Monday, September 17, 2018

UPCOMING PRATIK MAGAZINE OBITUARY -- In Our Wanderings: Remembering Jazzman John Clarke By British Poet Maria-Heath-Beckett



   Photo by Yuyutsu Sharma

On 5th August 2018, the poet known as Jazzman John, birth name, John Robert Clarke, passed away, taking friends and fellow poets by complete surprise. Because I was in Paris at the time, no internet, this sad news first reached me a few days later from Yuyutsu Sharma, and, like Yuyu himself, and others who had known John, I felt literally knocked over with the shock. Yuyu described the feeling like this:

The ball of my breath froze in my throat as I heard my best friend, British Poet Jazzman John Robert Clarke has passed away in London, suddenly I have to sit down and rethink — how cruel can life be, after 5 years I was planning to finally meet him this year and work on his dream visit to New York City.

John, writer of the poetry collections: All the Way from Kathmandu: Selected Jazz Poems and Ghost on the Road, based on his love of jazz and the Beats,     was renowned as a vibrant, talented performer on the London poetry circuit, and for sure, he will be, and is already, sadly missed, his future potential poems only to be guessed now instead of reading or hearing.

 Life can be cruel, to deal us such blows. Not only was I faced with this loss, but a deep regret at my relative neglect of a nascent friendship that could have become still deeper, and richer had I made time, had I not been too preoccupied with the vicissitudes of a turbulent relationship to attend his birthday, or the pending lunch date we had pencilled in at the Café de Provence over the road from me, never ‘inked in’, no definite plan made. For sure, if I could make it happen this week, next week, as soon as possible, then I would because my life feels emptier without John.

Why hadn’t I found the time? I castigate myself, for not doing so, often reliving his kindness the day we had met there, the day he had delivered a box of books for me from New Delhi - several copies of the anthology, Eternal Snow, in which my long narrative poem, Parnassus to New York, had been published, a copy of David Austell’s Garuda, and Yuyutsu Sharma’s Quaking Cantos, a series of poems stimulated by the Nepalese earthquakes. I had looked forward to this delivery for days, perhaps a time when all was not so well in my life, a rift in the aforementioned relationship leaving me feeling quite isolated and desperate, then, to see any friend. My best friends have all moved to Hastings, miles away from my home on Drury Lane, and John walked into this void for me like an angel, a shaman, a companion, a man who may perhaps hold my hand.
Photo by Yuyutsu Sharma

I remember his wonderful stories over coffee that morning, his Dublin parentage evident in the detailed retellings of this raconteur, his kind offer to buy us lunch, the photographs we took together, delighted to read our poems from YuyusEternal Snow, a day that was up there with the happiest of days, like the first day we met, at Heathrow. That day, a few years ago, I was seeing Yuyu off to New York, the start of a journey of poetry readings and teaching, a meeting in a café in Queens Park over coffee and poetry books, a taxi ride to the airport together, the arrival of Jazzman John, at once as if placeless, timeless, Shamanic, defiant of fashion and context, with his anachronistic scarves and mirrored sequins, his vivid colours, velvets and longish hair, and yet so much a part of London. Quickly I began to absorb John’s encouraging words, delight in his cheerful banter, his anecdotes and stories enriched with all the wisdom distilled from a life evidently, and unusually, led with true integrity, curiosity and passion.

 Curiosity led John to discover jazz, initially in the music collection of Greenwich library, during the years he lived in Greenwich from childhood to adolescence. Later I heard that he befriended Basie band played Eddie Lockjaw Davies who ran Minton’s in New York, and developed a life-long passion for jazz, and beat poetry, his concept and delivery of sound and rhythm always inspired by jazz and earning him the name, Jazzman John Clarke. The tribute from Y Tuesday, one of the poetry nights he frequented, reads:

for many I feel, it was John's live performance for which he will be most remembered.
On stage he seemed to be inhabited by the spirit of the San Francisco Jazz poets of the late 50's and early 60's, and few will forget his live rendition of "Messages from drunken blowfish.”

       Photo by Yuyutsu Sharma

It is not only jazz that inspired John - a fusion of Dada, surrealism, psycho-geography, and Zen can be felt playing through his poetic word-play and syncopated rhythms. John loved diversity, the drawing together of styles and genres into the poetry venues he loved to attend, describing (in the Londonist):singers, musicians, dancers, poets and comedians rubbing shoulders with burlesque artists at live events. When you think about it Vaudeville and Dadaists were doing it long ago!

