Robert Merkin: "As a little introduction to me and zombies"

Robert Merkin is a writer and journalist based in Masschusetts, USA. He is the author of two books: “Zombie Jamboree” (1985, left) deals with his life as a draftee in the US military during the Vietnam war, while “The South Florida Book of the Dead” chronicles crime scenes he witnessed as a journalist in Florida in the 1980s. We contacted Robert via e-mail, requesting an interview. What follows is his four-part (mostly unprompted) response, a meditation in prose on all things Zombie, from voodoo to World War Two. As Merkin writes: “I would write my zombie thoughts in poetry, but I am, as Faulkner called all novelists, a failed poet, and I just lazily grew more comfortable with prose -”
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Elude

What I know about zombies?
Haiti invented them, as did
The US, The French, The Spaniards
slavery and the Caribs,
but mostly it was sugar.
Papa Legba or your local
houngan could have something
to say about the dearth above.
See cat people – or that other
Tournier with the canefield carrefour.
Clairvius Narcisse is the
man to find if you’re writing
an ethnobiology of the
Haitian zombe – muchas
gracias Wade Davis – would
you like a photo of him
in a domed reading room? Scour
a national geographic from 2001.
Le potan mideau – am I getting
these words right bokor?
Who went to Cuba to have
a hole dug in their kitchen,
a treasure chest revealed
and reburied – Poppy Z Brite?
Steve Austin the robot? Travels
with my Aunt? Thomas Rowlandson?
The Fon, the Fonz, Franz Fanon…
Toussaint L’Ouverture!

Posted in 14: ZOMBIE | Tagged

Chapter 7

1008

All roads lead to other roads

62

    metamorphoses of brain damage:

The man who mistook his wife for a truck
they had a similar stress gradient
she bore her load of life badly
he lacked all emotion; his frontal lobes
had worn away like a brain-shaped
eraser; he'd lost that pencil with which we write
out the chorus of everyone else's responses to life
and sing along. I can't love you anymore she wrote
to him while in hospital, ever grinning
it's like you're there and not there
I don't care, he told the camera of his accidentally caused
lack of empathy, and she cried
on camera, and no one lied

the doctor looked on kindly
the camera and film crew watched
and so did I – in whose shoes (dress,
fingers, accident, blank screen or eyes)?

    and another:

'Rate your sadness for me,' she said to the woman, who was
trussed in a plaster cocoon like a broken leg
sensors and receptacles suspended from her to the ceiling

('I want to make you sad,' said the scientist
in her white like-a-slightly-longer-dress lab coat
'and to measure your frontal lobes')

'About a six' came a voice
whose bruise was real, if practised
large eyes staring out of old fruit sockets at the screen above

her, her words hanging spiders of text, set pain
('I'm a monster. I hate myself,'
the depressive wrote, with her fingers

typing out her saddest thoughts, quote unquote)
then while she was looking back at her thoughts
they radiographed the sadness of her brain

'I'm sad that you're sad,' the scientist then said
in her wordlessly-white, paper-white lab coat
'but I'm glad that you were sad for us';

like a child, the monster woman was still
sad but pleased to be pleasing, a little
healed, you could feel the plaster wearing lighter and

the power of science

385

Some God's elbow escarpment holds this town in to
its azure seascape, its fresh mown green back yards,
Hill's hoist, sea-saw waves and sky-blue time

a shivering pall over the death of our dead friend
whose loss we have gathered to forget, whose loss
to forget, bright eyes embrace me, you've arrived

238

Fishing for sharks
a ring of teeth
round your neck
their eyes like egg whites
boiled wider than fear
who are nicer than people
many more people
are injured each
year by their own
underwear
continues the professor
lecture theatre widening with laughter
like a maw

147

    a quartet of curses

Dean wanted a cigarette. I suggested
he watch The Curse of the Phantom Limbs instead:

