STEVE DALACHINSKY Engages
Long Day, Counting Tomorrow by Jim Feast
(Brooklyn: Autonomedia,
2017)
I must praise Feast for his depiction of me or, at least a
character modeled on that wayward waif, Steve Dalachinsky. At that time, I had
not fully acquainted myself with the book and find that the Steve character
doesn’t have much of a role in the story. He’s mainly occupied making pompous
statements on art and getting scolded by his wife. I, of course, never make
such statements.
Here’s something I/he says: “I don’t know about China, but I
feel what you were saying about Tang poetry being all about
capturing-the-moment hits the spot. That’s what Ornette, Ayler and all the free
jazz heads of today have been trying to do. Without a prearranged score, they
create a trellis of notes that match the ambiance of the room and the assembled
feelings of the players.”
What this has to do with Tang poetry is anybody’s guess, but
I know the comparison of jazz to Oriental art is not new. See Bill Evans’
less-than-enlightening discussion of this in, of all places, the liner notes
for Kind of Blue.
The second friend of mine who gets the Feast treatment is
Yuko, my wife. Here is the way he presents her in dialogue with another
character. That character says, “That’s what Japanese poetry was all about
responding totally to the now in all its … its …”
Hiro [Yuko]: “Its nothingness.”
I’ll give it to him here. He does hit off Yuko’s
conversation style of gnomic statements of a proto-existentialist tone. In
fact, I asked (to use the nickname I’ve given him) Feastie Boy how he came to
capture Yuko so well.
He pointed me to a book I had forgotten, her A Sunday Afternoon on the Isle of Museum. I wasn’t sure what he meant but now, paging
through it, I can see what sparked his admiration for her brevity and
concision. Take her piece “August,” in which she looks at various photographs
of people arranged according to their occupational fields: painters,
politicians, movie stars; thumb-nailing each. Of the last group, she writes,
Living in a celluloid mirror,
a moving wagon
or on a gilded stage,
actors, male of female,
know how to stare
into the void.
Yes, it’s the same nothingness motif the character Hiro
brings up, though the poem says a trifle more. To me, one of Yuko’s concerns is
that today’s young people have become unhealthily self-obsessed. Thus, actors,
like today’s youth, are staring into a “void,” but this is not some existential
abyss but rather themselves. Young people’s inner lives are voids, she says,
because they don’t see themselves are fully part of a community. When the film
actor is acting in front of a camera, for an audience that will see the
performance later, she is, thus, forced by circumstances to act only for her
own perceptions. But young people internalize this attitude and begin acting
for themselves, only themselves, in
public. So Yuko says.
At this point, I’m not being self-obsessed but Yuko-obsessed, and a reader may feel
I’ve strayed pretty far from reviewing the book. Not really. Look at Feast’s
introduction to the Unbearable anthology Help
Yourself, the one with the flashy Shalom Neuman cover. In it he describes a
discussion between various characters modeled on his friends. Hint: Yuko = Yoko
Snapple. Here Yoko is discussing actresses!
The cover like most
Feast books is by the Richard Lethem (the father of Jonathan Lethem). Feast
told me he met Lethem the first week he was in New York in 1975 when he moved
into a “commune” in Brooklyn. He has been championing the painter’s work ever
since, including a long piece in the important anthology, edited by Alan
Kaufman, called The Outlaw Bible of
American Art.
Someone recently commented, after looking at the cover on
the Internet, that it was “gruesome.” Lethem depicts a head, thrown back on a
hospital pillow, mouth gaping open, forehead a bright crimson as if his head
were bloody (an emergency room admittee?) or maybe the person is just a redhead
or maybe this is simply a slash of brightness for artistic effect. A tangled
wire rising to the right of the canvas is also red, perhaps blood plasma. Is
the guy depicted male or female? And is the depicted individual dead, dying or
in between?
Like other Lethem works everything Lethem paints seems to be
in extremis. Feast puts this down to
an act of memory, writing on these lines, Lethem has as his subject “a biting,
emotionally caustic, superbly measured indictment of a society that impacted
his childhood [in the Midwest] decades ago, submerged somewhat only to surface
in the times of the civil right riots and postwar militarism.” This is what
gives his work about the present such a deep resonance, in that they scan and
infuse depictions of, say, contemporary racial tension with a continuity that
links them back to the racism he saw in his childhood in the 1930s.
I would also add that like Lethem, Feast’s work is filled
with noir foreboding and deep rich, mysterious textures rather than thick
overlays.
Feast’s book has all the attributions of Lethem’s work
though some cannot be applied to this novel. This is a book, like the
other of Feast’s novels in this series, that overflows with exoticism, menace,
theory and search. Highly recommended.
His book is also set around hospitals. It’s actually
a murder mystery. The description on the back cover reads: “Raskin Hasp is
dying of AIDS, given only a few months to live. Then someone tries to kill
him.” The book is set in 1998, yet, I also think he is, like Lethem, referring
to America’s deeper past. It is an atmospheric, dark serious noir that has, in
Feast’s own words “as much to do with the past as it does the present and
perhaps the future. Like the ravaged demi-world of Nathaniel West’s Miss Lonelyhearts, in which a handful of
broken losers battle an establishment that has all the power and money but none
of their guts.”
2/18
*****
Poet/collagist
Steve Dalachinsky was born in Brooklyn after the last big war and has managed
to survive lots of little wars. His book The Final Nite (Ugly Duckling
Presse) won the PEN Oakland National Book Award. His latest cds are The Fallout
of Dreams with Dave Liebman and Richie Beirach (Roguart 2014) and ec(H)o-system
with the French art-rock group, the Snobs (Bambalam 2015). He has received both
the Kafka and Acker Awards and is a 2014 recipient of a Chevalier D’ le Ordre
des Artes et Lettres. His poem “Particle Fever” was nominated for a 2015
Pushcart Prize. His most recent books include Fools Gold (2014 feral
press), a superintendent's eyes (revised and expanded 2013/14 -
unbearable/autonomedia), flying home, a collaboration with German visual
artist Sig Bang Schmidt (Paris Lit Up Press 2015) and “The Invisible Ray”
(Overpass Press – 2016) with artwork by Shalom Neuman.