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Showing posts with label new release. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new release. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

NEW RELEASE: Majok Tulba BENEATH THE DARKENING SKY. Hamish Hamilton, 2012 (272 pages).


I first became aware of this novel through an interview with author Majok Tulba by fill-in Life Matters host Wendy Harmer on Radio National: http://www.abc.net.au/radio/player/rnmodplayer.html?pgm=Life%20Matters&pgmurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.abc.net.au%2Fradionational%2Fprograms%2Flifematters%2F&w=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.abc.net.au%2Fradionational%2Fmedia%2F4121610.asx&r=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.abc.net.au%2Fradionational%2Fmedia%2F4121610.ram&t=Majok%20Tulba&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.abc.net.au%2Fradionational%2Fprograms%2Flifematters%2Fmajok-tulba%2F4121610&p=1

Tulba, who migrated to Australia in 2001, has fictionalized the stories he has heard about child soldiers while living in refugee camps in Sudan and Uganda for eight years. His novel has been described as confronting but beautifully written. Tulba, 27, lives in Western Sydney with his wife Mary and three children. 

Publisher’s Blurb:
When the rebels come to Obinna's village, they do more than wreak terror for one night. Lining the children up in the middle of the village, they measure them against the height of an AK-47. Those who are shorter than the gun are left behind. Those who are taller are taken. Obinna and his older brother Akot find themselves the rebel army's newest recruits. 
But while Akot almost willingly surrenders to the training, Obinna resists, determined not to be warped by the revolution's slogans and violence. In the face of his vicious captain's determination to break him, Obinna finds help in a soldier called Priest, and in the power of his own dreams.
Beneath the Darkening Sky describes a life unimaginably different from our own, but one that is the experience of tens of thousands of child soldiers. Uncompromising, vivid and raw, it is an astonishing portrait of a mind trying to make sense of a senseless world. 
Majok Tulba himself was shorter than the AK-47, and came to Australia from South Sudan as a refugee in 2001. This is the story of what might have happened to him had he been an inch taller.
'Seen through the striking simplicity of a child's eyes, and told through a voice gripping and strong, Majok Tulba's powerful novel resonates long after the last page.' Alice Pung

'It does what great literature can, which is to make something beautiful out of terror and truth. Beneath the Darkening Sky is a meticulous and noble examination of violence and evil, and of how the most innocent people anywhere can be broken and, possibly remade.' Anna Funder



Alice Pung the author of Unpolished Gem and Her Father’s Daughter interviews Tulba here: http://www.readings.com.au/news/alice-pung-interviews-majok-tulba-about-beneath-the-darkening-sky

 Colleen Ryan’s excellent review of the book can be found here:
Majok Tulba: Born to Write (Financial Review, 30 June 2012): http://afr.com/p/national/arts_saleroom/majok_tulba_born_to_write_9Yfy5Vs99PIZDqEj3uX5AK

Tulba is interviewed by ABC TV here: http://www.abc.net.au/bestof/archive/20120704.htm

Tulba reads a section of his novel inspired by his experiences in refugee camps in Sudan and Nigeria: http://video.couriermail.com.au/2251341113/Beneath-the-Darkening-Sky

Friday, April 20, 2012

BOOK REVIEW/ INTERVIEW: R.L. Raymond Sonofabitch Poems. PigeonBike Press, Canada, 2011 (49 pages).


This is the first poetry collection of R.L. Raymond, a Canadian writer and founder of PigeonBike Press. The book’s twenty-six poems are tightly crafted and explore a wide variety of subject matter in an open-ended and understated way. These are largely third person narrative poems which focus on ordinary incidents- a motor vehicle accident, visiting a relative in the local hospital, sitting in a pub, sending a son to the shop to buy smokes and the like. Despite the basic subject matter of many of the poems, what elevates this book is the pain-staking and strikingly original way in which the poems are conceived and constructed.

The stiff, shiny cover features an original oil painting by the writer. It has a swirl of bright colours like inside a furnace with three thin finger-like bars slashed into the foreground. The title Sonofabitch Poems is highly memorable and was coined by R.L. Raymond to mirror ‘the tough guy sonofabitches’ he writes about in his collection. As Raymond explains in the interview which follows, he had written three early poems about ‘tough guys’ and this emphasis on character drove the rest of the book:

‘I had three poems about legendary, pseudo tough guys (Skallagrim, Gambrinus and St Vitus) that worked really well together. Those became the foundation. From there I build characters and situations where sons-of-bitches acted, reacted, interacted. There are some tough guys, tough gals, and also regular folks affected by SOBs in one way or another. The tread is character driven in this collection.’

