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This blog consists of reviews, interviews, news, etc...from the world of the Boston area small press/ poetry scene and beyond. Regular contributors are reviewers: Dennis Daly, Michael Todd Steffen, David Miller, Lee Varon, Timothy Gager,Lawrence Kessenich, Lo Galluccio, Zvi Sesling, Kirk Etherton, Tom Miller, Karen Klein, and others. Founder Doug Holder: dougholder@post.harvard.edu. * B A S P P S is listed in the New Pages Index of Alternative Literary Blogs.
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Friday, October 19, 2018
Thursday, October 18, 2018
The Sunday Poet: Bert Stern
I’d been sitting by the river all afternoon
and now the sun was going down and Venus
shone on the horizon. I’d been sitting
to watch how the water swirled into braids
and swirled out again. I was watching
a leaf ride the river until, drawn into
sluggish water near the bank it rested there.
Evening fell but the full moon made
the moving water sparkle.
Quite late a trail took me up the long bank
and across a rough meadow home. But before
I climbed the porch steps I stopped and listened
to distant water and a single owl.
Above me Orion was still in place,
so I went in to sleep in a room whose floor
was earth and whose ceiling was moonlight.
All night as I slept, in generous swirls
the river pursued its intricate dance, as if
it were still learning.
My Fair Junkie: A Memoir of Getting Dirty and Staying Clean by Amy Dresner
by Amy Dresner
October 2018
Hachette Books
Review by Timothy Gager
This is an important book, considering the heavy weight of the opioid crisis in this country. It is important because the story and the author are very real in this struggle. It is important because people need to meet people like Amy to understand alot of this crisis.
Unlike our President’s attempt to placate the African American population by bringing Kanye West to The White House, there are no popular drug addicts invited to wow the Oval Office. Why? Because what we learn in actual recovery holds the key to fighting this crisis. It’s not less drugs on the street, but rather more sober people in recovery willing to help others.
Amy Dresner was one of the featured guests at the last Dire Literary Series, October, in Somerville, and she was as real as it gets. Her book, My Fair Junkie: A Memoir of Getting Dirty and Staying Clean, chronicles her struggles with her disease, which included six trips Rehab Hospitals, four psychiatric wards, four suicide attempts, multiple Emergency Room visits, endless rounds therapy, a slew of fired sponsors, and as a cherry, a felony arrest for assault with a deadly weapon. Society doesn’t have much empathy for events such as this. The average citizen (oh, to be average) is not about to rally to battle anything having to do with serious drug and alcohol use and the wreckage in brings.
But aren’t they? When you read this book, you’re rooting awfully hard for the author. She tells her story with self-effacing humor, combined with real life terror. It is both frightening and hilarious. She is vulnerable and as some say about alcoholics and addicts when using, an ego-maniac with an inferiority complex.
The book alternates life before recovery with her court ordered work on The Clean Team (a wonderful double meaning) a street sweeping unit in Los Angeles. The Clean Team, works convicts to beautify the city and to cover the terms of their sentences. While doing this dirty work, Dresner simultaneously was living in a sober house, going to AA meetings, meeting with a sponsor and doing the required work on herself. Her story reports the importance of what losing everything, and becoming humble really means. These are extremely measurable traits for being and staying clean and sober, according to The Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. The book though, isn’t about Alcoholics Anonymous, but rather is about a brave and determined journey of one single individual. It is the kind of book which has already helped so many people, and should be on the reading list for those not in recovery, as well, as those who don’t even have a problem with drug and alcohol use. “The book also helps me stay accountable, I mean, I can’t exactly promote it if I’m skyping into readings from my seventh rehab!” Dresner told me.
My Fair Junkie: A Memoir of Getting Dirty and Staying Clean is funny, well written, and entertaining, while offering hope. It presents a person who had no hope left, tried multiple times to get sober, only to fail each time, as a strong person who succeeds triumphantly in the end.
