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Showing posts with label Frank Reardon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Reardon. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Featuring the poetry of Frank Reardon




DUST
at nineteen he ran through
the jungles
with a telephone on
his pack
screaming out for his mama
while bullets aimed directly
at the receiver
placed
ten inches from his head
zipped by his body.


at twenty
he carried a pack of Marlboro's
in his helmet
and played poker
outside the crumbling walls
of Hue
with the other unfortunate boys
who made it past
the initial three week
trial period.


at twenty-one
he smoked opium
and listened to The Doors
in sandbag bunkers
with Big Jim Stone
from Fort Wayne,
together they learned
the essential hate trade
with the words gook
and charlie.


at twenty-two
he kissed a Saint Michael medal
with long napalm tears
covered in mud
when he couldn't
remember if he had killed
five or fifteen men
with a Jamming Jenny.


at twenty-three
after taking two in the leg,
one worth a ticket home,
the other, smashing one
of his baby makers
into a million pieces;
he was airlifted high above
long lines
of black body bags
shining
in the Vietnamese sun


at twenty-five
they gave him a minimum
wage job
in the post office
where he spent long nights
locked in the bathroom
vomiting guilt, death,
screams and panic attacks


at forty-five
he developed a skin condition
called Orange
and he sold his war stories
to anyone who would listen
to the emotional vampire
who pushed his forearm weight
down on a child's throat


at fifty-three
he had a massive heart attack,
the jungle escape routes
in his arteries hardened
from years of smoke, misery,
fear, hate and judgement


at fifty-five,
after many years of midnight
ghosts that haunted
his dreams, who came to him
screaming with legs, arms
and faces blown off.
After years of unknown voices
screaming "baby killer"
into his empty skull,
After thirty long fuckin' years
the mental hospital finally
taught him how to cry
when they unlocked
their enormous iron doors


at sixty
he went to Washington D.C.
to visit The Wall,
and he searched for hours,
looking for names, names
that haunted
his sleepless nights,
names that he tried to put
back together but couldn't,
names he carried on his shoulders
like ten tons of steel
day in and day out


and when he finally found one,
he soon found another
and then another,
he moved his fingers
along the chipped away granite
that spelled out their names,
and when he took a breath
it was his first breath
in forty years
because he finally realized
that a forgotten friend in the hands of the living
is made from dust.


LONELY LARRY
Everyday Larry walks into the lumber yard
with his head down due to years of bad posture.
His hair, fake or not, looks like a blond toupee,
and he twiddles his fingers in mad circles
when he speaks. Mona, the cashier,
calls him "Lonely Larry." She says it whenever
he leaves the room. "Lonely Larry, poor-poor,
Lonely Larry." During the day Larry is a lumber
merchandiser and he takes his job very seriously
even if his corduroy pants are pulled up over
his belly button. He looks like a giant Weeble
most days, and he's a massive billowing shit-talker
from years of love lost, everyday. While fastening the Velcro
straps on his gray sneakers, Larry likes to remind
me of his youth, how in his 20s he was a ladies' man,
a sure-fire chick magnet. He says it was
all due to his over-use of cologne and gold chains.
I find it hard to believe, especially since his work apron
has his name painted on it with large purple letters
and bedazzled silver rhinestones, though he's done
a great job convincing himself of his prowess. Whenever Kayla,
the woman with the perfect ass, the woman who can
speak perfect French, says "hi," Larry's
fake deep voice turns high-pitched and nasally.
He's 60, but whenever that French painting
struts by with her big black boots he turns
into himself:  quiet, nervous, perverted, the shy little boy.
At night Larry is a quiz show genius, a Game Show Network
lunatic. Sitting in his father's old leather recliner,
he tries to solve puzzles on The Wheel of Fortune
while sucking root beer from a straw. "Buy a vowel!"
he shouts as he twists off the top of an Oreo
so he can lick the cream filling.
"Why won't she buy a fucking vowel!?" he asks
his purple and yellow canary sitting in its brass cage,
but the bird never replies, it just sits
on a perch rapidly moving its head and chirping a song.
Poor-poor Lonely Larry, the game shows are over
and the symphony has gotten so cruel
with night songs that Larry must go under his bed
and pull out the old box with the frayed cardboard cover.
Inside: ancient comic books that he had saved since
he was a child. And with teeth clenched upon bottom lip,
he savours each action packed square,
each crime fighter's heroic action, each word floating
inside its cartoon bubble. The hands are weak, the sweat
is real, the foreboding feeling in the dark pulls
at lost eyes and surrounds him with panic.
Soon Larry will climb into bed. "Gotta get up at 4 a.m.
and do it all over again," he'll whisper to himself.
It's the same thing each day and night, the perfect
hell on earth, relived day after day and night after night.
The perfect assassin with the perfect bullet,
inching closer and closer by the second until
it burrows in us all
and plants the great seed of denial.



