Advice For Your Next Poetry Slam


Mid Week Staff Meeting – Haley Barbour Not Completely Wrong About Everything


Haley Barbour makes one of the few decent decisions of his life and names Natasha Trethewey Mississippi’s Poet Laureate.

Tuesday Morning Staff Meeting – Beware Of Poets And Online Retailers


Amazon is the new Wal-Mart.

I’ve really got to read that new Nietzsche book (but definitely don’t buy it from Amazon).

I still don’t recommend the lifestyle, no matter how good their poetry.

Newt Is Not Going To Win Florida Tomorrow


That’s really all I have to say. He’s not going to win. Even a last minute surge won’t help him because of Romney’s advantage in early votes. If you’ve been paying attention, this really shouldn’t be new.

There’s no question that Republican Party tends to be more hierarchical in practice than the Democratic Party. That’s not a necessarily a criticism nor is it a statement of across the board, in every circumstance fact. It’s a tendency or a trend, if you will.

Well, the hierarchy has (somewhat unenthusiastically) settled Romney as ‘next in line.’ There have been some bumps in the road and no one really likes Romney all that much, but that’s how it is people.

Romney was chosen a while back and things have almost finished falling into place for him.

Please return to your daily lives.

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – Luther Was An Early Adopter


Martin Luther, zealot, reformer, revolutionary… blogger?

The e-book is never finished.

What is neo-chartalism? Funny you should ask…

Play ‘Greek Mythology Punishments’ for fun and edification (but not for the graphics).

Sunday Book Review – Is There No More Bad Poetry?


Seth Abramson has nothing but nice things to say about every poet he reads.

Ralph Fiennes reads amateur erotic fiction in his pajamas. Not kidding.

Who here actually though Connie Mack IV was running his accomplishments?

Mad Love


In case you were worried, I am not writing about some future rom-com starring the latest pretty blonde actress, but rather Andre Breton’s meditation on… well, what?

On Jacqueline Lamba, a painter and also Breton’s second wife?

Sort of. But to my mind, not really.

Certainly, she is an object of desire. And that’s the real focus, desire and desire’s object. And sometimes, the fading of desire for the object.

Lamba is less clearly to focus here in Mad Love than the titular Nadja was the focus of Nadja. Mad Love is also much more autobiographical. In fact, it’s not a novel in the way Nadja is. It’s poetry, prose, prose poetry, and a running commentary on desire.

Certainly, it picks up where Nadja left off, with the convulsive nature of beauty.

But Lamba doesn’t even appear until a third of the way into the book. Before that, boding poorly for the couple’s future, Breton is walking with the sculptor Alberto Giacometti and suddenly Breton must purchase this spoon he finds in a market, but then later admits to losing most of his interest in it.

A short read and easier to understand than Nadja and more easily enjoyable to read than a full collection of his poetry, it’s a great introduction to the writing of the leading surrealist.

The forms range from the dreamy, gauzy prose of Nadja to more manifesto-like writing (he did write the two manifestos of the surrealist movement, after all) to actual poems inserted whole cloth within the book.

This bouncing between forms goes to the point of how this book is not about Lamba in the same way that Nadja was about Nadja. If I were to say what it is about, I would come down on the side of it being an aesthetic manifesto. Breton was always the most dogmatic of the surrealists, expelling from the movement those he felt betrayed the values and politics (surrealism was closely tied to the pro-communist left) set down (and generally set down by Breton), so it is hardly a surprise  that this work would so often take that form.

Weekend Reading – Poetry For Children


Top five list of poetry for children.

Another Brick In The Wall, Another Neighborhood Bookstore Gone


I used to live in Midtown Atlanta, right across the street from Piedmont Park. I lived in a crumbling, narrow building filled with studio apartments. I rented mine for $525 a month. For that money, I got a parking spot and a place to live within walking distance to my work (the Democratic Party of Georgia) and to Outwrite Books.

As you have perhaps guessed, Outwrite Books was an LGBT bookstore and coffeehouse, but so what? I could buy poetry by Adrienne Rich and Mark Strand, fiction by Oscar Wilde and Marcel Proust, and philosophy by Judith Butler. And having it so close by was a blessing and cemented by desire to always live in walkable, literate, and cultured communities.

As of today, Outwrite Books is closed for good.

Dungeons & Dragons Reboot


Dungeons & Dragons in the New York Times

I’m basically unaware of much of contentiousness the article talks about, mainly because there was a twenty-year gap, more or less, between last playing the game and joining a campaign in 2010. I’m just happy that I can remember some things from the now ancient days of the first edition of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons.

But, to date myself, I will admit to remembering when AD&D issued its second edition rules. I will also admit to having greater affection for the 1st edition rules. I will further admit that I like the relative fluidity of the current D&D rules (Advanced Dungeons & Dragons doesn’t exist anymore; the ‘advanced’ literally referred to the greater number of rules governing more situations, as opposed to the greater emphasis on ad hoc improvisation in D&D), though I am still getting used to the greater tactical emphasis implied by playing out fights on a grid with small figurines indication the location of each actor in the fight (AD&D fights were somewhat more likely to be simply sounded out verbally than played out in this manner, or maybe I was just doing it wrong before).

This article also makes me think that it’s no surprise that our group is made of men in the 30s and 40s. We predated the dominance of video games. Oh, I had video games as a kid, but they weren’t the huge, all encompassing part of culture that they seem to be now.

Of course, I was warned off joining a group by a friend who tried to take the game again after a similarly lengthy absence and said, Don’t do it! Everybody was a teenage! I felt so old and creepy!

It seems that it is my band of intrepid, armchair adventurers who are typical and his that are the atypical ones. Breathing a sigh of relief.

P.S. – The company that now owns D&D is preparing to re-release the original, 1st edition rules from 1974 (the year I was born, actually) in honor of Gary Gygax.