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		<title>&#8220;The Face on the Fork: A William Burroughs Triptych&#8221; &#8211; new booklet by Iain Sinclair</title>
		<link>http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/2011/12/15/the-face-on-the-fork-a-william-burroughs-triptych-new-booklet-by-iain-sinclair/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Dec 2011 17:34:26 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[The Face on the Fork: A William Burroughs Triptych]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>An extract from the booklet that will be published later this month by Kevin Ring&#8217;s Beat Scene Press. It&#8217;s called &#8216;The Face on the Fork: A William Burroughs Triptych.&#8217;</p> <p>I have tried to present a refracted portrait of Burroughs through my dealings with him over a forty year period. The portrait comes in three panels.</p> [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>An extract from the booklet that will be published later this month by <a href="http://www.beatscene.net/" target="_blank">Kevin Ring&#8217;s Beat Scene Press. </a>It&#8217;s called &#8216;The Face on the Fork: A William Burroughs Triptych.&#8217;</p>
<p>I have tried to present a refracted portrait of Burroughs through my dealings with him over a forty year period. The portrait comes in three panels.</p>
<p>First, Dublin 1962: establishing contact, receiving a short text from Burroughs.</p>
<p>Next, 1967: my unpublished script for a film with Burroughs that was never made.</p>
<p>Finally, a visit to Lawrence, Kansas, in 1995.</p>
<p>The book is available from <strong>Beat Scene Press, 27 Court Leet, Binley Woods, Coventry, England CV3 2JQ</strong>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.beatscene.net/" target="_blank">www.beatscene.net</a></p>
<p>Price: £6.95 in UK, £7.95 overseas. Edition of 125 copies, numbered and signed.</p>
<p>Cheques payable to M.Ring on by Paypal.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p></blockquote>
<p>LAWRENCE, KANSAS. WINTER. 1995.</p>
<p>Out on the road, through farm country with no signs, neat houses at the end of long tracks, I thought of <em>In Cold Blood. </em>But this was the wrong part of Kansas and we had a date with the wizard. Paul, my companion, didn’t drive. He operated the recording machinery and produced the kind of sound documentaries the BBC no longer commission. After this shot, he would step aside. It was rumoured that he was working on the definitive Croydon novel. If that epic is still in progress, Paul, your moment, post-riots, might well have arrived.</p>
<p>I didn’t know much about Lawrence, the small university town where Burroughs had settled with his companion and minder, Jim McCrary. Kathy Acker told a few colourful stories about riding around town in a customised ambulance, with Burroughs, acting as bait for college boys. We had an address and a time, and we were early. Stopping at a drive-in convenience store to find a street map, I was awed by the longest, meatiest turd I’ve ever seen, floating like a skinless brown python in the crusted lavatory bowl. Much Kansas beef was tinned on the shelves. Alongside the usual gun magazines, sweet drinks and root beer.</p>
<p>Paused across the street from the boxcar-red weatherboard house, in our dark-windowed car, I pictured us as the two characters from Don Siegel’s film of <em>The Killers</em>, the silver-suited hitmen.<em> </em>And that became the motif of my own story, when I came to report this episode. We were agents of fate, not really implicated in the complex Burroughs biography; hirelings in town for an afternoon, to do a job. <em>Nail the mark on tape. Get the shot.</em></p>
<p><em> </em>But Burroughs was too canny, too long in the game. Pale winter sunlight across the table where he sat, waiting for the hour when he would take his first drink. Nothing to be said that had not been said a thousand times before. He talked property prices. He reminisced about meeting Samuel Beckett in Berlin. Beckett stared at the wall. He had nothing to offer, beyond acknowledging that, yes, William Burroughs was indeed a writer.</p>
<p>The voice never rises above a gravel whisper. I have a letter to deliver from Gregory Corso. Burroughs slashes it open with a ceramic knife. ‘Best there is. Cost me $100.’ He reads the message from New York. ‘Humph’, he snorts.</p>
<p>We get the tour, the paintings, the books, mostly science fiction, like unopened gifts on the shelf. Burroughs doesn’t read, he re-reads: Hemingway (‘good on death’), Conrad. A huge cat is sleeping on the master’s sun-dappled bed.</p>
<p>The gaunt old man pokes his cane into the goldfish pond. The orgone accumulator looks like an outdoor privy. We pose for the ritual shot. These visits are about fleshing out the album. In a few years, the writer will fade from the photograph. Strange men standing around an absence on a patch of Kansas grass. ‘One night,’ Burroughs said, ‘a bunch of drunk Indians came over the fence.’</p>
