Thursday, November 29, 2012

"poem" broadside #313 / Queen’s University writer-in-residence (2012) poem-pick # 2: "Meditation On Stress" by Kirsteen MacLeod


Trapped in the crawlspace:
old lawn chairs, the trash can, some metal pipes,
the damn hula hoop
that caught my bike tire.

I’m doubled over,
my bicycle leaning outside,
purse in the rain, the “Yoga
for Managing Stress” class I teach
starting in just 10 minutes.
I peer out the lattice holes,
yellow leaves swirl—
the wind, cosmic joker;
it gusted the door shut
with an awful click.
I lie back, kick wildly
at the half-door. My heart
leaps like a frog in a jar,
and I scream until I’m spent.

What I’d planned for today’s yoga lesson:
breathe in for four, out for eight.
I smell the damp earth, hear the rain plunk
on the deck above me,

notice
the broken lattice.

I thread my hand through,
open the latch:


Meditation On Stress
by Kirsteen MacLeod
above/ground press broadside #313
& Queen’s University writer-in-residence (2012) poem-pick # 2
(curated by Phil Hall)
Kirsteen MacLeod is a yoga teacher in Kingston, Ont., where she stays mostly unconfined.

Monday, November 26, 2012

some video of the above/ground press 19th anniversary reading

Pearl Pirie was good enough to record and post excerpts from the 19th anniversary of above/ground reading Aug 19, 2012 reading at Overkill Bar, Byward Market, Ottawa. The video excerpt features Marilyn Irwin, Stephen Brockwell and publisher/editor/host rob mclennan.

Monday, November 19, 2012

"poem" broadside #312 / Queen’s University writer-in-residence (2012) poem-pick # 1: "Night" by Sadiqa de Meijer


Not dark. That makes it June,
or close. The curtain’s a screen
for foliage. Downstairs,
their walks, blind signatures.
Floating in abridged beds, 
sheets brittle and imbued
with backyard trees.
Even bicycles release
a sound in passing, tremulous
as insects. Awake, because
of the light. Loose thoughts
ascend to the white
ceiling: fantastic
Mr Fox’s plan, trick
knots, the voltage
in a friend’s stray touch,
visions of scoring from midfield.
Each night a penciled
tracing paper, overlaid to make
one form, almost opaque.
Words below, but aimless.
I forgot to memorize their faces.
Gods of fuselage and baggage trucks.
No, gods of clocks.



Night
by Sadiqa de Meijer
above/ground press broadside #312
& Queen’s University writer-in-residence (2012) poem-pick # 1
(curated by Phil Hall)
Sadiqa de Meijer’s poetry has appeared in a number of journals, as well as in the Best Canadian Poetry in English series and in the anthology Villanelles. Her poem “Great Aunt Unmarried” won the 2012 CBC Poetry Prize.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

The Factory Reading Series presents: chapbook launches/readings by Maguire, Prevost + Calhoun,,

The Factory Reading Series presents:

readings and above/ground press chapbook launches by:

Shannon Maguire (Toronto/Guelph)
+ Roland Prevost (Ottawa)
with special guest Craig Calhoun (Ottawa)
lovingly hosted by rob mclennan
Saturday, December 15, 2012;
doors 7pm; reading 7:30pm
The Carleton Tavern (upstairs)
223 Armstrong Street (at Parkdale)


Shannon Maguire is the author of the chapbooks: Vowel Wolves & Other Knots (above/ground, 2011) and Fruit Machine (Ferno House, 2012). She has been a finalist for the Manitoba Magazine Awards (2012) and the Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry (2011). Her first full-length collection, Fur(l) Parachute is forthcoming from BookThug in spring 2013.

She will be launching her second above/ground press title, A Web Of Holes (2012).

Roland Prevost’s poetry appears in Arc poetry magazine, Descant Magazine, the Ottawa Arts Review, Peter F. Yacht Club, Ottawater (online), among others. He has three previous chapbooks: Metafizz (2007, Bywords), Dragon Verses (2009, Dusty Owl), Our/ Are Carried Invisibles (2009, above/ground). He’s also been published in two poetry collections by Amanda Earl’s AngelHousePress, Whack of Clouds (2008) and Pent Up (2009). Roland won the 2006 John Newlove Poetry Award. He was, for a few years, the managing editor of 17 seconds: a journal of poetry and poetics, as well as poetics.ca, both online. He studied English and Psychology at York University and the University of Manitoba. He lives, writes poetry, short stories, a lifelong journal, composes and records songs, and peers through telescopes in Ottawa.

