----------------------------------------------------------------- TTTTTTTT AA PPPP RRRR OOOO OOOO TTTTTTT T A A P P R R O O O O T T AAAAAA PPPP RRRR O O O O T T A A P R R O O O O T T A A P R R OOOO OOOO T ----------------------------------------------------------------- Issue #0 8/92 ----------------------------------------------------------------- TapRoot is a quarterly publication of Independent, Underground, and Experimental language-centered arts. Over the past 10 years, we have published 40 collections of poetry, writing, and visio- verbal art in a variety of formats. In the Summer of 1992, we began assembling contact information and reviews of like-minded publications, and distributing them as part of a local (Cleveland Ohio) poetry tabloid, the Cleveland Review. This posting is an experiment, to test the practicality of (and interest in) distributing this information through the Net. Your response and comments are vital in determining the fate of this project. Please e-mail your feedback to editor Luigi-Bob Drake at: au462@cleveland.freenet.edu Hard-copies of The Cleveland Review are available from: Burning Press, PO Box 585, Lakewood OH 44107--$2.50. All reviews by Luigi, and copyright 1992 by Burning Press, Cleveland. Burning Press is a non-profit educational corporation. Permission granted to reproduce this material FOR NON-COMMERCIAL PURPOSES, provided that this introductory notice is included. ----------------------------------------------------------------- 'ZINES: 11x30--(Vol. 4 #2), 32 Scott House, Univ. of Toledo, Toledo OH 43606. Named for it's physical size, the most recent issue of this broadside focuses on Poetry Slams in general and the work of Boston's reigning Slam Queen Patricia Smith in particular. ASYLUM--(Vol. 6 #2), PO Box 6203, Santa Maria CA 93456. 44 pp., $3. Writing, experimental and fun, which is a good combination. Short-shorts from Celestine Frost, Belinda Subraman, Donna Glee Williams; somewhat longer stories by S. Ramanth, John Richards, and (my fave) Catherine Scherer. Scattering of prosepoems, translations, visual/concrete, and a few reviews--not a clinker in the bunch. BOGG--(#65), 422 N. Cleveland St., Arlington VA 22201. 64 pp., $4.50 Still going strong, another solid and eclectic collection of poetry from the US & UK (Britain and her former empirees). The Brits as a batch often come across more genteel, especially compared to some of the bad-boy Yank's like Ron Androla, Tom House, & the Buk. But there's a wide range of voices from both sides of the pond, and somehow it all hangs together. The letters section seems a little less cantankerous since last I looked, and the reviews are now in the form of selections from the chaps reviewed, so you can make yr own judgements--nice way to go. BRIEF--(#6, Jan. '90), PO Box 33, Canyon Ca 94516. 28pp. Poems that require some thinking to digest, selected and sparsely presented to give the needed headspace and breathingroom. Nearly fragmentary lyrics from Todd Baron, Robert Fitterman, and Kent's own Tom Beckett, almost prose-poems from Gerald Burns, sonnets (unstilted by the form) from Jack Collom. CAUTION!--(Vol 1 #4, winter '91), PO Box 4694, Richmond VA 23220. 64pp., $3.95. "Art & Literature Like a Frog in a Blender". Mostly poetry, spanning a wide range of voice & quality. Honest rather than intellectual, and (despite the name) not "cautious" at all. Credits in the editors box include thanx to Naropa Institute, Jim Beam, and a slew of noise-rock bands. Annoying use of computer gimmicky type-twisting fr the poem titles, but that's a pet peeve of mine, so forget I sed it... CENTRAL PARK--(#19/20, spring/fall '91), Box 1446, New York NY 10023. 344 pp., $9. Their 10th anniversary issue, this deserves to be spread out on yr coffee table if you have one. Book sized, perfect bound, dense with material that deserves that kind of permanence. The poetry mostly L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E influenced (or maybe "post-modern", if that means anything). Essays on Chris Columbus & genocide, "disappeared" persons in Chile, Salmon Rushdie; several on the Gulf war (including one by Noam Chomsky). Serious people taking their world seriously, and working to know/change it. DUMPSTER TIMES--(#11, March '92), PO Box 80044, Akron OH 44308. 