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Buoy the population of the soul
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Confessions of An Addict



Seriously, I lack discipline, in among other things, going overboard in acquiring books. I am supposed to be on a "only buy poetry" diet, and borrow fiction and non-fiction from the public library (one of the absolute joys of living in this Whitman land) but no, I have absolutely no self control.

So I went overboard, and bought four books of fiction: Saul Bellow's "The Adventures of Augie March" (with the idea that I will make myself read through this essential novel if I have my own copy that I can mutilate with my red and green pens), J.M. Coetzee's "Foe" (JMC does mean a chautauqua on fiction on fiction - see his "Elizabeth Costello" or his Nobel Lecture), Italo Calvino's "Numbers in the Dark" (mainly because this was previously owned by Sturgeon, and I am now, officially, addicted to second hand books that smell of expensive cigars[1]), and Richard Powers's "The Time of Our Singing" (because my book-runner friend C had classed RP with JMC in an email yesterday, and he was right too - RP's writing was so good that it kept me up way past bed time last night!).

I am proud to record, however, that I managed to put five other books back on the self (not really, I will probably get them next week), and winnow the pile to half its orginial height before I walked out of the store, lighter by $13.50 (looke ma, this is less than five lattes at Starbucks for two hardbacks and three paperbacks). Yes, I should sign up for a BA program this winter, seek refuge in a Higher Power (but what if, as J.L. Borges wrote, paradise is a library?), and wean myself from this space-destroying habit of buying and sniffing books.

Maybe I should begin by redirecting all my disposbale income towards expensive shoes and designer wear. Maybe I should stop converting anything I spend money on into book equivalents (you mean that cappuccino is gonna cost me two paperbacks or one hardback!). Maybe I should build myself more bookshelves[2], and purge the piles on my bed by putting them under my bed so that I feel less guilty. Maybe I should simply find a demanding significant other with whom I can "bond" so that I will stop submiliating myself with books. Maybe all of these will be my resolutions for New Year's.

[1] See this recent discursive post at Guardian Book Blog on the joys of book sniffing

[2] If I have had the dough, I would have said I will do what Umberto Eco did with his modest collection of 30,000 volumes




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Another Book Rodeo



Things appear shiny to me when the NYT's Sunday Book Review features reviews on books dealing with two poets, Allen Ginsberg and Charles Bukowski, nevermind the fact that quite a bit of their fame rests on their being cultural rockstars vs. language shapeshifters. Of these two Beat leading men, I prefer the darker and seedier Bukowski[1], mainly for reasons of personal identification. Why? Because in an Rolling Stone interview, Bukowski had these words of insight for those losers with ugly mugs[2] and poetic aspirations:

"Ah, well, I shouldn't complain. That makes three different ladies in the last 36 hours. Man, I'll tell ya, women would rather screw poets than just about anything, even German shepherds. If I had only known about all this earlier, I wouldn't have waited till I was 35 to start writing poetry."

And when you think the NYT folks couldn't suprise you anymore on a Sunday morning, they go ahead and review an epistolary book by that desert madman and misygonist, Edward Abbey[3]. You can't help but like a man who wrote in a letter to a fellow writer:

"Reality and real people are too subtle and complicated for anybody’s typewriter, even Tolstoy’s, even yours, even mine"

Meanwhile what the fuck is wrong with the Iranian mullahs? Banning books and murdering writers is the most sure way to speed up the demise of a fruitcake empire - looke what happened to the Glorious Soviet Fatherland when they tried this? Also memo to Du(m)bya: when you finish reading your Camus's "The Stranger", get a B-52 bomber to drop it, and many others like it, over Tehran.

Finally, while I prefer the poetry of Adrienne Rich ("I came to explore the wreck./ The words are purposes./ The words are maps. /I came to see the damage that was done/ and the treasures that prevail."), and find much of her critical prose feminist theory heavy, she can make me thinkful:

"Poetry has been written-off on other counts: it's not a mass-market "product", it doesn't get sold on airport newsstands or in supermarket aisles; it's too "difficult" for the average mind; it's too elite, but the wealthy don't bid for it at Sotheby's; it is, in short, redundant. This might be called the free-market critique of poetry. There's actually an odd correlation between these ideas: poetry is either inadequate, even immoral, in the face of human suffering, or it's unprofitable, hence useless. Either way, poets are advised to hang our heads or fold our tents. Yet in fact, throughout the world, transfusions of poetic language can and do quite literally keep bodies and souls together - and more.

