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Following Boris to Hollywood

I am not here following the caretaker Prime Minister who has resigned but not. He appears to live in some sort of borderland theatre which has become boring beyond belief; I am referring to Boris Drayluk’s collection of poems My Holywood published by Paul Dry Books. I have just finished Jonathan Coe’s Mr Wilder and Me and am currently reading Nicholson Baker’s The Anthologist which seem to form a suitable background on which to project Drayluk’s moving collection.

His collection begins with a mixture of recollection and nostalgia-

This much is clear :the good old days have passed

Some giant fig trees, a few pygmy palms

deep broken shade on disenfranchised grass;

This magnificent collection by the Editor-in-Chief of the Los Angeles Review of Books has many lovely poems. Dralyuk has a stirring feeling for the dilapidated landscape of Los Angeles and a wide understanding of the hinterland of European Culture. He is a skilled translator and his poems have a deep moving quality appropriately relieved by wit and humour. Here is one short example-

OLD FLAME

Above the tongue-tip is an air so blue

I can compare it only to how you

who once consumed me in a yellow heat,

now scarcely singe me when we meet.

Dralyuk writes of loss and passing time and of memory under the condition of exile. I particularly enjoyed Stravinsky at the Farmer’s Market; here are two stanzas.

Christopher Isherwood is a disciple, slipping

off to the Viertals on the weekends far from Swami,

swimming naked. In Brentwood, Schoenburg lobs grapefruits

and insults at Feuchtwanger’s wife.

Herr Doktor Faustus, exile is no bargin.

You move von heute auf morgen.

Stravinsky lunches at the Farmer’s Market.

The Firebird is plucked, Petrushka’s henpecked.

Here there are layers of sorrow portrayed in a dream-like landscape. Here is a photograph of the poet and a YouTube interview on this collection.

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Verlust des Gesperrten

wolframette2013's avatarTexte von Wolfram Ette

Warum ist die gesperrte Schrift, wie man sie aus den Texten Nietzsches und Karl Kraus’, oder aus älteren, getippten Doktorarbeiten kennt, aus dem Schriftbild vollkommen verschwunden? Es ist ja nicht so, dass diese Zeitalter keine Kursive gekannt hätten. Wenn zum Beispiel in einer anderen Sprache zitiert wurde, kam sie zur Geltung. Verzichtet wurde in den letzten Jahrzehnten also auf eine bestimmte Form der schriftlichen Ausdrucks, wohl um eines einheitlichen Satzspiegels willen.

Daran, dass der Satzspiegel dadurch einheitlicher wurde, kann es auch keine Zweifel geben. Zu fragen ist also, was denn zuvor an der gesperrten Schrift so wichtig schien, dass man die Seite sich flecken ließ mit den hellen Stellen, an denen der Text fadenscheinig und gewissermaßen durchsichtig wurde auf das Blatt Papier, dass ihn trägt. Warum dieser offensichtlicher Verzicht auf die Schönheit der Seite?

Adorno hat einen schönen Text über Satzzeichen geschrieben. Seine Idee ist dabei, dass sie, die es…

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Sommerabend im Park

Sweet and lovely

Wolfregen & Constanze's avatarDas poetische Zimmer

©Constanze

🌿~Rendezvous mit dem Sommer~ 🌿

Erwarte dich im Park zur Dämmerstunde,
wenn seidensamt dein Atem mich umweht
und aus dem Dickicht der Gezweige geht
ein sanftes Rauschen, Flüstern in die Runde.

Auf jeder Blüte, über allem Grün
hast zärtlich süß Aromen du gebettet
und warme Zunder in die Nacht gerettet
vom letzten Funken eines Tags voll Glühn.

Von Blatt zu Blatt bezeichne mir dein Herz,
schick Schmetterlinge tanzend himmelwärts,
lass Mücklein spielen, Vögel singen Lieder
und ewig auch in mir – du hast mich wieder!

©Constanze

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Seaside Passage, Rovjin, Croatia

Steps down to the sea-reminds me of Bethesda Hill!!

