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The launch party for The Macabre Modern and Other Morbidities took place on Sunday, 25 August 2019 at the Don Bank Museum in North Sydney...

In the days leading up to the launch, there was a gale blowing. But now, right now, the weather is perfect. Warm but not hot, a light breeze occasionally stirring the white azalea which has contrived to bloom early in this nineteenth century well, sheltered on all sides by the anonymous walls of skyscrapers. This is Rotwang's house in Metropolis – the old house untouched by time. Ferns, old brick and lingering camellias. It smells like my grandmother's garden.

There are hats. So many marvellous hats—Laura's black felt with white ostrich feather, Danny's steeple crown (I never knew he owned such a thing), Rebecca's exquisite topper of black netting, even James wore a black fedora. Black brocade glistens in the sunlight, black lace slides over the paving past a plethora of buckled boots. David looms attractively in his heavy, black army coat, that can't have seen the sun in decades. White tablecloths ripple lightly, topped with bright bouquets and an interesting range of china, bearing delicacies to tempt gloved fingers.



It behoves me to record the exact delights on offer -

Dainty sandwiches. Gouda cheese triangles on seeded spelt bread, fluted cucumber circles on white (sprinkled lightly with parsley), chicken and lettuce fingers on white (ditto) and thinly sliced roast beef seasoned with mustard and red pepper puree, on white, in crustless squares.
Llyn's gluten free, low GI zucchini and fetta fritters with red pepper dip.
Gluten and dairy free, Low GI carrot, avocado and almond terrine with Carmen brand 5 seed crackers.
Spelt cupcakes, double carob and vanilla with pink icing. Both in polka-dot cups, adorned with candy pearls.
Gluten-free lemon polenta slice. This was gorgeous. After Rebecca helped me cut it into squares, there was not a crumb left!
Carob chip spelt cookies.
Jam fancies, with cherry jam.
Llyn's almond coconut macaroons, gluten free and possibly low GI?
Mini kebabs of pineapple, paw-paw and honeydew melon with Nib Nob brand dark chocolate dipping sauce.
My mother's mixed batch of date and pumpkin scones. They were wheat flour but Rebecca and I each had to have just one.
Black tea, green tea, mint. Sugar cubes, honey, dairy and soy milk. Carafes of iced water.

Over cups of tea, cakes and biscuits balanced precariously on the saucer, conversations proceed about music, books and art. There are quarterly catch-ups taking place, and perhaps deeper matters are discussed with heads bent close on secluded benches.

Until now the music has been unobtrusive, light glissades of string and piano. Suddenly, it becomes a dirge. And now, here comes the cortege, passing by the picket fence and winding up the path. Tim Jackson in the lead, sombre in suit and tie, then David and Rebecca each supporting a side of the miniature, black casket. Behind it, a figure in full Victorian veil and weeds, clasping a bouquet of black, silk roses. Through the veil, her face is pale and...odd-looking. Oddly shaped.



They lead us into the combined dining room and parlour; clunky, old Venetian windows thrown open to the air and the verandah. The Don Bank cottage is a museum, there are glass-doored cabinets displaying old crockery and pill boxes, an ancient Singer sewing machine – in a back room stands a full-sized scythe. Sepia photos hang from the picture rail: could the original owners have envisaged such a gathering, to such purpose? On a black-draped table at the far end of the space, gleam books. The cortege places the tiny casket before them as Leigh Blackmore welcomes the assembly to the death of a new book from my blood-dipped pen.

He flatters outrageously, calling me a major weird poet. So does Danny. I respond by thanking them for putting up with me, especially David, “when I was constructing a coffin on the dining table. And it wasn't the first time!” Danny and I open the little casket, revealing a stash of the glistening new paperbacks, and the book is launched. It behoves me to give the audience a sample of what's inside.

“The danse macabre's initial scheme,
“Was quite the medieval meme.”

But what comes here? As the music once again swells, it is the strange mourner, stalking through the crowd and pressing hands, offering mute condolence.

“The present author... has reworked it some,
“To suit this new millennium.”

