Saturday, May 11, 2013

Born Eighty-Three Years Ago Today



Stanley Elkin, one of my Deserted Island Five. These are the two excerpts I always use for his birthday, the first capturing one of Elkins's great themes, the second simply the most beautiful, heartbreaking paragraph, as stand alone but especially within the context of the novel, I've ever read:

Ben, everything there is is against your being here! Think of get-togethers, family stuff, golden anniversaries in rented halls, fire regulation celebrated more in the breach than the observance, the baked Alaska up in flames, everybody wiped out - all the cousins in from coasts, wiped out. Rare, yes - who says not - certainly rare, but it could happen, has happened. And once is enough if you've been invited. All the people picked off by plagues and folks eaten by earthquakes and drowned in the tidal waves, all the people already dead that you might have been or who might have begat the girl who married the guy who fathered the fellow who might have been your ancestor - all the showers of sperm that dried on his Kleenex or spilled on his sheets or fell on the ground or dirtied his hands when he jerked off or came in his p.j.'s or no, maybe he was actually screwing and the spermatozoon had your number written on it and it was lost at sea because that's what happens, you see - there's low motility and torn tails - that's what happens to all but a handful out of all the googols and gallons of come, more sperm finally than even the grains of sand I was talking about, more even than the degrees. Well - am I making the picture for you? Am I connecting the dots? Ben, Ben, Nick the Greek wouldn't lay a fart against a trillion bucks that you'd ever make it to this planet!
   
- The Franchiser


And it was wondrous in the negligible humidity how they gawked across the perfect air, how, stunned by the helices and all the parabolas of grace, they gasped, they sighed, these short-timers who even at their age could not buy insurance at any price, not even if the premiums were paid in the rare rich elements, in pearls clustered as grapes, in buckets of bullion, in trellises of diamonds, how, glad to be alive, they stared at each other and caught their breath.

 - Magic Kingdom 


Here's what I wrote below those two excerpts last year:

When I knew beyond doubt that how I read had undeniably changed was rereading George Mills last fall when reading Elkin changed from WOW! to merely wow.  George Mills was never my favorite (though it was Elkin's) - the two novels the two above quotes I always use are - but I had never found myself wishing for the end of an Elkin novel, and I've read them all multiple times for pleasure then thesis then pleasure again. This idiot machine I'm typing this sentence into no doubt is a factor: self-publishing changes everything, the idea that somebody may be reading me makes me write for them rather than read for myself, though, while a substantial proportion, that is more contributory than causative, and in any case is being reconsidered. I've never read fiction more poorly, I've never read non-fiction willingly and now find it almost onerous, I've never read poetry better. I never would have guessed I'd put down a novel because I was thinking of someone's poetry after a lifetime of putting down poetry because I was thinking of a novel. I think about this constantly, am working it out, will report back here no later than the anniversary of Elkin's 83rd birthday, or sooner, or not.

I don't flatter myself anyone remembers my promise much less has tuned in to see if I kept it. I can say I'm still working on it, constantly, I am reading fiction more poorly than last year, I'm reading poetry better than last year, I'm as happy with what I create, here - yes, fuck me (and fuck this blog) - and elsewhere (occasionally made available here and there, the majority not) - as I can remember.

In any case, when I was writing the thesis Wonder Books in Frederick had a stack of fifteen Magic Kingdoms on a remainder table at a dollar apiece, I've still a few, I think everyone who reads this blog and wants one has got one, but if you want one email me.

Friday, May 10, 2013

The Privilege of Not Knowing If He Was Kind or Unkind as You Chamber Another, Waiting for Someone to Come for His Shoes



  
Kensington to Frederick to Hagerstown to Hancock to Cumberland to Morgantown to Washington (where I'm guessing the reconstruction of the I-70/I-79 interchange is a total clusterfuck) to Wheeling to Zanesville to Bamgier tomorrow, meaning today, Bamgier to Zanesville to Wheeling to Washington (where hopefully PDOT game it's employees Saturday off) to Morgantown to Cumberland to Hancock to Hagerstown to Frederick to Kensington Saturday (meaning Saturday), I said at Thursday Night Pint - no S for any of us, this was a drive-by, we're all busy. On the television Rafael Soriano got the third out top of the ninth for a Nats' save and pulled out his tucked in shirt, all the other Nationals untucked their shirts, and fat lobbyists in the expense account seats untucked their shirts. Can you explain this, asked K. Yes, I said. Don't, ordered L. Did you hear about the Nationals changing their rain-ticket policy on the fly Wednesday? K asked me, she and partner 10-Game season ticket holders, I've a standing invitation. Supposedly, when the Nationals became aware the Wednesday game v Detroit had a better-than-probably chance of a rain-out the Nationals changed their rain-ticket policy from any available seat the rest of the season to today's (meaning yesterday's) make-up game. L said, I read that Dan Snyder defiantly claimed yesterday (meaning Wednesday) that the Redskins will NEVER, in all caps, change their name. Have the Caps choked yet? I asked K. Fuck you, I was told. Google ads, I said, have toggled from promoting free beer night for random strangers at a United game to telling me I'm needed THIS SUNDAY for the Kansas City game. The Kansas City game is a week from this Sunday. So yes, fuck me, it used to be charmingly self-congratulatory to be a zealot not only for the rinkydinkiest operation in town but because it was the rinkydinkiest operation in town. That's gone.