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Irmgard Keun – Das kunstseidene Mädchen

joerghup's avatarliteraturweimar

Roman, Universitas Verlag, 1932

Was ist ein kunstseidenes Mädchen? Aus welcher Perspektive wird erzählt? Wie urteilte die Kritik?


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Telemann: Fliehet hin, ihr bösen Tage

At Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet's avatarAt Sunnyside - Where Truth and Beauty Meet

“Melancholy”, by Odilon Redon, 1876, Various charcoals and gouache, with pastel and black chalk, and touches of stumping and erasing, on pale-pink wove paper with red and blue fibers altered to a golden tone, laid down on gray wove paper, Image Source: Art Institute of Chicago

Fliehet hin, ihr bösen Tage from the communion cantata Fliehet hin, ihr bösen Tage, TWV 4:19* by Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767)

TRANSLATION:

Fly away, evil days

of my life, fly away!

Constant suffering has left me

less than half alive.

Bitters and affliction

have been my drink and daily bread.

My time has been spent in groans,

signs and wringing my hands.

Jeffrey Stivers

Thanks for Visiting 🙂

~Sunnyside

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Autoportrait Day 192~ Annie Leibovitz

The famous and redoubtable Annie!!

Christy's avatarThe Misty Miss Christy

A random survey of self-portraits created by women through the centuries

American portrait photographer Annie Leibovitz (Born 1949)

Self-portrait, 2011 / Photograph / “September”, 2012 Lavazza Calendar

[2 embedded links above]

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Lea Ypi: Free

I have been meaning to read this book which has been generally given positive reviews. I agree with “It’s a bizarre, looking-glass world that makes perfect sense when seen only from within, exactly like our own, if you just stop to think about it.” So true in the U.K. with politics like a play by Beckett or Ionesco!

litgaz's avatarLIT.GAZ.

     I have a rather strange relationship with Albania, and I have never been there. Some forty or more years ago, during the days of would-be socialist nations, I discovered the nightly English propaganda broadcasts on Radio Tirana, which were preceded by the strident call-sign With Pickaxe and Rifle, and always ended with the words, “Goodbye, dear listeners!” followed by a rousing version of the Internationale. The broadcasts were so over-the-top that they caused much amusement. And there was the Albanian Shop, purveyors of propaganda and the party daily from a basement shop in a Covent Garden back street. Then I discovered the astonishing novels of the only Albanian novelist I’m aware of, Ismail Kadare. You will find reviews of some in these pages, if you care to look.

I think I’ve also read some travel writing about the country. So this book, about growing…

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Evening Mood

Lyrix's avatarKlapperhorn

Picture by Lyrix, 2008

An old tree near my former home. I often watched the sun go down in the meadow where this tree stands. One day i threw a stick for my dog Tinka and unfortunately it ended up high in the trees branches. Faster than i was able to react, Tinka jumped on the tree, climbed up the branches and took her stick… in round about 8 or 9 metres height. Then she turned around, on a small branch that wasn’t thicker than my leg and ran down the tree, jumped the last 1-2 metres back on the ground, the stick in her muzzle. I nearly had a heart attack. My dog is totally crazy.

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 Afghan Rubab by Palash Mahmud

Tiffany Renee Harmon's avatarEphemeral Elegies

Even now my fingers feel the touch

of sponge; as if my father's body were

mutated into an aquatic invertebrate

before his last breath.

 

Since then I have been regretting me

for escaping the route my father coming

after smoking a cigarette.

 

If there were a second coming

of the shadow without his body,

not in a dream but in real time.

I wouldn't repeat that, I promise.

 

I missed the moments I stood on

his shadow & listened Afghan rubab

in the saffron rays of early spring.

Photo by Mohammad Husaini on Pexels.com

About the Poet:

Palash Mahmud is a bilingual writer, book critic based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. His poetry, literary reviews and criticisms appeared inCordite Poetry Review,Active Muse,League of Poets,Superstition Review,The Punch Magazine,Kitaab,Ephemeral Elegies,The Bosphorus Review of Books,Poetry PotionTrouvaille Review,

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