Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Sunday Short: 'Poetry: Five' by Carl Adamschick

I picture him
in the plastic lawn chair
at the head of the driveway

a thistle growing
in the crack beside his beer bottle

leaving a wet ring
on the blonde cement

The tenuous frail night
landing like a paper airplane
in a field of high corn
Man, there's something about good poetry that's just, well, good. These five poems by Carl Adamschick beautifully rotate themes of longing and loss, with such compelling imagery to boot. Feel all the things.

You can read 'Poetry: Five' by Carl Adamschick over at Electric Literature.

Friday Finds

- These love notes found in books are gorgeous.

- Your week in trailers: Pitch Perfect 2! Orphan Black Season 2!!!!!! Trainwreck looks like a lot of fun. I adore Almost Famous, but haven't loved Cameron Crowe's newer stuff. That said, Aloha looks interesting. Ballet 422 looks amazing.

- Online dating limericks!

- Hipster logo generator!

- And congrats, 50 Shades! This Lego reenactment of your trailer is more compelling than your real one.

- Oh! The Stella Prize longlist this year is the thing dreams are made of. Amazing list.

- This week in cosplay: this Cinderella gown is awesome. This Sailor Moon transformation is the best ever.

- These photographers with their most famous photos are lovely.

- And hey! Start your weekend with this Minister for Men webseries with Gretel Killeen to promote All About Women. Ridiculously funny.

Sunday Short: 'I Will Wade Out' by E. E. Cummings


i will wade out
                        till my thighs are steeped in burning flowers
I will take the sun in my mouth
and leap into the ripe air
I go on and off poetry, depending, but I'm in a bit of an on period with it at the moment. One of the poems that jerked me back in though was this beautiful one by E.E. Cummings. It's a gorgeous, emotive thing and just, man, the imagery of eating the sun and moon is a wonderful one.

You can read 'I Will Wade Out' by E.E. Cummings over at hellopoetry.com

Sunday Short: 'Japanese Maple' by Clive James


My daughter’s choice, the maple tree is new.
Come autumn and its leaves will turn to flame.
What I must do
Is live to see that. That will end the game
I don't include a lot of poetry as a part of the Sunday Short series, but Clive James' most recent one is so heartwrenching that I couldn't not. James is one of Australia's most renowned exports as far as poetry and memoir goes, and to read this poem in reflection of his terminal illness is, well, pretty gutting.

You can read 'Japanese Maple' over at The New Yorker website. 

Friday Finds


Well this is basically the best thing I've seen all week.

- On a related note, I know not everyone's a fan, but I'm pretty stoked on the fact that Pottermore is adding so richly to the content of the Harry Potter books, and not just telling us things we already know, or focusing more on the protagonists. This song by Celestina Warbeck is pretty much a delight.

- The trailer for Studio Ghibli's new film, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya is pretty divine.

- These sixteen bookish pick up lines are pretty hilarious.

- These rarely seen photos of the Sex Pistols are awesome too.

Sunday Short: 'Rape Joke' by Patricia Lockwood

The rape joke is that he was seven years older. The rape joke is that you had known him for years, since you were too young to be interesting to him. You liked that use of the word interesting, as if you were a piece of knowledge that someone could be desperate to acquire, to assimilate, and to spit back out in different form through his goateed mouth.
Fair trigger warning for this one, but Patricia Lockwood's moving poem about rape is equal parts compelling, confronting and devastating. She tells a story years on, in a shrug-it-off tone that's ultimately anything but, and by the end of it I was having to pick my stomach off the floor. Awful. Wonderful. 

Friday Finds

Penny Dreadful is hitting so many of my narrative buttons right now. I mean, seriously. You should check it out.

- How to tell you're reading a gothic novel.

- On that note, Genderswapped Frankenstein by the team behind The Lizzie Bennet Diaries?! *makes grabby hands*

- Annnnd speaking of series, I'm tentatively excited for the new Batman-before-Batman show, Gotham, and INSANELY EXCITED for the new Marvel series, Agent Carter.

- These storyboards from the original Star Wars trilogy are kind of awesome.

- The stunning second lives of 10 repurposed houses of worship and occult practice.

- And, to take you out for the weekend, check out this awesome spoken word piece by Patrick Roche. Shivers, meet my spine.

Sunday Short: 'The Type' by Sarah Kay

You are a woman. Skin and bones. Veins and nerves. Hair and sweat.
You are not made of metaphors. Not apologies. Not excuses.
 I go on and off poetry, but this one's been doing the rounds for a while and it really is pretty wonderful. It captures compelling narrative about womanhood and feminism and body without ever seeming contrived and cliche. It's a pretty great piece of writing.

You can read 'The Type' by Sarah Kay over at The Huffington Post.

Friday Finds


- Hear Sylvia Plath read her poem The Birthday Present.

- The new Jurassic Park adds more ladies! And awesome ladies too!

- These ritual photos of make-up routines are pretty lovely and fascinating too.

- These 22 photos of foxes are even lovelier.

- And to take you out for the weekend, have 26 majestic dogs.