ROUND

James Hoch

Perhaps you covet something of
          its emptiness, its uselessness

in matters of yearning or feeling
          another's yearn, that it can't

know a damn thing, yet damns
          everything it touches: the water

it gathers along its passage,
          the air it pushes through,

swallow-like. It is no bird,
          though you envy the song

you hear only after it's gone,
          even if it sings through paper,

a goat, the neck of a man
          wearing a scarf that tufts just as

the rest of him flies out of
          his shoes and collapses in dirt.

Or, how it is like the dirt
          receiving him, the privilege

or not knowing if he was
          kind of unkind, as you

chamber another, waiting for
          someone to come for his shoes.


Thursday, May 9, 2013

They Asked Him Why He Had So Many Books About Blindness and When His Attorney Arrived the Man in Question Said That He Did Not Know Why He Had So Many Books About Blindness, or: United 0, Houston 4



I didn't go. Could have, didn't, chose to get necessary things done so I can thoroughly enjoy my trip tomorrow and Saturday to bring Planet home for the summer. Easy choice. Watched on TV, United sucks and, here's the thing, other than Benny (and your mileage on Benny may vary from mine), the players don't give a fuck - to be fair they gave a fuck in the second half until they conceded the third goal - the front office doesn't give a fuck, ownership certainly doesn't give a fuck, why should I give a fuck? Oh, next home game another FIVE ON A SUNDAY AFTERNOON GAME! Fuck you. Whether United had no choice to schedule FIVE ON A SUNDAY AFTERNOON GAME! because of network television contracts or not, here's a valid Fuck You, schedule a weeknight game at SEVEN FUCKING O'CLOCK, clearly ownership hasn't been stuck in weekday DC rush hour traffic during thunderstorms, but FUCK YOU! and FUCK YOU! for all the other seven o'clock games that steal a half hour of my weekend daylight. Oh, check my record off your tickets scans since that technology was invented, my attendance record, you give some fuckers who aren't season ticket holders free beer for the price of tickets less than I pay? Fuck you. All United is waiting for is a stadium yay or nay in DC, if it doesn't get one United will leave, if it does get one LOUD SIDE will be abolished, they don't give a fuck about the product - or their loyalest fans - until then, the fucks.





On the bright side, Thomas Pynchon was born 76 years ago today yesterday: thanks to Hamster for correcting me, this is what happens when I take a blegday off. Fine metaphors abound.

  • Proverbs for Paranoids:
  1. You may never get to touch the Master, but you can tickle his creatures.
  2. The innocence of the creatures is in inverse proportion to the immorality of the Master.
  3. If they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about answers.
  4. You hide, they seek.
  5. Paranoids are not paranoid because they're paranoid, but because they keep putting themselves, fucking idiots, deliberately into paranoid situations.
Gravity's Rainbow, above and below.

