Micro
press generalizations: US and Them
Canada does not have a history of
big-time salty writers the same way the US does. [No one who] ever
really threatened not only the literary world but also the very social
fabric binding the country. ... A first step would be to cut all the
precious grandma lit and throw down more from-the-gut short fiction
and prickly poetry.
by Matthew Firth
It’s a national pastime in this
country to differentiate between Canadian this and American that.
Sports, culture, politics, history, climate, international diplomacy,
guns, abortion, health care, social policy, dope smoking, sexual
behaviours, etc. – the list goes on.
One of the few things I remember from
high school was a Grade Ten history lesson on the "cultural
mosaic" (us) versus the "melting pot" (them). Wouldn’t
Miss Jewel (though I reckon she’s dead) be proud of me now citing this
lesson twenty-five years later. Trite, maybe, but early on we develop
biases when measuring us Canucks against them Yanks. And biases are like
opinions, generalizations and assholes: ubiquitous.
But what of the micro press? Surely the
noble art of smaller than small book publishing is above all this
us-and-them stuff. There must be more similarities, you’d think, than
differences.
A few months back I wrote three
articles for the Ottawa Xpress on the local micro press scene:
The gist of that work showed plenty of
activity but the content of micro press stuff wasn’t all that
different stylistically from what the big presses do – just not as
polished. Ottawa – having a reputation as a staid, soporific town that
hugs the centre line – is perhaps less adventurous than Halifax,
Hamilton or Edmonton when it comes to micro press publishing. I’m not
sure. One thing for sure; the US sample I looked at showed way more
balls, experimentation, irreverence and iconoclasm. I believe this is
linked to different literary traditions in both lands.
Canada does not have a history of
big-time salty writers the same way the US does. We have no one we can
hold up to compare with Henry Miller, Hubert Selby Jr., Charles Bukowski
and Kathy Acker, for example. These are saucy, adventurous,
controversial writers not buried in the small presses and only read by a
few hundred. They are writers – and others cut from the same cloth
(William S. Burroughs, William T. Vollmann, Dennis Cooper, etc.) –
published by larger, influential publishing houses. Their books are/were
hardbound and prominent – front and centre in American literature.
Okay, we had Al Purdy and maybe Leonard Cohen to a certain extent –
but neither of these guys ever really threatened not only the literary
world but also the very social fabric binding the country. That was the
perception with, for example, Miller and Selby, whose books were banned,
burned and decried in the States and elsewhere. Simply put, Canada has
produced very few literary bad asses and those that it has (e.g., Daniel
Jones, Juan Butler) have been marginalized to the small press.
Because of this, you might expect the
Canadian micro press to brim with irreverent writers. But it doesn’t.
It’s dominated by flowery, friendly, reading circle type poets the
average grandma could read without blushing. It’s a terrible letdown,
no, more: a fucking disgrace. However, thanks to the Internet, edgy
micro press stuff is easier to locate these days, meaning if you want
your underground writing to actually evoke that underground spirit, it’s
best to look to our southern neighbours.
Here’s a few examples. Beautiful
Blemish is a collection of short and flash fiction by Kevin Sampsell
(Word Riot Press, p. 96, $9.00). Sampsell is a flexible yet powerful
writer, comfortable whether depicting the seedier side of life, sexual
oddities or just short bursts of ordinary weirdness. "Earotic"
is a poignant story about ear fucking that blends desperation and humour.
"My Old Man" is again doused in humour. It’s an absurd story
about a guy who picks up an old, homeless man on the street and houses
him like a pet. "New Suburban Lit" experiments with form well
without being contrived. The title story crosses sexual fetish with a
skin ailment in a funny story about an older couples’ feisty sexual
shenanigans. Sampsell shows conviction and a human touch in the
collection. He’s got a solid grasp on everyday anguish in stories that
frequently feature ordinary, slightly damaged folks.
