Friday night was our annual Peter F. Yacht Club Christmas party/reading/regatta, once again in our usual space in Parkdale Market's Carleton Tavern [see last year's report here], held as the "office Christmas party" for our informal writer's grouping.
The evening held a myriad of short readings by PFYC regulars, including Amanda Earl, Monty Reid, Frances Boyle, Pearl Pirie and myself, as well as special guests Stuart Ross and PFYC founding member Laurie Anne Fuhr, launching her first trade collection! As with an event like this, there were absences a-plenty, as Jason Christie, Chris Turnbull, Anita Dolman, James Moran, Cameron Anstee, Vivian Vavassis, D.S. Stymiest, Roland Prevost and Janice Tokar simply couldn't make it. And of course, Marilyn Irwin had put herself down as a "maybe" to read, and then I completely forgot to put her on the set list (dammit!). (I'll just have her read twice next year.)
Originally, natalie hanna and Chris Johnson were also on the bill, but natalie had to send her regrets (Chris was simply a no-show; where did he go?).
Christine and our young ladies had been there as well, but just up to the point of the readings, when they wandered home for bedtime, which meant, among other things, Christine wasn't able to read. Given the day allowed me to get to the tavern for 3pm for the sake of some writing time, Christine and the wee girls came by around 5pm to join me for dinner, before we headed upstairs to prepare for the event (and the girls danced/ran laps around the room). They also spent a great deal of time attempting to eat further of the lemon icebox cookies I had made that morning.
The house was packed! A crowd that included Robert Hogg, Stephen Brockwell, Michael Dennis, Avonlea Fotheringham, Jenna Jarvis (all the way from the east), Claire Farley, Craig Simon, Grant Savage (who most likely took photos far superior to these), allison calvern, jesslyn delia smith, Steve Zytveld + Cathy MacDonald-Zytveld, Grant Wilkins, Brian Pirie, Kees Kapteyn, jwcurry and plenty of others. Huzzah!
Amanda Earl was good enough to read from her broadside produced as part of the above/ground press 25th anniversary; Pearl Pirie read from two new chapbooks, including one self-produced as a give-away for the event; Monty Reid read from his new above/ground press title, produced as the final item of 2018, composing a sequence on the underground seams of coal throughout Alberta that occasionally catch fire; Frances Boyle read an excerpt from her recently-published novella; and Stuart Ross, who originally hadn't planned on reading, was convinced (with some slight prompting) to read a couple of pieces, including the handout he made for the event. Pearl, as well, was good enough to provide a hat for readers (most of whom declined), a hat she'd only been meaning to bring to the event for years.
It was very cool to be able to host Calgary-based Laurie Anne Fuhr and the launch of her first full-length poetry collection. A founding member of The Peter F. Yacht Club, way back in 1999 when all of this nonsense began [see the short history I posted on the group back in 2010 here], it was grand to be able to hear her read (and an impressive reading it was! she even managed to slip a drink order to bartender Derek mid-poem, in the most casual way), especially given she isn't able to make it back this way as often as she'd like.
Sunday, December 30, 2018
Saturday, December 29, 2018
some author activity: mclennan, Earl, Young, Smith + Higdon,
rob mclennan has some poems up in Volume 1 of Theta Wave; Amanda Earl (among others) participates in the Queen Mob's Review of 2018, over at Queen Mob's Teahouse; Geoffrey Young, Jessica Smith and others have work in the anthology The Emerald Tablet; and Hailey Higdon provides her own list of 2018 Recommended Reading for Bloof Books.
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Merry Christmas, holiday, season, festivus and/or whatever you celebrate!
That magical time of year when, once again, we put our myriad of gigantic children to work, whether in the kitchen or the skies.
For whatever you celebrate, we hope it is healthy and happy. Merry! And wishing your 2019 far better than 2018 (ugh, I know, right?
And we shall see you at our big seasonal gathering on Friday, yes? Instead of baking multiple smaller items this year, I'm thinking of preparing a single, massive confection for everyone to enjoy!
For whatever you celebrate, we hope it is healthy and happy. Merry! And wishing your 2019 far better than 2018 (ugh, I know, right?
And we shall see you at our big seasonal gathering on Friday, yes? Instead of baking multiple smaller items this year, I'm thinking of preparing a single, massive confection for everyone to enjoy!