They're interviewing a woman and her stump
which feels, which she feels, pain
in the fingers, though she lost it from the elbow

A hand typing in the distance, next door, on the computer

An artist interviews her too, takes photos, digital
images and then virtuals
the woman's imagined pain in, pixelling a massive swollen hand
the hand that grasped the wheel – this is imprinting
on a stick-thin arm coming out of the stump: a map of pain

the artist paints

Another is a man with no arm, but his phantom
body map has a huge thumb, a thumb for an arm

The typing stops
Dean didn't need a cigarette. He wrote a letter instead
touch typed like us

*

A man lost all sensation in his right arm
from the motorcyke smash, but his phantom hand still gripped in pain.
The eyes. Their phantom pain. The arm ungripped

(its ghostly impossible grasp. What else are phantoms
but. And so is art. This is imprinting the scientist said print. The homunculus in your brain is more you than you. Which remaps)

when he placed the one left in the black mirror box.
In a mirror your right arm is your left
a reflection of the left. So you see

both limbs, one virtual, one real, move perfectly now, as if the motorbicycle
had never cut the other off. And patients start to cry
And to lose all phantoms float away pain

to where?

*

while the black mirror box has a video restorative effect
on me too, like a phantom picture of what's virtually real
or a T.V. set (you coffin box) up turning into a pathway
to Heaven, and all our lost souls idiots

*

a cigarette
paints phantom lungs

91

There in Russia they keep their herds shut in stables, you'll see no grasses in the fields, no leaves on the trees appear.
But the land is mounds of snow, shapeless and deep
in cold, it rises as you walk all around you. It's always winter
the North-west wind is always breathing in frost.
From morning, the Sun, his horses reaching for the far skies,
never succeeds in scattering the paling shadows; his car rushes
to bathe in the red mirror of Ocean, and night the shadows revives.
Bridges of ice congeal, of a sudden, from flowing rivers. Whose waves
then carry wheels bound with iron on their backs. Having
once served ships, they now pave a way for open carts.
The cold causes bronze vessels to leap apart, clothing stiffens
when put on, they cut off blocks of frozen wine with an axe.
While pools, in their depths, turn solid ice, fierce icicles
make caves of uncombed beards, and the snow
all through the air, is all this time falling.

Virgil, Georgics III

56

The body of Bethesda: the tain of sky that floats overhead
and the walking tracks vein the land with life

inroads, humans, ring up in the mind
their binary codes, the lizard beside me, DNA-determined

he motes in the eye my silence of nature
as if the divorce I'm getting over meant as much to him

as the light at each tick of the clock of the sun
on the pool of Bethesda, silence settles, no one
was or ever will be at home

35

Walking around a
corpse makes
the path of our
conversation
difficult, trippy, little
jumps in grammar
over – excuse me

21

Sydney postcard

that bleary-faced old faith of me supping on the sober
the podium dancers were podium dancing

and the night did away with all thought of the night
yet Daedalus found it easy to fall into the Sun

did his skies slip from knowing
did the soles of his feet come undone

Hyde park spreading out its dark rug of grass
to eternity

an eye enters the harbour smashes a mallet smashes down on her face
my hand touches your breast like the wheels of the train go round and
round

14

Cleaning my teeth with a truck

7

I ate the best minds of my generation, rot
dribbled down the sides of my chin
and not throwing up
To what sight
do you shut that eye off
do you dream it to death
do you drink it all down
to one black painting
that swallows the frame

Posted in 14: ZOMBIE | Tagged

Request

On the same day
in the alley between
Westfield and my house
appear both a carburettor
and a large plastic bag
containing something rotting.
A strip of a child's face
also appears, between
two fence planks;
she asks me to move the bag.
When I look through I see
she is holding something wet
and oval in her hand.
It looks like a closed-shell mussel
in a coat of caramel hair.
A dog leaps around her bare legs;
the girl says she had to
take it from his mouth.

