Sunday, June 29, 2025

The Call of Paradise by Majda Gama (2023)


 The Call of Paradise

Majda Gama

Two Sylvias Press

Kingston, WA

(c)2023

Winner of Two Sylvias Chapbook Prize 

It is refreshing to read work by poets who come to and through the English language from cultures and experiences beyond white Anglo-Saxon protestant backgrounds. Be that Native American, and frankly any "minority" voice BECAUSE how these other "voices" capture their experiences while also witnessing ours is cleansing. 

Yes, cleansing. Far too many American poets write in a manner similar to how this country was portrayed in the Mel Gibson film The Patriot in which there were no black slaves and no Native tribes in a film where both groups IN HISTORY combined to outnumber European-born colonists and British troops at the time of the Revolutionary War. In the same way, when Robert Frost writes of being in the woods, those woods are empty canvases - they are devoid of whom inhabited them prior to Frost's birth. Prior to most "American writers'" births. And while the majority of poets in this country attempt to capture their experiences, their environments, their surroundings; they do so through their white person lens. And we, as a nation, are about to become a Minority Majority nation (despite the efforts of the MAGA and Trump and their White Nationalist ilk) so seeing things strictly through a "white lens" does not do our collective experience as Americans justice. 

Ms. Gama, while neither beating a drum nor hammering a nail, presents experiences beyond - outside - and other with grace and calm expression. And her language is beautiful. 

Resonance by Gwendolyn Zimmerman (2018)


Resonance

Gwendolyn Zimmerman

FootHills Publishing

Kanona, NY

(c) 2018

I don't recall the exact time of the catastrophic fire that destroyed the building, and therefore the operation, of FootHills Publishing but I know it happened and that was a sad moment not only for Michael Czarnecki (the publisher) but for everyone associated with that small press. 

I got to meet with Michael a number of years ago when he ventured into the Berks County, PA poetry community due to publishing Craig Czury, who at the time was an important link between the fledgling Berks Bards poetry organization and the Berks Arts Council. [I know, sorry, structural minutiae dealing not directly with the poetry here or the poetess but she mentioned both men on the back cover, so....] 

I have heard that Michael has phoenix'd out of his disaster and have given FootHills new life. 

This collection is lovely, btw. 




Tuesday, May 27, 2025

single poem presented as broadside by Kirby and Ralph (1996)


This is less than a chapbook

Smaller than a broadside

tinier than anything I actually had to pay to get, in truth. But signed, it is, and by both men. One who might be wearing swim trunks, I would hope. 

A single poem. Not a bad poem but hardly worth the effort in my estimation. But I didn't, they guys did and that is all I wish to say about that. Oh - it's Kirby Congdon (poet) and Ralph must have been the "artist" involved. 

Friday, May 23, 2025

Sparse Rain by Roy Zarucchi (1990)


Sparse Rain

Roy Zarucchi

Pygmy Forest Press

Albion, CA

(c)1990

I got this one because I had never heard of this poet before and doing some research prior to the arrival of the book gave me some insight. But, wait, Pygmy Forest Press...... that is Leonard Cirino's press. Oh, he passed in 2012. I did not know that. He and I had a feisty exchange of views concerning the Beat Generation. He blamed the Beats for his life (choices) as I remember it. And yet I am hearing traces of Kerouac in a few of the poems in this collection by Roy Zarucchi. His phraseology in a few of the poems are right out of the Kerouac language universe. 

This collection is NOT a Beat generation infused chapbook, but it does hint at it. It's a cross section of the writings by this gentleman, a man who had a remarkable and interesting life. I learn of his background from the obit shown below: 

Roy Zarucchi Obituary

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M - ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Retired U.S. Air Force Maj. Roy Zarucchi passed away suddenly June 29, 2011, at his home. He was born June 9, 1939, in Oakland, Calif. 


Roy retired after 20 years in the Air Force and taught college. During his distinguished career he was an Air Force commando, served in the Vietnam War and spent five years at the Pentagon. He graduated from St. Mary's College, Berkeley, Calif., and received a master's degree at Central Michigan University. In addition to being a skilled potter, he was a published poet. He and Carolyn were essayists with Maine Public Radio and joint published authors. Roy and Cal operated Nightshade Press and edited Potato Eyes Literary Arts Journal for 12 years. They left Albuquerque, N.M., to return to coastal Maine, but were pulled back to the climate and friendships they had made in New Mexico. His hobbies included swimming, gardening, throwing pots and European travel.







Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Leaf Notes: Poems of the Plague Years by Michael Fallon (2022)


Leaf Notes: Poems of the Plague Years

Michael Fallon 

Self published 

(c)2022

This is a very fine collection of poetry created during and entirely about the COVID 19 "plague" we are still recovering from today. 

