Look what has happened during 40 years to my little copy of Gerald Hausman's children's book Beth. She's been through the war — the war of love.
The book first came to me via a book salesman who was moving through the countryside one November evening in 1974 and Gerry happened to hand him this copy to give to me, signed and all, thoughtful, and the salesman did. He came to our cabin in the woods. If it sounds romantic, it was.
I still remember the hour he arrived because it was a dark late afternoon with snow on the ground and it felt like already night time. We stood and talked in my two room cabin. Probably me leaning against the old sink, the visitor leaning against a small counter. The kerosene lamp on. I was waiting for Sweetheart to return from town. Instead the salesman showed up.
He stayed long enough for Sweetheart to meet him. We never saw him again. We wouldn't meet Gerry for three decades. Like I said, it was romantic.
I read that book aloud to Susan, our son, all children that ever came to the cabin and later our house. The book began to fall apart. The silverfish came to read it, gobble it, they took some of the book away. It was allowed. The book was tough, the book was vital, the book was in love. It has endured.
Pianist Horace Silver performs on stage as part of the Newport Jazz
Festival held at Carnegie Hall, New York City in July 1976. (Photo by
David Redfern/Redferns)
A wonderful publication, long in the tradition — and my only quiet complaint is that Peter Berg, founding spirit, should have his name on the masthead. Done right.
When next in the Berkshire hills — Lenox, Massachusetts to be exact — stop-in at one of the better small town bookshops and meet a pro at work: kept small, kept shiny.
I just wrote this on the Birdhouse comments to my good friend Mike Luster, and then couldn't live with myself, or go to bed, before putting something up for this sweet singer.
"Mike,
Just heard Jimmy Scott passed away at 88. The stunning
singer, interpreter, vocal genius. We're just too busy right now on the
road with errands and long travel bouts to get anything correct in place
on the Birdhouse for Jimmy Scott the master. I'll make up for this, and
him.
"We humans have always defined ourselves by narration. What's happening
today is that we're allowing multi-national corporations to tell our
stories for us. The theme of corporate stories (and millions drink them
in every day) seldom varies: to be happy you must consume, to be
special you must conform. Absurd, obviously, yet our identities have
become so fragile, so elusive, that we seem content to let advertisers
provide us with their version of who we are, to let them recreate us in
their image: a cookie-cutter image based on market research, shallow
sociology, and insidious lies. Individualism is bad for business --
though absolutely necessary for freedom, progressive knowledge, and any
possible interface with the transcendent. And yes, it's entirely
possible to function as a free-thinking individual without succumbing to
narcissism."
Tom Robbins
Robbins is a direct descendant of Daniel Defoe (1660-1731)
This whole odyssey of looking for a new truck started two weeks ago. Before that, we were a couple watching our 25 year old (1989) Toyota truck come to its end. Regular road-use end; we still have plans in the woods for the old warrior. We bought the original truck, our 4 year old son Carson with us, from the Keene, New Hampshire Toyota dealership, and we kept it as a loyal family companion all these years. Truck grew old, marriage grew with it, and now we're 40 years married together and an easy enough reason to call the new truck purchase we want a "40 year wedding anniversary.” So be it.
We start the hunt for a new truck. Knowing little about what is currently out there.
We haven't bought anything new in the vehicle department for 25 years. We've been driving hand-me-downs all that time around the ’89 truck, beaters to get in out of town, but when driving a long distance we've rented a vehicle for an excursion. While the Toyota pickup has aged, and its capability to serve for a long secure drive lessened, we've picked up the rentals and have had a short string of mechanics dealing with the beaters, but this has now grown old. We've lost the mom & pops rental agencies that made renting a kick and a blast and cheap enough to do, and we've likewise lost the faithful old-timer mechanic with a bell on his door when we walk in. The mechanic who was there to work when he said he would be. We're facing a changed world of fly-by-nights, shady mechanics, wheeler-dealers, and suddenly everyone thinks they are worth $90 an hour. Let's take the 40 year anniversary impetus and get rid of the rental agency hustle, and dump the shady mechanics into one oil drum, buy a new truck and try to get back to a world done right. It's possible. Plus we've been saving all those 25 years since we bought the ’89 Toyota for a new vehicle. No loan, no lease, no borrowing, clean.