A week later
the bag has ripped open.
Inside is part of a dead animal.
Grey fur;
large, cleanly cut bones.

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Matt Hetherington Reviews Jordie Albiston

The Fall by Jordie Albiston
White Crane Press, 2003

Works of art are of an infinite solitude, and nothing is less capable of reaching them than is criticism.
&#151RM Rilke, quoted in Antigone Kefala, ‘Journal III’, Heat 15, p 227

So, to avoid criticism, I offer a dialogic interplay between my own response to the work and those voices that have also spoken to me in thinking about the work. Parts of The Fall have resonated so strongly within me that I have found it futile to attempt anything like a standard critique.

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Sarah Connor’s Last Ride

tying her blonde hair behind her
left no time to resuscitate her Beamer
so watch her drive in Range Rover fear
that the wind may change direction
suck air pressure from her tyres
and blow out her lipstick holder

once she could have picked up
Arnie Schwarz or someone taller
but her make up and cucumber slices
fill the customs bin her stockings
are stuck up on the heads of teenagers
robbing milk bars for M & Ms

she's on a highway to helicopters
in fruit fly formation cross the desert
she shoos them with her hairspray
she's left a slipper on the Nullarbor
Ernie Dingo shows it to the nation
what it cost to buy this, hey?

her hair's unwinding in the bull's eye
the red centre where the dart flies
a five thousand kay pipeline pumps
gas and leftover songlines
solid rock standin on sacred ground
livin on blonde hair borrowed from a bottle

she's tied her khaki legwarmers to the aerial
that Wrong Way Go Back sign was red
not pink she didn't notice it the sand
on her windscreen the nuclear fallout
sweetening up the desert the machine
she fires into the night sky tracer bullets
blaze in white light neon

“Terminate Her Too” and a blanket falls
from heaven president Swarzenegger
(don't call him Arnie) says “Sarah,
the War is Over” they put a gas mask
on her and she spits and coughs
the taste of Chanel Number Five

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Buffy

All the evil sins in a book
Learned at Obedience School
A flag in peoples' hearts —
And people everywhere are born chained
The real bloodsucker death
Steps out of the television
When the runways extend from Hell.
Better to think of the angels above
Heaven busy with electricity.
Those departed hoons rise undead
To catch new episodes of trash tv.
Buried in a grave they crave war, sex
And machines smoothed on a screen.

In most celestial ballet Buffy kicks ass —
Thus contemplate the path made light
By Buffy meditation — athletics is a soul's power
Breaking out, unflinching and she would
Never let down a friend — you might ask Buffy
For a smidgeon of grace, be smart and quick
Kick mucho evil butt with finely scripted wit
Kick decay from our hearts Give the self
to purity ideal and your dreams
will be “wicked accurate”.

Buffy does it so it's okay to party
All night and “go through stuff” growing up and
If Buffy gets a hard time at school those vampires
Are so killed. Mumble the words of an occult prayer
So it should be with you. . . This world you do not – cannot –
Angel of the world gone to hell — déjà vu Buffy
Stake evil's heart thank her for the bliss she gives

A blood-stained shower curtain kind of love
The kind of love an angel craves.
Children take up armour, swords, crosses &
Garlic necklaces. Learn by heart the snappy
One-liners six seasons of Buffy episodes
Brought us they are powerful charms.
Late nights, warmed by the television
We shall listen to those Californian voices —
A cold wind blows from outer space.
Any ghost will tell you: Love is forever.
Light the incense now and call the spirit.
Good will triumph in her light.
Kick those demons. Kick 'em high
Buffy bless and sanctify.

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Dangers of Spilled Ink

Rorsharch bat breaks out
of white-spread card, closes in for the kill:
first puncture into self-possession.

        “So, what do you see, Mr Pitts?”
        You laugh, suddenly nervous, “A butterfly.”

Bisymmetrical wings clamp over eyes,
clammy blindfold pungent
with mammalian urine.

