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December 21, 2020 / barton smock

night, you (miracles, forgeries, edits 2012 etc)

Dad is trying to load bullets into a flashlight. His tv show is having trouble sleeping. Sister opens the oven for a doll she thought would be taller. We like you but not when you’re lonely. The first groundhog calls to us horribly as if it knows there will soon be a woman who swallows a cigarette to see a broom catch fire. That my mother can sleep, a pea goes dark in the eye of a deer. I think of my son and how it’s not every child gets its sickness from god. I jump rope might I later move into the land of plague my acre of miracle and find for snowfall the farm machine that once cleared lambs from the formlessness of habit. There was a day I followed a sheep. There had been a party at a house next to other houses. I had been there. Probably, the sheep wasn’t real. I sent a big-wheel down one driveway and it crossed and went up another. It made like it was going to roll back, but didn’t. I kept my eye on the sheep, yard to yard. It seemed no one anywhere had ever been home. I borrowed a red ball, kicked it under a car and it stayed. I was surprised at how much this disappointed me. Some doors were open and the sheep would go in the front and out the back. In one of the houses, a piano was briefly played. The sheep came out and the playing stopped. I did not go into any of the houses. Either I would chin handles of lawnmowers or sit on the edges of dry pools and put my feet in without taking off my shoes. At one point I pretended to be on the phone and the sheep let some grass fall from its mouth. My stomach purred. A moving van idled. For my hunger, the sheep made good time. I watched it from the empty cab of the van. I turned on the heat. Those poppy fields in the Wizard of Oz, that castle. I wondered how many of the houses I’d passed had porn in them. I can tell you today they all did.

December 20, 2020 / barton smock

death and whiskey

Sleep is trying to remember the sound your body makes when I am asleep. Forgetting its maker, snow hides from the last unseen tree. No hound ever thought there are too many hounds.

Can place
be cruel

No

December 18, 2020 / barton smock

blood notes

Comb your hair in Ohio
and to some
you’ll sound
like a radio.

You were not a sad baby
but your mouth
had a twin.

The shelf life of nothing
is absence.

December 17, 2020 / barton smock

{ I didn’t say nearly enough this year, but } @ isacoustic.com

The Wishbone Dress
poems, Cassandra J. Bruner
Bull City Press, 2019

I worry sometimes that I have been invisibly abandoned. That a context left unsaid has given its art to a museum obsessed with displaying beginnings. Beginnings only. And then, but then, there is work devoid of panic, work unlike, work with words not so much chosen but words more revealed, work that enters the dead and encodes the universal to amplify the specific, work that with its subtle harmony of discovery sings as to horn a ghost a backbone and then lures that ghost into the modified regions of beauty and transitional creation, work that asks existence for the emergency past imposed on another’s sudden body, that asks of our being here what violence we interrupted, work that is only named The Wishbone Dress, and is called into sound by Cassandra J. Bruner. Work I wish you to read, and in the reading, be unleft.

https://isacoustic.com/2020/02/12/the-wishbone-dress-poems-cassandra-j-bruner/

~

In The Field Between Us
Molly McCully Brown + Susannah Nevison
Persea Books, 2020

It is possible our maker knows we are makerless. What can we do? Pair up, perhaps. Read outwardly, together, this In The Field Between Us, placed so mortally within by poets Molly McCully Brown and Susannah Nevison. Look, I have wanted to write you. But instead I cup my hands by holding this book while elsewhere I clay and call inside its impression of response. Oh body, with your origin stories for mirrors. Oh eye, with your cut of arrival’s winnings. I was wrong to think correspondence would turn one lonely. Here, in a verse predating what is both former and latter, are two as two bringing transport to a standstill. Should I go on? Can I? How pure and wrecked can language be? I can’t say, but start here. There are tools used in this work that don’t exist. I needn’t be whole, but am by them, fixed.

https://isacoustic.com/2020/03/19/in-the-field-between-us-poems-molly-mccully-brown-susannah-nevison/

~

The Flavor Of The Other
poems, Clara Burghelea
Dos Madres, 2020

Clara Burghelea’s The Flavor of the Other is both a progressive exit and an appearing act. Inside of each, stillness awaits no inheritance. Full of confessional reserve and prayers that maybe begin with amen, these poems carry the exaggerated possessions of location as the divided theft of void and oblivion. Burghelea knows taste as a portal through which one can swap hungers, and makes of self an otherness versed in the familiarities of a becoming not saddled with being. If it is here that migration and exile are two birdwatchers marked by the same talon, then a reader may place themselves as one combed by any scar that holds hair as the body’s longest fire while another counts backward then forward using absence as census.

