Showing posts with label links. Show all posts
Showing posts with label links. Show all posts

Monday, November 26, 2007


(from left: cris cheek, Matthew Abess, Dr. Marvin Sackner, Maggie O’Sullivan, Charles Bernstein, unidentified)

Photo courtesy of Derek Love & PENNsound

Bob Cobbing:
Sockless in Sandals
(PDF)

Plus
Bob Cobbing at Penn
(last 3 weeks)

Plus plus
Bob Cobbing archives
at PENNsound

Plus plus plus
Bob Cobbing archives
on Ubuweb

§

Richard Owens responds
to my review of
Damn the Caesars

§

Howard Junker
reads Paul Muldoon
as editor
& has some interesting
observations
(why I call this
neophobia,
part 1)

§

Al Filreis
on anti-modernism
in 1960

(why I call this
neophobia,
part 2)

Al Filreis
on responses to
The Grand Piano

Al Filreis
bookmarks

§

The New York Times’
list of “100 notable books of 2007
contains just four volumes of poetry,
including one by Rae Armantrout

The three others
continue the hegemony
of what I once called
the “Gang of Eight
(This year it’s just FSG & Ecco/Harper)

§

Erin Mouré’s
Transparency Machine
exhibit

§

Two books
from George Bowering

§

After 73 years
of publishing poetry,
Ruth Brin
tries a novel

§

Celebrating John Ashbery
in utter bafflement

§

Charles Bernstein
& Susan Bee

collaborating in 1971

§

Jim Harrison
on
Charles Bukowski

§

Vernon Scannell.
”drunk, boxer, and Army deserter,”
who “emerged a poet,”
has died

As has
Bloomsbury poet
Paul Roche

§

Kindle me this

§

Talking with
Kim Addonizio

§

Worth attending:
in
Lowell,
Geoffrey Young
reads
The Riot Act,
December 1

§

Worth attending
in
Berkeley:
Big book
party/reading
for
The Collected Poems
of Philip Whalen,
Dec. 4
@ Moe’s

§

Worth attending
in NY:
David Shapiro
in conversation with
David Lehman
Dec. 11
@ The New School

§

Poets against the war
on the Monterey Peninsula

§

250 attend
marathon reading
in Traverse City, Michigan

§

In Boulder,
20 years of poetry
at the Laughing Goat

§

22 poems
by 17 men
with one thing in common:
Guantanamo

§

Israeli verse
written in
European languages

§

A profile of
Nasreen Syed,
a Canadian poet
writing in
Urdu & Punjabi

§

Scotland’s only
African Asian Scottish
performance poet

§

Short profile of
Pham-Tien Duat

§

Slammin
down under

§

From Pakistan, the question
Is English a foreign language?

§

A little YouTube vispo
from Nico Vassilakis

§

Cambridge’s first
Poet Populist
isn’t an academic

§

Bringing Gulzar
to Bollywood

§

Bringing Western writing
into Arabic
at last

§

Performer murdered
during play
in
Nepal

§

A profile of
David Solway

§

W.S. Merwin
at 80

§

Seamus Heaney
on the poetry
of
Japan

§

Britain’s
year of Quietude
(plus Galway Kinnell)
in review

§

Andrew Motion’s
Christmas recommendations
find Ted Hughes’s world
”as compelling as Yeats's,
but more instantly sympathetic
and approachable

§

Very bad poetry

§

Robert Pinsky
offers
Merwin’s Neruda

§

Norman Mailer’s work
in the
New York Review of Books

§

Software
to guide you
through your
paint-by-the-numbers
novel

§

Jenny Holzer
gets literary
and
political

at Mass MoCA

§

Barry Schwabsky
on
Kara Walker

§

Ian Keenan
on
Alain Badiou

§

In a land where
the few hundred
publishing poets
of the 1950s
have begat
over 10,000 today,
the rise of arts culture
is inescapable

§

Peter Gay’s
pop modernism

§

The ghost
in the machine

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Julian Brolaski
on
Stacy Szymaszek’s
queer poetics

§

Reginald Shepherd
on John Ashbery’s
Some Trees

§

America
has stopped reading

But Amazon
tries to
invent a better book

Nonsense, say Forbes,
the real competition
for reading
is the web

§

GASP!
William Shakespeare’s works
were really written by…
William Shakespeare!