        “And in this one?” He is calm.
        You feign boredom, “The same.”

Vermin blot licks side of mouth,
enters to feed on prized tongue
as lips curl back in revulsion.

        “And now? Mr Pitts? Mr Pitts??!!”
        His impatience makes you falter, “But-ter-fly!”

Vulture bats wing overhead.
Flies buzz in and out cavernous ears.
In the room, a carcass lies in wait.

        “Still a butterfly?” He sneers.
        “Yes!” You lunge to devour his tongue.

Posted in 14: ZOMBIE | Tagged

James Stuart Interviews Pierre Brulleacute

Don't let the relative coherence of these interviews fool you: when I conducted them I hadn't spoken French regularly for at least six or seven years. That aside, I had barely engaged with the world of poetry in Australia over the past two. All this added up: playing back the three hours or so of recordings from the interviews was an at times painful experience in which I had to cyclically shake my head at botched phrasings of the most simple questions or comments in French.

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Paul Mitchell: International, Interspecies – Welcome Chimps…

A recent international scientific report suggesting chimpanzees should be admitted to the human family – because they share 97 plus percent of our functional DNA – has produced worldwide confusion. First there was the problem of whether or not the formal admission was coming a little late.
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Moses Iten: Because I Was Brought By the Road (3)

“Those who sell our dreams – “

The road off the highway became a dirt road until eventually we were driving around a maze of rough dirt roads, weaving their way between humble homes. Camelia's large and jolly mum constantly quaking with a bout of laughter, gave us all a hug on arrival and wanted to give her son – one of nine – a duck. After a proud tour of their beautiful pig – “More handsome than Camelia himself,” teased Jesus …
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San Gimignano

I saw a girl drinking absinthe—
I saw her rural eyes and Florentine hands—
an ivy-coated wall behind, cool as a lover.

I drank from a fountain in the plaza
its marble head sad as a ruined epigram
the water tasting of moss and clay.

Twice I looked into the distance
beyond the city walls, finding olive groves
and fields of sunflowers.

I saw a valley dry as lavender—unenvied, remote
as though left by mauve for silver’s pleasure.
I entered a museum, silky

with cardinal lives, and I saw
manuscripts with Latin words laid down
like stones crumbling where they fell.

And even though the space on the postcard
where I sat in frescoed shadow
beneath gargoyles

is now blank, a wash of emptier light,
I remember a storm falling into the valley,
thunder radiant with the war-cry of elephants.

I remember the girl drinking absinthe—
how she gathered up her small handbag
and Vespa keys.

I believe I counted my ribs
for a missing bone and found
her rural eyes and Florentine hands—

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Way Out

Such is the violence required
to stop the body in its tracks.
Some say the spirit – if it exists – hovers
permanently within a hundred metre radius
of its busted, flesh-and-bone cage.

I hurried over to the huge, once encumbered
bulk of her; eyes shut behind spectacles
that cling to her face, oddly
unbroken. Her leg, jumped free from its socket,
was held in place
by what must be size-40 Levis.

Blood through a rip in the jeans
flood a long, squint-eyed cut across her thigh:
the inside of her large body
peeking out. I imagine her spirit easing
its way out of that wound

to stand there, gazing skywards at how
far she had come in the gasp of two seconds,
debating if this was a mistake,
and if she had only known
that death was false, that consciousness
would draw her back to itself
even after the end, inescapable,
like gravity.

But I prefer to believe that she
is gone, just as Leslie Cheung
is gone; that death
is not a rapid corridor
between one prison and the next;

that the sound she made when the pavement
rose generously to meet her
was not the opposite of a bomb
going off.

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Landing

What death may be: a slow, close-to-weightless
tilt, like a burgeoning foetus turning
slightly in the womb. The engine starts a low
growl like a stomach, the aircraft hungry to
land, to devour the space between its
falling body and the ground, followed by
the slow lick of its wheels against the runway's
belly: pressing down, then skating forward,
only to decelerate, a sensual slow-mo,
and the plane makes a sound
like the hugest sigh of relief.