He will be launching his second above/ground press poetry chapbook, Parapagus (2012).

Originally from Tucson, Arizona, Craig Calhoun moved to Canada in 2008. His work has appeared in the Writers in Prison issue of Descant, Pilot, The Incongruous Quarterly, Liars’ League London, Liars’ League NYC, Marco Polo, and Steel Bananas Quarterly.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

new from above/ground press: The Peter F Yacht Club #17!

The Peter F Yacht Club #17!
edited by rob mclennan

[see the link here for information on the previous issue]
[see the link here for a history of the publication]
$6

With new writing by a host of Peter F Yacht Club regulars and irregulars, including Cameron Anstee, Stephen Collis, Anita Dolman, Amanda Earl, Laurie Fuhr, Lea Graham, Marilyn Irwin, Ben Ladouceur, Kirya Marchand, rob mclennan, Peter Norman, Sean Moreland, Pearl Pirie, Roland Prevost, Monty Reid, Janice Tokar + Vivian Vavassis.

published in Ottawa by above/ground press
November 2012
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy

[copies will also be available tonight as part of the door cover of The Factory Reading Series VERSeFest Fundraiser with Anstee, Pirie + Brockwell, or on Saturday as part of the ottawa small press book fair!]

If you subscribe to above/ground press' 2013 subscriptions today, this might even be included (if you ask all nice, like)!

To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; outside Canada, add $2) to: rob mclennan, 402 McLeod St #3, Ottawa ON K2P 1A6 or paypal at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com


Coming soon! information on The Peter F. Yacht Club Christmas party/reading/regatta at the Carleton Tavern, Saturday, December 29th

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

rob mclennan's above/ground chapbook, This, circular tower, is reviewed in Broken Pencil #57



Chris Landry was good enough to review my above/ground chapbook, This, circular tower (above/ground press, 2012) in Broken Pencil #57 (autumn 2012 issue). Thanks, Chris! There are a few copies still available, here, and copies of the Deborah Poe title I originally reworked, here, also. Although I admit to still not understanding why so many reviewers in Broken Pencil seem not to comprehend that not all folded/stapled are “zines.” Why can’t they call them chapbooks?

This, circular tower is as sparse and clean as the poems it contains. The cover image provides an entry point. It is an image from the mclennan family archive. Many of the poems invoke family history in a dry, chopped-up manner that suggests free association. In “Lineate,” mclennan lets drop fragments of sentences that bring to mind the geography of the prairies, great aunts and trees. It is this wistful looking-back where I enjoyed this the most. The barren expanse of the Canadian landscape is not unlike the gaps in memory in a family archive.
            At his best, mclennan alternates between the general and specific in an evocative and measured style like in the poem that gives this collection its title. Where I find some of these pieces lacking is where the words are just too general and the imagery too heavy-handed to give the reader much to hold on to. Or perhaps that was the point – it’s an attempt to capture the feeling of what is hard to capture: our fleeting memory.

Friday, November 9, 2012

The Factory Reading Series: some upcoming (December-March) events,


We at above/ground press and The Factory Reading Series know how excited you get about literary readings, so we thought we should let you know some of what is in the works for the next couple of months:

December 15: reading and chapbook launches by Roland Prevost, Shannon Maguire and Craig Calhoun
upstairs at The Carleton Tavern, 223 Armstrong Street (at Parkdale) / 7pm doors; 7:30 reading

December 29: the annual Peter F Yacht Club reading/Christmas party/regatta
at The Carleton Tavern / 7pm doors; 7:30 reading

January 24: the launch of ottawater #9
at The Carleton Tavern / 7pm doors; 7:30 reading

February 22: Hugh Thomas and others tba
at The Carleton Tavern / 7pm doors; 7:30 reading

March 12-17: the third annual VERSeFest Poetry Festival
including The Factory Reading Series' annual lecture; readers and venue tba

March 28: reading and chapbook launches by Deborah Poe, Wanda O'Connor and tba
at The Carleton Tavern / 7pm doors; 7:30 reading

all lovingly hosted by rob mclennan
Can you believe it? In January 2013 The Factory Reading Series turns twenty years old!