Sunday Short: 3.5 by Betsy Turcot

I imagine her peel the corners free,turn the image over,savor pen scratch, smile that smile that will bend meto the place I dream of going back to being.
Betsy Turcot is one of my favourite poets around at the moment. Her ability to twist moments of perfect domesticity into moments of perfect prose is almost unparalleled. I got to see her read at the Riverbend Poetry Series a few weeks ago for the third time, and it was as magical as it always is. 3.5 is one of my favourites, but you can read a lot more over on her blog. Perfect Sunday reading.

You can read 3.5 by Betsy Turcot online here.

Friday Finds

I'm completely obsessed at the moment with these oldschool covers of modern popsongs and have been jamming to them all week. I particularly love this twenties version of Carly Rae Jepsen's Call Me Maybe.

- I'm a bit of a nut when it comes to both F. Scott Fitzgerald and John Keats, so hearing the former read Keats' Ode to a Nightingale is close to pornographic for me. Seriously.

- Thought-provoking photos that explore cultural appropriation in fashion. A really interesting project on an interesting topic.

- These illustrative photographs are pretty lovely. As is this Assembly collection by Japanese photographer, Osamu Yokonami.

Books I Read in June


There's something about this year that just seems to be whipping passed, more so than usual. It's great in some ways - I can feel myself racing towards the end, to exciting trips and deadlines and events, but it's also leaving me nostalgic. Needing to ground myself in the month that's gone passed. So hey! Welcome to a new series! Books I Read This Month.

June was kind of light-on reading-wise, and certainly manga heavy (I'm inhaling Fullmetal Alchemist for the second time and just. You know. Relatively obsessed again), but I read some things I'd never touched before. Jane Eyre was a big one (cue gasps). It's a bit of a monster of a book too, and I really maintain you could cut the whole of the first section and not be robbed of any emotional sucker punching, but that might just be my inner editor talking. The romantic in me didn't love Jane Eyre (mostly because Mr. Rochester strikes me as pretty high on the cray cray scale), but I appreciated Jane a lot as a character - strong and stubborn and kind of brilliant.

Lost at Sea by Bryan Lee O'Malley was almost the opposite. A graphic novel detailing the coming-of-age of a girl who believes her soul's been stolen by a cat is both wonderful and slight (particularly compared to Jane Eyre). I read the Scott Pilgrim series a few years ago and this very much feels a precursor to it in terms of O'Malley's writing style and character types. Which isn't a bad thing! Just a thing.

I also ended up with Kate Lilley's collection of poetry, Ladylike, after partaking in an experiment with a writer at Emerging Writers Festival. The experiment involved doing an interview with her and then picking one of her pre-loved books to take home. I ended up with Lilley's collection and, while I find it mostly unremarkable, the process was something I really enjoyed and engaged with. It was pretty great.

And Fullmetal Alchemist! Well. I'll get to that when I finish the series again.

Friday Finds

i dont want to be infantilized because i refuse to be sexualized 
Lack of capitalisation aside, musician Grimes has written a pretty cool feminist tirade over on her tumblr about treatment of women in music and women generally. It's well worth the read.

- Writer Unboxed has talked to literary agents about what NOT to include in the first chapter of your novel.

- Danielle Binks has put together a really interesting post on the new adult genre and the effect that fad-erotica like 50 Shades is having on the genre and the readership.

- Strange Horizons has also released a study of why you haven't heard of most female SF authors

- io9 also has three new books that will prepare you for the future of humanity which is cray. On the note of the above too, all three are awesome lady writers which is great.

- F, Marry, Kill: The 2013 Summer Movie Guide! I can already see a few months in the cinema. There are soooo many movies I want to see coming out.

- Also, how great are these picture of a Brooklyn gang in 1959? I'm really feeling it.

- In tumblr news, poets without clothes exists.

- Annnnd, on the other hand, how great is Ksubi's new collection? I'm loving the sci-fi-ish feel to it.

Friday Finds


- These safety tips for ladies are basically the best thing I've seen all week and combats serious issues in the best way - with humour.


- The Wheeler Centre has an excellent interview with the new Island editor, Matthew Lamb. A really great read for anyone interested in the journal editor profession, Island and getting published in her.

- This looks totally amazing.

- And these photos of famous authors as teens are kind of the best. Hemingway sort of looks like a young Josh Hartnett! Neil Gaiman kind of looks exactly the same! And Toni Morrison and Mary Carr are totally babin'.

- NY Times is also running a serendipitous haiku generator based on their articles and it's kind of the bomb.

- Lemony Snicket has a level of snark that mostly just makes me cackle. His commentary on these 13 terrifying movies he saw before he was old enough is the greatest. Also, I am getting progressively more excited for The Dark's release (I've always been partial to picture books).

- This Game of Thrones death generator! I particular like the blood splatter.

- These nail art stickers! Hearts in my eyes.

- This spoon! Which I need in my life because I am the biggest sucker when it comes to wordplay and puns.

- And these photos of the Palm Desert by Julia Robb. *chinhands*

Your Mid-Week Art Break: Salvador Dali

A bit of the oldschool this week. Between 1951 and 1960, Salvador Dali did 101watercolour illustrations to accompany and interpret Dante Aligheri's poem, Salvador Dali Divine Comedy. The overall effect is really interesting and beautifully executed. Check out the full works here.