<p>Back inside, books inscribed, drinks poured, Burroughs comes to the revelation. He doesn’t write anymore, he transcribes dreams, a transit lounge to the next stage of existence. He paints, shoots cans. He collects his methadone prescription. A Native American sweat lodge ceremony conjured up, and exorcised, the spirit that had oppressed him for so many years; a spirit in the form of a winged Vietnam War helmet. A spirit representing the ugliness of American materialism and war guilt. A curse laid down at the moment when he shot and killed Joan Volmer in Mexico City. A curse that could only be ameliorated by dedicating his life to writing, taking the dictation of the old ones.</p>
<p><em>Word falling, image falling. </em>Now those dues were paid. The way was clear to the western lands, that eternity of cinema without horizon, space that never ends. Biography plays back as fiction. <em>It is written. </em>The virus is in the order of words on the page. <em>The old writer lived in a boxcar by the river</em>. 1987. <em>The Western Lands</em> published by Viking Penguin. 1987: Burroughs begins painting, rents a studio in a barbed-wire factory building on Kaw riverfront.</p>
<p><em>Forty years ago the writer had published a novel which had made a stir&#8230; Gradually, as he wrote, a disgust for his words accumulated until it choked him&#8230; An old man in a rented house with his cat&#8230; How long does it take a man to learn that he does not, cannot want what he “wants”&#8230; In Tangier the Parade Bar is closed. Shadows are falling on the Mountain&#8230;</em> The last words come from Conrad, ‘I live by my sword’. And from Eliot. ‘Hurry up, please. It’s time.’</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;
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		<title>Max: a celebration. Remembering W.G. Max Sebald</title>
		<link>http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/2011/12/14/max-a-celebration-remembering-w-g-max-sebald/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Dec 2011 19:30:32 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[past events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[talks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[A.S. Byatt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Motion]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Dan Gretton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grant Gee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iain Sinclair]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Julius Drake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Katie Mitchell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marina Warner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rachel Lichtenstein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stephen Watts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[W.G. Max Sebald]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[W.G. Sebald]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Will Stone]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/?p=2637</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Max: a Celebration – Remembering W.G. Sebald <p>Max: a Celebration – Remembering W.G. Sebald</p> <p>Readings, Music and Film &#38; Book Launches: W.G Sebald – Across the Land and the Water: Selected Poems (1964-2001) &#38; Austerlitz – 10th Anniversary Edition, newly introduced by James Wood</p> <p>On the 10th anniversary of his death, a unique event celebrating the late, great writer W.G. [...]]]></description>
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<h2>Max: a Celebration – Remembering W.G. Sebald</h2>
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<p><strong>Max: a Celebration – <em>Remembering W.G. Sebald</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Readings, Music and Film</em></strong> <strong>&amp; Book Launches: W.G Sebald – <em>Across the Land and the Water: Selected Poems </em>(1964-2001) &amp; <em>Austerlitz</em> – 10th Anniversary Edition, newly introduced by James Wood</strong></p>
<p>On the 10th anniversary of his death, a unique event celebrating the late, great writer W.G. Max Sebald; with Anthea Bell, Ian Bostridge, A.S. Byatt, Julius Drake (tbc), Ian Galbraith, Dan Gretton, Grant Gee, Rachel Lichtenstein, Christopher MacLehose, Katie Mitchell, Andrew Motion, Iain Sinclair, Will Stone, Bill Swainson, Marina Warner and Stephen Watts.</p>
<p><strong>Curated</strong> by Gareth Evans; staged in association with Katie Mitchell.</p>
<p>The late <strong>W.G. Sebald</strong> (18.5.44 – 14.12.01) was one of the most acclaimed writers of the last 50 years. Describing his ‘incandescent body of work’, Susan Sontag asked, “is literary greatness still possible? …One of the few answers available to English-language readers is the work of W.G. Sebald… he demonstrates that literature can be, literally, indispensable. He was one by whom literature continues to live.”</p>