The seatbelt sign blinks off for the final time.
We rise up from our seats like souls
from bodies, leaving bulky hand luggage
in the overhead compartments, then
begin a tense line down the aisle, awkwardly
smiling at each other, remaining few minutes
alive with all kinds of ambivalences,
or simply relief at having arrived, at long last,
in that no-time zone of a country
without a name except the ones we give it;
weeping, laughing, both at once.

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howtowritepopsongswithoutevenreallytrying

fifteen day sleeping tour of the north coast
relieves your fixations, prices slashed even further –
parties, exhibitions, murrumbidgee dried fruit
now open to the public, decades of tattoos
on euston road & a jeep wrangler abandoned on the footpath.
from here the country's just a shimmy away,
that drone you can't clear from the microphone
& a pipeband playing scotland the brave.
later still it's the bedsit thing, all kitchen sink drama,
no woodchips & six dollar pasta
across the street from the neighbourhood centre,
corners & intersections & recycled kisses,
your feelings reconfigured like a frankenscience project,
iterative heart & useful things to think about,
comfortably dissociated, scrawny chicken bits dangling
beneath your t-shirt, the performative redundancy
desire amounts to, like a body surfer,
staggering up the beach with a mouthful of sand

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Justin Lowe Reviews Emma Lew and Ashlley Morgan-Shae

Anything the Landlord Touches by Emma Lew
Giramondo, 2002

Love Trash by Ashlley Morgan-Shae
Five Islands Press, 2002

Emma Lew's second verse collection, Anything the Landlord Touches, begins with one of those stanzas that could almost serve as a credo for an entire generation of atomized humanity: Continue reading

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Q&A with Mathieu Hilfiger and Sebastien Raoul

The lasting image that I will retain of Mathieu Hilfiger and Sebastien Raoul is the ever-so French portrait I took of them at the conclusion of our entretien on another biting Paris winter morning. In the photograph, Sebastien is wearing a bright red coat and black beret, and is ill shaven. Mathieu has on a black woollen coat, and a thick, grey scarf that is tied in a knot under his chin. They pose in front of the old clock in the main courtyard at La Sorbonne, one of Europe's oldest and most prestigious universities and where both Hilfiger and Raoul are completing their Masters of Philosophy. And it is from the university that they edit and publish their biannual poetry journal, Le Bateau Fantôme (Ghost Ship).

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Lifestyle Beijing

        I

a pekinese on
the dashboard.
be careful when
opening the door.
 
 

        II

so much depends
upon

24 hour
gate guards

standing to
attention

beside the bronze
lions.

 
 

        III

there is
  such a
   style
    of
     personality
      in
       number
        plates.

some of the public have tried to understand the phenomenon.

 
 
        IV

a rounded lobby in
marble & mirrors.
a leather
sofa &
a flat screen,
the flatter
the better.

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Scheherazade

sleep
is the story I long to tell
death is everyone's story

when you close your eyes
think of me
and the whole world comes

its denouments are myriad
as the songs of birds
some are whispers some are screams

a sword falls
your head lolls
and you float like blood

I have come to you in good faith
listen to me
death is everyone's story

one day a sword will fall
your head will loll
night will grasp you like a knife

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Moses Iten: Because I Was Brought By the Road (2)

“To pull up their boats under the safety of the coconut palms”

“Come and have beer,” shouted my friend Jesus, waving me over to a chest-fridge just metres from the shore. The local cantina: a corrugated-iron roof with a full fridge, an assortment of plastic tables and chairs occupied by a handful of fishermen. The chicken-feet joker was swinging in a hammock stretched up between two poles. Grabbed a beer and paid the owner, Don Julio, sitting on his throne of five stacked-up chairs. Crowned by large straw hat, with his sceptre – a walking frame – standing in front of him.
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Part of a Discussion

Eve: Except nothing happens. That was what the fruit was about: one bite and boredom exploded like juice to fill our mouths.

