Making Memories Together - What creative moments will stay with you forever? by Dan Holloway
Today is National Flash Fiction Day. It would be fairly
criminal of me not to state that from the outset. First off, this is the first
time ever we’ve celebrated this marvellous form as a nation – the Arts Council
have even got behind it. Second, tonight, as part of the shindig, we’re holding a flash slam in Oxford, combining the worlds of poetry slam and flash fiction
as twelve of the UK’s finest practitioners battle it out, reading their stuff
in front of an audience and celeb judge, the short fiction legend Tania
Hershman. If you’re anywhere near Oxford,
do come along to what will be a truly wonderful evening. And if you’re not,
please do check out what’s going on in your area. Third, to celebrate National Flash Fiction Day, my two short fiction collections are free for today and tomorrow:
(life:) razorblades included contains some award-winning short stories and poems with some adult content. Free in the UK and elsewhere
Ode to Jouissance also has some award-winning shorts of a lyrical nature, exploring questions of ageing and identity in 20th century Europe. Free in the UK and elsewhere
(life:) razorblades included contains some award-winning short stories and poems with some adult content. Free in the UK and elsewhere
Ode to Jouissance also has some award-winning shorts of a lyrical nature, exploring questions of ageing and identity in 20th century Europe. Free in the UK and elsewhere
And whilst we’re on the subject of invitations, here is
something to which I want to invite you all. My new poetry collection, Last Man
Out of Eden, is out on June 12th, and there will be an ebook (STOP PRESS: the ebook is available now for 99p HERE), but
it’s performance poetry (below is a video of one my favourite poem from the
book, Hungerford Bridge, performed in Gloucester earlier this month), so I’ll
mainly be selling it at shows, and what better than a book with accompanying CD.
And to make the CD, I’ll be holding a free recital of all 9 poems at The AlbionBeatnik in Oxfordon 8th June and recording the show. I hope it might be the chance to
be part of something rather fun.
Which brings me to the question and reminiscence part of the post. Don’t worry – I WILL get there!
(with Katelan Foisy at Covent Garden Poetry Cafe)
Last Man Out of Eden draws directly for many of its poems on
my friendship with the writer and photographer Cody James and the writer,
model, artist, and publisher Katelan Foisy, whom I met through Cody and with
whom I collaborated on a wonderful event in Oxford this time in 2010, Lilith
Burning, for which Katelan dressed as Lilith and whilst we walked around Oxford
I took photos of people’s reactions to her. We made the photos into an artwork
and invited everyone we’d pictured to a reading of stories based on the Lilith
myth. I don’t think I can remember having my head pulled in so many wonderfully
creative directions. Katelan was only in the UK for a few days before heading
back to New York
but it’s a creative relationship I am delighted to say is still going to this
day.
Katelan was in the UK primarily to launch her book
Blood and Pudding, the story of her relationship with her childhood best
friend, Holly. She’s an obsessive recorder, and during one glorious,
sun-drenched, xanax-fuelled road trip she left tapes running the whole time,
and the transcription of their conversations forms the majority of the book.
The rest comprises anecdotes from the few years between that trip and Holly’s
death from a heroin overdose. It is, without doubt, the most life affirming
book I’ve ever read, the most unsentimental and beautiful celebration of a life
(standing alongside that other great doyenne of New York art, Patti Smith and
the exquisite Just Kids, the story of her ill-fated but wonderfully productive
friendship with the late great Robert Mapplethorpe).
(Cody in San Francisco)
My own brush with creative friendship and tragedy came
through our Cody, who had introduced us. One of the most extraordinary moments
of my literary life came when I performed a duet with her of her story Fifteen
Minutes From the Golden Gate Bridge, one of many heartbreaking and coruscating
pieces she has written based on her time in San Francisco in the 1990s, where meth
addiction and schizophrenia nearly killed her. Thankfully it didn’t, and I have
had the privilege of working with her for two years, and through two suicide
attempts on her part. She is now so ill I don’t know if she will ever write
again, but what we achieved in the time we had was remarkable. There is
something transcendent about creative friendships, and Last Man Out of Eden is
a celebration of that – and of the importance of living whilst we can. Many of
the poems are about or for Cody, like Hungerford Bridge.
And below is one I wrote for Katelan, simply called Holly. There are two
quotations in the front of the book, one from each of them. Together they sum
it up, and pay tribute to the three beautiful lives of Holly, Katelan, and
Cody:
“sometimes we can’t make the world a better place, and
there’s nothing to do but tell the truth” (Cody James)
“go out and live. And live. And go on living, because you
never know when it’ll stop” (Katelan Foisy, Blood and Pudding)
Which brings me to the question – what moments of your
creative life will stay with you forever? Who set you on this path? Writing is
often a solitary profession, but often it is only in the completely creatively
safe space of the company of one special person who completely “gets” what
we’re trying to do that we can truly explore and start to bloom. How about we
spare a comment to remember someone special.
