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Rerun: Jeff presents ... David Ohle Day (orig. 10/08/08)

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David Ohle is a natural born terrorist — inso-far as Naked Lunch is the definitive English translation of the Koran. And if — as was provocatively asserted in Don DeLillo's Mao II — the terrorist has hijacked the novelist's role within our culture, is it then somehow supercilious of me to report that Ohle has written a novel that will behead his readers? Said novel is The Age of Sinatra, in which, it should be noted, "elective deformation" of one's body is the predominant fashion trend. Readers, in this case, can attire themselves however they see fit (the orange jumpsuit is optional). And I'd like to propose that getting your head lopped off by Ohle's fiction is a strange and unforgettable experience.

Some essential backstory: The Age of Sinatra is billed as a sequel to Motorman, published in 1972 by Knopf, and just reissued by 3rd Bed. Here we first encountered Moldenke, the stonepick-smoking, compulsive letter-writing, Beckettian hero ("At best I can say that I am here, although I don't know where. I am at large and about") as he journeys to and through a place dubbed the bottoms. Moldenke, suffering from a heart condition, consults his physician, Dr. Burnheart, who installs four sheep hearts in Moldenke's chest, and removes one of his lungs. Moldenke is also a veteran of the "mock War" in which citizens enlist for an injury of their own devising. He, in a moment of guilt-induced heroism, volunteered to give up "a list of feelings" and to receive a "minor fracture," whereupon a nurse promptly smashed his kneecap.

Motorman's landscape is chockablock with multiple suns and moons (Ohle effortlessly strafes the traditional tropes of science fiction, the epistolary novel, and the picaresque), and is populated with a nefarious breed of faux humans called jellyheads. Here is a scenish bit of prose in which an otherwise listless Moldenke combats two hitchhiking jellyheads he unwittingly picked up in his k-rambler: "Moldenke exposed his letter opener. 'You first.' The man came forward. 'Bend over.' The man bowed. With the letter opener, Moldenke opened a small hole in the back of the neck, enough for two fingers. He put a thumb and forefinger in and widened the hole, a clear jelly spilling out, down his trenchpants. He did the woman, her jelly more clouded, her rubber skull a little thicker than the professor's had been. In the morning, with two suns behind him like stray moons, he examined his vehicle." This is a textual torture so pleasurable that Motorman generated an ominous subplot while out of print—that of readers' reverent anti-chatter about the novel's spiritual effects. Forget cult status: Motorman birthed its own sleeper cell.

- from 'Invitation to a Beheading' by Gabe Hudson. Read the rest here



Motorman

For a long time I was scared to read Motorman. It had come recommended to me in such hushed tones that it sounded disruptively incendiary and illegal. Not only would the reader of this crazed novel burn to ashes, apparently, but he might be posthumously imprisoned for reading the book — a jar of cinder resting in a jail cell. Books were not often spoken of so potently to me, as contraband, as narcotic, as ordnance. There was the whispered promise that my mind would be blown after reading Motorman. There was the assurance that once I read it I would drool with awe, writerly awe, the awe of watching a madman master at work, David Ohle, awesomely carving deep, black holes into the edifice of the English language.

— from the introduction to the Calamari Press edition of Motorman by Ben Marcus


Motorman is the only book ever given to me photocopied in full. That's how hard to get it was, and how badly I wanted it.

David Ohle's legendary first novel was published some three decades ago, in 1972, and it has since been out of print. Ohle himself, while continuing to write and intermittently publish, has remained almost completely unknown. So this earlier book, reprinted to coincide with the release of his new novel, The Age of Sinatra, enters the world as something fresh that is also the secret ancestor of the most daring speculative fiction of our time.

Motorman tells the story of a hapless everyman named Moldenke, who gets by in the gray areas of a world that's almost all gray areas—a science fiction-tinged world with two suns, a number of "government moons," man-made humanoids called jellyheads, and mock wars where soldiers volunteer for injury. Moldenke receives some menacing phone calls from a man named Bunce, who claims to have tapes of everything everyone's ever said about him. To escape from Bunce, he sets out to find his old mentor, Dr. Burnheart.