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Gifts of the Forest by Inez N. Mcfee (1909)


 Gifts of the Forest

Inez N. Mcfee

F. A. Owen Publishing Company

Danville, N Y 

(c)1909

This booklet was part of a series entitled Instructor Classic Series brought out by F. A. Owen in the early 20th century. It was conceived as an educational tool but it clearly (at 31 pages) is something I deem a chapbook. The inside last page of the booklet offers a listing of other booklets in the series. 

Saturday, April 26, 2025

Three & One by Toby Olson with Mary Laird Hamady (1976)

Three & One 

Toby Olson & Mary Laird Hamady

Perishable Press Limited

Mount Horeb, Wisconsin 

(c) 1976

Extremely small booklet. With awesome and uniquely "typical" cover for this press. 2 drawings in the booklet by Mary Laird Hamady. 4 poems by Toby Olson. Included in the book was this "flyer" for a reading with Clifford Burke. Beautiful item. Not cheap but worth having. 

Friday, April 18, 2025

The Consolation of Fairy Tales by Shelley Puhak (2011)


 The Consolation of Fairy Tales

Shelley Puhak

Split Oak Press

2011 Stephen Dunn Poetry Chapbook Competition Winner. 

(c)2011

Shelley Puhak won the competition in 2011. She has gone on to a more established literary career as is attested to on her website. Her website also do not list this book. Curiously enough, she it won and everything. 

I understand that it was so 14 years ago but winning is winning, isn't it? I mean this wasn't a high school competition. Split Oak Press is a real Press, I have to assume. 

I am being a bit snarky - I will admit. I am being snarky because this is a chapbook that is barely 32 pages thin (the publishers did some Jedi Mind Tricks with their layout to even achieve the 32 pages and most galling to me is that they slapped a perfect bound cover on this book which is so narrow that there was no room for the title of the book or the name of the author on the spine. A tiny sliver of nothing. Barely a color blip on the eye blink. 


The United States Capitol: A Brief Architectural History (1990)


The United States Capitol: A Brief Architectural History

US Government 

Washington, DC

(c)1990

This particular copy is stamped DO NOT REMOVE FROM MAIN LIBRARY - US DEPT JUSTICE (which is ironic in our current upheaval) 

Handsome staple bound book featuring details and photos of the US Capitol, assembled with text by William Allen. I will be keeping this one, in case the next mob decides to do worse damage than what was done on Jan. 6, 2021. 

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Prattle Tales by St. Stephens and St. Agnes Middle School Literary Magazine (1998)


 Prattle Tales

St. Stephens and St. Agnes Middle School Literary Magazine

Alexandria, VA

(c) 1998

Oversized kids magazine of poetry and drawings. These kids are adults now. 

Sunday, April 13, 2025

 





The New York Wits : The Pamphlet Poets

Simon and Schuster

New York, NY

(c)1927

The New York Wits: The Pamphlet Poets published by Simon & Schuster in 1927. It’s a chapbook, a paperback chapbook as chapbook-y as any I have ever heard or written about. They did exist before the 1940s. In the same dimensions and staple-boundness and everything. Wow. So now my “starting point” for poetry chapbooks goes back even 2 decades earlier. I seem to also remember another early one I have written about, not bubbling to the surface right now but it might later. 


Note the back cover image and the list of poets involved in the selection of the poems included. I am aware of some of these men, as old men, but here they are much younger and in demand. The logo is even different. The Press was 3 years old when this "pamphlet" came out. Quite the find (am keeping it) 


Friday, April 11, 2025

Kangaroo Virus by John Kinsella & Ron Sims (1998)

Kangaroo Virus

John Kinsella (with Ron Sims)

Fremantle Art Centre Press

Western Australia 

(c)1998

John Kinsella is the poet. Ron Sims is the visual artist. Together they collaborated on this book with CD. When I saw this on a bookshelf in a local bookstore all I saw was the tiny spine (the little sliver of nothing) but when I pulled it out and looked at it I instantly recognized the name because I saw him read in person several years ago at Georgetown in DC. 

I appreciate to multi-disciplinary elements at play with this project. 

Listening to the CD enhances and alters the experience of the book entirely. While there is a great focus throughout the recording of the first two poems in the collection. "Death of a Roo Dog" and "The Visitation", the sound experiment that accompanied changes the reading of the text, adding a complexity that is absent when merely reading words on a page. The complexity enhances the experience even with the repetition and looping effects throughout the 31 minutes of sound. 

Brilliant. 