Meeting John, I sensed a pulling together of influences into his words, character and a persona that flowed seamlessly into his writing and his everyday demeanour, so one never really felt he had to put on a performance but he was the poet, the performer, through and through. Turning to John’s words in an interview for The Londonist about his sources of inspiration, John said:

My poetry amounts to the sum total of my inspiration… Currently, I draw enormous inspiration from the intimate juxtaposition of the multi-arts approach. Traditional routes tend to bore me rigid - I want to plough my own furrow, take chances, try to be different without being overly contrived, which I know from experience is easier said than done. For me inspiration can drop out of the sky and I find the source is infinite. Jeremy Reed (himself a prolific writer) once said that his source of inspiration was rather like switching on the electric light - it was always there.

In John’s company, I had the sense that he was always inspired. Every moment seemed it seemed as if strings of fairy lights were sparkling, his mind alive with stories of poets, musicians and club nights he had run, London an always rich seam of possibility for him in terms of performance, encounter and stimulus for his work. John threaded inspiration from journeys around London, with music and Eastern thought and psychology to create works that, in his hands, create a vibrant invitation to a way of thinking, a way of life, never vague or too abstracted but grounded in a sense of connection with other minds, an attitude so visible in the way that he interacted with me. The inspiration that saturates his work breathed through his life as a breeze through chimes. In this sense, there seems to be an indefinable spirituality in his work, which at the same time can be visceral, earthbound and sensual.

After my first meeting with John, which continued from Heathrow airport, a place suspended, that day, as if between ground and celestial spheres, into the underground as far as one of the central tube stations but I forget which, I wandered next to the River Thames, composing a narrative, Parnassus to New York, and that day I felt quite transported as if Yuyu and John were able to grant me some lightness that carried me out of whatever personal difficulty I was experiencing into a more poetic, liberated space. I get the sense that Jazzman John always wanted to ‘follow his own star.’ Not for him the life of a City banker which he pursued for some years, instead he wanted the freedom to wander, explore, write and make friends, a true bohemian and beat poet, and surely then an influence I will remember and treasure throughout my life, although the hours I have passed in his company were all too briefly, and unexpectedly ended this summertime.

London has lost unique voice and spirit, very much loved and missed. To keep that spirit alive, in my mind, I have been listening to his recorded poems on YouTube: Poems by the River, a selection of poems, some of which are set to an abstract sound collage, recorded at Enderby Studios in 2016 and displayed for the internet with a striking, psychedelic array of visuals and self portraiture. InEverlasting Contrast, John writes –

‘You are a sunshine stumbling across a rainy beach,
You are the anchor midway to lean upon…’

And I like to think of him like this, as lightness and weight, gravity and grace. I like to visualise him rather as an angel looking down, watching over me.

Angels control us, even when we cannot see or immediately recognise them.  (Angels)

Victor Hugo said, Errer est Humain, flaner est Parisien. My lack of alacrity delaying another meeting with John I regard as a mistake but I will learn from this. I don’t think to wander is specifically Parisian, but the way of poets everywhere, and I am glad that in our wanderings our paths at least crossed.



Maria Heath Beckett was born in North Yorkshire and currently lives in London, UK. Maria is finishing two novels and a memoir and collating her first poetry collections. Her writing has been published in magazines and anthologies, such as Strands, Tumbleweed Hotel, and In the Company of Poets. She has also performed at many venues in London and Paris, and staged a short drama-poem at The Royal Court Theatre Upstairs.

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

From Pratik's Upcoming Issue: A Tribute to Jazzman John Clarke by American Poet, Jack Tar



Dearest, Long-Lost Brother Jazzman John Clark!
By JACK TAR



Sorry I had not heard of you
       heard of you
       heard of you
       heard of you
before I learned that we were       
        brothers, brothers, brothers

Before hearing
       London is Lost,
       New York is lost, Europe is Lost
from Kate Tempest
       and some brother in a Burger Corner in New York.
       that we are lost, we are lost,  we are lost.

