Showing posts with label 2020. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2020. Show all posts

Saturday, May 22, 2021

“The perfect shape to drop to the earth” in Humble Pie

Humble Pie, the literary and art annual of the California College of the Arts, published my poem “The perfect shape to drop to the earth” in the Spring 2020 issue, vol. 17. Unfortunately, due to the great covid shutdown, the issue was not able to be printed at that time. I am happy to say, a contributor’s copy came in Thursday’s mail. (Thanks, Caroline!)

“The perfect shape to drop to the earth” was written in the home of Helen Luster. Helen and Paul Mariah co-facilitated a poetry group I joined a year after high school. Both Helen and Paul were much older than me. I guess Paul was about the age I am now (his 50s?); while Helen was a bit older (b. 1913). 


The poem went through some changes since first scrawled it in a notebook, but it’s still describing a particular afternoon. 





Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Thousand - reviews at Goodreads

There are now two reviews of Thousand at goodreads.com


The review by Steve Masover appeared October 25, 2020. Steve wrote a review that would make a great cover blurb:


Exuberant! Unbounded! Inexplicable, but why would you want to? Hilarious! Disconcerting! Lascivious! Delectable! You can't make this stuff up, but Glenn Ingersoll did, one hundred words at a time.




The review by Jim Murdoch appeared March 2, 2021. Jim’s review is generous and thorough:


When, in 2013, I reviewed Fact, Glenn’s tiny (i.e. physically small) collection of short poems, I said it wouldn’t be for everyone. The same proviso is true of the, by comparison, gargantuan Thousand. To be fair that could be said of every book ever written so let me drill it down: if you got lost on the second page of The Unnamable or found your head spinning after a few lines of ‘Howl’ then Thousand is probably not for you. To be honest I’m the kind of person who finds the word “epic” off-putting no matter what you’re talking about but an “epic prose poem” just sounds like hard work and that’s exactly what this book is which is not a bad thing in itself unless you’re afraid of hard work; hard work can be rewarding. 


We could argue about the fine line between poetic prose and prose poetry all day long but I couldn’t find many books that chose to call themselves “epic prose poems,” and, at 476 pages, Edgar Qunitet’s Ahasvérus is the only one that came close to matching Thousand’s 100,000 words. 


That said just because a book’s big doesn’t make it a tome and just because a poem is long doesn’t make it epic. What makes a poem epic in the traditional sense? The Bedford Introduction to Literature describes the genre as follows:


An epic poem is a lengthy narrative poem, ordinarily involving a time beyond living memory in which occurred the extraordinary doings of the extraordinary men and women who, in dealings with the gods or other superhuman forces, gave shape to the mortal universe for their descendants, the poet and their audience, to understand themselves as a people or nation.

 and as much as I didn’t expect to be writing this that’s not a bad description of Thousand (only prosier) since much of the action takes place out of time and across multiple dimensions. All that’s missing is a tardis. What I expected to find in the above description was talk of the hero’s journey and although there are heroes in Thousand—a Jesus Christ for one although not any Jesus I recognise—there isn’t a central heroic figure, an Odysseus, Beowulf or even an Alice to follow through these many wonderlands. Most of the characters are ordinary-ish folk when they’re not leprechauns, river goblins, seventeen-armed angels, three-headed giants or transcendental butlers. 


Why a prose poem though and not a novel? I don’t have an answer for that but this comment from Glenn raises some interesting issues:


I understand that many readers wish words were invisible, that their meanings would instantaneously and without ambiguity translate to their minds the important stuff—the story, the scene, the conflict. That sounds like a philosophy of prose. Poetry wants you to notice the way it’s being said as well as what it’s saying. – Fact: an introduction to the poem poems of Glenn Ingersoll


There is a story here—many stories—but the stories, if you’ll forgive me, aren’t the whole story. Thousand doesn’t follow a traditional linear narrative. Sometimes you notice the transition but often not. One minute we’re jogging along nicely in the third person then POW! a narrator appears out of nowhere and PFFT! vanishes as mysteriously. One minute you’re reading about two sisters, Emily and Eula, then the story veers left and the next thing you know it’s inside a radio that Eula turns off. Or sometimes the narrative just arbitrarily jumps to a new story, like someone changing the TV channel on you without asking. Usually you know when this is about to happen because Glenn helpfully begins the new storyline with “Once upon a time there was a…” a dog (most often it’s a dog and sometimes he’s called Prince or Sir) or a cat or a boy or a chimneysweep or a caiman. 