Most of the poems are characteristically 1-2 pages in length and provide brief glimpses into the lives of a variety of often unnamed people, who exist on the margins of mainstream society. The portraits are unsentimental and sometimes crushingly grim. The reader is presented with deft, nuanced figurative language, occasionally embedded with clever but opaque allusions.

In ‘L’acadien perdu’ a young man is king-hit outside a dive bar and is left to perish in the snow. ‘Lucky Luke’s car crashes into a ditch during an accident. He rolls down his window and is punched in the face by a road ragger. In ‘Phenoptosis’ a man ‘with the perfect lawn’ has shot himself with a hand gun. Outside his house,  the police, family and counsellors blare away on a megaphone not aware that he is already dead. In ‘Gambrinus’ a tough barfly sits drinking and waiting for ‘whatever else came his way.’

The portraits sometimes reveal to the reader, through dramatic irony, the false hopes people desperately cling to. In ‘A dirty bowl’ a child steals a coin from a church collection plate every Sunday and tosses it into a dry well in the hope his deceased mother will return. In ‘Crusts’ a dying man in hospital wheezes out a wish for a ribeye steak. In ‘On the grate’ a homeless woman sees her ex-husband, a doctor, approaching her hovel and futilely thinks that he has ‘finally come back for her.’ He walks on, not knowing nor caring she is there. In the powerful thirteen page ‘Gravedigger- a long poem’ the protagonist buries the old man’s dog after his neighbor blows his head partially off with a rifle.

Despite R.L. calling himself a ‘non-poet’ elsewhere and the book’s pretensions to appeal to a wider, non-academic audience, much of the pleasure for me inside these pages derives from unraveling the meaning and form of the poems. The best poems in the collection certainly ask more of its readers.

The beauty of the poems lies in the scattered, often shotgun detail that R.L. Raymond provides the reader. On first reading you understand the essence of most poems, but because the author has deliberately withheld crucial information, or has incorporated ambiguities, he denies us a precise reading. It’s up to the reader therefore to fill in the gaps based on their past experiences to make better sense of the poem. The reader therefore becomes involved in the composer’s process of creation. 

Take the first seven lines of ‘A little yellow room’ as an example:

maybe he hadn’t heard her scream ‘no!’
because her voice was young
and again
maybe he hadn’t heard her scream ‘I’m bleeding!’
because the phone lines were scratchy

she hailed a cab alone
so mom wouldn’t find out

The passage seems to raise more questions than it answers. The details of the narrative are as scratchy as the phone line. Who is the girl calling? Her boyfriend? Did he hear her screaming ‘no’, and ‘I’m bleeding’? Why would he not want to admit hearing her pleas? Was she attacked? Why is she bleeding? Why does she go to the hospital in a cab rather than by ambulance? Why doesn’t she want her mother to know?

While she sits in the back seat of the cab she is revolted by the stink of previous passengers. The poem concludes:

she closed her eyes to block it out
imagining a little yellow room
from a hallmark special around Christmas time
where girls in pigtails and boys with perfectly parted hair
were polite and beautiful
singing songs about baby jesus

The poem starts to make more sense. She has lost her virginity to her boyfriend and she has to go to the hospital because she continues to bleed. She doesn’t want her mother to know she’s had sex and her boyfriend is freaked out so she goes to the hospital alone. The yellow room symbolizes the state of childlike innocence and naivety that she would now like to return to.

‘Exhaust on the wild flames’, ‘Officer & Gentleman’, and especially ‘After the third beer and not much to eat’ also work in this style and are worthy of close detailed study. R.L. Raymond discusses his writing methods further in the interview below.

Overall, this is an intelligent, well thought out collection brimming with ideas, skilful word play and  bold experimentation. The poems creep up on you and as you draw further connections and associations, the poems will deliver their sucker punch to you when you least expect it.

