Spine Volume One : Issue One
Welcome
For the first issue Spine is delighted to present work from three British writers : Stephen Emmerson, Chris Stephenson and Alison Faulds and also new, exclusive and previously unpublished work from Dan Fante and August Kleinzahler.
Stephen Emmerson
Stephen Emmerson's most recent work has appeared in Poetry Salzburg Review and Jacket.
Chris Stephenson
Chris Stephenson lives in Leeds where He works in most of His poems on the bus everyday to and from work, using his mobile phone. Recently He has been unable to work out whether to laugh or cry.
He is influenced by all sorts but especially Charles Bukowski, Raymond Carver, William
Burroughs, a few scandalous Zen monks, Bill Hicks, Derek and Clive, Oasis, The Stone Roses, The Verve, late night listening to Thelonious Monk woth rain on the window and Everton Football
Club.
One day He would love to hit the road and travel across America, north to south, coast to coast, discover and undiscovered Rimbaud manuscript in a trunk somewhere, aand He hope that sooner,
rather than later , He will get the chance to escape again, to that cabin by the lake, in that forest not too far from Helsinki.
Alison Faulds
Alison Faulds lives on a high and windy hill with the Badgers and the Hares and the
Owls. She once nursed a female Yellowhammer back to life after it had been hit by a car.
Dan Fante
Dan Fante is from Los Angeles and is the son of the author John Fante, the legendary
novelist who Charles Bukowski came across one day in the L.A. public library and would later, in the preface to the novel Ask The Dust, declare “Fante was my God!”
If you haven’t come across Dan Fante before you are in for a treat.
Booze filled binges, blackouts, cheap motel room rage and madness…biting humour, anger and sadness, blazing hot cab ride confessionals, the pain of loss…
...this is life with all the mistakes left in...
…writing that is according to Uncut Magazine “a violent lyrical blizzard”
...and for a taster of some of the most heartfelt, searing, honest, purgatory bound, rollercoaster ride writing through the dirty underbelly of American life check out the exclusive poems from
new collection 'Kissed By A Fat Waitress'.
After that it should be pretty self explanatory, we can’t thank him enough, and it’s quite simple! Follow the links, get Fante added to your collection and check back here again soon for more
poems.
August Kleinzahler
August Kleinzahler was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, but has lived in San Francisco,
California, for over twenty years.
He has received honours for his writing from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation (1989), the Lila Acheson-Reader’s Digest Award for Poetry (1991), and an Academy Award in Literature from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters (1996). In 2000 he was awarded a Berlin Prize Fellowship and in 2004 he was awarded the Griffin Prize.
Richard Wilbur writes that 'The most dazzling thing about Kleinzahler’s writing is the way his diction successfully combines slang, highfalutin words, mimicry, technical terms and plain talk, in
such a way as to play the whole instrument of speech',
Kleinzahler’s subject range is vast and intriguing, displaying an incredible attention to detail. Descriptions of light falling, baseball games and futon factory fires, vultures, trees just in
bud, how much meat moves around a city at night, references to Japanese paintings.
Ideas flow into one another, leading you forward, suggesting, and swirling, like musical registers shifting, sometimes surreal, sometimes eccentric, always articulate and fascinating. There is
wit and humour, a toughness, grit and clarity, a kind of, impossible to quite pin down welcome familiarity. Klienzahler's writing is proof, if indeed you need any, that there is an America
out there without pretence or artifice, an America that is complex and is dazzling, still very much connected to the world and vitally interesting. It exists, and if only you could put your
finger on it…
Spine is delighted and incredibly lucky to be able to present new and exclusive poems from his new book, ‘Sleeping It Off In Rapid City’ and we are convinced that once you have had a taste you
will want to read more.
So, once again it’s quite simple, go out and grab any of Kleinzahler’s books, pick any poem, pick a first line and open the page, we guarantee it will be worthwhile.
Spine
