[Riding the subway is an adventure] by Frances Chung


Subway Chinatown NY
Originally uploaded by DJ Axis

Riding the subway is an adventure
especially if you cannot read the signs.
One gets lost. One becomes anxious and
does not know whether to get off when
the other Chinese person in your car
does. (Your crazy logic tells you that
the both of you must be headed for the
same stop.) One woman has discovered the
secret of one-to-one correspondence.
She keeps the right amount of pennies
in one pocket and upon arriving in each
new station along the way she shifts one
penny to her other pocket. When all the
pennies in the first pocket have disappeared,
she knows that she is home.

© Frances Chung
from Crazy Melon and Chinese Apple

"The arsonist stood up in court and said" by Jeffrey McDaniel


Firestarting
Originally uploaded by _val_

I am not an arsonist. I dreamt
the building was a phoenix
and needed my help. Before sticking me
in a sentence, like a four-syllable word
with only one meaning, consider
what becomes of the ashes: see
how after smearing a palm-full
hair grows on a bald man’s scalp, how
just a sprinkle makes irises sprout through
sidewalk cracks. You call me sick,
but have you ever seen a suicidal
parakeet, a homeless butterfly?
You want to know how you go crazy?
One marble at a time. It’s the law
of your language that dictates mess
is the precursor for messiah. You don’t
understand my logic to the hmph degree.
Your style of math is forty-three floors
beneath me. But you should have seen
the fire, a symphony of mayhem, people
leaping from windows, like lightning
bolts somersaulting out of a terrible cloud.

© Jeffrey McDaniel


KSW Press Literary Reading at the Actor’s Center of San Francisco

The Actors Center of San FranciscoTuesday, Sept. 25, 2007, 7 – 9pm
Bunsen Burnt: KSW Press Reading & Chapbook Release

The Actors Center of San Francisco
180 Capp St. @17th St., 2nd floor
$10-20 sliding scale ($8-$20 for KSW members)

Join us for an evening of literary readings and the launch of a new chapbook, Bunsen Burnt, from KSW Press. Featuring readings by

Neelanjana Banerjee
Oscar Bermeo
Sita Kuratomi Bhaumik
Nicole Bohn
Vanessa Huang
Susanna Kwan
Margaret Rhee

View artist bios arrow

Buy Tickets at manja.org arrow

Francisco X. Alarcón and Francisco Aragón @ Copperfield Books

I always love a reading like this because it proves that there is no single theme/voice/identity that comprises Latino Poetry. Mind you, I don’t think that statement is any kind of news to anyone who reads this blog on the regular but I do think it is news to a lot of folks who casually attend readings.

At the reading last Friday, we were treated to a tag-team pairing as Alarcón led off with a few poems, passed the baton to Aragón, and then back and forth for the rest of the rounds. (Yes, I know I just blended four different sports terms into one.)

Alarcón started with a call to the four directions and then to the fifth direction: the reflection; which made me think of writing as a solitary singular act and that a public reading could be viewed as the reflection of that act. From there he went into poems about Hernando Alarcón, a Spanish ancestor responsible for a number of atrocities on Mexicanos for the express purpose of chronicling their spells and stories. Much props to Alarcón for examining that (often purposefully neglected) aspect of Hispanic heritage- the Conquistador, the Priest, the Chronicler, the Sailor, the Landowner, the Immigrant to the New World looking for a fresh start. Alarcón’s poems don’t decry or endorse this heritage but let the story of a man sent to destroy a culture and by preserving it in words ironically accomplishes and fails in his mission at the same time.

Aragón’s work reflected on a different set of literary ancestors. Infused with the spirit and words of Ernesto Cardenal, Rubén Darío and García Lorca, his work winds through place and perspective taking the time to observe, take note and reflect on shifting histories or waiting to see if any change will come at all. Aragón’s steady and confident cadence gives the listener plenty of opportunity to examine this space around them and come to their own conclusions.

Back to Alarcón, who is also a children’s book author (commenting durig the reading that he “has given up on adults”) and his poems for kids might just be too grown up for most people. In this respect his poem “From the Bellybutton of the Moon,” a playful take on the etymology of the word Mexico, might have been my favorite poem from the night.

A real close second would be Aragón’s “To The President” a re-mix of Darío’s “A Roosevelt.” Reminding us again of what’s changed and what hasn’t in the (Latino) World.

And I’ll close with a shout out to Katherine Hastings for putting on a stellar reading with a packed book buying house.