three plus one

January 15th, 2009

Nathan really, really liked the pizza we ended up having from his birthday. So did we. We recommend Stone Hearth Pizza, a regional chain which claims to use almost entirely regional ingredients.

I’m in no position to recommend– but thought you-all might want to know about– new work of mine: on Governor Blagojevich and Alfred Lord Tennyson at the Poetry Foundation, on Jordan Scott in the new Believer, and a couple of poems (about Nathan, in part) in the Columbus-based litmag The Journal, which I think I’ll be reading more often in years to come.

Also, Molasses Flood!

is three

January 14th, 2009

Nathan turns three today! It seems like just weeks, sometimes, since we brought our little guy home from the hospital– and now he speaks in complex sentences, distinguishes conifers from deciduous trees, and asks us whether sushi is Chinese (for informational purposes only, I suspect– for all his curiosity about the world he still has trouble eating new things). He’s the best. Jessie made apple-ginger cake for his school friends (those not out sick) this morning, and I’m about to go home so he can have (what he’s apparently requested) pizza. But before I do, and since we haven’t done such a thing here in a bit, a couple of literary and musical timelinesses that ought not pass without notice:

Daniel Karlin in last week’s TLS had the best piece of literary criticism I’ve seen so far this year, a convincing re-evaluation of Edward FitzGerald’s Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. You can’t read Karlin’s piece online, but you can read an editor’s summary here.

Second best: the essay about Jane Austen, Emma and care-giving from the current (it just came this morning) Michigan Quarterly Review. Again, the essay itself appears not to be online, but here’s the question it asks: does Emma Woodhouse’s father have what we, in the 21st century, call dementia? How much of Emma makes more sense if he does?

Mick Imlah, the Scottish poet and critic who since 1994 was my editor at the TLS, has died. I knew him primarily via email, as an editor– we only met in person once: nonetheless he was as generous, patient and attentive to me as I could have wished– and I recommend a look at the poems as well.

His last book was widely expected to win Britain’s Eliot Prize; instead, the prize went to the last book that he sent me for review, Jen Hadfield’s Nigh No Place. I recommend it, and Hadfield’s prior book too.

Merge Records are finally, finally going to reissue (the CD goes on sale in two weeks) two of my favorite indie-rock records: the first two discs by the Volcano Suns. You can download two of their best songs at this absurdly copious and apparently wholly legal MP3 blog (which also has lots of other songs I mean to check out soon).

I learned about the Volcano Suns and about thousands of other obscure indie bands in the early 1990s at WHRB’s Record Hospital, which, L. informs me, now has its own Wikipedia entry. L. also informs me– I’m shocked, really– that a blogger in the employ of the Boston Phoenix has posted a story about Record Hospital’s two-decade archive of handwritten playlists and comment books: if you want to know what I spent most of 1992 thinking about, you can just click that link. The Phoenix has wisely chosen to reproduce the handwritten comments of Patrick Amory, whose handwriting my own grew to resemble after a couple of months at WHRB.

attention all NPR producers

January 3rd, 2009

Do not invite Steve on your show. He has the kiss of death. First Bryant Park Project (where he was brought in for his expertise on NCAA Women’s Basketball), now Weekend America (where he read a poem about cocktails mere days before the show was canned). Sure, you could blame it on the economy, and Steve never appeared on Day to Day or News and Notes, but you can’t be too careful in these uncertain times. Stay away from Steve if you know what’s good for you.

nontropical

December 29th, 2008

Ten days ago we were in Puerto Vallarta. We recommend it.

Five days ago we were in Connecticut for Christmas. It is a very good thing that we can now see Jessie’s family without having to board (or pay to board) an airplane. There was warmth. And fun. And presents, especially for Nathan (see below).

Three days ago we were watching Dan Zanes’ holiday show with Nathan in New York. We recommend that too. He’s got several musicians from Semitic traditions who seem to have joined his entourage since his last album: there’s a singer whose bio calls her “neo-Hasidic” and who adapts Jewish festive and liturgical tunes, and several Arab-American players, including a guy with a buzuq. We liked the buzuq, but what I still want is a melodica. I’ve wanted one, vaguely, ever since I saw one in the Heavenly stage show…

But it’s churlish to complain about instruments we don’t have, at the moment, since Nathan got so many new ones for Xmas/Hannukah, which he has now arranged to his liking, now that (today) we are re-established at home.

