‘Novel Finds’ – free pdf download

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Right click on link: Novel Finds Download

I began writing Novel Finds two and a half years ago. Though some of the found poems have been published in print and online magazines, it has not acquired a home for a full book publication. Thus I am offering it here as a free pdf download, and I hope there are those who will take and read and enjoy.

By way of explanation, and perhaps some apology [but more the former], I selected a ‘literary canon’ from which to find new poems as an identifiable and well-known source material. Novel Finds is my first such project, and the found poems are taken from a conventional collection forming the ‘British Literary’ canon. I also completed a second found poem project American Finds based on the ‘Great American Novel’ canon – again conventional and/or notional, depending on how anyone else might see, interpret and accept/reject it.

Since writing both, I have reflected on what many would view as the problematic notion of either literary canon, especially in terms of cultural and historical representation, though there are those who might argue they both just exist as identifiable constructs. I simply acknowledge potential questions about the idea of such a canon surviving, certainly for many as something intrinsically to be celebrated.

In the final paragraph I will conclude this ‘foreword’ with an account of the process I applied to the selecting of text extracts and crafting found poems from this, but I will just explain now – and without any sense of apology or justifying in the context of what I have offered above – that in working from these conventional canons I always wanted to make the ‘new’ work a contemporary reflection/interpretation. Therefore, the here and now of when the poems were written would be as much a part of the ‘new’ meaning as the often randomness of the found poetry writing process.

There is no question that Donald Trump and his presidency often had a pervasive, and indeed invasive impact on what I instinctively/compulsively ‘found’ in the original sources. But there was much else that informed, though this was never to redress or ‘correct’ or challenge the original material as it exists.  I will add that most poems are simply evocations, prompted by the original language and also, as I have already said, the random, accidental and creative nature of the found poetry writing process.

Explanation of the writing process sent to various potential publishers:

The poems submitted are cut-ups/found in the British novel canon, an arbitrary find and ‘catalogue’ to some degree, but also conventional. I have not attempted to reflect the texts’ original stories/meanings, though this did occasionally intrude. More intentionally, the design was to find new meanings, or quite simply sounds and patterns. There are two poems per text [36 novels used], the first poem from each novel’s opening page or chapter; the second from anywhere else in that novel. The selected extracts were randomised, and the new poems then found/crafted from this. In all cases I have adhered to the ‘Code of Best Practices in Fair Use of Poetry’ for found/remixed poetry.

 

‘Micro Event Space’ by Robert Sheppard – The Red Ceilings Press

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A micro-review in the spirit of Sheppard’s own announcement of this chapbook’s publication:

‘Yesterday I micro-launched this micro-book of micro-poems. Don’t worry: nobody was there’.

It is micro – excellently so. Playful and innovative and evocative. A wonderfully symbiotic collection for a Red Ceilings chapbook

I have particularly enjoyed The Working Week poems and am currently macro-liking Haibun: 52 Haiku.

Get it here.

 

Waste Management

I have read again
Trump’s ‘The Squad’ tweets
from today

and rather than articulate rage
or try to conceptualise
the depths of his inane behaviour

I have instead checked out
the recycling, food waste and rubbish calendar
for a pragmatic catharsis.