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Showing posts with label Peter Jelen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Jelen. Show all posts

Friday, July 14, 2017

Book Review: Wayne F. Burke A LARK UP THE NOSE OF TIME (BareBackPress, Hamilton, 2017) 92 pages



A Lark Up the Nose of Time is Vermont based writer Wayne F. Burke's fourth collection poetry published by BareBackPress. It follows Words That Burn (2013), Dickhead (2015) and Knuckle Sandwiches (2016). A fifth volume, tentatively entitled Poems From The Planet Crouton, will shortly be forthcoming. Some of the poems have previously appeared in fine small press publications such as Meat For Tea, The Rat’s Ass Review, Zombie Logic Review, The Bees Are Dead and dozens of others.

There are 75 poems in this collection which are divided into six sections. The poems are typically confessional & 20-30 lines in length and use a rush of anecdotal detail in simple, highly accessible language. The words hug the left margin and cascade down the page without the relief of stanzas. The narrative, free verse poems are reminiscent of Bukowski but Burke puts his own particular spin on the humbling tales of a flawed man.

In the interview which follows at the end of this review, Burke was asked if he makes any shit up. He shrewdly replies, “On rare occasions, yea, but more in the way of exaggeration than lies. I mean, the poem is not a transcription of so-called REAL life, but an act of creation. It can go wherever the mind takes it. I am not writing autobiography though I use my life experiences as a sort of foundation or template or buoy maybe, something to anchor the imaginary stuff to.”

After graduating from college in the late 1970s, Burke has worked in a wide variety of jobs, “Jobs,” he cynically quips, “that someone in America with a degree in liberal arts is deemed qualified for: truck driver, laborer, janitor, dishwasher, cook, moving man, machine shop operator, store clerk, substitute teacher, security guard, oil rigger, census taker, gas station attendant and others.” More recently, Burke has worked as a Nurses Assistant and after returning to college in his 50s, as a higher paid Practical Nurse.

His wide life experiences have enabled Burke to write insightfully about the human condition but he remarks that we all are unique and have a story to tell: “The work has given me subjects and/ or anecdotes to write. It is part of my story—everyone has a story. It is what we have—all we have—that is essentially our own.”

Burke stresses that he wasn’t on his death bed when he began to get it all down, “My heart operation at 58 did not prompt me to start writing again—I had started about a year before with a do or die attitude, that it was time, now or never…I finally found the FORM, poetry, and exploited it."

The poems appear to be quickly and urgently written which give the collection a raw, spontaneous edge. But in an email this morning, Burke expressed clearly the pain-staking difficulty of his writing process, "The first draft of pieces may be 'quick' but my god the sometimes torturous struggle to get the thing into shape--get it to a point where it can easily be read--where the music of the language is just so--that is never a 'quick' process. Screw, chip, clip, prune, cut, smooth, flatten...Can go on & on. Freakin' forever."

To give you a heads-up about what’s in the book, here’s a brief overview of the 6 sections:

DIRTY SUN

These poems take us back to Burke’s childhood in the late 1950s and 1960s, to a time when kids were allowed to play in trees (“Bomber”) and take crazy, sometimes deadly risks (“Disgust”, “Kamikaze”), when ice creams cost a dime (“10 cents”), when bullying (“Posse”), overt racism (“Schwartzie”) and pedophilia (“Bill”) were rampant, when people paid lip service to religion (“Holy Moly”) and were sexually naïve (“Babies”), when fists could be meted out to resolve neighbourhood disputes (“Fat Bastard”) & inter-gang rivalries (“Sphincter”) , a time when kids played impromptu ball games (“Ballplayer”) and when mentally sick people were placed in institutions rather than being left to fend for themselves on the streets (“Looney Bin”).

Burke writes about his childhood with great affection and without passing judgment on the people or events. He simply records what he saw & can recall- piling on the images, with the occasional use of direct speech to add to the poem’s authenticity.

The poem “Bill” showcases Burke’s use of understatement and his grim verbal irony from this period:

Bill

stepped off of the town bus one day
and onto the field
where we played football
and told us his name was “Bill”
and that he had watched us
from the bus
and that
if we would let him
he would be our manager
and try and arrange games
between us and teams from
other towns…
He wore glasses and had a long
horse-face plus white shirt and
black slacks on a bowling-pin shaped
body;
he came by every day afterward
to watch us;
he said he would be our score-keeper
and that he would write stories about us
and have the stories published in the
newspaper…
At the dinner table my Uncle
asked about Bill
and I told him what Bill had said
he would do for us
and the next day my Uncle
showed up at the field
and told Bill to get lost and to stay
the hell away from us
and me and the other kids
did not know why my Uncle
was so upset or
why he had told Bill to go away
because,
we all agreed,
Bill was a nice guy
A very very nice guy.