This continual switching of stories—none of which are brought to a satisfactory conclusion—reminded me of Calvino’s If on a winter’s night a traveller which I gave a rather mean-spirited 3 stars when I reviewed it not because it wasn’t well written but because I felt cheated and I realised this was going to happen again and again. The same goes for Thousand. You’re continually getting short-changed and what’s more annoying is there isn’t an obvious thread (none I picked up on) linking the stories. Yes, characters do reappear like the sisters but they’re not developed. The same with the dogs, the angels, the leprechauns… we spend a few pages following them then something shiny catches our narrator’s eye (I use the term “narrator” loosely) and he’s off again which is really annoying because there’re so many good ideas here crying out for development and resolution. My favourite begins (sans the helpful ‘Once upon a time’):


The girl pulls open the door and steps into the white room. She steps around the naked figure and kneels on the floor before a white box. From the pocket of her


         Thousand: Six Hundred Six


jacket she takes a small gold box. She pops the lid on the box and dips a finger in. An ant climbs onto her finger and walks rapidly around it. The girl puts her finger into the keyhole of the white box. When she removes the finger the ant has stayed behind. “I don’t know why people don’t talk to you. You’re standing there and somebody comes by and doesn’t say anything to you. It’s like you weren’t even there. That’s rude. I hate rude people. I won’t talk to them. They can just go to hell, that’s what I


         Thousand: Six Hundred Seven


think. They can just go to hell.” The girl pushes herself up, slaps imaginary dust from her pantyhose, and straightens her cap. She’s not wearing a cap. It’s something else. […]


         Thousand: Six Hundred Eight


The girl is wearing tan slacks, no cap, a button-up shirt. Yes, it’s clear now. There are no bats or purses. White room like a doctor’s exam room. A table covered with white paper, a white stool with wheels, a


         Thousand: Six Hundred Nine


couple white cabinets. Everything white. Including the figure in each room’s center. White like a worn out hospital sheet, maybe, not white like a white person. Not person-like, the girl tends to think, if she hasn’t managed to ignore it completely, letting each voice play like a slight variant of the same bad radio program, advertisements for the Way of Anxiety. […]


         Thousand: Six Hundred Ten


The girl pushes herself up, slaps imaginary dust from the knees of her slacks and centres their carefully ironed creases. With measured steps she passes again around the complaining creature, closing the door as she leaves the room. In the next room there is another white box beside another naked figure.


This scene is repeated with slight variations several times and reminded me of Beckett’s late prose and also his play Catastrophe. Predictably we learn little about what’s going on here. Later we’re told her uniform has the letters ORO stitched in gold on all the “labels” (lapels?) which stands for Official Rotunda of the Others but that’s it. The next thing we know she…


finds herself standing on the hard packed clay of a desert highway. “Knock knock,” she says. The tables are gone, the chairs are gone, the


         Thousand: Six Hundred Seventy-Nine


walls are gone. The stars are so bright she can see by them. More or less. She scuffs her shoe against the road and raises a puff of dust. The arm that rounds her shoulder and the kiss that touches her cheek should surprise her, she will think later, trying to remember everything. Wouldn’t that be one reason it makes sense to regard this all a dream? One of many reasons, that is. “Welcome to the place between places,” the voice says, a voice sleepy as a kiss. “I am an angel.”


