How did Shiny get to be 16 years old already? Michael Friedman’s journal of
poetry, now a biennial, has pushed quiet excellence just about as far it can go
& managed to do a marvelous job in making each issue an event. Number 12
arrived just in time for Christmas & it’s hard not to simply throw out an
infinite number of Christmas present/stuffed stocking tropes to indicate my
pleasure at its arrival and all the great work inside.
When I lived in Berkeley
& San Francisco, I would never save a magazine unless some of my own work
was included in the issue – it wasn’t a question of desire, but of room. There
is a point, somewhere around 2,000 books, when the amount of space to
physically store a library becomes limited. I blew past 2,000 books years,
maybe decades ago. A secondary result was that, since I knew in advance that I
would not save the publication, I virtually never subscribed or bought copies
of mags. The downside of this, of course, is that there is a lot of work,
especially by newer writers who have not yet had a “big book” that you can’t
learn about in any other fashion.
But we had long since maxed
out of our book space in Berkeley ,
even with built-in bookshelves and a fairly impressive bricks & boards
system in several rooms. When I was first contemplating the job offer that
brought me to Pennsylvania, Krishna tells me that she could tell I was
seriously thinking about because I went & got some cartons just to pick up
the books that were lying around in stacks on the floor in case I wanted to
invite a realtor over to talk about selling the house. It came to 13 cartons.
Now that I live in Pennsylvania in a house close to three times the size of our home
in Berkeley , I still have stacks of books lying around
everywhere – even as we’ve added nine book cases. So I’m still pretty rigorous
about not getting or holding onto too many journals – my periodical collection
has only five shelves allotted to it. Yet I’ve noticed that there are some
magazine that are just too important to ever throw away – Chain is an obvious one, as is Combo
– and I realize now that I’ve been saving Shiny
for the past ten years. My only regret is that I didn’t get those early
editions way back when.
I think of Shiny as being one of the last truly
articulate manifestations of the New York School , the sort of generalization that is both true and not true at the same
time. The journal started, I believe, in New York & didn’t acquire a Denver address until double issue 9/10 in 1999. Some
classic New York School figures show up in every issue: Ted Berrigan, John
Ashbery, Harry Mathews, Kenneth Koch, Alice Notely, Ron Padgett, Tom Clark,
Brad Gooch, Joe Brainard, Tim Dlugos, David Shapiro,
Larry Fagin, Paul Violi, Clark Coolidge, Michael Brownstein, Ed Friedman,
Charles North, Steve Malmude, Tony Towle, Eileen
Myles, Susie Timmons, David Trinidad, Elaine Equi,
Jerome Sala, Kim Rosenfield,
Lewis Warsh, Ted Greenwald, Michael Gizzi, Bernadette Mayer, Anne Waldman, Bill
Berkson, John Godfrey, David Lehman & Clark Coolidge have all appeared in
these pages. Yet langpo has never been neglected – in the current issue alone,
I can find not only Greenwald & Coolidge, but also Bruce Andrews, Rae
Armantrout, Alan Bernheimer, Stephen Rodefer & Kit Robinson. There are also
a number of younger writers who resist any sort of grouping: Alan Gilbert, Lisa
Jarnot, Kevin Davies & Dierde Kovac, Andrew Levy
& Mark Wallace, just to pick a few. Plus a few older folks likewise hard to
pin down: Steve Ratcliffe, Bill Corbett, Tom Raworth , Terence Winch, Anselm
Hollo.
What makes Shiny a New York School magazine is Michael Friedman’s sense of active editorship – and here
the contrast with Chain
is fairly pronounced. In addition to the high design value and the inclusion,
in every issue, of recent visual art*, Shiny
uses positioning – Ted Greenwald leads off the current issue, Ted Berrigan
led off 9/10 with a 25-page selection from his journals -- interviews (Brad Gooch, Harry Mathews) and
design to focus its aesthetic concerns. & while Shiny is quite ecumenical with regards to current poetries, it has
generally shied away from non-NYS friendly poetries from the generation of the
New Americans, including only John Wieners (twice), David Meltzer & some
Allen Ginsberg photographs over the years. The current issue is dedicated to
Kenneth Koch.
