Tuesday, November 28, 2023

My poem THE AREA is published in The Long Poem Magazine number 30 (background and links)

I’m pleased to say my long poem ‘The Area: thinking with the photographs of Tricia Porter, Liverpool 8: 1972-74’ has been published in the excellent Long Poem Magazine, issue number 30. Yes, 30! 

How did this poem come to be? Well, in 2015 the Bluecoat arts centre in Liverpool mounted an exhibition (and, importantly for the writing of the poems, published a catalogue) of the 1970s photographs Tricia Porter made of ‘the area’ called then Liverpool 8, later Toxteth. (Now part of it glories under the name the ‘Georgian Quarter’, newly re-developed, but not beyond recognition.) As Liverpool unlocked after Covid I returned to the photographs (and the place; some of the images adorned the newly decorated walls of the Belvedere pub I frequent, reminding me of them; I used to have a poem on the wall in an earlier decoration of the pub: Pages: Chris McCabe and Robert Sheppard poems in the Belvedere, Liverpool!). I was haunted by the richness and deprivations of life in the photographs, a life I didn’t experience at the time (though many of my Liverpool friends in the loose grouping, the 1955 Committee, had! See here: Pages: The 1955 Committee (and others) 2022 (robertsheppard.blogspot.com)).

 

I decided to ‘write through’ the images, including this one above, and then edit some of the results into the unpunctuated couplets that you may read in the Long Poem Magazine. The emphatic capital letters starting each line might be thought of as a counterpointed mode of punctuation, certainly a guide to rhythmic utterance (or ‘stutterance’ one could even say).

 

This subtle dialectic between

Reinforced glass and finely engraved

 

Panels at the counters of the Belvedere she sits

On a stool in white slacks

 

He wraps an arm around he

Presses his lit cigarette onto the tip of hers

 

I have a love-hate relationship with so called ekphrastic writing (see here: Pages: Robert Sheppard: Talk for the Open Eye Gallery on Poetry and Photography December 2016) and was determined that no section of the poem would relate completely to a single image: I was imagining collaging the images in the same way I was collaging the words, ‘thinking with’ rather than looking at.

 

Read the poem by buying the magazine here: ISSUE 30 – Long Poem Magazine

 

Other writers included in this issue (and at least four are associated with Liverpool as well!) are:

 

Helen Tookey                                                A Choice of Paths

Peter Robinson                                              Le Suquet Revisited

Aidan Semmens                                            Tales of the Old Pacific

Garry Mackenzie                                           Oysters

Anna Quarendon                                           Menagerie

Daniel Samoilovich tr Terence Dooley        Awaking Demons

Graham Mort                                                 Concerning the Ukraine War

Simon Collings                                              Scenes from Out West

Judith Amanthis                                            How to Howl

Frances Presley                                           The Modern Long Poem and Feminist Projects

Mara Adamitz Scrupe                                   a seiche a derecho

Simon Maddrell                                            dear derek jarman

Ian Seed                                                        from Scattering My Mother’s Ashes

Robert Minhinnick                                      Family Bible

Andrew Nightingale                                    Dead voice trafficking contraption

Iain Britton                                                   Dolls

Penelope Shuttle                                          book of lullabies

Peter Daniels                                               Happy and Fortunate

Kathryn Pierpoint                                       Sunspot

Sean Street                                                   Running Out of Time

 

 My copy has now arrived and it looks very exciting. 

Friday, November 24, 2023

Scott Thurston's TURNING ; my endorsement and a link

Sometimes a blurb for a book (I mean ‘endorsement’, don’t I?)  says little more than ‘I like this book: you will too’. Snappy, short. Quotable. Sometimes I find myself (given my history as a critic and reviewer) sketching out an essay or a review (which I then have to shave until it’s the right length). In the case of this slightly long blurb for the selected poems of Scott Thurston, I managed to write a condensed review of this excellent collection.

Thurston’s poems always danced, as the early writings here demonstrate, in line and spacing, long before dance as a practice became his poetic focus and his ethical metaphor for other modes of action and introspection. They always measured a world to be moved into, fine lines across fine distinctions. His texts become cues for performance, in performance, but just as important is the insistent voice of the poem as it becomes increasingly the voice of the poet: restless, relentless, carrying us with it. This is all for us: ‘in dancing your own rite you don’t/ do it for yourself.’ This is crystallized in the culminating triumph of the lockdown sonnet sequence, ‘A Hard Grief’; it reaches out from our shared resignation and hope. We’re all ‘searching/ for the shapes that shadowed the meaning/ until the flow showed up’, and Thurston is our invaluable lead.

 


I spent most of today with Scott, pleased to exchange our books, and dine in Chorlton. We chatted about the journal, dance, Salford, life, health (mine) and well-being (his), before retiring to his study to talk poetry and books. Joanna emerged from Zoom meetings, and we all drove to Liverpool, joking all the way in the failing (but bright) light. A great day.