We start off, knowing very little, by looking at a Ford F-150, used, cheap, but we can see it's falling apart, rotting at the seams. It only has 50,000 miles on it, 2003, suspicious already with those numbers not quite adding up, body tumbling, shiny on the outside/rotting on the inside, and the dealership is talking about having it mended and undercoated for us overnight. A nightmare. We run away.
Across the street another dealership is selling one of the notorious Toyota pickups with the suspect frames, same time period as the F-150. 2005. Very high mileage. Susan takes a look while she is in town but I'm not interested.
One or two days at this rigamarole, and there was other tomfoolery but I'll spare you, we head back to the Toyota dealership where we bought our ’89 Toyota in Keene, New Hampshire. The dealership has since moved up the road, been expanded immeasurably (the corporation also owns Honda and Subaru dealerships) and it looks very solid. We've lost some of the key elements at the dealership we once knew and we're fond of, like the foreman in the mechanic crew — a good guy we met during a dicey situation with the '89 truck out of his work crew and he handled it beautifully and professionally. We had taken the truck over for service work and it was picked up by Susan with an unknown at the time gas leak. The other work was accomplished fine but the gas leak was undetected, and there was the long drive home to Vermont from the dealership for Susan, through road work, machinery, sparks etc., with this unknown gas leak. By the time she returned home, now with a migraine from the gas fumes, we noted the leak, the danger, called the dealership and met Mike Bresnahan, the best kind of fellow you'd want to meet in this sort of scrape. He drove all the way over from the dealership personally that day and we figured things through. He admitted the mistake was from his end, and he did his best to square up with us both the economics and our future with Toyota. He had the good sense to know there was a future to maintain. This attitude and solid character is precisely what we search for in a relationship, any relationship. It comes before money or any salesmanship; it's the backbone of a reputable company. Any reputable country. Any reputable individual.
So now Mike has retired, or at least retired from Toyota and moved northward to a new location, and in fact it’s his dream spot and new home and from what I hear he's still got his hand in with servicing vehicles up where he lives. I'm happy for him. He used to share with us his plan to one day retire to this location with his family and maybe it's happened for him. I like hearing he's still helping people with vehicles because he's very good at it. At his old location in Keene Toyota, where we are now returning to, I only hear good things about Mike. From the sales folks to mechanics. We're about to meet the sales folk and mechanics, and there's one of the original mechanics there from 30 years ago and he remembers us and plans to take care of things. You'll see.
So with the prospects for a used F-150 out of the way, we're quickly moving aside a used Toyota pickup because of the so-so body frame, and despite the steep price to the new trucks, it's starting to look like the direction to move in. We've now been at this a few days. We have visited a half-dozen dealerships with new and used vehicles, our eyes pinpointing more and more at Toyota. There happens to be an employee at Keene Toyota by the name of George Thompson whose phone number we’ve stumbled upon, and lucky us, because George takes the time to introduce us to Fenton Auto Sales with the care of hand-shaping pottery — he doesn’t have to, nobody has to, but he does. We're getting around in our 2001 Subaru Forester. When we get to the dealership our car is the crummiest one in the parking lot. Kind of funny. Kind of dawning on us.
We've stretched our wings now from Northampton, MA Toyota, up to Greenfield, MA (like night and day as far as the management: you get slick in Northampton and a little more down-home in Greenfield), we also receive a general manager on the floor of Northampton you want to avoid. He may be making the sales and numbers for the bosses, but he's horrendous with the public. We haven't met the hidden away manager in Greenfield yet, but we’ve met Mike Dubour, a salesman. He's been there 25 years. Easy going with all the get-up-and-go of walking that extra mile with you, he's eager to find us what we want. We like him and his energy, but we're still fumbling through the roster of Toyota trucks: do we want the access cab, regular cab, or now the 4-door; how about the off-road, definitely not the Tundra: it would never fit down the alley way woods roads we chopped out 40 years at home in our woodlot fit for the smaller '89 Toyota pickup and the Willys jeep we used to draw wood and haul fieldstone for our work. Toyota is thundered with "packages,” so there's lots to learn. We fuddle now between dealerships and the two best, by far, are Greenfield Toyota (MA) and Keene Toyota (NH). Keene is where we bought the '89. Its scope and rise has been a large success over the years since we've been away. Both dealerships worked on our '89 pickup truck, but the truck was mainly worked on at Keene. On a cool late May day we happened to wander back over there and just happened to buy a 2014 FJ Cruiser. Don't ask me how, except I used to pull wood out with all sorts of jeeps and Land Cruisers in the 60s & 70s, always loved jeeps, owned and worked for years the '57 Willys (now rotting away in a corner of the dooryard back at home), liked very much the look of this new one; the model was about to be discontinued by Toyota (more of our fate — what we seem to like, goes away) and we weren't leaving the dealership without it. Bought it.