The angel leads her to a settlement of tents outside a city. The residents, although they don’t speak her language, take her in and appear friendly. They bathe her, supply appropriate clothing and let her spend the night. In the morning she finds she can understand them. It turns out the tent-dwellers are waiting to queue to gain access to the city which may or may not be a place of education. Anyway she gets in and meets a dragon who offers to be her teacher:


         Thousand: Seven Hundred Twenty-Seven


“When the pupil is ready, the teacher will come,” the dragon says, holding up a claw. Impaled on the claw, the girl sees, is one of the dried ticks. “No,” she says. “Then never mind,” the dragon says, tucking the tick back into the fold of its ear. The dragon lays its head on the floor, tucks forefeet under chin, and closes its eyes.


And then we’re off at a tangent and, apart from a brief mention later, we never learn of her fate or, indeed, the dragon’s.


The book began life as an exercise. Glenn determined to produce one hundred words a day every day for a thousand days. Quite a feat. Of course other writers have worked like that before, the Australian Gerald Murnane for one. Glenn began in May 2010 and wrote on his blog, “There is, so far, no plot. A plot of some sort may begin to accrue. I suspect it will. In my writing I tend to pull all the parts together, even if I am also trying to push them apart.”


The work that appears on the blog is not written ahead of time. I write it. I post it immediately after writing it. This is not to say the posts go up completely first draft. I write, read the work over, revise (occasionally extensively), reread until it works for me, then post. But I do not write ahead. – thousand explained some more


The final entry was on January 21st 2013. Over the three years there are several entries tagged thousand process but none, sadly, tagged thousand explained. So what is it about? Does it have to be about anything? Can it not simply be the sum of its parts? I have mixed feelings on this. By all means expect your readers to bring something of themselves to the work but how much is fair trade? Five percent? Ten? Towards the end of Thousand meaning is discussed and it’s worth sharing a bit of that:

         

Thousand: Nine Hundred Eighty-Eight


Understanding is overrated. Have you ever watched a foreign film without subtitles? Or read a modern poem? If it really doesn’t matter whether you understand you can appreciate other things. The music in language, say. Birds sing in the trees and we’re told they do it to attract a mate. Is that everything? It’s a lot, sure; everybody knows that who doesn’t have a date for Saturday night. But singing’s probably a pleasure for the singer, too. Maybe birds are sending sophisticated messages, messages we have yet to decode. I’m not saying we shouldn’t bother seeking meaning. Except sometimes.


         Thousand: Nine Hundred Eighty-Nine


Indeed, sometimes you need to let go the frenzied grasping after meaning. Take pleasure in mystery. Live in it undispelled. Ignorance as sensuous experience.


He acknowledges that we’re all “meaning-making animal(s)” and it’s hard “taking your hand off the wheel of the relentless inner drive and shedding the fear that meaninglessness will hurt you.” He’s right. I found it immensely hard.


         Thousand: Nine Hundred Ninety-Two


A dream doesn’t mean what it presents as nonsense. It really means really profound shit. There’s a good reason you dreamed that. Right? Well, that’s your mind. Working away. Coming up with gods and symbols and finding faces in burnt tortillas. That’s your mind.


I said at the start this is not a book for everybody and I stand by that because not everyone—and I include myself at the head of that list—can unlearn how to read the way they’ve been reading for the past, in my case, fifty-five years. It’s like the first time you heard microtonal music. It just sounds wrong. Like a piano badly in need of tuning. And yet an out-of-tune piano has a flavour that isn’t unpalatable. It can even be comforting especially if you grew up with a piano in a house that never, or hardly ever, got tuned. This book plinky plonks along quite merrily and doesn’t take itself too seriously. As Glenn himself concedes:


As a story it’s probably more frustrating than rewarding. I’ve enjoyed writers like John Yau and Clark Coolidge who write things that seem to be fiction sometimes, but the words refuse loyalty to any single narrative. The reading is fun for the sounds and the surprises and the wit rather than the what-happened-next of a plot. – thousand in thirds