     There is no graceful way out of this now. Darlene has brought a couple-three more candy jars down off the shelf, and now he goes plunging, like a journey to the center of some small, hostile planet, into an enormous bonbon chomp through the mantle of chocolate to a strongly eucalyptus -flavored fondant, finally into a core of some very tough grape gum arabic. He fingernails a piece of this out from between his teeth and stares at it for awhile. It is purple in color.
     "Now you're getting the idea!" Mrs Quoad waving at him a marbled conglomerate of ginger root, butterscotch, and aniseed, "you see, you also have to enjoy the way it looks. Why are Americans so impulsive?"
     "Oh try this," hollers Darlene, clutching her throat and swaying against him.
     "Gosh it must really be something, " doubtfully taking this nasty-looking brownish novelty, an exact quarter-scale replica of a Mills-type hand grenade, lever, pin and everything, one of a series of patriotic candies put out before sugar was quite so scarce, also including, he notices, peering into the jar, a .455 Webley cartridge of green and pink striped taffy, a six-ton earthquake bomb of some silver-flecked blue gelatin, and a licorice bazooka.`
     "Go on then," Darlene actually taking his hand with the candy in it and trying to shove it into his mouth.
     "Was just, you know, looking at it, the way Mrs. Quoad suggested."
     "And no fair squeezing it, Tyrone."
     Under its tamarind glaze, the Mills bomb turns out to be a luscious pepsin-flavored nougat, chock-full of tangy candied cubeb berries, and a chewy camphor-gum center. It is unspeakably awful. Slothrop's head begins to reel with camphor fume, his eyes are running, his tongue's a hopeless holocaust. Cubeb? He used to smoke that stuff. "Poisoned . . ." he is able to croak.
     "Show a little backbone, " advises Mrs. Quoad.
     "Yes, " Darlene through tongue-softened sheets of caramel, "dont you know there's a war going on? Here now love, open your mouth."
     Through the tears he can't see it too well, but he can hear Mrs. Quoad across the table going "Yum, yum, yum," and Darlene giggling. It is enormous and soft, like a marshmallow, but somehow - unless something is now seriously wrong with his brain - it tastes like gin. "Wha's is" he inquires thickly.
     "A gin marshmellow," sez Mrs. Quoad.
     "Awww . . . ."
     "Oh that's nothing, have one of these- " his teeth, in some perverse reflex, crunching now through a hard sour gooseberry shell into a wet spurting unpleasantness of, he hopes it's tapioca, a little glutinous chunks of something all saturated with powered cloves.
     "More tea?" Darlene suggests. Slothrop is coughing violently, having inhaled some of that clove filling.
     "Nasty cough," Mrs. Quoad offering a tin of that least believable of English coughdrops, the      Meggezone. "Darlene, the tea is lovely, I can feel my scurvy going away, really I can."
The Meggezone is like being belted in the head with a Swiss Alp. Menthol icicles immediately begin growing from the roof of Slothrop's mouth. It hurts his teeth too much to breathe, even through his nose, even, necktie loosened, with his nose down inside the neck of his olive drab T-shirt. Benzoin vapers seep into his brain. His head floats in a halo of ice.
     Even an hour later, the Meggezone still lingers, a mint ghost in the air. Slothrop lies with Darlene, the Disgusting English Candy Drill a thing of the past, his groin now against her warm bottom. The one candy he did not get to taste - one Mrs. Quaod withheld - was the Fire of Paradise, that famous confection of high price and protean taste - "salted plum" to one, "artificial cherry" to another . . ."sugared violets" . . "Worchestershire sauce" . . . "spiced treacle" . . any number of like descriptions, positive, terse - never exceeding two words in length - resembling the descriptions of poison and debilitating gases found in training manuals, "sweet and sour eggplant" being perhaps the lengthiest to date. The Fire of Paradise today is operationally extinct, and in 1945 can hardly be found: certainly nowhere among the sunlit shops and polished windows of Bond Street or waste Belgravia. But every now and then one will surface, in places which deal usually other merchandise than sweets: at rest, back inside big glass jars clouded by the days, along with objects like itself , sometimes only one candy to a whole jar, nearly hidden in the ambient tourmalines in German gold, carved ebony finger finger-stalls from the last century, pegs, valve-pieces, threaded hardware from obscure musical instruments, electronic components of resin and copper that the War, in its glutton, ever-nibbling intake, has not yet found and licked back into its darkness . . . . Places where the motors never come close enough to be loud, and there are trees outside along the street. Inner rooms and older faces developing under light falling through a skylight, yellower, later in the year
.






  • The economics of over-ripe capitalism.
  • Today in Motherfucking Obama.
  • Politics is the shit-end of life.
  • Cause and effect.
  • The sorrow and the pity.
  • Things you might have missed.
  • I am reminded of when I worked for a Christian Scientist in his hippie health food store in my early twenties.
  • So, everyone seemed suitably unimpressed - there was one Kind word - by my rendering this shitty blog's title through an upside-down and backwards text generator, though I did enjoy the day off, I want to thank David Bowie for posting his new video on the day I asked him.
  • Also too, Newest Gag - a new site added everyday through May to a blogroll literally to the left of this sentence as I type it - continues apace, latest two music blogs, check them out, send me suggestions of people I should be reading who actually still post in Ghosttown, Blegsylvania now that the Blog Days of Summer are here.
  • Ishiguro interview from 2008, reminded by this guy.
  • Silliman's incredibly generous litlinks.
  • Rebumping this review of Middle C.
  • Actually, most people didn't even notice.
  • The standard of literature.
  • Coetzee, for those of you who do.
  • I don't know is it was serendipity or if Edwin did this for Pynchon's birthday, but yesterday he tweeted to his 2009 review of Inherent Vice
  • Slint. I never quite got the disease, but I've buds who did and do.
  • Holyfuck! there was a Noise and Syrup Tuesday night.
  • A Nurse w/Wounds primer.
  • On the new Wolf Eyes.
  • So, guess what I've been listening to the past couple of days, starting Tuesday night, it's only serendipity (and as I texted a beloved last night, sometime serendipity fucking sucks) I dialed up Kiss the Anus of a Black Cat on the iPod the two nights before a tirade.