It can be done. In a few long days of research and doing our homework.
It also helps a great deal to personally get to know the staff at the dealership. At Keene Toyota this is possible. We knew no one when we arrived — two days later when we leave we know — let's count it up: at least four sales people, cashier, mechanic bunch, business manager or two, and as soon as you walk in the door at the dealership there's a fellow who knows to greet you having watched you paw around out in the warm sun parking lot for over an hour and he wonders if you'd both like a cold bottle of water? He'll get the bottled water for you.
We'll spend six hours one day looking for our truck and this outfit will make sure during this time it is indeed special. This is plain fact. Look around at the other salesmen's desks, it's busy, other couples are also being treated sort of special. In the long run this is better than money. Even better, it stretches straight back into the large garage where mechanics are tooling away. It's Mike Cushman who you look for back there, 30 year veteran, New Hampshire boy, he takes our new vehicle and treats it with kid gloves. You can't even believe the shady mechanics you've met and tolerated in your past. They all disappear right before your eyes when you're with Mike.
If you think this is a sales pitch, I feel sorry for you. I'm a stonemason in the woods who cares next to nothing about automotive mechanics. But I know stone and stone is like a Land Cruiser is like a good and knowledgeable mechanic is like a business staff that can communicate and move some parts of the whole mechanism for you is like a success story. End of story.
We need a second vehicle, but we're loyal, and we'd like to give Greenfield Toyota the business if we can. Mike, the salesman we first met at the start of our journey a week earlier is there, and we started off with Mike after a dreadful visit with Lia Toyota in Northampton. Keene is ideal but their trucks are priced a little too steep for the second vehicle and Mike seems to think he can muster our plans for us. What Susan likes about him — and it's always important what Susan (or any companion) likes — is when she talks to Mike over the phone seeking a vehicle, Mike is already surveying the Internet and Toyota inventories, the possible draw from dealer swaps, digging and rooting out what he can while he talks with us and gradually moves dreams into ideas and plans. Keene will do this for you with their eyes closed, too; it's just we were stuck loyal to New Hampshire for the first vehicle and we wouldn't leave them until we had it, and we feel the same about Mike. Otherwise, it's a putrid, sorry business and nobody's having fun. That "sorry" part is about to meet us in Greenfield, hang on.
So Mike swiftly finds the vehicle we’re after from a Berkshire hills dealership, where I was born and raised, so we like this good omen. We drive down to Greenfield immediately to have a look at the truck. It has 44 miles on it. Our New Hampshire purchase had 73 miles. You can't get much more 'brand new' for a wedding anniversary gift. We begin to talk with Mike over price and options and we end up with a very fair price. It all looks sealed and now he has to take the figure to the business office, the dreaded business office, where knuckles are cracked. We wait.
Out comes the manager from the business office. We meet and greet and then start to crunch numbers and comparisons from other dealerships. This fellow wants to at first please. Whatever magic has been performed by Keene Toyota with our first vehicle package (remember Toyota's packages and dealership packages: it's where they make their bread & butter), this fellow would like to match . . . he can't quite, but he comes close . . . add in Mike's hard work and hustle, plus dedication to us, and we agree to purchase the vehicle. Susan has a lifetime of employment as a secretary and book-keeping experience and is keeping extensive notes. What anyone is saying, Susan is writing down. I'm listening to everyone from the ground up. We tell Mike we're very close on a decision but we first want to head south and climb Sugarloaf Mountain where we think the best when in this region and we'll be back before closing time for the truck. We leave a deposit with Mike, and he's probably wondering what in the hell it is about this mountain.