BLUEGRASS BABY

She likes to dance on the back deck
in her tight jeans and listen
to Bluegrass: Bill Monroe, Earl Scruggs,
Lester Flatt. She spins in circles.
Her hair, an array of sharp knives,
cuts through the sun and splatters
it all over the sky. She's fast banjo honey.
She's still spinning.



JEREMIAH
Somewhere outside
Tomah, Wisconsin,
upon numb ass,
tired and defiled,
the Amish man
who smelled of bologna
and odd starch
leaned in and asked
if I was a farmer.

His beard of no moustache,
his hat of straw,
his shirt of blue tears,
and his crazy eyes
from another man's nightmare
patiently
awaited my response
with a boot tap.

I contemplated
the question
for a moment
as I watched
the big dipper
touch the new earth
from the night window
of a narrowing
greyhound seat.

Fuck.




KEEP TRYING
As I piss on the empty beer cans
outside the backdoor,
I watch the steam
of all that's still possible
rise up from the ashes
like an angry set of fangs
preparing to bite down on all
that has been given.



UNCLE LEO'S CLOUD OF SMOKE.
at my grandfather's wake
Uncle Leo & i
smoked cigarettes
together
in the Croswell Funeral Home
basement,

Leo's face: drawn out,
blank, quiet
& listless
as he inhaled
Lucky Strike
after Lucky Strike
into his bony
&narrow face,

Leo must've smoked
15 non filtered
cigarettes
to every one of mine

& it did not phase him,
in fact, he never once
coughed or uttered
a single word to me,

until, i asked
"Uncle Leo,
what was my grandfather
like when he was younger?"

Leo leaned forward
from the chair
& let the slits
of his blue eyes
cut through
the smoke cloud

"he was the toughest
son-of-a-bitch
i ever knew!" he shouted
"there was not one
person
who could've out drank,
out worked,
out punched,
or out lived Francis!"

& as quickly as he
appeared
to me
he once again
vanished,

back to his
safe & secure cloud
of smoke,

where each one
of his inhales
sent him
back to his youth
so he could have
at least
one more beer
with his brothers
in South Boston
Dorchester,

&his cloud of smoke
continued to grow
bigger
&bigger
around our heads

because
he had to keep
lighting
more & more
cigarettes

because
with each exhale
came the agonizing
reminder
that he was truly
the last one
left.




Frank Reardon was born in 1974 in Boston, Massachusetts, currently lives in Monot, North Dakota. Frank has been published in many reviews, journals and online zines. His first book, Interstate Chokehold, was published by NeoPoiesis Press in 2009 as well as his second collection Nirvana Haymaker 2012. His third poetry collection Blood Music was published by Punk Hostage Press late 2013. In 2014 Reardon published a chapbook with Dog On A Chain Press titled The Broken Halo Blues.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

BOOK REVIEW/ INTERVIEW: Frank Reardon NIRVANA HAYMAKER. Seattle, NeoPoiesis Press, 2012 (164 pages).