Placing her bouquet before the casket, she is overcome with grief, grasping for the mantlepiece to support her sobs. In the process, parts of her lavish costume come loose. Regaining the centre, she flings back her veil, revealing the face of death itself! Slowly, she divests herself of her remaining weeds, until a skeleton stands before us, wearing a jaunty top hat. A bony, jerky dance follows, as she attempts to draw first this person then another onto the floor. Llyn declines, shaking her head firmly. But Tim appears all too happy to join the skeleton in a jerky waltz, before being rejected. She comes up to me and bows, offering a single white lily. We have rehearsed this maybe twice earlier, but we both understand what this is about. I take the lily bashfully, and allow her to lead me into the centre. In close embrace we spin, faster and faster, until I succeed in flinging her off! I cast the flower after her with imperious disdain and point for her to leave. It's all exactly as I envisioned, only better. And then, I smile.



“The fact remains, each book is writ,
“By one whose expertise and wit,
“Or lack thereof, brings it to be
“The author is not dead...”

The applause, finally, feels deserved. I share it as is proper, bringing Venus back for her curtain call, thanking Craig and Barb who stage-managed, Scar, the composer, Jon and Darwin who filmed, Llyn who catered and Rebecca and Iain who have been taking photos all this time. Then, when things calm a little, I give them “Mourning Rites”, which seems to go down well. I thank them all for coming and announce that Danny has copies to sell. Now, I am seated in one of the chairs, signing books for some time. I hadn't planned what to write, just as I hadn't really planned what to say. Things just come out, wishes that we be friends till the final page, and that this book may offer comfort to those in need. Will people read these? Will they actually read the book?

At last, I can squeeze in a cup of tea – Carmen makes it for me, the dear. There are many people who did not come, even among those who confirmed, but she is not one and nor is Liviu. The party is breaking up: farewells are said, future meetings proposed, as the last cupcakes and jam fancies mysteriously disappear. People are changing out of costume; Llyn, Craig and Barb are clearing and cleaning plates with amazing efficiency. Everything is done much sooner than I had anticipated: before meeting us at the Macelleria in Newtown, various people go home to feed the cat.

Not us. In my new black jacket, jeans and cereus tee, I wander with David down Enmore Road, watching the lights come on. I feel exhausted, stunned almost. I should stop moving, should just sit down but I can't. I don;t know what I've done, if its anything at all. As the night closes in, as we return to the Macelleria, it starts to rain.
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I am delighted beyond measure to announce that my new collection of poetry and short prose is now available from P'rea Press.

book cover, The Macabre Modern, woman romancing skeleton

The Macabre Modern and Other Morbidities contains my reworking of the medieval danse macabre for the new millennium, my detailed essay on the subject, the fable "The Loquacious Cadaver" and a cortege of poems both reprinted and appearing for the first time. The former include the Australian Shadows award winner “Revenants of the Antipodes”.

The Macabre Modern, as it came to be called (thanks to Mark Calderwood), is a passion project of long-standing. If, in the fourteenth century, Death came calling personally on the Pope, the Emperor, the farmer and the monk, should It not also attend the C.E.O. and party politician, the activist and the life coach? After all, Death hasn't gone anywhere, just assumed new forms, that it was an intriguing challenge for me to capture in the illustrations.

Medieval historian Dr Gillian Polack and renowned literary scholar S. T. Joshi were kind enough to provide me with foreword and afterword respectively, greatly enhancing the depth of the book.

Thanks to editor Danny Lovecraft, compositor David E. Schultz and cover designer David Schrembri, the hardback and paperback are both decidedly handsome. The official launch takes place on the 25th of August, for which I've cooked up some surprises that will hopefully be available as videos shortly thereafter. So, whistle past the graveyard and get on your party shoes, for "how you live is how you dance"!
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So yes: The Audient Void # 7 is now out and about, including work by Ashley Dioses, KA Opperman, Adam Bolivar, John Shirley and my own twisted self, among many others - the black and white artwork by Dan Sauer is worth the cover price alone. "Mourning Rites" is a charming little ballad, if I do say so myself, based upon my reflections on just how curious some death customs were in Victorian England. Especially those which applied to women.

If I should keep a lock of hair
wound tight within a cameo,
what should you think but I compare
all suitors to one lost below?
You would console me as I grieve,
not dreaming that I might believe
you culpable. Why should you care
what weird this token may bestow?