As someone who knows their way around the rooms of AA, Dresner's book took me from, no, not me, to I totally identify with so much of this, but one doesn't have to have these kind of experiences to enjoy this book. My only criticism of My Fair Junkie came after meeting Amy Dresner a few weeks ago. She is someone who is successful, talented, and extremely alive, but the book wraps up too quickly to give this justice. I, for one, would like others to see her the way she lives in the world right now, as a strong woman, and a powerful example to those in recovery. We might never see Amy Dresner invited to The White House, but you can read the book in your own house, and learn, first hand, what this crisis really is about.
Sunday, October 14, 2018
Quit This Job And Become A Poet (Out of spite)by Georgia Park
Quit
This Job And Become A Poet (Out of spite)by Georgia Park
October
2018
Free
Verse Revolution Publishing
Review
by Timothy Gager
There’s
something wrong with you if these poems don’t speak to you. If they
don’t speak to you it means you are not vulnerable. It means you
are uncomfortable when someone is completely honest with you. It
means someone sitting next to you on an airplane who is about to tell
you the most incredible story you’ve heard in your life and is
silenced because you are too busy to listen. Truth is, you are not
too busy, but you don’t want to listen to the person next to you in
the airplane because you are too busy pretending to read the
in-flight magazine. You’re a unlucky sap who flips pages about the
Taquerias in Atlanta, that you will never eat or speak about. It’s
too bad because you have passed on some real life.
Georgia
Park’s poems will speak to you admire people who take social risks.
If you think the world’s normal is your normal, and you know that
your normal isn’t at all what society says is normal…but
basically you don’t give a hoot. If you are that kind of creative,
sensitive person, you will love Quit
This Job And Become A Poet (Out of spite)
In
this book, the poet, Georgia Park does a remarkable thing. Her poems
expose the inner-editor she has in her head regarding the risks in
life, yet seems to shut down the inner-editor having to do with the
poetry. In other words, the work all hangs out. This is a gift that
Park has which allows amazing lines or phrases to appear like magic
out of nowhere.
I
want someone as close as
family
to
kiss my eyelids while I’m
sleeping
and
make a cross on my chest
even
if it’s just my little dog
slobbering
who
still smells vaguely of
kimchi
(from
the poem Helicopter Tail)
This
talent also allows her to stick the closings of her poems like a
gymnast ending an outstanding routine. Many of these poems close
strongly.
In
Quit
This Job And Become A Poet (Out of spite), Park
writes her truth about being a poet, going to events, making a life
of it. While doing this, she is naked within her work, with the
attitude of “so what if I’m naked,” which is a necessary
attitude and swagger of a poet announcing themselves into the tricky
world of poetry and or poetry groups. Again and again, we are treated
to these unblinking words, as if, we are forced into a staring
contest and we, the reader, will be the one who end up blinking. Yet
it is the poet has blinked a few hundred times, but it’s too late,
you have already lost the contest, the poet is braver that you
are---but as a reader of poetry you are the winner. It is something
to admire. In the poem Talk
Show Host the
reality of no longer working is reflected upon, with humor and
desperation.
I
am sleeping
far
too often
I
won’t go out
because
I can’t
pay
for me
and
I can’t feign interest
any
longer
unless
you’re a
talk
show host
or
a future
employer
don’t
bother
Certainly
if Park quit her job to become a poet you certainly understand
it---and understand how it can be out of spite. The working world can
be such bullshit, but so can the poetry world, which offers other
various challenges. The poem, Molotov
Cocktail,
rings true in this regard:
Molotov
Cocktail
I
haven’t heard back
from
the guy who said
he’d
make me famous
except
to ask for a blowjob
of
epic proportions
which
I won’t give
and
the texts
keep
rolling in
I
start to think
it’s
not such a bad thing
if
no one ever knows
who
I am
I’m
going to bury
my
manuscript
in
a garden
and
see if I can grow
my
own little
Molotov
cocktails
it’s
better than ending up
in
the garbage
with
the scrap metal
and
home furnishings
of
this life
I
thought I could live
This
book of poetry is a good read, one I enjoyed, and would recommend to
poets, readers, and even those who might be stuck working out in the
world as dogs being eaten by other dogs.