What about looking at the interview I conducted with Scott about his writing and dancing (even the cover of the new book will not allow us to take these pages as simply for, or of, the page!), part of my guest editing of Stride a few years ago:  Guest editor Robert Sheppard: 8 | Stride magazine,

Turning may be purchased here: Scott Thurston - Turning — Selected Poems 1995-2020 (shearsman.com)




Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Performance of the Ern Malley Orchestra and launch of Doubly Stolen Fire

 

David Whyte and I took part in this event on Saturday night, a celebration of all things Mallyesque, that included Mark Ford on meeting one of the hoaxers, John Wilkinson on John Tranter's Malley poems, and other contributions as on the poster above (but I missed some of the names represented by the elisions). But thanks to William and Jeremy, named above in brief, the organisers of the conference that this was the 'let your hair' down tail of. 

I read a shortened version of the essay 'Doubly Stolen Fire' which is published in my new book. also called Doubly Stolen Fire. (See details:  Pages: Doubly Stolen Fire (a new book of hybrid texts) is now OUT (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) It's a response to the Malley 'affair', and posits a distinction between 'hoaxes' and 'fictional poems' and 'poets', which is something I've experimented with a lot; I also read my 'Ern Malley Suite', which is from one of those projects. (The essay was written after the Liverpool celebration of Ern's birth: Pages: Ern Malley 1918-1943: Celebrating the centenary in his place of birth Liverpool (set list) (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) )


Here's a picture of the two man orchestra setting up., David with guitar and lyrics, me with lyrics and harmonicas... 


We then launched into a performance of four of Ern's greatest poems, set to music by David Whyte. We ended with a bit of a Malleyoke, with (some) of the audience singing our Malley chorus: 'I have split the infinite.' Imagine.

It felt good to be singing once more and playing a little backing blues harp. One commentator said I sounded like Kevin Ayres. 

Here's a selfie taken at the 'blood-soaked Royston perimeter', as Andrew Duncan called it long ago. It was good to travel with David. This is where 'rail replacement bus' gave way to trains.


 Pages: Launch of Doubly Stolen Fire at the Lowry Lounge 2023, Liverpool (set list) (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) tells you about my Liverpool launch for Doubly Stolen Fire, the one that concentrated on the Malcolm Lowry materials in the book. There are different emphases for different venues. Next up: the talking mongoose? 

Saturday, November 11, 2023

From a Poetics Journal 2023: notes on two critical volumes: Betteridge and Kaufmann

 Notes on two critical volumes

Joel Betteridge’s Avant-Garde Pieties: Aesthetics, Race and the Renewal of Innovative Poetics. Oxford and London: Routledge, 2018; and

Reading Uncreative Writing: Conceptualism, Expression and the Lyric by David Kaufmann. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017; 

and touching very briefly on Oren Izenburg’s Being Numerous: Poetry and the Ground of Social Life. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2011.

I have been trying for an age to finish reading Joel Betteridge’s Avant-Garde Pieties (2018) and I’ve finally done it. (And I've taken even longer to get this post up and online.) I’ve been simultaneously re-reading Reading Uncreative Writing by David Kaufmann (2017). Both books are rocked, I think it is fair to say, by the affront of – intended – and the affront caused – probably unintended – by Kenneth Goldsmith’s ‘The Body of Michael Brown’ (2015, well that's the date of its single performance anyway). Never has a text been so central and absent to literary debate (since Goldsmith withdrew the work and replaced it with a self-justifying Facebook post). With one enclosure does Goldsmith refute his often quoted assertion that you don’t need to read his work. In this case we do, but we can't. But, then, we should be wary of Goldsmith’s pronouncements (I suppose we should call it ‘poetics’, but it appears too finished to fulfil my definitions of it. See Pages: Robert Sheppard: The Necessity of Poetics 1: The Identification of Poetics) His whole book Uncreative Writing (saintly white cover), like its critical shadow, Perloff’s Unoriginal Genius – brilliant and persuasive books both! – his book (as I say in my book The Meaning of Form: see Pages: Robert Sheppard: The Meaning of Form in Contemporary Innovative Poetry PUBLISHED) offers a teleology that fashions all of avant-garde or modernist history into a precursor of uncreative writing or, rather, to himself. I criticised this, rightly, but what I failed to see was that his critics have also taken him at his word. So that when the disgusting and ill-judged presentation (and subtle rearrangements, or forming in my terms) of ‘The Body of Michael Brown’ was attacked so comprehensively, some commentators used the opportunity to dismiss all avant-garde art... particularly as racist. Where this gets us – suddenly everything I've ever written is automatically racist! – is unclear – but where it leaves Baraka or Mackey (etc… a long list in Betteridge and Kaufmann) is much clearer: they stand as refutations of this simplistic charge, by dazzling us, by simply existing. As I say, these critics (who have an aesthetic agenda (mainstream writers) or a political one (they want directly political work; what would they make of my sonnets? nothing, of course, the focus is purely American, a blindness unaddressed…) These critics are only following Kenneth Goldsmith’s teleology. We all go down for his crime, in the worst form of joint enterprise.

