recent posts

Friday, July 26, 2019

Book Review/ Interview: John D. Robinson HANG IN THERE (Uncollected Press, 2019) 113 pages


Hang in There is English poet John D. Robinson’s first full-length poetry collection. Many of the poems first appeared in small alternative press publications, such as Ramingo’s Porch, Outlaw Poetry, Alien Buddha Press, Misfit Magazine, North of Oxford and Analog Submission Press. Robinson is a relatively new and rising star of the underground- not only is he a prolific writer but through his publishing house Holy & Intoxicated Publications, he has printed seven Broadside Series of poems, as well as about a dozen poetry chapbooks- most notable amongst them are perhaps In The Heat Of Night by A.D. Winans and Fire On The Mountain by the late, great Doug Draime. 

Robinson’s poetry is characteristically first person, confessional narrative in form which candidly tap into his life story. The poems have a raw, spontaneous feel to them and explore common underground themes in a fresh and invigorating way. 

The title poem “Hang in There” is the first in the collection. It is addressed as much to the poet as to his readers. In the interview which follows this review, Robinson says of the title, “Hank Stanton (editor of Uncollected Press) came up with this title: It hit me right off: isn’t that what we’re all doing? Hanging in there for something, anything, anyone.”

HANG IN THERE

Hang in there
like a ghost falling
into the rain,
like a ship drifting
into a smothering fog,
hang in there
like it’s your last
breath, the final
word said,
the last page
read and turned,
hang in there
and scream the
injustice you feel,
that you see, as a
third of the world’s
human population
lacks
shelter
food
water,
hang in there
like heaven itself
awaiting its fate,
like waiting for the man
on a street-corner
who will make things
good again,
hang in there
whatever
it takes.

Robinson writes frequently and in graphic detail about the seamier side of existence: drug and alcohol abuse, mental illness, suicide, domestic violence and sexual assault. Robinson places himself in the foreground of most of his poetic anecdotes and he is never squeamish or embarrassed in revealing to us his many fuck-ups or the sordid tales of his acquaintances. In the poem “The Code of Honour” Robinson writes, “I know low-life,/ I’ve lived it, breathed/ it: cheated, robbed,/ lied and betrayed/ most and myself.” 

In the interview which follows, Robinson says of his poetry, “I guess it is mostly confessional and for sure is based on true events that I have been witnessed to, experienced or they are stories given by the people I meet, sometimes only very briefly, but sometimes that is enough to sense the sorrow or the joy and I try and capture this with a straight forward direct delivery, I think any other approach would not possibly have the resonation, the clarity and depth that I am reaching for.” 

In Hang in There Robinson writes about his disjointed childhood memories and young sexual love. He writes about his European travels, work related incidents and his life as a poet and publisher. He writes portrait poems of artists and of the down and out. He writes about the women in his life and he includes his reflections on life, love, truth and death.

The poems cascade down the page in one stanza- often rolling towards an ill- defined, obscure or uncertain conclusion. Like life, nothing is resolved or neatly stitched up. Robinson often uses dialogue to propel his poetry, and combined with his unique perspectives and anecdotes, creates a highly credible experience for the reader.

In a hefty chunk of the collection, Robinson turns the spotlight on himself- yet he neither condemns nor glorifies his unruly past. The poems are sometimes told with an exuberance and cheeky humour, or sometimes with a deeply gutted, shaking of the head- but never does Robinson utter a false note.

Robinson says of his childhood and young adult life: “On my father’s side, I come from a long and staggering line of drunkards: alcohol became a part of my life very early on, drugs came a little later: I was an alcoholic by the time I was 17 or 18: I drifted, never had any ambitions of any kind, just wasn’t interested in anything else except getting drunk and high: Hash has been forever present: speed, cocaine, amphetamines were party pieces : Heroin scared me, I had lost half dozen friend’s to heroin: Codeine: Valium or any ‘downers’ was my choice.”

Robinson creates highly personal poems which intimately involve the reader. Especially memorable are the poems in which he describes waking up in a strange bed after a blackout (“The Next Move”, 3 Floors Up”), meeting the folks of a girlfriend (“It Was Vodka”), when he tries to bum a drink for his old man & is bashed (“How’d You Get That Nose?”) and how as a young soldier he resolves a previous bullying situation with a fellow recruit (“Pay Back”). 