<p>Over four key books in the 1990s (<em>Vertigo, The Emigrants, The Rings of Saturn, Austerlitz</em>) he created a style and a range of concerns that has had a huge and ongoing influence on numerous writers, artists and filmmakers. Uniquely hybrid works, his books combine fiction, memoir, history and travelogue into a seamless whole.</p>
<p>Spending almost all his adult life in England, firstly in Manchester and then Norwich, Sebald is perhaps most well-known for the remarkable Suffolk travelogue <em>The Rings of Saturn</em> and his Holocaust fiction<em>Austerlitz</em>, much of which is set in East London and the streets close to Wilton’s Music Hall.</p>
<p>In this unique event, many of Britain’s leading writers and artists celebrate Sebald’s life and writing in an evening of readings, music and film. Drawing from his remarkable <em>oeuvre</em> and their own reflections, on the 10th anniversary of his untimely death, they will honour a man whose profound and searching work has exerted an almost uncanny influence on our times.</p>
<p>Writers taking part include the multi-award winning essayists, novelists and poets A.S. Byatt, Dan Gretton, Rachel Lichtenstein, Andrew Motion, Iain Sinclair, Will Stone, Marina Warner and Stephen Watts. The books launched tonight will be introduced by their translators, Anthea Bell and Iain Galbraith.</p>
<p>One of the world’s greatest tenors, Ian Bostridge, will sing from Schubert’s iconic song cycle <em>Winterreise</em>, with remarkable accompaniment by Julius Drake (tbc).</p>
<p>Award-winning filmmaker Grant Gee (<em>Joy Division</em>) will present an exclusive ‘landscape edit’ of his forthcoming feature essay film <em>Patience (After Sebald),</em> a multi-layered meditation on landscape, art, history, life and loss, and the first film internationally about Sebald. It is produced by Artevents (<a href="http://www.artevents.info/" target="_blank">www.artevents.info</a>) and released in the UK in January 2012 by Soda Pictures (image from film).</p>
<p>Finally, it is a privilege to announce that Sebald’s UK publisher Christopher MacLehose and his editor Bill Swainson will attend and share their recollections.</p>
<p>There will be an event bookshop provided by independent booksellers Pages of Hackney (<a href="http://pagesofhackney.co.uk/" target="_blank">http://pagesofhackney.co.uk</a>). Event filmed by Fugitive Images (www.fugitiveimages.org.uk).</p>
<p>Many thanks to Andrew Wylie, Luke Ingram, The Wylie Agency and the Estate of W.G.Sebald; and to Simon Prosser, Joe Pickering and Anna Kelly at Penguin Books.</p>
<p><strong>Booking Information:</strong></p>
<p>Dates: Wednesday 14th December</p>
<p>Times: Starts 7:30pm</p>
<p>Prices: £17.50</p>
<p>Link: <a href="http://www.wiltons.org.uk/listings/max-sebald.html" target="_blank">http://www.wiltons.org.uk/listings/max-sebald.html</a></p>
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		<title>Ghost Milk and Other Tales of Walking</title>
		<link>http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/2011/12/03/ghost-milk-and-other-tales-of-walking/</link>
		<comments>http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/2011/12/03/ghost-milk-and-other-tales-of-walking/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Dec 2011 17:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Bristol]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[festival of ideas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ghost Milk]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Iain will be today at the Bristol Festival of Ideas</p> <p>Link: http://www.ideasfestival.co.uk/?p=2330#more-2330</p> <p>Iain Sinclair is a great walker and writer of cities and places. His latest book, Ghost Milk, looks at our possible futures as well as making his most powerful statement yet on the throwaway impermanence of the present. It is a story of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Iain will be today at the Bristol Festival of Ideas</p>
<p>Link:<a href=" http://www.ideasfestival.co.uk/?p=2330#more-2330" target="_blank"> http://www.ideasfestival.co.uk/?p=2330#more-2330</a></p>
<p>Iain Sinclair is a great walker and writer of cities and places. His latest book, Ghost Milk, looks at our possible futures as well as making his most powerful statement yet on the throwaway impermanence of the present. It is a story of incident and accident, of the curious meeting the bizarre. Police raids and mass expulsions jostle with accounts of failed grand projects: the Millennium Dome, Thames Gateway, and numerous other half-completed, ill-advised or abandoned structures. Iain Sinclair will be in discussion with Anita Sethi.<br />
How to book<br />
Price: £7.20 / £5.60. Contact Arnolfini, Bristol on: 0117 917 2300, book online, or visit in person.</p>
<p>Events start punctually and, out of consideration to other audience members and speakers, our policy is not to admit or issue refunds to latecomers. Please allow enough time to collect your ticket/s from the relevant box office (if these haven&#8217;t already been posted to you), and make sure to arrive before the advertised start time to take your seat/s.
