Tag: Book

PORNOGRAPHY

This is what it’s like
holding your own

book: picture a mirror
held up to your face,

uncomfortably close,
painfully close,

a torturous exercise
in exceptional vanity.  Picture it

held there as you sneezed,
ugly-cried, laughed, tripped,

kissed, picked your nose.
Picture it broadcast

on the high-definition television
in your second cousin’s bedroom.

Picture a comma forgotten,
lines flubbed,

watching yourself
in something akin to pornography.

Picture a birthmark you didn’t
know was there

right on your ass,
right in the middle of the screen.

Now I know why
Brent Corrigan* doesn’t watch

his own movies.

© Bryan Borland

(*insert your favorite adult film star here.)

MY LIFE AS ADAM – NOW AVAILABLE

My Life as Adam is now available for purchase on Lulu. As the next six weeks progress, it will also become available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and other retail outlets as it flows through the distribution channels.  You will also be able to request it at fine bookstores throughout the world.

My Life as Adam is a 121-page collection of 70 poems, many making their print debut.  It is mostly autobiographical and tells a narrative of my journey to self-acceptance while struggling with the primary dueling forces of nature in the southern United States – sexuality and religion.

I will be reading from My Life as Adam on March 27 in New York City at the Rainbow Book Fair and April 10 in Little Rock at the Arkansas Literary Festival, with more dates and events forthcoming.

Never give up on  your dreams, folks.  It can happen.  I want to once again thank those who have helped Adam come into existence.  My father, of course, to whom, along with my brother, this book is dedicated.  The love of my life, Christopher Baxter, and my wonderful family.  My friends, both in the flesh and on the computer screen, who have provided support, comfort, and encouragement.  John Stahle, Philip F. Clark, and Seth Ruggles Hiler, my publishing supergroup.   Loria Taylor, David Koon, Jessie Carty, and Stephen S. Mills, whose time and opinions I value greatly. And finally, to the readers of this blog, who have taken me from a tentative, toe-dipping pseudo-poet to a manic scribe with a bullhorn, shouting from the rooftops, I say thank you, thank you, thank you.  I am forever grateful.

MAJOR ANNOUNCEMENT – THE UNVEILING OF ADAM

On December 20, 2009, my father died unexpectedly from injuries he received in a motor vehicle accident. On November 25, 2009, I gave my father a copy of my manuscript, My Life as Adam. My Life as Adam is a portrait of my family as we struggled to accept both my sexuality and the death of my older brother, who similarly died in a motor vehicle accident when I was thirteen years old. Because the poems of Adam are extremely personal and intimate as they relate to my family, I asked my father for his blessing prior to moving forward to publish my first full-length collection.

He told me I didn’t need his blessing, but that I had it.

As an early Christmas gift, my father provided me with the funds to hire prominent New York-based author, editor, and book designer John Stahle to create my own imprint. Thus, in his last act of love to me, my father enabled me to bring Adam to the public. Two weeks before he died, I told him, “Dad, you’ve made my dreams come true.” His generosity culminates with the announcement that my first book, My Life as Adam, will be published in early 2010 by Sibling Rivalry Press.

After lengthy counsel with mentors and friends, I made the decision to bypass a partnership with a traditional publishing house. Though there are many wonderful independent presses in existence and many benefits to walking the road commonly traveled, I believe that my potential audience could best be served if I maintained a level of involvement that is so often impossible within the constraints of traditional publication. I wanted to be intrinsically involved with every aspect of Adam, from the look and feel of the book to how it is marketed and promoted. In the spirit of Whitman, Poe, and Wilde, My Life as Adam will come to the masses with its author in complete control, live or die.

There are stigmas associated with self-publishing that I intend to shatter. Perhaps the strongest stigma is that self-published books suffer from a lack of professionalism or quality. I guarantee you that my book will aesthetically hold up to, if not surpass, the looks of other poetry books on the market. I’ve selected the cover art, a portrait by the talented gay artist Seth Ruggles Hiler. John Stahle, who many will recognize from his work on the top-of-the-line journal Ganymede, has worked tirelessly to coordinate the book’s layout and production. I asked gay art guru Philip F. Clark to write an introduction, which he did, and folks, it blew me away. The team I’ve assembled continues to impress me, and I can say, unequivocally, that when My Life as Adam steps out of our collective imaginations and swaggers seductively into your hands, you will not be disappointed.

In the end, my father made this decision for me. He taught me that so often, we waste time by not seizing opportunities. The world of publishing is changing and, indeed, has changed. I could have waited. I could have spent $25.00 per manuscript contest entry and tried to catch the eye of a publisher. I could have done back flips to win over expert panels. I could have sent My Life as Adam out to mainstream press after mainstream press and, yeah, I might have eventually been picked up. I might have been paid an advance. I might have been assigned cover art I abhorred. I might have received little-to-no promotion or support from my publisher. I might have gone out of print after a year. I might have grown old waiting for something to happen to me rather than making it happen myself.

It seems the only argument I could find against self-publishing a book of poetry came primarily from MFA programs and their administrators, many of whom believe in only one path to literary success. Self-publishing apparently kills one’s chances to become an academic. I think I killed those chances myself long ago.

With the advent of Sibling Rivalry Press, the champagne of success or the blood of failure is completely on my hands. My Life as Adam is, more than anything I’ll ever publish, my story. But it’s also the story of the kid in Nebraska, or Illinois, or Alabama, or New Jersey.  It’s our story.

My Life as Adam is soon to become a reality. I want to express a great appreciation to so many who have helped me on this journey, including my husband, Christopher Baxter, and friends Loria Taylor, Stephen S. Mills, David Koon, and Jessie Carty. I want to thank Philip F. Clark for the hours of communication and motivation. I want to thank the readers of this blog whose feedback transformed me into a poet. But mostly, I just want to thank my father, the man who made the first thirty years of my life as Bryan truly wonderful.

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