Robinson, a man in his mid-50s, threw himself headlong into writing in 2016 and he has published a flurry of chapbooks since then (see the list at the end of this post). He recently explained to Bold Monkey why he didn’t publish his work earlier, “I was writing gibberish: bullshit: as Dan Fante said (or something like) ‘Keep writing, no matter what, write that shit down, keep writing, write yourself through the shit and you’ll find a way that is comfortable’: I had written nothing that was worthwhile for publication, the odd poem perhaps: I had initially written in the direct narrative but had nothing of note to capture back then: I then started working on ‘When You Hear The Bell, There’s Nowhere To Hide’ I was in my early 50’s and had a lifetime as it were to look back over and write about and I knew I had found my way back home after taking the longest route and it feels good to be home.”

In the meta-poem “The Longest Route” Robinson writes that nothing on his journey was planned- “shit just happened.” Many of his experiences and places he ventured into were “brutal and harrowing” but that is what he writes about:

THE LONGEST ROUTE

took the longest,
the hardest and
toughest route
and that’s what I
write about:
it wasn’t a
deliberated decision
to take the bumpy
road, that shit
just happened,
there was no fate,
dream or plan
with anything
at all: nothing I
was reaching for,
I threw myself into
what was there in
front of me and
found other worlds
and places within
them, most of them
brutal and
harrowing, self-
explosive and
ignorant and I came
to love,
to love them all
and that’s what I
write about.

The most harrowing part of the collection are Robinson’s several portraits of young and vulnerable woman who have fallen prey to drugs, mental illness and sexual predators. Highly memorable are “Broken Eyes”, “The Fuck-Up Again”, “If Not Earlier”, “So Silently”, “Like Starving Rats”, “Bruised And Cracked”, “The Old Friend” and “You Know Her.” The poems are gritty and evoke a sense of hopelessness in the reader as you sense Robinson’s frustration in not being able to help these women.  

Some of the poems in the collection probably have been inspired by Robinson’s work as a housing officer.  The most direct reference to this is in the poem “The Hollow People” in which he writes, “A large proportion of my work/ is listening to people…to hear words that are the lives/ of the fucked-up and lonely.” He understands and empathises with his clients because he has been in similar situations to them: 

and I am each and
everyone one of them, I
hear and speak their
language, know of their
needs and weaknesses
I have come through it and
now hold the hands of
those who didn’t.

In “So Silently” the speaker, presumably Robinson, has to urgently house a woman who has just been released from a psychiatric hospital. He raises a fist to the predators and bean counters out there: “25 years old and at the mercy/ of a cold and defensive/ authority that will decide/ whether she’ll have a roof/ over her head tonight, out/ of street danger and the/ coldness of October.”

Robinson says about his important work: “For the past 3 decades I have worked as a housing officer: working with the most vulnerable, dangerous, crazed, beautiful, intelligent, homeless, violent, thankful, warm, people of my local community: and without a doubt these people are the inspiration for some of my work: I am fortunate to meet some beautiful souls but every day I will hear of some tragedy: a suicide/serious self harm/ families becoming homeless/extreme poverty/ some poor fucker getting a severe beating: although I enjoy the job as with most things it’s the politics and their budgets that fuck things up and makes life even tougher with every screw turned, particularly for those at the bottom looking up.”

In Robinson’s world, lessons are rarely learnt, people continue to fuck-up, take drugs, drink themselves blind- although often in full knowledge of the negative consequences of what they are doing. Addiction, genetics, gender, poverty, family dysfunction, peer pressure and many other variables are all ingredients which turn to shit of all rational government attempts to control and straighten out human behaviour. 

Robinson consistently explores the life of people on the margins and their often inevitable plunge into madness, suicide, prostitution, drug use, sexual abuse- and other aberrant behaviours. It is very difficult to break this chain and he offers us no solutions- he is merely recording what he has seen and heard over decades.

The poem “The Clothing” is highly effective in depicting the emptiness which comes with sudden loss.  The bagging of the woman’s clothing is sharply contrasted with her love for clothing.  This is not a cautionary tale on why people shouldn’t take drugs but rather a sad comment on a vibrant life brutally and prematurely taken.

