Showing posts with label vietnam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vietnam. Show all posts

Friday, January 28, 2011

ROCK 'N ROLL JIZZ by Doug Draime

Rock 'n Roll Jizz
Poetry by
Doug Draime

$6 (plus shipping)


~~BUY HERE~~


Doug Draime is a poet for the ages, whose words of yesteryore are not filled with if-only's and shoulda-woulda-coulda's, but instead are blistered, bleeding, and broken through the skin with pure punk-fucking-rock.  This book defines a generation raised on Elvis and Robert Johnson, air guitar and hard nightlife, James Dean and Marlon Brando, with a chug of whiskey, a dirty syringe, a couple of lonesome sighs, and a swift kick to any throat that's lost for words and fumbling for drink.

In Rock 'n Roll Jizz, Draime nails the nostalgia without clinging to the sentimental, makes those moments when rock 'n' roll was young seem accessible to anyone, as if it were the firsthand experience of the whole world, without sounding like an already-overdone spinning record of remember-when.  You'll end up wanting to dust off those musty blues 45's, drop one needle on the record and one in your arm, sport that patched-up leather jacket, and walk yourself to Basin Street via Positively 4th Street, not forgetting to hit up Peggy Sue at Heartbreak Hotel and swing by Blueberry Hill on the way.

When rock 'n' roll was young, there was a romantic magic in the wild hearts of the generation's youth that will never be found again.  It was a time period on the verge of bridging one of the greatest generation gaps in modern history; and if you weren't there, you weren't there.  Until now.  Draime's in-depth look at the generation, music, influences, atmosphere, and pop culture that shaped him will take you there.  With a side of rocks.  And a few stitches.

Copies can now be purchased online; or through the mail for $6 (plus $2 US shipping; $3 out-of-US shipping) via cash, check, or money order made out to Angstman Arts, and mailed to Alternating Current, PO Box 183, Palo Alto CA 94302 USA; or via PayPal with the email address alt.current@gmail.com. All authors on our press receive royalties for each copy sold.


This book includes:

Cover and inside photos by Beth Weinstein.

P
oems by Doug Draime:
  • Molly's Place
  • When Rock 'n Roll Was A Teenager
  • After Buddy & Richie Died Flaming Down From The Sky, Yeah, The Big Bopper Too
  • 1959
  • Down In The Swallow
  • Blues 1
  • Blues 2
  • Long Gone, Motherfucker In A '55 Olds 45 Years Ago
  • Warped American Dream
  • for Bo Diddley
  • 6 Sketches of L.A.
  • Gracie Slick At 23 And Me On LSD
  • Walking On The Sky Over East L.A.
  • Dream
  • "Jim Dandy To The Rescue" 
  • Cigarette & Booze Ad
  • Robert Johnson & The One Available Woman Of Horny Blues
  • Waiting For Further Developments
  • On The Edge Of Reefer Madness
  • Former English Lit Teacher Now A Talking Bartender
  • On Elvis Presley's Birthday
  • Shamrock Bar
  • Dean
  • Dream From Motel 6
  • Drinking Down The Street From The Radio City Rockettes
  • We Are The Sons And Daughters And Brothers And Sisters (to all those who came home from Viet Nam)
  • When I Had Elvis Sideburns
 

Read the Pushcart Prize-nominated poem, On Elvis Presley's Birthday.

Read a review of the book by Aleathia Drehmer (Durable Goods/In Between Altered States).

Read what John Bennett (Vagabond Press/Hcolom Press) and Misti Rainwater-Lites (eBuLLieNCe Press) said about the book.

Sample poem: 
When Rock 'n Roll Was A Teenager

When rock ‘n roll was a teenager,
Great Balls Of Fire
was throwing punches
at a man twice its age
on a gravel parking lot in
Westport, Illinois,
laughing and drinking Jim Beam
straight from
the bottle,
between ducks and jabs.

When rock ‘n roll was a teenager,
Heartbreak Hotel
had its finger up the local car hop
after she closed down A&W for the night,
her hand around its hard dick,
pumping it slowly,
in the back seat at the drive-in movie,
Marlon Brando
in The Wild One
on the screen.

When rock ‘n roll was a teenager,
Only The Lonely
was in the county jail locked up for
drunk and disorderly, reading
Tropic of Cancer and writing poems
of sex, rage, and revolution,
trying to conceive a way
to escape from jail by taking its own life,
but, oh, we all know, rock ‘n roll
can never, will never die!





~~BUY HERE~~

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

SHADES OF GREEN by Jeff Fleming

Shades of Green
Poetry by Jeff Fleming
$5 (plus shipping)


~~BUY HERE~~


Jeff Fleming's latest collection of poems revolves around the before, during, and after years of the Vietnam War, dabbling more with the damaging psychological effects of the sights, sounds, and senses of and around the soldiers than the actual war itself. Fleming doesn't claim to be an historian in these poems, but rather a narrator for those who can no longer speak for themselves, a portal into the minds of the fallen... or those who would rather they had fallen than be thrown back into a society that no longer understands what they'd been through. The voice is there, in a simple and unpretentious way, giving faces and names to those who can no longer tell their stories and paralleling the fears and flickering media images of today's war, reminding us that history repeats itself if we don't learn from it. Fleming -- an editor and publisher, himself, who knows the importance of saying everything in just a few words -- is precise with his pen, clear cut and vocal without the padding, bringing you a collection of poems that are equally as enjoyable and beautiful as they are important and gripping, leaving you knowing the truth about war and its survivors: that only those who have died will ever see the end of it.

Copies can now be purchased online; or through the mail for $5 (plus $2 US shipping; $4 out-of-US shipping) via cash, check, or money order made out to Alternating Current, PO Box 398058, Cambridge MA 02139 USA; or via PayPal with the email address alt.current@gmail.com. All authors on our press receive royalties for each copy sold, and each purchase comes with three free random books from the archives while we clean house.


This book includes:

Poems by Jeff Fleming:

Make It Count
the leaves, the grass
Blame
In The Bush
December 9, 1969
The Good News
Some Guys
Docs
Way Out Here
Today Is
The Machete
The Smallest Rustle
Chico Tells Me
Bird Book
Egg Nog and Something Else
The First Thing
In the Dust
The Little Moments
Over There
The Four Ravens of the Apocalypse
In the Dream

~~BUY HERE~~




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THIS ELECTRICAL WEEK (Ending 1/23/10)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~Reviews and mentions: Poems from the Left Bank: Somerville, Mass. by Doug Holder blogged on Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene HERE and on The Somerville News HERE. Billy and Cindy by Stephanie Hiteshew and Dave Church reviewed on Ragged Edge: Instead-Of-A-Blog HERE.



please send all responses to alt.current@gmail.com