He’s got a purple microphone with its own stand! and an electric keyboard just his size! And this ingeniously designed toy trumpet, which is actually a bath-safe plastic pan-pipe! Our living room has really turned into a music room. Which is good. I have become “Drummer” (as in “Drummer! Daddy Drummer! Can you play the drums now?”) which is good, except when it’s a bit rude. We’re working on the rude part.

Three pieces of text online you should probably read:

(a) the LRB’s Lanchester on video games. Yes, they are art.

(b) the Poetry Foundation’s staff year-end best-of list, which includes the inevitable (Jack Spicer, George Oppen), the international (my former student Hannah Brooks-Motl, whose work you should clearly watch out or, picks Robert Minhinnick), and the heretofore almost-unknown.

(c) the nation’s preeminent women’s-sports journalist explains why people keep doing things they don’t really love, and why, sometimes, they later decide to stop.

When you get done reading those things, there’s always my fake Virgilian ode to last month’s election, now with a quasi-permanent online home at InDigest, a web-mag I’d be reading even if they had never published me.

we have a new blog

December 7th, 2008

It’s called Close Calls with Nonsense, not coincidentally named for my forthcoming book about contemporary poetry. You can expect to find my impromptu thoughts on contemporary poetry– and on other contemporary bookish matters– there, starting with this neat Web discovery. Sometimes posts there will be posted here, too; sometimes not.

Nonliterary matters– Nathan’s accomplishments, basketball milestones, travel notes– will continue to turn up on the accommodatingly blog, when they turn up online at all.

Design and formatting on the new blog, of course, all done by Jessie, without whose labor, attention, and design sense I’d still be using only 12-point Courier on white backgrounds for everything. Which might look neat for a while but would get got old fast.

close calls

December 4th, 2008

Coming soon: a new blog for me– some overlap expected with this one– for literature-related musings, with links to my writings online as those writings appear, and other stuff related to my next lit-crit book, which now has an Amazon page. Dig the cover!

I’m in the middle of Jenny Davidson’s YA novel, The Explosionist. It’s a lot of fun– even more so if you notice the way her eighteenth-century expertise informs the world she’s built for the book, noticings that the younger parts of her intended audience won’t mind if they don’t pick up (and will feel pretty special if they do). It is, in a way, set during the Scottish Enlightenment… and yet, really, it’s set in an alternate-history Scotland where Napoleon, 200 years ago, won the Napoleonic Wars.

I’m in Harvey Hix’s new anthology, intended to introduce US poets to Northern Ireland! It ends with William Meredith’s fine sonnet “The Illiterate,” but most of the people in it are my age, or not much older, or a bit younger. So far I like it. Best discovery: a poet about Bikini Atoll by Quan Barry.

I’m also in a recent, though no longer the current, LRB, writing about Frank Bidart. People should read him.

theory of lyric; keith blueboy, mourned

November 29th, 2008

Nathan really likes Sam Cooke right now. We’ve been listening to an album that includes “Another Saturday Night” (yes, the song later covered by Cat Stevens).

Nathan: “I know why Sam Cooke is sad.”

Me: “Why?”

Nathan: “Because he has no body.

That’s a fine old theory of lyric right there…

In other discoveries: every so often I find in the library, receive in the mail, or acquire, through the exchange of legal tender, books I very much want to recommend, and yet likely won’t have the time, nor the venue, to review properly (either that or the books are just too old for review). One such book is the new lit-crit study by the British poet and scholar Angela Leighton, called On Form. It’s one of the only recent books about form-in-general, poetry-in-general, and the history of ideas about poetic form in general that made me want to run towards, not away from its author: Leighton suggests, sympathetically and plausibly, that “form” has the hidden double “nothing,” itself a double (as you might expect) for “death”: that the fluidity of life (the opposite of nothing, the opposite of death) makes the idea of a wholly fixed poetic form something of an oxymoron; that Walter Pater understood all this; that we can trace specifically Paterian ideas about form, flux and “nothing” from the mid-Victorians all the way up to contemporary British poetry, with a useful stopover in the auroral America of Wallace Stevens; and that, once we have done that sort of tracing, we can place reductive, hostile ideas about the history of “form” (the sort of ideas many grad students think they’ve discovered) in the dustbin where they belong. I am making a vivid sketch of Leighton’s implications, rather than writing a proper book review and saying what she proves, because I’m not a Victorianist, really, and this is a blog, not a peer-reviewed quarterly: but really what I’m saying is, if you’re at all a lit-crit academic, I hope you will read her book.

