David Tomaloff's Blog, page 4

March 1, 2013

SMOKING MIRRORS: ART, WORDS, WONDER

Everyone, I’m excited to be a part of this limited edition print project from Connotation Press. Details VIA Meg Tuite:



“Smoking Mirrors” is now available for pre-order and will be shipped out on March 10th. It is a limited signed edition so place your orders to ensure you will get a copy! The artist is Matthew Tuite and 17 writers wrote stories/poems inspired by the art. The writers are: Robert Vaughan, Len Kuntz, Ryan W. Bradley, Tara Laskowski, David Tomaloff, Michelle Messina Reale, Gregory Sherl, Kristine Ong Muslim, Eryk Wenziak, Nicolette Wong, Corey Zeller, Joseph Quintela, Frank Reardon, Nicelle Davis, Kona Morris, Mary Stone Dockery and Meg Tuite. It’s a beautiful hand-stitched book with the brilliant artwork of Matt and exceptional writing! Get your copy now!”


SEE: SMOKING MIRRORS at CONNOTATION PRESS





 

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Published on March 01, 2013 16:26

February 27, 2013

SORE NUDE PROSE AT USED FURNITURE REVIEW

Meg Tuite recently invited me to take a part in her new column at Used Furniture Review, Exquisite Duet. Come & see how Mary Stone Dockery & I build two kinds of fire using a single tiny match.


SEE: EXQUISITE DUET at USED FURNITURE REVIEW


 

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Published on February 27, 2013 18:20

February 18, 2013

A REVIEW OF THE REVIEW AT THE REVIEW REVIEW

A very cool review of HEAVY FEATHER REVIEW 2.1 calls it “experimental, humorous, dark, heartbreaking,” adding that “each piece holds so much to be savoured and absorbed.”


The reviewer, Jen Faulkner, had some particularly nice things to say about my piece, HOW EVERY LIVING THING IS IN ITSELF A HOUSE ON FIRE as well, calling it “possibly my favourite poem in this issue.”


Yes, get a copy if you have not yet done so!


SEE: THE REVIEW REVIEW

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Published on February 18, 2013 17:16

February 4, 2013

SMOKING MIRRORS FROM CONNOTATION PRESS

So, there is this really cool chapbook project being released soon from Connotation-Press An Online-Artifact. Limited edition & full of hot goodness. Keep an eye out! Additional notable fact: I’m in it.


Smoking Mirrors features the artwork of Matthew Tuite and an ekphrastic response from the following superb, hand-picked, Connotation Press contributors: Gregory Sherl, Michelle Reale, Len Kuntz, Kristine Ong Muslim, Nicelle Davis, David Tomaloff, Ryan W. Bradley, Nicolette Wong, Robert Vaughn, Eryk Wenziak, Kona Morris, Mary Stone Dockery, Corey Zeller, Tara Laskowski, Meg Tuite, Joseph A.W. Quintela, and Frank Reardon.”


SEE: SMOKING MIRRORS

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Published on February 04, 2013 17:13

January 22, 2013

HEAVY FEATHER REVIEW 2.1 IS GO

I am sprawled across 6 pages in Heavy Feather Review 2.1 with a photo essay/visual poem piece that I am stoked to be able to share with you. This issue is available in print, nook, kindle, and .pdf formats. An excellent lineup, folks.


SEE: HEAVY FEATHER REVIEW 2.1



HFR volume two, issue one, featuring works from Brandon Amico, Jeremy Behreandt, Daniel J. Cecil, Peter Clarke, Dan Crawley, Justin Lawrence Daugherty, Colin Dodds, Gabe Durham, James Ferry, Luke Geddes, Tyler Gobble, Amanda Goldblatt, Nicholas Grider, francine j. harris, Courtney Hitson, Chas Hoppe, Mike Ingram, Matthew Jakubowski, Toshiya Kamei, Terry L. Kennedy, Andrea Kneeland, Allison Kortokrax, Eric Larsen, Erin Lyndal Martin, Megan Martin, Tom McCartan, Amanda McCormick, Patrick Milian, Nathan Moore, Brian D. Morrison, Joseph Mulholland, Alex Myers, Harmony Neal, Delaney Nolan, Daniel Scott Parker, Mark Parsons, Garrett Quinn, Timmy Reed, Daniel Romo, M.A. Schaffner, Natalie Shapero, Michael Dwayne Smith, David Frederick Thomas, David Tomaloff, Sara Uribe, Joshua Ware, Brandi Wells, and Joshua Young.

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Published on January 22, 2013 17:55

January 11, 2013

ON THE HARD DICK JOURNALISM TIP

In which I Poem the News in the form of an extended dick joke. Thanks, Mason and CBS Chicago.