THE CLOTHING

She loved clothes and would
spend a great deal of money
and time with this;
she also loved drugs,
unlike her particular
choice of clothing, she
wasn’t fussy and would
swallow, snort, smoke or
shoot whatever was on
offer; her looks were
Italian pretty, her
character warm and
charming, kindly and
she prostituted herself
for clothes and drugs;
it took a full day’s work
to bag up her clothing;
5 dozen huge plastic
sacks, most of which
she had never worn,
bought on impulse, a
lust to own;
charity shops collected,
soon other young
women would be
buying and wearing
these things and I’d
hope she be
happy with this.

There is an underlying energy and optimism in Robinson’s writing which occasionally lifts Hang in There above the gloom. There are moments of humour or humility or quiet moments of enjoying simple pleasures- like getting high or writing poetry- which make this senseless wild beast worth living. Poems like 
“The Flick of a Switch”, “Ticking Calendar” affirm life from the highest rafters. In “To Begin With” Robinson writes how a granddaughter of a totally messed-up family has broken the chains of her past and now “has a successful/ business and she is/ beautifully stunning,/ living clear of her/ mother’s journey.” 

My favourite image of the collection is from the poem “1960’s Pop Culture And Stravinsky.” In the poem the speaker walks out of his office at midday, gets high and writes:

I saw my wife pull up in her
car; a pop song from the 1960’s
came over the radio and I
began dancing in the kitchen,
my wife came in, she didn’t
take off her coat but embraced
me and we danced and held
each other


 The front and back cover are by the artist and poet Henry Grier Stanton. The front cover depicts a couple embracing under an archway. Robinson says of the cover, “Henry G Stanton is not only a true quality poet but he is also an exceptional artist: I loved the cover right-off: a couple entwined, ghostly: is this their first embrace or their last? Where do the archway’s lead to? Heaven or hell? I see and feel something different every time I look at the painting, which is hanging in my home: it has energy with the colours that move like a fine mist and this applies to the portrait.”

 John D. Robinson is an important underground poet totally worth turning your attention to. Although Bukowski & others may have been an initial inspiration, Robinson has now found his own voice and there is a lot to admire about him – the honesty of his writing, his embrace of the alternative small publishing community, his resilience in surviving his past errors and in getting his words out to us.

Robinson has now left his crazy past behind. He says: “These days I open up a bottle of wine about 9 pm when I settle down with pen and pad and start to scribble: A beautiful, strong and intelligent lady saved my ass: love saved my ass: my daughter saved my ass, my grandchildren saved my ass. Poetry saved my ass and god damn it, my cats saved my ass: Love: I am friends with my demons now: it took a while and I’ve always got to be alert.”


Signed copies of the book (limited edition of 100) are available through Raw Art Review: https://therawartreview.com/books-for-sale/or direct from John D. Robinson: johndrobinson@yahoo.co.uk





INTERVIEW WITH JOHN D. ROBINSON  20 JULY 2019

How was the process of getting your collection Hang in There published through the American based Uncollected Press?

Henry Stanton had read some of my work in ‘Outlaw Poetry’ and then read some more works online and then purchased a couple of my chapbooks: he got in touch and asked for some poems to feature in his online literary and arts publication ‘Raw Arts Review’: Following this Hank then approached for some poems for a book and this full length collection is the result:

Can you explain why you called the book Hang in There?

Hank Stanton came up with this title: It hit me right off: isn’t that what we’re all doing? Hanging in there for something, anything, anyone:

Is your poetry essentially confessional and based on real events? What are some of your influences in developing this narrative, first person style?

I guess it is mostly confessional and for sure is based on true events that I have been witnessed to, experienced or they are stories given by the people I meet, sometimes only very briefly, but sometimes that is enough to sense the sorrow or the joy and I try and capture this with a straight forward direct delivery, I think any other approach would not possibly have the resonation, the clarity and depth that I am reaching for:

In the poem “The Code & Honour” you write “I know low-life/I’ve lived it, breathed/ it: cheated, robbed,/ lied and betrayed/ most and myself”. Can you describe this period in your life. How old were you? How were you able to break free of this spiral downwards of alcohol and drugs?

