Review: Outer Space is a Musical Number.

Outer space is cramming yourself into a dirty restroom stall in a stinking asteroid bar while two strange men practice their musical number for the night’s space-roughneck dance contest. Outer Space is having those men take a polaroid of you doing your business through the cracks in the stall door.

The American Astronaut is a musical, an outer space western, a bizarre exploration of frontier times where the sexes have become almost completely divorced.

On Venus, women live on their own, reproducing parthenogenetically—only they need to take on an adolescent boy once in a while, to diversify their genetic pool.

Jupiter, meanwhile, is mined by men and only men—men who worship the Boy Who Has Actually Seen A Woman’s Breast. Heterosexual contact is something dreamt of, whispered about, it exists only in story and song.

And in a dive bar on a shitty asteroid we find our hero, the smuggler named Sam Curtis. He’s given a mission and offered money: retrieve the mortal remains of the last “King of Venus” in exchange for the Boy, after exchanging the Boy for a cloned Real Live Girl. The old aim to devour the young, children raised only for eerily utilitarian reasons, but the old never get what they want. They’re always thwarted.

All the while, Sam and the Boy are hunted by Sam’s archenemy, the malevolent Professor Hess—a man who lives to kill for no reason, a man who comes on like Sam’s jilted, manic ex. Outer space is also the threat of disintegration by a man in a bow-tie, nothing left of you but clumps of loose earth that can be caressed in a fit of musical number ecstasy.

The film is uncanny and ugly and beautiful. Cory McAbee wrote, directed and starred in it, with the music produced by his band, the Billy Nayer Show. It drags me back to Guy Maddin’s films, the low-budget black and white expressionism, the sexual madness of living in isolation.

It doesn’t let you get comfortable, forces you to breathe recycled air in a universe without meaning, the ultimate extension of the very first Star Wars—Empire gone, solar system reduced to bodies in tin-cans, getting drunk and competing in dance contests, men holding each other close without talking about it, dreaming about women without really knowing what they look like. People subsist with only a dim memory of Earth, atrophying in the dark.

(The American Astronaut was originally released in 2001 and distributed by Artistic License Films.)

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Review: Uncanny, Gifted, Peculiar.

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom RiggsI was handed a copy of Ransom Riggs’s Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, and I’ve been mulling it over since I finished. It’s beautiful, incorporating vintage examples of trick photography, telling the story of a sixteen-year-old boy named Jacob, trying to recover from the violent loss of his grandfather but unable to get anyone to believe what he knows really happened.

The book has a lot of great set-up rendered in clever, light prose. Jacob’s life in Florida is well-drawn, and we’re introduced to the mystery of the grandfather, which spurs Jacob to go with his father to an island in Wales where his grandfather spent time during World War II. Jacob was raised on fantastical stories about children at a safe-house there.

Only we lose most of what was set up once they go. Jacob barely ever thinks about his life in Florida for the rest of his book, and while we’re shown an isolated island community with intriguing characters, they go nowhere. Instead, Riggs focuses the star attractions, the “peculiar children” of the title: an orphanage of abandoned children with unusual biologies and talents, and a science-fiction element that keeps them young enough to be interesting to Jacob.

At this point, the story shifts from the mystery to more of an adventure, with Jacob working to help the children fend off a threat. The problem is, we never really get to know the children in depth—we know about their strange situations, which leads to some beautiful imagery (a girl unaffected by gravity, a boy with a stomach full of bees), but we don’t really delve into who they are.

Even Jacob becomes flat, the narrative voice scaling back. His father, whose own grief over the loss of Jacob’s grandfather, disappears after a while, and we only get a few scenes that hint at their shared mourning. Instead we get monsters and a romantic subplot.

Riggs’s prose is quite beautiful, and the subject matter’s interesting, even with its influences on its sleeve, the X-Men written into the book’s DNA. But it reads like it was pruned back too much, and doesn’t end so much as stop; it feels like there will inevitably be a sequel but the novel itself doesn’t feel like its own complete piece, able to stand up on its own.

The relationship that exists between the prose and the artwork is also frustrating, the photographs introduced into the prose in a overly mannered fashion when I wanted them illustrating something without being referred to.

Ultimately Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children fell down for me, only hinting at depth, introducing things and then forgetting about them—characters and settings ignored the sake of its conceit, a conceit that didn’t quite manage to capture my imagination the way it hoped.

(Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children was originally published by Quirk Books in 2011)

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“I am a Heart” in Malahat Review Winter 2011.

One of my poems is available in the latest issue of the Malahat Review, out now.

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State of the Union.

I’ve been furiously writing away on both my major projects, as well as my ongoing poetry manuscript, for the past few months. Strawberry World is in the midst of a draft, and I’ve got two more stories to revise before I can put the whole thing together and see how it hangs. The whole thing has changed shape in minimal ways.

As well, I’m working on my children’s novel, The Ridiculous Carvelles, which is a different beast altogether. I’m having to teach myself the long-form plotting and it’s not easy. Sixteen chapters into the second draft I can see so many sweeping changes on the horizon. For the moment, I’m happy to bash out my draft so that I can get a handle on all the plot points.

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New Works Available

New issues of Descant and Poetry is Dead are coming out with some of my poems in them!

Cover for Descant 152, "Ghosts & The Uncanny"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Two of my poems, “Indecent & Lucent” and “To Burn Yourself at the Stake” are being published in the “Ghosts and the Uncanny” issue of Descant. If you click on the cover up above, it’ll take you to the run-down of the new issue, which features a short story by one of my classmates, Sigal Samuel. And, if you feel like it, you can scroll all the way down to the bottom of the page and read an excerpt of one of my poems.

Poetry is Dead, "Temporary Structures."

As well, I have a quartet of linked haiku in the third issue of Poetry is Dead, which is devoted to form poetry. I’ll be reading at the launch party for the issue on April 21st at the Havana Theatre (1212 Commercial Drive, Vancouver BC), and discussing some of my process in writing poetry. Tickets are $10 at the doors, which open at 7pm.

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If you happen to be in Vancouver on Thursday, February 3rd…

In my capacity as the Circulation & Promotions editor for PRISM international, I’m organizing a communal reading with seven other literary magazines in the city. The readers are a great mix and I highly recommend checking it out. Otherwise I will get drunk and sing love ballads outside your window at three in the morning until you have to call the police, because nobody should be doing to love ballads what I would be doing to them.

There will be a cash bar, five dollars a piece for wine or beer.

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Escape artist bemoans the bonds of form poetry

So, imagine that all of form poetry was a giant wall made of uneven bricks, lots of little chips and edges and things. Now imagine me trying to write a ghazal by slamming my head repeatedly against that wall as if I’m suddenly going to shatter it. You know, if I keep slapping my forehead against those bricks for an hour, a day, a week, a month, a year, a decade, a century, whatever. One day that wall will crumple, right? It has to, eventually.

It’s entirely the restriction of the rhyme and the refrain; if you don’t pick the absolute perfect one, you’re stuck in this mire of convoluted lines jammed inexpertly into a formalist hole that winds up swollen and sore.

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Performance Anxiety

Forgive me a first post talking about my process.

I am writing a book made up of nine stories. They are linked, taking place in a brightly-coloured science fiction world. I am about to start writing a first draft of the ninth and final story, and find myself stalling.

The project has changed from the way I originally envisioned it. The book started out as all taking place in a peculiar city that veered into surrealist territory. Then I wrote something which completely changed the project.

“Strawberry Promotion” came out in a white-hot burst, first person and present tense. Set in an  entirely different world. There was no question it had to be in the book, but it changed everything. The one story that had made it into the project thus far was dropped. So, I only had one story and a world to build.

It grew increasingly strange and frightful and brightly coloured. I thought up a crystalline structure, nine stories, three trilogies split up between three sections. Things started to get complicated. The book got a title, Strawberry World.

In the process of writing the pieces, things changed. One of the trilogies ended up being three stories connected more by vague symbols than anything concrete.

The structure came apart last night. Workshopping one of the stories with some of the other writers in my program made me realize that the second story in the book actually needs to be the first story and it has to move backward in time, and has to have entirely different characters involved with it. Other stories need to be reordered.

It’s immensely invigorating to see the book as, well, a book, but to also understand what the book needs me to do to make it better. Giving up and taking control simultaneously.

But I still have to sit down and write the ninth story. But there’s a lot weighing the last story down that I need to forget about, I need to forget the plan and focus on what the character needs to do.

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