally of life and death myself an addition to this crippling) pattern and habit mighty about their affect on god, children and the rot of houseplants will collapse “I wish he would have died in Vietnam” she is indiscreetly dying never was dying replaced by a dark house in the valley dying a live wife’s nightmare a dead wife’s mantra dying sits in the concrete in the back-yard-house-in-the-valley applying and applying sun burnt sod with the neighbors Brendas Reading Bordofsky • Iijima and more Sun. Nov. 23, 3:00 p.m., $3 The Bowery Poetry Club 308 Bowery (& 1st St.) New from O Books: iduna by kari edwards 104 pages, ISBN # 1-882022-49-1, $12.00 O Books: 5729 Clover Dr Oakland CA 94618 “If benign linearity marks the last vestige of Cartesian consciousness, Vitruvian space and Spinozan ethics, then iduna signalizes its catalectic adieu. For there is no return after this. kari edwards has written and conceived a bold, complex text that pushes lyricism to the brink of an interstice, between the Dictionary and its scream. Auto-translative, self-contaminatory, iduna never renounces its splendid linguistic excess, fabricating a textural world of legibility and illegibility, gravitation and non-gravitation, that powers its dweller (for one must dwell in iduna) gesturally around and among its morphs and torques. If Deleuze and Guattari are correct when they aver that writing ‘has nothing to do with signifying. It has to do with surveying, mapping, even realms that are yet to come’ then iduna provides a special map to a certain dream of Coleridge’s: the frontiers of a post-cognitive.” — Steve McCaffery “Paratexts and processing suggestions stream through kari edwards’s iduna... The constant drive to make use of formal possibilities at the level of page and opening brings graphic format into substantive play...A machinic drive echoes in this work as a human, subjective voice struggles to come through the registers of current language events, noise, news, records, communications. The shape of a human outcry presses through the mass of mediated material. Form embodies possibilities enabled by the instructions of forced justification, font shifts, hard returns, tabs, chunked blocks, and other basic elements of text processing...Before we can ask what something means when we read it, we must ask what it means to read — and edwards poses that as a high-stakes question providing the point of departure for current poetic production. — Johanna Drucker “Having evacuated the endemic patriarchal script, edwards writes hir own rules of the game in the wee hours when the sky turns green and binary logic decamps posthaste. Under the ruins of gender, iduna is a wild garden where ‘sexuality begets language.’ The anarchic profusion of voices, discourses, idiolects, fonts and typographies that seem to rain down upon the page becomes the new ‘formlessness’ which is the political signature of this resistant and absorptive text.” — Chris Tysh also by kari edwards: a day in the life of p., from: Subpress Collective /ISBN # 1-930068-18-2. $12.00 Distributed by SPD: 510-524-1668. 