In less than two hours we're back; we've also managed to fit in some grocery shopping. Susan hasn't said anything to me but she's already feeling something is growing ominous. I'm feeling all is moving ahead. Probably because I asked Mike about the possibility of finding a welder in his garage and he took the time to take me out to meet Andy, one of the mechanics, and like Mike Cushman back in Keene Toyota, Andy's a good guy. Ready to talk. Ready to help. You see I'm still working on a chance to get my '89 Toyota pickup back in shape with a welded rear frame. Not for road inspection. Just to keep as a firewood and stone hauler in the woodlot at home. Maybe Andy can assist us from where he is and where my truck is stuck (water pump and clutch are momentarily shot), so we put our heads together, he’s helpful, and blocks the short conversation up with good advice. Has it stuck in anybody's head yet that this good attitude and grace is better than money? The guys that do it, know it is. I want to believe the corporate owners at Greenfield and Keene know its value.
Unfortunately, the business manager at Greenfield doesn't get it. Here's the scenario:
We've worked some days with Mike on a vehicle purchase. He's basically been patient with two novices learning the ropes of Toyota's new products. He's listened to our silly, but sincere plan, for a wedding anniversary vehicle gift. He's taken seriously our finances and figures. We thought we had everything ironed out with the business manager and according to Mike, we have. Deposit left. Mountain climbed. Groceries in the back of our old Subaru. We've returned obediently a half hour before closing time to mint the deal and write the final check. Now watch this part people: the business manager shows up and changes his tune. In his bravado to chase and meet the terrific warranty from Keene Toyota, in our earlier meeting when he agreed to an 8 year/125,000 warranty "bumper to bumper" extended package from Toyota, which almost equals what Keene has offered, in the very last minute — the difference of $180.00 — this guy is actually ready to stop the sale if we don't agree to an 8 year/100,000 mile warranty package. Even his dealership brochure shows "8 year/125,000 mile" warranty and he's quibbling over $180.00. In Susan's notes she had written down when the business manager spoke of the "8 year/125,000". I heard him say this. He quickly admitted he did say these figures but didn't mean to! Not seeming to understand that EVERYTHING everyone is saying are facts toward a solution. A purchase. A sale. We go home with the truck, they keep the bags of gold. The world goes round.
Then he makes a bigger mistake by saying, "I'm not lying and I'm not saying you're lying."
Lying? Who's talking about lying?
I correct this mendacious comment and remind the man "lying" is never a word one brings up in conversation with any customer, or any transaction. What we have here is a misunderstanding. I'm also starting to register the ominous and creepy crawly prospects (what Susan sensed) of a professional actually wanting to railroad a perfectly fine transaction (Mike's in the background listening with his sorry head dropped down) either because he thinks we got too good of a deal, or else he has personal prejudice with the likes of us: two people wanting to buy a new vehicle from Greenfield Toyota. I'd actually like to have the owner of the company sitting with us right about now listening to this all going down. All over a mere $180.00. I mostso would like the owner there when the business manager finally gets frustrated and says, "I don't think I want to sell you the truck." And then he forecasts and projects even further, “I don’t think you will be happy with anything.” He doesn't think he wants to sell us the truck? I can't imagine why not, unless he's troubled, because we're about to write a pretty big check. Imagine days of work by Mike, Bob and Susan. A swap taking place by Mike who had the truck driven over the hill & dale of the Mohawk Trail, in the rain, to his dealership. Our money is good and the deposit is down. We had Greenfield Toyota install a new clutch into our '89 pickup years ago; we have a solid record of maintenance with this dealership. A logger buddy just bought a new Toyota pickup this spring, and I asked him who he dealt with: Mike. I took Mike's name. Other neighbors have their new Toyota pickup serviced in Greenfield, they like the place. The word of mouth is rampant and friendly. The only person not friendly is the business manager, who for some unexplained and last minute psychotic reason doesn't want to now sell us the truck. And he feels we won’t be happy about anything. We’re the very same people who have been working the last two weeks with many people, at two different dealerships, on landing two vehicles and have already written the check for this second one. What’s happy got to do with it? We walked in happy! The clock is inching up to closing time. Friday. If you're the owner of this establishment, keep reading because this is what is going on.
The business manager now decides to stand up and walk away; he leaves us, abandons our prospects on this note. Nice huh? I want this vehicle for my wife and she's sitting beside me sick to her stomach watching and listening to this guy. I don't want to get Mike in trouble but I have to believe he doesn't know what in the hell is going on either. I'm not moving but I'm also not watching a lot of hard work and negotiation that was fair and honest get shot to ribbons by an arrogant individual. Mike's going to lose this sale because a business manager can't live up to his word on an "8 year/125,000 mile warranty package" that we've accepted, paid for in full, on this man's decision two hours earlier? I'm supposed to leave without the truck I bought for my wife as a gift? It's come to this?