 

Thursday, February 27, 2025

Pierre Joris 1946-2025

 The poet (and one time actor) Charles Bernstein posted that Pierre Joris died. I don't usually announce the passing of any poet, publisher, artist, etc. because after a while those posting would outnumber those of the living. But as I have already mentioned him twice in this blog, I can mention him again here. 

While he will be missed, his writing will live on. 


Saturday, February 22, 2025

Chrysalis Literary Journal Ferrum College (1984)


 Chrysalis (Literary Journal) 

Ferrum College

Copenhaver Publishers, Inc

(1984)

A student run collection of poems, short fiction and drawings - Ferrum, Virginia. A timepiece. Not familiar with anyone in the book but glad to have seen it. 


Thursday, February 13, 2025

Turret by some students at Fort Hunt HS, Alexandria, VA (1977)


 Turret 

Spring 1977

Fort Hunt High School

Alexandria, VA

There was something about the creative process at High Schools in the 1970s. This staple bound book was created in the High School by one of the classes offered at the time, a printing class. They had on-site printing equipment in the school. I recognize that some of the pages were typed using different fonts, suggesting more than one typewriter was used and considering the number of students involved (26), this was quite an undertaking. Likely completed before Seniors graduated and fluttered off to college, or the military, or elsewhere. 

The other thing I wanted to mention is that I live in the area where this High School once was. It's no longer called Fort Hunt, but West Potomac High after two separate schools merged in the 1980s. So, it's quite the collectors item to be sure and if anyone knows anyone who was in this edition, I would love to hear from them. 

First Poetry Anthology by the Live Poets Society (1994)

First Poetry Anthology

The Live Poets Society

Alexandria Public Library,

James J Duncan Jr. Branch

Alexandria, VA

Summer 1994

Truly it is important to find the first of any publication, any attempt of putting together a smattering of poems by a small group of poets who gather at a local branch of a library and this was their initial attempt. Their declaration of existence. According to the introduction, they first met in April 1993 at this branch and met once a month there to share and sharpen to reveal and express. 

The names of those poets are listed but I won't mention them. Sometimes mystery is a good thing. The FACT of their existence is what is important. 



Tuesday, February 04, 2025

Cowboy Rhymes : Tall Tales and True Tales by F. Allen Brewer & Richard E. Ufford (1987)


 Cowboy Rhymes : Tall Tales & True Tales

F. Allen Brewer & Richard E. Ufford

Assumed self published

(c)1987

Now this here is a quandary to be sure. I found this little sliver of nothing (okay, not so "little" since its 96 pages, but it's staple bound and I feel bound to write about it) {I need a high hat}

These gents seem to have originated in Utah, from other sources I have found, but there is not telling where this book was printed because there is NO publisher information anywhere in the book. The back cover is blank. There are photos of the cowboy poets and some B&W illustrations throughout the book and in all likelihood it was created for one of those Cowboy Poetry gathering. Just my guess. 

I am not predisposed to rhyming poetry and haven't since leaving Dr. Seuss behind a long time ago, but I am willing to acknowledge the craft of writing in this style. If I do have an issue with Cowboy Poetry it is that it is the white man's telling of the West (and how they took it). Subtle hints and phrases and nudges and winks but they aren't any Natives in these camps nor do I imagine there would be. Victors and vanquished. A subtext of this entire genre. 


Friday, January 17, 2025

See Vermont by Patty Oldenburg (1979)


See Vermont 

Patty Oldenburg

Poets Mimeo Cooperative

Burlington, VT

(c) 1979

Patty Mucha, who trained as an artist and poet, was married to Claes Oldenburg from 1960 to 1970, first met him after moving to New York City in 1957. When Oldenburg was painting portraits, Mucha became one of his nude models  before becoming his first wife. An Oldenburg drawing of Mucha titled Pat Reading in Bed, Lenox, 1959 is in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art. She was a collaborator in Oldenburg's happenings by coming up with ideas together, making the costumes together, and was also a performer in the piece, along with collaborating on happenings, she also as well, sewed his famous floor hamburger, ice cream, and cake. Mucha was lead singer in the band The Druds. Pop artist Andy Warhol occasionally sang backup he also wrote the songs “The Alphabet Song, Movie Stars, Hollywood and Cocal-Cola”, .minimalist Walter De Maria played drums, painter Larry Poons guitar and composer LaMonte Young saxophone (briefly) along with neodadist lyrics provided by Jasper Johns and vocal contributions by “Happening Artist” Gloria Graves and Greek-American artist Lucas Samaras. 

She appeared in art and films by Warhol. After, still in her mid-30s, became involved with the young poet and (pre Voidoids) musician Richard Hell.


