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Bitches Brew Love Poems For The Wicked Who says underground poets can’t be the prototypical, sensitive poet lover? Certainly not Brian Morrisey or his rabid fans (and yes, many of them of the female persuasion.) But to his credit, Morrisey is a romantic on many levels. With poem titles like the “The Last Cowboy”, “Café Babar”, “Sylvia” and “Another Poem About Andy Warhol” it’s easy to see the aesthetic of the outlaw and the pioneer are not far from this poet’s heart. Yet neither is it for the faint of heart: “…I am climbing up the walls
- From “About Face”
Morrisey is unique in that he tips his hat to the old school nobility (and truly what would one expect from an author who publishes a magazine whose name is simply “Poesy”) within the context of our doomed Babylon:
- From “Karaoke Nights”
Further damning Morrisey to that circle of hell where he’ll find old friends like Micheline, Lerner, William Carlos Williams, the French Surrealists, Ducasse (yes, the author of a collection entitled “Poesies”) Mary Shelley and Wordsworth is the addressing of the poetic process in a kind of flip meditation called “The Kind of Poem That Almost Rhymes”:
Morrisey cites Frost and Sandburg as solid foundations, and this shows in his quiet, plainspoken realism, but the overall effect of this collection also smacks of one Whitman’s well studied progeny…a hopeless romantic and imaginer who doesn’t trip outside himself since his perch on the edge of civilization and history offers one hell of a ride in and of itself…and there is quite a poem to be told from that place. -Paul Corman-Roberts |
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