Meaning, of course, doesn’t only indicate a level of understanding but also a degree of appreciation, an emotional as opposed to an intellectual, connection. This I do have. Reading Thousand was something I went through, something I experienced and although I’ve already forgotten much of the specifics the overall experience will stay with me. That means something. You cannot read this book and not be affected. You might not understand it or be able to grasp the bigger picture but that shouldn’t be regarded as a loss. When Beckett was overseeing Jessica Tandy’s interpretation of Mouth in Not I he told her he hoped the piece would work “on the nerves of the audience, not it’s intellect.” Thousand has a similar logorrhoeal feel to it. Although it was written in bite-sized chunks I think it was a mistake to publish it with breaks. It’s a single paragraph, a wall of words that ideally, to my mind, should be read in a single sitting although who would have the stamina for that I’ve no idea.


At time of writing the book is free to download at Smashwords and I would encourage you to give it a go and not be like I was the first time I started this and quit after five hundred words. Gird up your loins, grit your teeth, pee before you sit down to start and don’t even think about reading it if there’s background music on or the kids are still awake and acting up. 

Monday, January 11, 2021

The Books That Shaped Our Year 2020

 As a past contributor to Inverse Journal, I was asked to talk about some of the books I read last year. My comments are included along with those of 29 other writers. 

The editor of "The Books That Shaped Our Year 2020," Majid Maqbool, says, “As the year comes to an end, we asked Kashmir’s writers, poets, academics, journalists and some of our contributors about the books they’ve managed to read this year. These are books that have resonated and stayed with them, giving them company, educating them about the world, and expanding their knowledge. In an unstable year that mostly confined us indoors due to the raging pandemic, keeping us apart and limiting our travels and mobility, books open new doors of knowledge and insight, in the end making us feel less lonely.  The idea is to share a diverse list of books, across genres, published this year and in earlier years from which our readers can choose and pick something to read as per their taste as they step into a new year.”


This is what I wrote:


Finding Them Gone: Visiting China’s Poets of the Past by Bill Porter / Red Pine

Bill Porter travels around China like a geologist, scratching at its surface modernity to reveal the deep time of its civilization, the continuities of its arts, and the personalities that are still vivid hundreds (thousands?) of years after their life on Earth, all this while negotiating taxi rides, grumping at bad motels, and getting lost in rural villages.

The Invitation-Only Zone: The True Story of North Korea’s Abduction Project by Robert S. Boynton

One of the strangest stories ever. For decades the North Korean government kidnapped foreigners and set them up in North Korea as involuntary guests. Why? No one really seems to know. Robert Boynton profiles some Japanese abductees, and puts together evidence that might lead to an explanation, but never quite does.

The Pink Line: Journeys Across the World’s Queer Frontiers by Mark Gevisser

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Queer … South African Mark Gevisser interviews people all over the world to trace the progress (and regression) of rights and liberties among the non-het. The global LGBT rights movement has influenced the way everyone thinks of themselves, it seems, even in societies where there were traditional roles for third gender people. The book’s strength is in the individual stories, whether in Africa, India, or Mexico. These are day to day struggles in contexts that a decade or two ago did not exist.

A few others:

Haiku World: An International Poetry Almanac
William J. Higginson

Ubiquity: Why Catastrophes Happen
Mark Buchanan

White Christmas: The Story of an American Song
Jody Rosen

Wallflower
Peter Thomas Bullen

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind
Yuval Noah Harari

Friday, January 01, 2021

2020 in publications

A quick list of the places that included something of my work in 2020:

Sheila-na-gig

Inverse Journal

Bones

Cabildo Quarterly

Cacti Fur

E-ratio

bottle rockets

Witty Partition (formerly The Wall)

Otoliths

Sparkle & Blink

The Collidescope

Ginosko Literary Journal

Spillway

CutBank

Door Is A Jar

Humble Pie


Thousand

now available in a 2-volume edition

(as well as the original 10-vols and the ebook)


Living Senryu Anthology


—ah: anthology of American haiku, mondo edition

edited by Jonathan Hayes and Richard Lopez

Poems-for-All Press, San Diego


readings (via Zoom):

Ventura County Poetry Project

Quiet Lightning


plus I finally applied for and got a listing at 

Poets & Writers


And I finally got competent at posting on my blog about publications as they happen.

