Showing posts with label Jake Marmer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jake Marmer. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Frank Lima



From his long poem, and the title poem to his new (posthumously-published) book, "Incidents of Travel in Poetry" - Frank Lima:

"…We move the sun to South/America. Neruda had become an organic poet writing about/ the fulcra of yes and no. He wasn't at home when we got there,/so we went over to Allen's for some microbiotic poetry. As/usual, Allen was rolling incense and howling at America. Allen/was always mystical and beautiful when he walked on the/Lower East Side. When he stepped into the old Jewish/pavement, he mystified the habitués. David Shapiro, the Djinn/of subatomic poetry, asked Allen what was the future of poetry/in the borough of Queens? Allen placed the palm of his right/hand on David's glittering forehead and said: "David, don't you/know? The future has no future. It is very old and doesn't worry about its future anymore, because it has so little left of/ it". Allen made suicide exhilarating when he wrote Kaddish./Finally, suicide could talk about the pain of living with/unbearable beauty.." 


and the poem, "Homenaje" (from his 1997 collection, Inventory - New & Selected Poems  ("One decade of Suffering City Withdrawal Pains is focused here", wrote Allen, "in the few poems a young man finds in his head by Art Miracle and offers Futurity, a little free Joy from Frank Lima") - written March 29, 1995, a full two years before Allen's passing:


                                                     [Inventory- New & Selected Poems, 1997]

HOMENAJE

like God
Allen will be taken away from us
to the slaughterhouse of dear God

  what will happen to
   Allen's great eyes

will he give them to my son
the new poet of life

  will Allen become the pieces of the past

       the little quiet feast

    who will collect
            his glasses
            who will haunt poetry in memphis
             in the vending machines

  we the little children of his soul
    are the prostitution tourists
       the four dimensional fleas
         and our poetry revenant helices

            because poets do not sleep
            they die like bread

        like the id
        underneath the tree of secrets
        like the dust
        underneath the tree of secrets
        like the sacred dust of the soul
        sounds to a cassette

          you are the devastating force
  
           of an old poem
              the voice of burning hair
             the sarcoma of a minor poet

       like me

     the idiot in Allen's heart

        eating
    america tell me poems
    writing  
kiss me with your round dream poems 

From a Spring 2001 interview with Guillermo Parra:

GP: Your poem "Homenaje" is dedicated to Ginsberg. How much of an influence did his work have on you as a young writer, and in recent years, as fellow poets?

FL: In the beginning there was Allen. Allen was the second poet I read. The first was Robert Lowell. Both were the ultimate influences in my early writing career. Allen gave a sense of current life and immediacy. Lowell had the elegance and education I did not have. I benefited greatly from both at the time. My Homenaje, or tribute, to Allen, is an honest and open acknowledgement of how important he was to my early writings.


                                                                           [Angel, 1976]    

Parra's obituary note in 2013 - "This is the sorrow of poetry in America" is well worth reading
Wendy Xu's note in Fanzine - "Remembering Frank Lima (1939-2013)"  is another heart-felt testament and can be found here 
Nico Alvarado in The Boston Review further provides insight and context
Here's Tom Clark's review of Inventory (the earlier Selected Poems) in the San Francisco Chronicle (and Richard Silberg in Poetry Flash 

Here's a hugely-revealing interview Lima gave (Q & A), in 1999, to the Poetry Society of America.

