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REVIEWS

22 SKIDOO / SUB-TRACTIONS by Michael Boughn Reviewed in Jacket Magazine

INTERVIEWS

rob mclennan talks to Jonathan Ball

rob mclennan talks to Kate Eichhorn

rob mclennan talks to Camille Martin

REVIEWS

Spacing Magazine reviews The SubWay by Philip Quinn

OF NOTE

Jacket Magazine features BookThug

BookThug will be sole Canadian press featured in the art project "The Small Presses" in Marfa, Texas at the beginning of October through the end of November created by Marfa Book Co. The gallery showing will feature a handful of under-the-radar presses, their books and ephemera. http://www.myspace.com/marfabookcompany

LAUNCH: Thursday October 22nd 2009 at The Supermarket, 268 Augusta Avenue in Toronto:
Expeditions of a Chimaera by Erin Moure and Oana Avasilichioaei; The Rose Concordance by Angela Carr

Interview:
Kate Eichhorn at Open Book

Review:
Kate Eichhorn review at Agora Review

Interview:
Phil Quinn at Open Book

The Danforth Review Interview: Philip Quinn
Link

Review: Broken Pencil Issue 43
Nathaniel G. Moore's review of Philip Quinn's The SubWay

Arc Poetry Magazine Reviews
(Vol 62/ Summer 2009)
Phil Hall's White Porcupine
 
Meredith Quartermain's  Matter and Nightmarker

Read:
Kate Eichhorn in the Poetic Front

Fond (Kate Eichhorn) and Matter (Meredith Quartermain)

More Reviews!
The Basho Variations and Every Way Oakly reviewed by Prairie Fire Review of Books

Interview:
Meredith Quartermain [Matter, 2008] in Steel Bananas

June 3: Marianne Apostolides reads from Swim at the Pivot Reading Series.
The Press Club, 850 Dundas West, Toronto.
8PM




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Haikube by Gregory Betts

Haikube by Gregory Betts

The Haikube is a free-moving three-dimensional cube handmade from ebony. Each three-inch face is comprised of nine unit cubes. On the exterior face of each unit cube is a word. On each of the six faces of the cube, the nine unit cubes form a nine-word poem modelled after the syllabic structure of the traditional Japanese haiku. Beyond the horizontal symmetry of the haiku, the constraint of the Haikube follows a further vertical symmetry. Each column and row of the unit cubes can rotate around the central point. It is an edition of two.

The poems collected in this book were all generated by the random rotation of the Haikube. By aleatory manipulation, the Haikube can thus randomly create haikus – poems by chance. The poems that begin each chapter in this selection were the original orientation of the nine unit cubes. We prefer to think of these particular patterns as the originary faces rather than the solution. As this collection attests there are multiple solutions to the cube – each a moment of pause in the Haikube’s perpetual motion.

The Haikube is one of Matt Donovan and Hallie Siegal’s History Machines; an ongoing dialogue about art and communication. They have been creating collaborative work for this series since 2002. This particular machine utilizes Gregory Betts’s constraint-based experimental writing. He is the author of If Language, a book of interconnected paragraph-length anagrams published last year by BookThug.

44 pages; 5.5x5.5 inches; stapled and bound into wrappers
ISBN 0 9739742 4 9
Second printing

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Price: $15.00

 
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