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		<title>Reading in Brighton</title>
		<link>http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/2011/11/24/reading-in-brighton/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 2011 00:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[past events]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Lee Harwood]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Tom Raworth]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/?p=2209</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Nov 24th in Brighton (Lee Harwood &#38; Tom Raworth have been mentioned in this context).</p> <p>Organised by Pighog (who published &#8216;Postcards from the 7th Floor&#8217;).</p> Brighton Poetry Festival 2011 &#160; &#160; Brighton Poetry Festival this year originated in serendipitous cooperation with other organisers as well as in our own eclectic &#8216;mix&#8217;. It&#8217;s a festival energised [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nov 24th in Brighton (Lee Harwood &amp; Tom Raworth have been mentioned in this context).</p>
<p>Organised by Pighog (who published &#8216;Postcards from the 7th Floor&#8217;).</p>
<table width="600.0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
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<td valign="top"><strong>Brighton Poetry Festival 2011</strong></td>
<td valign="middle">&nbsp;</td>
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<td valign="top">Brighton Poetry Festival this year originated in serendipitous cooperation with other organisers as well as in our own eclectic &#8216;mix&#8217;. It&#8217;s a festival energised by the quality of all the writing. One of Pighog&#8217;s defining characteristics is our unwillingness to be bracketed in a particular poetic school or school of poetics &#8211; a resilience that has led us to be rebuked by some and courted by others. But Pighog is nobody&#8217;s patsy. We are eclectic: &#8216;In ancient use, the distinguishing epithet of a class of philosophers who neither attached themselves to any recognized school, nor constructed independent systems, but &#8216;selected such doctrines as pleased them in every school&#8217; (<em>OED</em>). Pighog is anti-systematising, anti-totalising. We&#8217;re not sure we like people who think they have &#8216;the answer&#8217;, but equally we are always ready to be challenged, to learn and to engage in dialogue.</p>
<p>The invitation and promise of the festival fulfil what Pighog has always believed &#8211; that poetic language is and has energy, and a very special energy at that &#8211; connecting at one range of its spectrum with the public and political, at another with the intensely felt and personal; at yet another with language as bodily function, physically generated and located in a space; at still another with plough and harrow, turning up new material (almost as it&#8217;s needed) at the same time as harrowing and mashing the old, the redundant, the hackneyed.</p>
<p>A barometer, &#8216;is an instrument for determining the weight or pressure of the atmosphere, and hence for judging probable changes in the weather (<em>OED</em>). Here at Pighog, in a battered old case, we have a unique poetic barometer, and over the last year it&#8217;s needle has been swinging wildly between different traditions and poetics. But as the pressure of desire for imaginative and visionary political change slowly builds it&#8217;s noticeable that the needle is steadying towards poetic experiment and revitalisation, transforming and subverting both traditional forms and attenuated postmodernist phrasemaking at one and the same time. Word-smatter and language poetry, just as much as the wry turn and ironic wit of the conformist English lyric, are challenged by the mettle of new and younger dynamics, absorbing, synthesising and superseding older forms, habits, growths.</p>
<p>You&#8217;ll find that &#8216;language energy&#8217; at every event in the festival. But as well as attending the events that reaffirm your particular poetic, Pighog would also encourage you to attend the events that challenge your particular notion of poetry.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s the unique evening with Harwood, Raworth and Sinclair (Thursday 24 November) &#8211; a perhaps never to be repeated meeting of poets who have supercharged English poetry in ways yet to be fully acknowledged. The needle of the poetic barometer, with a glint of sixties déjà vu, is certainly flickering back in their direction.</p>
