Thursday, April 18, 2024

Fred’s Little Red Books

 



The three weeks Fred had been away certainly told on his shelves in Carlisle Street. Stacked with product lately, a good number of thick spines in soft pastel colours. Sight for sore eyes striking the lad at another thrift shop, in Prahran. Come Saturday he would be back on duty sorting, the man promised. Dancing a little in the tight space between the shelves on Chapel Street; understandable if he had felt somewhat bushwhacked. We had spoken once before when Fred was found in back of Carlisle and he could be thanked for the marvellous find of Baz Dickens’s Unparalleled Sorrow. (Never a whisper on that volume in all these many, many years.) Dancing and dodging. In his colourful leggings & top, baseball cap pulled low. The usual dental at this age noticed on first meeting, despite the man’s ducking on that occasion too. A true featherweight. Was he still using, at that age? The find of the little red book 5”x 3.5" right there on Chapel could be shared with Fred, fair chance. And so it did prove. Fred’s initial guess was The Little Red Schoolbook, but he had both on his shelves at home, adjacent it might have been. That item had been banned for sale here, taken down even from newsagents’ shelves, Fred reported. Real tuition for school-kids, sex & everything else, in language the kids could understand—fucking, cocks in cunts, &etc, Fred further reported. Yeah, that was right. Must have been late-60s. Fred might in fact have been a couple years older; impossible to judge properly. A photograph! Later the thought like a twanging arrow in the brain. It was only ever worth attempting the impossible in portraits.









Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Gavrilo P. April 2024

 

Sixteen, not fifteen, now reported the young attacker of the Assyrian Bishop in Sydney. Last 24-48 hours an intention to check how old was Gav Princip at the time of Ferdinand's assassination. Turned out twenty; he was executed four years later. And how much evidence did the young Gavrilo have of Austro-Hungar atrocities against the Serbs through his young adulthood? On his way to introduce his new wife to the family up in the village at Boka, circa 1938, Uncle Jovo, a gendarme commander in the Lika, went to visit the monument to Gavrilo in Sarajevo.


Friday, April 12, 2024

Publication news: Soekarno-Hatta Hanging

 Hello all



Another Aero publication of mine has just appeared, again from a while back - 2019, and again Airplane Reading in the States, edited by a long-time editor of New Orleans Review.

Under 500 words, centred on the international hub in Jakarta — highly swanky / soulless now.


All best to all
Pavle








Monday, April 8, 2024

Passing Muster


Numerous pretty young Asians footing along the upper end of Swanston near the library, with the peaks of their caps screening themselves on the nearer approach. By these means they managed to escape the more searing and unsettling examinations of their beauty. One among them this afternoon bore the clear sign of the ordeal on her crown, white upper case semaphoring:

    STOP
ANXIETY



Thursday, March 28, 2024

In-Store Now (revised late Mar24)


 

Rain     Drops

Keep Fallin’

On

My

Head

Followed by,

 

What the World — 

Needs              Now

 

Mid-afternoon Orchard Kinokuniya

For the notation the store pen was deployed. 

There had been rain in the morning and showers later, one distinct grenade of refreshing humus rising from the ground somewhere along the way. It may have been through the Haig carpark beneath a tree up on one of the  islands, when the path at the end was taken in order to avoid another pass of the funeral party of Hadramis at Block 11. Daunting that gathering; almost as bad as if they had been Palestinians.

In the case of the spattering of drops in the store the flesh of the brain seemed more exposed.

Before being able to make an exit, in the queue by the cashier, the original, unremastered What’s New, Pussy Cat? started up after a pause. 

Wow…..Wow-Wow…..Wow, wow.

There was a hidden speaker near-by. 

Stretching credulity one perfectly well understands. Entirely understandable. Nevertheless, such was the musical offering in close sequence that afternoon over the lazy heads of perhaps 8-10 dozen book-lovers absorbing without any noticeable twitch or shudder. 

In the standard rendition of the first the vocalist was unknown. Second was the Burt Bacharach and last the inimitable Tom, with his shirt unbuttoned to the navel and frilly panties raining down from all sides.

Nada. Not a flicker. Absorbed like candy, sweetmeats or sweet perfume.

And that was not the end of it either. More followed. 

There was delay in the queue with a lapsed Members’ Card at the counter, lady purchasing a stack of unidentifiable colourful titles, children’s series possibly. 

The Way We Die Now. And immediately adjacent in some kinda implicit pairing, When Breath Becomes AirFace out top shelf of the Highlights stand that made a large island in the passage. 

Bodilo oci, the Serbs say; pricking the eyeballs.