This is Frank Reardon’s second full-length collection of poetry. Reardon, 39, grew up in Boston and currently lives in the Badlands of North Dakota where he has been able to dry out and put his life into perspective. He says candidly of Nirvana Haymaker, ‘A lot of those poems were written after I locked myself away in North Dakota. There's not much vice around me up here, nor distraction. I was drying out, getting on track, dealing with the pain of my past, writing out the pain, until I got to the point where I could tell the pain to go to hell.’ Reardon’s collection is difficult to nail down. It is an eclectic mix of raw, free verse poems which have spilled randomly from Reardon’s creative fount. In his ongoing search for a credible voice, he experiments with subject matter, language features and forms and uses a wide range of styles and perspectives. 
The book’s striking, predominantly burgundy cover jacket, was designed by Milo Duffin and Stephen Roxborough. The main focus is on a set of boxing gloves dangling from a wire mesh fence. As Reardon explains in the extended interview which follows this review, the boxing gloves represent a metaphor for the tough personal battles he has faced and how they have shaped his determination now to never give up: ‘Maybe I like doing things the hard way, but nothing in my life ever came easy. I don't think it does for most people, but in with my own personal experience, it has always been a fight. I think the cover portrays that- the two boxing gloves over a picture of Boston. I grew up in Boston, lived most of my life there. It's where I learned to fight, where I learned to never give up.’ Reardon reveals the genesis of the title, ‘The title "Nirvana Haymaker" like anything else in my life sort of just popped into my head one day. I had an uncle who was a gold gloves boxer in the military. He taught me, almost every day, how to punch and block. He taught me how to be a fighter not only of the flesh, but also of the mind and of the heart.’
Boxing and writing are inextricably linked in Reardon’s world. In writing Nirvana Haymaker Reardon absorbs a lot of punishment and takes a tumble or two in exposing his vulnerabilities as a fledgling writer, but he also counterpunches, and lands the occasional haymaker. In ‘Some Are Afraid of the Pain’ he describes the process of writing like taking a ‘bear trap off his heart’. In ‘Earning Respect’ he speaks from real-lived experience when he compares the reception of his poetry to knocking down his father for the first time: ‘you’ve got to be able/ to know how to take/ the beating & bruising/ that he is going/ to inflict on you/ when he finally stands/ back up’. In the micropoem ‘I Don’t Care How You Write’, he offers the reader some practical, hard won advice: ‘if the gods are not doubled over/ & clenching their guts/ from the “jabs” you/ just threw at your/ typewriter, then/ it’s not/ a poem’. In ‘They Prepare Too Much’ he suggests through another boxing analogy that writing needs to have a raw, spontaneous feel about it to breath life into the word, ‘when you tape up/ your knuckles,/ you only/ give the words/ a chance/ to escape you’.
One of the best poems in the collection ‘Go Fifteen With the Typewriter Before the Gods Ring the Bell’ features a clever extended metaphor which compares boxing with doing fifteen rounds with a typewriter. Reardon explicitly suggests that it takes great skill and tenacity, not only to ‘keep on your guard’ but to produce immortal lines of great beauty:
Go Fifteen With the Typewriter
Before the Gods Ring the Bell

It won’t smile at you
before landing
a haymaker
keep on your guard
keep on your guard
keep the gloves up at your chin
& learn how to counter
with all of your might
wisdom & courage,
if you don’t
you’ll never be able
to go toe-to-toe with it
because it dances the mat
with a mighty fury
jabbing
crossing
hooking
leaving you bloody
& lifeless.

if you can go toe-to-toe
with it
you need a lot of stamina
because if you
can keep up
you’ll be dipping & punching
with concertos
weaving & upper-cutting
with the heavens
& if it goes down
for the count
it will only be
because you
learned to throw
the most
beautiful punches
the world
has ever
thrown.

(reprinted with the author’s permission)

Reardon spent many years on the road between 2001-2009 in what he refers to as his ‘Lost Greyhound Years’. They were not wasted! He accumulated material for his writing. The five page poem ’10 Years’ captures acutely how he precariously clung to his sanity by ‘shouting love/ to every/ piece of dust/ that fell from/ every ceiling fan’s/ repetitive heartbeat’. He says of this period, ‘I did a lot of listening and people watching. I learned the movements of human beings, I learned the sounds they make, I learned the silent words that come from a person's face when they look at their shitty paycheck. I learned about the poetry that's found in the dish soap and the poems that are found in the rag that dries the plates.’ 

In more general terms, Reardon sees writing as freeing him ‘from the mundane’, of offering him hope when his life was shit: ‘It helped me wake up at 5 am, it helped me cut the sides of beef or to serve the people booze. During the worst of times, when I thought my life was crap, when I thought it was all but done, I'd come home and find out that a poem was published, or someone liked my chapbook, those things kept me going.’