1341 Seventh St. Berkeley CA 94710 http://www. spdbooks.org/ Paid for by the Committee to Eliminate Gender NOVEMBER 2003 BOOG CITY 7 NYC POETRY CALENDAR 6:00pm (CSC) Cornelia Street Cafe ($6) Featured poets. 7:00pm (ZB) Zinc Talk ($4) Featured poets. MONDAY 4:00pm (BPC) Segue Series Poets’ Plays ($5) (BPC) Segue Series ($5) 6:00pm (CSC) Ziryab ($6) (BPC) Tribes ($10) (CSC) The Viking Hillbilly Apocalypse Revue ($6) Featured upstairs. (CSC) Italian-American writers ($6) Featured downstairs. (BPC) Bethany Brooks ($6) (BPC) From Griot to Rapper: Bringing Our Poetic Roots Home ($15) (MM) Girlsalon Literary Night ($7) (CC) Chaos Club (free) Open mike. 4:00pm 7:00pm (BPC) Hip-Hop Greets Poetry ($12) 8:00pm (SMC) Open Reading ($8) 9:00pm (AAWW) Asian American Poetry Festival ($10) 10:00pm 4:30pm 6:30pm (BPC) The MacGuffin (BPC) The O'Debra Twins "Show & Tell" ($3) TUESDAY 5:30pm (BPC) Roundtable Reading 8:00pm (MC) Muddy Cup Featured poet + open mike. 8:30pm (BU) Buttafly Open mike/performance. 9:00pm (ML) M Lounge (free) Open mike. WEDNESDAY 7:30pm (BPC) Saul Williams ($15) 11:59pm (BPC) Amayo’s Fu-Akrist-Ra ($10) SUNDAY 2 11:00am (BPC) People Like Us ($5) 1:00pm (Hal) Wordsmiths (free) 2:00pm (BPC) Poetry on the Bowery ($8) 4:00pm (BPC) Barretta Books (Free) (OB) Poet to Poet ($3 + $3 min) Featured poets + open mike. 6:00pm (BPC) Book Party Harriet Sohmers Zwerling’s Notes of a Nude Model 8:00pm (BPC) All Soul's Party (SMC) Kenneth King ($12) (JW) Java and Wood (free) Open reading. (CU) Rev. Jen’s Anti-Slam ($3) Open mike. (SMC) The Poetry Project ($8) Featured readers. Not available Nov. 26th. (BPC) First Sundays ($5) JohnnyO & De La Guarda 8:30pm (NPC) Nuyorican Slam Open ($5) Open slam with third week for Hip Hop. THURSDAY 7:00pm (BCC) Brown Chocolate Cafe ($7) Open mike. 7:30pm (BPC) NYC-Urbana Poetry Slam ($5) Long-running championship slam. Calliope’s Corner (WRHU 88.7FM) Can also be heard online at WRHU.org. 8:00pm 9:30pm MONDAY 3 7:30pm (JO) Johnny O’s (KGB) Featured Poets (free) Open mike. 7:45pm (SMC) The Poetry Project ($8) Open mike. 8:00pm (BPC) Bethany Brooks ($5) (CL) Largo Reading Series (free) (SMC) City Lights ($8) 50th Anniversary Celebration (TB) Library Lounge (free) TUESDAY 4 6:00pm 8:00pm SUNDAY 9 12:00pm (BPC) Armature ($3) 1:00pm (BPC) Three Translators “Distant Noise” by Jean Fremon 3:00pm (BPC) Sifting Through Embers ($5) 4:00pm (BPC) Writing New York Stories ($5) (WSU) Kairos Cafe ($3) 6:00pm (BPC) Words, Reeds, Dance ($5) (TFC) Spiral Thought (free) 8:00pm (BPC) The 4 Bags ($5) 10:00pm (BPC) Comstock Presents MONDAY 10 7:00pm (PCS) Wax Poetic (free) 8:00pm (11) Reading Between A&B (free) (BPC) PlayGrounD: Agamemnon by Stephen Berkoff (SMC) Fanny Howe and John Wilkinson ($8) 8:00pm (BPC) Starpeople THURSDAY 13 SATURDAY 12:00pm (BPC) Respect the Mic ($5) (BPC) Great Companions: A Workshop in Poetical Derivation $250 for 10 classes series 3:00pm (TEI) The Ear Inn (free) Three Featured Poets. 