Archive for the 'Poetry' Category

reading at Metropolis Books, 9/11 (Artwalk!)

Here’s the deal with my reading at the Artwalk next Thursday:

“Metropolis Books is a great little bookstore in Downtown, sort of an anchor of literary goodness in this crazy beautiful part of the city. It is owned and operated by a really cool lady named Julie Swayze.

Please join us and hear Kim’s unforgettable poetry, buy a book or two if you haven’t already done so,
and have a good time with us.

For those of you who haven’t done the Downtown Art Walk before, it’s a real treat.
People are all over the streets, hopping from one packed gallery to the next, and you’re like us,
sipping free cheap wine at most of the galleries!! It’s a bucketload of fun.

So once again:

Thursday, 9/11
7 PM

Kim Calder
@
Metropolis Books
The Downtown Source for Books
440 S. Main St. L.A. 90013
Phone-213-612-0174 

www.MetropolisBooksLA.com 
www.Downtownbookblog.blogspot.com

Looking forward to seeing you all there.

Chiwan & Judeth
writlargepress.com

ghost of readings past

I’m back from New York, and getting geared up to read next Thursday night at Metropolis Books during the Artwalk in Downtown LA.  I’ve posted some pictures from the reading I did at goodbye blue monday in Brooklyn, which was a great experience.  Check out the gallery section of the site if you’d like to see them.  I read a few short pieces from the book, and then read the 25 or so pages I have of prison-house (for the first time).  Generally, I’ve only read very short sections, so it was somewhat dizzying to read the whole thing.  I find it daunting, too, to read works-in-progress, but having some friends there to help me along was useful.  As I read prison-house, I was accompanied by 4 musicians: a drummer, violinist, guitarist, and a pianist.  We had no real plan and the whole thing was improvised, a form that seemed to match perfectly, for me, with the notion of presenting a work-in-progress publicly.  I feel even closer to the piece after performing it in this setting, and I learned a lot about what I’d like to accomplish with it.  It was a major challenge, acoustically and energetically, to read with and over the music, and the reading had a very different feel from other readings I’ve done.  We were well received, and GBM was packed for the duration, with both old friends and strangers.  If you live in Brooklyn, or are planning on visiting soon, I highly recommend paying goodbye blue monday a visit.  It’s located in Bushwick and is a great place to check out some free music/performance, have a drink, and buy weird stuff (everything in the place is for sale).

I’m planning on staging a similar reading of prison-house once it’s further along, and will keep all you LA people posted when I figure the timing of that out.  I’ve been traveling a lot lately, and it’s good to be home, where I’ll actually be staying put for a while.  Hope to see some of you at the Artwalk–I’ll post the info here, of course.  

back from the dead

Hi all,

Sorry it’s been a while since you’ve heard from me! It’s been a crazy, busy month–lots of visitors in town, lots of going out of town…so no blogging. But, I’m back, and want to tell you about some exciting events coming up and some other new news.

I’ll be in NYC with my man from August 27th-September 2nd, and while I’m there, I’ll be doing a very special reading on the 31st at goodbye blue monday in Brooklyn. It’s the first time I’ll be reading a large section of my work in progress, prison-house, and I’ll also be collaborating with a talented friend of mine.

Stefanos Tsigrimanis (AKA animal nudity) will be accompanying me as I read prison-house (think noisy, noisy goodness). He’s one of my favorite people and a great musician. Here’s his info:

http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=50786080&MyToken=5a937580-ccd6-4554-a853-dabe8e4f243f

And here’s the info for goodbye blue monday:

http://www.myspace.com/goodbyebluemondayinc

As you can see on their calendar, we go on at 9 pm. I’ll also read from the book, and animal nudity will kick out some jams. I’m excited, and hope to see some old friends there!!!

In other news, I’ve started up a page at www.goodreads.com, a great site my friend recommended to me. This neat site allows you to keep track of what you’ve read, what you’re reading, and what you’re planning on reading. I’ll be writing book reviews, and it’s a great way to connect with your friends on the reading tip.  If you’re interested, you’ll find me here:

http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/1441658

Right now, I’m working on Adorno’s Negative Dialectics with my very brilliant friend Greg. We meet every Sunday and discuss a section of the book we’ve read. It’s difficult material, and slow going, but really exciting stuff (and really relevant to prison-house). I’m also beginning to put together applications for Creative Writing MFA programs across the country, and am hoping, next year, to get paid to write for a few years. I’ll keep you all posted on how it goes!

Well, see you East Coast folks soon!

reading/signing at Village Books

I’m having a book signing/reading at Village Books in the Palisades this Thursday, July 10th. It’s the first thing I’ve done on the westside, so hopefully I’ll see some of you who haven’t been able to get out to the other readings there, and everyone in general! Here’s the info:

Kim Calder signs Who’s to Say What’s Home

Village Books

1049 Swarthmore Ave. Pacific Palisades, CA 90272

(310)-454-4063

7:30-8:30

and their website:

http://www.palivillagebooks.com/vb/index.php  

“Two roads diverged in yellow wood…” Wait, what happened???