48 pp., $2. Anarchist magazine, featuring articles about the tyranny of work, war, religion, art, and gender (among other things). Editor Wendy S. Duck keeps it personal & real-life-- frinstance, sharing her inner turmoil over eschewing a life of luxury/wage slavery & health insurance to keep (mostly) doing what she wants. This issue has lots of reprints of articles from elsewhere; past numbers have had more poetry & "art". THE FACE OF THE CONGRESS--(#2, Feb. '92), Fagagaga, Box 1382, Youngstown OH 44501. 20 pp., $1. 1992 is the year of the WorldWide Networker Congress, a conceptual group project which declares that "where 2 or more artist/networkers meet, there a networker congress will take place." This publication documents some of those meetings, primarily with pictures (hand-drawn & otherwise) of the participants. It's a MailArt Thing, You Wouldn't Understand... FISH DRUM--(#5), 626 Kathryn Ave., Santa Fe NM 87501. 45 pp., $2.50. Poems strongly rooted in place, primarily the Southwest. The psychic juice is tapped from all over (Zen & mystical Christianity, Emily Dickinson & bluesman Robert Johnson), but the resulting perspective is no less unified. Miriam Sagan, Joy Harjo, and ex-Clevelander Linda Monacelli Johnson all prominently featured. FISH WRAP--(#3), 921 1/2 24th Ave., Seattle WA 98122. 36 pp., $3.50. Their "Fishy Business" issue is a batch of multicolored business cards, a poem per, elegantly packed into a red velvet pouch. How did Ez say--"gists & piths"?--if that's yr definition of poetry, these are IT. Single-word works of geof huth, verbovisuals from Toledo's Joel Lipman, striking minimalism from Joseph Keppler; Crag Hill and Skip Fox also faves, but all deserve a read. Get 2 copies, one to keep, one to leave behind with yr tip at the coffeeshop. FOUND STREET--1403 S. Santa Fe #6, Los Angeles CA 90021. Not sure if this is a serial, or a series of chaps--maybe call 'em "scraps". "Currently accepting submissions of visual poetry, verobvisual art & experimental writing/drawing... all work must be camera-ready, B/W and fit within a 7x8 1/2 format". First install is BRAIN DAMAGED FURNITURE by Larry Tomoyasu, minimally detourned graphics from '40s era advertising. HEAVEN BONE--(#9, winter/spring '92), PO Box 10981, Chester NY 10918. 64 pp., $5. The poetry here is well crafted, but content seems to dominate over form--political & ecological concerns, and god (in a wide range of guises) appear throughout. Contributors range from the pros (Marge Piercy leads off, Bukowski & Antler here too) to the rest of us; the presentation definately on the professional side--very slick. Contents include: a travel joural thru India, Ren Daumal in translation, a halucinogenic-mushroom story, some reviews. Assembled so as to lead you thru, one to the next. IMPETUS--(#20, Aug. 91), 4975 Comanche Trail, Stow OH 44224. 70 pp., $3. Close enough to Cleveland for us to claim as our own hidden gem. Cheryl Townsend edits a fine and visceral mag, direct descendant in look and feel to the mimeo-underground of my youth. Mainstays of this from-th-heart/land poemfest: Androlla, Huffstickler, Sollfrey, Kittel, Oberk, Nimmo, Lifshin; Clevelanders (& ex-) Ben Gulyas, Joyce Shipley, Mark Weber; a slew of others. Solid review pages, plus plugs throughtout for publications & zines of similar ilk. IN THE MAIL--(March '92), PO Box 4857, Washington DC 20008. 16 pp., trade for art. Ex-Clevelander Tim Harding has revived "WordLess Press" and this, his long dormant mail-art document. Xeroxing & redistributing the various images he receives, this has a conversational feeling, a circle of friends sittin' around & shootin' the breeze. To get in, you've gotta hold up your end of the conversation... INTENT--(Vol 3 #2&3, summer/fall '91), 201 Crestwood, Buffalo NY 14214. 36 pp., $15/yr. Heady newsletter of critical thinking, Primarily Literary. About half devoted to a theme, "Alphabetics"; the rest rambling around points of perstistant interest (most notably, Charles Olson) in review, comment and occasional example. LOST & FOUND TIMES--(#29, Jan. '92), 137 Leland Ave., Columbus OH 43214. 52 pp., $4. Language mangled on every level, from meaning to spelling, syntax to vocabulary to grammer to orthography....all laid to waste, finally maybe ready to "make it new". Not everything new is an improvement. That's why we call this stuff experimental--sometimes experiments don't succeed, but you won't know without trying. People who like this stuff (myself amoung) really like it; those who don't are usually stuck trying to figure what it "means". Hint: the "means" art the "ends". MALCONTENT--(#29, Dec. '91), PO Box 703, Navesink NJ 07752. 