4:00pm (BPC) Segue Series ($5) 7:30pm (CI) Open Mic/Slam Competition ($5) 6:30pm 7:30pm (Hal) Wordsmiths (free) 10:00pm (BPC) Krunkadumpolis & Game ($7) FRIDAY 21 7:00pm (BPC) Jason Nuzzo “Dead Meat” 7:30pm (LESTM) Noche Multicultural (free) 8:00pm (BPC) Ned Sublette ($10) (CDS) The Buffalo Readings (free) Featured readers + open mic. SATURDAY 22 2:00pm (BOB) Acentos ($5) (BPC) Death of the Party (Hal) Wordsmiths (free) (BPC) Raquy Danziger & The Birthday! ($10) (BPC) Gypsies ($5) 5:00pm No Events Listed. THURSDAY 20 (BPC) Jason Nuzzo “Dead Meat” (BPC) PHAG! ($5) (BPC) The Bus Part 1 WEDNESDAY 19 (BPC) Open Mic All Stars ($10) (BPC) The African Party ($10) (NPC) Nuyorican Poets Cafe ($5) Spotlight poet + slam. 12:00am 9:15pm (BPC) Karaoke + Poetry = Fun ($6) (BPC) Wesley Clark Presidential (BPC) Q2: Audre Lorde Praise Day ($5) (NPC) Nuyorican Poets Cafe ($5) Open mike. 9:00pm (BPC) Hal Sirowitz ($8) (BPC) ExploText (BPC) NYU MFA Reading Series ($5) WEDNESDAY 5 9:30pm (CB) Wordmusic ($7) 7:00pm (BPC) Experiments and Disorders (OCT) Ozzie’s Poetry Night (free) Open readings. 10:00pm 6:30pm (BPL) Poetry Readings (free) WEDNESDAY 12 (BPC) Blue ($5) (TOA) A Taste of Art (free) 10:00pm 6:00pm 10:00pm 8:00pm 8:00pm TUESDAY 18 (BPC) Los Vinos ($5) (BPC) Marc Ribot Trio ($10) 7:30pm 8:00pm 7:00pm (BR) BBR Reading Series ($4) (BPC) The Taylor Mead Show ($5) 6:00pm (BPC) Shaba Sher ($6) Persian Poetry 7:30pm 7:00pm MONDAY 17 (CSC) Writer’s Room ($6) TUESDAY 11 (CSC) Songwriters Workshop ($6) 6:30pm 9:00pm (CUAA) New York Scores (free) Student poetry slam. 7:00pm 6:00pm (CSC) Pink Pony West ($6) Featured poet + open mike. 8:00pm (BPC) The 4 Bags ($5) (BPC) The Bowery Poetry Club Presents: Insert Band Name Here! ($12)9: 5:00pm FRIDAY 7:00pm (BPC) Galinsky Perfpo Graduation (BPC) Underground Poetiks ($10) Open mike slam with $100 prize. 11:00am (TA) Archway (free) Open reading. (KK) Kay’s Cafe ($5) (VDP) Live Thursdays Open mike/performance with Kerry Brown jazz trio. 5:00pm (BPC) Mud/Bone: I Will Hear This Divinity ($10) (SMC) Christopher Stackhouse and Rebecca Wolff ($8) (TB) Library Lounge (free) 11:59pm (CCG) “Wanted: Poets” Open mike. 8:00pm 7:30pm 10:00pm 7:00pm (B13) Bar 13 ($5,$4 w/student ID) Slams, readings, + open mike. (Night) Saturn Series ($3) Featured poets + open mike. 10:00pm 6:00pm (TH) ALOUD! ($25/$50/$100/$240) (SMC) Paul LaFarge and Frances Richard ($8) (BPC) Totally Open Slam ($3) (WS) Wabi Sabi (free) Open mike/performance with house dj. 4:00pm (OB) Poet to Poet ($3 + $3 min) Featured poet(s) + open mike. (BPC) SubPress Party ($5) (BPC) MacGuffin Tech 8:00pm 4:00pm 10:00pm FRIDAY 14 7:30pm SATURDAY 15 2:00pm 6:00pm (BPC) All Out Poetry Jam ($5) (CSC) Greek-American Writers ($6) 7:00pm 7:00pm 9:00pm 10:30pm SUNDAY 23 3:00pm (BPC) Four Brendas 5:00pm (BPC) Resonant Voices 8:00pm (BPC) Balaklava MONDAY 24 7:00pm (PCS) Wax Poetic (free) 8:00pm (11) Reading Between A&B (free) TUESDAY 25 5:00pm (NS) Poetry Forum ($5) (BPC) John Kearns Play (Free) (BPC) Soft Skull Sneak A Peek ($5) (Night) Artists Lounge ($3 + $1 min) (BOB) Acentos ($5) (BWB) Women’s Poetry Jam ($5) Featured poets + open mike. (BPC) Karaoke + Poetry = Fun $6 (BPC) The Em and Lo Show ($5) 7:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 8:00pm 11:00pm (BPC) The Bus Part 2 THURSDAY 6 6:00pm WEDNESDAY 26 7:00pm (BB)Tehuti’s Spoken Word Café ($5) 7:30pm (ACA) D.A. Levy Lives (free) Featured