Find further reviews and purchase details of Sonofabitch Poems here:


 INTERVIEW WITH R.L. RAYMOND 18 April 2012

 Q1: R.L., You tell stories, like bourbon and have an MA in English Literature from the University of Western Ontario. What else can you tell us about yourself?
 RL: I still tell stories, I also drink gin and tonic in summer, and I’ve forgotten a lot of what I learned those many years ago. Aside from that, I’m really just a guy writing words that I hope people enjoy reading. 
Q2: When did you first develop an interest in poetry and who are some of your present influences?
 RL: I’ve been writing for a long time, more seriously since about 2001. Not that I’d share much of that ‘juvenilia’ now, but there are some good lines here and there that sometimes find their way back into current stuff. I started getting published more consistently early last year – coincidentally when I started submitting a lot more. I am quite proud of the range of mags that accept my stuff – from literary to underground, scientific to comedic.
Influences are a hard thing to answer: are there poets and writers? Of course. But when you talk actual ‘influences,’ those things that MAKE you write, I’d probably list ambient drone music, darker beats by folks like Lustmord, Horseback, Pyramids… and I have to give props to Metal. To me, a nice loud blast of “Circle of the Tyrants” by Celtic Frost or “Snakes for the Divine” by High on Fire will get me going. Personally ‘influence’ isn’t those contemporaries I admire, or the dead that I’ve studied; ‘influence’ is what do I take in and regurgitate with, I hope, my stamp on it.
But for those writers that really touched me – Faulkner, McCarthy, Barnes, Eliot, Pound, Beckett, HD, Stevens – I tip my hat.
Q3: You’ve been publishing in small press magazines for a couple of years. Who do you rate amongst the best you’ve read and why?
RL: A few mags are stellar, either for their execution, their ‘vibe’ or a combination of both. Epic Rites always manages to capture the blood and guts. There are a lot of underground places that TRY to push that envelope, but it’s a hard thing to do right. Epic Rites Press does it. From a Canadian perspective, I think Carousel has to be one of the most fun, attractive, polished offerings I’ve seen in a long time. And the content is varied, interesting. With the small press there is SO MUCH stuff. Everyone has a niche, a schtick, and that’s cool. To me, if it’s entertaining, and well put together, I’m in. I am still a print purist, so a mag has to sound good, but FEEL good too. 
Q4: Turning to your first collection Sonofabitch Poems, apart from its head turning appeal, why did you choose this title?
RL: There is an actual genesis here. I had three poems about legendary, pseudo tough guys (Skallagrim, Gambrinus and St Vitus) that worked really well together. Those became the foundation. From there I build characters and situations where sons-of-bitches acted, reacted, interacted. There are some tough guys, tough gals, and also regular folks affected by SOBs in one way or another. The tread is character driven in this collection.
Q5: Why is your finely crafted book ‘dedicated to all the non-poets’?
RL: Poet is a label I abhor. You can’t call yourself a “poet” inasmuch as you can’t call yourself a “virtuoso.” It’s not yours to use. But, today, with social media, websites, innumerable ‘poetic’ places, everyone calls him or herself a poet. Not me. I’m a writer. I tell stories. There are line breaks, and ‘poetic’ diction / devices, but they exist only to add to the narrative. I have trouble separating my ‘poetry’ from my ‘prose’ so I just call it all writing. Someone wants to call me a poet, OK; but that’s not a compliment for this guy.
Q6: A predominant theme in the book appears to be about false or crushed hopes, yet ironically, there is an underlying sparkle of humour in the book. What are you trying to say about human nature?
RL: Well, I wouldn’t go that deep! Human nature is an ugly, ugly thing. What I try to do is take everyday situations, look at them from the outside, like an ‘alien’ as a good writer friend of mine likes to put it, and tell the ‘story’ I see. It’s a voyeuristic enterprise. Snapshots. Fill in the blanks. Here is a quick example:
Resolve

