March 22nd, 2013 by Jesse Glass
Three publications from nick-e melville:
routine. a collection of daily schedules collected from the Edinburgh lock-up during melville’s stint as writer-in-residence, 2011.
stuff. “words from stuff, stuff from words/ stuff lying about, stuff on TV etc.” Whirlpool Press, Edinburgh, 2012. whirlpoolpress[at]hotmail.c.uk.
“CU [\\] ts. cut” a trio of fearsome dogs. Press King, Edinburgh, nov. 2010.
Of the three, I was drawn most to routine, (though all are witty and imaginative) simply because one can attempt to reconstruct the voices and the environment revealed in the schedules. For instance, here’s one from Dalmar 95418:
get out of bed
have breakfast
go back to bed
listen to radio four
opened up for lunch
go back to bed
deep asleep
opened up for dinner
listen to radio
up all night.
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March 20th, 2013 by Jesse Glass
Deborah Meadows. Saccade Patterns. BlazeVox books.
Goro Takano. Responsibilities of the Obsessed. ” ” “.
Alan Botsford. Walt Whitman of Cosmic Folklore. Sage Hill Press.
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February 12th, 2013 by Jesse Glass
And the information is and always will be free.
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March 20th, 2012 by Jesse Glass
Many thanks to Beyond Baroque for their kindness in sponsoring our “For Japan” benefit reading. Hiromi Ito, Jerome Rothenberg, Marthe Reed, and Amy Ueymatsu put on a superb performance. Many thanks to Amy for taking care of the donations. Thanks to all who came and good Kharma to anyone who donates to the Japanese Relief Fund of the American Red Cross, or the charity of their choice, to help the victims of Fukushima. Jess
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January 16th, 2012 by Jesse Glass
Very happy about this. And the information is free! Jess
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January 5th, 2012 by Jesse Glass
On the eve of the great disaster here in Japan, I had the great good fortune to have met up with George Quasha in New York City to talk about poetry for his “What is Poetry?” project. Among some great old titles that Mr. Quasha so generously gave me–I’d like to mention several that stand out:
First, for sheer beauty and force of idea, his Axial Stones; An Art Of Precarious Balance–with its wonderful photgraphs of balanced stones–one on the other– (Quasha practices this Zen-like art), and poetic–philosophic text, warrents continuing study and attention. As Mr. Quasha noted in a hand-wriiten message: “In the stones is vision too.” Highly recommended.
Quasha’s Giving the Back Her Hands is a long poem–mono-mythic in the sense of a Blake text. Still reading this rich exploration/ explosion of energy and form.
Another gift was Charles Stein’s The Hat Rack Tree; Selected poems. Reading, reading.
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December 23rd, 2011 by Jesse Glass
Even If Only Out Of by Alan Halsey.
A Tour of the Lattice by Maurice Scully.
First-rate work from first-rate poets.
veerbooks[at]gmail.com
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December 20th, 2011 by Jesse Glass
We’re presently putting the finishing touches on our roster of readers. We’re pleased to announce Jerome Rothenberg, Hiromi Ito, and Marthe Reed as headliners in our line-up so far. We plan to put together an issue of Ekleksographia dedicated to this cause. More news as it arrives. Jesse Glass
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December 20th, 2011 by Jesse Glass
We’re a victim of our success at Facebook with over 4,000 friends, and a computer so slow that it takes an hour to post something now. That suits us just fine. We enjoyed joking around there and hearing from some of our nearest and dearest. All in all though, Facebook is/was a so-so experience we can live without.
Though Daniel seems to be moving on to bigger and better things, Ahadada Books remains doing what it does: i.e. enduring. If we do 30 books one year and two books the next who’s to worry? Not me and not you–Ahadada fans–either.
An earthquake couldn’t knock us out here in Japan and we’re not in the habit of crumbling because of any old world economic depression. Not at all. We practice asymmetrical publishing and have been at it for quite a few years. That means that we’re not chained to this website; neither are we in absolute love with “fine books in limited editions.” Staples and mimeo worked for us for years and if circumstances warrent, we’ll gladly return. The point is to get the best work–i.e. the work that gives me–Jesse Glass–permission to try new and interesting things with language–out there. If that work inspires me, then it will probably inspire others. That’s what we’ve always been about.
We thank Dan Sendecki for his friendship and for all of the good things he’s done, this side of gradually disappearing after c. 2007. We wish he and lovely Katie well.
We also thank most of our authors–most of them–and apologize to a few others for unanswered e-mails and all of that other hair-pulling stuff.
This website will be going through a few changes to another, more easily managed format, according to Dan. We sure hope so as we like this website–it’s served us well.
My friends, we can’t promise to be good, but we can promise to continue to be ourselves in 2012.
Happy holidays to everybody–and buy our books from Small Press Distribution for the fastest service.
We are NOT OPEN TO SUBMISSIONS AT THIS TIME. Jesse Glass
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January 9th, 2011 by Jesse Glass
..as Part of the Jesse Glass Papers, thanks to the kind folks of Special Collections, UM, College Park.
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