readers. (AAWW) (re)collection ($5) Featured readers + open mike. (BPC) Tim Wells Welcome Party (SMC) Paolo Javier and Rebecca Reilly ($8) 6:30pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 8:30pm (BPC) Ladies on the Mic ($7) (GP) Green Pavilion ($3 + $5 min) 10:00pm (BPC) Paradigm’s Hiphop Revue ($10) THURSDAY 27 (22) A Century of Life and Love ($10) (BPC) Drunken Poetry Slam (free) (BPC) Celena Glenn ($10) CD Release Party (BPC) Graffiti Magazine ($10) (BPC) Daniel Bernard Roumain & Band ($8) (BPC) Urban Word Youth Slam ($5) FRIDAY 7 5:00pm (BPC) The Return of the Viking Hillbilly (free) 6:30pm (BPC) Tunnels ($8) 7:00pm 9:00pm 11:59pm FRIDAY 28 7:00pm SATURDAY 29 1:00pm 10:00pm (BPC) Sixth Sense Presents SUNDAY 30 6:00pm (BPC) Latino America en el Bowery ($5) 8:00pm (BPC) Jeremiah Lockwood 8 BOOG CITY OCTOBER 2003 (Blue) Belladonna SPREAD THE WORD Interested in your event being listed on the NYC Poetry Calendar? Send your request to listings@poetz.com, including the name of event/series, name of venue, date, time, price, and address. 7:00pm (BWB) Women’s Poetry Jam ($2) Featured poet + open mike. (LB) The Poets Grimm (free) (BN) Seaman Poetry Award (free) 10:00pm (TH) Town Hall 123 West 43rd (TNS) The New School, Tishman Auditorium 66 West 12th Street 212.254.9628 (Tribes) Tribes 285 East 3rd Street, 2nd Floor http://www.tribes.org 212.674.3778 (VDP) Via Della Pace East 7th Street (WH) Wave Hill 675 West 252nd Street http://www.wavehill.org 718.549.3200 (WS) Wabi Sabi at Bar Below 209 Smith Street, Brooklyn 718.694.2277 (WSU) Washington Square United Methodist Church 135 West 4th Street 212.544.0005 (BF) Back Fence ($3|$3 min) Featured poets + open mike. (ABC) Our Unorganized Reading ($2) Open mike. 2:00pm (SJU) Saint John’s University, Council Hall 8000 Utopia Parkway (SMC) Saint Mark’s Church 131 East 10th Street www.poetryproject.com 212.674.0910 info@poetryproject.com (SS) Soft Skull Shortwave Bookstore 71 Bond Street, Brooklyn http://www.softskull.com 718.643.1599 (TA) The Archway Pinehurst Ave 212.923.5461 (TB) Telephone Bar 149 2nd Avenue http://www.telebar.com (TEI) The Ear Inn 326 Spring St http://home.nyc.rr.com/earinnreadings 212.246.5074 earinnpoetry@nyc.rr.com (TFC) The Fall Cafe 307 Smith Street, Brooklyn 718.832.2310 3:00pm (149) Nomad’s Choir Open reading. 3:00pm (BPC) Scottish Reading Series ($5) (Nest) Nest 70 Washington Street (Night) Nightingale 213 Second Avenue (NPC) The Nuyorican Poets Cafe 236 East 3rd Street http://www.nuyorican.org 212.505.8183 (NS) The New School 66 West 12th Street (NYOC) New York Open Center 83 Spring Street http://www.opencenter.org 212.219.2527 (OB) The Orange Bear 47 Murray Street (OCT) Ozzie’s Coffee & Tea 251 5th Avenue, Brooklyn 718.840.0878 (PCS) Pete’s Candy Store 709 Lorimer Street, Williamsburg www.petescandystore.com 718.302.3770 (SC) Striver’s Cafe and Lounge 2611 Frederick Douglas Boulevard SATURDAY 1 L O C A T I O N S (JW) Java and Wood 110 Manhattan Avenu, Brooklyn 718-609-1820 (Hal) Halcyon 227 Smith Street, Brooklyn http://www.halcyonline.com 718.260.WAXY (KK) Kay’s Kafe 1345-4B Southern Blvd, Bronx 718.378.3434 (LB) Labyrinth Books 