I was sorry I did not know
       and argued that I had a brother like you and was sorry I did not know that it was you…
that kept alive
       the red-hot pokers of words
dripping worthless syllables
       on to the cracked lips of passing camel trains camel trains camel trains.
that kept the old poets, Dada…
      all alive on Space Cake Amsterdam

But do know that we, as Yuyu said
        will be meeting in Little Paradise Lodge,
        Paradise Lodge, Paradise Lodge
till the last tweet, tweet, tweet,
       of the last budge in the street
        a Prothonotary, warbling forever now
though dead on the street
        his first flight from the Andes to New York
books are magic  books are magic  books are magic
        as he was freeing Dada
from its early chains of
         misfortune, misfortune, misfortune 

         I thought I did not know you
before Kate Tempest, but you were here first
         With the beats, beats, beats
for our brotherhood and blurb on my works
         that we will still be meeting All the way from
          Kathmandu, Kathmandu, Kathmandu...

With Yuyu, in London,
          Old Delhi, New York,
on the lips of Arriving Camel Trains
           So all won’t be over, over,  over but found in a Little Paradise Lodge.





Pratik Spring 2018 Issue: News Update by Bhuwan Thapaliya



Awards & Honors

Deni Apriyani, 27, an Indonesian domestic worker won the 2017 Migrant Worker Poetry Competition in Singapore, worth S$500 (US$370) for her English-language poem titled “Further Away,” about her abusive marriage. She said she was inspired to write the poem after an encounter with a stranger in her hometown of Indramayu, West Java, The Straits Times reported.

Claremont Graduate University has announced the winners of the 2018 Kingsley and Kate Tufts Poetry Awards. Patricia Smith won the $100,000 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award for her collection, Incendiary Art (TriQuarterly/Northwestern University Press). Donika Kelly won the $10,000 Kate Tufts Discovery Award for her debut collection, Bestiary (Graywolf Press).



The Nobel Prize in Literature 2017 was awarded to The British author Kazuo Ishiguro who was born in Nagasaki, Japan. Ishiguro, author of novels including The Remains of the Day and Never Let Me Go, was praised by the Swedish Academy (https://www.nobelprize.org) for novels which “uncovered the abyss beneath our illusory sense of connection with the world” and were driven by a “great emotional force.”

Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders is named the winner of the 2017 Man Booker Prize for Fiction. George Saunders is famous for his short stories and Lincoln in the Bardoisis, his first full-length. The 58-year-old New York resident, born in Texas, is the second American author to win the prize in its 49-year history.

The T. S. Eliot Prize for Poetry 2017, arguably the most coveted award in poetry goes to Ocean Vuong’s debut collection, Night Sky With Exit Wounds. The Vietnamese-born poet now lives in Massachusetts. He has won a host of awards for the collection, including Whiting Award, the Thom Gunn Award, and the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. Vuong won £25,000 prize money, an increased amount on previous years due to the TS Eliot Prize celebrating its 25th year. Previous winners include Ted Hughes, Carol Ann Duffy, Alice Oswald and Seamus Heaney.

The 2017 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry (for a distinguished volume of original verse by an American author) was given to Tyehimba Jess for his book, Olio. The prize money was Fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000). Tyehimba Jess was born 1965 in Detroit. Jennifer Freeley of South Lyon, Michigan, won the 2017 Lucien Stryk Asian Translation Prize for her translation from the Chinese of Xi Xi’s poetry collection, Not Written Words (Zephyr Press). She received $5,000. The annual award is given for a book of poetry translated from an Asian language into English and published in the previous year. Joaquin Zihuatanejo of Dallas won the 2017 Anhinga–Robert Dana Prize for his poetry collection, Arsonist. Carmen Maria Machado of Philadelphia won the 2018 Bard Fiction Prize for her story collection, Her Body and Other Parties (Graywolf Press, 2017). She received $30,000 and a one-semester appointment as writer-in-residence at Bard College.  Julie Lekstrom Himes of Marblehead, Massachusetts, won the 2017 First Novel Prize for Mikhail and Margarita (Europa Editions).  Caitlin Doyle of Cincinnati won the seventh annual Frost Farm Prize for her poem “Wish.” She received $1,000 and a scholarship to give a reading at the Frost Farm Poetry Conference at the Robert Frost Farm in Derry, New Hampshire.



Notable Departures in 2018

We are barely three months into 2018, having lost many champions of the written word. Here, we pay tribute to some of them.

One of the leading Nepali language short story writers, Manu Brajaki passed away in Kathmandu at the age of 75. His notable books include Timri Swasni ra Ma (Your Wife and I) and Annapurnako Bhoj, (Annapurna’s Feast).  Also, Award-winning Darjeeling-based fiction writer, Indra Bahadur Rai, died in March. He launched several literary movements including Tesro Aayam, and Lela Lekha.