Labor Day by Nathan Graziano
(Bottle of Smoke Press, p. 34, $5.00) treads similar terrain to Sampsell’s
collection but Graziano’s fiction is more straight-up, his prose less
succinct. "Pal, the Pit and the Pig" is a great story about
three juxtaposed characters that work in a restaurant: a
recently-graduated, unsure-what-to-do-next, university student, a
psychotic Vietnam vet and a pretentious Swedish-immigrant chef. Graziano
portrays the dull rigours of labour expertly while examining the strange
bonds that often form between co-workers caught in the same mire. There
are plenty of laughs in "Bump in the Road," a story about a
man’s troubles with genital warts. More yucks follow in "The Hand
that Spanks You". But the best story is "Labor Day," a
muscular story about how the peace of a beer-and-barbecue afternoon can
be shattered by the slightest glitch in conversation, spooling
proceedings into stupidity and violence. It’s sort of Trailer Park
Boys meets Bukowski and is definitely the type of fiction rarely
encountered in Canadian publishing of any scale.
Graziano is also the author of Frostbite,
a hardbound short story collection published by Green Bean Press that I’d
classify as more small than micro press. That book also shows he’s a
fine observational writer with a smooth hand at day-to-day dialogue.
Girl Juice by Ritah Parrish
(Heavy Flow, an imprint of Future Tense Books, p. 42, $7.00 Cdn) is a
smart collection of off-beat stories. "I Dwarf You" takes
nutty neighbours to an extreme. Eve moves into her dream flat only to
quickly discover she lives upstairs from a crazy, lesbian dwarf with
only one leg. The dwarf – Debbie – yearns for Eve in a big way and
will stop at nothing (including self-abuse) to win her over.
"Transactions" is a sorrowful drinking tale wherein the female
narrator struggles to sympathize with a junkie stripper and cut her a
break but finds, in the end, that she cannot. Parrish’s prose is tight
and razor-sharp:
I end up driving in circles, through
the streets of North Portland, highly conscious of the horrible facts:
It’s 1:30 in the morning. I am a little drunk. I am lost. My
passenger is a desperate junkie who shoves stuff up her butt for a
living.
The final of the five stories in this
chapbook – "Hit Me Doing Thirtyfive" – is a domestic
nightmare of a story; violence, booze, infidelity feature prominently
but the story is told without exaggeration and without slipping into the
extraordinary. Parrish lets the reader know the suffering here is
ordinary, commonplace and not to be gawked at incredulously.
An exhaustive analysis of Canadian
versus American micro press writing this is not. I’m pretty sure that’s
an impossible undertaking. It’s more musing on a random sample with
some leaping to generalization. Go ahead; shoot me for doing it. But
after thirteen years as a micro press publisher, I stand by my polemic
that Canadian underground writing as a whole has a long way to go before
it can trade punches with its fiery American counterparts. I welcome all
the Canadian micro presses out there to prove me wrong – not by
defensively ranting back at me but by altering what they publish. A
first step would be to cut all the precious grandma lit and throw down
more from-the-gut short fiction and prickly poetry.
Of course I’m not suggesting
knee-jerk mimicry of American micro presses is the way to go. Let’s
leave that sort of behaviour to our new Prime Minister. And there are a
few gutsy and innovative Canadian micro presses (e.g., Edmonton’s
Greensleeve Editions, Stuart Ross’s Proper Tales Press, the defunct
Streetcar Editions). But these presses are by far the minority.
Micro presses should not only be
raucous and punky – there is plenty of room for nuance and variety.
Difference, in fact, should be activated and celebrated fully in
micro presses. The trouble is, in Canada, it isn’t; the micro presses
are far too homogenous and timid and thereby right in step with our mild
and mainstream brand of big press literature. If this were beer, by
comparison, micro breweries would be spewing out the same innocuous
bilge as the big breweries, instead of all the wonderful bocks, stouts,
wheat beers and others that have really livened up suds in this country
in the past twenty years. Sadly, the same can’t be said for micro
presses. What’s needed is more passion, courage and conviction to be
bold and blunt on the printed page at the micro level. Given that many
writers get their start in micro presses, it just might lead to more
dynamic literature at all levels of Canadian publishing.
Matthew Firth is the
editor of Front&Centre
and the publisher of Black Bile Press. www.ardentdreams.com/blackbilepress/
(February 2006) |