58 pp., $3. This is the 1st annual collation ish--each contributor sends in 100 copies of their work, Laura adds cover & comment pages, binds 'em up, and go. Variable results as you'd expect, with a leaning towards ruff edges & rock'n'roll (even an interview with now-defunct Adrenalin O.D.). At one point, editor Laura Poll rails against poets sending formal/form cover-letters with their submits--seems like she'd rather have a genuine personal relationship with her authors & audience, rather than the ususal "professional distance". Upcoming themes: "Sharing"; "Does it Hurt to be Alone?". MOTEL--(#5, fall '91), Box 65402, Station F, Vancouver BC Canada V5N 5P3. 32 pp., $4. Exquisite poetry, but so spacious & open it sometimes threaten to fall apart. Held together (like the mag) with a constancy of tone, & physical conjoining that threatens not to stay on its own--requires an active reader to hold it together. Not for those who need to be spoon-fed. Ray Dipalma the heavy L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E name here, Abigail Child weighing in with particularly striking work. PAPER RADIO--(spring '92) 2615 N. 4th St Suite 797, Coeur d'Alene ID 83814. 48 pp., $3. Cleanly produced mag of writing (approx 50/50 poetry/prose, by weight) and art. Much of the work is precise & well crafted, without relying on the homogonized MFA/workshop "image", & "voice" stylings... Several folks singled out & featured, with a selection of several poems apiece--helps give a context to their work. Also nice to see prose poetry given some prominance. POETRY MOTEL--(#18, fall '92), 1619 Jefferson, Duluth MN 55812. 52 pp., $5.95. Back after an extended vacation, and welcome. Some of the regular guys still around--Ron Androla, Seth Wade, Todd Moore, & the editors-- still working drinking & talking hard. Same old cut & paste layout, with recycled 50's magazine graphics plus mayan hieroglyphs. In the end, Jelly Bobby & Mr. Jenkins try to get into the Naked Sex Place... POETRY USA--(#23, summer '91), 2569 Maxwell Ave., Oakland CA 94601. 28 pp., $1. A quarterly tabloid with a political awareness. Sections devoted to poetry by prisoners, the homeless, and young people, as well an international page and a regular contest series. Subscribers help to support a program that privides free copies to folks on the street, who can then resell 'em instead of plain panhandling. Maybe not dressed up fancy, but the poetry is straight up--not putting on airs and not talking down to anyone, either. REBEAT--(#1, spring '92), PO Box 13387, Salem OR 97309. 24 pp. Fine looking tabloid that really utilizes the news-print format-- big type, lottsa space, a genuine vision. Several stories with fresh language & twisty points of view--reminds a little of Brautegan, but not so neat. Free locally, send a coupla stamps at least. RETROFUTURISM--(#16, March '92), PO Box 227, Iowa City IA 52244. 48 pp., $3. Still coming out, but sporadically, during the Art Strike* (1990-1993, the Years Without Art--buy now!). News & views of censorship, plagarism, and assorted strains in networking. Fairly political critiques of mass culture and herd thinking, in both mainstream society and the "art" "underground". Cynical & idealistic, which aren't so different after all. Also available, the broadside series Yawn, a "Sporadic Critique of Culture"-- send stamps. SLIPSTREAM--(#11), PO Box 2071, New Market Station, Niagra Falls NY 14301. 130 pp., $5. Starts off with some powerful poems about the Bomb--Americana, but not the kind you see on the bloodless faces and hands in the advertisement. City & truckstop poems, neigboorhood bar &, car poems, whore poems and war poems. Short stories in the same vein. Bukowski weighing in with 8 pages, he's in the company of friends. Lotta bang for yr buck. SPLITCITY--(#1, summer '92), PO Box 110171, Cleveland OH 44111. 20 pp., free. Cleveland has always been split: east & west, high-brow & beer-belly, white & black & blue... These folks split from the Cleveland Review to persue their own vision of free poetry, & did a damn fine job. Xerox & cutup, gut-bucket poetry, & a hilarious attack on Poetry Slams. Hope they do another. TRANSMOG--(#4), Rt. 6 Box 138, Charleston WV 25311. 6 pp., SASE. Editor Ficus Strangulensis is an afficianado of computer- generated word-bending, and this newsletter presents the results of his various experiments. Random or alleotorically generated poetry, or computer cut-ups of found text--past issues have featured de-readings of movie listings, recipes, and noozepaper headlines ("Cyclone Deaths Black And Whited Against Hangers!"). The results are weird indeed, sorta surrealist, but with the heart & soul of IBM. WRAY--(#2), PO Box 91052, Cleveland OH 44101. 