Motorman is a quest narrative, of a sort. But you won't read this book for the plot. It does have a narrative thread, but one composed of snippets whose ends barely meet. The language, too, is not quite English as we know it. Attributes and effects coagulate into strange new objects — "a building with structural moans" — while familiar objects are defamiliarized. Here's Moldenke taking notes on some birds: "Rapid pecking followed by pauses." Got it. "Long, agile tongue coated with a jellylike substance." OK . . . "When the tongue is retracted it apparently wraps around the brain." What? That "apparently" is the kicker here. This is a world that does facts —we're not in the realm of pure poesy — but the rules have all been changed. Don't expect Ohle to spell them out for you, either. Like very few other writers — the Joseph McElroy of Plus, the Burroughs of Nova Express — Ohle maintains a high level of indeterminacy in both his fictional world and the language he uses to tell us about it. The result is disorienting, vertiginous, thrilling: "Roquette pierced the water with his stick. 'Good,' he said. 'It's thick enough to walk on.'"

It helps to be light on your feet. Like one of the novel's geographic oddities, the River Jelly, this book is only semi-solid. The tiny chapters (sometimes no more than a few lines long) appear adrift in white space, which starts to feel like a positive substance, something Ohle himself might invent in his fiction: a sort of viscous fog from which unrecognizable objects emerge. "He felt something without form, something edgeless, rushing at him from the direction of eastern light." But before you float away on this nebulous fare, Ohle gives you something solid: a name. "Is that you, Bunce? Mr. Bunce?"

Bunce. A goofy name, a bounce with just a little of the air let out of it. There is something clownish about Bunce and his threats. But clowns are scary, and all is not right in this world of incessant, pointless surveillance, petty bureaucratic meanness, decay and graft and moral inertia. All is not right inside Moldenke, either, and that's obvious not just from the arrhythmia in his four sheep hearts but from the arrhythmia in the narrative, its stutter and lurch. By the end of the book, we have lost track of time (easy to do in a world where six "technical months" can pass in a single day), and neither we nor Moldenke knows exactly what has been going on. Moldenke thinks he might have let the goo out of a pair of jellyheads with a letter opener. Or was it a screwdriver? It's dizzying but exhilarating for a reader to be given so much room to play. A typical mobile might seem too pretty an image to serve as a descriptive metaphor for a book by Ohle, but I have a different image in mind. A friend from high school once called me in tears: He was trying to make a mobile out of dead bugs but was having trouble bringing them into balance. If he had succeeded, that mobile might resemble this book: delicate and grotesque, tragic and hilarious, precarious but perfectly balanced.

- from 'Gross Anatomy' by Shelley Jackson. Read the rest here

Read an excerpt from Motorman
here

Buy Motorman from Calamari Press here



The Age of Sinatra

After the most recent Forgetting, Ohle's luckless protagonist Moldenke is in possession of only his name and the bare facts of his former life. He finds himself cruising on the Titanic through a bizarre alternate reality where elective deformation is a fashion trend, neuts and human settlers do their best to live together in relative harmony, and the only available sustenance is stomach-churning fare. Everyone agrees the Stinkers are troublesome and something must be done. President Ratt not only fails to control the Stinker problem, but he also has a penchant for decreeing absurd laws and issuing random vouchers of innocence. Violators with valid vouchers defer their punishments to guiltless bystanders -- regulations that land Moldenke and his fellows in prison more than once.

Rumours are circulating that another Forgetting is imminent, and that the Forgettings are induced by Ratt's radio broadcasts. The prison guard Montfaucon emerges as Ratt's political rival, and Moldenke, ever the yes-man, finds himself inadvertently involved in a plot to assassinate the president. The rebels hope to return to the Age of Sinatra, "when happiness was not only considered achievable, but hailed as the ideal state of being."

- from 'About the book' at Soft Skull Press

The legendary author of Motorman is back. In The Age of Sinatra, David Ohle is so attuned to reality that he has invented a brand new world to reflect it. Whereas what is generally called realistic fiction is busy cataloging what we wear and buy, Ohle is documenting our last secrets, and he's doing it with droll hilarity, brilliance, and a genuinely original vision.

— Ben Marcus

Ohle's visceral world splices together such diversities as Rabelasian humor, schizophrenia, science fiction, a twisted version of the Kennedy assassination, necronauts, conspiracy theory, aphasia, genetic manipulation, surrealism, the Titanic, cyperpunk, the French sewers, gland eating, hair smoking, pig hearts, and a constantly shifting system of law to create a hilarious yet compelling dystopia. A beatifully strange novel, imbued with nervous laughter and serious social critique, The Age of Sinatra is a startling book, excessive in all the right ways.