Some of the best poems in the collection derive from Reardon’s close observations of people. These poems are characteristically written in an underground, free verse style from Reardon’s point of view. His portraits include his parents, other close relatives and quirky people he has met. The poems are told in a conversational tone direct to the reader, include direct speech and are often best read aloud. They are narrated in a matter-of-fact, no bullshit way and without jabbing our ribs with some obvious or facile moral lesson. The characters are revealed for who they are with all their vulnerabilities dangling. 

There are no neatly tied up or cute endings in Reardon’s poetry- just the gut-wrenching futility of messed-up lives with the occasional piss of hope. People learn to deal with the vicissitudes of their lives in different ways. In ‘The Mortal Kids’ a high school kid hangs himself after his girlfriend dumps him, in ‘Roselle’s Morning’ an arthritic woman dulls her pain by listening to radio sermons, in ‘Burnt Girl’ a deformed woman shows the speaker, presumably Reardon, a photo of herself as a girl before the fire, in ‘Gaining Wisdom’ a drunk lesbian tells Reardon that she is after ‘a nice hard one’ and in ‘3 Quarters for Ol’ Blind Chester’ a blind busker plays his guitar in the local mall and stoically reflects on the nature of existence.

Reardon’s dark childhood memories about his extended family provide the bulk of his best narrative portrait poems. These poems rely on the fleshing out of painful anecdotes burrowed deep in his hide. ‘10 a.m. Valiums’,‘Linoleum Prison’ and ‘Knocking Down Towers of Blocks’ are harrowing poems which represent his mother’s dysfunction, including her battle with alcohol and prescription drugs. ‘The Ball Breaker’ presents an unsympathetic, abusive portrait of his drill sergeant father. In ‘When You Don’t Pat the VIG’ his Uncle Jimmy is shot and lies ‘shirtless/ under a pile of leaves’. ‘Steal Home’ begins as a fond recollection of his Aunt Barbara playing baseball with the kids in her late 50s but ends in her tragic death through her drinking of mentholated spirits. In ‘Gardens Grow All Kinds of Things’ his grandfather is depicted as a brutal, impatient and unfaithful man. The tone in these poems is remarkably consistent and Reardon maintains a detached perspective which allows readers to develop their own inferences on how these events have shaped him as a man and writer.

Another highlight for me in Nirvana Haymaker were two poems Reardon wrote about his home town Boston, ‘Boston Irish’ and, probably the best poem in the collection, ‘Tobin Bridge’. ‘'Boston Irish' is a stirring tribute to the tough working class Irish men who helped build the city. They are the unsung heroes of the city and Reardon proudly identifies with them, ‘These people, my people,/ have always been called the quiet ones,/ stuck in manifested silence,/ spoken with a nod, a punch, or from the ale glass.’ The lyrical ‘Tobin Bridge’ is more ambitious in scope. This is a love poem directly addressed to the bridge which crosses Mystic River. The bridge is personified as a wise ‘barrel chested warrior’ who has guarded the ‘proud, filthy and marvelous Boston’. The bridge becomes an emblem for the history and toil of the working class ‘who ached agony/ into your backbone.’

Reardon projects a tough guy persona and often holds his fists close to his face, not giving too much away emotionally. As he says in ‘A letter to Whitey’, ‘I know about/ hitting it/ over & over/ With a confession/ of strictly trained/ muscles,// pulverizing it/ until the idea/ of running/ is no longer/ an option’. Yet under that thick-skin there lies the scared boy in 'The Little Boy' who wants to come out and be accepted by the poet. The boy represents Reardon’s conscience, the keeper of his long buried love.

Nirvana Haymaker is a solid but challenging collection of diverse and interesting poems. Frank Reardon is a tireless and highly committed poet whose tenacity in pursuing the word should be an example to us all. His enthusiasm and openness in sharing his ideas about his writing craft at length are invigorating. Reardon is continuing to develop as a writer and it will be interesting to see what flows from his well in the future.



INTERVIEW WITH FRANK REARDON 13 APRIL 2013
BIO: Frank Reardon was born in 1974 in Boston, Massachusetts and spent his first 28 years living there. Since then, he has lived all over the country, in places such as Alabama, Kansas City and Rhode Island. He currently lives in the Badlands of North Dakota, still looking for a way to get out. Frank has been published in various reviews, journals and online zines. His first book, Interstate Chokehold, was published by NeoPoiesis Press in 2009. Frank is in the process of completing a third poetry collection and intends to take up additional prose/fiction writing and perhaps clay pigeon shooting.

