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Shared. Not Burned.

Mackin Books Day 092213Evidences indicated that Steve Mackin might be present at the Poetry Hotel yesterday. There were periodic knockings that sounded like someone was at the door but when we opened it, in rushed a draft of cold air. Of course, each time we faced the unseen, we said, “C’mon in!”

And when I am dead
Let the dirges be sung
To the turban mad twirl
Of the dervish and Hun
On the field of twilight
As the moon mugs the sun

Bill Mercer opened the reading with Dylan Thomas’ In My Craft of Sullen Art, a poem Steve liked to recite when he attended a reading for the first time, or just for the love of it.  One of Steve’s poems was read too. Imagine him growling and cursing if  no one bothered to read his poems at his memorial Salon!

And when I am dead
I will leave not a mark
Except for these poems
That I carved on the heart
Of the veil of the night
As Venus fucks Mars

Steve’s friends came and went all day, picking from the thirty-four boxes of Steve’s books that his family gave away. The portrait of James Joyce (painted by Chris Trian and commissioned by Steve) looked on as we performed this intimate activity: going through one’s library that took years to build.

And when I am dead
Why then build me a pyre
Of my books and my poems
Consign me to fire
Oh sing then rude cantos
of the ruin of desire

We didn’t burn any books. If Steve’s poem was his last will, we certainly did not executive it properly. But no matter how fiercely the wind protested outside, Steve would have loved seeing his books taken up by appreciative hands. We all had a part of you now, Steve.

 

Photo by Vern Peralta.
When I Am Dead, by Steve Mackin.

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Click to Publish

Years ago I walked into Tower Records and was shocked that their LP collection had shrunk into a corner.  The world had changed to CDs without me.  Today the same sense of awe strikes me when I receive a print on demand book from Amazon. A book is printed and shipped within days. There is practically no cost for the author to publish a professionally printed book.  E-Publishing has evolved to a point that cannot be ignored.

Things that have become/are becoming obsolete:  typewriter, newspapers, land-line phones, encyclopedias, film cameras, the Yellow Pages, etc..  I don’t have nostalgic feelings for these things.  And for authors, this might just be the golden age of publishing.

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Twenty Years, Twenty Poems

Steve Mackin at the SF Poetry TV Show. Click to watch.

At the end of the Thursday tarot soiree conversation turned to the internet and its effect on musicians.  The prevalent file sharing culture is challenging copyrights.  And if you protect and charge for your music chances are the audience will turn away from you and go to the ones that are giving out their music for free.

“Take Lady Gaga, for example,”  our pianist host Richard said, “she was giving her songs out for free until she built up a large following. She makes her money from her tours.”

I think of my friend Steve Mackin, who is always generous in giving out his poems.  Earlier in the year he read twenty poems in twenty minutes to commemorate his twenty years of writing poetry.  That and his most recent reading were accompanied by free books that he painstakingly printed, collated and stapled together.  I appreciate having the poems in my hands after a reading to savor at another time.  By giving, Steve’s poems are in circulation.  I don’t think anybody ever “burst” into a scene.  It all takes hard work, and Steve is planting the seeds.

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