Critical discourse about poetry has said little about the daily conditions of our material existence, past and present: how they imprint the life of the feelings, of involuntary human responses - how we glimpse a blur of smoke in the air, look at a pair of shoes in a shop window, or a group of men on a street-corner, how we hear rain on the roof or music on the radio upstairs, how we meet or avoid the eyes of a neighbour or a stranger. That pressure bends our angle of vision whether we recognise it or not. A great many well-wrought, banal poems, like a great many essays on poetry and poetics, are written as if such pressures didn't exist. But this only reveals their existence. But when poetry lays its hand on our shoulder we are, to an almost physical degree, touched and moved. The imagination's roads open before us, giving the lie to that brute dictum, "There is no alternative"."

[1] One of the more effective and poignant moments in that much liked movie "Sideways" is the scene in which its anti-hero Miles bemoans the final rejection of his novel by quoting a Bukowski-ism; the dialogue goes: "I’m not a writer; I’m a middle school English teacher. I’m so insignificant I can’t even kill myself.... Half my life is over and I have nothing to show for it...‘a smug piece of excrement floating out to sea.’"

[2] A Bukowskian class in which, I sadly, don't fall either as yet; my mug is more like a desi everyman - quite anonymous, and quite forgettable. I plan to, however, change this by downing a gallon of cheap whiskey everyday, and getting into bar fights with whores and bums

[3] Abbey's books are essential reading for anyone who wants to be an anarchist, and his billboard burning Dr. Sarvis in "The Monkey Wrench Gang" is a great literary personage whose example the industrial man might benifit by follwing




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Birkets On Reading



I previously mentioned in passing of acquiring Sven Birkets's collection of essays on reading, "The Gutenberg Elegies". Over the past few nights, I have read quite a few of them, and I have felt that the high praise this book was greeted with when it came out in 1994-1995 is very well deserved. While I am yet to synthesize all the multiple strands of thought that Mr. Birkets laid out in this book, I thought I should make note of the some of the predictions he had made ten years ago in one of the final essays titled "The Death of Literature" that I thought were shockingly prescient.

After surveying the scene of reading and writing, in academia and in the larger populace, and finding it approaching an Eliot-ish wasteland, Mr. Birkets writes:

"We are, I believe, in typical American fashion, approaching another crisis. A crisis of meaning....slowly, steadily, we may see the pressure build, and with in the awareness in individuals of a vacany at the subjective core, a gnawing sense of need....and when the crisis does come, no chip or screen will have a solution for it. It will flash forth as an insistent need, a soul craving, and nothing binary will suffice.

I predict three possible outcomes, or collective reactions to this crisis. One, a return to religion - to churches, temples, ashrams - to all the places that have traditionally served as repositories of the sacred. Whatever else they may be, our religions are grand stories that make a place for us. Two, I would expect to see a rush to therapy, the resort of choice for those who are experiencing a sense of emergency in secular terms. People will pay and pay to counter the distracted drift of the perpetual present with some explanatory narrative that has a purchase on time, on history. The fragmented self will be brought to trained professionals for reconstitution.

And three, I see the possibility of a genuine resurgence of the arts, of literature in particular. This may be wishful thinking - our electronic age may leave us unfit for the rigors of stationary words on a page - but grant me the wish. For literature remains unexcelled means of interior exploration and connection-making. The whole art - fiction, poetry, and drama - is fundamentally pledged to coherence, not just in terms of contents, but in forms as well. The structures of language represent a doorway back into duration..."

From an overview of the general scene, I think it is fair to conclude that it is the first two outcomes - a turn to messanic religiosity, and a dependance of mood altering drugs and therapy - that have come to pass with the exception of a few cavemen and luddites holding out in their booklined fastnesses.Still, still I have hope for reading and its resurgence, if for no other reason, it keeps things from falling apart while holding the somewhat cracked center of my life intact.




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