THE MAN IN QUESTION

Daniel Borzutsky

They dropped the charges of homicide, filed new charges of
terrorism, dropped the charges of terrorism, filed
new charges of public nudity, dropped the charges of
public nudity, filed new charges of lewd and
lascivious behavior. A spokesman for the FBI
said they found him on the hood of an SUV in a part
of town known as the “Fruit Loop”. His penis was in another
man’s mouth and in the front seat were vials containing a rare
strand of bacteria known to cause blindness in rats. They
dropped the charges of public nudity and filed new
charged of sodomy. A spokesman for the police department
said they found him with his pants down and it appeared
that his penis was in another man’s anus. But since they
could not prove to what degree his penis had penetrated
the other man’s anus they dropped the charges of sodomy
and filed new charges of assault and battery. A
spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security said
that he assaulted a worker from the Department of
Public Health who used a Q-tip to extract from inside of
his urethra a rare strand of bacteria capable
of causing pneumonia in chickens. He was placed in
solitary confinement and a spokesman for the
Department of Corrections suggested that he was a
serious threat to the community. They examined the
strand of bacteria found in his urethra but since they
did not properly store the bacteria in the
appropriate container with the appropriate seals and
signatures they could not charge him with intent to commit crimes
against humanity. They dropped the charges of intent to
commit crimes against humanity and filed new charges
of larceny. They said he had stolen the rare strand of
bacteria from his employer and that he had done so
with the deliberate and malicious intent to harm as
many civilians as possible. They tried to verify
for whom he had worked during the given time period but since
they could not verify the name or location of his
employer they dropped the charges of larceny and filed new
charges of tax fraud. When they discovered he was privately
employed, they dropped the charges of tax fraud and filed new
charges of theft with an unregistered weapon. A
grocery store in his neighborhood had recently been robbed
and the cashier said that the thief had carried the same model
of weapon that the man in question kept beneath his bed in
case of emergencies. They dropped the charges of theft with an
unregistered weapon when they discovered the cashier was
partially blind and that the weapon the man in question kept
beneath his bed in case of emergencies had been
properly purchased and registered. When they found on his
bookshelves several works of fiction with blind characters,
including King Lear, Oedipus Rex, Endgame, and Blindness by
José Saramago, they accused him of conspiring
to use the rare strand of bacteria to blind not only
the grocer but the seven other blind residents of his
neighborhood, each of whom had had perfectly good eyesight
until he came to town. They asked him why he had so many
books about blindness, but he refused to answer the question.
They asked him why he had so many books about blindness and
when his attorney arrived the man in question said that he
did not know why he had so many books about blindness. They
asked his friends and family why he had so many books
about blindness. No one knew why he had so many books
about blindness and they accused him in the press of
anti-social behavior. When his neighbors testified that
the man in question enjoyed society as much as he
enjoyed a quiet night at home, they dropped the charges of
anti-social behavior. They dropped the charges of
anti-social behavior and filed new charges of
jaywalking. An undercover police officer filmed him
with a video camera as he illegally crossed
the street. At the advice of his attorney, he pleaded
guilty to the charges of jaywalking. He agreed to pay
the fine.



Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Keep in Mind How Callow I Was and How Sarcastic Walking Down That Dirt Road With No Room in Any of My Outside Pockets for Your Left-Over Straw or the Gold Leaf You Gave Me for High Achievement in the Art of Ridicule