https://isacoustic.com/2020/04/28/the-flavor-of-the-other-poems-clara-burghelea/

~

Poetry Against All
a diary
Johannes Göransson
Tarpaulin Sky Press, 2020

I am no expert and have little idea what to say about impossible books. Johannes Göransson’s Poetry Against All is one such book. Is many such books. Little idea does not mean I can be quiet. What is impossible? A safe child. A coroner who disappears to plan simple kidnappings for the elaborately still. I continue. I stop. Göransson keeps this diary alive. Fossil porn. A more exact resurfacing. Some things poke through; holes in movies, a mask thrown from a moving dream, a photograph taken by a hand. I don’t know how this draws, but know I am drawn. But am also, surrounded. Held and carried. I might have it backward. Some prenatal eternity, some austere intercourse, some uprooted sickness ghosted by certain immunities unique to the tourist’s stunt double. I have only recently forgotten how to write. If I am nostalgic, let me be so in the center of this secret as someone specifically somewhere who can’t live on resurrection alone but longs to witness a fire being set on fire. Gone, then here.

https://isacoustic.com/2020/08/03/poetry-against-all-a-diary-johannes-goransson/

~

Requisite
Tanya Holtland
Platypus Press, 2020

Does silence ever notice the quiet? Can doom move the past? Are we, by listening, able to pose our ask into a speaking that might enter unheard the conversation so lovingly and urgently remembered in Tanya Holtland’s Requisite? What language, what ghostly origin, what presence. With unassigned awareness, and while swallowing the clinical eye of attention, Holtland knows to talk underwater about distance and to use both our archival futures and communal isolations to render a spiritual economy of verse enough for us to picture multiple ecologies from the vantage point of some same animal with the ability to wonder secretly which four shapes will be on the test. And what of those stills of misplaced exits that were slipped into the water-damaged photo album of an escape artist, and what of our walking, and what of our inaction? Whether one scores the self with the informed angels of chorus or notes loneliness by the marked angel of solo, here, in all its local holiness, is a needed response to being made from the call.

https://isacoustic.com/2020/09/23/requisite-tanya-holtland/

~

Unfinished Murder Ballads
poems, Darren C. Demaree
w/ photo accompaniment of Ryan Barker’s ‘Midwest Nostalgia’
Backlash Press (2020)

The premise of blood is a color.
-from The Facts Persisted

On the occasion that flood brings you a painted body, know that I had everything to do with it…
-from The Cage Is Unwound By The Poetry Of Death

As if hiding in Eden after hearing a pop-gun, the poet Darren C. Demaree makes short work of vast vision in his Unfinished Murder Ballads, a collection of implanted cares and layered addictions as played for those still awake inside the cinema of the abrupt. Whether ashes or trailings, Demaree finds the evaporated clue and spirits it toward the character actor whose family feels abandoned by exit. Nothing in this meditation overstays, and at times it seems that words are at a loss for people. If the verses here make their first impressions hoping to access the fractured archive of impulse survival, the bodies that said verses nourish know, or pretend to know, that paranoia has only one hand. Water helps vacancy find a vein, and water goes everywhere baptism is not. Poison is the shortest story, and paint protects the frostbitten. A pair of bicycle legs dreams submergence, and a camera dreams god. Not everything comes to pass, but in the etching of this death music, in the crooked humming of shared worship and separate goal, a stillness is reached. Vignette is no small church.

https://isacoustic.com/2020/11/27/unfinished-murder-ballads-poems-darren-c-demaree/

~

Ribald
essays – Alina Stefanescu
INCH, issue 44
Bull City Press (2020)

The writer Alina Stefanescu is a student of curious worry, loyal to irreverence and a giver of passage and path. These essays, on sight, put one in the middle of understanding, where one knows perhaps how to read, but not yet how to re-read. As a child, I heard of a child who stopped playing hide-and-seek because they would forget to hide. I heard this from a child distracted by god. None of this is true, but it could be. Ribald is a work that continues to begin, that opens the body might it out what’s been baked into, that offers the unexpected as a cure to prophecy, that misplaces to protect.

https://isacoustic.com/2020/12/17/ribald-essays-alina-stefanescu/

~

December 17, 2020 / barton smock

{ Ribald – essays – Alina Stefanescu }

barton smock's avatarISACOUSTIC*

Ribald
essays – Alina Stefanescu
INCH, issue 44
Bull City Press (2020)

The writer Alina Stefanescu is a student of curious worry, loyal to irreverence and a giver of passage and path. These essays, on sight, put one in the middle of understanding, where one knows perhaps how to read, but not yet how to re-read. As a child, I heard of a child who stopped playing hide-and-seek because they would forget to hide. I heard this from a child distracted by god. None of this is true, but it could be. Ribald is a work that continues to begin, that opens the body might it out what’s been baked into, that offers the unexpected as a cure to prophecy, that misplaces to protect.