— Brian Evenson

Read an excerpt from The Age of Sinatrahere

Buy The Age of Sinatra from Soft Skull Press here



The Pisstown Chaos

The Pisstown Chaos tells the story of one family's journey in the midst of environmental and political crisis, disease and forced relocation. Power is concentrated in the hands of the Reverend Herman Hooker, an "American Divine," who revels in the sufferings of others as he spouts platitudes to the masses.

When the Reverend attempts to overcome a rampant parasite infestation by decreeing population "shifts," the members of Balls family find themselves subject to relocation at a moment's notice. The family persists through unfair imprisonment, persecution, and forced labor, subsisting on urpmeal and getting stoned on willywhack to occupy the time. Mildred Balls is imprisoned in a parasite control facility; her grandson Roe is ordered to mate with a parasite victim; and his sister Ophelia is sent to one of the Reverend's Templexes, where she will serve as an acolyte in absolute silence. Meanwhile, an evermore confused and enfeebled Reverend struggles to maintain his grip on the country as the chaos rages on.

This is David Ohle's foreboding, strange and comedic follow-up to Motorman and The Age of Sinatra, the story of one brave family's struggle against an absolute, corrupt, and increasingly irrational centralized power, and their quest to be reunited.

- from 'About the Book' at Soft Skull Press

Read The Pisstown Chaos online free at WOWIO here

And/or buy it from Soft Skull Press here




David Ohle as editor


Cursed from Birth: The Short, Unhappy Life of William S. Burroughs, Jr

Born in 1947 to the writer William S. Burroughs and his common-law wife Joan Vollmer, William S. Burroughs, Jr. (known as Billy Jr.), would later describe himself as "your cursed-from-birth son." Cursed From Birth is a testimony to the difficulty of living in the turbulent wake of a famous father his famous and troubled friends, and a lucid, shattering depiction of a life going down the tubes.

Raised by his paternal grandparents in Palm Beach after his mother was killed by his father in a shooting accident, Billy saw his father become suddenly famous for Naked Lunch just as he became a teenager. Billy Jr.'s short life was defined by creating trouble to catch the attention of his father, mourning the death of his mother, descending into alcoholism and drug addiction, and reckoning with it all by beginning his own literary endeavors.

Compiled by writer David Ohle from Burroughs Jr.'s third and unfinished novel Prakriti Junction, his last journals and poems, and correspondence and conversations with those who knew Billy, Cursed from Birth is faithful to Billy's own intentions for a last artistic effort. With the sufferings — but not the patience — of Job, Billy Burroughs's life illustrates the fall of one "whom the gods would destroy". Cursed from Birth is the funny, tragic, angry, and stunning final statement from William S. Burroughs, Jr. — a casualty of the Beat generation.

- from 'About the book' at Soft Skull Press

Buy Cursed from Birthhere



Cows Are Freaky When They Look at You: An Oral History of the Kaw Valley Hemp Pickers

The Kaw Valley Hemp Pickers were marijuana harvesters around Lawrence, Kansas during the 1960s and 1970s. A variety of the weed known locally as K-pot grew plentifully, nurturing a counterculture celebrated here in a foreword by William S. Burroughs and a series of oral history excerpts by Lawrence's former hippies. Their recollections focus mainly upon drugs, sex, and violence, tales and tall tales lovingly preserved to the final raunchy detail.

- Robert F. Nardini

Buy Cows Are Freakyhere



David Ohle as Interviewee

Interviewer: What are some of your favorite Burroughs stories?

David Ohle: I took him out shooting one time. He and I were the only ones on this particular shooting trip. … William was just first beginning to get the idea to do shotgun art—to take something and shoot it and make art out of it. So he had brought out, I believe it was a piece of plywood that day, and he asked me to hang an ink bottle, like from a rubber band, on the plywood. He was gonna shoot the ink bottle and that was gonna splatter onto the wood and make some kind of art.

He had one of his fairly large-caliber pistols, and he had on his ear protectors. I didn’t have any ear protectors so I went in the cabin so I didn’t have to listen to this while he popped off his shot. But I could see him through the glass door. I couldn’t see the target, but I could see him standing there with his gun.