Holly
Just a road trip,
That’s what it seemed.
Two more teenage hipsters
Zipped on xanax
Paying lip service to the Kerouac
dream.
Holly’s hands on the wheel
My feet on the dash
And the sun splashed
Our lips
And every rash decision
Slipped into our private
mythology,
Major key rips in a minor
key mixology.
We lived at 200 beats a
minute.
I was drum and she was
bass.
Life was numb and we
chased
The sun from dawn to dusk,
The dust in our face.
The delirious race left us
crazed
Till we spent days playing
space invaders
On porn booth joysticks,
Placed every cent on black
Jacked up
And had infinities
tattooed on our backs
To seal our Beatnik pact.
But Holly wasn’t so strong.
I think I’d known all
along
She was no survivor
And now she was falling
apart.
I tried to revive her
By making our lives into
art.
I tried so hard
But her life was a shard
that had stopped reflecting the light,
Her heart was the dark on
a starless night.
I couldn’t keep her safe
from harm,
I couldn’t be her lucky
charm,
And when she placed it in
my palm and pleaded
I couldn’t even put the
needle in her arm.
Just a road trip,
In truth it’s already fading.
Her outline’s lost its
shading.
Our friends have got desk
jobs and jaded,
There’s little left of
those two teenagers.
Kerouac and Cassady are
someone else’s dream
And Ginsberg is their
melody
But Holly is their theme.
Hungerford
Bridge
Remember the day we lay
under Hungerford Bridge
And London stopped, just for us?
Like balletic bullets in a
John Woo film
We toured the stillness.
Skateboards and blades
played our private soundtrack
Scored from the clacketing
Backbeats of the
Thamesside track.
We played hopscotch on
Bankside,
Poured pints of London
Pride
And downed them on the
docks in Rotherhithe,
Embraced in the space
between Bridget Riley’s stripes,
Defaced the latest White
Cube canvas hype
With lines of lust typed
blind on absinthe
And declaimed them to the
planeless skies from Trafalgar’s empty
plinth.
Neon flared through our
Soho lair
And electric reflections
glared.
We spotted pimps and toms
in strip joints coming up for air
And in clip joints frotted
by despairing gimps and johns,
The silenced timpani of Dean Street’s daily
song.
We stole tubes of lube and
90 percent proof,
Got pissed on Chelsea rooftops,
Fisted, lay on Wembley’s centre
spot
And kissed till our lips
were blistered
And our minds went
missing.
We met them by the river.
An army of the alkies and
the dispossessed,
The depressed, repressed,
the not so easily impressed,
The inconsolable and
unconfessed
Who repossessed their
lives for just one night
Howling Baudelaire like
loons
And raving by a quarter
moon,
Piping crazy tunes across
the water –
A glorious guttersnipe
Brigadoon.
Forget the lazy days,
The backward gaze, the
haze, the sugar glaze we paint upon our
yesterdays.
We tattooed London in our veins,
Inked in electricity and
linked up to the mains,
Its maze of urban
arteries,
Its winding streets that
bleed from us
Plying meths to find the
key to us,
Suppress the lethargy that
hides our dreams from us
That lies against our
sighing breast to squeeze from us
The dying breaths that
wheeze from us
And leak into a lullaby
that pleads with us –
Remember the day we lay
under Hungerford Bridge
And London stopped, just for us.
Comments
John Dickson. A man of few words and most of them 'happy.' He loved to jump and wave his hands. He fell and broke his neck. But he's still happy. And he's the only person who laughs at my jokes IN ALL THE RIGHT PLACES. He taught me the true nature of shared creativity. And how to be happy.
I didn't realise the Slam is tonight. I've got myself a clash already tonight, to go with Kay to the Artweeks forum in the Natural History Museum or Cherry Mosteshar's writing workshop iun Blackwells, though it's non-fiction tonight and I won't have much input, and staying at home because I put my back out yesterday and though it feels better now, you never know.
I'll get to hear you on June 8 I hope. And I'll drop copies of the Oxford Writer round to the Albion, with your great articlke Not the Oxford Oxford LiteraryFestival.
I'm waiting for nreaction to it!
And so I did. And Blackwell Scientific published it.
If I could do that, then I could write about travelling, couldn't i? So I did.
Jennie - yes, it's one reason I'm a sucker for films like American Graffiti. My friendship with Cody feels that intense form the other direction - she has been so ill ever since I've known her that I've been aware of the need to savour every second
Julia - then to add one more to the lexicon - the highest scoring piece at tonight's event was a piece of flarf by Anna Hobson that left the whole room aching and crying with laughter. Flarf is one form of alt.lit as I think it's written (avant garde digital stuff) - it's where phrases are lifted from the internet word for word. Anna used status updates from dating sites. It sounds like an easy target but despite the copious belly laughs she also wove it into a beautifully rhythmed and rhymed story. As we're electric, I should dedicate a piece to it next month