Running between 160 and 250
pages, each issue of Shiny has many,
many treasures. It’s rare & wonderful to see four new Rae Armantrout poems
in a single journal. And it’s simply wonderful to come across the long (14
pages) ”A Burning Interior” by David Shapiro, Kenneth
Koch’s serial poem, “The Man” –
Teeth
Coldly the knife is Montana
– two pieces by Terence
Winch (a D.C. poet whose work I haven’t seen in far too long), two pieces by
Jacques Roubaud (my personal favorite of the Oulipo writers), 16 sections from
Mark Wallace’s ”Belief is Impossible,” three poems by William Corbett, two by
Ashbery, excerpts from a collaboration
by Dierdre Kovac
& Kevin Davies (“The cultural badger is hungry”), two poems in
tercets by Kit Robinson & an excerpt from Bruce Andrews’ “Dang Me,” part of
his turn to a new mellower tone (“Treat me as well as your pets”).
There are pieces to which I
want to direct closer attention. The first is Alan Bernheimer’s “My Blue
Hawaii,” The first stanza establishes the poem’s sense of style & the kind
of world it projects:
Every queen loves a lobster
with the
nerve to kill time
since it’s
easy to be sure in a bistro
where more
than dogs are turned away
This is the kind of pop art
landscape that John Ashbery pioneered & the second generation
New York School virtually patented – Ron Padgett,
Joe Ceravolo, Bill Berkson are
all superb at this. Bernheimer uses the same devices not so much to focus on
style as such – this is why he’s not “really” a New York School poet – but on the language beneath:
Your mother had the particle
but key
words are too brittle
to warp the
probity of a lifetime
for a perp walk through a wafer fab
While “wafer fab,” a facility that manufactures silicon chips, turns up
more times in a Google search of the web than Anna Warner’s hymn, “Jesus Loves
Me,” none of the 48 occurrences on a page that also includes “poem,” “poetry”
or “poems” actually appears in a
poem.** What we have here is not merely a moment of marvelous prosody – let
those last two lines roll around on your tongue for awhile – but also an
instance of the culture coming into the language of a poem for the very first
time.
Lisa Jarnot’s two pastorals
also jump off the page & into the ear. Here is “Hound Pa storal”:
Of the hay in the barn
and the
hound in the field
of the
bay in the sound, of the
sound of the
hound in the field
of the
back of the field of the
bay and
the front of the field
of the
back of the hound and the
front of the
hound and the sound
of the
hound when he bays at
the sound
in the field
with the
baying of hounds in the
baying of
arms in the field
of the
hound on the page in the
sound of the
hound in the field
of the
hay that unrests near
the hound
in the barn in the field
of the
bend in the barn in the
sound of the
hound in the bay
by the
barn in the field.
Jarnot may have the best ear
of any poet under 40 – Lee Ann Brown is really the only other poet who comes
close – so it’s no accident that she is willing to take risks like this – the
actual climax of this poem comes with the word “bend” in the first line of the
last stanza, the introduction of a new sound that completely shapes everything
around it.
At the age of 21, Jarnot
published a book entitled Phonetic
Introductions. The collage that serves as the frontispiece to her 1996
Burning Deck volume, Some Other Kind of
Mission, is built around a Perec-like phrase:
“there are no ‘e’s’ in the other language.” Ring of Fire, published by the late,
lamented Zoland Books in 2001, is filled with works that no other poet in the
world could have written. I’d wondered at first why Jarnot, who seems so out of
place generationally, could have been selected to fill out the Curriculum of
the Soul series of critical pamphlets, but her volume, One’s Own Language may in fact be the strongest one in that entire
series. It’s one of those “knock you on your butt” kinds of books – reading it
reminded me of what reading Tristes Tropique, Proprioception & The Mayan Letters felt like when I was a youngster reading them for
the first time. It also made realize just how very long it has been since I
have had a reading experience like that.
I noted before that Shiny has generally steered clear of the
likes of projectivism – Robert Creeley seems never to have appeared in its
issues. Yet here is Jarnot, Duncan ’s
biographer & perhaps the closest thing in her age cohort to an extension of
that aesthetic. Her appearance in Shiny
12 is not her first, either.
It has been Shiny’s particular contribution to poetry to
show to us what has evolved out of the original (or at least second
generational) New
York School – it’s really the only publication now doing that.
That it can also show us how this vision of poetry ties into everything from
langpo to this multigenerational gumbo of mavericks is a test of what a great
journal can (& maybe even should) be.
* Duncan
Hannah has been Shiny’s art editor since the move to Colorado , and this has shifted the art
included to figurative works mostly in neo-Pop post-post-impressionist modes,
somewhat away from the more conceptual work of its earlier issues. Every artist
in the last two issues has been represented by a New York gallery.
** I’m not
certain how encouraged I am to discover that the editor of Chip Scale Review has penned editorials in verse, however.