(reprinted with the permission of the poet)


RIPE BANDANNA

These poems cover Burke’s early working life as a house painter (“Brad”), fry cook (“Vane”), laborer (“Nips”) and a carpenter’s assistant (“Roy”). These are essentially portrait poems of the men who have employed the young adult Burke. The speaker, presumably Burke, is usually drunk or hungover, projectile vomiting, getting stopped by the cops or getting the crap beaten out of him.

The poem “Lights” is characteristic of Burke’s gritty, detached, matter-of-fact style:

Lights

We got stopped by cops
in a show of blue light
and a cop told my cousin
“step out of the car”
and made him walk a straight line
touch his toes
then his nose
and my cousin,
as shit-faced as he was,
somehow passed the tests
and we drove off
to the club
where we picked-up two girls
and then drove up to the mountain top
with them
and parked;
the wind howled around the car
non-stop
the lights of the town dully glowed
in the valley below;
my cousin and his girl went for a walk.
My girl had bow-legs
and a pigtail;
she unzipped my pants
then pulled hers off
then straddled me
as I lay back,
then she sat and guided me
inside of her and
then moved up and down
and lifted off
as I shot
and the wind wailed
and the car rocked
and down below the lights winked
on & off.

(reprinted with the permission of the poet)

A LARK UP THE NOSE OF TIME

The catchy title of the collection derives from the opening poem of this section. It is a road trip poem which describes a journey taken by Burke and his two friends Ron & Steve from Kansas, to Saint Louis and Daytona and eventually to Ottawa.

This section is perhaps the best in the collection as it offers more considered adult perspectives on life- the misunderstandings, the stuffed-up relationships between people, the physical pain, the terrible loneliness, the boredom, the loss of direction and purpose in life.

The poem “Fall” uses the concept of pathetic fallacy in an extended metaphor of swirling leaves to describe Burke’s mental unrest and his brooding sense of procrastination: 

Fall

trying to decide what to do with myself
I sit
on a park bench
in the sunlight
to think
and I get caught
in whirlwinds
of yellow and rust-colored leaves
rushing from one side of the park
to the other
like a mob storming a Bastille
but then
lying down just as quickly,
spent
apparently,
until they get up
and renew the rush
only in a different direction
obviously confused
and
unruly;
a tornado of them whirls into the road
and is run through by a truck
and scattered;
they are a spiritual force
mainly
though make a clatter on the sidewalk
like tiny horses’ hooves
scuttling
like the clouds
across the sky,
not sure where they are going
either.

(reprinted with the permission of the poet)

HAIKU-YOU

This is a series of 9 haiku poems. My favourite is the macabre:

my jacket
hung by the neck
until Spring

POLITICS, POLITICS

Here you’ll find four anti-Thump poems which reflect Burke’s alarm about “the joke” of a president America has elected, “who loathes his own constituents/ and is using the dumb-fucks/ to gain power/ in order/ to glorify his ego” (“Herr Trumpf”).

SPARE TOOTH

This last section is an eclectic mix of poems which include a portrait poem about a high school buddy (“Lou 1954-2016”), advice about life (“Advice”) and his family’s recollections of what Burke was like as a toddler (“Baby”).

Yet after you’ve read this section a number of times, you get the impression that these poems are meditations on the general malaise and hollowness of contemporary living. They chart Burke’s underlying discontentment with life, of feeling trapped by the fakeness of things (“Oasis”), where the allure of alcohol (“Drink?”), fast cars (“108 mph”) and women (“Knock Knock”) has largely waned. Burke sees himself as a “dumbfuck” (“Dumbfucks”) and driving in his car he feels a brooding, unshakable sense of ennui (“Straight”).

In the last poem in the collection “Spirit”, this unbearable sense of hopelessness and dread & loneliness briefly lifts:

Spirit

the spirit flew in
through the window
and down my
gullet:
I love it,
it tells me
that there is hope
that there is a future—
but the night, I said to the spirit
it is so dark,
and I am all alone;
and the spirit said that
it knows all about
the dark and
the lone,
and does not think much
of either.

