The Carrier of Ladders


I am not a fan of W.S. Merwin’s overall body of work. I don’t think that’s a secret.

But when I walked into Capitol Hill Books on C Street SE, made my way up the book cramped stairs and into the back room where poetry is stacked on counters, shelves and two stolen library carts… I saw it. Right near the door, in one of the library carts, in fact. It hadn’t been there the other week. I would have noticed, believe.

The Carrier of Ladders.

Merwin’s 1972 masterwork. A politicized collection of eco-poetry, sprinkled with anti-war sentiment.

What can I say? It’s amazing.

It’s a reminder how, in comparison, virtually everything he’s written in the succeeding thirty-nine years is just so much c–p. Pale, shallow, bloodless, workshopped imitations of his greatest work.

But this here is the stuff. It’s why people will bother reading him in a quarter century. His latest ruminations will be forgotten, but his early elegiac, passionate poems, bursting beyond the limits of his free verse forms to achieve something meaningful and memorable, will be remembered.

I wish I’d had a copy of this when I got his autograph at the Library of Congress.

Nirvana


While making my daily commute, Smells Like Teen Spirit came on the radio and I began thinking about those days when it first came out.

I hung out with skaters and punk fans, so I wasn’t unaware, by any means, of the music that lay beyond and beneath the songs playing on the radio – Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, Circle Jerks, Black Flag – but none of us were too jaded to be struck by that song and by the Nirvana in general.

Maybe it was like the first time someone heard MC5, the Sex Pistols or the Clash. I don’t know. But certainly, Smells Like Teen Spirit was of that moment.

It was representative of the break from postmodernism and the rejection of a postmodern irony that evolved into kitsch. There is, yes, irony, in the title, but mostly the song seems to rage against disaffected irony.

Un cri de coeur. Whatever. We liked it. I affected us.

But what perhaps I didn’t fully appreciate as a 16 year old in suburban Florida was the quality of the songwriting.

I can’t sing, I can’t play, so I am just talking about the lyrics. But this is a rare song that, I would argue, actually works on the page, as well (only Leonard Cohen consistently writes songs that could also be good poems).

To me that is the real test of a poem, and perhaps at the root of my discomfort with the slam culture. When you take away the performance, what value (or is value the wrong word? should we assign something as capitalist and market oriented as ‘value’ to poetry and art?) remains in the words themselves?

Listening to the (granted, sometimes mostly unintelligible) lyrics, I could see them put down on the page and having value (that word again) as poem, stripped of the music and stripped of the connotations now associated with it and with singer/songwriter Kurt Kobain’s death/suicide/martyrdom (I use the word ‘martyrdom’ not to make any sort of judgement either way on his suicide nor on what ‘killed him’ but as a statement on its meaning for us – he was a sort of liberator and the early death of a liberator is always a sort of martyrdom).

Jeb Bush and Republican Presidential Primary


Jeb recently said he liked Paul Ryan as a potential presidential candidate. I said that was just so much horse hooey.

But I am curious as to what he’ll do over the coming months.

I suspect he’ll keep on doing things to muddy the waters – which is what the whole Ryan thing was all about.

Rick Perry jumps into the race, threatens to turn things into a simple, two man affair (Perry v Mitt) that could resolve itself not long after South Carolina with a de facto nominee in hand.

So what does Jeb do? Why he muddies the waters, of course. Uses his big name clout in Republican circles to suggest that no one currently running is really the right man for the job, neither politically nor ideologically. And he tosses out the name of another savior. If Ryan had jumped into the race, I have no doubt that Jeb would have been touting New Jersey Chris Christie as the kind of candidate the GOP needs. And if Christie were in the race he’d say… well, you get my point.

Jeb Bush Pushing Ryan To Run For President


Apparently, Jeb is advocating on behalf of Congressman Paul “Let’s Privatize Medicare” Ryan (R-Privatizing Medicare) as a 2012 candidate for President.

That can mean only one thing: Paul Ryan would have no chance against Barack Obama. None at all.

‘Cause if you think that Jeb would, this early in the game (eventually, he’ll have to offer support to the nominee), actually support the candidacy of someone he thinks could win in 2012 – thereby making it nearly impossible for Jeb himself to run in 2016 – well, then you’re just plain crazy.

No, I take that back. You’re not crazy. You’re a genius. I think you’re so smart, that you are one of the few people who could appreciate this unique opportunity to make millions helping the deposed Prince of Nigeria move his fortune in oil money to America…

Library Book Sale


While wandering Eastern Market with my father on Saturday, I saw a sign taped to a trash can that spoke of a book sale at the Southeast Library, just across Pennsylvania Avenue.

