Galatea
Resurrects is pleased to present an excerpt from
Sheila E. Murphy’s book-length poem Reporting
Live from You Know Where which recently was awarded The Hay(na)ku Poetry Book Prize judged by hay(na)ku experts Vince Gotera, Jean Vengua, and Mark
Young. Sheila’s manuscript will be
published by the original publishers of the first hay(na)ku anthologies,
Meritage Press (San Francisco & St. Helena) and xPress(ed) (Finland), in
2018. About this book, we also present
some advance words by other poets who’ve written extensively in the hay(na)ku form:
Reporting Live from
You Know Where is a jeremiad, a book of lamentations,
a poem "it/hurts to/write." It is an edgy and affecting work of
political art. It is Murphy's masterpiece.
—Tom Beckett
In her powerful new hay(na)ku long poem, Sheila E. Murphy
brings her ceaselessly resourceful troping, her bold, imaginative leaps of
association, to bear on our contemporary U.S. political situation,
"replete/ with despair." Countering the "assault on sensate//
being" with processual poises, she keenly exposes "rancor
ill-disguised// as/ confidence" and "patriarchal dross."
Although we learn that "it/ hurts to/ write this poem," Murphy will
not permit us to be "excused/ from attention/ spanning," as she sings:
"my/ country 'tis/ in pain, please// recover who we/ are again."
—Thomas Fink
Readers will recognize where Sheila E. Murphy is coming from. You will find such pleasure reading between the lines, meditating, and musing on the text, as she navigates recent history, modern-day politics, and popular culture, with her usual deftness, and musicality, that create an internal rhythm, sometimes through displacement, humor, measure, or esthetics. No matter what avenue Murphy takes, she will make you think. You will witness her expertise as with other verse forms, such as the non-English ghazal (the hay(na)ku is itself a naturalized form of the haiku), and will be affected by her spirituality. An evocative tour de force from one of America's leading contemporary poets.
—Javant Biarujia
Readers will recognize where Sheila E. Murphy is coming from. You will find such pleasure reading between the lines, meditating, and musing on the text, as she navigates recent history, modern-day politics, and popular culture, with her usual deftness, and musicality, that create an internal rhythm, sometimes through displacement, humor, measure, or esthetics. No matter what avenue Murphy takes, she will make you think. You will witness her expertise as with other verse forms, such as the non-English ghazal (the hay(na)ku is itself a naturalized form of the haiku), and will be affected by her spirituality. An evocative tour de force from one of America's leading contemporary poets.
—Javant Biarujia
from Reporting Live from You Know
Where
nothing about this
feels quite
familiar
*
so
blanking what
just drive on
stamina may denote
routine energy
expenditure
or
possibly investment,
your eminence,
in
reporting live from
you know
where
all
the commandments
stand alone, until
you can, yes,
put your
arms
around
this little
leader, you are
not yet God,
only partly
human
it
hurts to
write this poem,
*
protect
and serve
first do no
harm, that motorcade
proceeding unimpeded
along
wide
crowdless roadways
empty of feeling
yet replete with
despair the
new
normone
catastrophic contagion
of sleazed over
unfeelingness father, forgive
them for
whatever
(t)reason
first person
irregular monstrosity boomer
boombox boomerang the
litmus doppelganging
up
on
honeymooning vagabonds
this close to
sentimental journey remembered
wrong homonyms
stronghold
sounding
oversimplified take
the day on,
not off, think
if you
agree
practice
makes pure
watch this space
*****
Sheila
E. Murphy is an American text and visual poet who has been writing and
publishing actively since 1978. She is the recipient of the Gertrude Stein
Award for her book Letters to Unfinished J. (Green Integer Press, 2003).
Murphy is known for working in forms including ghazals, haibun, and pantoums in
her individual writing. As an active collaborator, she has worked with numerous
writers in long poems spanning multiple volumes. Murphy’s visual work,
both individual and collaborative, is shown in galleries and in private
collections. Initially trained in instrumental and vocal music, her work is
often associated with music in its language and rhythmic pulse. Murphy earns
her living as an organizational consultant, speaker, and researcher and holds
the PhD degree. She has lived in Phoenix, Arizona throughout her adult
life. Sheila E. Murphy’s Wiki Page.