The year 2015 is an interesting one for the wheels to fall off the conceptualist wagon. (Vanessa Place was also playing with fire by retweeting Gone with the Wind at this time, and Kaufmann itemises the creative blindness of the gesture, and the critical blindness of the response.) Somewhere I noted that I thought conceptual writing would last until about 2015. (I wished I'd expressed that publicly; I didn't, probably because I've been so wrong with predictions before! Examples omitted.) If you believe Kenneth Goldsmith's self-serving teleology, then all avant-garde work died in 2015. (With him.) It's not what he intended, but that's the result of his argument.

Goldsmith's intentions are of interest in this moment. Betteridge argues convincingly that his justification of ‘The Body of Michael Brown’ – I feel like I'm re-inscribing the pain, and ‘anti-elegy’ with each reiteration of his name in this context – betrays most of the tenets of conceptual writing, largely through a very traditional plea to ‘Truth’. It's like he's claiming to be some kind of documentary poet (like Mark Novak for example, or Juliana Spahr, about whom Betteridge writes so eloquently). But maybe Kenneth Goldsmith would sell his own skin to save his body.

If you don't believe Kenneth Goldsmith's self-serving teleology then avant-garde work didn't die in 2015, not all forms led to Goldsmith. Indeed at that moment I was working on The Meaning of Form, attempting to prove, in part, that conceptual writing’s disavowal of form was not evidenced by the form, forms and acts of forming involved in producing the works themselves. (See Pages: Robert Sheppard The Trace of Poetry: Notes on Conceptual Writing and Form) One of the problems with Kenneth Goldsmith’s ‘The Body’ is that he does reform the work – ‘translating’  medical terms, it's a re-forming of an autopsy report, a transposition of its restricted code (and quite unlike Goldsmith's American Disasters which uses PUBLIC language) another of Kenneth Goldsmith’s self-justifications that deny and defy the evidence is to suggest ‘The Body’ is an extra chapter of American Disasters. Kaufmann's thesis – in brief –is a parallel one to mine. Where I find form where it's been liquidated by the theory, he finds affect, ‘subjectivity’, a ‘trans-subjectivity’ belonging to a mass of quoted people, and ‘expression’ in Adorno’s sense, i.e. it's not self-expression. 

[I will now interpollate some earlier notes I made on this use of ‘expression’: First he redefines ‘expression’:

The truth of dissonance is expression.

‘Expression renders audible differentiated state or mood... Expression... marks the critical function of art and its concomitant utopian hope.’ (Kaufmann 2017: 7)

My language. Expression is not self-expression. Indeed, in The Meaning of Form I say something like this: Pages: Robert Sheppard: A Note on Self-Expression and Conceptual Wriitng]

The rejection of lyric subjectivity is not as absolute as it might be for Marjorie Perloff.

‘A critique of actually existing “official verse culture” is not a criticism of lyricism tout court. It is a critique of the current state of play,’ (Kaufmann 2017: 9) the ‘workshop poem’, for example. Thus he can say of Emily Dickinson: ‘a determinate negation of the lyric of her time, not the blanket negation of the lyric, as such.’ (Kaufmann 2017: 10.) (Such negations are part of its history.)

A turning from that lyric, not from the long tradition. Or returning from it, within the tradition.

Kaufmann has serious wonders on the way, but by page 125, we're back to Adorno’s  ‘expression’ that is not self-expression: ‘Artworks bear expression not when they communicate the subject, but rather where they reverberate with the proto history of subjectivity’... Expression ‘approaches the trans-subjective.’ (Kaufmann 2017: 125))

I'll leave his thoughts about lyric to one side for now. [Actually, these notes do not return to the subject.] The more satisfactory conceptual work for Kaufman is that of Robert Fitterman and it is interesting (to me, anyway), that James (Byrne) and I should have selected his work for Atlantic Drift. (See Pages: Atlantic Drift launch in London: 5th February 2018 (some photos and a few comments) (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) The language of affect, argues Kaufmann, saturates conceptual writing when it shouldn't. The ‘shouldn't’ only works if you exchange the flexibility and developmental gymnastics of poetics for the sclerotic diktats of a manifesto – but that's exactly what conceptual writing did in its (or Kenneth Goldsmith's) attempt to be the only avant-garde practice in town.

It's not. It can't be, given continual avant-garde poetics and practice, of course.

And it isn't, if we are looking at the other writers Betteridge treats (chiefly Spahr and Buuck, Kaia Sand, Peter O’Leary, and Clauda Rankine (another inclusion in Atlantic Drift)), and the scope can be widened to include many many other writers, as ever when one writes a critical work).