Frank can you briefly explain your first experiences with poetry and how you initially became interested in writing the stuff?
My first experience with poetry was not much different than anyone else. I first got it in high school, and to be honest, I hated it at the time. I had to learn about the old English poets, or about rhyme and meter- I even remember being forced to write rhyming poetry as well. This is not to say there are not some good poets out there who use rhyme, there are some, like Jeffers and Dylan Thomas, but I was not introduced to them, and forget about the oriental poets, or the modern poets, or the narrative poets. My first real experiences with poetry worked out much like the gathering of a record collection. I read novels and I found out they wrote poetry too. When I found something that spoke to me like Kerouac or Creeley I would move onto what moved them- then I would discover d.a. levy, or Bukowski, William Carlos Williams, Frank O'Hara and so forth, I was then hooked on the stuff. I tried going to open mics but most of the time, 95% of the time, I couldn't find anything that moved me, not like the books I was reading. I went onto myspace and joined some pompous group who put their nose up at everything, that also turned me off, of groups that is. Then I discovered some people like Scott Wannberg, S.A. Griffin and David Smith, all three would eventually become mentors and friends to me. I also discovered people my age doing amazing stuff  like John Dorsey, Jason Hardung and Rob Plath; all three eventually became friends of mine. Through all these meetings I was able to discover what was going on underneath all the B.S. I discovered other people, though vastly different, they were doing their own things, speaking from their hearts, speaking of their lives, whatever formula they used was of no consequence to me, I just liked what they were saying. In many ways they upped my game, they helped me be a better writer just by reading their stuff and giving readings with them.

You have experienced a wide variety of jobs, including butcher, fork lift driver and bartender between 2001-2009. Can you describe the impact your various occupations and travels have had on the development of your writing?

Yeah, I am a jack of all trades, there's probably not a blue collar job I cannot do. Besides checking out the girls and clock watching, I did a lot of listening and people watching. I learned the movements of human beings, I learned the sounds they make, I learned the silent words that come from a person's face when they look at their shitty paycheck. I learned about the poetry that's found in the dish soap and the poems that are found in the rag that dries the plates. Another reason I had all these jobs is because when I went to college I studied philosophy. After I was finished I could not apply it to anything. I learned more from the jobs, the travels, the people, places, smells, tastes than I ever did in some classroom. I am not opposed to education, but for me it did not apply in my development. This probably shows as it took me ages to learn proper grammar. I was always fascinated by William Carlos Williams, a doctor who could write about the people in the streets better than the people could. I am not saying anyone can be a writer, they cannot. Not everyone is blessed with the gift. To say everyone can be a writer is almost like saying anyone can be a center in the NBA. I don't know about you, but I am only 5ft 8, I needed to find another career. Writing poetry or writing in general saved me from the mundane, it helped me wake up at 5 am, it helped me cut the sides of beef, or to serve the people booze. During the worst of times, when I thought my life was crap, when I thought it was all but done, I'd come home and find out that a poem was published, or someone liked my chapbook, those things kept me going. They kept me alive, and they still do. As for travel, I grew up traveling in the summers with my father for his job. At 8 years old I was eating king crab in Vegas casinos with show girls, while other times, I was in the desert looking for something to do. I suppose it has always stayed with me, the traveling, the rambling around. It's part of my soul, and much like the jobs I had, it taught me everything about people, landscapes etc.

What goes on in your mind before you write? Where do your poems come from? Is your writing carefully planned and crafted? Do you have a set routine? Do you do much editing? What is your overall intent as a writer?