Adam: Except it wasn't juice. It was not any kind of matter, although it would fly up to consume us, although all we can do is pin it down with words, an entire language.

Eve: How long have we been walking? Juice. How apt. How boredom drags itself out from us through our skin as sweat, floods the space between my legs with liquid fire.

Adam: It is also a vacuum. And the body is sucked in to fill it. Desire. This is what the word means.

Eve: Frustration follows. Then weariness. Cyclical. With an unstoppable rhythm: our hearts keep the time, drum out its indifferent tempo.

Adam: We will have each other. Or more of us if we have to.

Eve: Let us rest here. We will build a fire for the night, as nights are longer here. And the cold will be unbearable.

Posted in 13: INTERNATIONAL | Tagged

International Date Lines

the first: watashiwa piano

mizue takada on the walkman. my japanese
is like fractured helium. i'm wearing paradise

pink bobbles in my folded hair. my fingers are
origami swans. i shuffle my nerves to the corners

of my mouth. he is coming closer. we talk nicknames
& canasta & pizza. he walks into my kiss. then he says:

wanna play 'go' sometime? i could kick your
blossom bottom.
 

the second: dadra

eating subji on the train. a sitar as purple as dad's.
the pineapple sunset is scraped with morning red.

you always wanted the trip of a lifetime. this scene
was just the ticket. as we share bad wine you lean in.

pulling out a fantale & a pink handkerchief you swear.
then: hey baby, was this the way you pictured it?
 

the third: before Nirvana

        banana clips. balloon shoes. baggies.
baroque. batwing blouses. big bangs. bicycle shorts.
        bermuda shorts. bolero jacket. bubble gum jeans. bows.
bra shirts. bullet belts & bandanas.

this is the backdrop for a bad night. bowled over
by the eighties. you have a solid navy top.

i hate the way you always smack my mum on the ass
& then talk to me about commitment.
 

the fourth: during the Dirty Three

we made out like punk music & stared at each other
like alt country. you were severe in every brush stroke.

all that alcohol & loopy band behaviour. i loved your
hook & kink but couldn't stand the love quotes from

random books. we held hands during jim's drums.
i cringed when you said: this is the theme to my sadness.
 

the fifth: after Charles Mingus II B.S.

'Often when I'm sitting at the piano , developing a piece,
it's difficult to put a label on the particular feeling I have going.'
        Charles Mingus

smashmouth bittenbabe. this was the chase. you
were tenor to my sax. just when the shuffle started

you said: i'm moving to spain. i like the weather
& the women. i couldn't think of the words.

how do you say go ahead in spanish &
shit in a calm voice.

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Q&A with Pablo Garcia

When Pablo Garcia imparted his belief that a) Poets were shamans of today and b) Poetry was the trunk from which all other branches of art sprouted, I'll admit that I had trouble staying my left eyebrow. In the end, it remained on my forehead and I was able to engage Garcia on his thoughts regarding the cross-breeding of the arts, and the interconnectivity of the world we live in.

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Paul Mitchell Interviews Dorothy Porter

For Dorothy Porter, writing librettos is a natural extension of her desire to “open things up” with her poetry; to discover the realms in which it can move. However, renowned as the woman who writes with rock music playing (the final sections of her latest verse novel Wild Surmise were written with P.J. Harvey on the stereo), the shift into opera in recent years doesn't mean Porter's CD collection has altered too much.

“Librettists are, internationally, pretty scarce on the ground,” she says when I meet her in the courtyard of her local cafe in Clifton Hill. “Jonathan Mills approached me back in 1996 to see if I'd be interested in writing a libretto for him based on a short story called 'The Chosen Vessel' by Barbara Baynton. And I wrote a libretto called 'The Ghost Wife'.”