Saturday, December 22, 2018
some author activity: Robinson, Schmaltz, Siklosi, Dolman, Earl, mclennan + Beaulieu,
Elizabeth Robinson is interviewed over at poetry mini interviews, as is Eric Schmaltz; Kate Siklosi, Anita Dolman and others have new work in issue #11 of Amanda Earl's experiment-o: and both rob mclennan and Derek Beaulieu write up their 'best of 2018' book lists.
Friday, December 21, 2018
Elizabeth Clark Wessel’s 2018 recommended reading : MC Hyland's Plane Fly at Night (2018)
American poet Elizabeth Clark Wessel includes MC Hyland's Plane Fly at Night (2018) as part of her chapbook-fueled 2018 recommended reading list over at Bloof Books. Thanks so much! And of course, copies are still very much available.
Labels:
best of,
Bloof Books,
Elizabeth Clark Wessel,
MC Hyland
Thursday, December 20, 2018
new from above/ground press: Seam, by Monty Reid
Seam
Monty Reid
$4
published in Ottawa by above/ground press
December 2018
celebrating twenty-five years of above/ground press
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy
Monty Reid was born in Saskatchewan, lived for many years in the Alberta badlands, and moved to the Ottawa area in 1999 to work at the Canadian Museum of Nature. His books include Karst Means Stone (NeWest), Crawlspace (Anansi), The Alternate Guide (rdc) and Garden (Chaudiere) – his most recent collection is 2016’s Meditatio Placentae (Brick). His chapbooks have appeared from many small publishers in Canada and abroad, including four from above/ground. A mini chapbook, nipple variations, is forthcoming from postghost press. A three-time GG nominee, he was Arc Poetry Magazine’s Managing Editor for many years and is currently the Director of VerseFest, Ottawa’s international poetry festival.
This is Reid’s fifth chapbook with above/ground press chapbooks, after Six Songs for the Mammoth Steppe (2000), cuba A book (2005), In the Garden (sept series) (2011) and Moan Coach (2013).
To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; in US, add $2; outside North America, add $5) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
Monty Reid
$4
Slowly
your body is dispersedthe secondary metabolism of a world burnt without your approvalrifted without your approval, you cannot remember how to leaveyou cannot remember if you have ever been the firethe seams of old coal smoulderno one stops them.
published in Ottawa by above/ground press
December 2018
celebrating twenty-five years of above/ground press
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy
Monty Reid was born in Saskatchewan, lived for many years in the Alberta badlands, and moved to the Ottawa area in 1999 to work at the Canadian Museum of Nature. His books include Karst Means Stone (NeWest), Crawlspace (Anansi), The Alternate Guide (rdc) and Garden (Chaudiere) – his most recent collection is 2016’s Meditatio Placentae (Brick). His chapbooks have appeared from many small publishers in Canada and abroad, including four from above/ground. A mini chapbook, nipple variations, is forthcoming from postghost press. A three-time GG nominee, he was Arc Poetry Magazine’s Managing Editor for many years and is currently the Director of VerseFest, Ottawa’s international poetry festival.
This is Reid’s fifth chapbook with above/ground press chapbooks, after Six Songs for the Mammoth Steppe (2000), cuba A book (2005), In the Garden (sept series) (2011) and Moan Coach (2013).
To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; in US, add $2; outside North America, add $5) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Amanda Earl reviews four (more) 2018 titles: Jenna Jarvis' year of pulses, Jason Christie's glass language, Billy Mavreas' A Mercy of Signs and Stephen Brockwell's Immune to the Sacred
For the second year in a row, the esteemed and muchly generous poet, editor, publisher and reviewer (and above/ground press author) Amanda Earl provides further reviews of her favourite above/ground press titles of the past year (see her 2017 lists here, here and here; and the first part of her 2018 list here), providing a first review of Jenna Jarvis' year of pulses, a first review of Jason Christie's glass language, a second review of Billy Mavreas' A Mercy of Signs (after Greg Bem reviewed such over at Goodreads) and a first review of Stephen Brockwell's Immune to the Sacred. Thanks so much! And of course, all of these titles are still in print! Madness, really. You can see Amanda's full review here.
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
new from above/ground press: Danse Macabre, by Anthony Etherin
Danse Macabre
Anthony Etherin
$5
published in Ottawa by above/ground press
December 2018
celebrating twenty-five years of above/ground press
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy
Some of the poems in this chapbook are palindromes by letter, while some consist of lines that are perfect anagrams of each other. Others are triolets or small sonnets. One is a palindrome by pairs of letters and one is a palindrome by word. The remaining poem is an aelindrome, whose unit of palindromism varies according to the repeated, premeditated sequence 1-2-3-4… (i.e. [M]1[el]2[ody]3[ablo-]4 reverses as [a blo]4[ody]3[el]2[m]1).