Wednesday, December 02, 2020

Autobiography of a Book in Door Is A Jar #17, winter 2020

A chapter from Autobiography of a Book appears in Door Is A Jar #17, winter 2020.


Because Door Is A Jar is mainly a physical publication (or an e-book), rather than an online literary site, I am going to let them have an exclusive. 


Mostly. 


However, “in which the book has a dream or three” does include three dreams so I’ll tease you with one:


In this dream I am lying on a railroad tie and it is shaking as the train comes down from the mountain. I wonder if the engineer will read me. Perhaps the train will screech to a stop, the engineer will get out, crunch across the gravel. He will reach down, pluck me from where I am lying and brush the dust from my cover with his canvas-gloved hand. Then he will look into me. He will look into me the way he looks down the line, seeing the track stitching the landscape together, looking at how the way has been laid out for him and is always the same and he is always the same and nothing changes but the weather and what gets in the way. The vibrations of the coming train move me. A bird throws its silhouette against the white sky. The train is shaking the earth. Where is it? The sky remains white, and I try to imagine myself its child. I could grow up to be a white white sky.


If you want more, buy the issue! 


Or wait for Autobiography of a Book to finally achieve its dream — of being a real, honest-to-goodness book! 

Thursday, October 22, 2020

Ventura County Poetry Project reading video

 


Glenn Ingersoll

video of Thursday, August 27 reading

hosted by Phil Taggart

under the auspices of the EP Foster Library


I read via Zoom from my home. Phil Taggart conducted a brief interview afterward, which I enjoyed, but which didn’t get recorded.  


Other readings in the series can be accessed via the Askew Poetry Journal youtube channel. 

Friday, October 09, 2020

Autobiography of a Book in Ginosko Literary Journal #25

Ginosko Literary Journal #25 features three chapters from Autobiography of a Book:

“in which the book takes it back”

“in which the book gets complacent”

“in which the book talks about your book”


It’s a big issue. The Autobiography of a Book chapters appear beginning on page 142.


Ginosko Literary Journal takes its name from Ginosko (ghin-océ-koe): 

A word meaning to perceive, understand, realize, come to know; knowledge that has an inception, a progress, an attainment. The recognition of truth from experience. 


[links updated 12/22/23]

Sunday, September 20, 2020

“Human Right” as a video

I performed “Human Right” for the Quiet Lightning Virtual Poets-in-Parks reading via Zoom. Yes, that is my home library. 


   


You can compare the performance to the written version of the poem, which I included in my last post.


And if you want to see how my poem fits into the Quiet Lightning experience, you can watch go to youtube for the full playlist


Saturday, September 05, 2020

Glenn Ingersoll reading with Quiet Lightning’s virtual Poets-in-Parks

Quiet Lightning and California State Parks present: 

The 6th annual Poetry in Parks!


Monday, 07 September at 7 PM – 8:30 PM

online via Zoom


This is a free event, but RSVP is required. RSVP here: https://app.gopassage.com/events/poetry-in-virtual-parks


A live literary mixtape in two sets, featuring readings by Elizabeth Burch Hudson, Ladan Khoddam-Khorasani, Robert Keim, Jeanie Ngo, Glenn Ingersoll, Andre Le Mont Wilson, Brandon Henry, Jane Mauchly, Carla A. Hanson, Aleesha Lange, Deborah Bernhardt, Karisma Rodriguez, Sorcha Collister, Shirley Huey, Rohan DaCosta, Wood Reede, Alex Maceda, Doug Mathewson, and Elisa Salasin!