(reprinted with the permission of the poet)

 As in his earlier work DICKHEAD, this is a varied collection of first person confessional poems. The book is structured roughly in terms of the chronological age in which Burke appears in them. The poems are easy to read and you have to admire Burke’s tenacity in getting this shit down. My only criticism is that although I do not require glasses to read, I found the font size (9) a tad small for my liking.








AN INTERVIEW WITH WAYNE F. BURKE 8 JULY 2017

I recently asked Burke a shitload of questions about his writing. The following is what he provided- the use of paragraphing is mine:

I started to try and write a poem when I was nineteen and at my 3rd college. My college roommate was the first guy I ever met who admitted to writing poetry. It was though his influence that I started to write verse--it was through him that I learned what I know of writing poetry, not from a professor or class I took though there was a high school English teacher and a professor at the first college I went to who were very encouraging. The English teacher is one of the dedicatees (oh boy) of A LARK. I did not write anything that I or anyone else recognised as poetry for four or five years. After I graduated from college, my 4th, I went to work and poetry got lost in the shuffle. Not completely forgotten, but kept on a back burner.

I started the series of jobs--I have written of--truck diver, labourer, janitor, dishwasher, cook, moving man, machine shop operator, store clerk, substitute school teacher, security guard, roughneck (worked on an oil rig), census taker, gas station attendant, and some others--orange picker, bartender--done before I graduated college. Jobs that someone in America with a degree in liberal arts is deemed qualified for. Six years ago, after working for 9 years as an LNA (Licensed Nurses Assistant), I went back to college and got a license to work as an LPN (Licensed Practical Nurse) an occupation I am still practicing. Whew. That's a long list. Makes me tired thinking of it. The work has given me subjects or/and anecdotes to write. It is part of my story--everyone has a story. It is what we have--all we have--that is essentially our own. In my late 50s, and occasionally before, I started to put down, as I understood it, MY story.

Do I make things up? On rare occasions, yea, but more in the way of exaggerations than lies. I mean, the poem is not a transcription of so-called REAL life, but an act of creation. It can go wherever the mind takes it. I am not writing autobiography though I use my life experiences as a sort of foundation or template or buoy maybe, something to anchor the imaginary stuff to. I feel I am getting off track, if I was ever on one, and have no business explaining my work. I am mystified myself about how it comes out, knowing only that it is work and persistence, writing something everyday, not a poem, but something, and applying myself with a will--I am going to have to read the thing, as well as whomever, when it, the thing, comes out in print.

My heart operation at 58 did not prompt me to start writing again--I had started about a year before with a do or die attitude, that it was time, now or never--I had figured myself for a prose writer and scholar and critic but was only 2nd or 3rd rate critic, scholar, prose writer... I finally found the FORM, poetry and exploited it. Previous to late 50's I was an artist but without a form. I did publish 2 books of criticism, essays, short stories, and book reviews (which I continue to write), because that was my idea of what I was supposed to do as a sort of "gentleman of literature" to which I aspired, and still do to a limited extent. Someone like Ford Madox Ford or W.D. Howells or even Edmund Wilson, who were arbiters of taste and could kick out reviews, essays, novels, what-have-you, at a moment's notice... Oh boy, I've really gone off the track now. Unsure how to get back on... Some guy using a chainsaw outside my window, really ripping into the wood...

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Book Review: Matthew J. Hall The Human Condition Is A Terminal Illness (BareBackPress, Hamilton, 2017) 105 pages.



This is the second book of poetry published by the Bristol based writer, Matthew J. Hall. The free verse writing is exceedingly clear and largely focuses on human vulnerabilities and defects and on the fleeting and sometimes nasty side to relationships. You will also discover a variety of reflective pieces, portrait poems, poems about growing up and meta-poems about the process of writing. The language is typically simple, fresh and authentic.

The poems tap into Hall’s evolving literary spine and represent a significant step-up from his first collection Pigeons and Peace Doves (Blood Pudding Press, 2015).