Cover: Woodcut from “Danse Macabre”, Hans Holbein the Younger, 1538.
Anthony Etherin is an experimental formalist poet. He founded Penteract Press (www.penteractpress.com) and he invented the aelindrome. For more of his poetry, find him on Twitter, @Anthony_Etherin, and via his website: anthonyetherin.wordpress.com
To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; in US, add $2; outside North America, add $5) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
Anthony Etherin
$5
THE FOG (Sonnet)
This fog: It spills
through light and ferns.
The dead return
to walk these hills;
their whispers chill
the air. As stern
as gods that yearn
for songs to fill
the nothingness,
their steps are out
of time. You sight
them, as they bless
the earth, but doubt
they have the right.
published in Ottawa by above/ground press
December 2018
celebrating twenty-five years of above/ground press
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy
Some of the poems in this chapbook are palindromes by letter, while some consist of lines that are perfect anagrams of each other. Others are triolets or small sonnets. One is a palindrome by pairs of letters and one is a palindrome by word. The remaining poem is an aelindrome, whose unit of palindromism varies according to the repeated, premeditated sequence 1-2-3-4… (i.e. [M]1[el]2[ody]3[ablo-]4 reverses as [a blo]4[ody]3[el]2[m]1).
Cover: Woodcut from “Danse Macabre”, Hans Holbein the Younger, 1538.
Anthony Etherin is an experimental formalist poet. He founded Penteract Press (www.penteractpress.com) and he invented the aelindrome. For more of his poetry, find him on Twitter, @Anthony_Etherin, and via his website: anthonyetherin.wordpress.com
To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; in US, add $2; outside North America, add $5) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Pearl Pirie's Best Reads of 2018 so far: Marshall, hanna + Ross,
Ottawa poet, editor, publisher, critic and blogger (and above/ground press author) Pearl Pirie was good enough to include three above/ground press titles in her extensive "Best Reads of 2018 so far" list. Thanks so much! She included Sara Renee Marshall's The Landscapes were in my arms (figure 2) (2018), natalie hanna's Concealed Weapons/Animal Survivors (2018) and Stuart Ross' Espesantes (2018). You can read the full list of her "Best Reads of 2018 so far" here. And did I mention that all three titles are still available? Hooray!
Labels:
best of,
Natalie Hanna,
Pearl Pirie,
Sara Renee Marshall,
Stuart Ross
Saturday, December 15, 2018
some author activity: Gray, Gurton-Wachter, Saklikar, Townsend + Beaulieu,
Friday, December 14, 2018
above/ground press 25th anniversary essay: Marilyn Irwin
This is the thirty-seventh
in a series of short essays/reminiscences by a variety of authors and friends
of the press to help mark the quarter century mark of above/ground. See links to the whole series here.
above ground press: a quarter century of
community and paper cuts
It is hard to consider
above/ground press without considering the man who created it and has kept it
the well-oiled machine it has been for 25 years now.
The first time
I heard about rob was at a book store in Alexandria, Ontario, about 12 years
ago. I randomly picked up one of his books off the shelf in the poetry section
after a five year hiatus from writing post-high school. The cashier gushed how
rob was from the area and looked just like he did in the photo on the back of
the book. I bought the book.
The first time
I met rob was at a reading of his when I first moved to Ottawa in 2007. He was launching
his novel white and about to move out
west for a year as Writer-in-Residence at the University of Alberta. I
purchased a copy of his book and someone (Ottawa poet Amanda Earl?) told me he
would be happy to sign it. I was (still can be) debilitatingly shy but managed
to approach him. He inscribed it as follows: “for Marilyn, who I do not know”.
As he was packing up the book table, he handed me “a thing,” as he put it.
Truth be told, I don’t remember if it was a broadside or a chapbook but it was
an above/ground press publication. After the reading, a handful of people went
out for drinks at the Dom (Dominion Tavern); Amanda, husband Charles, Pearl and
Brian Pirie, Max Middle, Joshua Massey, rob and me. It would be the first of
many shenanigans centred around poetry, around this person, a personified nexus,
who seemed to know everyone in the local and farther reaching community and who
had the stories to prove it. Soon after, rob started handing me envelopes at
literary events stuffed to the gills with above/ground press goodies. This was
how I came to know the Ottawa poetry community and beyond.