"Frank Lima", David Shapiro boldly declares, "is an American Villon", a singular force.
"After enduring a difficult and violent childhood, he discovered poetry as an inmate of a juvenile drug treatment center under the tutelage of the painter Sherman Drexler who introduced him to his poet friends."   
Protege of Kenneth Koch and Frank O'Hara, as well as Allen, "the only Latino member of the New York School during its historical hey-day", he was/is, without question, (also)  
"a major Latino poet" (though, as Garrett Caples, this new book's editor, points out, "throughout his life (he) rejected both labels (New York School, Latino) in relation to his poetry, and this rejection is one reason why his work remains little known.")
Another,  even more "damaging" perhaps, factor to his poetic reputation, was his prolonged  hiatus. In the late 1970's, Lima left the poetry world to pursue a successful parallel career as a professional chef . For twenty years, from the publication of Angel in 1976 till his "re-discovery" in Inventory in 1997,  (and indeed, for less laudable reasons, before), he was essentially "off the radar". That book triumphantly announced his return to the fold, but, regrettably, his follow-up volume, The Beatitudes, was stalled, persistently stalled, and did not find publication, dissipating all the momentum.   
Caples, in his comprehensive and illuminating introduction ( a must-read) writes:
 "The failure of Beatitudes to appear was a source of great bitterness to Lima, destroying the momentum of  his comeback in the poetry world. This combined with an unsuccesful attempt to stage a libretto he wrote about the king and queen if Mexico, led him to abandon further attempts at publication, though he remained willing to contribute poems and give readings when asked."  
However, if publication passed him by, owing to an inspirational death-bed encounter with his mentor, Kenneth Koch, Lima, as it happened, "only grew more prolific in the last decade of his life" - Koch had suggested he discipline himself to write a poem a day, and, "as a result, there are hundreds - more likely thousands -  of pages of poetry from the last decade of his life." "Even allowing for his inevitable culling of inferior pieces and perhaps an occasional day off", Caples writes, "he would have composed in excess of 3,500 poems. Given the small number of previous collections…it's safe to say the bulk of Lima's poetry remains unpublished".
The new volume features a generous selection of that previously-unpublished work, since, 
"it is with this late work that we can ultimately support the claim that Lima is a major poet. For here Lima developed a distinctive mode that accomodated everything from the quotidian to the literary and historical to the most exalted displays of surrealist imagination..The world has yet to experience the extent of his poetic genius."    

Bob Holman, author of the 2000 profile/investigative poem, "The Resurrection of Frank Lima", writes:

"This is what we've been waiting for, a grand selection of Frank Lima's poetry with immersive additional material that tells his stories and contextualizes him as the unique, uniquely connected, poet and person that he was. From his first contact with poetry while incarcerated as a juvenile offender in Harlem, through his meetings with Langston Hughes [sic] and Frank O'Hara, his years with (Bill) Berkson, (Ron) Padgett and (Ted) Berrigan, his stint as a chef, and his years of livibg his Vow to Poetry when he wrote at least a poem a day in total obscurity - Lima's life is an epic of contradictions. Frank Lima is a poet the world has been waiting to discover, Now we can."

Here's a gem. Frank Lima, late in his career (in 2010) reading poems at Woodland Pattern in Milwaukee




"Ginsberg was an early admirer and Lima counted both Ginsberg and Gregory Corso as influences on his work. But, as (David) Shapiro also reports, Lima was critical of the Beat Generation's exaltation of street life: "He said to me, you know, I've tried as much as possible to get away from the Beat Generation. I tried to get away from violence and the old drug habits, and they want to push me back in…Allen always wants to get back to Harlem, I want to get out of Harlem."   

(from Garrett Caples' Introduction to Frank Lima - Incidents of Travel in Poetry - New and Selected Poems (2016)) 

Further Caples notes on the City Lights blogspot

Jake Marmer's review in the Chicago Tribune - here

Buy this book!

Saturday, July 25, 2015

The Ginsberg-Ferlinghetti Letters




The phrase is, of course, Emerson's, writing to congratulate Walt Whitman



" I greet you at the beginning of a great career, which yet must have had a long foreground somewhere for such a start. I rubbed my eyes a little to see if this sunbeam were no illusion; but the solid sense of the book is a sober certainty. It has the best merits, namely of fortifying and encouraging.."

This greeting was echoed by Lawrence Ferlinghetti after hearing Allen's legendary Gallery Six reading of "Howl" in October of 1955 -  "I GREET YOU AT THE BEGINNING OF A GREAT CAREER [stop] WHEN DO I GET MANUSCRIPT OF "HOWL" [stop] LAWRENCE (FERLINGHETTI) CITY LIGHTS BOOKSTORE.  His telegram (itself, a classic encomium in American Literature), opens this intimate, revealing, "fortifying and encouraging",
collection - the (selected) Ginsberg-Ferlinghetti correspondence, edited by Bill Morgan and just published recently by City Lights   