To be honest most times nothing is in my mind, today for example, I was standing at a busy crosswalk and I imagined getting hit by a car, instead of the blood and gore I pictured myself popping like a balloon with tons of confetti littering the street. These images tend to turn into poems sometimes. The writing comes when I need to express myself, it also gives me something to do, to be able to tell a story, or convey an image. It also helps me come full circle as a human, to write out the past, to help me let go, so in some ways it can be therapeutic. I try to find poetry in everything, whether it be a simple tree, or a past experience. I avoid things political, or things religious if I can. I wouldn't say the writing is carefully planned at all, other than just writing it, trying to get up every day and just write something, or to travel with a pocket notebook and jot down words, or lines that could turn into something. I used to not do much editing, but now I do, but I don't go overboard. I'll write the poem, then I'll read it several times. I try to use my skill as a butcher with the words; carefully cutting out stanzas, lines, words etc. I also need to hear myself say the poem so I can see if the flow feels right, most times it does not. Most times if the poem does not work out in a few hours it probably does not need to see the light of day or it might have a few words or lines in it that belong in another poem. I'm not the type of writer who sits on one poem for ages, there are way too many other poems to write. I have written thousands of poems in my lifetime and to this day I have yet to go back to a poem that never worked out, say a year ago, and tried to work on it again. I live with an English major, so she tends to go over my manuscripts, helps me with my terrible grammar. My intent as a writer is nothing more than to write, to keep writing, to write more and more quality poems, stories. To challenge myself, and let my readers find some sort of inspiration or to connect with me on an intimate and social level. I'm not trying to save the world or leave my mark. I guess I am trying to leave behind a little color in a world that is so black and white. 

The cover design of your latest book is very striking and was created by Milo Duffin and Stephen Roxborough. Can you explain the background to the design and the choice of the title Nirvana Haymaker?

Milo and Stephen did an excellent job! I am getting amazing feedback on the cover alone. I will always publish with NeoPoiesis Press, but they are so jammed up with other projects that I will probably only publish a book with them every 2-3 years, so in between the Neo projects I'll do things with other people from time to time. I really like their view points and their direction. A lot of their books have beautiful and well thought out covers that portray the overall feeling of the books. The title "Nirvana Haymaker" like anything else in my life sort of just popped into my head one day. I had an uncle who was a gold gloves boxer in the military. He taught me, almost every day, how to punch, and block etc. He taught me how to be a fighter not only of the flesh, but also of the mind and of the heart. I see a lot of people get somewhere with ease, or obtain some sort of enlightenment with ease, I never understood that. I never understood how these people could wake up one day and say "wow, that's it" without any sort of struggle. For me, it has always been a fight to be able to say those words. Maybe I like doing things the hard way, but nothing in my life ever came easy. I don't think it does for most people, but in with my own personal experience, it has always been a fight. I think the cover portrays that- the two boxing gloves over a picture of Boston. I grew up in Boston, lived most of my life there. It's where I learned to fight, where I learned to never give up. It has always stuck with me over the years, whether I'm baking a cake, writing a poem, or fighting or just trying to understand things. If I never grew up in Boston or had an uncle teach me boxing and the spirit of self competition, then I would probably not be writing today. I needed that. I need people to tell me I cannot do something, it makes me a better person when I hear those words. It makes me a better writer, father, friend, anything really. 

You use a wide variety of poems from different perspectives. How has your subject matter and style developed between your first full length collection Interstate Chokehold and Nirvana Haymaker? Who have been some of your more recent literary influences?

Interstate Chokehold was more of a write at will sort of book. I bombarded people with wild language and word pairings that sometimes made no sense. It's not a bad book, but one I am not overly proud of, but I think I'll say that about every book I write- haha. I think I just wrote in those days, a lot of those poems are from my early days as a writer. I was searching for a voice. I was also way too drunk when writing the poems, I was trying to find myself and trying to find my place in the world. I did not give a shit about carving up the perfect poem or perfecting my craft. As for the Nirvana Haymaker, a lot of those poems were written after I locked myself away in North Dakota. There's not much vice around me up here, nor distraction. I was drying out, getting on track, dealing with the pain of my past, writing out the pain, until I got to the point where I could tell the pain to go to hell. I was also reading a ton, I mean a ton of poetry. I was rereading Bukowski, Kerouac, Micheline, Creeley, Olson, Basho, Li Po, d.a. Levy, e.e. cummings, Robinson Jeffers, James Wright, John Berryman among many others. I was studying what was so special about them. I was trying to understand and erase my own preconceived notions of what it meant to be a writer of poetry. I was trying to free myself of myself in order to just become myself. My recent influences, people writing today, a lot of them are my friends to one degree, or another. I am a fan of April Bratten, Will Crawford, Iris Appelquist, Rebecca Schumejda, Wolf Carstens, William Taylor jr. R.L. Raymond, Rob Plath, Jason Hardung, John Dorsey, Mather Schneider, Meg Tuite, Cat Benitez, A. Razor, Jason Neese, Amelie Florence, Dan Provost, Scott Wannberg, S.A. Griffin, Franz Wright, Bucky Sinister, David Smith, Bill Gainer, Missy Church, John Macker, Dale Winslow, James Duncan, there are others. 