On my father’s side, I come from a long and staggering line of drunkards: alcohol became a part of my life very early on, drugs came a little later: I was an alcoholic by the time I was 17 or 18: I drifted, never had any ambitions of any kind, just wasn’t interested in anything else except getting drunk and high: Hash has been forever present: speed, cocaine, amphetamines were party pieces : Heroin scared me, I had lost half dozen friend’s to heroin:  Codeine: Valium or any ‘downers’ was my choice;:  I  am prescribed pain relief medication these days for a crumbling spinal disc: I do not drink during the day nowadays, the pain relief is a good deterrent not to consume alcohol during the day: : In my 20 and 30’s I’d be drunk and stoned around the clock: These days  I open up a bottle of wine about 9 pm when I settle down with pen and pad and start to scribble: A beautiful, strong and intelligent lady saved my ass: love saved my ass: my daughter saved my ass, my grandchildren saved my ass. Poetry saved my ass and god damn it , my cats saved my ass: Love: I am friends with my demons now: it took  a while and I’ve always got to be alert:

In “The Hollow People” you write that “A large proportion of my work/ is listening to people…to hear words that are the lives/ of the fucked-up and lonely.” What is your job and is it the inspiration for many of your poems in the collection?

For the past 3 decades I have worked as a housing officer: working with the most vulnerable, dangerous, crazed, beautiful, intelligent, homeless, violent, thankful, warm, people of my local community: and without a doubt these people are the inspiration for some of my work: I am fortunate to meet some beautiful souls but every day I will hear of some tragedy: a suicide/serious self harm/ families becoming homeless/extreme poverty/ some poor fucker getting a severe beating: : although I enjoy the job as with most things it’s the politics and their budgets that fuck things up and makes life even tougher with every screw turned, particularly for those at the bottom looking up: 

You first published poetry as a young man but according to your publishing credits you didn’t start putting out books until 2016. Is this accurate? If so, why the long delay?

I was writing gibberish: bullshit: as Dan Fante said (or something like) ‘Keep writing, no matter what, write that shit down, keep writing, write yourself through the shit and you’ll find a way that is comfortable’: I had written nothing that was worthwhile for publication, the odd poem perhaps: I had initially written in the direct narrative but had nothing of note to capture back then: I then started working on ‘When You Hear The Bell, There’s Nowhere To Hide’ I was in my early 50’s and had a lifetime as it were to look back over and write about and I knew I had found my way back home after taking the longest route and it feels good to be home: 

In “The Longest Route” you write “I took the longest,/ the hardest and/ toughest route/ and that’s what I/ write about”. You say nothing was planned- “shit just happened”. What were the circumstances which influenced you to write about some of your “brutal and harrowing” experiences.

I think I may have answered this above: people inspire me: be it the beauty and love, the madness , the energy, the daring, the stepping out of the norm people: I feel at ease with these people , a lot more than being in the company of a bunch of faceless suits in an artificial office: life is on the streets, my streets, your streets, all over the globe:

The cover and back art is created by Henry Grier Stanton. The cover illustration appears to be of a man and woman giving solace to each other under an archway. What’s the story behind this cover?

Henry G Stanton is not only a true quality poet but he is also an exceptional artist: I loved the cover right-off: a couple entwined, ghostly: is this their first embrace or their last? Where do the archway’s lead to? Heaven or hell? I see and feel something different every time I look at the painting, which is hanging in my home: it has energy with the colours that move like a fine mist and this applies to the portrait (which is also hanging in my hallway): I am hoping to publish a chapbook of Hank’s artwork in the future:

How has the reception of your work gone so far?

I think the reception has been very positive so far: I gave a reading some weeks back in a local bookstore and received a good reception and sold some books: I am planning to visit the States to meet with Hank and do a micro-reading tour: the book has received some very positive reviews: I am so pleased with this book: the layout and format by Hank works well: 

I know you are a very busy man- what are some of your upcoming projects?

My chapbook ‘Singing Aria’s’ will be published by UK Analog Submission Press on the 31stof July: 20 pages of recent unpublished poetry appearing in print for the first time: print run of 25 copies: pre-orders are welcomed, please go to the Analog Submission Press for details of how to purchase;

In September 2019: Alien Buddha Press will be releasing my book: ‘ A Hash Smoking, Codeine Swallowing, Wine Drinking Son Of A Bitch’ : about 130 pages of old and new poems:

As Holy&intoxicated Publications I will continue to publish quality limited edition’s chapbooks of poetry: forthcoming are : George Anderson: Jake St. John: Tohm Bakeleas: Mendes Biondo: Catfish McDaris: Gwil James Thomas: Scott Wozniak to name just a few:

Who knows then?

That’s for your time, John!

Thank you for everything! Take care. Hope to hear back from you.