‘Race’ in Bettridge’s subtitle ‘Aesthetics, Race and the Renewal of Innovative Poetics’ is a live issue, in a particular, global way, post-Black Lives Matter (his book is pre-BLM, of course, given the delays of book publication). It's never been a not-live issue for Poets and People of Colour, and - without sounding like Kenneth Goldsmith and his self-justifications, I'm pleased with the diversity of coverage in Atlantic Drift though that's probably more James Byrne’s doing than mine.

No, it's racism that's the issue here. Betteridge puts up an argument against directly activist poetry that isn't worth repeating here, since I'm more interested in his ‘renewal of innovative poetics’.

Because a poem doesn't mention race it doesn't mean it's racist. (That should be obvious, but it's not.) If a person doesn't mention race that doesn't mean it's not racist; obviously, to be overtly racist (rather than institutionally racist) you'd probably need to mention race, possibly obsessively so. Of course, my use of ‘mention’ is playing into certain presumptions about the referentiality of poetry - it's not helpful…

One of the things Betteridge touches upon at the beginning is dealt with precisely by the rest of the book: the notion that some ‘avant-garde’ gestures (I'm using his terms but ‘formally innovative’ might do just as well) – some such named gestures just aren't. I came up with the aphorism: ‘A writer (an artist) must both derive and dérive –  and both must be unruly,’ after reading Betteridge (on Robert Duncan, as it happens). I do see surrealist writing, Oulipo techniques applied on far from the fruit fly material Queneau stipulated, decorative concrete poetry, ineffectual erasure, pointless cut up, etc… etc…  but to note that is only, really, to notice that being derivative is not the same as deriving the work – Bettridge has no problem with an avant-garde tradition – so long as one does something with it, ‘working the work’ as I've long said: ‘derive and dérive’ seems to me an epithet-prophylactic for that problem. It's a minor point and it doesn't need returning to. (I take it up in a piece of poetics intended for publication, called (at the moment) ‘My Own Crisis’. Really!) ‘Right imitation’ is no longer part of our poetics, but neither is wild novelty. It is part of good aesthetic judgement to deal with it. It is partly poetics’ task to derive and to suggest the dérive. (Oh no, not another definition of poetics!)

This brings me to another minor point. Betteridge occasionally gestures towards the religious and, even if his suggestion that the language poets’ commitment to language is not unlike a sect’s commitment to its principles (I always think of the Muggletonians!) I would want to steer away from that, and stay secular and linguistically materialist.

That said, his account of the ‘pieties’ of the avant-garde suggest ways towards ‘renewal of innovative poetics’. Another way of saying this, is to say that I want to re- read his book – or parts of it – as poetics. Or rather, to read the parts which are poetics. Betteridge is a poet, after all. That demands a different way of reading parts of the book, for example, his discussion of Claudia Rankine which includes the words ‘the book’s form of politics – its avant-garde belief that aesthetics are political. The avant-garde values of multiple genres, use of sources, etc…’ (passages on page 29 and 151-200 for those who have access to the book)...


[These notes become more notelike from here on, as I ran out of energy. I’ve also not taken up the suggestion to re-read parts, but I suspect I will. In the meantime I have been writing (as I said) ‘My Own Crisis’, which overlaps with some of this, BUT began life as a writing-through of Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher. I got halfway, and then wrote through my own notes backwards. It has the virtue of compression which these notes don’t.]


Betteridge tells us that Rankine takes elements of a ‘racist violent culture’ and ‘redirects that culture by means of the poem’s friendship’. (Betteridge 151). This use of ‘friendship’ derives from readings of Stanley Cavill, (but I believe the modes of ‘hospitality’ Derek Attridge writes of (in writers and readers) serves just as well; see Pages: Robert Sheppard: The Meaning of Form and Derek Attridge’s The Work of Literature). (304) Betteridge talks of ‘its avant-garde belief that aesthetics are political. The avant-garde values of multiple genres, use of sources, and commitment to a form of literary poetics... They ‘simultaneously illuminate the problem of American culture and produce a solution to it.’ (151) 

He calls it an ‘impossible avant-garde politics’ as I think it might be for me!

‘A multiform tradition’ (163) ‘multiform avant-garde tradition’ (165-6) The danger he calls ‘moralising’. It destroys the multiformity of the avant-garde (171)

Wendy Brown. We must develop a ‘vision about the common’ (‘what I want for us’) ‘because it aims to create a collective future by transforming where one lives out of love, and it takes political acting and conversation as the means of such correction’. (73) We mustn't ‘abandon … the sheerly political domain in favour of moral judgement and identity … particularly injured identities.’ (174) Identity + Ressentiment = Moralism (which cuts us off from anything that offends us).  Isn't this obvious? Perhaps it is, but this ‘conclusion’ does provide some terms to use, a few useful quotes for critical writing and – more importantly – poetics.

