![]() |
![]() |
![]() ![]() |
![]() By Mari Wadsworth PROSE KITCHEN: What do you get when you cross a hometown boy with a few years of the Big Apple under his collegiate belt, a savvy band of graphic arts students, and a community teeming with unpublished writers? The answer's no joke: Prose Kitchen, the newest literary kid on the block, celebrates its debut issue with a tantalizing stew of original art, poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction and theatrical monologue.
An advance glimpse of the goods uncovered John Sulliven's "Edsels and Deloreans of the Gods," a tasty morsel of short fiction sure to make fans of Jack Kerouac smile. Elsewhere, Rachael Rustigian tackles lost love in a pair of image-laden, free-verse poems: ...and they're tired/of dissecting love through the skin of a zipper/where growing never grows into growth... (from "The Underwear Jar"). A Beat spirit infuses much of the advance copy, suggesting that the magazine's group reading and release party on Thursday, February 5, might be the best place to test Prose Kitchen's heat. In particular, Sulliven's theatrical endeavor, "Gray Sergeant," is an avant-garde ode to postmodernism. (In other words, we don't really know how to describe it...nor does Robinson, for that matter.) But it's surfaced a couple of times previously on Tucson stages, so you may have seen it yourself. Described as "a primarily visual dramatic piece," the two-person one-act's simple yet abstract language and rhythmic vocal uprisings bring to mind performances by that other indescribable Tucson talent, Mat Bevel. So it's particularly well-suited to its venue, the Mat Bevel Institute, 530 N. Stone Ave., with its colored light show and kinetic-sculpted surroundings. "When I first got back into town, I went to a poetry slam there. It was great. (The way the) institute has opened itself to public use fits in well with what we're trying to do at the magazine, so I wanted to take advantage of that," Robinson says. Writers will read from original works, not necessarily limited to those published in the magazine. Afterwards, a live band (still TBA) will take over. Show time is 8 p.m., and admission, like the magazine, is free. Call Andy at 903-1197 for information.
|
![]() |
Home | Currents | City Week | Music | Review | Books | Cinema | Back Page | Archives
![]() |
![]() |
© 1995-97 Tucson Weekly . Info Booth |
![]() |