Events & Reviews at This Ain’t The Rosedale Library

New arrivals.

Posted in New Releases, Reviews by thisaintblog on January 10, 2010

nogsomethingsWe need to draw attention to a few recent fiction titles of note, Occupied City by David Peace, second in his Tokyo trilogy, and Some things that Meant the World to Me by Joshua Mohre, from the always reliable Two Dollar Radio. Also in the store are two recent reprints, The Queen’s Gambit by Walter Tevis, Nog by Rudolph Wurlitzer again from Two Dollar Radio. Alexander Trocchi’s poetry, Man At Leisure has been reprinted and is back on our shelves.

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Non-fiction new releases:
Psycho Too by Will Self
Angels of Anarchy, Women Artists and Surrealism by Roger Carter Allmar and Mary Ann Caws
Heidegger; The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy by Emmanuel Faye

James Gunn’s top ten for 2009

Posted in Reviews, Staff Picks by thisaintblog on January 7, 2010

American Romances by Rebecca Brown; City Lights
Bad Peny Blues by Cathi Unsworth; Serpent’s Tail
The Book of Jokes by Momus; Dalkey Archive
Born Yesterday: the News as a Novel by Gordon Burn; Faber and Faber
The Coming Insurrection by The Invisible Committee; Semiotext(e)
The Killing Circle by Andrew Pyper; Seal Books
The Mere Future by Sarah Schulman; Arsenal Pulp Press
Metrostop Paris: History From the City’s Heart by Gregor Dallas; John Murray
The Resistible Demise of Michael Jackson edited by Mark Fisher; Zero Books
Waiting for the Sun: a Rock & Roll History of Los Angeles by Barney Hoskyns; Backbeat Books

Jesse Huisken’s top ten 2009

Posted in Reviews, Staff Picks by thisaintblog on January 4, 2010

8 x 8 x 7 by Colin Smith; Krupskaya. On of the poets of the Kootenay School of Writing.
Short Life Housing by Chris Cheek; The Gig.
St. Petersburg by Andre Bely; Pushkin Press. A new translation.
Institutional Critique, an Anthology of Artist’s Writings, various; MIT.
The Tanners by Robert Walser; New Directions.
Interogative Mood by Padgett Powell; Farrar, Straus & Girioux. This book won me over from complete irritation to total enjoyment by page eight.
The Mandarin by Aaron Kunin; Fence Books. Maddeningly self indulgent and brilliant.
Western Marxism and the Soviet Union by Marcel van der Linden; Haymarket Books.
The Most Evil by Steve Hodel; Dutton.
Zero Books: Fear of Music: Why People Get Rothko but Don’t Get Stockhausen, Militant Modernism, Capitalist Realism, One Dimensional Woman, The Resistible Life of Michael Jackson. I know this is a whole imprint, but these books are all great. A contingent younger cultural theorists (mostly of a Marxist post-structuralist type) taking over the New Age imprint Zero. (Zero Books).

Honorable mentions: 8 x 10 by Michael Turner, Rose Alley by Jeremy M. Davies, The Political Mind by George Lakoff, Take It Joshua Beckman, Collected Stories of Lydia Davis, Born Yesterday, the News as Novel by Gordon Burns, The Story of Crass, and new in paperback Today I Wrote Nothing by Daniil Kharms, and from late 2008, Michel Bernstein’s All the Kings Horses.

Co-owner and founder Charlie Huisken’s top ten … or so … titles for 2009

Posted in Reviews, Staff Picks by thisaintblog on January 3, 2010

Zeitoun by Dave Eggers; McSweeney’s
Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of An American Original by Robin D.G. Kelley; Free Press
Rose Alley by Jeremy M. Davies; Counterpath Press
Buying Cigarettes for the Dog by Stuart Ross; Freehand Books
Heaven is Small by Emily Schultz; House of Anansi
Febuary by Lisa Moore; House of Anansi
The Importance of Being Iceland by Eileen Myles; Semiotext(e)
griddle talk: a yeer uv bill n carol dewing brunch by Carol Malyon and bill bissett; talonbooks
The Taste of Penny by Jeff Parker; Snare Books
Trauma Farm: A Rebel History of Rural Life by Brian Brett; Greystone
Do Not Touch by Eric Laurrent; Dalkey Archive