Further Resources

Eight further poems from Hang in Therecan be found in a feature on John D. Robinson in Raw Art Review: 




Chapbooks by John D. Robinson

Cowboy Hats & Railways (Scars Press 2016) https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1537539019/ref=x_gr_w_bb_sout?ie=UTF8&tag=x_gr_w_bb_sout-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1537539019&SubscriptionId=1MGPYB6YW3HWK55XCGG2
When You Hear The Bell, There’s Nowhere To Hide (Holy&intoxicated Publications 2016)
https://www.amazon.com/When-Hear-Bell-Theres-Nowhere/dp/0993206808
An Outlaw In The Making (Scars Publications 2017)
https://www.amazon.com/Outlaw-Making-John-D-Robinson/dp/1981468188
These Poems Stole Your Lunch Money with Bradley Mason Hamlin  (Holy&intoxicated Publications 2017)
https://www.amazon.com/These-Poems-Stole-Lunch-Money/dp/0993206875
Looking Down Both Barrels with Adrian Manning  (Holy&intoxicated Publications 2017)
https://www.amazon.in/Looking-Barrels-Adrian-Manning-Robinson/dp/0993206867
Hitting Home (Iron Lung Press 2018)
https://ironlungpress.bigcartel.com/product/hitting-home-by-john-d-robinson
In Pursuit Of  Shadows (Analog Submission Press 2018)
https://www.analogsubmission.com/product/the-pursuit-of-shadows-by-john-d-robinson
In Between The Curves  with Charles Joseph  (Holy&intoxicated Publications 2018)
https://www.amazon.ca/Between-Curves-Charles-Joseph-Robinson/dp/0993206891
Echoes Of Diablo  (Concrete Meat Press 2018)
http://adrianmanning.wixsite.com/concretemeatpress/single-post/2018/08/16/New-Chapbook-by-John-D-Robinson
Too Many Drinks Ago  (Paper & Ink Zine Publication 2018)
https://paperandinkzine.bigcartel.com/product/too-many-drinks-ago-by-john-d-robinson
Romance, Renegades & Riots with James Gwill Thomas  (Analog Submission Press 2018)
https://www.analogsubmission.com/product/romance-renegades-riots-by-gwil-james-thomas-john-d-robinson
Singing Aria’s (Analog Submission Press, 2019): https://twitter.com/analogsubpress/status/1151177142622834689



I

Thursday, July 18, 2019

New release: John D. Robinson Singing Aria's (Analog Submission Press, 2019)



Analog Submission Press
More
A message from Analog Press: John D Robinson needs no introduction. ‘Singing Aria’s’ is his latest ‪#chapbook, all new and all recent, drops the 31st July. Limited run, lovingly handmade, painstakingly hand numbered. Pink inner wrappers with white outer wrappers. Pre-orders available now, crash the link!

No doubt the collectible chap will go fast. Only 25 copies!

Thursday, July 4, 2019

Book Review: Ryan Quinn Flanagan AMBIENT SAVAGE (Rust Belt Press, 2019) 280 pages


This is one of the latest collections of poetry by the prolific Northern Ontario poet Ryan Quinn Flanagan, who has amassed more than thirty-five books to date, most of which can still be bought through Lulu or Amazon. Check out his yolasite link below. The man's output is not surprising when you consider that on a good full day Flanagan can crank out 20-25 poems. Recently asked if he ever deleted a poem Flanagan confidentially quipped, “Hahaha! Yeah, I got a big pile of QC (Quality Control) that I box away when it’s not good enough so plenty of rejects for sure.” 

There are an amazing 199 poems in Ambient Savage and those familiar with Flanagan’s poetry will find both confessional verse combined with what he refers to as his “wandering poems.” He explicitly explained his use of style in an earlier BM review in regard to his collection Gangbangs and Other Mass Rallies (Pski’s Porch, 2017): 

“The more matter of fact confessional type poems are much more straight forward, and often the backbone of the book.  The other intricate word play or “wandering poems” as I like to call them are probably the best example of how my brain works.  They are non-linear, almost steams of consciousness, but not quite.  I honestly enjoy writing these types of poems more and more I find.  I don't consciously set out to do so, but I find that more of them are appearing in newer works.” 