Famous Indian poet Anwar Jalalpuri, who translated Bhagwat Gita and Gitanjali into Urdu, passed away in Lucknow on January 2 at the trauma centre of King George’s Medical University. Anwar Jalalpuri was born in the Gasba of Jalalpur in Uttar Pradesh in 1947.

 American poet and educator, author of four poetry books, most recently, Stay Illusion, the finalist for the National Book Award and National Book Critics Circle prize, Lucie Brock-Broido died at age 61. She directed the creative writing program at Harvard and the poetry division of Columbia University’s writing program.


Nicanor Parra, one of Chile’s most notable poets, has died in the city of Santiago. He was 103 years old. Parra introduced the concept of “anti-poetry,” opting for a grounded, blunt and “darkly comical” style instead of traditional lyrical forms.  (5 September 1914 – 23 January 2018)  Walter Skold, the founder of the Dead Poets Society of America, who visited the final resting places of more than 600 poets, died Saturday, Jan 20, 2018, of a heart attack, according to The Associated Press. He was 57. British writer Penny Vincenzi, whose stories of romance, rivalry and family secrets topped best-seller lists, has died. She was 78. Jenny Joseph, whose poem Warning was twice voted Britain’s favourite poem, has died at the age of 85. It is perhaps best known for its opening lines: “When I am an old woman I shall wear purple / With a red hat that doesn’t go, and doesn’t suit me.” (7 May 1932 – 8 January 2018). 

Richard Murphy, the distinguished Irish poet and member of Aosdána, has died, aged 90. (6 August 1927 – 30 January 2018). South African poet and political activist, Keorapetse William Kgositsile, also known as ‘Bra Willie’ has died. He was 79. In 1996, he was inaugurated as South Africa’s National Poet Laureate and was actively involved in the fight against Apartheid. From 1962 to 1975, he lived in exile in the United States, where he gained success and quickly became a household name. My Name is Afrika, which he published in 1971, made him one of Africa’s leading poets. (19 September 1938 – 3 January 2018.) Pakistan’s renowned columnist and poet Munir Ahmed Qureshi, more popularly referred to as Munnu Bhai, passed away on Friday, at the age of 84. Prince Henrik of Denmark, the husband of the Queen of Denmark and a published poet, has died at 83. Stanford poetry scholar, humanist Michael Pennock Predmore died at 79. A professor emeritus who taught at Stanford for over 30 years, inspired generations of students. He was known for his analysis of Juan Ramón Jiménez’s poems.


with input from the Agencies

From Pratik Spring 2018 Issue: The Lifeblood of Consciousness, of Love and Loss: Stephen Massimilla on Ruth Danon's Limitless Tiny Boat

Book Review

BY STEPHEN MASSIMILLA  
_______________________________________

The Lifeblood of  Consciousness, of Love 
and Loss


Ruth Danon’s work may seem to be by turns “postmodern” and “Surreal,” but the allure of her style never displaces the sense of a living, breathing presence in the sea of fragmentation. This is the paradoxical wonder of Limitless Tiny Boat: What from a certain perspective is vast, strange, abstract, and ungraspable is, at the same time, spare, heartfelt, and irreducibly human. And the drama and trepidation of the heart is often conveyed in, beside, or through what is tellingly quotidian—the food slowly chewed, “the gloves, partly worn,” “bees in the garden and wasps in the wall.” 

I must say there is a special harbor in my own heart for a book that opens with “dead fish / against the pilings.” Amidst such concrete evocation, Danon charts the journey of the self through, to quote the first title, “Something Larger than the Self I Don’t Understand.” Here all understanding is inseparable from unsettlement. Heading out is an act of fleeing, and arriving is a shadowy, solitary experience. Danon’s boat image serves as a vessel, one that becomes, at different times, a bed, a plane, a cradle, a room. It often morphs into another container or frame of reference, ultimately the poem itself “carried along by random / waves.” Water is the medium of reality, of experience; and loneliness and thirst are part of the passenger’s condition, the human condition. These are in turn expressions of desire, which (in the poem “Desire”) is a vast, unstable structure, like language itself. “I wanted all of it,” the speaker asserts in “Duration”: “A home / you could say.” The longing for stability here is almost tangible, but there is something unstable in the structure in and through which it is realized: “the sentence pushes / against the line.”