I have lost
count of the number of Factory Reading Series events rob has organized in the
10ish years I’ve been going to them but they are usually like family reunions.
rob brings people together. rob has and continues to make things easy for us
all to find one another – even in this digital age – to trade or buy each
other’s books and, often, has been the catalyst for new acquaintances,
friendships and lovers (for better or worse). Without rob’s efforts; his
publishing, events, encouragement/coaxing of new, emerging and established
poets to put new work out into the world, without his workshops (which I’ve
taken a few times and totally recommend) and the ottawa small press book fair
and reviews and essays, etc., etc., etc., the Ottawa and Canadian poetry
communities would look very differently. Personally, my knowledge of the
literary landscape would be much less informed. And he has made it all look
easy, though I can only imagine how many long-armed staplers he’s been through
in the past quarter century or how many paper cuts he’s had or grocery bills
he’s tightened to subsidize putting poetry goodness into the world.
rob was kind enough
to reprint my first (self-published) chapbook
in 2010, shortly after he invited me to read at a Factory event – my first
official reading alongside stellar poets Marcus McCann and Cameron Anstee. I
have since had seven more chapbooks, two published through above/ground, in no
small part due to his gentle nagging for new work from me.
I
owe a debt of gratitude to you, rob, for helping me get this far despite my
mountains of reservations. So, thanks, rob, who I know, for all that you do and
congratulations on such a fine achievement!
I have often
heard rob say something to the effect of “I enjoy what I do so why would I
stop?” Here’s hoping he continues to enjoy doing what he does; I can’t wait to
see what the next 25 years bring.
Shortlisted for the 2016 bpNichol Award and winner of the 2013 Diana Brebner Prize, Marilyn Irwin’s [photo credit: John W. MacDonald] work has been published by Apt. 9
Press, Arc Poetry Magazine, bywords.ca, In/Words, Puddles of Sky, and The
Steel Chisel, among others. north,
her eighth chapbook, and third published by above/ground press, was released in
2017. She runs shreeking violet press in Ottawa.
Irwin’s three chapbooks through above/ground press include for when you pick daisies (2010), flicker
(2012) and north (2017).
Thursday, December 13, 2018
above/ground press chapbook bundles in the 2018 Belladonna* auction!
above/ground press has donated six different above/ground press 2018 titles (three copies of each) for the sake of the 2018 Belladonna* auction!
To help support some of the work they do (check out their website to get a sense of it), you can bid on one of three identical bundles of above/ground press poetry chapbooks: MOTHER OF ALL, by Anna Gurton-Wachter; Each Acre, by Megan Kaminski; Seventeen Summers, by Cole Swensen;Everything will be taken away., by Julia Polyck-O’Neill; Twenty-Five, by Emily Izsak; and CONCEALED WEAPONS / ANIMAL SURVIVORS, by natalie hanna.
See the links to the three identical bundles here, here and here.
Now, yes, all of these titles are still in print, but why not see if you want to support Belladonna* in their glorious works?
You can always come back here after, and order titles individually, or simply pick up a 2019 above/ground press subscription. Right?
To help support some of the work they do (check out their website to get a sense of it), you can bid on one of three identical bundles of above/ground press poetry chapbooks: MOTHER OF ALL, by Anna Gurton-Wachter; Each Acre, by Megan Kaminski; Seventeen Summers, by Cole Swensen;
See the links to the three identical bundles here, here and here.
Now, yes, all of these titles are still in print, but why not see if you want to support Belladonna* in their glorious works?
You can always come back here after, and order titles individually, or simply pick up a 2019 above/ground press subscription. Right?
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
above/ground press 25th anniversary essay: Renée Sarojini Saklikar
This is the thirty-sixth
in a series of short essays/reminiscences by a variety of authors and friends
of the press to help mark the quarter century mark of above/ground. See links to the whole series here.
above/
& grounded: looking back on a fine press
When
did you first hear of and/or interact with the press?
XRSS:
Somewhere back in 2009/2010, enrolled in the Writer’s Studio, I attended a
presentation by Anne Stone: we were up in the Diamond Lounge on the third floor
of SFU Vancouver, the light from the harbour drifting in on a June
evening. We exchanged stories about making little books of poetry and
Anne said something like, “if you are ever in Ottawa, look up a guy called rob
mclennan” and that’s how it all started. Once I graduated from the Studio,
immersed in the wayward path that become the process that became my first book
length poem, children of
air india, un/authorized
exhibits and interjections (Nightwood Editions, 2018), I would visit all
the “rob” websites: I spent lots of time online, fascinated onlooker, situated
on The Outside, peering longingly Inside, to the world of small presses, all
those poets, their work. I learned so much and still do by reading the poets
published by above/ground press: all the ways a poem can be and become―
What did it mean for you to have titles through the press?