Something else I really liked but probably won’t review: Franck Andre Jamme’s New Exercises, a book of brief shaped poems– all in caps, in shapes like the letters engraved on tombstones, with no spaces between the words– that sound good even in translation from the French. I knew that some folks believe lyric poetry evolved out of inscriptions on ancient tombs, but I never had an intuitive understanding of the sources for their beliefs until I read what Jamme has done: it sounds good even in translation (by Charles Borkhuis) from the French. You can see a typical, if more-than-typically laconic, Jamme-Borkhuis work here.

Two more recommendations, both graphic novels, both discovered in Ann Arbor, thanks to the dual agency– they are an irresistibly convincing combination– of Rebecca Porte and Ray McDaniel: first, the bittersweet, achy streamlined-realist teen-sadness chronicle SKIM, which is a lot less sexy– and a lot sadder, and at least a bit more profound– than the few reviews I’ve seen implied; second, the latest collection of Astro City installments. If I had ever possessed the ability to make technically sophisticated, long-form comics, Astro City is what I hope I would have made.

Apropos of nothing, very sad news from the indiepop world, a world which I seem to have nearly exited by accident: Keith Girdler of Blueboy (and later of several other bands) died last year. Blueboy were one of my favorite bands ever– still are, and most of their vinyl is down there with the rest of our vinyl, mostly non-unpacked: shed a tear or three over, and then sing along with, their 1994 masterwork Unisex. Save your hopes for the lovelorn gay hooker in “Marble Arch,” if you like, but shake your fist with the rocker “Imipramine,” and then shake your fist some more at the trio of fast-foward, distortion-armored pop songs on their three-song single “Dirty Mags.” (Yes, you can find quite a lot of these songs on iTunes: so their former label’s website claims.) If anyone’s writing this sort of song, this well, these days, I would be most grateful if somebody would let me know.

receptionists

November 14th, 2008

Academic parochialism watch, vol. XXVI: this Monday I had a long conversation with a student (one of my senior thesis writers) about the changing job market for receptionists: they’re still in demand, but it’s not clear where they belong, or what sort of enterprise fits them best. We were talking about these sorts of receptionists, people who study reception: not until after she left did I remember that, to almost all Americans who recognize the term, “receptionist” would mean something else.

As some of you know, these are my favorite receptionists. And speaking of My Favorite… did you know Michael Grace from My Favorite had a new blog? There’s a new band, too, called Secret History, but it looks like they have yet to release anything… I’m looking forward to the EP (same name as the blog) called Desolation Town.

And speaking of indiepop reception history– I discovered this summer that Mary Wyer, half the songwriting duo from Even As We Speak, had a newer (not truly new) indiepop act called Her Name In Lights. They sound superb (and a lot like EAWS, with the same sweet voice and the same caustic undertones) on the Internets, but my attempts to order their record have so far been balked… developing…

I had the idea that I’d spend the morning writing letters of recommendation, and instead spent the morning cleaning out hundreds, yes, hundreds, of old emails, making sure I knew what recommendations I owe and for whom and when they are due. It’s much, much better than not knowing. I’m starting to think that John Freeman’s forthcoming book (click here for his take on Jarrell, then scroll down for his own book) will have something to say to me.

And speaking of people with something to say to me: Boston-based poet and critic Dan Pritchard reviews my critical book about adolescence.

Election euphoria still hasn’t worn off around here, I think: said euphoria hasn’t even been derailed by the repeated, and scary, realization that the economy is in the tank– and that the economic collapse explains the size (if not the fact) of the good guys’ win. Time for a letter to Pollio, while the hope lasts.

Goodbye, Mama Africa

November 10th, 2008


Two-thirds of a family band

November 2nd, 2008