a paperclip
bent repeatedly
between thumbs
and forefingers
snapped

her hands
warming a glass
of red wine
at a table for two
in another room

What’s going on? Who? Why? I don’t care. I am writing that slice; you are filling in the blanks. Is it ugly, or beautiful? Your call. There is nothing in the above but an open-ended story. That’s my job. Here’s a snapshot – what does it say to you?
Q7: How were you able to solicit the help of the American poet John Yamrus in the editing of your book?
RL: I met John through some online interactions (we’ve actually never met in person – something we’ll change soon I hope) and through chatting, calls, emails, we figured out we are on the same page when it comes to poetry. John was helpful in paring down what didn’t need to be there. Let the story tell itself. Don’t overdo it. My favourite Yamrus collection has to be “doing cartwheels on doomsday afternoon.” It is required reading in my opinion.
We often exchange writing, comments, and practices. What I’ve learned most is the ‘business’ of writing. Submit, submit, submit. Stay true to your craft and you’ll find it a home. There is evidently a writerly connection there – check out the number of times we’ve appeared in print together (never planned!) But I’ve got a long way to go. John’s been published so much I can’t keep track. But, I’m doing OK. And I’ve got the confidence of youth on my side – HA! Just kidding John (kinda).
Q8: You are the Editor/Creator of PigeonBike Press. Can you briefly explain the events in the lead up to your decision to set up the publishing company? 
RL: PB started old-school in 1995. The whole underground thing: posters as calls for submission; the issue photocopied and stapled and passed around; contributors handing them out. It was small. It was me and a university friend just wanting to try it out. We did one issue. That was it. I resurrected PigeonBike in January 2011 for fun. Started as a blog to showcase some writers that I liked reading. Totally egotistical. If I liked it, it went up. Then I grew bored of the internet, of digital stuff – I’ve always been a book addict. So, I launched a few print issues and they were quite well received. Then I did the collections – full colour covers, perfect bound, hyper-professional looking. I have since turned off the digital part of PB, focusing on the print only. I want to practice what I preach: the permanence of ink and paper; putting out a product that contains both writing quality and physical beauty; showcasing what the small press can and should do. I think the current Print Issue “Semi Permanent Death” is the pinnacle of what I’ve been able to do with PigeonBike. It’s packed with great writing and photography. And, I humbly think it looks and feels wonderful. Pick up a copy: http://pigeonbike.blogspot.ca/2012/04/semi-permanent-death-now-available.html
Q9: What is the underlying philosophy behind PigeonBike Press?
RL: Simply put PigeonBike puts out stuff I like to read, on paper, to be shared and passed along. I want PigeonBike, however small it may be, to be a Press people respect and admire. 
Q10: What have been some of the highlights/ problems you’ve encountered so far with PigeonBike Press?
RL: As much as I love print, as much as I admire quality paper and printing methods, it’s expensive. I’ve used old-school offset presses, new-school digital presses, quality materials to ensure the longevity of PB titles. All this said, the world is changing. People want now, free, right away. ‘Likes’ and ‘re-tweets’ aren’t accepted currency at the printers. And because I don’t like e-devices and digital books, I don’t really want to play in that sandbox. But I’ve made that choice, to be old school and try my hardest to fight the death of print. So I’ll continue to fight.
Highlights? The writing. At the end of the day, that’s what it’s all about. I have discovered people whose work I’d never heard of. I hope that a little exposure in PigeonBike helps those writers. Maybe a reader will pick up a print issue, a collection, whatever, and decide to support that writer by buying more of his or her work.
I just want to keep telling the stories that matter.

Thanks R.L. for taking the time in answering my questions so thoroughly.
My pleasure. Keep up the good fight. It’s the interplay and cooperation like this that can only help the small press. I tip my hat to you.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

NEW RELEASE: David Spiteri THE PREZ. Harper Collins Publications, Sydney, 2012.


If you are interested in knowing more about the rebel patch bike gang scene in Australia, especially during the 1970s and 1980s, David Spiteri’s book should be a real eye-opener. He has fictionalized events related to his involvement in the founding and leadership of a motorcycle club but the events described in the book are based on real experiences. Over the last couple of weeks, Spiteri has appeared extensively in the Australian media to promote his book. I first heard of The Prez this week when he was interviewed by Trevor Chappell on ABC Radio and I was greatly impressed by Spiteri's candour and tough-guy persona. You wouldn't mess with this guy!

The blurb from the publisher: Book Description
′This story is a true account of the birth of outlaw motorcycle clubs in Australia. There was no template for us, it just evolved. It shows our simple creed: loyalty to the club and respect for your brothers.′

David Spiteri was a founding member and long-time President of one of Australia′s first outlaw motorcycle clubs from its inception in the early 1960s through to the early 2000s. He has been uniquely placed to witness the clubs develop from loose affiliations of riders to the well structured and well connected groups we see today, with links to police, politicians and lawyers. In this never-before-told inside story, Spiteri puts himself at risk to reveal everything from the drug trafficking which funds the clubs′ operations to the extreme violence that continues to make them infamous. For the first time, the true extent of the clubs′ corruption will be exposed, and the treachery and subsequent retribution enforced by their own brand of law known as ′the code′ is brought to light. A truly shocking and compelling look at a fascinating subculture.