The title poem “Ambient Savage” appears early in the collection. The highly associative word play in the poem is a remarkable example of Flanagan’s hugely experimental “wandering” poetry:

Ambient Savage

Big Brother is little sister
sharing a bunk

the fingers of lepers
always leaving the
band

and I walk into the room

and all the walls have been
ex-communicated

not a Latin bone in my body
so that fishy cans from Sardinia
mean nothing to me

that salty red taste of split lips
after a fight

the way you can leave yourself
behind in the snow
and be somewhere else
completely

your ambient savage
scabbed across distant
knuckles

drying in the street
that stolen joyride cars
drive over.

In the Gangbangs interview, Flanagan also explained the sense of artist freedom and joy he derives from his writing methods: 

“I have always loved surrealist paintings and Dada and such and the wandering poems allow me to jump around a bit like a frog stretching its legs a little… It is more a comfortable free association as you go along, not locked in on anything specific, but rather gliding through loose sentiments and never forcing a cohesion.  There often is a loose cohesion when you are done, but it is flexible and free and therefore often the most rewarding.”

You will find more than two dozen “wandering poems” in the collection. Here’s another stunning example:

Summer Comes

You reach
and come up
short

that is straight
carrot on a stick
bullshit

leading the horse
to glue

and the cars
that won’t start
come to rest
in the street

the neighbourhood
children try the doors,
then jump on the hoods

if there is a body in the trunk
the right people will
find it

with its testicles cut off
and shoved in
its mouth

or perhaps
this is a reckless
abandon

the plates removed
like loose teeth

and when the summer comes
it is hot

your clothes seem to stick to you
like cotton shadows

in the absence of trees
for shade

and books

for
school.

*

I have been following Flanagan’s work for over ten years and have been impressed by his tenacity to get the word down on the page.  Asked about his process of composition and how he arranges the order of his poems for publication, he candidly and generously replied:

“The process I follow for composition is pretty simple and repetitive.  I eat the same thing which is a bowl of oatmeal, then I listen to the same music to get in the right headspace. Usually some Ministry and Nine Inch Nails or Joy Division.  After that, I head upstairs with some wine or beer and switch to classical music from hard rock or industrial. The classical stuff is just nice and quiet like something in the background to help put you into a sort of trance so you just get to the business of writing without thinking about it too much.  I might have a few notes to jog the memory, but usually I'll just sit down and see what comes out.  If I have a full day to write I write until the wine or beer is gone. Then I turn the computer off and grab some dinner before bed.  I can't write everyday of course, we all have lives to lead and life stuff always intruded, but when I can I definitely make the time and just repeat the above process as many times as I can.

“When I feel the poems are written and the collection is ready to be assembled, I print out a hard copy and spread all the poems out on the bed so I can get a real good idea for the flow as I'm arranging. The flow is very important to me like building a strong album in many ways.  Some people can just do it on the fly on the computer, but I have to see everything laid out in hard copy and arrange things that way.  Then I take the assembled MS and rebuild it onto the computer with cut and paste until it is in an ordered MS form on the computer.  Then I read through and make any edits I have to, usually just a lot of little spelling and grammar things.  I almost never change anything that is written. I figure it was written during that specific time and headspace and just stick to spelling and grammar edits.   It is important to be totally sober for this part, can't stress that enough! "Write drunk, edit sober" is a mantra I certainly ascribe to.  

“After first edit, the MS is ready to be sent off to the respective publisher. The MS is then formatted into a PDF and all the line and spacing issues are dealt with. I do a second reading during this stage as well. When the corrections come back, I check to make sure everything is good to go and usually do a third cursory edit read while we work on the cover art and other important things that go into a work. Then the proof is ordered and we check to make sure everything is correct and transferred just as we wanted it to be. After that, we are good to go.  And that's the process for every book with little to no variation. Just certain things may be different depending on the respective publisher. But I really am a creature of habit when it comes to writing, that's for sure.”

As with Flanagan’s previous collections there is no unifying theme in Ambient Savage. As he explained in the Gangbangs review, “I much prefer to sit down and write whatever comes to mind over a couple of months, and then look at what I have in its entirety and choose from there. A few loose themes or motifs often appear, but overall, the idea is to just let things flow and see what comes from that; to mine the subconscious and make sure the conscious just gets out of the way as much as possible. When the poems are written, that is the way they are.”  