About a dozen poems in the collection, such as, ‘A Letter to Lowell’, ‘Muse: Downtown Crossing’ and ‘The Endless Sky Above the Suspension Bridge’ are comparatively abstract. I guess each has its own personal history but where are you taking the reader, for example, in ‘A Letter to Lowell’?

Well, "Letter to Lowell" started out like a lot of the poems, sorta out of nowhere. I was actually listening to Lowell George's band 'Little Feat'. Most people, because I am from Boston, think it's a letter to the city of Lowell. At the time it was written, a year, or two ago, I was dealing with mental illness. I was also discovering my different ego states, hence in the poem how it talks about wanting to be free of them when it says "priest, drunk, father doctor...".  At the time I was also trying to understand simple human concepts such as love, how I never really understood it, how I was always looking in the mirror, always looking at this bastard. I think I wrote it rather quickly. Those lyrical/abstract type poems come from an open heart, you have to be ready to receive them, you cannot chase after them. It takes an open heart to write them. The song they give, or the specific flow has to be captured right away, or they'll never come. I guess it's sort of like a deep depression, you have those small specs of light that shine through and you need to capture that light at the right time or you'll never be able to see it. ‘The Endless Sky’, which is my personal favorite of the bigger lyrical types, was written when I was trying to write one day, nothing was coming out right, so I quit. I started to read about the John Berryman suicide. I then remembered this bridge I used to lie under in Decatur Alabama. It was right next to this huge river and I would watch the cars and people go over the bridge. I put two and two together and sorta used Berryman's suicide as my own personal experience while lying underneath the Decatur Bridge. It's not a suicide poem at all. It's very much a poem about life and trying to capture your existence and live it to the fullest.

Can you briefly explain your dealings with NeoPoiesis Press, especially in terms of how your poems were assembled in the collection and promoted? How have your two collections been received?

Well, Interstate Chokehold was a learning process for me in terms of hustle and sell. It sold well, as well as Indie press books of poetry can sell, but it was received in a very black, or white sort of way. People either loved, or hated the book. It wasn't street enough, or academic enough or I was channeling this guy or that guy. Then there were those who loved some of the poems in there, and they would email me, or tell me they loved the book. Like I said earlier, I was looking for my voice at that time. The publisher was also new at the time and they were trying to learn ways to sell, promote etc. so we were both newbies. By the time Nirvana Haymaker came out it was 3 years later. We were both seasoned at that time. The book has had some excellent reviews, people like the different tones and contrasts. They like that at one moment it can be lyrical, while on the other side of the coin, it can tell them truths or tell them about me as a person. People relate to the poems in there a lot more. As for assembly, I don't have a certain formula. I tend to write a manuscript, say 250 pages, then I pull out the poems I feel are not strong, then it's edited again, then the publisher and myself discuss pulling out other poems, then it's looked over and edited again. This process keeps happening until I find the final product that we can agree upon. Nirvana Haymaker was a labor. It was originally about 250 pages, then carved down to about 175 pages. When first written it was an entirely different manuscript, with totally different poems, but I sat on it for about 6 months and just read books. One day I decided it was not the right manuscript, so I wrote an entirely different book. As I am working on any book, I am still writing new poems every day. Nirvana Haymaker came out of those new poems I was writing while I was hating the original manuscript. So, I guess I have about 100 pages of a book that will never see the light of day. 

You have also been involved in radio interview work and also reviews of books. Can you tell me more about your involvement in these literary sidelines?