The Toronto launch of When Does a Kiss Become a Bite? by Len Gasparini

Posted in Events, Past events by thisaintblog on January 3, 2010

Tuesday January 12 at 8pm join us to launch When Does a Kiss Become a Bite? by Len Gasparini. Jim Christy and other guests will also read and answer questions. The venue is This Ain’t The Rosedale Library, 86 Nassau Street near Bellevue Avenue in Kensington Market. Admission is free.

Pull My Daisy / Tip My Cup / All My Doors Are Open

Posted in Events, Past events by thisaintblog on January 3, 2010

MONDAY JANUARY 11th 9pm

A screening and talk by Charlie Huisken on:
Jack Kerouac, Robert Frank, Alfred Leslie, Alice Neel, Delphine Seyrig
co-presented by This Ain’t The Rosedale Library

at Cineforum, 463 Bathurst (near Sneaky Dee’s)

Admission is $10

“Pull My Daisy” was created as a collabouration by various members of the Beat Generation. It was directed by Alfred Leslie and Robert Frank and featured a number of poets – Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, Peter Orlovsky – as actors. But who played the other parts? As well as creating a snapshot of the writers of that generation, the movie captures a moment in musical and visual art history as well – a moment often overlooked by the “slide show” approach to art history or “greatest hits” approach to music history. And that’s one of the things that makes The Beat Generation interesting – more than the drugs and other sensational elements so often romanticized. The Beats’ relation to art and music gave their work a spark lacking in the academic writing of their contemporaries. The title of the movie comes from a collabourative “exquisite corpse” poem. That poem will be read aloud, and then we’ll try our hand at creating something similar on the spot. But no pressure.

A documentary about Alice Neel will be referred to for sure and screened in its entirety if time allows. Presented also with the help of Eileen Myles through an essay that she wrote on Delphine Seyrig published in The Importance of Being Iceland and after a discussion with her about the movie “Pull My Daisy.”

READING: David Meltzer, Michael Rothenberg, Terri Carrion Robert Priest & Jim Christy join ROCKPILE with music and poetry

Posted in Events, Past events by thisaintblog on November 7, 2009

Friday November 13th, 8pm-11pm reading takes place in the store. Event is FREE

DAVID MELTZER:
One of the key poets of the Beat generation, David Meltzer is also a jazz guitarist and Cabalist scholar and the author of more than 50 books of poetry and prose. 2005 saw the publication of David’s Copy: The Selected Poems of David Meltzer (edited by Michael Rothenberg, with an introduction by Jerome Rothenberg) which provides a current overview of Meltzer’s work. Meltzer’s Beat Thing (La Alameda Press) is his epic poem on the Beat generation. It was called by Jack Hirschman: “Meltzer’s most important lyri-political work to date…written by a poet who, in terms of the rhythms and verbal inventiveness and the naming of figures of popular culture, is without equal anywhere.” Meltzer’s other books include No Eyes, poems on Lester Young, and a book of interviews, San Francisco Beat: Talking with the Poets (City Lights Books). Meltzer teaches at the New College of California in the Poetics Program which was
originally founded by Robert Duncan. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

TERRI CARRION:
Terri Carrión was conceived in Venezuela and born in New York to a Galician mother and Cuban father. She grew up in Los Angeles where she spent her youth skateboarding and slam-dancing. Terri Carrión earned her MFA at Florida International University in Miami, where she taught Freshman English and Creative Writing, edited and designed the graduate literary magazine Gulfstream, taught poetry to High School docents at the Museum of Contemporary Art in North Miami and started a reading series at the local Luna Star Café. In her final semester at FIU, she was Program Director for the Study Abroad Program, Creative Writing in Dublin, Ireland.