From the back-cover blurb:
"In 1969, Allen Ginsberg wrote to his friend, fellow poet and publisher Lawrence Ferlinghetti, "Alas, telephone destroys letters!". Fortunately, however, by then, the two had already exchanged a treasure trove of personal correspondence, and more than any other documents, their letters - intimate, opinionated, and action-packed  - reveal the true nature of their lifelong friendship and creative relationship. Collected here for the first time, they offer an intimate view into the range of artistic vision and complementary sensibilities that fueled the genius of their literary collaborations. Ferlinghetti and Ginsberg were two of the twentieth century's most influential literary rebels, and their correspondence documents a time when both were rising in the peak of their notoriety and international fame, traveling, writing, publishing and performing their poetry during a period of unprecedented social and cultural experimentation and upheaval. The majority of the letters collected here  have never before been published, and they span the period from 1955 until Ginsberg's death in 1997, offering an evocative portrait of an inspiring and enduring relationship."



















"Dear Allen - Back from Nica + 10th Anniversaro of Sandanist Rev…. You should have been there. Great stuff going on. Love Lawrence"

Ah Sandinistas! - We would do well to look back on that pivotal time in Latin American political and cultural history (and U.S. political and cultural history!). Allen did indeed go down there (making an important visit (captured here in photos by Ilka Hartman) three years earlier, in 1986, and maintaining a consistent and prescient understanding and following of the situation; forthright and outspokenly critical of U.S. hypocrisy and manipulation (this, long before the revelations occured regarding the so-called "Iran-Contra affair"). 



[Allen Ginsberg with Ernesto Cardenal in Managua, Nicaragua, 1986 - Photograph by Ilka Hartman]

In an early visit (in 1982, at the Managua Poetry Festival), he had penned, alongside Russian poet, Yevgeny Yevtushenko, and the Sandinista's Minister of Culture, Nicaraguan poet, Ernesto Cardenala joint-manifesto (the "Declaration of Three")  - "to (the) World's Writers", an appeal "for (the) Liberty of Nicaragua" - "We are three poets of very different countries...We don't want to see Nicaragua become a puppet in anyone's hands. At this moment we are witnesses that here in Nicaragua, which suffered so much under tyranny, misery and ignorance, there is an intent on the part of the people to defend their economic and intellectual independence. Nicaragua is a big experimental workshop for new forms of get-together wherein art plays a primordial role…." 

and in "Little Fish Devours The Big Fish", he expressed his deep and understandable concerns -  "When the troops/get their poop/at Fort Bragg/how to frag/ Sandinistas/ Leftist Nicas/or go bomb/Guatemalan/Indians.."  

Here's another one - from the late 60's - "Dear Allen, Dreamt last night you handed me a copy of the VILLAGE VOICE with complete POEM ON THESE STATES in it, about fifty pages of Voice pages. Not a bad idea for a first complete printing of it, I'm even dreaming genius publishing ideas, and it reminds me to tell you that I am ready to do it in Pocket Poets Series whenever you are…"
"The Fall of America: Poems of  These States 1965-1971" finally appeared in 1973, and garnered for Allen that year the U.S. National Book Award 

Also in that letter - " I am also wondering, what with your new singing career (sic), wouldn't you like to do a little (William) Blake edition with your music for the poems you have done. It would be lovely; but maybe you want to give the idea to some bigger publisher…"




[Lawrence Ferlinghetti - Unfinished Flag o fthe United States, 1988,  oil on canvas  51 1/2"" x 28]


And a postcard from 1990 -  "Dear Allen, I sent the original of the enclosed to you at Naropa  Anne (Waldman) to hold for you there. Curious what happened on stage that day of the sumi-brush event….After I asked you how to spell bodhi, "elephants fucking" flashed upon my brainpan…then you said it! - Love L"


                         [Allen Ginsberg & Lawrence Ferlinghetti - Photograph courtesy The City Lights Archves]

And a couple of postcards from Allen - from 24th August, 1976 :

"Returned home tonite & found your Aug 8 note in Pile of letters - I'll stay here [New York] till (I) go to Berlin with W.S.Burroughs  Sept 20 - Oct 5. Then w/ Peter (Orlovsky) Oct - Dec  4 [sic] retreat N(orth) Wisconsin sitting on breath all day & technical Void studies - Then open spare time Next Summer at Naropa  I will Teach one course "Literary History of the Beat Generation") Apprentices retyped most of Mind Breaths - ready  soon I hope - note to you - Louis died peaceful & Philosophic little Pain - Love -in haste - Allen 
[Yes, I have some nice conclusions]



















and from November 18 1985: 

