Pif Magazine - ISSN: 1094-2726
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Drunken Boat 

reviewed by Tom Hartman
 


After a spotty initial effort, Drunken Boat has returned with an impressive second issue (Winter/Spring 2001). Edited by Ravi Shankar, who notes in his bio that he does NOT play the Sitar, and elegantly designed by Michael Mills, Drunken Boat features poetry, criticism and an assortment of web-friendly art.

Overall, readers will find here a fairly representative cross-section of contemporary poetry — from the language experimentation of Stephanie Strickland's "WaveSon.net" series (highly recommended) to the lyrical surrealism of David Lehman's "April 19" and "August 18". Other contributors include Lawrence Fixel ("Book of Glimmers," in the "criticism" section), Sidney Wade (see in particular his lovely, imagistic "My Istanbul") and Mark Rudman (the nearly epic-length "Long Stemmed Rose"), all of whom have contributed new work.

With this lineup, it's easy to forgive Shankar for throwing in the odd reprint: in addition to Charles Dickens' "Hunted Down," two of the three Patrick Donnelly poems appeared previously, in Beloit Poetry Journal and Quarterly West, respectively (however, Donnelly's "Dust" is previously unpublished).

Reprints or not, Drunken Boat is poised to take its place alongside zines like Cortland Review, Slope and The East Village Poetry Web in the webzine First Division. Add it to your reading list.





Tom Hartman has been a regular contributor to Pif since 1999. He lives in Philadelphia.










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