This has to be one of the funniest articles I’ve ever seen:

 

Court throws the book at Frost home trespassers

A beer party in a former home of the poet lands several teens and young adults in literature class.
By John Curran, Associated Press 
June 9, 2008
MIDDLEBURY, Vt. — Call it poetic justice: More than two dozen young people who broke into Robert Frost’s former home for a beer party and trashed the place are being required to take classes in his poetry as part of their punishment. 

Using “The Road Not Taken” and another poem as jumping-off points, Frost biographer Jay Parini hopes to show the vandals the error of their ways — and the redemptive power of poetry.

“I guess I was thinking that if these teens had a better understanding of who Robert Frost was and his contribution to our society, that they would be more respectful of other people’s property in the future and would also learn something from the experience,” said prosecutor John Quinn.

The vandalism occurred at the Homer Noble Farm in Ripton, where Frost spent more than 20 summers before his death in 1963. Now owned by Middlebury College, the unheated farmhouse on a dead-end road is used occasionally by the college and is open in the warmer months.

On Dec. 28, a 17-year-old former Middlebury College employee decided to hold a party and gave a friend $100 to buy beer. Word spread. Up to 50 people descended on the farm, the revelry turning destructive.

When it was over, windows, antique furniture and china had been broken, fire extinguishers discharged, and carpeting soiled with vomit and urine. The damage was put at $10,600.

Twenty-eight people — all but two of them teenagers — were charged, mostly with trespassing.

About 25 ultimately entered pleas — or were accepted into a program that would allow them to wipe their records clean provided they underwent the Frost instruction. Some will also have to pay for some of the damage, and most were ordered to perform community service in addition to the classroom sessions. The man who bought the beer is the only one who went to jail; he got three days behind bars.

Parini, 60, a Middlebury College professor who has stayed at the house before, was eager to oblige when Quinn asked him to teach the classes.

Eleven recently turned out for the first of two sessions, with Parini giving line-by-line interpretations of “The Road Not Taken” and “Out, Out –,” seizing on parts with particular relevance to draw parallels to their case.

“Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,” he thundered, reciting the opening line of the first poem.

“This is where Frost is relevant. This is the irony of this whole thing. You come to a path in the woods where you can say, ‘Shall I go to this party and get drunk out of my mind?’ ” he said. “Everything in life is choices.”

“It’s a lesson learned, that’s for sure,” said one of the vandals, 22-year-old Ryan Kenyon, whose grandmother knew Frost. “It did bring some insight. People do many things that they don’t realize the consequences of. It shined a light, at least to me.”

Beirut, and the LA Poets and Writers Collective reading

It’s been a wonderful weekend. Last night I had the pleasure of seeing Beirut at the Wiltern, and it was absolutely amazing. They were charming as hell, and their performance was nothing short of epic. The best way I can describe it: imagine if a group of kids from the high school band walked out on stage, and then proceeded to blow a sold-out crowd away. Zach Condon’s voice is simply one of the best out there. It was one of those shows that reminds you why it’s good to be alive–touching, energetic, and unpretentious. Not to mention the sheer volume of instruments on stage, and damn, those kids can play. Simply beautiful. If you haven’t gotten a chance to check them out, I’d suggest getting a copy of Gulag Orkestar–I think it’s their best. Also, they’ve got mp3’s on their website, http://www.beirutband.com. In the top left corner, there’s a little player you can use to go from song to song.

Other highlights of the show included a girl who was ejected by security for attempting to get crunk/”belly dance” in the aisle, and Zach’s comment that on Friday night he’d had a real LA night, having woken up in a hotel room covered in blood that morning.

Today, Sunday, I went over to the LA Poets and Writers Collective reading at Beyond Baroque in Venice, hosted by Jack Grapes. Jack’s been doing these for a long time, and they’re always a lot of fun. Readers who go over the 2 minute time limit are subject to a fart machine, and if that doesn’t stop them, they’re squirted with water pistols. I actually got to be one of the enforcers today and squirt a few people, which was pretty great. Jack also surprised me by asking me to get up and read from the book, and we got a really positive response from the crowd. It was a fun afternoon, and I’m always touched by Jack’s generosity in mentoring and helping local writers and small presses. I began studying with him when I was 17, and I can’t say I’d be the writer or the person I am today had it not been for his encouragement and guidance.

The best part of the whole weekend, though, had to be when a woman at the reading came up to me after I’d read my piece and asked me, “Were you a crackhead?”

Compliments are always appreciated.

chiwan choi (and this wednesday)

As y’all know, I’m reading with Chiwan Choi this Wednesday at Good Hurt and had promised to post a sample of his work. Chi’s a genius, and he’s also 1/2 of my publisher, Writ Large Press. Here’s a poem from his website:

Jacob and Israel

it’s how the story was told to me
on the steps of the kitchen,
my little belly hanging out over the waist
of the beige shorts mom made me,
with seams stitched in
so i’d know which side was the front,
the comic book in my hands,
unable to admit to her
that i was making up the words
after overhearing her tell her sister
who lived next door with her unbearable husband
that i could already read at not quite 4,
sitting there on the steps that my father built
just like he built the rest of the house
once over the business of having me,
sitting on those steps that went down into the kitchen,
as she stuck her hands
into cabbage and pepper flakes
and drew me the picture of that cliff,
that mountainside of rocks,
with her words
and i pretended not to care
and held the book i couldn’t read to my face
and pretended i didn’t hear the story
of jacob,
of israel,
hanging there on the rocks,
his hands on the cloth of the angel’s robe,
whose wings were no match
for a young man’s desperation.