~

reflection by Barton Smock

~

book is here

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December 15, 2020 / barton smock

blood notes

Sex remembers death as the skinner of sleep.

Touch invents a past it can fix.

December 11, 2020 / barton smock

as alone

as aliens needing god

December 10, 2020 / barton smock

some words toward some films

Wade In The Water is a film that builds itself so quietly from its physical and spiritual surroundings that any viewer may find themselves checking the room they’re in to make sure it’s in the right place. If dialogue driven, it is walked to where it is by character, and Tom E Nicholson follows the offhand with a focus most can’t summon for travelogue, while Danika Golombek drains dream from both open space and cramped diner long enough to correctly guess the names of sleepwalkers.

Both gritty and cosmic, Black Bear is a terror ignored, a film of paused immediacies, of art imitating art via bodies alive to the horror of approachable motion. Plaza cuts deep in the shallow and covers ground so silently that every surface seems a sound longing to be mothered by a scratch. Gadon is a backward fire and gently pulls origin through outskirt without waking either until the dream restarts. And Abbott, as in the recent Possessor and not so recent James White, gives a performance of planned confusion that leaves no guess unknown. This movie wounds, for sure, but knows scar gets there first.

Brandon Cronenberg’s Possessor, while definitely Brandon Cronenberg’s, could also be called, if in front of another body, Andrea Riseborough’s Inhabitor. Her performance plants itself as host to the genesis of disorientation. And with Christopher Abbott adding a layered confusion to what is already a weary disconnection, the movie becomes blessedly the wrong map to the right film.

The Dark and The Wicked is a hopeless beauty of a film, and Marin Ireland and Michael Abbott, Jr. use the sibling performance of their lived-in bodies to avoid possession and give us something humanly frightening. After this and In The Radiant City, am thinking they were born to play siblings.

Light From Light is a film that knows that even grief is a little curious about which page to turn, and while Jim Gaffigan rightly gathers himself for and from solitude, it’s Marin Ireland who plays silence as a handwritten thing that keeps the angels looking.

The Swerve is both ascent and descent, is both invite and mousetrap, and is all so slowly and elegantly killed. What Azura Skye does in this film is dissolving, and with the lower beauties that her performance is able to unearth, she is able to replace being looked over with being decidedly invisible. If cure has no choice that poison hasn’t already tried, then illness is all of the above.

The Wolf of Snow Hollow is a strange and nostalgically impulsive horror show or show of horror which, either way, lives both inside and outside its moving home. Cummings and Forster play the gentle and the toxic as two heads made for the same chicken, and Riki Lindhome quietly collects costumes in a performance that knows to transform by wearing its own skin. Cummings is the whole deal and it could be we’ve never pictured a wolf correctly because we think sight belongs to what we see.

Jungleland is a great looking film that plays fast and loose with its rambling familiarity. It loves the films that came before it, and has a few detours into which it carves its trailing initials. Every character has a few grace notes…Charlie Hunnam and Jack O’Connell find music in looking directly at and away from each other, Jonathan Majors sings a resigned menace, and, most successfully, Jessica Barden frames the meandering doom with a performance loyal to an outsider’s confidence. The movie fumbles the violence here and there, but that might be the point. No blood, here, is wasted.

Using stillness to travel through time, The Giant, as directed by David Raboy, is a meditation on memory and terror that gifts a delayed fear to an elegantly doomed present. Odessa Young brings a dreamy energy to a spiritually nervous character, and allows physicality to anchor the film’s more ambitious evaporations. Lovely lovely film. I don’t think we’re small just because we look up to nothing.

A film of beginnings and endings, of short term genesis and lopsided aftermath, Racer and the Jailbird has very little middle to speak of, as if it knows the less it needs to fill, the more it can run from absence while on empty. It’s a strange choice, and better for it once its drainings come full color. Matthias Schoenaerts and Adèle Exarchopoulos choose their spots wisely and in so doing give tragic shine to the doomed singularity of their pairing, and if, in the end, one of them lives too long, neither believes they’ve died.

