Summer is officially here and with it comes Fact-Simile Poetry Trading Card #30, featuring the work of poet, editor and literary biographer Tom Clark:
In addition to publishing his own unique and varied style of insightful verse, this wildly prolific former editor of The Paris Review
has written biographies of some of the most important literary figures
of the last half century, including: Charles Olson, Jack Kerouac, Ted
Berrigan, Robert Creeley and Ed Dorn.
This new poem ("Turning") by Tom Clark is featured on the back of June's Poetry Trading Card from Fact-Simile Editions and collected in his latest full length release, Distance (BlazeVox, April 2012). These super limited-edition poetic collectibles are printed on recycled paper and available for just 99 cents on our website.
Subscriptions to the entire 2012 series are just $10 plus shipping and, as always, our 2010 and 2011 Poetry Trading Cards are still available individually or as a complete set.
Happy Reading,
Travis & JenMarie Macdonald
Fact-Simile Editions
www.fact-simile.com
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Confronting Kim Gek Lin Short's China Cowboy
China Cowboy
by Kim Gek Lin Short
Lyric Novel | 6"x8", 132 pp, pbk
ISBN: 9780982541685
Tarpaulin Sky Press, June 2012
Just like the book’s protagonist, La La, who “...wears all her clothes. Her boots. All three skirts. All the shirts. The panties, many of them...” China Cowboy by Kim Gek Lin Short is an expertly woven story told in tangled layers.
It is the story of an abduction or escape, a brutal love
affair or abusive imprisonment, rise to fame or road to perdition, art
installation or songbook retrospective. It is each of these things in turn or
neither depending on the narrator in charge at any given moment.
Told in turn from the perspectives of each of the book’s
primary characters (La La and Ren), China Cowboy is a successfully executed experiment in prosody that simultaneously
braids and frays narrative timelines and expectations, bringing the reader to
the brink of every sensory extreme and back again. The result is a darkly
surreal adventure in perception that leaves one’s nerves exposed and moral
fortitude shaken to their respective foundations.
As a note in the lower right hand corner of both the back
cover and the title page indicates, “China Cowboy is Told in Technicolor.” In retrospect, this is perhaps a content
warning of sorts for a book publishing industry still as yet (blessedly)
unregulated by any sort of parental advisory ratings agency.
On the other hand, to use the euphemism of a bygone era and
call the language of this book “colorful” would be both a dangerous
understatement and a grave disservice to the unrelentingly aggressive,
continuously shifting, sexually charged and poetically crafted syntaxes that
Kim Gek Lin Short stitches together with apparent ease.
Take the following lines from “American Ball” by way of
example:
“It is not a ball. It is a rubber doll, but only part of her. The ass and pussy part. I decide I do not want the flashlight anymore I turn it off. I want my ball back. I lie on the ball but it is not the same. I want to scream. But I don’t.”
Faced with hundreds of provocatively conflicted passages
such as this, one does not “read” the pages of China Cowboy so much as one is confronted by them and left to
weigh the visceral experiences they both depict/imprint in the mind’s eye and
evoke/carve within the physical body.
Which is to say: When you pick up this book (and you should) be prepared to
hold both your brightest hopes for humanity and darkest emotional expectations
in a precarious balance. By the time you put it down again, the scales of your
psyche will never be quite the same.
-Travis Macdonald
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