The quirky plastic farm yard menagerie on the front and back covers was designed by BareBackPress publisher Peter Jelen. In a recent email, he explained his representation, “Well, I guess after talking with Matthew, getting to know him through correspondence and his work, I gathered the impression he doesn’t look upon humanity with fondness and admiration. After reading the manuscript as many times as I did I came up with this image of a really fucked up plastic world filled with mutant and hybrid animals with humanity at the low end of the food chain. The teeth are mine, I asked my dentist for it when I needed a bridge made, painted it, and added it to the forefront to enhance the sense of devouring going on in scene. That’s basically it.”

The title The Human Condition is a Terminal Illness derives from the opening poem “petrol station”, a mammoth 51 stanza epic poem in which the poet describes some of his rare memorable encounters in an otherwise mindless dead-end job. A frequent visitor to the station was “Cathy”, a fucked-up addict who offered a ray of light in a sea of misery:

Cathy was the only line of poetry
in that box of artificial light
built on a foundation of greed and illegal practice
there was nothing else to say

working at the petrol station
suicide was often on my mind
I was often bored
more often depressed
and more often than not,
disabled by a raging sense of anxiety

I realised early on
that the general public’s common stupidity
was symptomatic of lots and lots of
individual selfishness
and their anxiety was contagious;
the human condition is a terminal illness

In the interview which follows, Matthew J. Hall says of this sad, harrowing period of his life, “In hindsight I realise that my hatred for that job was largely due to a long-lasting and severe bout of anxiety. Having said that, I do believe the extremity of my anxiety was triggered by working in a petrol station. It was miserable. The poem is an honest account. The people I mention in the poem were all real people. The only one mentioned by name is Cathy. And of course, that isn't her real name. She was one of the most remarkable people I have ever met. Just a mess of contradictions. Hopelessly addicted to drugs yet so pure of personality. Physically speaking, she was fucked; malnourished, broken teeth, offensive scent, caked in grime. But she was so kind. She was known locally as an addict, an arsonist and a prostitute. I don't think she was a prostitute, but she was an addict and she did have a fascination with fire. Of all the thousands of interactions in that job, Cathy's were the only ones I would care to repeat.”


In a later email, Hall says of the title, “In the poem I'm trying to make comment on how prone to selfishness so many people are. I think there is a widespread loneliness and sadness, particularly in built up areas, which is rooted in this obsessive need to be first. Selfishness is a sickness, and in a very honest way, I believe it is deadly. Of course I am also making the obvious comment about life and death. As soon as we're born we have started on a journey toward death. I felt like it captured the tone of the collection fairly well.”

Most of the poems in the collection are about Hall’s relationship with woman, in particular his partner Esther May, one of the women he dedicates his book to. In a series of poems scattered throughout the collection he explores the vicissitudes of a fragile relationship- the cruelty, the fights, the temptations, the guilt, the pleasures and the constant need to be reassured that love still exists.

The most memorable poems are often confessional in form, sometimes third person narrative poems, in other instances second person narratives directly addressed to Hall’s partner or his former lovers. “Play the sad violin”, “my mannequin and I” and “moths dressed as butterflies” are particularly vicious in sinking the boot into the hearts & minds of former or perhaps present “loved ones.”

“Play the sad violin” is a bitter personal lament which propels insult into an art form. The middle section of the poem has echoes of Robert Browning’s macabre “Prophyria’s Lover” but the poem stumbles towards a tearful, melodramatic resolution:

play the sad violin

there is a stranger inside
who refuses analysis
a sickness, an undefined nausea
who over the years
has formed her own personality

she is dying down there
the scent of death on her breath
is overpowering

I can hear her playing
the sad violin
the notes are in my chest
and in her eyes
she plays in A minor
a song I can’t quite hear

her salty tears
coat the back of my throat
and strangle my laugh

she resents my peaceful surroundings
detests those who love me
insists I punish them
as she has been punished

she calls for me quietly
with a sad and steady bow
longs for me to join her
invites me insistently
from somewhere deep in the intestines

I hate the love I have for her
I should kill her
but how do you murder
an already dead flower

I could swallow poison
and silence her
but deeper down
and deeper yet
I know that is what she wants

she imagines us as dancing ghosts
far from all the others
embraced in a smokey waltz
our bare feet
light and free
on floorboards of dreams and mist

but the other woman
won’t let me go
she doesn’t hide her song from me
and you may know something of love down there
but you know nothing of her

her tears stand out in the rain
and though she is cynical of the promise
she believes in every rainbow
she washes my face and wants me to live

she tells me to look after myself
she looks at me expectantly
trusting we will reap as we sow

she does not play the sad violin
yet I hear her song clearly
as the oak
as its limbs
withstanding strong winds

she places her head on my chest
straining her ears to hear
she wants to get to know her
but I won’t let her
and neither will she
we are too jealous for that

and it is breaking all of our hearts

(reprinted with the permission of the poet)

Poems such as “the birds were yet to start sing”, “love seat”, “always fighting”, “quick and fast”, “the day’s hopeless patterns” and the meta-poem “it’s all lies” are more moderated in tone but have an underlying impatience, frustration and undefined sadness about them.

