Breakdancing for the Pope
A Thousand Paper Cranes
by Pamela Miller Ness, $3
—a 28-page chapbook
Ahoy There!
by Missy Kulik, $1
—a 12-page, 5.5 x nearly 3" illustrated book of sailor haikus
Missy makes absolutely adorable drawings and, in Ahoy There!, she tells tiny stories about sailors, seahorses, seamonsters, mermaids and such—all in haiku, all illustrated. This little lengthwise book is charming and lovely, something you'll want to show to everyone who comes over.
Bats With Baby Faces
by Liv, 75 cents
—a 16-page collection of poems
"I think of this zine as the shedding of an extra layer of skin," says Liv in her handwritten introduction. This collection of her poems is an issue of her zine Ribald, and it's a nice selection of mostly free-verse poems. Strips of laughing picture-booth photos and photocopied school notes accompany them. One especially warm poem is called "Observations," though that's what these all are, word-snapshots of old houses, childhood friends, and doors opening onto scenes like a "sunday morning in a hot city church."
by Katie, $1
—a 14-page, half-size chapbook
So says Alan Lastufka, writer and founder of the indie publishing resource Fall of Autumn. This little book contains 12 poems, all free verse, and don’t be scared; they’re not pretentious, but they’re not sappy either.
The Bumblibee: Pomes
by Liz, now 26, when she was about 5, $1
—5 sheets of 8.5x11" pages stapled together, with a hand-drawn color cover
Says Liz: "I came across this book of poetry not too long ago while cleaning out the closet in my childhood bedroom. I have no idea how old I was when I wrote these. I'm also not entirely sure what was going on in my life to inspire these poems, but I showed them to my sister and she absolutely loved them." I'm the sister, and I do love them. Liz read these to me over the phone and we were howling with laughter. They're so great and funny that if you didn't know a kid wrote them you'd swear they were by Carl Sandburg. From the original introduction: "If you love POMES read this book / It's for all ages / From 3 to as old as you want." I reproduced the book to look just like the original. You need to own it.
Did You Know That You Could Heal Yourself?
by Sean O'Keefe, $1
—a 34-page chapbook + a nice cardstock cover
I recently heard from a fellow named Sean Casey, who publishes poetry chapbooks by other writers, and he sent me this one, which was written by a poet and musician named Sean O'Keefe. I like it. It's an unusual book-length poem, in a sense, with only one line per page. Each sentence reads like an oddball piece of advertising copy, a line from a hokey movie trailer, or a spooky aphorism. As a whole the chapbook is like a piece of pop detritus urked up by, well, by a poet. (Urk is my word for puke. I think it's just a sound I started saying and now consider a word.) This is an attractive book.
Eight Beatitudes
by Katie, $5
—a letterpress poetry broadside
I letterpress printed my poem “Eight Beatitudes” onto a broadside, or poster. Letterpress printing is when you set metal or wood type on a big old Ben Franklin-style printing press and crank the printed matter out by hand. This run of 35 prints is signed and numbered and, as they’re all printed on lovely art paper, suitable for framing.
Erik and Laura-Marie Magazine No. 43
by Laura-Marie, free
—a 24-page, half-size zine
ELM is a personal zine, but Laura-Marie is a poet, and she includes many poems throughout each issue of her zine. I am not exaggerating when I say that she is as good a writer as I’ve read, in the zine world and outside of zines. This issue includes a smart, hotly written essay by Jo of Loveanarchist Press about punk, anarchism, and the dangers of sloganeering. LM also includes recipes and a number of book reviews. I like to read about what LM is reading.