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Ahadada Books publishes titles both online and in print. We present broadsides, chapbooks, and perfect bound books of diverse literary forms.
 
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Two Publications of Interest from Catfish Press 
August 31st, 2007 by Jesse Glass

Two recent pamphlets from Jim Goar’s Catfish Press arrived in my mailbox together without a zip-code–a real testament to the great Japanese postal system, I think. Jim also did not include much else this side of the sealed envelope and the stamp, but I suspect that information about how to obtain these publications, prices, etc., can be found at www.pastsimple.org/catfishfront.html.

“letters toward jim” by matthew langley tempts this reviewer to search out some biographical hints to aid his undertanding of the text. Hmmm. First, both Jim and Matthew are alums of the Naropa Writing program, and on the penultimate page of the pamphlet we see what appears to be a picture of the author standing next to Jim Goar dressed in a uniform with Hangul characters on a military helmet. Veeerrrry interesting. This leads one to suspect that perhaps these letters to Jim just might be tiny to brief poems that are addressing the editor of Catfish Press.

Dear Jim,

Evel Knievel’s still big on Ebay
but ready to die.
“I can’t wait
to meet God, ask Him
why He didn’t make me
faster, why all this pain.
He knows I’m not evil.”

He was a big eater.

Just the kind of information a poet living living in South Korea might want to hear from a poet living in America (or maybe in Prague, Seoul, or Baltimore, MD. as the bio note indicates since we’re not quite sure what span of time these letters represent and the letters themselves are undated.) But hey–here’s another:

Dear Jim,

Did you ever hear of the umbrella bird?
The feathers on its head look
like an umbrella. Fine feathers
make fine birds. Birds know this.
That is why they hurt themselves so often.
Some like it better than sugar.

The second pamplet (slightly larger) is by Richard Froude, who has learned that stacking simple sentences results in an aura of disconnection, schizophrenia, metaphysical dread even. His The Margaret Thatcher Trilogy runs the scales of this device:

Question Three

An engineer leaves a train at 72 miles per hour.
It is raining in St. Ives.
Henry 8th seems glum today. He is lonely and talking to statues.
Beatrice looks at him through stone eyes. She says nothing.
Steve locates the Conservative Club off Lime Street.
Jane has escaped from Catholicism and is running through a cemetery.
Her stone legs drag.
Margaret and I are napping together.

Oh my dear! Oh my dear! The disjunctions continue beyond the de Chirico train station and into the surreal:

Margaret Thatcher has grown into mythology, her skin of wrought iron.
Wings have sprouted, organic and batlike.
She has no need for feathers.
She has no need for old eyes. She deals instead in sound.
[Phase Five: Strategic Intelligence]

You get the picture, right? Back in the 1980’s the editor of Poetry Motel wrote a series of poems about Ronald and Nancy Reagan that included a flashy poem about Ronald buggering the former-beauty-queen-actress-cum-First Lady. Nothing that interesting happens in these poems, but the satirical mechanism is the same. In fact, as I read through these poems I continued to experience flash-backs and “where did I see that before?” moments. Not that Thatcher doesn’t deserve all the thwacks that Froude gives her, but we require crisp, snappy cracks of the whip, and sometimes we simply find ourselves walking down memory lane instead of leaning forward cupping our ears for the moans and cries–or laughs. But that could just be us succumbing to old age.

Is there a Naropa “School” of writing? After encountering the products of more than a few Naropa graduates, I’m almost tempted to say so. I remember the days when we used to identify the typical Iowa Poem by its lack of contractions, stilted rhetoric, and never-ending references to stones. Is the unthinkable starting to happen in 2007?

Anyway, Jim Goar’s a buddy, and these pamphlets are efforts worthy of your purchase and consideration.

Necessary Adjustments to the Site 
August 30th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

Please bear with us. We’ve revisied the submissions policy (please refer to this blog for specific details until they are incorported into the automatic “statement” potentional authors receive), and are working on a subscription plan. This will help us focus on our goal: the (largely) cooperative publication of new and experimental literature.

Comments disabled… 
August 29th, 2007 by Administrator

This is just a quick heads up to let everyone know that comments have been temporarily disabled on all posts. This is to eliminate comment spam and reduce the amount of time that is required to police the site, until we have figured out a better monitoring system.

I think that comments are a great way to express your thoughts on a particular subject in an open forum. However, many blogs (including this one) have had to moderate comments because of how pervasive spam comments are. Comments have become a burden to me (as webmaster) and Jesse (as blogger), because of the time needed to make sure that spam bots aren’t playing our system.

Many blogs offer comments because of traffic benefits and for the community — thre reason that we’ve kept them alive until now. As a content publisher and blog reader, I have mixed feelings. As a reader, I like comments because I can commment on what I’m reading. However, as a publisher, it can take time to approve or delete comments as well as respond to them.

Lately, however, both Jesse and I need to concentrate on getting several books to print! Truthfully, we should have done this sooner but decided against it as many of the older articles invited comments. However, after a recent spate of comment spam we have decided to go ahead with it. Please let us know if you have any problems or concerns with this. Thank you for your understanding!

Size of the English Wikipedia 
August 29th, 2007 by Daniel Sendecki

Wikipedia Hard Copy

Thought this might be interesting to our readers—what with Jesse contributing so much good work on poets and movements in Wikipedia.

The above graphic, courtesy Nikola Smolenski, illustrates the physical size of the English edition of Wikipedia. Using volumes 25cm high and 5cm thick (some 400 pages), each page having two columns, each columns having 80 rows, and each row having 50 characters. Note that this is a conservative estimate, as it doesn’t include images, tables etc. which take up more surface than the text which describes them.

Check it out here.

Drew Stroud in Hospital 
August 29th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

I just received word that Dru Stroud/ Ryu Makoto suffered a massive stroke on June 25th and is now in a coma at UC Medical Center ICU, San Francisco. Dru is a fine poet and a great guy. Keep him in your prayers. Friends may contact me back-channel for more information. Jess

Going To Press Next Week: Burton Watson, Elizabeth Smither 
August 28th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

Exciting times.

Subscribe To Ahadada Books 
August 27th, 2007 by Administrator

Along with our new submissions policy, Dan and I are working on a subscription plan for people interested in receiving a selection of our past and future publications. Details forthcoming. Jesse

New Submissions Policy 
August 25th, 2007 by Administrator

From this date on, anyone submitting material for possible publication by Ahadada Books through our website will be asked first to purchase one of our books or help us place a book or books in a library near them. We encourage those who ask us to help them, to help us. This is only fair. Submissions without publication purchase or an offer of library placement help will not be considered and will not be aknowledged. Please Note–Purchasing one or more Ahadada books or library placement does not guarantee publication by us, but merely initiates the submission process. Thank you.

Patrizia Hayashi’s interview with Kikuko Otake 
August 20th, 2007 by Daniel Sendecki

Hi all — just took the opportunity to post an interview by Patrizia Hayashi with Kikuko Otake. On a recent trip to California, she had the chance to speak with the author of Masako’s Story. They spoke of her book and her plans for the future. Check out the interview here.

The Rome Reborn Project at the University of Virginia–Take a Look! 
August 15th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

An entirely accurate, virtual recreation of Constantine’s Rome from 320 A.D. will soon be available in its entirety on the Internet. For now a sampling can be experienced at www.romereborn.virginia.edu, along with supporting material. This is one of the most amazing things I’ve seen this week. Jesse



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