When I was twelve years old, my mother took me to a sale at the Dunedin Library where we found a lovely three volume history of mathematics. It was actually a huge collection of essays by various folks, rather than a chronological history by a single author. Unfortunately, every other sale at that particular library was nothing but disappointing.

Fortunately, this one did not disappoint.

For the low, low price of four dollars, I picked up copies of the following:

Hestia, by C.J. Cherryh
Childhood’s End, by Arthur C. Clarke
Possession, by A.S. Byatt
Middlemarch, by George Eliot
Triton, by Samuel R. Delany
Spy in the House of Love, by Anais Nin

Middlemarch, in particular, excited me. For some reason, I had lately been struck by the desire to read it. Many years ago, I went through a nineteenth century novel phase, but someone, George Eliot’s oeuvre had escaped my attention (partly because I was a boy, so was much attracted to Dumas’ tales of derring do and partly because I was a moody boy, so also much attracted to Dostoyevsky’s architectural novels of philosophy leavened with hearty helpings of despair and Christian proto-existentialism).

And a funny little story about Anais Nin. My first introduction to her actual writing (I knew of her as person because of her association with Henry Miller) was from MTV. Yes. MTV.

In the early nineties, they used have actors and actresses read brief segments of famous novels and very alluring literary environments. Sherilyn Fenn read a brief segment from Nin’s Delta of Venus and I also remember Aidan Quinn reading from The Metamorphosis. Back when it seemed like MTV might actually be something cool and occasionally constructive. Sigh. Not anymore. Or maybe I’m just growing old.

 

Why Isn’t Hasner Doing Better?


The last poll I saw had Adam Hasner polling at only 6% – half of what George LeMieux was pulling and behind a couple of candidates who might be charitably described as ‘some dudes.’ Granted, the election is a long ways away, we are seeing huge undecideds, and it seems unlikely to me that the folks with a real chance to win the nomination come next year will include ‘some dudes.’ Another caveat, however, would be that ‘some dude’ could transform into a serious challenger with a well-funded, professionally run campaign.

Hasner’s camp tried to spin his falling behind (ret.) Col. Mike McCallister as having been beaten to the punch in terms of attending some Tea Party meetings, but that is pure b.s.

Their campaign just isn’t gaining traction and I suspect that is almost as much a mystery to them as it is to me.

When Mike Haridopolos dropped out, this left a huge opening for, well, everyone else.

I thought that LeMieux would benefit from being able to secure many of Haridopolos’ donors (especially since Haridopolos clearly hates Hasner and could probably be convinced to work his rolodex a little on behalf of someone he thought could beat him) and from not having to share with Haridopolos that percentage of the primary electorate who are not hard care Tea Partiers.

But it also gave Hasner a chance to really establish himself as the conservative, Tea Party, anti-establishment candidate in the race. It didn’t matter that none of it was true. It wasn’t true when Marco Rubio said it either and he still won, despite having been more old school, back slapping, favor trading establishment that Hasner ever was in his wildest dreams.

However, while LeMieux has done a half decent job of getting himself positioned, Hasner, after an initial media bump, is getting close to looking like he’s flailing a little.

If he can’t put together a big showing in an upcoming campaign finance report, when do we start asking if he’s just not going to make it?

Leaving aside what I personally think of Hasner (which is very, very little) – why do you think it hasn’t happened for him?

Freddy Adu Coming Back To America?


One of the rumors flying around is that Chivas USA will grab Freddy Adu before the European transfer window closes in August.

He’s currently ‘playing’ on for the Portuguese powerhouse Benfica. I say ‘playing’ because he’s hardly played for them at all. He’s ridden the pine and been loaned out, but he’s hardly played for them at all over the last few years. The only reason any is really talking about him again is because he went on loan to a second division team in the Turkish league, put in the work and made a real difference for them. Then, he got called up to play for the national team in the Gold Cup and when he was finally given his favored trequartista role, excelled in holding onto possession and played some excellent passes to open opposing defenses.

But he still looks unlikely to get any playing time for Benfica.

If he came back to Major Leage Soccer, Chivas would be my first choice for him. My hometown team right now is DC United, but his time here was only moderately successful and think maybe we should say that the moment for him here has come and gone.