§

Language Poetry & the Body:
the complete panel
(Maria Damon, Steve Benson,
Leslie Scalapino & Bruce Andrews,
moderated by Tim Peterson
& Erica Kaufman)

§

Pound’s language

§

I am “out of fashion
(actually, he gets what I’m trying to do,
but mostly isn’t interested)

§

The ghost-writer
of
Akron

§

Keith & Rosmarie Waldrop
in
St. Petersburg, FL

§

Auctioning China’s
contemporary poetry archives

§

J.H. Prynne
on
Ken Edwards’ novel
Futures

Plus an excerpt
from Edwards’
latest novel

§

The Marin Independent Journal
on the suicide of
Landis Everson

§

Charles Alexander
reading
Creeley whole

§

A peek at
Beedle the Bard

§

Barrett Watten on
the radical particular:
critical regionalism
vs. globalization

§

Readers’ reports:
an assassin’s list
for contemporary books

§

How
War and Peace
works

§

A column on academic presses
in the daily paper?


The first one

§

Tenney Nathanson
on
the poetics of
Leslie Scalapino

§

The Bad Poets Society

§

Covering Norman Mailer
or not
in
Columbus, Ohio

Rethinking his place
in
The LA Times

§

Matthew Sweeney
makes the test

Each mooed to each

§

A new
Aeneid

§

Michael Gottlieb
on
Lydia Davis
Proust

§

Contemporary poetics
for a whole new century

§

Even more dismal
than the Costa Book Award shortlist
is the roster of judges
who turn up year after year

An oft-rejected novel
makes the list

§

Like playing tunes
out of your armpit

§

Two North Carolina poets

§

Robert Pinsky
celebrating
a fatty, artery clogging
slice of sentimentality
from Mark Strand

§

Angela Veronica Wong
in between

§

A Queen’s Medal
for
a noisy Quietist

& the Royal Society
honors
Peter Porter

§

The trouble with
Janet Malcolm’s
Stein & Toklas

§

A poet’s portrait
with a rare history

§

Alan Davies
on
Roberto Harrison

& on
Norman Fischer

§

Canadian book prices
start to fall

§

The lone poet
on
Florida State’s
football team

§

James Emanuel,
neglectorino
in his own time

§

A little Edith Wharton mystery
appears to solve itself

§

The dynamics
of web-based
social networks

§

Lawrence Weiner’s
word art

§

About Looking

§

Loving Picasso’s biography

§

Hélio Oiticica

§

Surfer dude
stuns physics

An Exceptionally Simple
Theory of Everything
(PDF)

§

Gutting
The San Jose Mercury News

§

Do newspapers favor
the striking screenwriters?

§

The first film postponed by the strike
is Dan Brown’s
Da Vinci Code prequel

§

Whose culture is it?

§

Vaclav Havel
returns to theater

§

Stephen Paul Miller
on
Radiohead

§

The Bob Dylan
camouflage military hat

§

Special thanks
to
E O A G H
for so much
wonderfulness

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Kenny Goldsmith’s
playlist
for November
in the NY Times
(Marie Osmond does Hugo Ball,
Charles Bernstein, Christian Bök,
Joseph Beuys, La Monte Young, Terry Fox,
the complete Beatles, more,
all with MP3s)

§

Profiles of
Sawako Nakayasu
&
Aaron Kunin

§

Confronting
aesthetic diversity

§

A profile of
Ron Padgett

§

Ange Mlinko
on
Tom Pickard

And here also

§

Slammin
with
Saul Williams

§

Two poets of Buchenwald
translated by
Fanny Howe

§

A review of
the most recent
volume of
The Grand Piano

§

Ananda Rajakaruna
& a specific moment
in the evolution of modernism
in Sinhala verse