SEE: PLEASE TELL ME WHY, MY COX-BROWN


 

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Published on January 11, 2013 17:29

January 5, 2013

A READ MY POEM META-POEM

nailpolish stories.

best of 2012 edition.


I

am

June.


that makes me

ridiculously happy.


 

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Published on January 05, 2013 17:45

January 3, 2013

THE NEXT NEXT BIG THING TYPE THING

My man in Glasgow (and fiction editor over there at A-Minor), Kenny Mooney, invited me to take part in a thing called The Next Big Thing, which is kind of a chain letter in the form of a blog post, except it’s more of a self-interview/self-promo/opportunity to promote the work of others sort of thing. So, win/win/win, right? Probably, yes, at least in theory


What is your working title of your book (or story)? PIXEL REVOLT | remixed {+ekphrastic poems based on the John Vanderslice companion album}. This title may very well change.


Where did the idea come from for the book? I am always interested in the way art forms can inspire and/or cannibalize one another; how they can live independent of one another, and still remain intrinsically connected. Being familiar with Vanderslice’s original PIXEL REVOLT album, I was taken with how the instrumental deconstructive remixes had effectively shed their own voices. I felt inspired to imagine new, equally fragmented voices for the music.


NOTE (a):

JV’s Pixel Revolt remix album can be downloaded for free here.


NOTE (b):

An outtake version of one of the poems, PLYMOUTH ROCK (alt. remix), has been recently published by Truck. See it here.


What genre does your book fall under? Poetry. Ekphrastic. Alternative Black Robot Metal [slash] Sentient Data Rock [slash] Down-Core Noise-Wave meets Bruise-Wave in an alley where the former bodies of analog synthesizers once planned the eventual rise of New Conspiracy Theory Post-Content-Core.


Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition? I would like for there to be a robot character called Caramel, who would ideally be played by an actual robot named Caramel. Caramel would be portrayed as a wall of ancient sci-fi military computers projecting audio-video montages, soundtracked by the album & played by a revolving cast of known and unknown actors and actresses. Spoiler alert: You will wonder how you are seeing these images. Four years after the premier of the film, another will be released as a prequel, revealing that Caramel is God and that the concept is God is an illusion created in a 1950s laboratory and placed into the machine-fed collective conscience stream. In short, it will be revealed that we are all of us nothing more than an accumulation of data; we are our stories made of digital fog, and every food we have ever known is nothing more than oyster crackers reconstituted into some other imagined form.


What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book? This is not light; these are not vast breathing oceans.



Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency? I hope to count on the independent small press world to offer a tiny place for it when the time comes, whether in print or online. Failing that, who knows? That the work is read is what matters most.


How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript? It’s a short manuscript—14 short poems based on 14 songs, each with a separate footnote poem (so, 28 poems). Most of the original draft of 14 poems was done in a single album sitting, which was part of the point of the project. A second listen patched up some holes that I’d missed. The footnote poems took another couple of weeks. Some are still in progress. It doesn’t sound like much, I know, but sometimes the real effort is spent finding the right avenue, particularly with ekphrastic work.


What other books would you compare this story to within your genre? As the work contained within the work is of an ekphrastic nature, I think it could hang out casually at parties with WE BURY THE LANDSCAPE by Kristine Ong Muslim and THE MOON & OTHER INVENTIONS:  POEMS AFTER JOSEPH CORNELL by Kristina Marie Darling, though both are full-length books, and in no way am I making direct comparisons to those fine authors or their work.


Who or what inspired you to write this book? Mastodons, mostly. That and the disembodied voices of the doomed crewmen on the spaceship in the 1979 videogame, Asteroids. So, the same stuff as everyone, probably.


What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest? I’m sorry if this wasn’t made clear; this is a poetry chapbook—I know not of these “interested readers” of whom you speak.


+++

Next week, look for The Next Big Thing blog posts from CODE FOR FAILURE author Ryan W. Bradley, the ubiquitous Howie Good, and publishing mogul/textual gangster, Chad Redden.


 

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Published on January 03, 2013 16:57

December 28, 2012

SIX FOR THE PRICE OF NONE

Erik H. Rzepka so very kindly invited me to send him work during his guest editor run this month at TRUCK. It’s a six course kind of thing; please dig in and enjoy.


SEE: SIX PIECES AT TRUCK


 

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Published on December 28, 2012 17:46

December 24, 2012

THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS

Love for Halloweens past (it’s never too late), courtesy of the ever most awesome Beach Sloth. Both “13” and its sequel, “TH1RT3EN: REAN1MAT3D” (artistically declined press), are covered in the way only Beachy can.


SEE: 13


SEE: TH1RT3EN: REAN1MAT3D

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Published on December 24, 2012 16:23