Still, how can we come to terms with desire? It is both a part of us and not. In “Outward,” where boat imagery and building imagery both figure, “Desire / is interfering with me.” And what if that desire is often for the immediacy of experience? The speaker goes on to consider the moment toward which things tend: “how to account for it /without falsifying the record.” But who is even doing the speaking, given that “I is not a name”? Any notion that this poem is an abstract exploration of dis-solution or a heady exercise in deconstruction runs up against the emotional and sensual immediacy of Danon’s work. The apprehension of “The water still to cross” is too strong to be merely an idea, and there is also the fact of now, the intense reality of “this. Acute. / This certainty.”
What we both can and cannot grasp is not only the self, the sea, and the moment at hand. We move through a variety of times and climes. There are the clouds, which could begin or end anywhere and  “could be below us if we happen to be on a plane” (“Without Prepositions We Cannot Understand Clouds”), and the sun “bleaching out the scarred and pitted wood” (“Bearing the Weight of Snow”). Danon invites us to question where almost anything begins or ends. And are our lives, our desires, as unfathomable as the entire universe?

The second section of the book, entitled Echoes, explores the mythic and “scientific” dimensions of this theme of limitlessness, and of its lovers and discontents. The nymph Echo herself “(a creature of desire and longing, much like ourselves)”, is, we are told, now a singularity, a black hole, a phenomenon out of math and physics. This claim is as quirky and funny as it is painful. The mythical lover Echo has become as disembodied as she once was physical, and as contemporary as she once was ancient Greek: “Now she is mapped acoustically and calibrated digitally. She is everywhere and nowhere, and we see that was always the plan” (”Preface”). In the poem “Singularity,” this poor neglected nymph is reduced to the formal components of the poem that describes her diminution—that is, to “Anaphora // And // Rhyme.” Even this is hardly the end of her painful transformation. In “Echo’s calling,” her longing returns “as speech fractured // in air.” An elemental sense of loss also comes through in the short poem “Echoes Pain”:

Echo is phantom limb. She shivers
as if she exists. She has never forgotten
her body or how much she loved it.

Indeed, this whole book is haunted by echoes of an out-of-body experience. Witness the ghostly, inchoate figures hovering in the oceanic realm on the cover (an image by Danon’s husband, the painter Gary Buckendorf). But surprisingly, Echo’s journey is still far from over. In “Echo Over,” she becomes not only sound moving though air, not only memory, but “The memory of memory.” Her echoing cannot be over, not as long as she is echoing all over again.



Entitled Code Blue, the third section of Limitless Tiny Boat almost takes us under. Here we plummet to the hibernal depths of “Living in the Cold” and of “Writing the Disaster.” The latter poem (after Blanchot) is full of cold and hurt and desperation: “Something’s so wrong in the house of birds,” it begins—only later to conclude with little sense of restoration or recompense: “I know myself only for what I was at the time / And that was not enough.” Lost opportunity, consternation, and desperation are palpable here, as in the poem “Crossing,” where the speaker recalls her anxious effort to make it to her dying mother’s deathbed in time by flying over the Tappan Zee Bridge—a bridge that she feels is about to collapse. She still swings from it in her nightmares to this day.

I love these occasions when the speaker plumbs the abyss. I am reminded of the plea at the end of the earlier poem “Piracy,” where poignancies of mythos, metaphor, and utterance come together startlingly: “I will give you whatever I have. I will return what I took. I will hold out my hands, I will never name names. I will throw down my gloves. I will take you on, I will hoist sails, fly flags, wear white in the dark.” Even if this is an importunate gesture in a dream, it reads as something that had to be said.

In fact, insofar as dream-work and word-work are the products of desire, we are always on the verge of returning what we took, holding out our hands, coming full circle. The entire paradoxical journey of life—and of Limitless Tiny Boat—is one inseparable from the processes of language and dreams. Words, Danon’s speaker affirms, “are the only boat I have.” This journey of paradox, of sensitive intelligence, catches at every impulse, every snag—be it of love, of danger, of pain, of the opportunity and loss glimpsed in every moment. We are carried along amidst objects and narratives that struggle to take shape before they dissolve. This dreamlike process, which defines every waking moment, is not the upshot of a stylistic decision: It is the lifeblood of consciousness, of love and loss, of suffering and joy, of poetry itself.

Limitless Tiny Boat
By Ruth Danon
Blazevox, 2015