Poetry As Protein (John Olson on Michael McClure)

There is no other poet/scholar in Seattle like John Olson. In fact, there’s no one in the world quite like him. His appetite for language is unmatched. We all are our language, to some degree, but John lives words. Breathes syllables. Exhales some of the most fascinating scholarship and poetry that there is, sourced in Gertrude Stein, Dada, Surrealism, a Beat ethos and done with endless curiosity and a rare (in this realm) humility.

Mysteriosos

Mysteriosos

So, when I saw the link on Silliman’s Blog to John’s review of Michael McClure’s latest book, Mysteriosos and Other Poems, I cringed a little. I mean, you bet I want to review the book, but how could I do it justice after John’s research into musical forms, biology experiments going back 60 years, McClure’s relationship with nature juxtaposed with the current nature as inert commodity mentality and a brilliant breakdown of one of the more striking short poems in the book.

Well, I can’t compete. That’s pointless. But competition is not part of John Olson’s realm, nor McClure’s. Sure, John sometimes wishes he had the audience of the average rock star, but John is like one of our brightest poetry rock stars in Seattle, and fathoms more interesting than any person working in that field.

So, yes, read his review, linked below. Buy one of his books at Open Books, and give thanks for people like him doing it the old fashioned way, living the life of writer and scholar, even as he makes this belated plunge into social networking and the blog-o-sphere.

Poetry As Protein

Mysteriosos, and Other Poems
Michael McClure
New Directions, 2010

reviewed by John Olson

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Charles Olson Centenary Conference Simon Fraser University June 4-6 2010

http://olsonconference.com/?p=99

Roundtable: The Future of Olson Studies 1
Charles Alexander, Anne Dewey, Meredith Quartermain, Lytle Shaw, Jonathan Skinner, Fred Wah

Just one of many interesting panels…

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Flavia Rocha, Brazil Native, Tonight at 7P

Living Room tonight at 7P, where writers read new work, lovers of writing read the work of someone else or come just to be in the engaging company of other writers and readers. (You’re a dwindling minority!)

4816 Rainier AV S, right next to Subway, across the street from Bank of America, in the 2nd floor lounge of the Columbia City Cinema. The smell of really good popcorn greets you & look for the SPLAB sign.

You may want to bring copies of a recent poem of yours to read for gentle critique. We’re averaging 6 folks a night, but sometimes more show up, so bring 8. We meet every Tuesday until the end of May.

Our guest tonight?

Flávia Rocha was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil, in 1974. She has a bachelor’s degree in Journalism from Fundação Casper Libero and a M.F.A in Writing from Columbia University. She has worked as a reporter and contributor for various magazines in Brazil, including Casa Vogue and Bravo! She is currently the editor-in-chief of the poetry journal Rattapallax (www.rattapallax.com). Author of the bilingual poetry book “A Casa Azul ao Meio-dia/ The Blue House Around Noon” (Travessa dos Editores, Brazil, 2005), has just finished a second collection, “Quartos Habitáveis”.

She has edited anthologies of Brazilian contemporary poetry for magazines Rattapallax (U.S.), Poetry Wales (U.K.) and Papertiger (Australia) and her poems and translations have appeared in various magazines, in print and online. In the area of film, founded with her husband, Steven Richter, the Academia Internacional de Cinema (www.aicinema.com.br), a film school located in Sao Paulo, for which she developed a Creative Writing Program and directed the Communications Department. They moved to Portland last fall, where they are starting to work on new film and literature projects, while enjoying Northwest life with their two lovely daughters.

See you in the living room Tonight 7-9P.

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Dark Coast Gallery Now Up

From DCP:

The Gallery at darkcoastpress.com is now active.  All works that were selected for publication are now available online in the first April 2010 edition of The Gallery.

This month’s issue includes:

§       Jennifer Natalya Fink – An excerpt from The Mikvah Queen

§      Paul Nelson – Danse Macabre, The Offering, and 10 American Sentences

§    J.r.d. Middleton – We Haven’t Seen You In Ages

§     Chris Stuker – Belittled

Follow the link here:

http://www.darkcoastpress.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=59&Itemid=70

This debut of our new online feature is a big deal for us. Dark Coast truly strives to maintain an aesthetic standard of writing that is not always easy to uphold.  To say it plainly, there is just so much bad writing that comes our way.  We are so excited to be launching a feature that promotes quality work from contemporary writers.  The Gallery is still new, and we have a lot of plans for it in the future.  There will innovations in its design as well as its marketing as a free online ‘art gallery’ of new writing each month.  If you have questions or comments I’d love to hear from you.

Dark Coast Press offers The Gallery monthly as a free, online feature…

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