Asked about what his partner Esther thinks about including her in his work, Hall explains to me cautiously, “I think she is in two minds about this. I have been public about the private. There have been times when I have handed her a poem and asked her to check it for spelling errors. I've been in that place where I'm only concerned about the poem as a piece of writing and have moved on from the emotion of the thing. Only the poems in question are a highly, emotionally charged comment on her and my flaws and qualities; a fight, a moment, some shared tears. I stand there waiting impatiently and she's like, ‘what the hell am I supposed to do with this?’ Writing is a very selfish affair. Particularly autobiographical writing. Esther doesn't think it's all that autobiographical, though. She told me that I write from a combination of personalities. Some of it is painfully honest, some of it is fiction and some of it is bullshit. I'd say she's also accurate in her assertion.”

Hall also includes a half a dozen second person poems in which he metaphorically attempts to capture his partner through a wide variety of art forms, including sculpture “getting creative”, a pencil drawing “gutless”, acrylic paint and charcoal “incarcerated in canvas”, and paint and pastel in “trapped inside my furniture.” As Hall admits in the latter poem there is something “creepy” about this obsession. Perhaps he uses this artistic metaphor as a way to pin down and idealize an otherwise fleeting and all too emotionally sapping situation. In “trapped inside my furniture”, for example, he paints a robust portrait of his partner on the base of his drawer. He talks to his drawing and hopes one day she will learn to love him despite her confines.

Similarly, “trespassing” explores through an extended metaphor the notion of cracking “the codes”, searching “out your secrets”- to understand better her “version of me”. Interestingly, the quest appears driven by self-interest rather than empathy. The persona, presumably Hall, says matter-of-factly, “of course, the first door of interest would have my name/ inscribed above it.”

“The best I could do” is a more positive love poem. In it, the speaker discovers an innovative way to emotionally appeal to his missus:


the best I could do

I wanted to do something romantic for you
because in spite of the senseless circle
you have shown me sharp corners
where the destination and journey merge
and a single moment becomes all of life
and all of life becomes whole

I wanted to say thank you
I wanted to do something romantic for you
I wanted to give you something special
I wanted to say something of your truth
wanted to find that honest line and lay it out at your feet

but the rose petals ripped under my ball-point pen
and the thorns on the spindly stem
were too small and obstinate
the poesy wouldn’t fit no matter how tiny the words

so I pinned our poem to a homing bird’s leg
whispered words of instruction and sent him off
but he had a mind of his own
he flew around and around and around as though he were lost
then he spotted some discarded food
and with our words he stopped

I wanted to do something romantic for you
and with regret
I am afraid
this, my love
is the best I can do

(reprinted with the permission of the poet)

In asking Hall why so few blokes appear in his poetry he replied, “I'm speaking generally now, but I have found many men to be emotionally vacant and lacking in intellect. So many male conversations are nothing more than a conformation of established opinions. That's fine, but there has to be more. I've learnt more from women and I think they are more interesting than men; they have a higher pain threshold, they have faced more adversity, they are better company. I think this is true in writing. There are plenty of exceptions, but of the authors writing today, of which I've read with some regularity, I have found the men to be repetitious. Their major concern is to become prolific, they are succeeding in this goal but it's essentially the same poem or story, over and over again. The female writers tend to have a bit more originality about their work.

Perhaps this is all bullshit; a weird kind of projectile self-loathing. Maybe. Maybe not. Either way I think that the essence of poetry is emotional and I have experienced a wider spectrum of emotion with women than I have with men.”

Apart from his penetrating and sometimes acerbic observations about relationships, Hall also creates a diverse range of credible character portraits. Notable in the collection are “sometimes you meet someone”, “dead hope”, “portrait”, “crueler than kids”, “an old song” and “in her letters.” Characteristically, the portrait poems feature people who have done it tough and who have struggled to meet the unreachable expectations and demands of society.