<p>There are the skilled and accessible poetics of Ciaran O&#8217;Driscoll &#8211; poetry rich in rhythm and cadenced beauty &#8211; contrasted with and complemented by the pared down elegance and power of Hugo Williams, both set off by the discrimination and delicacy of Kay Syrad&#8217;s distinctive word work. (Wednesday 23 November)</p>
<p>There are open mic opportunities a plenty when fresh voices can charm and challenge on Wednesday 23 and on Tuesday 22 , when Neil Rollinson and Brendan Cleary bring their earthy centredness and lack of &#8216;fancy footwork&#8217; to entertain and enchant any audience, in company with Susie Campbell and her unusual diary poems that chart months of emotional weather.</p>
<p>On Friday 25 November, Lorna Thorpe will be launching her new collection from Arc &#8211; Sweet Torture of Breathing. Expect robust, questioning poetry, poetry that gets audiences&#8217; heads nodding in affirmation of content, sound and feeling. Lorna Thorpe is a consummate reader and performer of her work. Audiences connect with her accessible poetry, often written from and about the heart, but sparkling with a self-deprecating wit and lightness of touch. Visceral and intelligent, her readings are a complete experience. She plans her delivery carefully with an ear for dramatic impact &#8211; every performance is a journey for audience and poet. Charlotte Gann, Pighog&#8217;s most recent Sussex series poet, will be joining Lorna together with musicians led by Simon Beavis.</p>
<p>And for the festival finale on Saturday 26 November, four very different top flight poets will provide a memorable evening of the finest contemporary poetry. In association with and introduced by Mark Hewitt from Lewes Live Lit, Mimi Khalvati launches her new collection (from Carcanet) Child. Hosted by Jackie Wills, Peter and Ann Sansom (of Smith&#8217;s Doorstop and Poetry Business fame) make a rare appearance in Brighton. And to round the evening off, one of Sussex&#8217;s favourite poets &#8211; Catherine Smith &#8211; with poems both tantalising and terrific (in more ways than one).</p>
<p>In addition to the marvellous mix of voice and subject at the 8pm readings every evening, there are also shorter free readings at 6pm on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday with Rachel Woolf, Philip Pollecoff (Chair of the Poetry School), Mark Whelan and Clare Best.</p>
<p>Tickets for the 8pm events are available now on our website. Early booking is advised as capacity is limited and by booking your ticket in advance you&#8217;ll have a seat reserved for you at the venue. For best value you can invest in a festival pass which will entitle you to a reserved seat at all of the 8pm readings. At just £16 (£10 concessions) it&#8217;s a real snip.</p>
<p>So a poetry festival as juicy, as tender and as tasty as a suckling pig, hence the name! Pigbaby. Brighton Poetry Festival 2011. Come and enjoy this autumnal feast!</p>
<p>Looking forward to meeting you there.</p>
<p>With best wishes</p>
<p>John Davies, <em>Director</em><br />
PIGHOG PRESS</td>
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		<title>At the Richmond Book Festival</title>
		<link>http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/2011/11/16/at-the-richmond-book-festival/</link>
		<comments>http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/2011/11/16/at-the-richmond-book-festival/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Nov 2011 20:00:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[past events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[talks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Richmond Book Festival]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.iainsinclair.org.uk/?p=2191</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Iain will be appearing at the Richmond Book Festival.</p> <p>16 Nov 2011. 8pm.</p> <p>Clarendon Hall, York House, Richmond Road, Twickenham TW1 3AA</p> <p>Apples &#38; Snakes Poetry </p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Iain will be appearing at the Richmond Book Festival.</p>
<p>16 Nov 2011. 8pm.</p>
<p>Clarendon Hall, York House, Richmond Road, Twickenham TW1 3AA</p>
<p>Apples &amp; Snakes Poetry
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