Antonio Campos does some brave things with The Devil All The Time…from using stillness as an inquiry into its mapmaking, to using negatives to reflect the violence we think we’ve already seen…and the movie is definitely its own thing, but overall still needs the book it’s based on in order to live. I think there is a longer movie, with shorter scenes, here…that could’ve been epic. But maybe that would have lessened the viewer’s shortness of breath? All said, I think it’s a success. Bill Skarsgard and Haley Bennett register most strongly performance-wise, but all have a moment or two where they turn their commas into periods. Pattinson’s performance is the oddest…equally checked in and checked out.

I’m Thinking Of Ending Things is still scaring the fuck out of me. Jessie Buckley navigates hell as if she will soon have been there before, and Jesse Plemons tints his return to modified nothingness with vivid exile. Collette and Thewlis, comically together, hide separately from lipstick inside death’s too big costume. What a subtraction, what a film.

Do not understand the lazy reviews that Mary Magdalene rec’d. A reverent and careful film about vulnerability, the fear of death, and maybe also a little about what death might fear. I loved it. And I’m not religious in a word-for-word way. Phoenix plays Jesus as enthralled. but this movie belongs to Rooney Mara. I don’t think she steps wrong in anything she’s in, and this is no different. What washes over her face in terms of expression carries the same baptism over many lands.

A Good Woman Is Hard To Find carries itself brutally well while bleeding but then Sarah Bolger puts it on her back, takes its legs, and gives it heart.

The movie Blood On Her Name is morally precise in its desperation and comes constantly correct with its emotional messiness and from its decorative fog there emerges a densely sharpened performance by Bethany Anne Lind that has to be seen to be seen again.

Hunter Hunter, as directed by Shawn Linden, is a slowburn resignation of hunger and skin that seems it might close in on itself only to come loose like a B-movie rabbit jumping from the reappeared hat with a half-human hand in its mouth. Grim magic that knows violence when it sees it, and knows also how to make itself scarce when needed.

Phillip Youmans directs Burning Cane with an eye that sees triple- the inch of life, the inch of death, and the mile impoverished by home. If any ground is covered, it is also uncovered, and if the story is short, it is made so by never being done in the telling. The performances are giving, and in that giving we are lucky to receive what is done here by Karen Kaia Livers, who embodies both place and dislocation via the trinity of carriage, lift, and release.

Director Julia Hart is a master of lived-in discomfort, and, as such, the films Miss Stevens and I’m Your Woman glow with embedded locality. Miss Stevens is not as small as it seems, and Lily Rabe brings the world to itself with a performance of reminder and remainder. As no one should worship study, the writing here centers the theatrics of being taught, and allows that lesson is a left field we enter on fire. I’m Your Woman is an anxious film noir placed just outside of the times being had, and Rachel Brosnahan and Arinze Kene break bread with heartbreak and funny bone and let blood in the home just long enough for it to turn grey among the blue brutalities of the transience that here is caught redhanded.

The Midnight Sky is a subtle hallucination of a film, and Clooney shows and tells its lonely story with a friendly anger and viral sadness that, while coloring the checkboxes of restraint, allows for the moral greys of epic to shrink and, eventually, overtake. I’m not sure why so many are so wrong about this one, so lost to its communique. For me, it was hard to leave.

Miranda July’s Kajillionaire plays house long enough to become a home of stranded acceptance. Evan Rachel Wood plays it downbeat but does not succumb to disappearance so much as allows the performance to surface elsewhere as a straw posing as another’s breath. Richard Jenkins and Debra Winger give melancholy its own tremor and are constantly becoming one so as to separate. Gina Rodriguez allows hurt to flash and longing to scar itself on thunder. We don’t always need each other at the same time, and that…is theft.

December 9, 2020 / barton smock

2018.2019.bluemind

(from) BLUE MIND

a toy, brief and doomed. cat sadness. oh there are days the kids say nothing beautiful. soon is a painting but when. of a ballerina leaving Ohio for a gas can. of god giving death

a blank puzzle. of how to dress if I’m ugly.

we’re drunk in the backyard with my body and your grief and you say you’re hungry and this is how I end up holding a plate in the bathroom mirror where once my mother ate so quickly that a baby remembered its face

December 2, 2020 / barton smock

blood notes

Invented as a way to impress pain, eating had to pass through sleep. Brother says he’s been seeing things after they happen. Says he’ll soon forget burying them bomb squad dogs. Art form, ant farm…no matter. A room without a mirror attracts a room with. A scarecrow miscarries in kite country. Fat with crocodile tears for the alien dead, your stomach rings a private bell. I kiss my son’s foot. His parachute does not open. I am taken from the dream by childbirth

The face I make at god