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Straight Up | Jan Herman

Arts, Media & Culture News with 'tude

A Great Writer of Spy Thrillers Told the Awful Truth

October 10, 2022 by Jan Herman

‘Men had learned to sniff the heady dreamstuff of the soul and wait impassively while the lathes turned the guns for their destruction.’

— Eric Ambler

Orwellian Chuckle
Press Freedom in Full Squeak (replayed)

October 9, 2022 by Jan Herman

From a lifetime ago, though in fact it’s only been six years . . . and now what?

When a Poet Takes a Walk With Book and Camera

October 5, 2022 by Jan Herman

A I R F I E L D

‘Now that my hand just
reached into the book shelf
and grabbed your book,
it looks like you’ll be walking
out on the airfield with me …’

Day of Atonement: No Headline Needed

October 3, 2022 by Jan Herman

Portrait of JH by Gerard Bellaart, 2017

BRIGHTLY

Let us enter
the pure diamond
of evening
bound by nothing
but the pinprick
of the stars. . . .

Rimbaud’s Death Is Still Traveling

October 1, 2022 by Jan Herman

Efe Murad’s Turkish translation of “Rimbaud. Death in Marseille” has just been published. Carl Weissner’s small masterpiece — small only because it isn’t longer — is now a Turkish delight. Murad is a poet and historian, as well as a translator.

Asa Benveniste: Sylvia Plath’s ‘Afterlife’ Neighbor

September 30, 2022 by Jan Herman

“If Sylvia Plath would likely not have chosen to be buried in Heptonstall, Asa Benveniste definitely chose the location of his own grave, having spent the final years of his life in Hebden Bridge, the valley town that adjoins Heptonstall.” — Jay Jeff Jones

Jack Kerouac at 100, the Beats in Ruigoord

September 29, 2022 by Jan Herman

Kerouac fans In The Netherlands have been celebrating his centennial with readings, film presentations, and concerts throughout 2022. The celebration will culminate on Oct. 9 at the artists’s village of Ruigoord, near Amsterdam. An international gathering of writers, performers, and scholars will pay tribute, along with keynote speakers Joyce Johnson and Ed Sanders, who are to participate via Zoom.

Celebrating Sylvia Plath
A Poet’s Flame Burns Brighter Than Ever

September 26, 2022 by Jan Herman

“It’s a late winter’s afternoon on the top of Cross Hill, with Hardcastle Crags on one side and Colden Valley on the other. Down in their depth of hibernating trees and gritstone slabs, darkness isn’t coming down — it’s rising like a cold damp tide.” So begins Jay Jeff Jones’s uncommonly rich meditation on the poetic afterlife. It arrives nicely timed to an upcoming celebration of Sylvia Plath for what would have been her 90th birthday.

A Hero of Our Time
Lermontov + Edward Gorey + Nabokov = Paperback Keeper

September 14, 2022 by Jan Herman

The cover of this mass-market paperback of Mihail Lermontov’s 1840 novel, “A Hero of our Time,” was designed by Edward Gorey. It is taken from a portion of a painting by Lermontov. The typography is also by Gorey. I show it here because it is such a gem, and because a cover of this caliber doesn’t often come along. The 1951 paperback edition was the first publication of of Vladimir Nabokov’s translation from the Russian in collaboration with Dmitri Nabokov.

Any of You Like to Try Propping up the Queen of Denmark?

September 14, 2022 by Jan Herman

Portrait of William S. Burroughs © by R. Crumb [1985]

“The queen is an alien symbol basically Germanic in origin. The queen is also a white symbol. The White Goddess in fact. Young people want that. White people want that. Black people want that.” — William S. Burroughs

‘The Sex Pistols Had the Royals in Their Sights’

September 10, 2022 by Jan Herman

or ‘Off With Their Heads’ . . . from ‘An Investigative Poem’ by Heathcote Williams” (for those disgusted by the nauseating glorification of the House of Windsor).

Heathcote Williams
Uncensored, ‘Advertisement’ for a Supermarket

September 9, 2022 by Jan Herman

Heathcote Williams [Photo: JH, 2013]

‘The people who run Tesco must be Buddhists / You go in there and things are exactly as they should be / There is nothing that you could possibly want / Bits of telepathic animals neatly shrouded in heat-raised polystyrene / With Magic-Maker gravestones. / Dyed tomato mulch slobbering to itself in lead-lined tubular coffins, / Zilched by monosodium glutomate.’ — Heathcote Williams

Of Plumbers and Philosophers

September 2, 2022 by Jan Herman

Some old proto-Freudian
out of the German Yellow Pages
is looking up at me
from the kitchen floor
where he’s installing a new P-trap
under my kitchen sink,
telling me about how things are
and how they used to be . . .

Is a Poem Ever Finished?

August 31, 2022 by Jan Herman

It took Matthew Arnold 12 years to finish “Early Death and Fame,” which was first published in Fraser’s Magazine, in May 1855, and went through several changes until, in 1867, it found its final form. The changes were small. Were they fussy? I think not.

Tabloid Photographer + Rock Star + White Supremacy

August 21, 2022 by Jan Herman

“SHOOTER: A Fragment” is just out from Moloko Print in its new chapbook series. It begins: “Jerry Crane did not believe in perfection any more than he believed in his real name. If he had, he would never have worked as a shooter for the tabloids. Crane was born Jiri Kiranek, a truth-telling fabulist, tall and lean, a refugee from wealth and privilege. In his younger days he was often high speed, always riffing, full of imagination, his bitter humor tinged with sardonic taunts. Now not quite in middle age, he still had a facile street-smart intellect. He told ambling, long-limbed tales. It was a peculiar form of truth-telling.”

Independent Filmmaker, Principled Artist

August 9, 2022 by Jan Herman

Kenneth Anger held to his vision over a lifetime and, just as important, to his convictions.

Jörg Fauser: Outsider Among Outsiders

July 30, 2022 by Jan Herman

Lou Schneider liked his manuscript of ‘Stamboul Blues’ and got him started as a published writer. It was the cold junky eye, the alienation and disillusionment, the unemphatic humor—acid but deadpan—that appealed to Schneider, though perhaps I’m projecting what appeals to me.

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Jan Herman

When not listening to Bach or Cuban jazz pianist Chucho Valdes, or dancing to salsa, I like to play jazz piano -- but only in the privacy of my own mind.
Another strange fact... Read More…

About

My Books

Several books of poems have been published in recent years by Moloko Print, Statdlichter Presse, Phantom Outlaw Editions, and Cold Turkey … [Read More...]

Straight Up

The agenda is just what it says: news of arts, media & culture delivered with attitude. Or as Rock Hudson once said in a movie: "Man is the only … [Read More...]

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