No, what it’s come to is this — it has nothing at all to do with money or miles. We’ll never drive 125,000 miles in 8 years. Not happening. Our 1989 Toyota has 192,000 miles on it and the oil still looks like grade B maple syrup dripping off the dip stick. It’s never been black. It doesn’t matter that the water pump and clutch are shot, the truck is still very much alive. We’re loyal to the truck. Hell, we’re still loyal to the guy we bought it from 25 years ago and 12 years after that he was out of sales and we ran into him at a photocopy shop making small posters for his current yoga teaching class. Life is bigger than any money, although money is going to buy this new truck, and so is a bright and fraternal attitude from a business manager and an entire business department.
If you’re at Keene Toyota right about now peering in to this fiasco you’re saying to Bob & Susan: “We told you guys to stick with us.” We know, we know. But we have trouble with loyalty and Mike’s been very good at trying to drum up this truck, so we stuck by him and took our licks. Learned the hard way. We stuck with Keene and will stick there again.
55 years ago I met a gentleman by the name of Sweeney who was a colleague of my grandfather and father, both lumbermen in the Berkshires, and all the lumber company's trucks were Fords and Chevys. Sweeney was their insurance man and banker, and he may have been related to the Sweeney who once owned and operated Sweeney Ford where this Toyota dealership is now located in Greenfield. There's some hollowed ground here. A handshake was a handshake. Not only does this business manager think he has the power to "not sell [us] the truck" in the last minute, he walks away! And by the way, please keep note, he never clarified or apologized for these punk, rude acts.
In the closing minutes of a work day we hung with Mike at his desk and we're left to piece together a selfishly busted apart puzzle. What a rotten spot to leave any customer in.
And, a second “by-the-way” — and curiously — tell me that the unfinished and large plastic and tarpaulin blowing haunted half-built new garage, left dormant at Greenfield Toyota, isn't a symbolic showcase for a dealership that could do better? This is why we're throwing our very small shoulder into the company's direction. It's positive. They’re right down the road from us as the crow flies. We say, help out the little guy and all that. Our salesman is one of the good guys working with care; the mechanics we've met are on the up & up; so what's happening in the spooky middle ground with management?
My wife and I don't at all appreciate the bum's rush and outright personal assault by a business manager who left us high and dry, twisting on a rope, and then — just as mysteriously, and arrogantly — changed his mind and went ahead and approved our sale like it’s all been a personal whim. A game. This is sadistic stuff. Unprofessional by a mile. Way too easy to read.
I advise the business manager to take a page out of Steve Hill’s sound managerial book over in Keene. You’re all “Toyota” — learn from one another why don’t you!
As my wife said on the ride home with the truck — thanks to us holding our ground for fairness — while at Keene Toyota you get for the time you're there to buy a vehicle, and you damn well get your vehicle, it's a magic carpet ride. At Greenfield Toyota, it's a jail break.
It's a shame. But thanks, Mike, Andy at Greenfield Toyota. Thank you all at Keene Toyota.
Confederate General Robert E. Lee issued his Farewell Address, also known as General Order No. 9 to his Army of Northern Virginia on April 10, 1865, the day after he surrendered the army to Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. Lee's surrender was instrumental in bringing about the end of the American Civil War.
Headquarters, Army of Northern Virginia, 10th April 1865.
General Order
No. 9
After four years of arduous service marked by unsurpassed courage and
fortitude, the Army of Northern Virginia has been compelled to yield to
overwhelming numbers and resources. I need not tell the survivors of so many hard fought battles, who
have remained steadfast to the last, that I have consented to the result
from no distrust of them. But feeling that valour and devotion could accomplish nothing that
could compensate for the loss that must have attended the continuance of
the contest, I have determined to avoid the useless sacrifice of those
whose past services have endeared them to their countrymen. By the terms of the agreement, officers and men can return to their
homes and remain until exchanged. You will take with you the
satisfaction that proceeds from the consciousness of duty faithfully
performed, and I earnestly pray that a merciful God will extend to you
his blessing and protection. With an unceasing admiration of your constancy and devotion to your
Country, and a grateful remembrance of your kind and generous
consideration for myself, I bid you an affectionate farewell.