Here's a particularly useful passage: ‘Just because lyric poets and their apologists find the avant-garde tired, annoying, and out of fashion does not mean that it is; it just means that those writers bent on realism and representation can't read the avant-garde in the required spirit.’ Says Bettridge (197). And even better:

‘We have no idea which poem will be the catalyst for which particular readers and keeping this fact of reading alive and vital for specific readers is what a multiform avant-garde permits.’ (195) (Could equally argue that of the mainstream, of course, that that would be less multiform.)

The rousing chorus of the avant-garde seems more like a single strained note, or a breathy obviousness. Let's end this (failed?) summary with a quote from a different book: ‘Radical poetics... is not radical for its political commitments but for its pre political or ontological commitments.’ (Isenberg 35), a book I'm slowly rereading at the moment.


Later: I haven't returned to these thoughts – perhaps they are finished, what they are, and are destined to remain where they are, informing practice, as poetics is meant to do, according to me!

The Tesco delivery has arrived so I shall stop my dictation from my poetics journal and engage (briefly) with capitalism.


A previous set of journal ‘notes’ from my reading of critical works may be read here: Pages: Re:Pulse – on pulse and Richard Andrews’ A Prosody of Free Verse: Explorations in Rhythm (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) and also (further back in time) these thoughts on postmodernism came from my poetics journal: Pages: Robert Sheppard: Supplanting the Postmodern (notes).

 

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Locating and contacting me: email: Please do not use the Edge Hill one; it doesn’t work: robertsheppard39@gmail.com  website: www.robertsheppard.weebly.com Follow on Twitter: Robert Sheppard (@microbius) / Twitter  latest blogpost: www.robertsheppard.blogspot.com


Wednesday, November 08, 2023

Robert Sheppard and two others at Peter Barlow's Cigarette 24th October 2023 (set list)

An evening of alternative poetries happened at Peter Barlow’s Cigarette with me and two others. It was meant to be Patricia (Farrell) reading, but she was unavailable and I went instead. Patricia has had a short notice eye operation. She would have had to squint and glare at the audience with a piratical wink. (See www.patriciafarrell.weebly.com. ) 

 


Tuesday, 24th October 2023 

(not one of their usual Saturdays)

The (very fine) Carlton Club, Carlton Road, Whalley Range, Manchester.

I was reading with 

ALISTAIR NOON ~

Paradise Takeaway, a long poem with Luton Airport in it, is out from Two Rivers Press on 21 October 2023. Other recent publications include Two Verse Essays (Longbarrow, 2022) and two further volumes of his translations from the Russian of Osip Mandelstam (The Voronezh Workbooks and Occasional and Joke Poems, Shearsman, 2022). He lives in Berlin, which is where I last saw him at his wonderful Berlin Festival, at which both Patricia and I read, and Stephen sat on my hat!

And I wasn't (quite) reading with ELOISE OUI because the trains are shit in this country, so I left at half time. Only later, reading Alistair's Paradise Takeaway in the Belve did I realise that that is one of the emphatic and powerful themes of his book; though I actually had interruption-free travel, but we can't risk it, can we? In fact, the taxi journey was worse, caught in Man United traffic...) Anyway, apologises to ELOISE, who

is a multipurpose artist from Leeds. She is the writer and director of two upcoming short films: Warm Egg, a sci-fi-infused musical drama, and O River, a psychedelic cat-and-mouse Western set in the Yorkshire Moors. These projects are currently in post-production, with plans for release at various festivals in the upcoming year. Eloise writes poetry and paints for fun and for work she’s a graphic prop designer for tv shows, contributing to the visual storytelling of the small screen.

SET LIST

I read from the ‘English Strain’ Project, two poems: 

1 Afterword: The Shepherd's brow etc...' (see here: Pages: No need for a fourth book of The English Strain, I've decided (robertsheppard.blogspot.com)

2 Aftershock: Monitoring ... (see here: Pages: Another 'final' poem of the English Strain sonnet project: looking eastwards and to the Ukraine (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) ), but nothing from Doubly Stolen Fire. Otherwise, all new work. And on to:

3. The Area (a new work due to appear in The Long Poem Magazine. It is a long poem!)

4. Empty Diary 2022 (a work due to appear in a Broken Sleep anthology on 'Masculinities'. Up for pre-order here: https://www.brokensleepbooks.com/product-page/masculinity-an-anthology-of-modern-voices)

5. Empty Diary 2023. (About piss drinkers.)

Empty Diary context here:  Pages: Robert Sheppard: The last two Empty Diary poems are published on Strideabout the ones for 2020 and 2021 (with videos).

finally, 6 (to cool it down) 'Late Advance to Bonheur', a poem i.m. John James, published here:  Robert Sheppard: ‘Swift Songs’ and Essay on James’ ‘A Theory of Poetry’ – Glasfryn Project

Then it was time to go: thanks to Joey Francis and the team for a great (truncated, for me) night. And thanks to the audience for responding with laughter to what Joey called 'the first poem about edging that we've had in ten years!' (That's number 4 above.)

