Monday, December 12, 2016

DARLING COMPANION ~








 Hereditary



I kid him

& he argues

with me which

turns me to

argue with

him as he

begins to

kid me








She Comes To Me This Way



In her stocking feet and the

Pleats of her skirt, the way

The blouse is plain and opened

At the sand of her throat and her

Face is burned with winter and

So happy, that it is only then I

Notice something more — a

Necklace of rawhide and soapstone

Pebble, and even closer, the etch of

Turquoise on the piece, which brings

Me to her eyes…









More Father & Son Quality Time



He found in the farmyard

   3 clean white pilgrim goose

Feathers freshly dropped



He picked up a stick

Made a blunt arrow

Strung a bow



He taped the feathers to the arrow

Filled the bow

Aimed it at me







Off To School




except for

his base-

ball hat I

could kiss

him easily









Darling Companion




We’ve come to the end of the highway

Breathless on the Panamint Range



You in a dress all blue buttoned

Down to the knees and a



Breeze parting your sweater —

I have a photograph where



You stand in sage against

A Route 395 road sign



Pointing us either north

Or south along a high



Spring snow Sierra sky and

No possible ending to the day




_______________________________


Bob Arnold
ONCE IN VERMONT
GNOMON




photo by Bob Arnold




Sunday, December 11, 2016

CHRIS SMITHER ~













AVANT - FOLK ~






Avant-Folk: Publishing in the Vernacular
dreamt up and real by Ross Hair


Thomas A. Clark
Simon Cutts
Ian Hamilton Finlay
Lorine Niedecker
Erica Van Horn
Jonathan Williams


Published by the UEA Publishing Project
for the exhibition at theSmall Publishers Fair
Conway Hall, London
4-5 November 2016


Cover: IAN HAMILTON FINLAY Christmas gift, 2001







NOBEL PRIZE CEREMONY STOCKHOLM (PATTI SMITH / DYLAN) ~










It seems Patti Smith went over to Sweden (for Dylan?) 
and flubbed a line in “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” —  
quite the choice to sing at a Nobel ceremony.
It’s priceless, the photograph, covering her face with her hands in shame. 
We forgive her.
In fact, we love her.




Friday, December 9, 2016

KIRK DOUGLAS IS 100 ~













KIRK DOUGLAS 
is 100 Years Old Today
Give it up!
Here is one of his best films to watch


  • United States
  • 1951
  • 111 minutes
  • Black and White
  • 1.33:1
  • English
  •  

Billy Wilder’s Ace in the Hole is one of the most scathing indictments of American culture ever produced by a Hollywood filmmaker. Kirk Douglas gives the fiercest performance of his career as Chuck Tatum, an amoral newspaper reporter who washes up in dead-end Albuquerque, happens upon the scoop of a lifetime, and will do anything to keep getting the lurid headlines. Wilder’s follow-up to Sunset Boulevard is an even darker vision, a no-holds-barred exposé of the American media’s appetite for sensation that has gotten only more relevant with time.







PORT TOWNSEND POETRY ~






Jefferson County Historical Society
2016


_____________________



"In the 1970s and 80s a beautiful forgotten, small town on the Olympic
Peninsula, Port Townsend, Washington, was the sight of an unusual
literary blossoming. Writers, most of them young, had started migrating to
the area in the aftermath of the sixties. The Centrum Foundation's
Writers' Conference was established and Copper Canyon Press found a
home with them. Other small presses started soon after.

In 1984, only New York City received more National Endowment of the 
Arts awards to literary presses than Port Townsend There was more than
one publisher for every 850 people of the population.

This is the story of seven of Port Townsend's presses, the people behind
them, and the magical time and place where they came into being."


__________________________



A good friend I know and who knows me knew to send me a gift of this book for Christmas.

Merry Christmas! indeed, I sat down that evening and enjoyed myself thoroughly with an
easy going and beautifully networked community of small press publishers, many starting out cutting their printing teeth on the heavy iron works of letterpress. 

These were splendid dreamers and the heart of publishing history that would have not proceeded without such dreamers.

Keep that in mind today if you are feeling down in the dumps in these times — find a letterpress, any press, and learn the hardwork and core of publishing the writings of someone you believe in.
It never gets old.

There are smashing photographs of poets, their elegant books, and conversations and reports with some of the trailblazers like Tree Swenson, Sam Hamill, Finn Wilcox, Pat Fitzgerald, Tim McNulty, Michael Daley, Mike O' Connor, Bill Porter, Steve Johnson, Rusty North, Gwen Head, Scott Walker.
Forever young.

[ BA ]







Thursday, December 8, 2016

A GREAT BOOKMAN PASSES ~







RAY DI PALMA ~








Many of us have suddenly lost a good pal

Poetry, literature, and the adventure of books galore
have lost a champion

It's all been to the greater gain, thanks Ray.



[ 1943 PA ~ 2016 NYC ]







AIME CESAIRE ~










W E S L E Y A N    2  0 1 3






Wednesday, December 7, 2016

MORE JOHN BERGER ~










The dust jacket of my copy is murky compared to this example
shown above, but it's inside the cookie that counts



Tuesday, December 6, 2016

FELA KUTI ~









ROCK 'N' ROLL ~






Crown Archetype, 2016


By page 100 of this 500 page testimonial I knew it was about to go down as one of the finest books about rock 'n' roll ever written, lived through, and survived, since Robertson is now 73. Congratulations. Set this book right alongside Robertson's old buddy Levon Helm and his music memoir This Wheel's On Fire. Except Robertson's experience is a bit more literary, even expansive, whereas Helm's story is straight out of the Arkansas wilderness, and he was the early 'older brother' to the teenage runaway down-from-Canada Robertson. By the time we see both heroes in the film The Last Waltz (1976) both are freewheelin' storytellers trying to top the other. It's still going on in their respective books. And like their work together in the The Band — not a moment is wasted.
p.s. Don't expect any clarity on who-owns-what with The Band's
songs when it comes between Helm~Robertson.
The music is a dream.
Then there's the nitty gritty.

[ BA ]











STANDING ROCK PATRIOTS ~





S T A N D I N G     R O C K     S I O U X     P A T R I O T S








Monday, December 5, 2016

EVEN INSIDE ~









Even Inside




You were asleep

I blew out the lamp

Turned to you —

A firefly blinked






  


Summer Leaves



I listen

To all



Its length

Of a tall



Maple tree

In the rain









Duo




The same bird every night

In the same tree singing

The same song that does

The same very songful

Thing inside of me








  
It Is Now The Birds Settle




You would walk

Upstairs to our room

In the early evening

So warm

Undress, while looking to the woods

Lie down



Hours later

I would find you this way








Explaining To Carson




On the boat ride we saw

One town, one island,

Two motor boats, two

Kids swimming from a canoe,

A redtail hawk flew over

The mountain, a blue 

Heron flapped around the bend




___________________________


Bob Arnold
Once In Vermont
Gnomon






Friday, December 2, 2016

Thursday, December 1, 2016

GENUINE ~








There is no one like Ursula K. Le Guin, no one, when it
comes to the enthusiastic and conversational book reviewer,
the love of reading, the writers, the readers and the
freedom of speaking one's mind.

She advocates all of this.

She practices.

Read her.


Published by a brave press 
from Easthampton, Massachusetts
S M A L L      B E E R      P R E S S
150 Pleasant Street
01027