I also lived in Los Angeles and Chivas USA was my team during that time (I’m not just a leaf on the wind – my true team were the Tampa Mutiny, but they are gone forever, I fear; everyone else is just a substitute for my true love). They could use some sparkle and pizzazz. If Adu were really given a chance to shine and given a central playmaking role with little defensive responsibilities (either in a 4-2-3-1 or at the top of a midfield diamond), then he could really make that team – known more for hard work and grit, than flair – shine.

That said, I’d like to see him stay in Europe. Portugal would, in theory, be perfect for him: a league heavy on offense with frankly weak and not very physical defenses. But that train has left the station. A mid-table team in the Netherlands looking for a possession oriented quarterback or even a team in France’s second division would suit him to a tee, but the transfer window is almost over and getting on the field for Chivas USA is better than sitting on a bench for Benfica.

Now That’s No Longer Running for the Senate, Mike Haridopolos Aiming for Revenge on His Rivals


There’s a new word being used to describe Florida Senate President Mike Haridopolos since he gave up his floundering campaign for the U.S. Senate: relaxed.

Obviously, this is intended as a reflection of his demeanor, rather than his hair, which still looks like it was CGI’d on from a late eighties movie about surfers and valley girls.

The Orlando Sentinel wrote that he ‘isn’t afraid of much these days.’

But what’s more interesting is what’s broadly hinted at in-between the lines.

Three people are primarily responsible for the non-stop disaster that was his campaign for the U.S. Senate.

Number one was Haridopolos himself. If you haven’t been following this race, I won’t give anything away, but will simply encourage you to google the terms ‘Haridopolos’ and ‘book deal.’ Trust me. You won’t regret it.

The next person is Florida House Speaker Dean Cannon. Ostensibly, Cannon was a supporter of his Senate counterpart, having endorsed him early. But in practice, the Speaker made Mike’s life a living hell. Right at the very end of the legislative session, when most of the work is done and when reporters are paying the most attention, Cannon brought things to crashing halt, refusing to move on items and sending to the Senate right wing legislation that had no chance of passing the more moderate chamber.

The result was that Haridopolos, instead of looking like the big man in Florida and a strong leader, looked like a hapless loser and also saw his reputation as a true conservative damaged by his failure to pass these late arriving bills through the chamber he supposedly controlled.

All of this seemed designed to benefit the third most responsible party, his rival for the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate former state house majority leader Adam Hasner.

Hasner is out office and was able to throw Tea Party-esque bombs without fear of actually having to do anything.

Many political watchers saw this all go down feeling pretty certain that Cannon was setting Haridopolos up on behalf of Hasner.

So now that he is out of the race of for the U.S. Senate, what is Haridopolos doing?

He’s making Cannon look bad by showing up at one of the contentious redistricting meetings going on across the state – after Cannon stayed away for fear of being booed and hissed at.

He’s lamenting the absence of principled conservative in the Senate race and name dropping folks like Jeb Bush and Connie Mack IV. Since Hasner had been trying to portray himself as that very figure, Haridopolos’ statements are clearly aimed at denigrating his erstwhile rival.

Finally, Haridopolos is making it clear that he’s not going to run for Congress or any other office in 2012.

Keep in mind, he desperately wants to hold higher office.

My guess – he’s decided that he wants revenge more. So he’s going to spend next year’s legislative session trying to trip up Cannon and turn the whole session into a nonstop cluserf–k just out of spite.

Should be fun.

Were Floridians Kidding Themselves About Fair Districts?


In 2010, Florida voters overwhelming passed a ballot initiative amending the state constitution to end partisan gerrymandering in the drawing of new legislative districts.

No secret that the Republican leadership in Tallahassee wasn’t going to take this lying down. Will of the voters or no, Constitution or no, they weren’t going to simply roll over while their absolute rule over Florida was marginally weakened.

But most Floridians probably didn’t think that Governor Rick Scott, Senate President Mike ‘the Appeaser’ Haridopolos, and Dean ‘Loose’ Cannon would agree to use those same voters’ tax dollars to fight the constitutional amendment they passed.

Nor did they think that, during the voters’ one chance to have their voice heard by legislators in the redistricting process, that a legislator would ‘Like’ a plastic surgery clinic from his iPad instead of paying attention to what Floridians had to say or that legislators would ignore speakers who spoke in favor of  a obeying the Constitution and give extra time to speakers who supported them.

It seems like even the lowest of Florida’s expectations won’t be met the current ‘leadership.’

Inkwood Books Survives, Thrives


Tampa’s own Inkwood Books gets some well deserved love from the local, ABC News affiliate.