MICHAEL ROTHENBERG:
Michael Rothenberg is a poet, songwriter, and editor of Big Bridge magazine. His poetry books include Man/Woman, a collaboration with Joanne Kyger, The Paris Journals (Fish Drum Press), Monk Daddy (Blue Press), and Unhurried Vision (La Alameda/University of New Mexico Press). His poems have been published widely in small press publications including, 88: A Journal of Contemporary American Poetry, Berkeley Poetry Review, Exquisite Corpse, First Intensity, Fish Drum, Fulcrum, Golden Handcuffs Review, House Organ, Prague Literary Review, Tricycle, Vanitas, Zyzzyva, JACK, Jacket, and others. He is also author of the novel Punk Rockwell. Rothenberg’s 2005 CD collaboration with singer Elya Finn was praised by poet David Meltzer as “fabulous-all [the] songs sound like Weimar Lenya & postwar Nico, lushly affirmative at the same time being edged w/ cosmic weltschmertz. An immensely tasty production.” He is also editor for the Penguin Poet series, which includes selected works of Philip Whalen, Joanne Kyger, David Meltzer, and Ed Dorn. He has recently completed the Collected Poems of Philip Whalen for Wesleyan University Press.

Check out the ROCKPILE blog:
Check out Big Bridge:

JIM CHRISTY:
Always in search of original characters and experiences, Jim Christy is a literary vagabond with few peers. He was once described by George Woodcock as ‘one of the last unpurged North American anarchistic romantics’. His publisher has called him a hip Indiana Jones; one reviewer credited him with a ‘Gary Cooper-like presence’. His buddies have included hobos, jazz musicians, boxers, and non-academic writers such as Charles Bukowski, Peter Trower and Joe Ferone. “I never dismiss another’s story out of hand,” he writes, “no matter what it’s about or how outrageous it may seem.” Christy’s often wry reminiscences of his travels, trysts and trials
are fueled by a hard-won pride. A gardener, a sculptor and a spoken word performer with a jazz/blues ensemble, Christy has been seen in film and television productions, usually in non-speaking roles as a thug or a gangster. “You remind me of Malraux,” — Charles Bukowski

ROBERT PRIEST:
Robert Priest is a British born Canadian poet and children’s author. He has written numerous books of poetry, several children’s novels, and has often appeared on CBC radio’s hit spoken word show “Wordbeat” under the alias “Dr Poetry”. He is well known for his aphorisms and performance poetry. His adult poetry has been categorized as surrealistic satire while his children’s poetry is more tender, underpinned with a utopian hopefulness. Canadian novelist Barbara Gowdy has described him as “the voice of the people and the angels, entwined” and the Toronto Star has called him “passionate, cocky, alternately adoring and insulting.” Aside from poetry, Priest has also branched out over the years to write plays, novels and songs, many of which have earned him awards and recognition in Canadian literary circles. Priest won the Milton Acorn Memorial People’s Poetry Award for The Mad Hand (1988). As a songwriter, he co-wrote the international number one hit, “Song Instead of a Kiss” for Alannah Myles. His most recent poetry book is Reading the Bible Backwards (ECW).

LISA ROBERTSON reads from Magenta Soul Whip

Posted in Events, Past events by thisaintblog on November 5, 2009

LISA ROBERTSON reads from Magenta Soul Whip, with LISE DOWNE and NATLIE ZINA WALSCHOTS

Monday, November 16, 2009 - 8:00pm – event is in the store and free.

LISA ROBERTSON:
‘Robertson makes intellect seductive; only her poetry could turn swooning into a critical gesture.’ – The Village Voice

Lisa Robertson writes poems that mine the past — its ideas, its personages, its syntax — to construct a lexicon of the future. Her poems both court and cuckold subjectivity by unmasking its fundament of sex and hesitancy, the coil of doubt in its certitude. Reading her laments and utopias, we realize that language — whiplike — casts ahead of itself a fortuitous form. The form brims here pleasurably with dogs, movie stars, broths, painting’s detritus, Latin and pillage. Erudite and startling, the poems in Lisa Robertson’s “Magenta Soul Whip,” occasional works written over the past fifteen years, turn vestige into architecture, chagrin into resplendence. In them, we recognize our grand, saddened century.

