(Disclosure: I donât know anybody Iâve been currently reading this week. đ)
Adding the preface again here: every Sunday without fail I throw up the freshest literature and photography Iâve read over the week, sometimes itâs a book, sometimes itâs a piece I saw in a magazine or an online zine, sometimes itâs something I saw on social media, etc. Sometimes I add âRECOMMENDâ next to a few of the titles, but thatâs not to say I donât recommend all of them, I just love some pieces more than others. Not everything will be everybodyâs cup of tea, yanno, câest la vie. And any titles that you see in bold are hyperlinked so if you click or tap them theyâll direct you straight to the source⌠or shopping basket.Â
This week Iâm gonna throw in a red herring and tell you about something Iâve been watching as well as what Iâve been reading, because I think itâs really cool and definitely appropriate for the age weâre living in at the moment.Â
So Iâve been reading: Susan Sontagâs As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh (Diaries 1964â1980) which was edited by her son, David. I also read an interview on Granta from March between Rachel Long and Morgan Parker. Iâve also tucked into a couple pieces on Fence, Lexi Welchâs âAstroturfâ and Anthony Michael Morenaâs âThe Whaleâ. I also saw Cecelia Knappâs poem in Bath Magg Issue Three (but the whole issue is an absolute smacker, itâs great). Last but not least, Iâm up to episode 5 of a brand new thing called The Midnight Gospel. It is crazy good. And itâs on Netflix right now.Â
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Cecilia Knapp, âI Used To Eat KFC Zingers Without Hating Myselfâ, Bath Magg Issue #3: I really loved the whole of Issue Three, I guess I was quite struck by this particular poem for its âstaccato-nessâ. This poem is buttered with present-day references. But theyâre not necessarily about creating a familiar environment. Rather the object of familiarity is found within the assemblage of places, snacks and thoughts, all of which compound the grief âIâ is experiencing. The âIâ ruminates on lifeâs banality and their personal insecurities in living banality: âI need a thigh gap. I use emojis / to avoid conflict. Worry Iâm a gentrifier. Watch docs about murdered womenâ.
The vapidity is funny. The pain is not. The insecurities deepen. Your body, your life, continues the ache of day-to-day routine, and finds no resolution in the things which may or may not stand to comfort oneself when ravaged by loss. The poem feels quite loose, and disinterested. Itâs a sore poem, but its array of references make it colourful. It sort of reminded me of Ădouard LevĂŠâs work a little bit? But if Ădouard LevĂŠ had been a pop culture fanatic chewing HubbaBubba bubblegum on the London Overground.Â
Bath Magg is a pretty exciting new magazine, (been around just under a year I think?) and theyâve published a lot of great writers, many of whom are emerging and Iâve spotted some quite established peple in there too. Kudos to their rubber ducky logo. Itâs run by Mariah Whelan and Joe Carrick-Varty.Â
In Conversation with Morgan Parker and Rachel Long, Granta Magazine:Â I deeply love Morgan Parkerâs work, sheâs, in my opinion, the master of titles. I canât think of anybody who titles their work as well as Morgan Parker does. And I love the depth of honesty and charisma in this interview. Like yeah, it appears to be a generic Q/A but, it genuinely feels like a conversation, and itâs welcoming and unpretentious. Rachel Long asks some penetrating questions, and Morganâs answers are so detailed and self-aware. Most of the discussion revolves around the action of writing poetry in general and where does that impulse arise from, but they do discuss Morganâs latest collection Magical Negro which came out February last year. Itâs a narrative on black womanhood, on micro-aggressions and reoccuring violence, itâs about breaking down white perceptions of blackness, and dissolving those projections. What I love about Morgan Parker is sheâs tackling this fucking idiot thing where (mostly) white people think sheâs attempting to represent all black women in her writing, which is, by Morganâs own admission, impossible. Her work is a duty to herself, to the background sheâs lived and lives, and to unpack that discourse in her own way. And if it resonates, then great! I felt all this was inherent in the interview and only adds to my respect for her, and to Rachel for being such an attentive interviewer. BTW Rachel Long has a debut collection coming out this July, My Darling from the Lions.
Anthony Michael Morena, âThe Whaleâ, Fence Portal (Streaming) (RECOMMEND): I canât tell you how much I adored this beautiful mass of whale and word. Itâs an essay which references the American Natural History Museumâs Blue Whale model. The writing is thick with feeling and fat with concern. It blends monologue, memoir. Itâs non-fiction and documentary. Itâs elusive, enigmatic, fragmented. Itâs like broken biscuits and blubber. To me it felt like a note on the offences of climate change, the emotional response and grief as we bystand erosion and corrosion, the loss of life, and the urge to merge something back together as it dissolves and fragments before our eyes. Itâs as personal as it is public. A gorgeous and complex piece.