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Locating Robert Sheppard: email: robertsheppard39@gmail.com  (don’t use the Edge Hill email); website: www.robertsheppard.weebly.com Follow on Twitter (or is it X?): Robert Sheppard (@microbius) / Twitter  latest blogpost: www.robertsheppard.blogspot.com


Friday, October 27, 2023

Doubly Stolen Fire (a new book of hybrid texts) is now OUT

My new book Doubly Stolen Fire is now available. Buy it straight from the publisher: HERE:Robert Sheppard: Doubly Stolen Fire – Glasfryn Project

Cost (plus postage and packing) UK £13; Europe £15.00; USA and the rest of the world £17.00 

To buy click here to pay by Paypal: https://glasfrynproject.org.uk/w/8459/robert-sheppard-doubly-stolen-fire/ 

or send a cheque - made out to Aquifer Books - to

Aquifer Books, Glasfryn, Llangattock, Powys, NP8 1PH


http://aquiferbooks.co.uk



It looks great, and I’d like to thank Lyndon Davies, the publisher of Aquifer, for his hard work, and recommend all the books he’s published to date. (See the website for a full account of his many activities: Glasfryn Project: a hub of literary/artistic activity in rural Powys )

Mixing and matching hybrid modes – memoir, essay, creative non-fiction, fiction, fictional poems, psychogeographical derives, footnotes, poetics and even jokes – Doubly Stolen Fire examines authorship, real, fictional, hoaxing, as well as my own, from multiple viewpoints.

Whether a woman named Anonymous, or a mongoose called Gef, a fictional Austrian poet whose lockdown diary records her poeticizing mannequin, or some version of me in 1979 tracking the paths taken by novelist Malcolm Lowry, the book hosts a cast of unstable actors. Yes, I know that means that I’m one of them, and I acknowledge my attack of total global amnesia in one of the many labyrinthine footnotes. The characters keep returning to the scenes of their literary crimes, Liverpool mainly, though their guilty fictions float out to Berlin, the Isle of Man, Sussex and even to Ern Malley’s Australia.

You can re-write the history of post-War British poetry if you listen to your mannequin, it seems. You can put in a call for ‘creative literary history’ and all manner of alternatives appear. You can make Larkin and his crew disappear! All this in a volume bulging with mercurial humour and wily wit, and crawling with my creatures! What more could you want?


Contents

 Introduction: by Jason Argleton (he’s a fictional poet; he seemed appropriate)

One

Anonymous (a true short short about meeting a woman of that name)

Doubly Stolen Fire in his Prosthetic Voice: The Ern Malley Hoax and Fictional Poems in Liverpool (an essay coming out of the difference between hoaxes and fictional poems, and about some Ern Malley celebrations in Liverpool)

Thirty Russell Road (essay-poem-collage-piece about a strange event on the Isle of Man in the 1930s; previously unpublished)

Vestigial Gestures: The Fictional Poetry Project (in which Sophie Poppmeier communicates with her mannequin and produces English language fictional poems from the 1950s to rival Larkin and That Lot; and then I meditate upon current and previous fictional poets (who have appeared in the two books mentioned below. But also check out the EUOIA website for details of them: European Union of Imaginary Authors (EUOIA) - Home (weebly.com) )

The Novel (not a novel but another short short about (not) writing a novel; a fable of (non) creativity.)

Two: Malcolm Lowry’s Land

The Lowry Lounge (a short poem concerning Lowry or the Lowryesque, short enough to read on video, as I do here):




Malcolm Lowry’s Land (an account of visiting Lowry’s grave in 1979, mediated through attempts at a poem on that subject written then and read in the ‘now’ of the poem, 2009; previously published in the pioneering LUP/Bluecoat volume Malcolm Lowry: From Mersey to the World)

 Cablegram to Dale St (a fantasy poem about Lowry and Liverpool)

 Circle of the City: following in the steps of Chapter Five (All of the pieces in Part Two have been performed at the annual Lowry Lounge events held in Liverpool every year: I write about those meetings AND about this poem, a recent one; there is a link to the text there too: Pages: Circle of the City published now on Osmosis/New book coming soon (robertsheppard.blogspot.com))

Read about the Liverpool launch of the book, here:  Pages: Launch of Doubly Stolen Fire at the Lowry Lounge 2023, Liverpool (robertsheppard.blogspot.com)

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 Doubly Stolen Fire is a visionary glimpse into Robert Sheppard’s ‘inventory of the invented’. To begin with he is King Hoax, trickster offspring of Pessoa and Enderby with a smatter of W.C. Fields and Alfred Jarry. Curator of a fugitive archive of writings by and about imaginary authors, Sheppard is shapeshifter, saloon huckster, cabaret comedian, laugh out loud funny. The second part is a Firminist investigation into the Malcom Lowry labyrinth –psycho(somatic)geography, raw response, fragmented memory recovered. The work is imbued with loss, inky with fingerprints, words like haunted Kodaks.

