Holiday Discount on My Life as Adam – Autographed
From now through Monday, November 29 – enter the code GOBBLE at the new SRP Bookshop and get 15% off autographed copies of My Life as Adam. SRP can ship to anywhere in the world.
From now through Monday, November 29 – enter the code GOBBLE at the new SRP Bookshop and get 15% off autographed copies of My Life as Adam. SRP can ship to anywhere in the world.
It’s an absolute honor to be included as part of Lambda Literary – Amos Lassen’s Top 11 Books of 2010. To quote Lady Gaga, “Oh friend you’ve left me speechless/You’ve left me speechless, so speechless…” I’m in incredibly good company - Armistead Maupin, Michael Cunningham, Justin Spring, Raymond Luczak, Emanuel Xavier, among others. It’s surreal and humbling. Amos, thank you.
I’ve posted a formal expression of my gratitude on the Lambda site in the comments section.
In a two-page spread in the October issue of Poets and Artists, Grady Harp says:
“Bryan Borland’s first book of his poems, MY LIFE AS ADAM, is his life and he owns it, a life of sensing, noticing, yearning for the bite of the forbidden apple where the fruit has been distorted by religions and codices of human behavior in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent him from acceptance of what he intuited would be beautiful. It is this journey to date he sensitively shares – like that little beggar along the path who smiles at our sheckles and says thank you in a way that changes us – permanently.”
Thank you Mr. Harp and Poets and Artists!
Let’s say you’re a writer or poet. Let’s say you come across an amazing book of poetry. Let’s say it’s from A Midsummer Night’s Press, and it’s called Mute. Let’s say it’s by a fantastic writer named Raymond Luczak. Let’s say you carry it around with you for weeks, memorizing lines of his poetry like, Do not worry whether you should/continue buying CDs or downloading music/or listen to the radio in the morning./Your ears and voice are a gift/as much as his eyes and hands are from “How To Fall for a Deaf Man.”
Let’s say the poems remind you of people you weren’t brave enough to befriend and of shadows and angels in your own past. Let’s say the poems make you hear your heart in a different way. Let’s say the poems make you want to be a better poet yourself. Let’s say that when you read Mute, you said out loud, “This is an example of how a collection of poetry should be done.”
And then let’s say you get an email a few months later. It seems Mr. Luczak has purchased your own book and has written you to say:
I lay out in the shade on my towel in Lowry Park while my dog nibbled at clovers. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but whoa. This is one of the very best debut collections I’ve seen in a long, long time. I mean this seriously. It isn’t just another collection in which poems are shoehorned to fit a certain theme; they flow together organically. As a recovering Catholic, I appreciate your mixing spirituality with sexuality. It’s always a potent mix, and it works beautifully here. You have every right to be proud of the book.
Let’s say that you do backflips in your home. Let’s say that you immediately show your husband the email. Let’s say that you call your mother and read it to her. Let’s say that you forward the email to a few of your friends. Let’s say that you can’t even sleep that night because a hero, a person whose writing you admire so much it hurts, has complimented you on your own work.
Let’s say that you don’t know how to say thank you, but you’re damn sure gonna try.
IN MEMORY OF JOHN STAHLE
EDITOR of GANYMEDE, POET, AUTHOR, GRAPHIC ARTIST, FRIEND.
This morning I received confirmation that John Stahle, editor of Ganymede and the man that helped me produce My Life as Adam, has died. John was the first to accept me for publication in a print journal – with my photograph! I was so excited, as I know so many of the poets, writers, and photographers he published were. John convinced me that self-publishing was a viable option. John spent hours with me formatting Adam, giving me advice on how to market it, giving me a roadmap for my publishing future. John was the one that pushed me to create Sibling Rivalry Press. John designed the logo. That fig leaf? All John. John was the one that told me to attend the Rainbow Book Fair in New York, a trip that ultimately resulted in contact with Lethe Press and plans for publication of The Hanky Code, my project with Stephen S. Mills. In short, all the big moves in what is turning out to be a career for me – are owed to John Stahle.
John lived and breathed art. He was so proud of what turned out to be his last work, the chapbook Your Face Tomorrow. I can’t think of a more beautiful journal than Ganymede. We only have seven issues of it, but I know he designed the layouts for future issues months in advance, and I know he sent those layouts to their featured authors in advance as well. I have two layouts that were upcoming. I know others of you must have them as well. What can we do with them to honor John?
John, you will be missed, but the beauty you created is immortal. You’ve been swooped up by the talons of Zeus and have taken your place as cup-bearer to the gods… Ginsberg, Whitman, Wilde, Norse… and I can’t help but picture you smiling.
[Update - A website has been created to memorialize John here.]