Susan Sontagâs As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh (Diaries 1964â1980)Â (RECOMMEND): I felt so afflicted reading Susan Sontagâs diaries, because yâknow, itâs the equivalent of invading an Ancient Egyptian pharaohâs tomb. Like, leave people alone. At the same like, this woman. These diaries are still shaping me, and each section leaves you with the weirdest aftertaste. Her personality permeates through every detail, every line-break, every reference and articulation of feeling. You learn so much, you gain so much from her perceptions and observations. How do I contain Susan Sontag? How do I describe these diaries? Not at all. Just buy it.Â
Lexi Welchâs âAstroturfâ, Fence Portal (Streaming) (RECOMMEND): My eyes locked onto this piece and just didnât really stop reading. Lexiâs voice is enamouring and hypnotic. Itâs so violent too. Youâre lunged into friction burns and sports injuries, time and progression, the tensions between collectivity and individuality, family and sexuality, or as Fence put it, âlesbian erosâ. This piece felt acidic. At times you canât tell if the âIâ is indifferent or hurting to the point of numbness. It straddles so many different thematics, and breaks down a lot of conventions pertaining to the âideal experienceâ of family relationships and team work. The resolution seems to be that in spite of people, our collectivity is defined by our collective solitude. This essay kicked me around a football field. It takes a good few repeated reads to appreciate its kaleidoscopic shifting, but itâs definitely one of my favourites.
The Midnight Gospel, from Pendleton Ward and Duncan Trussell, Netflix: (RECOMMEND) So the other day my friend Ben linked this to me and I had seen the trailer ages back and thought âOh yeah I really wanna watch thatâ, but just forgot. After his reminder, I started watching it and ever since Iâve been saying to loads of other friends âHave you watched âThe Midnight Gospelâ on Netflix?â because Iâm d y i n g to talk about it with everybody.Â
I literally canât categorise this âTV showâ to you. Itâs like if animation had a baby with a philosophy podcast and then put that baby onto an IV drip of psychedelics. Itâs this swarm of different stimuli which you kind have to zone in on and absorb individually and yet somehow collectively.Â
So like, âClancyâ is a spacecaster who sets up âspacecastsâ (podcasts) with creatures from other simulated worlds and he interviews them. But when Clancy transports himself into these worlds, itâs not like theyâre sat down on some cream sofa with two glasses of water like itâs animated Oprah. No, his interviewees are like in the middle of fighting off a zombie apocalypse or meditating on a mountain or trying to find and save their lost lover. And Clancy just joins them on the journey and interviews them about their âspecialismâ. These are real people that are being interviewed like, the first episode is with Dr. Drew Pinker. And when youâre watching it, you think that the animation is totally separate to the conversation exchange the characters are having, but thatâs not true. They have intersections, they have meaning. It only becomes obvious that it has meaning right at the end of each episode, but if you lock on youâll see itâs all relevant throughout.Â
One of my friends was like âOh I might stick that on tonight and have a jointâ and I was like, donât fucking get high when youâre watching this because itâs already intense enough as it is, like you know that Pendleton Ward and Duncan Trussell have felt some real shit to create this absolute rare jewel. In my opinion, you donât need cannabis to appreciate these discussions. But if you wanna do it, then hey itâs a âfree countryâ. And itâs not as though thereâs a serious, central core plot like there is with Rick & Morty, I mean there is a kind of overarching plot but itâs not always integral. Like ultimately weâre invested in Clancyâs story but also all the stories of all the other people that come his way. Thereâs multiple plots, thereâs multiple dimensions and ways of seeing. Itâs a programme which delivers on multiplicity, which manifests itself in everything and everyone we see and know and touch and hear, etc, etc.Â
This production articulates some of the revelations that psychedelics can give you. Psychedelics donât make you see the world literally like these animations do, but the sensations of the animation are reminiscent of an acid tripâs oscillating moods and sensitivities. Itâs really cool, and itâs very poignant, and itâs my new favourite show to watch. And whatâs so great about it is that, it requires multiple watches in order to really absorb everything in its entirety, so itâs a series you can just keep going back to even after youâve seen them all. Itâs re-watchable. Just fundamental goodness all round. Best way to indulge in it is with ice cream. đ¨
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So thatâs it for this week, next Fridayâs review is Annie Ernauxâs A Girlâs Story translated by Alison L. Strayer, published with Fitzcarraldo Editions.Â
Stay safe and well as always, my little caramels. đđ˝
I DONâT WANT TO FALL IN LOVE BECAUSE I DONâT WANT TO GAIN WEIGHT
by Sasha Debevec-McKenney
but I drank 800 calories of bourbon with him last night
and this morning I was so hungover I would have let myself have it,
a bagel, but I couldnât move, dumb struck with my hands down my pants
until I had to go to work. No time. I talk myself back
into eating the overnight oats in the fridge. Flax seeds.
Unsweetened almond milk. Once something goes into your body
itâs in your body for good. Your thighs, your butt, your stomach.
Last week walking in the park he asked, what kind of food do you like?
I said healthy, he said Iâve been craving wings.
Me too, but I get mine unsauced. He tells me the truth
about his girlfriend. He adds more and more to the scale.
I shouldnât have put the cream in my coffee this morning. Two servings.
One for me and one for the version of me that lets herself fall in love.
She isnât scared to gain anything. To tell him keep feeding me
like before I lost weight; Iâm thinking about seconds
and thirds with all of this still on my plate. Itâs like dipping bacon
into maple syrup. Itâs egg yolk dripping down the hand. Itâs the hand
up my shirt. Last night the bartender told us we needed to get a room
and that was all I wanted: to be in a room with him.
I told her well actually we canât, weâre having an affair,
there isnât a room we can go to. This is our room. I made it for us.