so says Jeff Young, author of Ghost Town, A Liverpool Shadowplay


Robert Sheppard’s curiosity, brilliance and mischief are entwined as closely as ever in this gathering of poetry and prose. Continuing his excavations of poetry from perhaps-parallel universes, the first part explores the potentialities of fiction in and as poetry (or vice-versa), with the famous Ern Malley hoax as a touchstone for further inventions. In the context of this probing of authorial identities, the second part, with its focus on the apparently real Malcolm Lowry, shimmers with alternative possibilities. However, what holds the double construction of this book together is the character of Liverpool, its street names and gossip and half-heard stories haunting the fragmentary speculations that unfinish themselves, here and elsewhere at the same time. Behind the dissolving characters, there’s a committed sociality in Sheppard’s writing that makes it thoughtfully open to others as well as to language’s scintillating play of otherness.

so says Zoë Skoulding, author of A Marginal Sea

Here's me opening the box of books.

I write about the first launch of the book, at the Lowry Lounge 2023 here:  Pages: Launch of Doubly Stolen Fire at the Lowry Lounge 2023, Liverpool (set list) (robertsheppard.blogspot.com)

This book is (or parts of it are) the third part of my ‘fictional poetry’ project. Although you don’t need to know them, they are also available, A Translated Man, which features the Belgian fictional poet Rene Van Valckenborch, and Twitters for a Lark, in which I collaborate with a number of other writers to create European poets. (See European Union of Imaginary Authors (EUOIA) - Home (weebly.com) for info on that; or see the two books here: Shearsman Books buy Robert Sheppard - A Translated Man and here: Shearsman Books buy Robert Sheppard (ed) - Twitters for a Lark, where you may buy those.




The availability of all my book-length publications may be accessed here: Pages: Robert Sheppard: seeing what's in print and what's not!

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Locating Robert Sheppard: email: robertsheppard39@gmail.com  website: www.robertsheppard.weebly.com Follow on Twitter: Robert Sheppard (@microbius) / Twitter  latest blogpost: www.robertsheppard.blogspot.com

 

Sunday, October 08, 2023

Launch of Doubly Stolen Fire at the Lowry Lounge 2023, Liverpool (set list)



I launched my new book Doubly Stolen Fire as part of the Lowry Lounge at the Bluecoat, Liverpool on Saturday 28th October. 

Full details of the book itself, and how you may buy it HERE: Robert Sheppard: Doubly Stolen Fire – Glasfryn Project .

 Aquifer – Glasfryn Project

 Cost (plus postage and packing) UK £13; Europe £15.00; USA and the rest of the world £17.00

 

Or, 

to buy click here to pay by Paypal: https://glasfrynproject.org.uk/w/8459/robert-sheppard-doubly-stolen-fire/

 

or send a cheque - made out to Aquifer Books - to

Aquifer Books, Glasfryn, Llangattock, Powys, NP8 1PH

 

http://aquiferbooks.co.uk

See my hubpost on the book here: Pages: Doubly Stolen Fire (a new book of hybrid texts) is now OUT (robertsheppard.blogspot.com)


The Lounge started at the Bluecoat in the morning with a reading by me from Doubly Stolen Fire, originally subtitled reflections on authorship, real and imaginary, which includes my writings on Lowry. There were also be updates on other Lowry-related projects, including the new online archive in development, charting the arts centre’s 14-year (so far!) Lounge programme. In the afternoon, some folk walked to Hilbre Island on the Wirral. 

 


I write about a number of our previous meetings here: with links right back to 2009! Pages: The 2022 Lowry Lounge - a few thoughts (robertsheppard.blogspot.com)

- Lowry online archive update, Bryan: progress so far. Do check it out: it's looking good:  https://www.thebluecoat.org.uk/library/malcolm-lowry

I talk about the book as a whole, here: Pages: Doubly Stolen Fire (a new book of hybrid texts) is now OUT (robertsheppard.blogspot.com), but here's roughly what I told the audience, with an indication of what poems I read:

Doubly Stolen Fire is a book about authorship and one of the authors I consider is Malcolm Lowry. All of the other authors are, in one way or another, imaginary, even myself. Of course, Lowry is not exempt from the practice of concocting what I call fictional authors, Sigbjorn Wilderness, and so on. The second ‘half’ of my book contains my various responses to Lowry’s work, life and geographies, and, as we shall see, Lowry, or rather this Lounge, features briefly in the first part, which is about imaginary authors, fictional poets and hoaxes. I'm not going to read from two long pieces, one which features the famous Ern Malley hoax of the 1940s, and the second which showcases the case of the extra extra clever talking Mongoose on the Isle of Man in the 1930s. I wonder whether Lowry knew of either of these hoaxes, particularly the latter, with his interest in the Isle of Man: it was the stuff of interwar tabloid journalism. These pieces worry away at my distinction between hoaxes, which are usually malign, and fictional poets or imaginary authors – and I have constructed many of these, as I’ll reveal, for my many sins, albeit in passing today – which are benign but haunting presences in the literary imagination. They can’t be un-imagined. But first, I want to read you a complete but short real non-fictional story about somebody who could have been fictional – but wasn't. You’ll also notice that Liverpool is a persistent background theme in what I’m reading.