§

A belated obit
for Bill Griffiths
makes it finally
to The Times

§

Ditto Jane Cooper
& The LA Times

§

A memorial reading
for
Dmitri Prigov,
Sunday, Nov. 18
at the Bowery Poetry Club,
NYC
(Scroll down)

§

The New Criterion’s
Roger Kimball
is ready to take on
Norman Mailer
now that he can’t fight back

Dick Cavett
remembers
when Mailer could
& did
still bring it on

Robert Fulford
&
Kyle Smith
just generally
despise Mailer

Jim Lewis
has a more complicated
response

Cynthia Crossen
blames it
on fame

But Suzanne Fields
was charmed

§

Mailer’s ghost
loomed large
over the
National Book Awards

§

Bob Hass
deservedly won the
National Book Award
(Sherman Alexie &
Denis Johnson
also received awards)

Cold Front’s
National Book Award
Value Pack

§

The end
of the
Great American Novel?

§

Picador
abandons
hardbacks

§

The Dead Novelists Society

§

Nat Hentoff
on
Fred McDarrah

§

Japanese Women Poets:
An Anthology

§

Academy of American Poets
Poets Forum Reading
MP3s
(Lyn Hejinian, Robert Hass,
Frank Bidart, Susan Stewart,
Rita Dove, Galway Kinnell,
Sharon Olds, James Tate,
Robert Pinsky, Kay Ryan,
Ellen Bryant Voigt, Gerald Stern,
Carl Phillips)

§

The Olson documentary
comes to
his undergraduate school

§

Hart Crane
in
Brooklyn

§

A Peter Ciccariello
I just
got completely absorbed in
which I link here
to say I’m sorry
for having, for two days,
misspelled his name
(a problem it seems
of a wandering i)

§

Late Poems
of
Lu You

§

Talking with
Susan Gillis

§

Poetry
on the rails

§

C.K. Williams
hasn’t
”come very far”
in 71 years

§

Memories of my melancholy
Iranian censors

§

Getting naked with
Carmine Sarracino

§

A profile of
Tanya Davis

§

The need for a Complete
T.S. Eliot

§

Andrew Motion
on the new
Ezra Pound biography

§

Searching
for the right myth

§

Ugly Umberto

§

Nashville’s
new formalist

§

Judge rules
that intent
defines poetry

§

“Poetry has no serious contenders
as the English national art”

§

Jacques Barzun
at 100
has become a hero
to the right

§

As the audience ages,
so do fiction’s characters

§

Do geezers rule
at writing?

(The John Llewellyn Rhys shortlist:
those over 35
need not apply)

§

Studs Terkel
& the Popular Front

§

Reed Whittemore
telling it slant

§

Have all the gay stories
already been told?

§

In Canada,
the big chain stores
will start selling books
at
U.S. prices

§

Bookstore browsing
in the
Pioneer Valley

§

The National Council on
Bookstore Tourism

§

Bookworm
Paradise

§

The challenges
indie bookstores
are facing

§

Community college
to print its own
text books

§

Thirteen
new bookstores
that opened
in October

§

The literary scene
in Iceland

§

Harry Potter’s auntie
takes on
Samuel Beckett

§

Poetry in Pacifica

§

A short profile
of
Michael Collier

§

Poetry at
Ohio State

§

Language study is up
at American colleges
(Arabic has more than
doubled)

§

Scholarship
in the digital age

§

Social networking
as a part of
reporting

§

Lost in the library

§

Results of the
Pimp my Bookcart
contest

§

Creative writing
on
Craigslist

§

Fighting
libel tourism

§

Best practices in
fair use,”
cinema division

§

Against
improvisation

§

Talking with
Aesop Rock

§

Talking with
Jim Dine

The prints of
Jim Dine

§

On seeing Edward Hopper
through the eyes of
Alexander Nemerov

§

Violette de Mazia’s
defenders
come forth

§

Rothko sells for $34.2M,
Warhol’s “Liz” for $23.7M

&

Koons’ “Hanging Heart”
for $23.6M

§