Chi’s one of the best poets writing today–so I highly recommend you make it out for this one. I know it’s the westside, but it’s worth it, I promise.

Here’s the info, one more time:
Wednesday, May 21st
8 pm (Chi and I will be reading between 8:45-9:45)
Good Hurt Bar
12249 Venice Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90066

and, be sure to check out Chi’s website, www.chiwanchoi.com, and Writ Large Press’ website, www.writlargepress.com.

prison-house section

as promised, here’s the section of my new work-in-progress, prison-house, which I read at the release party:

__________

I hear a good many things about my life;

the best I can do is repeat them.

I am told that my parents, concerned

with poisoning me, bottled food to feed me.

I am told that once, at the beach, I refused

to return home as a cohesive unit, denying

familiar bonds. I am told, at a certain point,

I refused to return home whatsoever.

I am told that I loved someone and that

someone once loved me and we lived together

for many years in several different apartments.

I am told that a good many things about my life,

denying familiar bonds, refused to return home

at all for many years in several different apartments.

__________

traitorous cancer, serpent denying self

bad-bad train bound for nowhere good

inexhaustible nothing/something

lying on the dark dark green sheets,

twisting and twisting, waiting

for the whistle to get blown

for something something to get not-

foggy, to get a fucking job already,

to get fucked every which way

on the roof, in a building, in a car

or in a noose, or in the proverbial

lie of an originary truth, small thing

eating words and crawling, small

thing, a loved and not-loved thing,

small thing, reading fast, never

really learning to walk upright,

small thing crawling, small thing still.

as a small thing, I was held,

remembered strange stories

in the night, words confusing

to a small thing,

disappearing immediately,

reappear later, interrupt

creeping into the stairwell to sleep,

my lip gushing blood I lay, blanketless,

on the carpet, I remembered the strange stories,

felt nothing was right, felt something

__________

To get on the stairs,

I would have had

to have been in one

of many apartments

with someone who

I loved who supposedly

loved me, and that

supposition, apparently,

would have been false.

__________

unspeakable disaster, me and not me

unspeakable disaster, warm and heaving

in the bathroom, seeming to die

unspeakable disaster sleepless and seamless

and shirtless and full of glitches,

things unsaid unspeakable disaster

got me on my knees, unspeakable

disaster forgetting and remembering

Unspeakable

disaster,

I’d call

on the dead

for remembering,

but the dead,

like me,

don’t remember

a thing.

Unspeakable disaster, tell me sometime

I knew nothing truly, not that nothing

of nothing but nothing-nothing,

the small thing. small thing lost to me,

muddy in the garden watering roses

with Mom, diaper-clad, pulling

the cat’s tail like a personal handle,

cutting a thigh open on a Chevrolet seat,

eating chocolate cake, feeling scared

at night, loving Daddy so much,

privileging disaster.

Tell me

there are no

limit-points,

that it’s all

a part

of the same,

that I need

only press my ear

into the silence,

that it

will speak to me.

words flash past my face.

I’m kneeling on the bedroom

floor, looking up at god,

considering dead letters.

cards coming up in the hands

of my mother, her long red nails

against pale cardboard.

aardvark. tarantula. lemur.

animals I will never meet.

I’m strong, made strong

by freshly ground fruit

and vegetables, denial,

and devout abstinence,

but I’m weak as I try,

as I try to picture

the things before me,

fail, can’t put anything

between the aardvark’s

A & K, can only think

of noah and his ark,

my future exclusions

__________

this is interval one.

no spaces between the intervals

but more intervals.

no intervals between intervals

merely cuts, empty spaces

no knowledge of interval one

until interval ten,

no knowledge then either

interval outside of intervals,

ending interval systems:

hunters have found a body

in the desert. unidentifiable

at the time. heavily decomposed.

aardvark, tarantula, lemur,

coming home to roost

many years later in several

different apartments, aardvark

in the living room,

the subway rushing by

outside, making static on the TV,

shrouding the hard-shelled beast

in darkness, aardvark in Venezuela

where mother and sister worried

the house’d burn, made clothes

by hand, constantly fearful lemur,

intangible, tarantula, unmentionable.

__________

he could be anyone.

the man who watches

you cry,comforts,

the kindest old fool

on the block.

he might be crouched

with the aardvarks

in the flickering light,

under worrisome noise.

he might have prayed

for these outcomes,

and it would be the prayers,

not the outcomes,

that could give you nightmares.

You might have forgotten about him.

I have forgotten about all of them.

forgetting is our human duty.

one must forget, and live on.

__________