ksp news

February 23, 2010

SINA QUEYRAS on Matrix Magazines New Feminism, Les Fugues Feminissance, and Prismatic Publics: Innovative Canadian Women’s Poetry and Poetics.

SINA QUEYRAS on Matrix Magazines New Feminism, Les Fugues Feminissance, and Prismatic Publics: Innovative Canadian Women’s Poetry and Poetics.
This exuberant, detailed post at Harriet begins:
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/author/squeyras/
If you found Juliana Spahr and Claudia Rankine’s American Women Poets in the 21st Century: Where Lyric Meets Language exciting you’re going to appreciate Prismatic Publics: Innovative Canadian Women’s Poetry, published in 2009 by Coach House Books. Edited superbly by Kate Eichhorn and Heath Milne, the collection includes fifteen of the “most engaging avante garde Canadian women writing poetry today.” Some of these names will be familiar. In particular Nicole Brossard, Daphne Marlatt, Erin Moure, Lisa Robertson, and to the narrative people in particular, Gail Scott. Some of the new names include: Margaret Christakos, Susan Holbrook, Dorothy Trujillo Lusk, Karen Mac Cormack, M. NourbeSe Philip, Nathalie Stephens, Catriona Strang, Rita Wong, Rachel Zolf and, I must confess, myself.

This exuberant, detailed post at Harriet begins:

If you found Juliana Spahr and Claudia Rankine’s American Women Poets in the 21st Century: Where Lyric Meets Language exciting you’re going to appreciate Prismatic Publics: Innovative Canadian Women’s Poetry, published in 2009 by Coach House Books. Edited superbly by Kate Eichhorn and Heath Milne, the collection includes fifteen of the “most engaging avante garde Canadian women writing poetry today.” Some of these names will be familiar. In particular Nicole Brossard, Daphne Marlatt, Erin Moure, Lisa Robertson, and to the narrative people in particular, Gail Scott. Some of the new names include: Margaret Christakos, Susan Holbrook, Dorothy Trujillo Lusk, Karen Mac Cormack, M. NourbeSe Philip, Nathalie Stephens, Catriona Strang, Rita Wong, Rachel Zolf and, I must confess, myself.

February 22, 2010

D: What does “atmosphere” mean to you, and what is its importance in your life?

–interview with Bhanu Kapil on Mars Poeitc blog
D: What does “atmosphere” mean to you, and what is its importance in your life?
B: I read your question and immediately see the balcony of a temple in Mussoorie, in the Himalayas, where I stayed with my uncle for a few days when I was twenty. I was traveling with him from temple to temple, training or witnessing, really, the ancestral practice in my family of “healing with light and color.” My uncle would give a dharma talk, give healings, then the temple would put us up for the night, or as long as we could stay. I remember sitting on the balcony looking down at the mist in the valley below, the sun rising through the clouds, which turned rose and gold in turns — perhaps twenty variations of these colors — wrapped in a quilt, drinking chai from a little glass, and — from this time on, I never lost hope, no matter what happened to me or to others. I was recalibrated by atmosphere to the light in my own body, and lately, as I engage questions of aggression and community, what I do is go to the river near my house in Colorado, with my dog, and sit until the river comes out of itself and into me. It is the same thing. It is SHAKTI, which comes to us through the earth, its ethers and its bodies of water.

–interview with Bhanu Kapil on Mars Poetic blog.

B: I read your question and immediately see the balcony of a temple in Mussoorie, in the Himalayas, where I stayed with my uncle for a few days when I was twenty. I was traveling with him from temple to temple, training or witnessing, really, the ancestral practice in my family of “healing with light and color.” My uncle would give a dharma talk, give healings, then the temple would put us up for the night, or as long as we could stay. I remember sitting on the balcony looking down at the mist in the valley below, the sun rising through the clouds, which turned rose and gold in turns — perhaps twenty variations of these colors — wrapped in a quilt, drinking chai from a little glass, and — from this time on, I never lost hope, no matter what happened to me or to others. I was recalibrated by atmosphere to the light in my own body, and lately, as I engage questions of aggression and community, what I do is go to the river near my house in Colorado, with my dog, and sit until the river comes out of itself and into me. It is the same thing. It is SHAKTI, which comes to us through the earth, its ethers and its bodies of water.

February 19, 2010

Heidegger’s Glasses, by Thaisa Frank

KSP is excited to hear that Thaisa Frank has a new novel out!