John Haines Descent
CavanKerry Press
Fort Lee, New Jersey
After the book dealers scarfed a book sale, pushed into their boogie corners with their stashes, counting and mounting their hardware, the scanner-monkeys with their hand scanners and adding up the treasures, I found this book left behind on one of the tables. It was inscribed to Scott Walker, John Haines publisher once upon a time at Graywolf Press. It was then fully signed by the author on the full title page. It was a fine and dandy presentation copy. We were all in a high vaulted gymnasium on a Friday morning, plastic sheeting covering the hardwood floor. I had read everything by Haines, or so I thought. Somehow I had missed this book from late in the poet's life. Essays. Some reviews. A few endearing memoirs.
For the Birdhouse dozen readers or so — and you know who you are — let's not beat around the bush: this is the book you want to read, want to own and want to do what I am doing: promote it. The essays are mainly western USA based, with one long adventurous foray away from the west and into Sweden and the Nobel Prize for the author's father, and the author is family oriented in just the right way for the essay — of the father — to be the last word. There are other fathers, wisdom fathers, in this fine shaped book from deep forest seekers and inhabitants, to Jaime de Angulo, east India mystics, poets and similar seekers, other poets, and even a time out to discuss awhile baseball. Babe Ruth was a poet, and if you don't think so, then his name was poetry. Please read the back cover blurbs shown above, they mean well.
A poem (or more) will be offered by the hour or with the day and at the very least once a week. So stay on your webbed toes. The aim is to share good hearty-to-eat poetry. This is a birdhouse size file from the larger Longhouse which has been publishing from backwoods Vermont since 1971 books, hundreds of foldout booklets, postcards, sheafs, CD, landscape art, street readings, web publication, and notes left for the milkman. Established by Bob & Susan Arnold for your pleasure. The poems, essays, films & photographs on this site are copyrighted and may not be reproduced without the author's go-ahead.
New from Bob Arnold ~ "Faraway Like The Deer's Eye" ~ Bob Arnold Faraway Like the Deer’s Eye — A Saga — FOUR BOOKS IN ONE VOLUME ~ A Poet’s Memoir // 50 Years of Longhouse & Poets // A Builder’s Life, with photo assembly // The Selected Poems of Bob Arnold // An afterword by Andrew Schelling
Longhouse Bibliography Quick Link —
Link to the Birdhouse Bibliography
Read about Longhouse (a press edited by Bob Arnold) ~
"Poets Who Sleep" by Bob Arnold, Longhouse 2019. 500 portraits by Bob Arnold of poets worldwide & others. Please link on image for ordering information.
Link to a Preview of Poets Who Sleep
Shared at "Dispatches from the Poetry Wars"
Heaven Lake by Bob Arnold
Available from Longhouse. Please link on the image for ordering information.
The Woodcutter Talks by Bob Arnold
Available from Longhouse. Please link on the image for ordering information. Drawing from years of poetry and also new poems, The Woodcutter Talks is Bob Arnold at his finest branching love poems with back country work poems and settlement with community, family and individual portraits. The extensive collection also showcases vintage photographs from woodcutters and woodchoppers and big-saw-pullers of old. Sweat runs down the cheeks of the mere literary and they adore one another.
Stone Hut by Bob Arnold
"Once again, my friends, this is your best book! Exquisite in design, fat enough to be a feast, pretty enough to just wade around in, but deep enough to dive into and stay with, all I can say is WOW, you guys really did it – it’s the first of its kind, a scrapbook novel that is also a how-to and a mystery -- how did he do it, and how does he make rocks balance like Thor? — Gerald Hausman" ~
Museum, An Unlikely Meditation, written by the poet Bob Arnold, is as much an unlikely novel. Visit this page for details.
Cid Corman's Of, Volumes 4 & 5 from Longhouse.
ANNOUNCING. The final volumes to Corman's opus in one book ~ of, volumes 4 & by Cid Corman. 1500 poems, 850 pages edited by Bob Arnold, now available in a limited edition from Longhouse, 2015. Please link on the cover image for details & Paypal payment information ~
'Fully a book ~
An interview with Bob Arnold on Cid Corman’s ‘of’
Janina by Janine Pommy Vega
New and available now from Longhouse ~ Janine Pommy Vega Janina Visions, Tales & Lovesongs 288 pages perfect bound packed with poems and photographs. Janine's full course album of photographs, travel journals, poems, facsimile notebooks of poems, childhood photographs, and family, Beat family, plus her unfinished memoir of Jerusalem.
