Monday, 26 July 2010
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
Blue Hues - A poem from 'Rubber Orchestras'
This is another poem from my work-in-progress, forthcoming collection, Rubber Orchestras.
Blue Hues
She said
blue, like a strange heel
steps out of bed
hunting with devilish technique
like trick bag in the white broad’s hand
The river forest hid a palace
recap of the blue slash and pocket
we walked, sliver of a deep,
her confection was flame-red
like bursting inside
Exquisite, and parted her lips
cheek bones of her
beat back the black hustler
drag played the con for sure
like old crow whiskey
in the swedish bosom of her lullabye
her hairy thighs quivered
side of the bed
blue like fifteen echoes of winter
southbound to boulevards of dirty kickbacks
weeping like Bessie
Smith with her speckled head
she guaranteed a 50-50 split
There was a funk box in the rocking room
I was years well heeled
I played a tight con
in the hard eyed world of big time crooks
once, the half witch crushed blood in my rainstorm
and awfully in love
I wore a brokedick hat like a jitney driver
starving in a bargain for coins and Dutch head
with a broken shinbone
dope racket slick and mean
like some hurting thing
till the leather tong snapped
and sealed the sweet miracle
of her breath and hip
blue blowoff in the slum section
built upstairs
of gorilla pussy and champagne.
Tuesday, 23 March 2010
Poem for Franklin Rosemont
This is another poem from my forthcoming Rubber Orchestras collection. This time, a poem written in tribute to the late Franklin Rosemont, leader of the Chicago Surrealist Group.
Poem for Franklin Rosemont
beyond words
or destinations
visual and multiplying
intricate and persistent
they found a faraway place
in paris
its potential splendour
hid sequels and contrary sex
in the early hours of 1960
proclivities
of struggle and synthesis
within the most complete utopia
of fire and speed
dream letters
were drowned
in invisible stars
silent suburbs of jazz and primitive hell
were spontaneously glimpsed
in rigid cities
in which these souvenirs
were read
at the chicago public library
shuddering
loosley
in method and name
on the avenue between Greene and Zion
intergalactic radio
sent a message
unifying voice
like a violin
during the anxious months of miracles
and triple time
proto-hip like every second syllable, free floating
like a giggle to the subversive current
of eden’s swift sea
by prime energy of libido
by degrees of fear
darker skin and the fragment of shadow
lucid and unique
as paradox to paradox
as serious as blue silk
These are the definitions of the palace of signs
these are the masks with which
I hitchhiked across the wonderland
and travelled by radio
to resemble that mask
eccentric and boundless
in the image of you.
Belladonna in the South seas
further
past stairs and doorways past
afro-american ruins
bamboo by the dozen among those denizens of marvellous film
dead
yet actually distant
and exhilarating
like dissident blues swung from the zydeco
in the brutal suburbs of Pharaoh Sanders
emerging
from light
into some literary response
Sunday, 21 March 2010
Black Brown and Beige : Surrealist Writings from Africa and the Diaspora
Thursday, 11 March 2010
Caribbean Erotic Anthology

I have some work included in this new anthology of Erotic Caribbean writing. Many years in the making. My contribution is called 'The RealTime Trajectory of Explicit Love'.
A wide-ranging anthology of poetry, short fiction, and critical essays designed to generate thought about what is still a conflicted area of Caribbean literature and culture, this revealing, in-depth examination explores the many facets of the erotic in contemporary Caribbean literature—from desire; the psychology of abusive relationships; the role of fantasy; and issues of infidelity, lust, rape, self-respect, self-love, and child-birth. This anthology also discusses the Caribbean frameworks of sexuality as a cultural construct, from the role of machismo, homophobia, and Protestant-fundamentalist sexual ideologies as specific forms of denial and hostility to the open expression of sexual desire. The essays then extend the book’s scope beyond literature and consider the impact of the erotic upon other aspects of Caribbean life, ranging from song lyrics to the general issues of female empowerment in Caribbean societies. Featuring the work of well-known writers such as Nalo Hopkins, Colin Channer, Kwame Dawes and the work of many fresh new talents such as Obediah Michael Smith, Christian Campbell, and Tiphanie Yanique, this anthology aims to create a new framework in which the full spectrum of the erotic in Caribbean literature and life can be freely explored.
Buy it from Peepal Tree : http://www.peepaltreepress.com/single_book_display.asp?isbn=9781845230890
Friday, 5 March 2010
Work included in two new anthologies
Sunday, 17 January 2010
"Riff for Morton" from "Rubber Orchestras"

This is the a poem from a new collection I'm working on, Rubber Orchestras. The collection will feature 100 poems, and will be published in early 2011 if all goes to plan. More soon.
Riff for Morton
Damper down
both phallic and acquainted
with African blues.
The hips suggest
good jazz )(i.e.sex)
Anita, 1900.
the african fiction of whiteness is absolute.
arcade saloons and dance halls
gambling down like evil or false notes
blue notes of white magic
Jelly roll morton
at the cadillac cafe
pimp or piano drunk and sick
on the bricktops of vancouver
Ragtime Billy
from Chicago
a clarinetist at the Regent
1923
went southwest with the wrath of poseidon
gambling down
in terrific storms which broke down
the pensacola kid
at the Paradise gardens
with the first three notes of Dead Man Blues
and The Pearls
yes he left mamanita, yes he left
yes he let his beard grow
spat blood in the broom closet
yes he let his beard grow
there were many diamonds
she left many diamonds
cash on cadillac cars
duke ellington
had swing bands
basie and calloway
had a cluster of tricks
which in fact were as spikes at kingpin sessions
and in the exact rooms of the kidworth hotel
where days passed like clinic cards
Morton left the sepia spot and took his body to the jungle inn
on 126 North West
Red Peppers and the attack of alibi, restless priests
listening to Pops Mabel
at the church of intercourse
Jelly you rascal
you minstrel
you lover
you bone meat of the creole caribbean
- vicious semen, Jelly
bake ‘em brown and break a banjo across their backs
jelly you blues talker
1930
the worried blues and the voodoo of your laughter
stepping lean in stove pipes
with the prestige of your father
to the very end.