9781607477266

Description:

The Third Reich’s obsession with the occult, as well as scrupulous record-keeping has led them to create the Compound of Scribes, concealed in a converted mine shaft complete with rose- colored cobblestone streets and a continuously shifting artificial sky. The Scribes’ sole mission is to answer letters written to the dead—thereby preventing the deceased from pestering psychics for answers and exposing the Final Solution–as well as any questions about unanswered letters after Germany’s ancticipated victory after the war.

As a failing Germany falls apart at its seams, a letter arrives written by eminent philosopher Martin Heidegger to his optometrist and friend, a man now lost in the dying thralls at Auschwitz. How will the Scribes answer this letter?

The presence of Heidegger’s words—one simple letter in a place filled with letters—sparks a series of events that will  ultimately threaten the safety and well-being of the entire Compound.  Part love story and part historical fiction, Heidegger’s Glasses evocatively  constructs the landscape of Nazi Germany from an entirely original and  haunting vantage point.

From the Prologue:
In the ordinary winter of 1920, the philosopher Martin Heidegger saw his glasses and fell out of the familiar world. He was in his study at Freiburg, over one hundred and sixty kilometers south of Berlin, looking out the window at the thick bare branches of an elm tree. His wife was standing next to him, pouring a cup of coffee. Sunlight fell through the voile curtains, throwing stripes on her crown of blond braids, the dark table, and his white cup.  All at once a starling crashed against the window and dropped to the ground.  Heidegger reached for his glasses to look and as he leaned over, the coffee spilled.  His wife cleaned the table with her apron while he cleaned the glasses with his handkerchief.  And all at once, he looked at the thin gold earpieces and two round lenses and didn’t know what they were for. It was as though he’d never seen glasses or knew how they were used. And then the whole world became unfamiliar: The tree was a confusion of shapes, the blood-spattered window a floating oblong. And when another starling flew by, he saw only darkness in motion.

Martin Heidegger didn’t mention this to his wife. Together they cleaned and muttered. She brought more coffee and left the room. Heidegger waited for the world to fall back into place and eventually the ticking belonged to the clock again, the table became a table and the floor became something to walk on.  Then he went to his desk and wrote about this moment to a fellow philosopher named Asher Englehardt. Even though they often met for coffee, they enjoyed writing to each other about tilted moments: The hammer that’s so loose its head flops like a bird. The picture that’s crooked and makes the room seem uncanny.  The apple in the middle of the street that makes you forget what streets are for. The thing made close because it’s seen at a distance.  The sense of not being at home. The world falling out of itself.

A few days later Asher Englehardt wrote back in his familiar, hurried script, chiding Heidegger for always acting as though the sensation were new. “There is nothing of substance to depend on, Martin,” he wrote. “All these cups and glasses and whatever else people have or do are props that shield us from a world that started long before anyone knew what glasses were for and will go on long after there’s no one left to remember them. It’s a strange world, Martin.  But we can never fall out of it because we live in it all the time.”

Asher believed this resolutely and continued to believe it twenty years later, when he and his son were taken from their home in Freiburg and deported by cattle car to Auschwitz.

Purchase it from Phoenix Books.


February 14, 2010

A few photos from KSP’s 35th Anniversary

From top to bottom: Camille Roy, Elizabeth Robinson, Frances Phillips, Susan Gevirtz, Kathleen Fraser, Dale Going. And, current press members Hazel White, Ramsay Breslin, Tiff Dressen, Val Witte, and Amber DiPietra with co-founders Rena Rosenwasser and Patricia Dienstfrey.

C Roy by Messer 01.28.10
20100128_0068Robinson by Messer 01.28.10aPhillips by Messer 01.28.10Gevirtz by messer 01.28.10Fraser by messer 01.28.10D Going by messer 01.28.10KSP memebrs by Messer 01.28.10

We extend many thanks to all who attended and especially to all the authors and friends who read at the event (for a complete list, see previous post).  We also appreciate David Highsmith for hosting the event at Books and Bookshelves (99 Sanchez, San Francisco) and to Merredyth Messer, the photographer who captured these images.

February 2, 2010

Kon Kon, a film by Cecilia Vicuña. Premieres 2/4/2010

untitled

Recent RAIN TAXI review of  The Oxford Book Of Latin American Poetry, edited by Vicuña.