I read ‘Anonymous’, p. 11

I could not but read this poem that I wrote for Bryan Biggs some years ago. It came out of meeting the only actual Consul (of one of the world’s poorest nations) that I’ve met. I found him conducting consular business at the bar of a pub, very Firmin-like. He whisked away passports as I approached. A working title for this fantasia was ‘The Consul on the Smithdown Road’. It’s now appropriately called…

‘The Lowry Lounge’, p. 55

 


We’re now in the Lowry half of the book, which consists of three poems and a reprint of the hybrid prose piece I wrote for the From the Mersey to the World volume, edited by Bryan and Helen. This is impossible to read an extract from: it consists of bits of a poem I wrote in 1979 on my pilgrimage to Lowry’s grave in Sussex, plus descriptions of photographs I took on that journey, and my commentary on the whole thing, written in 2009. The piece is called ‘Malcolm Lowry’s Land’. [Extra info: ‘Malcolm Lowry’s Land’ (an account of visiting Lowry’s grave in 1979, mediated through attempts at a poem on that subject written then and re-read in the ‘now’ of the poem, 2009; previously published in the pioneering LUP/Bluecoat volume Malcolm Lowry: From Mersey to the World. See a review of it: 47-Lowry-book-review.pdf ; it says: ‘Robert Sheppard’s moving account in "Malcolm Lowry’s land" of his pilgrimage from Liverpool, the place of Lowry’s birth (and Sheppard’s present home) to Ripe, the place of Lowry’s death, and back again.' Miguel Mota.)] If my 1979 walking poem never saw the light of day my ‘Circle of the City’ did. It’s a series of interrupted haiku (my ‘pops’ this time, my ‘haiku-movie’) written (and read here) in 2021 while following the Liverpool perambulation taken by sailor-revolutionary Sigbjørn and his shipowner father as described by Lowry in his unfinished novel, written in the mid-1930s, In Ballast to the White Sea. Their walk starts (and ends) at Exchange Flags and skirts the docks, walks very close to this building, and rests at a cinema to view a Russian revolutionary film. They discuss politics and their culpabilities in the deaths of others. Like Lowry, I take in the messages of the urban environment I pass through: street signs, adverts, t-shirt slogans. There are, oddly, both in Lowry’s novel and my poem, references to Herbert Melville’s Redburn. The Liverpool ‘guidebook’ Redburn carried was 50 years out of date. My ‘guidebook’ was Lowry’s novel, 90 years out of date!

I read ‘Circle of the City’: p. 66: [‘Circle of the City: following in the steps of Chapter Five’ (All of the pieces in Part Two have been performed at the annual Lowry Lounge events: I write about those meetings AND about this poem, a recent one; there is a link to the text there too: Pages: Circle of the City published now on Osmosis/New book coming soon (robertsheppard.blogspot.com))]

Lowry makes an unexpected, unscheduled appearance in the longest shaggy-dog story section of part one! I thought I was presenting my thoughts on my ‘fictional poetry project’ in the form of the lockdown diary of one of my creations: she has a talking mannequin, as you do, that starts spouting English poetry from the 1950s, a prophylactic to the poisonous ‘Movement Orthodoxy’. You’ll have to read her account in the book, which is on sale today. I also reflect on my most extensive ‘fictional poet’, René Van Valckenborch, a Belgian, who writes in both Flemish and French, and reflect on how ‘fictional poets’ feel so real to some readers that ‘if they had not been invented, they would have to exist’. Another important fact is that I wrote a ‘fictional’ introduction (something my new book also has!). Then this happened. It involves this Lowry Lounge intimately, and a copy of the Van Valckenborch book: A Translated Man. (Also on sale.) With this I shall finish.

I finally read ‘A Great Gift’: p. 48

Ailsa Cox, who had generously introduced me,  led the Q and A. I don't know whether it was nerves, or not, but I don't remember a single question (or my answers).

Thanks, Firminists and Bluecoat and Aquifer (Lyndon Davies) for a great day (at the end of a great week: another reading and a lecture/reading on poetics!).


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Locating and contacting me: email: Please do not use my old Edge Hill one; it doesn’t work: robertsheppard39@gmail.com  website: www.robertsheppard.weebly.com Follow on Twitter: Robert Sheppard (@microbius) / Twitter  latest blogpost: www.robertsheppard.blogspot.com