He fired, and when he did all this ink came back and splashed him in the face and he thought he had been hit. He thought it had ricocheted and hit him in the head — the bullet. He thought it was blood. He started screeching and panicking, “Oh my God!” And he started wiping it like this and looking at it and going, “Wait a minute … that’s not blood.” But the expression on his face I’ll never forget. He was absolutely terrified that he had been shot by a ricochet.

Read the rest here



More David Ohle:

Interview with Hobart

Interview with LJWorld

The Mind of Moldenke

Nerve Screening Room interview

Mother and Son
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p.s. Hey. Today's rerun comes to you via the blog's time machine function and, most importantly, courtesy of d.l. Jeff. Give it your all please. I'm still in Scandinavia, and I have another random day sans an imminent amusement park sojourn and with a little pre-hotel check out time, so I thought I would say hey, etc. Our trip continues to go spectacularly. Today we're giving a look to our immediate surroundings, meeting with the curator of a big museum/art space, and then moseying by car to Linkoping, Sweden, home to Astrid Lindgrens Värld. So, yeah, all is great, and I hope the same goes for you. ** Friday ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Thanks for the link to the Taylor Mead obit. Nice to see all the respect pouring his way from points all over. No consolation for his loss, but ... ** Rewritedept, Hey. Uh, well, I eat the food that your friends eat and which you pooh-pooh almost every day, and it's actually quite delicious, man. Chill out, ha ha.  Cool about the gambling pay off and your concurrent loot. New Deerhunter's really good, yeah. It's been filling up our car a lot. The Vår album comes out tomorrow. Very excited for that. Keep on keeping on, C. ** S. Hi, man. It's not quite summery here, but it's clear and bright out, and my sunburn is getting heavily layered. Stack! Welcome input from home! Looks good. Everyone, the new Emo stack by S. is called 'The Unholy Flame', and it, and a follow-up stack from Saturday, reside here. Know what's good for you, yeah? ** Nemo, Hi, Joey. Okay, yeah, will do upon returning. I'll talk to Joel. I'm pretty out of touch up here, but I will as soon as I get the situation. Love to Jarrod and you. ** Saturday ** Paradigm, Hi, Scott. Excellent to see you! Things are great, thanks. I think you are right that I would love that museum by the sound of it. I see what you mean about 'Spring Breakers'. Makes sense, and, like you said, I think its aim was elsewhere-ish, or he was trying to use emotion's depths in a less centralized or subterranean way maybe. I don't know. I liked it quite a bit, and, yeah, I'm not much of a Franco fan, but he was pretty terrific in it. I hope your presumably Australian weekend was a really great one too! ** David Ehrenstein, I'm in a hotel room in Scandinavia, which, somewhat charming as it is, lacks the amenities of your room, not to mention of mine, so your room sounds pretty good, actually, if that helps. ** MANCY, Hi, man! ** Bill, It is going excellently. Moving along pretty quickly, but the pace is allowing for good absorption so far. You'll leave for S. Korea (?) when I get back to Paris? Wow. Hopefully I'll get to have sporadic chats with you via these random p.s.es between now and then. He did do some Venetian Snares covers, yep. Take care! ** Thomas Moronic, Thanks a lot, T! Really looking forward to being welcomed home by your book, needless to say. ** Chris Dankland, Hi, Chris! Greetings from Sweden! Aw, man, that's so nice, what you say about my writing. It's one of those days when hearing something like that is a real boost. How's your writing going? Sweet about your 400th! High five with a Swedish twist and vibe, buddy! ** S., Really nice double header stack to reenter the world to. I linked to it up above. ** Jax, Wow, Jack, how are you doing? What a totally nice thing it is to see you. You're fine, doing stuff, cool. Details would be swell when/if you feel the urge. Take care. ** Misanthrope, Hi, G. It would sure seem like you will get pictures from the trip. Haven't thought about it yet. Zac's doing major documentation for our planned book re: this trip, and surely he'll share some of that here. The 30th, cool. Yeah, keep in touch. I should get back to Paris on the 26th. We've added one extra day, I think. I think that's a pretty return firm date now. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. Very glad to hear about the YnY/Maclean/you convergence! ** Okay. I have to shower, pack up, and get out of this hotel by whatever time its check-out time is, so I'll see you when such an occasion as this arises again. Enjoy Jeff's Ohle Fest.

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