LISE DOWNE:
‘Lise Downe is the author of three books: A Velvet Increase of Curiosity, The Soft Signature and most recently Disturbances of Progress, the language and prosody of each book more delicately, purposefully broken than the last. Not “broken” as in a smashed teacup, but as light is broken by a prism, fanning out in front of the reader’s eyes. I hear echoes of, or parallels to, many other authors in Downe’s work – of Clark Coolidge’s Space in “Driven,” a sequence from The Soft Signature; or of Marjorie Welish’s iterative loops and sampled backtalk, in Disturbances of Progress. But one would hardly mistake Downe’s work for anyone else’s: these are some of the most scrupulous and beautiful of contemporary poems, possessing a tough unreasonableness underneath the slight lyric grace, as Eliot didn’t say of Andrew Marvell.’ – Nate Dorward

NATALIE ZINA WALSCHOTS:
Natalie Zina Walschots’ writing has appeared in FOURSQUARE, Matrix, Rampike and Open Letter. She served as the Managing Editor of both filling Station and dANDelion magazines, and co-curated the Flywheel reading series from 2005–08. Walschots completed her MA in English/Creative Writing at the University of Calgary, and recently moved to Toronto where she teaches writing to grade 12 students at a private school. Walschots’ first book of poetry, the 2007 Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry-winning Thumbscrews, is a poetic engagement with the aesthetics of sadomasochism and consensual pain, each poem taken as a miniature sadomasochistic encounter where language is tied up, beaten, and twisted into submission.

Eileen Myles & Eldon Garnet: readings in Kensington Market

Posted in Events, Past events by thisaintblog on October 16, 2009

icelandThursday, October 22, 2009
7:30pm – 11:30pm, at the NEW Jamie’s Area, 209 Augusta in the lane-way up the stairs

Presented by This Ain’t The Rosedale Library, Semiotext(e), One Hour Empire: the Toronto launch of The Importance of Being Iceland.

EILEEN MYLES was born in Boston in 1949 and is once again a New Yorker after being a professor for a stint at University of California at San Diego. She has written more than twenty plays, libretti, and volumes of poetry and fiction including Chelsea Girls, Cool for You, Sorry, Tree and Not Me. Recently she received an arts writers grant from Creative Capital / Warhol Foundation. She has toured with the arts/literary collective called Sister Spit. Her latest book is published by Semiotext(e): The Importance of Being Iceland: Travel Essays in Art.

ELDON GARNET, a Toronto writer and artist, is also published by Semiotext(e). He was the editor of Impulse magazine, an influential international magazine of art and culture. Garnet has exhibited at the National Gallery of Canada, Centre Georges Pompidou, Kunsthalle Dusseldorf and the Amsterdam Centrum voor Fotograpfie. He is now the Creative Director of One Hour Empire magazine of which This Ain’t The Rosedale Library’s James Gunn is Editorial Director.

“Eileen Myles is a genius.” –Dorothy Allison
“Myles is one of the savviest voices and most restless intellects in contemporary lit.” –Dennis Cooper
“Eldon Garnet employs a deadpan narrative that heightens one’s awareness of the possibility for evil on your own street.” –Douglas Coupland

Launching HANDWERK

Posted in Events, Past events by thisaintblog on October 16, 2009

handwerkThis Ain’t The Rosedale Library is pleased to be hosting the special
launch of HANDWERK a set of six new chapbooks from Mark Goldstein’s
Beautiful Outlaw press, with readings from each author in the collection,
Erin Moure, Phil Hall, Jay MillAr, Angela Carr, Oana Avasilichioaei & Mark
Goldstein.

Friday October 23rd, 8pm. Event takes place in the store.