To its credit, the publisher Harper Collins has in the last couple of days posted close to 100 pages of Spiteri’s book online here: http://browseinside.harpercollins.com.au/index.aspx?isbn13=9780732294878 
The first 2 or 3 pages of the book's 32 chapters are included. You will quickly develop an understanding and taste for the book's raw logic.

 
A 15 minute interview on ABC Radio Brisbane with Spiteri by Steve Austin can be found here: http://blogs.abc.net.au/queensland/2012/03/david-spiteri-the-prez.html

This is an engaging interview with Spiteri but Austin obviously has not read the book and only makes one passing reference to it. He is more interested in pumping-up a discussion about Bikie culture to reinforce the in-built perspectives of his conservative audience. Spiteri reveals two real life incidents which have been incorporated into The Prez.

An ABC TV interview with Quentin Dempster can be found here: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-03-03/interview-with-david-spiteri/3866346

This is short, fascinating interview in which Dempster asks Speteri some tough informed questions.

Breakfast, Monday April 16, 2012: Ross Solly interviews David Spiteri:

This is a more recent ABC Radio (Canberra) interview in which Spiteri discusses his personal fall-out with his motorcycle club since the publication of The Prez. After thirty-one years, he has handed in his colours and has donated his custom-made Harley to the club.

Buy the book here:
I scored my copy from K-Mart where it is widely available.

Find my Book Review here: http://georgedanderson.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/book-review-david-spiteri-prez-harper.html


Tuesday, December 6, 2011

New Release: Howie Good Dreaming in Red. Right Hand Pointing. Lulu. 2011 (68 pages).


This is Howie Good’s fourth full-length collection of poetry and consists of fifty-two characteristically short experimental poems in which he adopts a variety of non-traditional forms, including- prose poetry, free verse, found poetry, collage and non-rhyming couplets. The language is simple but has a cut-up feel about it which can alienate occasional readers of poetry.

The overall tone of the collection is extremely varied and includes some fond personal and family reminisces but as you enter further into the territory of the collection, the more you become aware of  Good's sinister representation of a world which is twisted and full of injustice and brutality. There are numerous references to Nazis, barbed-wire and beheadings. In the interview which follows, Good explicitly comments on the overall intent of his book, ‘I’m just trying to convey some small but defining aspect of our time and place as I find it- cruel, hyper-violent, and bleak.’

There is no doubting that Good is an accomplished and adventurous poet and that much of our marvel of his poetry derives from our emotional reaction to what is difficult to rationalize in his work. As reader you must first navigate through his jig-saw, sometimes obscure experiments in language before you are offered a glimpse of what he is attempting to achieve. If you are patient and take your time with Good's work perhaps all will not be revealed- but he will open up new spaces in your head which may help shake you free from your set ways of reading and interpreting poetry.



INTERVIEW WITH HOWIE GOOD  22 NOVEMBER 2011.

Brief bio: Howie Good, a journalism professor at SUNY New Paltz, is the author of the full-length poetry collections Lovesick (Press Americana, 2009), Heart With a Dirty Windshield (BeWrite Books, 2010), Everything Reminds Me of Me (Desperanto, 2011), and Dreaming in Red (Right Hand Pointing, 2011), as well as numerous print and digital poetry chapbooks, including most recently Love in a Time of Paranoia from Diamond Point Press. 

 BOLD MONKEY Q1: The imagery in Dreaming in Red is bleak and has an underlying sinister, apocalyptic tone. You make references to Nazis, terrorists, barbed wire fences, soldiers, beheadings, injustice, weeping, suffering- you explore in this book the metaphoric hell on earth. What is your overarching concept for the book and what are you attempting to express about humanity and our times?

My poetry is sometimes referred to as surrealistic. I don’t necessarily agree with that characterization. It’s reality, not my poetry, that’s surreal. I’m just trying to convey some small but defining aspect of our time and place as I find it – cruel, hyper-violent, and bleak. In a paradox typical of art, the stranger or more unrealistic one of my poems seems, the closer it may approach what’s really going on in the world.

Q2: There are numerous references to dreams and to the color red in your collection. Can you clarify some of the intended meanings/ associations you wish your reader to draw from your title and central motif Dreaming in Red?

Readers should draw whatever conclusions they want from the references and images in the book. The poet’s task, as I understand it, is to write poetry, not to explain it once it’s written. The poem itself is all the explanation there is to offer. 

Q3: Many poems in the collection appear to be cut & paste in either free verse or prose poem form. You commented in your Fogged Clarity interview (linked below) that you like to ‘keep the reader off-balance.’ Can you elaborate in detail on your fascination with the cut & paste style? 