Perhaps the best portrait is of the unnamed girl in “patti’s still got it.” The writing is unjudgmental and creates a clear and evocative sense of setting. It is an outstanding whimsical distillation of atmosphere and character:

patti’s still got it

the water under pero’s bridge
was still, as was the city
during its best hour on a sunday morning

she was playing a tin whistle
you couldn’t get away with calling it music
but the sounds were far from unpleasant

from my side of the river
I could see the market traders
setting up their fare, on their side

the crisp air tasted fresh
as it will when so few of us
are sucking it in and blowing it out

soon enough the crowds would arrive
and the air would become heavy
and the tongue would become numbed
by a mouthful of death

from my bench, a metal affair
cold and reassuring
I could see she’d been eying up my cigarette

she slid the whistle into her breast pocket
stood and walked with purpose

can I have a cigarette, she said
sure, I said, offering her the pouch and papers
can you roll it for me, she said
sure, I said
can you roll me five, she said
sure, I said and took to rolling

she retrieved her whistle and played
covering and uncovering the holes with her fingers
watching me roll with her eyes

her hair was the colour of wet straw
she was pale and very thin
but she carried a heavy weight
like someone who’s held the truth about people

at the fifth cigarette’s completion
she showed me the soft side of her hand
I lined them up on there
and she counted them out loud

one
two
three
four
five

instead of thanking me, she said
I saw patti smith in concert
oh yeah, I said, has she still got it?

she tucked her whistle and cigarettes away
put her hand all the way down the front of her jeans
held herself like that
gyrated and confirmed
patti’s still got it

with that said
she returned to her original position
on pero’s bridge
where she played her whistle

across the harbor
the market traders were chatting up
their first customers
I could hear a siren from somewhere distant

I stood from my bench
waved a quiet goodbye to the whistler
she lit one of her five cigarettes
and waved back

(reprinted with the permission of the poet)

Matthew J. Hall’s book The Human Condition is a Terminal Illness is largely a confessional representation of his foibles, written in a direct, searing-belly style. He provides numerous reflections and anecdotes but provides us with few clues as to how we can be better people or how we can treat each other more decently. According to Hall, relationships are emotionally and mentally messy and there are no neatly packaged happy endings. As he notes in the blurb on the back of the book, “More often than not, in the midst of a confused, selfish, self-hating populace, THE ANSWERS ARE WANTING.”


Bio: Matthew J. Hall is a UK writer based in the city of Bristol. His poetry and short fiction has been published online and in print. His poetry chapbook, Pigeons and Peace Doves is available through Blood Pudding Press. His poetry collection, The Human Condition is a Terminal Illness is available through Bareback Press. 



Find more about BareBackPress: http://www.barebackpress.com





INTERVIEW WITH MATTHEW J. HALL 11 MARCH 2017

Where do your poems come from? Do you write every day? Do you have a set routine?

I used to write every day and I wrote a lot of shit. I go through phases now. Sometimes I'll write every day for a week, other times I might go a week without writing, but rarely do my quiet periods go on much longer than that. I try not to romanticize output. I don't have a routine. I've learned I'm most productive in the morning. The best lines I've written have been in drunkenness, but they don't work on their own, it takes sobriety to bring a piece to completion. My best poems have come from conversation and the exchange of ideas.

When did you first develop an interest in poetry and whom have been some of your more recent influences?

I wrote a poem for a girl. I'm married to her now, so make of that what you will. Other than that, I wrote a few poems to fill in the time spent waiting to hear back from my first batch of short story submissions. One of the poems was accepted, while all the shorts were rejected. I carried on with poetry after that. I still write fiction from time to time, but poetry is what comes naturally.

In terms of recent influence, Karina Bush is the poet of note. I'm never going to be able to write like her, I would be a fool to try; she is a phenomenal poet. I reviewed her debut collection of poetry, Maiden; I wish I could write like that. Seriously, fuck this interview, go and check out Karina Bush.

As you know, I reviewed her book as well. Getting back you your shit, how long was the book in the making?

The oldest poem is about five years old, the youngest is a matter of months.

Did you actually work in a gas station for four years? Was it as bad as you make out in ’petrol station’?