"Dear Larry, Arrived in Moscow with Arthur Miller & Inge (Photographer Wife) and haphazard delegation of scribblers. Frieda Lurie of Writers Union & Yevtushenko at airport hellos - going on to old ghetto city of VILNA for "Discussions" then back to Moscow where I'll stay two weeks & goof with translators. How was your long Paris summer? Write any poems too?) I've been seeing Alex Katz, N.Y.painter, sitting last month for his portrait, also F(rancesco) Clemente. I brought lots of books here from Subterraneans,[distribution company] lots of City Lites [sic] & Grey Fox includimg yr Poetry, Don't know where I'll visit but hope to settle down in Moscow and teach & work till December 15 - Love to Nancy (Peters), Philip Lamantia, Folks at store & God - As ever Allen Ginsberg















[William H Gass, Allen Ginsberg & Arthur Miller in an elevator in St Petersburg in the apartment building where Fyodor Dostoevsky once lived (part of the US delegation to the Soviet Union, 1985] 

The scattered materials featured above are only a random sampling from an extraordinary trove, expertly edited and shaped by Bill Morgan, in fact summoned into being by him

From his introduction:

"Ferlinghetti has always been reluctant to publish his own correspondence, so this volume marks a departure from that previous silence. It was only after repeated coaxing on the part of the editor that he agreed to allow their publication.." 

Beat scholars will be forever grateful.

Jake Marmer's early review of the book in the Chicago Tribune may be read here  
Katherine Duckworth on the City Lights blog - here 
The Poetry Foundation has further excerpts and photos - here

More reviews to follow

Friday, April 6, 2012

Friday's Weekly Round-Up 68

Image
[Allen Ginsberg Papers at Columbia - K.C.Mead - from her blog,"Howling - Allen Ginsberg & The Trickster in "Howl"]

"Should. Should. Should. Should. Should. You keep making this sound, "Should", I don't think anybody "should" do anything." - If you've not seen it, don't miss this account, Richard J McCarthy's account, of a 1969 encounter with Allen.

Zeitgeist, cultural zeitgeist - Last Sunday, tv-watching America hears Allen get a name-check via Ben Feldman, the latest cast member on the mega-hit tv-series Mad Men, playing the part of junior copywriter, Michael (sic) Ginsberg. (Jon Hamm (Jake Ehrlich, Allen's defense lawyer in the Howl movie) is Don Draper, his fictional boss).
Wasn't it just last year that we read this sentence (in the New York Times, of all places!): "Try to picture Allen Ginsberg having a chat with Don Draper, across the counter at the local coffee house, about the latest Lady Gaga video, and you'll realize how far we've come."

How about this (we kid you not!) genuine advertising copy - indeed, how far we've come!

Jake Marmer's piece in Tablet magazine on octogenarian "Beat poet", Herschel (Hersch) Silverman, is a gem and well worth reading - "Candystore emperor", as Allen described him, "dreaming of telling the Truth, but his Karma is selling jellybeans and being kind".

Another worthwhile read - Iain Sinclair's review of a new biography of another "fragile soul" who, during his lifetime, during his later years, drifted into Allen's satellite, the great English Surrealist, David Gascoyne.

Last night (jazz and) Beat poet ruth weiss returned to New Orleans and performed - first time in 61 years! - More on the sorely-neglected weiss (lower case, it's important!) here and here.

Nicole Henares reviews "The Language of Bebop.. in Allen's "Howl"".

Daniel Radcliffe in People magazine, the first official promo and on-set interview for Kill Your Darlings - People: "Are you a Ginsberg fan?" - Daniel: "The more I learned, the more I liked him. There's unbelievable sweetness and compassion between him and Burroughs and Kerouac. His work was like an explosion".

(David Krajicek writes about the Kammerer case (the basis of the plot of Kill Your Darlings) today in the New York Times)

Alan Govenar's Beat Hotel continues with an extended play at New York's Cinema Village - and, likewise, the exhibit of Harold Chapman photos at the OMC Gallery

&, we've mentioned before Pejk Malinovski "Passing Stranger" project, but just in case you missed it, here's word on it again.