84 pp., $3. The point of departure here is Art, and from that point moving out to writing, performance etc. Not as rigidly "designed" as their 1st issue, but still nice & visual. Includes mostly-local writing, replies to their 2nd survey (questions like: "If you had an extra soul, what would you do with it?"), and a long interview with Charlotte Pressler. Their 3rd issue should be out by the time you read this. ----------------------------------------------------------------- CHAPBOOKS: Tom Beckett: ECONOMIES OF PURE EXPENDITURE: A NOTEBOOK--Leave Books, 357 Ashland Ave, Buffalo NY 14222. 12 pp. A series of entries, thoughts concerning poetry & language. Philosophic, & including quotes from Zukofsky & Olson amoung others. I think Tom distrusts language--certainly that language is always a shadow of whatever motivates its utterance, but even that it might somehow betray us. On the other hand, I may not have a clue... Johnathan Brannen: SUNSET BEACH--Runaway Spoon Press, Box 3621, Port Charlotte FL 33949. 50 pp., $5. The long prose piece that makes up most of this is dreamy and mirage-like, urreal--flat declarative statements of fact that don't seem to add up to the expected reality. As it turns out, the text is a collage of found fragments, so no wonder. The found-text sourcing is more obvious in the final section, consisting of visual collages using primarily text as a graphic element. Serena Fusek: THE COLOR OF POISON----Slipstream Publications, PO Box 2071, New Market Station, Niagra Falls NY 14301. 26 pp., $4. A collection of seperate poems, but the images recur: father hacks up coal dust, oil slicks the beach, women drink whisky while acid drips thru their wombs. Knit together by consistant voice as well as image. Hard hit vision of a sub-urban nightmare, distilled and polished as if it were nice to look at. Powerful stuff. Marc Kaminsky: TARGET POPULATIONS--Central Park Editions, Box 1466, New York NY 10023. 54 pp., $5. Finely crafted poems populated by homeless women, holocaust survivors, stock-brokers who forget how to fuck--victims & perpetrators. Not glorifying the grit or demanding easy answers, these poems connect flesh&blood faces to the sometimes abstracted realities of what passes for our civilization. Gerald Locklin: THE ILLEGITIMATE SON OF MR. MADMAN----Slipstream Publications, PO Box 2071, New Market Station, Niagra Falls NY 14301. 36 pp., $4.95. If you like Bukowski, you'll probably like this. In fact, maybe even more--this one seems like it's a little more selected than some of Buk's books. Jim Maloney: WORKING: SYMBOLS OF POWER & PROGRESS--Parallel Discourse Press, 921 1/2 24th Ave., Seattle WA 98122. 28 pp., During the Depression, Leftist magazines like New Masses and The Anvil printed Proletarian poetry, focused on the lives of the Working Class, and held up organized Labor or Socialism as possible solutions. These poems have some of the lyric power and class consciousness of those forebears (and other American voices like Whitman, Sandburg , maybe even Patchen), but with less optimism for simple solutions. Rustbelt vignettes of the Worker, more Tragic than Heroic. Lonnie Sherman: AFTER DARK--Implosion Press, 4975 Commanche Trail, Stow OH 44224. 56 pp. In the introduction, Ron Androla calls on the names of Lonnie's literary predecessors, Whitman & the Beats. I'd of named Ginsberg instead of Kerouac--these poems howl at the moon. Apparently all written in the we hours of mourning, there's broken bottles and broken hearts, but the spirit's still whole. The singing of whisky voice in-somnia, with harmony from the pack of wild dogs in the street. Kristen Ban Tepper: MOUTH WATCH--Burning Press, PO Box 585, Lakewood OH 44107. 28 pp., $2.50. From mouth to ear is how these are intended, direct from body part to body part. Some of Kristen's work appears elsewhere in the Review, check it out and judge for yourself. Chris Winkler: CHICKEN IN THE ACID--Plutonium Press, PO Box 61564, Phoenix AZ 85082. 26 pp., $2. Cut-up story based on a newspaper article about a family's attemts to murder one of their own. Unlike many cut-ups, this one's carefully done: the story unfolds & progresses, by turns hilarious & chilling. Illustrations by Jake Berry. ----------------------------------------------------------------- End TapRoot 8/92 -----------------------------------------------------------------