The
Halo-Halo Review is
pleased to interview authors in the aftermath of a book's release. This
issue’s feature is Paolo Javier.
What is your most recent book?
Court of the Dragon (Nightboat Books).
When was it released?
June 2015.
What has been the response?
Thrilling, to say the
least. Some highlights:
- On the eve of
the book's launch, the great Ian Frazier of The New Yorker
interviewed me for a Talk of the Town profile. (I've been a long
time fan of Mr. Frazier's writing, so you can imagine the bright smile on my dark face
when he starts quoting lines of my poetry during our meeting.)
- The brilliant
occult/cinema studies scholar and novelist Alan Ramon Clinton wrote an
appreciative essay, 'Paolo Javier's Double Seance', published in
The Volta.
- Lynne Sachs, one of my
fave filmmakers, made a short film with Sean Hanley, Starfish Aorta
Colossus, in response to/adapting one of the sonnets from a long sequence
of the same name in Court of the Dragon. Starfish Aorta Colossus
has made the rounds in a number of important experimental film festivals,
including the recent Black Maria Film Festival, where it received an award.
- Court of the Dragon
also opened the door to a new
collaboration with the brilliant electronic artist Listening Center,
aka David Mason.
- Inclusion in this year's
Greater
New York show @ MoMA PS1, where I invited Listening Center to
perform with me.
- Publisher's Weekly, not
usually a reviewer of experimental poetry, wrote some
nice things about the book. (Why is it filed under
'fiction'?)
What has surprised you about the response?
I should first acknowledge
the response from Stephen Motika, editor/publisher extraordinaire, who
championed the manuscript from the-get. This surprised me; Court of the
Dragon's "composed indeterminacy" (to borrow from Joan Retallack)
& esoteric designs would've turned most publishers away. Not only does Nightboat accept my m.s., but they also publish a version that exceeds my expectations.
It's a nice book.
Given that I have zero
presence on social media (I've been Facebook-free since 2010), I am, of course,
grateful for any attention given to CoD. But I'm especially thrilled to
hear from writers and artists I respect. Fellow Nightboater Jill Magi posted this blog recently. And at the end of a Nightboat reading in the city last month, Alex Katz, one of my
all-time favorite painters, walked over to tell me that he bought a copy
of CoD.
Tell me
something about the book that may not be obvious or known.
Here are two:
i) The title is drawn from
the name of a Robert W Chambers story, & a chapter in Max Ernst's Une
Semaine Du Bonte.
ii) Court of the Dragon, aka (Fi)l'amour Fou.
What are you
working on now?
Completing Ur'lyeh
and Aklopolis, a new collaboration with Listening Center that'll appear
as a limited edition book and cassette tape published by Flughschriften in
April.
*****
PAOLO JAVIER's collaboration with Listening Center (aka David Mason) will appear as a limited edition book, Ur'lyeh, and cassette, Aklopolis, published by Flugschriften in Spring 2016. He lives with his wife and young daughter in Sunnyside, Queens.
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