No doubt there was some good reason between the covers in the case of the books.

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.


This afternoon some lingering beneath a speaker in the ceiling of the stationery department at Kino. It had taken a while locating with the volume turned down and the voice riding the hubbub. At first the sound seemed to be coming from a hidden recess in the ceiling; some light emitted from beyond the little ledge above the notebook stand there too. Later a second speaker in the same aisle was found turned off. Thought had been after the KV lunch and print at Peace Centre, a quick reconnoiter for a volume of old Tu Fu—sometimes confusingly rendered as Du Fu, the poor girl at the info desk needed to be informed. There was nothing of David Hinton’s translations; that had been established couple weeks before. Only his Analects and I Ching, both previously purchased. Some hope that the largest bookstore of English holdings, at least in SE Asia, might turn up the Tang star. TuF had been rendered by a couple of previous notables—fair chance you might have thought in Sin’pore, steady sales ticking over. Kinokuniya had been downsized few years before, usual victims involved. If you were after motivational, entrepreneurial, investment gurus, biz management & strategy, conservative histories, mysteries, colouring-in books, comics, celebrity, cook books, photography, design, more photography & design, you had come to the right place, all cards accepted at the register. The great helmsman LKY’s shelves alone could not have been sent up in smoke with less than three molotovs, not a chance, forget it. Man was hardly dead, only symbolically & figuratively. (The feud between the PM and his younger sister & bro over accusations of political exploitation in the use of the father of the nation’s passing had been hosed down of late, all hush-hush in-family.) They had stocked Tu Fu once upon a time; sold out now, lass conveyed. She could not be quizzed on the history—it was not possible to punish innocents for the sins of the elders. No. Too bad. Good selection of gel pens in stationery, including 0.8s at $3.10, comparable to ArtFriend and Popular. On the shelves there among all the inferior biros and all the soft pastel colour varieties, in the midst of parents with their children, out of thin air, one was suddenly hallowed by Pavarotti early signatures. First, like a TV flowering of a orchid hidden in the jungle, O Sole Mio’s rhythmic swelling. It was followed immediately after by Ritorno a Soriento. Shiver one on top of the other. Brrrh! Brrrh! Here was a chance to show the locals one’s cultivated taste, almost word for word with the big man and phrasing perfect. The little jail-bait schoolgirl’s mum might have had entirely the wrong idea. Strange in the Asian (more or less) locale, receiving those melodies, those exhalations from the great bellows. The fact the maestro had been dead all these years now perhaps added feeling, gone the way of Caruso, Lanza, Bjorling; &etc. That short stretch of water from the bays of Boka over to Bari, down to Brindisi, Sicily and up on the other side, Napoli. They could have Sorrento, skip that joint. Thirty-five years ago there had been no malls in Napoli; in the old town near the water there would be none now. Minimum of ornamental trees and shrubs. The mafia there would be a sight better than the entrenched tropical kind that could not be ousted from the political stage for the next hundred years. There was almost as much street prostitution in Napoli as Geylang; no fool would pay for indoor theatre. Fascinating. Fourteen or sixteen hours away for little over a grand. With the usual shuttering for the morning during Ramadan, it had been Starbs for the early cafe & scribble. As the customers piled into the OneKM outlet nearing lunchtime, the volume had gone up on the pitter-patter remastered golden oldies & prairie ballads. That flustering and churning in the guts had something to do with the effect a few hours later of big Lucy standing tall. 


 

 

                    Kinokuniya, Singapore 

 


Saturday, February 17, 2024

Publication news: “Minus 41 & 35k Feet” - Airplane Reading

 Hallo & zdravo all


Another US publication to announce, this one a short-short in an odd & interesting online magazine called Airplane Reading, which is devoted to the experience of air travel. One of the editors here is an aerophobe like myself.

Freely accessible, 660 words. Hope you find something in it.


http://airplanereading.org/story/4971/minus-41-35-000-feet



Best to all
Pavle 


Sunday, February 11, 2024

Publication news: The Heart of the Matter - QU Lit Mag

 Hallo & zdravo all


Announcing now another US publication, this time at Charlotte, North Carolina, where MFA students & faculty curate the mag.

The middle piece in “The Heart of the Matter” was first drafted 12 years ago, within a few weeks of first discovering my corner of Singapore. Another cat piece that opens comes from early ‘23.

QU Literary Magazine, V.19 Winter 2023-24

The mag also comes in print form, US$10 for any passionate paper people. Otherwise the link below. 

A trio of 2.5k words in total. Hope you like it.


http://www.qulitmag.com/the-heart-of-the-matter/


Pavle