I have this collection of poetry that I really love by Stuart Z Perkoff. In the book he's always talking about giving back to the muse, so to speak. I always felt, whether for good or bad, that the muse had always given to me so I wanted to give back in some way. So I did a radio show called "Your Mother's Medicine Cabinet". The idea came from my bookcase. I have so many different types of writers from so many backgrounds on my shelves that I used the concept for the show. I interviewed so many people from Dan Fante, to Epic Rites Press, to Will Crawford etc. In many ways it was like my bookcase. It was my way of giving back. The show abruptly ended and I missed out interviewing Gerald Locklin and John Macker. I was sad this did not happen. So, I am hoping, in the distant future to do a show of my own without working under a banner and interviewing those people. I owe those writers and I will get them on the air, but at the present I have other things going on that keep me from doing it, but someday soon. As for reviews I don't really do many of them. I blurb people's books from time to time or I write a few paragraphs, but I am not very good at it. I know what moves me and what doesn't. If I really like a book I want the world to know about it.

Where do you go from here? What projects do you have in the pipeline?

I actually have another book coming out sometime this summer for Punk Hostage Press. It will be called "Blood Music". While I was putting Nirvana Haymaker together I was writing all these other poems. Some of them 4-5 line poems or observational poems while I was in Nature and hiking. Some of them are about my past, my dealings with divorce, my former self and drinking. Some of them are big and lyrical. They all came from my time hanging out in nature. Granted there are some nature poems, but a lot of them are not, just poems I wrote after hiking when I was home or while I was dealing with a lot of personal shit at the shrink's office or dealing with divorce or my memories of living on the road via the Greyhound and some funny poems too. That book is complete, and it's going through the editing phase, but it's almost done. I will probably gander at it again, pull some poems out of it, then ship it off to Punk Hostage Press. I am also working on a 4th collection, but it's very much in its infancy. I have no publisher for it because I only have about 15 pages of it. I am not sure of its direction as I am very keen on working on short story and novel type stuff next. But I am reaching for something new with this incomplete collection and I am unsure of what it is, but I am not stressing about it. After 2-3 years of non-stop writing in North Dakota, it's nice to lay back a little and just live. I'll get around to it soon enough. 

What general advice would you give to talented young writers of poetry?
Just keep writing. It's as simple as that. Also, have a thick skin, the art form is not meant for those with thin skin. Whether your book is selling, or not, some people will hate you for it. Some people will hate your work, some people will whisper terrible things about your work. Just ignore it, like Bukowski said, "you're the final judge of your writing, not the critics, or the readers". If rejection slips or bad reviews bother you, you might as well get out quickly and get a job as an accountant. You need a thick skin, you need to keep writing. Also, I would advise people to seek those things others ignore every day, those things in between. The world and life is vastly more than black and white, this does not imply the spiritual or anything new age. It's your neighbors rose garden and how the roses color the wind. Always seek that wind, those things in between the garbage dump and the fitness center. I would also advise the writer not to always be seeking praise, if it's praise you seek, then you're finished. You have to have confidence in what you do, not ego. You need to learn to separate the ego from your confidence. I am only 39 and I have been at it since my late 20s and I have seen a lot of writers come and go, especially the ones who are seeking only praise. It's not writing, it's just a hobby to praise seekers. Praise seekers lack confidence, they lack thick skin. What I am talking about has nothing to do with people liking your work, books etc. It has to do with the writer only writing because they want someone to say to them, "wow, man you're a genius. This is why they come and go, they move onto something else, they seek it somewhere else. Vampires, every one of them!

Well, thanks Frank for your extraordinary candor.

Thanks again, George.


Purchase Nirvana Haymaker
Direct from Neopoiesis Press: http://neopoiesispress.com/12401/103834.html
Further Research
The Literary Underground has included a page to Reardon under the headings: Biography & Early Education, Personal Life & Employment, Literary Career and Bibliography: http://theliteraryunderground.org/wiki/index.php?title=Frank_Reardon

Rusty Truck has posted the following poems: ‘Riding in a car with S.A. Griffin’, ‘Falling Down in Kansas’, ‘Wear Your Mistress Like a Badge’ (not in collection), ‘Go 15 With the Typewriter Before the Gods Ring the Bell’, ‘Earn Your Stripes if You Wanna Swallow the Earth’ (not included). Find the link here: http://rustytruck.wordpress.com/2011/02/13/the-man-cave-featuring-frank-reardon/#comments

Find an excellent reading by Hank Beukema of two of Reardon’s poems on youtube found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2Zasp-Niyw