And the triumphant return of rob mclennan's poetry workshops at Collected Works! January to March. Spaces still available.

further information on any/all of these events tba; watch this space for details

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Fenn Stewart's above/ground chapbook, An OK Organ Man, is reviewed in Broken Pencil #57



Justin F. Ridgeway was good enough to review Fenn Stewart’s above/ground chapbook, An OK Organ Man (above/ground press, 2012) in Broken Pencil #57 (autumn 2012 issue). Thanks, Justin! There are a few copies still available, here. Although I admit to still not understanding why so many reviewers in Broken Pencil seem not to comprehend that not all folded/stapled are “zines.” Why can’t they call them chapbooks?
Reading this poetry zine, I’ve come to the realization that I’m not quite poetry-illiterate. It makes me ask myself: Is this why I read fiction? Do I need it spelled out for me with sentences and paragraphs and familiar punctuation to hold my hand and read to me while I fall asleep where dreams are the closest thing to an imagination I have? As it turns out, this zine made poetry feel a little closer, a little more welcome, a little more familiar.
            Fenn Stewart’s zine follows a nature study club and a Classics club when they find themselves double-booked into one of those stuffy, wood-paneled university classrooms. Or maybe they are in nature – the Classics club, that is – and they’re discussing Lake Ontario, its fish and other aquatic species. Through the poems they describe the vegetation and the region’s life cycles in speech that sounds like humming birds, delicate but with determination and purpose, exhibiting a syntactical playfulness and careful word selection. One can only admire the precise angle through which a phrase is turned.
            Even as a poetry neophyte, this work drew me in, and I appreciated the amorphous quality of the atmosphere and setting.

Friday, November 2, 2012

new from above/ground press: Cat., a poem by Mark Cochrane



Cat.
Mark Cochrane
$3

In the garden, haunches down
like a library lion, Enid
the grown kitten
gently parts
with paw, with claw,
the feathers
on some rare, yellow-breasted
chat, exposing a belly
she tears open
with needle teeth &
gory-sunwarm
                   deliberation.  And standing
at his French doors
Felix is aroused
to a horror.  Loving
birds as he does—

published in Ottawa by above/ground press
November 2012
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy

Mark Cochrane lives in Vancouver, practises law, and teaches in the English Department at Kwantlen Polytechnic University. He wrote Change Room (Talonbooks 2000) a long time ago and “Cat.” not long after that.

To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; outside Canada, add $2) to: rob mclennan, 402 McLeod St #3, Ottawa ON K2P 1A6 or paypal at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Elizabeth Rainer and Michael Blouin's collaborative above/ground chapbook, let lie/, is reviewed in Broken Pencil #57



Lindsay Rainingbird was good enough to review Elizabeth Rainer and Michael Blouin's collaborative above/ground chapbook, let lie/ (above/ground press, 2012) in Broken Pencil #57 (autumn 2012 issue). Thanks, Lindsay! There are a few copies of their bpNichol Chapbook Award-nominated chapbook still available, here. Although I admit to not understanding why so many reviewers in Broken Pencil seem not to comprehend that not all folded/stapled are “zines,” perhaps never hearing the term “chapbook” in their lives. Why the disconnect?

This collaborative work, written over a year and a half and emailed back and forth from Vancouver to Kemptville, Ontario, is a glimpse inside a decaying relationship. What it lacks in punctuation it makes up for in vivid descriptions of the heart’s status. The prose pieces weave seamlessly together, like pages ripped from the same journal, and the endnote confessing “one marriage ended in the process. One survived,” lends a certain intrigue to the work that encourages the reader to delve deeper.
            There is longing, “I would be that cigarette that lighter because it is in your hands / I would be condensation on your glass where you wipe / I would be careful I would be discreet” and there is guilt, “I told you how I felt and the things that I said then I didn’t mean any of them and none of them were true / and remember the lights went off and we checked the window and the whole block was dark as if my own lies had been counted and I had reached my limit.” Then, there is acceptance: “You are what pulls me up / He doesn’t always do that / it’s okay it’s not His job all the time.” Let lie\ is a zine that will stay with you long after the close, and is well worth the $4 fee for even just a handful of the gut-punching lines contained inside.