The Druds was a short-lived 1963 avant-garde noise music band founded by Andy Warhol that featured prominent members of the New York proto- conceptual art and minimal art community. The band's noise rock sound has been compared to that of Henry Flynt and/or The Primitives, the band that featured the first collaboration of Lou Reed and John Cale, who would soon form The Velvet Underground.

That's a lot of preface for a collection of poetry by a relatively unknown poet but this particular copy is unique in ways the seller of it was seemingly unaware. (Yeah, I bought it online). This is a staple bound book. 64 pages. This was on of 100 copies to be signed by the poet, however, I noticed that the signature that I was told was in the book was actually crossed out by Ms. Mucha. I thought that odd until I read the snippets of her life in various places (apparently she did not rate to have a fully contained bio of her own) but she and Claus divorced in 1970 (because he was a cad, it seems) and this book came out nearly ten years later. 

The publishers must have reasoned that she would be more easily recognized in print as Patty Oldenburg because that's the name they assigned her on the title of the book and throughout but she had been divorced from him for a decade so, likely in a moment of clarity, she signed and then crossed out THAT name and signed her own last name above. 

The was her second collection of poetry. Her first, Poems Traveling, came out in 1973. 

The Papers of Patty Mucha more detail. 

she was born(Patricia Muschinski) was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on June 26, 1935. She attended Wisconsin State Teachers College in Milwaukee (now the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee), where she majored in art. Patty first saw Claes Oldenburg while she was at the Oxbow Summer School of Painting and later went to visit him in his Chicago studio. In 1957, she moved to New York to become an artist and met Oldenburg by accident after being there for two months. 

Patty Mucha was not only Oldenburg's muse for his main performance ensemble but collaborator for all of his early sewn sculptures. Her contribution to the invention of soft sculpture was the result of the immediate demand for Oldenburg's first exhibition at the Green Gallery in 1962. She appeared in his Ray Gun Theater, which they produced in 1962, and collaborated in sewing costumes and constructing objects and sets for his Happenings and installations. She appeared in Oldenburg films made by Rudy Wurlitzer and Robert Breer as well as in films by Jean Dupuy, Rudy Burckhardt, Andy Warhol and Red Grooms. She also participated in the Happenings of Jim Dine, Robert Whitman, Dick Higgins, Alex Hay, Steve Paxton, Simone Forti, and Sally Gross.

Patty Mucha farms, writes and paints near St. Johnsbury, Vermont. Her essential role in the Pop Art and Happenings scenes is revealed in her as-yet-unpublished memoir, Clean Slate: My Life in the 1960's New York Art World, which in 2022, the title was changed to Threads. Portions of the book have appeared in Art in America as well as in the catalog "Seductive Subversion: Women Pop Artists, 1958–1968." Her poetry books include Poems Traveling, 1971-1973 (Panorama, 1973) and See Vermont: Poems, 1974-1978 (Poets Mimeo Cooperative, 1979).



Wednesday, January 15, 2025

A Walk Through Graceland Cemetery (1977)


 A Walk Through Graceland Cemetery

Barbara Lanctot

Chicago School of Architecture Foundation

(c) 1977

61 page booklet filled with cemetery sculpture photos throughout. Map in the back. Fine booklet. 



Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Ride Home Through Scented Grass by Philomene Hood (2003)


 

This is not a chapbook. 

Ordinarily I wouldn't even mention it but the author and the Press are both deceased. The author was both in 1915 and died in 2017. This book was published in 2003. This is both a labor of love and an acknowledgment of existence. It seems to have been her only published book.

The press also disappeared sometime after publication of this book. The Press had been located in Zuni, Virginia. Ms. Hood lived toward the end of her life in Williamsburg, VA - a short distance from the Press. 



Sunday, January 05, 2025

The Poetry of Myra Sklarew (special edition of Shirim: A Jewish Poetry Journal)


 

This was a special edition of Shirim: A Jewish Poetry Journal published in 2006. I found it in a well known bookstore in Washington, DC and brought it home and put it in a pile where it was lost until a few hours ago. The significance of the timing of this re-discovery is that when I found it in the bookstore and got it, Myra was alive. And as of this writing, she no longer is. December 18, 1934 - December 30, 2024.

I had met her a few times in the DC and wrote her with the email address I was able to find for her right after finding this booklet, but unbeknownst to me she was already ill (and likely the email address wasn't accurate either).

Myra Sklarew was a mover and shaker in the poetry world for a long time. She will be missed but her impact will be felt for generations of poets to come.

I don't know much about Shirim (the publication) nor its editor. Apparently the publication has been around for some time and they did in fact highlight Ms. Sklarew ten years prior to this edition.