I worked in a petrol station for four years. It was worse than I made it out to be in "petrol station." In hindsight I realise that my hatred for that job was largely due to a long-lasting and severe bout of anxiety. Having said that, I do believe the extremity of my anxiety was triggered by working in a petrol station. It was miserable. The poem is an honest account. The people I mention in the poem were all real people. The only one mentioned by name is Cathy. And of course, that isn't her real name. She was one of the most remarkable people I have ever met. Just a mess of contradictions. Hopelessly addicted to drugs yet so pure of personality. Physically speaking, she was fucked; malnourished, broken teeth, offensive scent, caked in grime. But she was so kind. She was known locally as an addict, an arsonist and a prostitute. I don't think she was a prostitute, but she was an addict and she did have a fascination with fire. Of all the thousands of interactions in that job, Cathy's were the only ones I would care to repeat.

Can you explain your association with BareBack Press from the original conception of the book to the various processes involved in eventually getting your book published?

Some time ago I was searching for places to submit poetry to and I happened upon Bareback Press. At that time they were offering a free download of Peter Jelen's flash novel, The Cure For Consciousness. I read the book, loved it and reviewed it accordingly at www.screamingwithbrevity.com. Now, either I write shit reviews or small press publishers don't believe in networking because most of the time, when I review a small press book - and I only review the ones I love or feel strongly about commenting on - the publishers seldom send me a review request upon publication of their next book. The exceptions are Wolfgang Carstens of Epic Rites Press and Peter Jelen of Bareback Press. And so, a relationship of sorts was established with Jelen. He started sending me review copies of the books he was publishing and Bareback very quickly became my favourite press. After The Cure For Consciousness, I reviewed Damon Marbut's Human Crutches. Marbut is an extraordinary writer and a sweet and honest man. Not long after that I reviewed Wayne F. Burke's, Words That Burn. Wayne is the best at what he does; straight forward, old-school narrative poetry. He's the best. I have reviewed three of his collections and hope to review many more.

Anyway, some books later, Pete asked me if I had any books to my name and I sent him a copy of my chapbook, Pigeons and Peace Doves, published by Blood Pudding Press. He seemed to like the book and told me to submit a manuscript if I had anything of length. I sent him a draft of what turned out to be, The Human Condition is a Terminal Illness. It was about three quarters of the length of the final draft. Pete suggested some changes to the order of poems, namely putting "petrol station" as the first poem. I thought this a ballsy move, on account of the poem's length; a fifty-one stanza poem is quite an opening statement for a collection. I didn't need much persuasion and the manuscript started to take shape from there. Pete wanted more poems and I had plenty to offer. The collection is basically an assortment of what I have written over the last five or six years.

What’s the story behind Peter Jelen’s layout and design of the front cover?

Pete will most likely cringe at this, but he is a very talented visual artist. He is responsible for the cover design and I'm happy to say that he did a really nice job. For further detail you would have to ask him, and I recommend that you do; Jelen's work, visually and literary, is conducive to Bold Monkey's tone.

I will ask Jelen about the cover. What did you learn in writing the book?

That is a hard question to break down, some of these poems were written years ago, so I have learnt loads in the making of this book. To be honest, I learn more from reading than I do from writing. Reviewing my contemporaries has been, and continues to be my education.

As you mentioned, you are the editor of the site Screaming with Brevity. Can you tell us how the site originated and its purpose? What’s the best stuff for the uninitiated to begin with?

SWB started as a home for my writing; a personal blog, but I quickly discovered a love for sharing about authors, publishers and artists I enjoyed. I found my writing improved as I spent time mulling over other people's writing and so I began writing reviews. Visitors to the site will find reviews of poetry and fiction, my own poetry and art and hopefully soon other small press authors' poetry and art as well. Truth is, I'm no editor. My online presence wouldn't even exist if it wasn't for Esther Hall, who is a talented creative in her own right. I write the content, she makes it look good, and over the years it's become a project we enjoy working on together. The purpose of SWB is to promote small press publishers and writers. The coolest books can't be found in your high street book shop; Screaming with Brevity is a signpost to the best I've read in modern literature.

What advice would you give to talented young writers of poetry?

I have only been doing this for five or six years, and as such, I'm just a boy in the writing world; I would be a fool to hand out advice.

What’s next for you?

Aside from continuing to write poetry, I'd like to develop my criticism. Maybe write some small press writer profile pieces. I don't know if I have what it takes to pull that off. This type of writing needs to be exceptionally good, otherwise it's just fluff.

I totally agree! Thanks Matthew for your time.

Thanks George!