When a word or phrase or sentence strikes me while I’m reading or even during conversation, I write it down in my notebook. There they join material that’s more self-generated. All of it becomes the mud and straw for the bricks I use to build poems. Sometimes I’ll write a piece that’s kin to a found poem. In the book, SOMEONE WAS ALWAYS DYING SOMEWHERE and OVER YOUR CITIES GRASS WILL GROW are examples. They’re sort of verbal collages created from phrases I clipped from news sources and novels and arranged in what I hope is a provocative way. If you accept the premise that life in the twenty-first century is increasingly fragmented and discontinuous, then this may be the ideal form of writing to accommodate and capture the texture of modern experience. 

Q4: Since 2004 you have published at least four full-length collections of poetry as well as 31 print and digital poetry chapbooks. You also work as a journalism professor. I understand you write between 9 to 12 most mornings- but how do find the time and why the obsession with writing poetry at this stage of your life?

I take seriously Flaubert’s admonition to writers: Be bourgeois in your habits, and revolutionary in your work. This is the antithesis of the stereotype of the poet as a wild man leading an irregular Bohemian existence punctuated by drunken binges, drug abuse, and sexual abandon. As attractive or exciting as that kind of life may seem, it’s not exactly conducive to sustained creativity. Flaubert recommended saving the wildness for your work, and not your living arrangements. Essentially, I practice the values of the old Protestant work ethic – industry, sobriety, and discipline – to get my writing done.

 Q5: Your poems are characteristically short and use simple, clear language. Considering your prolific output do you usually do much editing and re-writing of your work?

I edit and rewrite extensively. I’ll even go back and revise published poems if something about them –an image, a word choice – bothers me in  retrospect. It’s extremely rare that I “knock out” a poem. Most of the time I don’t know what a poem is trying to say or do until it’s gone through numerous rewrites. For me, writing a poem isn’t like taking down dictation. It’s more like digging for gold in hard ground with broken fingernails.

Q6: You read extensively to aid your choice of subject matter. Can you outline some of your readings which contributed to the development of Dreaming in Red?

I do read a lot, and not just poetry. I particularly find biographies of visual artists useful. It’s not so much content or subject matter I draw from them, but titles and what might be called “prompts” – phrases and ideas I can push off from. I feel a fellowship to visual artists. Maybe it’s because the creative process for poets is closer to that of painters than it is to that of novelists or essayists. When I read about a painter like Joan Mitchell agonizing for hours over one brush stroke, I recognize my own experience wrestling with words.

Q7: A good sampling of your writing touches on the political but never explicitly. You characteristically present your views in a series of puzzles and language exercises. To what extent is this an accurate assessment of your work? 

Quite accurate if “political” is defined broadly, as the struggle to find a way to live together with the greatest amount of freedom and joy and the least amount of suffering and injustice. But I don’t often consciously write poems of political protest. Rather, given the times, any poem that questions the status quo is ipso facto political.

Q8: On a lighter note, what is your advice to young promising poets just starting out?
Organize your life around your writing, and not your writing around your life. And don’t be discouraged by rejection. Samuel Beckett’s first novel was rejected by 42 publishers; he eventually won the Nobel Prize for Literature.

Thanks Howie and all the best with the book. All proceeds from its sale are for a great cause.

Thanks for all your kindnesses,
Howie


Buy Howie Good’s new book Dreaming in Red here: http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/dreaming-in-red/18726602
All proceeds from the sale of this book benefit the Crisis Center www.crisiscenterbham.com .The Crisis Center is a non-profit agency in Birmingham, Alabama offering suicide prevention, services to victims of sexual assault, day treatment for the indigent mentally ill, and other services.


Howie Good’s blog Apocalypse Mambo keeps his readers informed of the links to the latest poetry he has published in magazines and books:  http://apocalypsemambo.blogspot.com/

Research Notes:
Twenty of Howie Good’s  poems in Dreaming in Red were previously published in his e-book collection Love Dagger on Right Hand Pointing and can be found here: https://sites.google.com/site/howiegood2011chap

Howie Good was interviewed by Ben Evans of Fogged Clarity: An Art Review for his first full-length collection LOVESICK. This is an excellent and highly informative audio interview in which Good discussions a wide range of topics related to his writing process and the aesthetics of his poetry: http://foggedclarity.com/2010/08/howie-good/