XRSS:
Oh, everything! As if a door in a stone gate, locked for years, slowly swung
open. Tribe/less, and
as always, not really feeling too comfy with that word, and nevertheless
wanting to belong to a cadre, a circle, a network of poets, from Outside to
Inside, that helped me gain confidence in writing. I should have liked, looking
back, to have not been needy for Belonging and yet—and so, when above/ground
published After the Battle
of Kingsway, the bees, a sequence of poems from my much larger work,
THOT-J-BAP (a sci-fi epic), and the chapbook: sweet yellow paper—
―that was restorative, because the generation of those poems
happened during the summer of 2013, a difficult time in my life. I remember
writing After the Battle of
Kingsway the bees, out of grief, and despair, the taste of aloes in my
mouth. To see the book then bring delight to others: I am smiling my slow slant
smile as I type these words—
Have
you a story of something around the press? An event that was particularly good?
XRSS:
Ottawa. Summer, circa 2014: Factory Reading Series. Upstairs in “The
Tavern”. With rob and the late Marthe Reed, both generously interested in
seeking out and publishing those of us on the Outside, bringing us Inside. And
Marthe invited me to submit work for DUSIE. These invitations by above/ground
press, leading to other invitations, vital to a long poem writer, helping to
keep me on the path of the epic, following that thread that pulls—I still
cannot believe Marthe is gone, at least from this planetary orbit.
How
did you see the press comparing to what else was around when you first heard of
it?
XRSS:
Everything that Jason Christie says!! There’s this sense of community, of work
made on the margins, for the love of what is in us to make, to bring forth,
despite seeming indifference from anyone else. Outside of the low misery of
grasping for achievement, there abides the makers: crafting, stitching,
folding, stapling, paper between our thumbs. Fragments pressed to our lips.
Renée Sarojini Saklikar recently completed her term as the first Poet Laureate for
the City of Surrey, British Columbia. Her latest book is a B.C. bestseller: Listening to the Bees (Nightwood Editions, 2018). Renée’s first book, children of air india
(Nightwood Editions, 2013), won the 2014 Canadian Authors Association Award for
poetry. Renée co-edited The Revolving City: 51 Poems and the Stories Behind Them (Anvil Press/SFU
Public Square, 2015,) a City of Vancouver book award finalist. Renée’s chapbook, After the Battle of Kingsway, the bees, (above/ground press, 2016), was a finalist for the 2017 bpNichol
award. Her poetry has been made into musical and visual installations,
including the opera, air
india [redacted]. Renée was called to the BC Bar as a Barrister
and Solicitor, served as a director for youth employment programs in the BC
public service, and now teaches law and ethics for Simon Fraser University in
addition to teaching creative writing at both SFU and Vancouver Community
College. She curates the popular poetry reading series, Lunch Poems at SFU and
serves on the boards of Event magazine
and The Capilano Review and
is a director for the board of the Surrey International Writers
Conference. Renée belongs to the League of Canadian Poets and The
Writer’s Union of Canada (TWUC) and is active on the TWUC Equity Committee. She
is currently working on an epic-length sci-fic poem that appears in journals,
anthologies and chapbooks.
Tuesday, December 11, 2018
Amanda Earl reviews six 2018 titles: Adrienne Gruber's Gestational Trail, Gary Barwin and Tom Prime's gravitynipplemilk, Gary Barwin and Alice Burdick's Pleasure Bristles, Alice Notley's UNDO, Sean Braune's The Cosmos and kate siklosi's po po poems
For the second year in a row, the esteemed and muchly generous poet, editor, publisher and reviewer (and above/ground press author) Amanda Earl reviews her favourite above/ground press titles of the past year (see her 2017 lists here, here and here), providing a first review of Adrienne Gruber's Gestational Trail, a first review of Gary Barwin and Tom Prime's gravitynipplemilk, a first review of Gary Barwin and Alice Burdick's Pleasure Bristles, a first review of Alice Notley's UNDO, a third review of Sean Braune's The Cosmos (after Greg Bem reviewed such at Goodreads and Esther Chen reviewed such at PRISM International) and a first review of kate siklosi's po po poems. Thanks so much! You can see Amanda's full review here.
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