536 West 112th Street 212.865.1588 (LESTM) The Lower East Side Tenement Museum 97 Orchard Street (LT) Lovinger Theatre Lehman College (MC) The Muddy Cup 388 Van Duzer Street, Staten Island 718.818.8100 contact@muddycup.com (ML) M Lounge 291 Hooper Street, Brooklyn (MM) Meow Mix 269 East Houston Street 2:00pm (SS) Frequency Reading Series (free) 2:00pm 2:00pm (CLA) Poets On Sunday (free) (WH) Wave Hill (free) (CLA) Central Library Auditorium 89-11 Merrick Blvd (CSC) The Cornelia Street Cafe 29 Cornelia Street (CU) Collective Unconscious 145 Ludlow Street http://www.revjen.com (CUAA) Columbia University Alumni Auditorium 650 West 168th Street http://www.newyorkscores.org 212-563-3250 (ER) Elysee Restaurant 199 Prince Street http://www.metaphorical.biz (FW) Fort Wadsworth End of Bay Street near School Street (Ford) Fordham University at Lincoln Center 113 West 60th Street, 12th Floor 212.371.5281 (GM) Guggenheim Museum 5th Ave 89th Street (GP) Green Pavilion 4307 18th Avenue, Brooklyn 718-435-4722 EVENTS (BPC) S.O.A.P.P. Poetry: Commerce, Commodity, And Commercialization SUNDAY 16 (BWB) Bluestockings Women’s Bookstore & Cafe 172 Allen Street 212.777.6028 (CB) CB’s Gallery 313 Bowery @ Bleecker (CC) Chaos Club 90-21 Springfield Boulevard, Queens 718.479.2594 (CDS) Casa Del Sol 672-674 East 136th St, Bronx www.casadelsol.org 718.742.2522 (CH) The Center for the Humanities 365 Fifth Avenue 212.817.2006 (Church) Undercroft of the First Unitarian Church 50 Monroe Place, Brooklyn (CI) Cafe Iimani 148 Stuyvesant Avenue, Brooklyn http://www.cafeiimani.com 718.574.6565 (CK) Citykids 57 Leonard Street http://www.citykids.com 212.925.3320 12:00pm (BPC) Joel Forrester & People Like Us ($5) 1:00pm (BCC) Brown Chocolate Cafe 1084 Fulton Street (BF) Back Fence 155 Bleecker Street (Blue) Bluestockings Bookstore 172 Allen Street (BN) Barnes & Noble Union Square 212.252.0810 (BOB) Blue Ox Bar East 139th Street & 3rd Avenue (BPC) The Bowery Poetry Club 308 Bowery http://www.bowerypoetry.com 212.614.0505 (BPL) Brooklyn Heights Public Library 280 Cadman Plaza West 718.623.7100 (BR) Bar Reis 375 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn 718.832.5716 (BU) Buttafly 769 Washington Ave, Brooklyn http://www.butta-fly.com 718.636.1900 SUNDAY SATURDAY 8 (11) 11th Street Bar 510 East 11th (149) 149-155 Christopher St. 718.932.8007 JoshuaMeander@aol.com (22) 22 Below Cabaret 155 East 22nd Street 212.228.0750 (AAWW) The Asian American Writers’ Workshop 16 West 32nd Street, 10A http://www.aaww.org (ABC) ABC NO RIO 156 Rivington Street 212.674.3585 (ACA) ACA Galleries 529 West 20th Street, 5th flr. (Art) A Taste of Art 147 Duane Street 212.964.5493 (B13) 13 Bar/Lounge 35 East 13th Street (BB) Brownstone Books 409 Lewis Avenue, Brooklyn 718.953.7328 WEEKLY EVENTS S P E C I A L SUPPORT THEPOETRY CALENDAR The NYC Poetry Calendar needs your help to survive! Donations are accepted, appreciated, and encouraged. Help keep New York City aware of the local poetry events that happen every day in your hometown. If you wish to help sponsor a future edition of the NYC Poetry Calendar, you can call 212.842.2664 or email editor@boogcity.com.