The chamber opera premiered at the Melbourne Festival in 1999 and also played at the Adelaide and Sydney Festivals, as well as at the Opera House and in London. Then last year Porter and Mills entered an international opera competition run by London's Genesis Foundation. Their opera, The Eternity Man, was one of three winners.

The opera is based on the life of reformed alcoholic, Arthur Stace. For 30 years from the 1940s, Stace in the night chalked the word “Eternity” in copperplate script on Sydney's footpaths as a celebration of his faith in God. After the word lit up the Harbour Bridge it became almost the signature symbol for the Sydney 2000 Olympics. In July this year, Porter heads to London to begin work on the opera's international debut.

“I turned the Arthur Stace story into a kind of an hallucinatory tribute to Sydney, my hometown. I look at the history in the 40s, 50s and 60s, using Arthur Stace as a ghost-like figure.”

Mills saw in Porter's verse novels (The Monkey's Mask and Akhenaten) an operatic quality in the way the poetic works are constructed; a view shared by reviewers when the novels have been translated into Italian. Porter says she didn't know much about the art of the librettist before Mills asked her to work with him, but she went into it with a “spirit of adventure”.

“I'd never thought of my novels as operatic before,” she said. But now she's worked with Mills she says the libretto form “does appear to have a relationship with my poetry.”

In the same way that writing opera doesn't mean she's turned away from rock, writing with Eternity in mind doesn't mean she's turned to religion. However, there's no doubt her recent poetic works, Wild Surmise and Other Worlds, have been part of a making-sense-of-why-we're-here motif in her work . . .

Both books take as their, dare we say (well, we're going to!) launch pad, astronomy, the planets, moons, stars, comets. All things spacey and far away. For Porter it's a case of the outer worlds affecting the inner worlds of the mind and soul.

“It's kind of a micro/macro thing,” she says. “There's the illustration on the cover of Wild Surmise which shows this skull with a kind of 'buzzingness' – world within the skull. And then there's a world outside the skull . . . There are images inside the book where I talk about the brain being a neural galaxy. And, also, what do these places [in the solar system] represent to us as images and in belief and so forth?”

It's widely known that Porter shifted from individual poems and collections to the verse novel out of a frustration with poetry's position in the literary world. After Akhenaten there came The Monkey's Mask, a lesbian detective narrative which has rated its gun barrels off and has been adapted as a play, radio play and film.

“I had nothing to do with those adaptations,” she says. “I was consulted . . . Sometimes I was listened to and sometimes not, but that's what a consulting role is all about,” Porter adds. However, she's been excited that people have wanted to adapt her work and she sees them as works in their own right to be judged separate to her poetry.

“I'm intrigued by what other people do with my work. A work of poetry can be a springboard for other people to do other things. The most dazzling example of that is Pushkin's verse novel Eugene Onegin [adapted for, among other things, film] which is still the greatest verse novel . . .”

As far as new work goes, Porter's just finished writing a song cycle for composer/pianist, Paul Grabowsky, to be premiered at the Brisbane Musical Festival. And she's started sketching a verse novel about a serial killer. She laughs and says she wanted to write another thriller.

“After Wild Surmise, which is very dense with these images of the cosmos, I wanted to do something more terrestrial,” she laughs again. “I wanted to get back to the idea of poetry and narrative . . .”

She says poetry has become trapped in the idea that the one page poem that is “difficult, challenging and demanding” is the only way to go. While she says some poetry works on that level, her desire has always been – and will continue to be – to move poetry away from being a “precious, esoteric hobby”.

“The most positive role I can play in the poetry community is just to open things up a bit and to present other possibilities. That doesn't mean everyone is going to follow my path or even want to, but just to say there are other ways of doing this. We don't have to be trapped in this particular cul-de-sac which I think poetry has become.”

Paul Mitchell is a contributing editor of Cordite.

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