Biographical note: Mike Ladd is a poet, radio playwright and broadcaster. His first book of poems The Crack in the Crib was published in 1984 and followed by Picture’s Edge and Close to Home. He was born in Berkeley, California in 1959. After studying philosophy and English at Adelaide University he became the singer of the punk band The Lounge. He has travelled in Africa, recording the traditional poet praise-singers known as “les griot” and is currently presenter and producer of PoeticA on Radio National.
BIC Basic
EAN13: 9781876857790 ISBN-10: 187685779X ISBN-13: 9781876857790 Author: Mike Ladd Title: Rooms and Sequences Series: Salt Modern Poets Product class: BC Language: eng Audience: General/trade BIC subject category: CTCH1 Publisher: Salt Publishing Pub date: 15-Apr-03 Extent: 160pp Height: 216 mm Width: 140 mm Thickness: 9 mm Weight: 240 gms Supplier:Gardners Books Supplier:Ingram Book Group Supplier:Inbooks (James Bennett) Availability: IP Price: GBP 10.99 Price: USD 16.95 Rights: World
Short
description/annotation: Ladd is an icon-maker and iconoclast all at once. The treasure among treasures in the diverse and pluralistic collection is the “Anakhronismos” sequence, which would have to stand as one of the most individual and challenging sequences in Australian poetry.
Main description: Mike Ladd is the best-kept secret in Australian poetry. It’s not that he’s not well known; he is. It’s more that few fully appreciate his range and uniqueness as a poet living both in the Australian mindscape, and distinctly outside it. His sequence “Ninety-One Hotel Rooms” shows the consolidations of the wanderer, the merging of the familiar (a room is a room is a room), with change and cultural shift. The mediating voice of self is always there, but also under pressure. He is a poet formally on edge, seeking to bring order to disorder, and disorder to the polite management of any poem. It is not surprising to find he was in a punk band in his early days, and that he's a radio producer these days. Ladd is an iconoclast and icon maker all at once. The treasure among treasures in the diverse and pluralistic collection is the “Anakhronismos” sequence, which would have to stand as one of the most individual and challenging sequences in Australian poetry. It’s like a convergence of Lehmann, Beaver, and even Laurie Duggan's “Epigrams of Martial”. And then there’s that classic, “3 Studies of a Rotary Hoist”, de rigueur for anyone trying to unpick Australian nationalism, parochialism, and a concomitant sense of irony. Ladd is a larrikin and a poetry tactician. Experimental, formal, multi-voiced. And often in the same poem. A book of the year.
Meet the author:
Table of contents: Anakhronismos from ‘Ninety-one Hotel Rooms’ Outside it’s (almost) snowing … Red patterned walls, uterine … The walls have ears, yes, but … Manager for Electrolux. Telephone distributor … A room like a bony head … A pin-up by Egon Schiele … Man in Restaurant A Vegetative Life Highways Australia: Holiday Notes 3 Studies of a Rotary Hoist Aviary Dawn of a Scorcher The Daylight Owl St Kilda Intersection Crows Cat Symmetry Murray Bend Parawa Farmer Solitary Male: 3 Shades of Loneliness Funiculi, Funicula The Silvered Mirror The Bird in the Park Gay’s Fables Creel The Immigration Minister’s Dream Prayer Kites of Sanur Genitalias Buffo Power Will be Restored in the Next Half Hour Dry Creek Rhapsody Letter Found in a Vacant Lot Spinal Unit Reading Rooms Beautiful Words About Your Poem … Audio Couplets Poet’s House Mausoleums The Reader
The trees stooped, looking for their night-shadows. There were more, more-delicate stars, and candles lit behind venetians.
A computer-voiced angel sang her litany: This blackout has been caused by a motor vehicle accident. Power will be restored in the next half hour.
A car and its driver had wrapped themselves around a pole; all the tail lights slowly bleeding past.
That moment, when the power came back, it could have been the letting go and the return.
Review quote: “Aponius Maso lived in the first century AD, a time when the Roman Empire was at its height and it southern boundary extended as far as South Australia.” Now there’s an opening sentence to grab attention. The rest of the introduction to Mike Ladd’s sequence of “translations” of Maso’s poems, Anakhronismos, is equally spooky. As are the hilarious Borgesian footnotes which follow the sequence. The poems are dedicated to the poet and classicist John Bray, who would have been proud of their sharp, astringently epigrammatic qualities, which owe something to both Martial and Catullus, with perhaps a little extra salt from Juvenal.
Peter Goldsworthy The Adelaide Review
Review quote: In Rooms and Sequences Mike Ladd’s charm is often satiric, whether he is confecting a colony of the Roman Empire, fables on animals and birds, or an ode to “a rotary hoist”. Ladd produces the excellent ABC program PoeticA, lives in Adelaide, and his landscapes earthily exude its heat.
Barry Hill The Weekend Australian
Review quote: The real highlight of Rooms and Sequences is a sort of adult fairytale-cum-fable entitled “The Bird in the Park.” This is such a delicate and finely balanced piece of writing that an extended description would risk breaking its spell. Briefly, the story concerns a talking seabird – a messenger – which comes into the life of a single, middle-aged man. (One immediately thinks of Coleridge's albatross, but, with the words “Don't fall for clichés”, the bird is quick to refute that comparison.) Ladd writes with tender sophistication and universal reach to create what is – despite appearances – a genuine poem. An ideal syllabus work, “The Bird in the Park” should be compulsory reading for anyone who has lived alone.
Oliver Dennis Island
Review quote: When you take home this collection you take home a tough yet loving critique of contemporary life, where masculinity is put through its paces and is caressed through the lens of a man looking to the past for a way to understand his meaning as a man living in the 21st century. The suburbs of Rome become the suburbs of our cities, and Ladd explores these through the lone eye of a traveller seeking a home. This is a poet who criticises corruption, complacency and apathy. A man who rages against the “fat men on couches” and who craves the ethical ideal, the uncorrupted scene and the day-to-day potential to live well in a world trying hard to suffocate imagination and freedom.
Jayne Fenton Keane Five Bells
Review quote: Mike Ladd’s 148 page collection of poetry and prose is an aesthetically pleasing Salt publication, drawing attention to the work of a highly individual and persuasive mind. Stand out pieces, for me at least, are the prose piece “The Bird in the Park” and the opening poetry sequence “Anakhronismos”. “The Bird in the Park” combines exceptional narrative skills with a delight in history, philosophy and cultural phenomena.