Walking Woman with the Tambourine is the final book of poems by Janine Pommy Vega.
"Walking Woman with the Tambourine is the final book of poems by Janine Pommy Vega. The author completed the manuscript and left it as she wished with her executor Bob Arnold … New and available now from Longhouse ~ Poetry. 144 pages. Perfect bound softcover. Please link on the image for ordering information
New! James Koller : Selected Poems 2003-2004-2005
James Koller — Selected Poems 2003-2004-2005 Longhouse 2016, 72 pages, perfect bound. Please link on the cover image for details & Paypal payment information PLUS more from Longhouse
OPENINGS by JAMES KOLLER
Selected poems 1959 ~ 1985 edited by Bob Arnold. New and available now from Longhouse ~ 72 pages . Perfect bound softcover. Please link on the cover image for details & Paypal payment information PLUS more from Longhouse
Lorine Niedecker's A Cooking Book
A Cooking Book Lorine Niedecker Longhouse 2015 72 pages, perfect bound. Please link on the image to purchase this new title from Longhouse.
Kent Johnson's "I Once Met"
Available once again now in 2022! $25 plus shippingVisit the Birdhouse for Kent's book information :
JD Whitney's Selected Poems
J.D. Whitney ~Sweeping the Broom Shorter Selected Poems 1964-2014 from ~ Longhouse 2014. 192 pages. Please link on the cover image for details & Paypal payment information PLUS more from Longhouse
New! from Longhouse ~ Island Dreams by Gerald Hausman Please link for details & Paypal payment
ISLAND DREAMS by GERALD HAUSMAN Selected Poems 1968 ~ 2015 chosen & edited by Bob Arnold New and available now from Longhouse ~ 160 pages Perfect bound softcover. Please link on the cover image for details & Paypal payment information PLUS more from Longhouse
John Bradley's "And Thereby Everything"
L O N G H O U S E is very proud to announce a new book by John Bradley in their on going series of S C O U T book publications — other titles from the series have been by Kent Johnson, Janine Pommy Vega, James Koller, Bob Arnold and Lorine Niedecker with more in the works. An opening salvo at the front of the book by Patrick Lawler should provide ample cover for what the reader should come to expect. And Thereby Everything John Bradley Longhouse 2015 First edition only issued in softcover 208 pages, perfect bound illustrated throughout by Bob Arnold with 150 photographs
Dudley Laufman : Bull & More Bull
Visit this page for information on this new Longhouse by Dudley Kaufman (2016)
Dudley Laufman's Islandian Poems
The Islandian Poems & Fables Dudley Laufman Longhouse 2015. 72 pages, perfect bound. Please link on the image to purchase this new title from Longhouse.
Duo by Bob Arnold — New from Longhouse Please link to A Longhouse Birdhouse for more information
DUO Bird Poems by BOB ARNOLD. New and available now from Longhouse ~ 92 pages. Perfect bound softcover. Please link on the cover image for details & Paypal payment information PLUS more from Longhouse
Start With The Tree by Bob Arnold
New in 2015. Building a marriage, building a family, building a small barn out in the woodlands together as a family, as a marriage, and seeing the roof go on. Over 150 color photographs
Beautiful Days by Bob Arnold
Beautiful Days ~ new poems of living and working in the Vermont woodlands and to Hurricane Irene
Yokel by Bob Arnold
[from "Yokel, A Long Green Mountain Poem" by Bob Arnold] ~ that and more at Bob Arnold webpage of books & poems: Please link on this image for more
Go West by Bob Arnold
Filled with poems and travel photography — shares one cross-country trip the couple took in the mid-1980s to California from Vermont.
"I'm In Love With You Who Is In Love With Me" by Bob Arnold
from Bob Arnold's new book "I'm In Love With You Who Is In Love With Me" ~~~~~~~40 years of love poems
"Rain Bear" by Bob Arnold
Bob Arnold's first children's book "Rain Bear" New and available now from Longhouse ~ 50 pages. Perfect bound softcover with photographs ~ & drawings by Jason Clark
"Heretic" by John Phillips from Longhouse
New from Longhouse ~ John Phillips "Heretic". Poems with collages by the author. Click on the image for more ~
Kim Dorman — "Owner"
"Owner" by Kim Dorman. Including photographs by Kim Dorman. Selected and edited by Bob Arnold. New and available now from Longhouse 2016 ~ 80 pages. Perfect bound softcover