Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Please Help


I'm 31 and have Cystic Fibrosis. I’d like to keep writing poems past the age of 37. The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation needs you to ask your Congressional Representatives to co-sponsor the Improving Access to Clinical Trials Bill so people with CF don’t have to choose between participating in clinical trials and keeping their health care coverage: http://tinyurl.com/mzyvrm.

It takes less than 2 minutes to fill out the information fields, and with only 50 more representatives needed to co-sponsor the bill, every delivered form letter helps. Please pass on this link to as many people as possible.

Monday, July 20, 2009

The Captain versus David Berman


A review of Lisa Jarnot's Night Scenes.

Read CUE.

A piece by Aram Saroyan.

The new Octopus.

Banksy.

The new H_NGM_N.

And this from Publisher's Weekly
:

Fort Red Border
Kiki Petrosino. Sarabande (Consortium, dist.), $14.95 (104p) ISBN 978-1-932511-74-1

The sharp, witty sequences in Petrosino's debut reveal a poet who has more fun with language, and who shows more range, than most. The titular series, whose moniker uses the same letters as “Robert Redford,” describes an imaginary affair with him, highlighting their differences in taste, in status, in race: “ I gather my afro into a plain elastic hoop... Redford's face goes coltish & aware.” Petrosino has more to say about lust and romance and social class than Redford's celebrity. Other series put more pressure on the sounds of words, in the propulsive sentences of her prose poems or in irregularly rhymed short lines: “The field saint in my skin/ who rakes:// I balm. I slake.” Ten poems all called “Valentine” include kiss-offs, come-hithers and advice: “Ordering food/ is really ordering some of the food... But:/ You can't order some of the love.” Drawing on popular culture, invoking sex often and flirting, or trying to shock, Petrosino rings some of the same bells as Frederick Seidel. But she repeats herself a lot less often, and her jokes are her own generation's: “Who would win, Jack White or Jack Black?” Her poems should attract anybody who wants to find out. (Aug.)

Get her book here.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Now Available from Cannibal Books:
Autumn it gestures.
by Thomas Hummel
32 pages, hand-sewn
$8

Sunday, July 05, 2009

Boot Cut


The Vanity Fair piece on Sarah Palin.

Whitman's selling Levi's

A profile of Jeff Tweedy. A review of the new Wilco album.

Harold Bloom on Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian.

A new chapbook by Olena Kalytiak Davis.

Scantily Clad Press has released several new chaps.

If you have a chapbook for review, send it here:

The Chapbook Review
92-37 55th Avenue
Elmhurst, NY 11373

Oh yea, and the new CUE is now online.