All selected authors will be paid and published in sPARKLE & bLINK 107 featuring cover art by Judit Navratil.


If you’d like a copy of the sPARKLE & bLINK book, featuring all selected writing and cover art by Judit Navratil, donate $15 (paypal or venmo); issue 107 will be mailed to you — plus a bonus back issue.

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Glenn Ingersoll reading for Ventura County Poetry Project tonight



Glenn Ingersoll

followed by an open mic

reading starts at 7:30, Thursday, August 27 

hosted by Phil Taggart

under the auspices of the EP Foster Library 


the zoom room opens at 7

join Zoom Meeting – new zoom number

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/9607501600

meeting ID: 960 750 1600


Ventura County Poetry Project, a weekly reading series in Southern California, has moved online during the covid-19 pandemic.


That makes it easier for me to join them! I will be reading from my Berkeley home. 

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Glenn Ingersoll listing at Poets & Writers

Check out my listing at Poets & Writers: Glenn Ingersoll

Currently it’s pretty bare. No bio yet. Maybe tomorrow …


I’ve thought about having a listing at Poets & Writers since I found out there was such a thing. Years and years ago. 


Once I even  put together an application packet. I think this was before the internet, when you were required to send pages photocopied from magazines. I never submitted it. I’m not sure why. 


Or, wait, was there a Poets & Writers directory pre-internet? I'm not sure. In the internet’s early days P&W could still have wanted the supporting documents hard copy. Literary culture hadn’t exploded online. Few literary magazines had a web presence, let alone posted poems or stories.  


I am self-conscious about this sort of thing. Self-promotion vs. letting the work speak for itself. Maybe I didn’t finish the application process because I didn’t feel worthy. Maybe I was afraid the editors would reject the application because the magazines in which my poems had been published were too obscure. Maybe I was afraid that I would expect a listing to have some meaning, some consequence. If I got a listing and nothing came of it, nobody wrote, nobody called — would that hurt my feelings? Or was following through just too much bother? Not worth the cost of postage? Might there have been a charge to be listed back then?


This spring, what with the covid shutdown and the things-to-do list getting a few line-throughs, I looked up the latest version of the directory application. Like I said, I’ve thought about getting listed for years. The application has been made easy. If your stuff is up online — and the venue is one P&W officially recognizes (not “too obscure” or too vanity-press) — you just upload a link. Six links are required. The P&W directory editors review the application, then add your name to their database (or, I guess, don’t). 


Once you’re in you can expand the listing with author photo and bio. I see there’s even an option to link to video. 


If you have any suggestions for improving the listing, leave me a note in comments below. Or send me an email.

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Autobiography of a Book — in a book for the first time!

Otoliths #58, which includes chapters from Autobiography of a Book, is now available in a three-part print version. 

Part one includes the Autobiography of a Book chapters.


lulu.com is offering a 15% discount through August 14 if you use the code PROSPER15. 

Sunday, August 02, 2020

Autobiography of a Book in Otoliths

Otoliths includes three chapters from Autobiography of a Book

in issue 58, southern winter 2020:


"in which the book snuffs a wonder bundle"

"in which the book in in" 

"in which the book is rescued by butterfly"


Otoliths is published out of Australia by editor Mark Young. Young describes his goals for Otoliths this way: The ezine should “contain a variety of what can be loosely described as e-things, that is, anything that can be translated (visually at this stage) to an electronic platform. If it moves, we won't shoot at it.”


update: Otoliths #58 is now available in a print version

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Autobiography of a Book in Witty Partition (formerly The Wall)

Witty Partition (formerly The Wall) includes three chapters from Autobiography of a Book in their issue #11, vol 2, Summer 2020:


The editors in their introduction to the issue prepare the reader: “Our Fiction section features a light-hearted romp, excerpted from Glenn Ingersoll’s Autobiography of a Book—with that very book as primary protagonist.”

Romp on!