The poems in Ambient Savage were written over a short period of time two years ago and “in the same head space.” Flanagan writes of the process of getting this collection published:

“Ambient Savage was written about two years ago. I then approached the amazing artist Marcel Herms about his fantastic art for the cover. I love whenever I get a chance to work with Marcel.  We've worked together on five books to date and I'm sure there will be many more. Once I had the book written assembled and proofed and the cover art, I approached a press about working with them. To their credit, they got back to me and said they would like to publish Ambient Savage, but had so many books ahead of it in the queue that it would be over a year before they could get to it and suggested I see if I could get it picked up somewhere else in the meantime if I could. I was very appreciative of them being so upfront about the wait. That extra time would have put the poems at over three years old at that point. I then went over the MS again with yet another proof before I approached Rust Belt and Ambient Savage came about pretty quickly after that.

“As I mentioned, most the poems were written over two years ago and then there was a wait with the first press before the move to the second. The poems in this collection are their own beast and completely independent of the other collections. They were all written during the same short period of time and in the same head space.  And having Marcel's wonderful artwork grace the cover really brought everything together.  That guy is truly a great artist!”

*

The heart of Ambient Savage consists of confessional verse and narrative poems which include personal anecdotes and observations of everyday events, conversations with his wife and other women, his battle with mental illness and his thoughts on writers and writing. The writing is typically clear and easy to follow. 

In the poem “Key Development” Flanagan uses a simple trip to get a key cut into a memorable experience for the reader:

Key Development

I am in this little closet of a shop
down by the water.

Having a key made for my new place.

This old timer in a candy-striped smock
standing over the buffer.

A wrinkly stooped Polack
with large brown growths
on his face.

There are many locks on the wall as well.
I check the one on the entrance to the shop
figuring this old timer would use the lock
he trusted the most.

There is no open or closed sign.
No one comes in while I am present.
I doubt they even know it is there.

It’s the type of place you walk by
a thousand times without thinking
about it.

When the key is done, the old timer
charges me next to nothing.

I thank him and he nods.
The same way creepy butlers do
in old horror movies that don’t
end well.

Then I am out the door
and back into the
world.

With a shiny new key
tucked inside a small white
envelope.

Past the movie house crowd
spilling out
and date night diners inside
restaurant windows.

Knowing the quietest one in the room
is the strongest one
in the room.

And your noise is the sound of
their victory.

Perhaps the consistently best in the collection are Flanagan's portrait poems, usually of struggling, marginalized people who appear in poems such as “Evgeny the Loan Shark”, “The Dope Dealer”, “Stanley’s Creation”, “Chop Shop”, “Gridlock Gary”, “Luke” and “$5 Cum Dumpster.”

*
Ryan Quinn Flanagan recently expressed to BM the evolving role that writing has had in his life, "I used to think that writing just played a cursory role in my life, but as I've gotten older I think it plays a much more therapeutic role than I previously thought. I used to laugh at that idea and I still have some problems with the idea of that, but writing really does help me. It just calms me more than anything and allows the opportunity to do something I enjoy doing as opposed to all the things we all have to do in daily life that aren't enjoyable in the least. Some of those daily things can be soul crushing really, so it's good to have something you can go to that makes you feel good, you know? And because it is so enjoyable I try to make time to do it whenever I can."   

*

You will find plenty of surprises in Ambient Savage. When you think you have Flanagan worked out he will fling your way a remarkable line or a poem to blow you away. That said, a few of the poems in the collection appear comparatively weak and perhaps this is due to Flanagan’s massive output, his bold experiments in language, and especially, his rigid determination not to revise his work once it is down. 

He says candidly in the Gangbangs review, “I never revise anything beyond simple spelling and grammar issues.  I believe that when you write, what came from that day, that specific time and space is specific to that place and not to be polished up or amended later on when you find yourself in a completely different headspace.  I don't want to censor anything I may say, so I just go with my first natural instinct and trust that.”

Ambient Savage is an interesting and solid collection of poems. Flanagan is up there with the best of the alternative small press. And as he is still only in his early 40s we should expect dozens of books to follow. The poems may not always work but you have to admire Flanagan for his ongoing experimentation with language and his tenacity in getting his work to us out there. 



Check out dozens of other books by Ryan Quinn Flanagan here: http://ryanquinnflanagan.yolasite.com/books.php

Find a BM review/ interview of Flanagan’s Gangbangs and Other Mass Rallies(2017) here: https://georgedanderson.blogspot.com/2018/01/ryan-quinn-flanagan-gangbangs-and-other.html

March 16, 2019 Interview with The Dope Fiend Daily:    https://thedopefienddaily.blogspot.com/2019/03/interview-with-ryan-quinn-flanagan.html