A guide to Xenakis. Like I need an excuse to play Xenakis. This is news how? Our drone delusion. Words of peace, acts of war. On crying wolf. Everything you've been told about radicalization is wrong. How class works. How banks get away with it. Boston Bombing: Made in the USA. Imperial gigantism. What's new in square boats? Hey, bud Dave of Zencomix needs, and has earned, your vote. Tyranny of the bubble. The downside of impartial journalism. Silience. The Deity. From the annals of abused participles. Coetzee, for those of you who do. Gaddis, for those of you who do. Philosophical theories as simple graphics. Three Gerald Stern poems below out of most recent copy of American Poetry Review, a magazine I've read for thirty years, haven't entered - as in paid an entrance fee - any of the scam poetry contests lining the pages whose advertising costs put a copy of American Poetry Review in my hands every other month. Ashbery, Cocteau, Motherwell. Hey, those of you who did, thanks for the Kind. Failure: A Post-Conceptual Poem. This is exactly how I hear The Beatles and why I never need listen to them ever again. I'm proselytizing WFMU.org to Dr Z, I'm hectoring, once you've a favorite show listen live if at all possible, listening to archives beats not listening but loses the good-panging loss of freedom of trusting the DJ in the moment, of not having the power to click past a song you don't like. Cat of Eternity. Root for Hull, not fucking Liverpool. Serendipitous to Hamster's song requests, fucking shoot me. ⊥µʁөө µo∩ʁƨ oʈ ɓoʁɓөo∩ƨꞁʎ ƨɐq w∩ƨ!ⅽ ʈoʁ Dɐʎ oʈ Eɓoƨꞁɐ٨!ɐu ᖶ∩ⅽʞ-⊥µ!ƨ E٨ө. Hey, SeatSix and Landru have already bagged on tomorrow's United home game v Houston so I've three tickets to give. Anyone? No?




   




Monday, May 6, 2013

Another Year Older Four Days Ago



Four days late because I'm a self-absorbed dumbfuck: Happy Birthday, Hamster, still 88 days older than me. Make a birthday music request, I'll post it below.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

(Click "Like" If You're Against Extinction!)



  • Sorry for the bleggalgaze yesterday, in my defense (a) it needed be vented and (b) it's a tradition on the first slowest day of the week the first week of the Blog Days of Summer. There's more above.
  • Hey, help Zen win some money!
  • Today in Fine Metaphors Abounding: The Spanish are fond of seeing football through a political prism, with what happens on the field often said to mirror what happens off it. So when Real Madrid and Barcelona conceded eight goals between them in 24 disastrous hours, eventually getting knocked out of the Champions League, the joke was inevitable and came laced with a bitter sting. Under the right-wing Madrid-supporting prime minister José María Azna, the joke runs, Real Madrid won; under the left-wing Barça-supporting José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, Barcelona won; and under the current incumbent, Mariano Rajoy, the Germans do. The shift in power is complete and so, too, is Spain's subjugation. Economic and political power was one thing, but now this. No Spanish teams reached the European Cup final and none even got so far as the quarter-final of the Europa League. The Germans, by contrast, have two European Cup finalists, full stadiums, cheap tickets, rude economic health ... they'll even have Pep Guardiola next season. What have Spain got?
  • Capitalism as protectionism.
  • The climate of capitalism.
  • Dennis the Peasant is 70 today.








 

SESTINA: LIKE

A.E. Stallings

Now we’re all “friends,” there is no love but Like,
A semi-demi goddess, something like
A reality-TV star look-alike,
Named Simile or Me Two. So we like
In order to be liked. It isn’t like
There’s Love or Hate now. Even plain “dislike”

Is frowned on: there’s no button for it. Like
Is something you can quantify: each “like”
You gather’s almost something money-like,
Token of virtual support. “Please like
This page to stamp out hunger.” And you’d like
To end hunger and climate change alike,

But it’s unlikely Like does diddly. Like
Just twiddles its unopposing thumbs-ups, like-
Wise props up scarecrow silences. “I’m like,
So OVER him,” I overhear. “But, like,
He doesn’t get it. Like, you know? He’s like
It’s all OK. Like I don’t even LIKE

Him anymore. Whatever. I’m all like ... ”
Take “like” out of our chat, we’d all alike
Flounder, agape, gesticulating like
A foreign film sans subtitles, fall like
Dumb phones to mooted desuetude. Unlike
With other crutches, um, when we use “like,”

We’re not just buying time on credit: Like
Displaces other words; crowds, cuckoo-like,
Endangered hatchlings from the nest. (Click “like”
If you’re against extinction!) Like is like
Invasive zebra mussels, or it’s like
Those nutria-things, or kudzu, or belike

Redundant fast food franchises, each like
(More like) the next. Those poets who dislike
Inversions, archaisms, who just like
Plain English as she’s spoke — why isn’t “like”
Their (literally) every other word? I’d like
Us just to admit that’s what real speech is like.

But as you like, my friend. Yes, we’re alike,
How we pronounce, say, lichen, and dislike
Cancer and war. So like this page. Click Like.