 

 





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by Kyla Lee Ward

composed in respect of the 150th anniversary

 

Rookwood necropolis. The city of the dead. It has been here for a mere 150 years, but all 150 of those years exist; you can see the numbers carved in stone. Testament to testaments, sanctuary for native birds and imported mammals, nursery of heritage roses, gallery of anonymous sculptors, a place where the dead are remembered so they may be forgotten elsewhere.

 


The Tamil memorial is new, brand new; the black granite gleams like a mirror. Its installation was controversial: doubtless, so was that of the Chinese pavilion and the Holocaust memorial in their day. But this is Rookwood's mandate and its secret power, to absorb every kind of dead. There is an Old Jewish section and a stretch where only gypsies rest. There are divisions for Catholics, Anglicans, Non-Conformists and Lutherans, memorialising a time when Christian sects diverged like races. But Saint Michael no longer raises a sword over the chapel that bears his name: the previous two statues were struck by lightning and the sculptor of the third was prudent. He found his model in a Russian icon. Whole continents away, yet still within the cemetery grounds, a blue and gold dome guards Russian Orthdoxy. A green-tiled dome protects the new Muslim section, a sunken garden of palms. A concrete dinosaur wards the graves of children, standing amongst a hundred metallic windwills. A thousand spikes of crimson, mauve, pink and white dot the stone fields; roses, wysteria and oleander brought here as offerings, now seeding and blooming wild.

 

A yellowed stretch of native grass and shrub shimmers under the bruised sky. It wasn't planned this way, but now, it too is a memorial. Its clayey soil can never be dug. Blue smoke rises from crisping gum leaves, there were once people here who did not weigh their dead with stones. It took decades for the invading culture to catch them up. The crematorium has chimneys in the Mission style. It caught fire in 2008 and the corpses had to be evacuated.

 

Who would make an angel out of stone? Such things should surely be fashioned of glass, or gauze and feathers. Nonetheless, these earthbound beauties stand upon rank after rank of slabs and plinths, exhorting those beneath to rise again. And so they may. On warm mornings, a black oil smears the lawns: the layman might think it the trail of a broken mower or even vandalism, but such is not the case. No casket retards the phenomenon, no embalming is proof, and today is very, very warm.

 

Nonetheless, we are determined. Sweating in shirt sleeves, we follow the roads winding round and round, until we find Hawthorne Avenue, where the ceremony is about to commence. As the smoke wisps upwards, people stand under an awning and speak of community. They remark upon the first internment, a pauper named John Whalan. The last took place yesterday, for today there are tours running in the crematorium and the chapels are all filled with historical displays. The parade comes next: standing next to the food booth run by the Greek Orthodox trust, we watch the tableaux. The first is a woman dressed in black from head to toe, bonnet, jewellery and hoop skirt hovering above the tarmac. How can she bear it, in this heat? Her outline shimmers like a mirage. Behind her come the carriages, as dark and shining as obsidian. Do they make ground shake beneath our feet, or is it the black and oily presence of the dead, compressing under feathered hooves and clattering wheels? The wheels roll, and now they are of black rubber and the curving doors are metal. The hearses pour onwards as the pipe band wails and thrums.

 

But what if we should turn away? A crypt door bears the sign of the ouroboros. George and Eva Pitt Wood were not husband and wife, but widowed brother and unmarried sister. Passing down the slope, past a hundred such stories, we see the glint of the Serpentine at the bottom of its restored channel. It too winds, past palm trees and stolen urns, returned a generation later after the thief was dead. Perhaps it will be enough to save his soul, perhaps not. Here stones tilt and tiles buckle around exploring roots. Here bushes burst from the graves that once held them and threaten passers-by with thorns. Here, bugle lillies grow as large as trumpets and bright as the hope of paradise. Here the reeds and grasses rise to the waist and the path of the mowers is as clear as sky-writing. Here the Rookwood goat and the Rookwood cows roam the maze of legendry, along with cohorts of perverts and Satanists. Once, the caretakers found the remains of a dog, a cat, a fish and a bird, describing what could have been a pentacle. There may have been Satanists, but there was definitely once a fox.

 

But now, there is not even the slightest sound from the fete we left behind. The crest of the hill can no longer be seen, in any direction. We are in the maze now. At the gravelled crossroads, a white bird awaits. It is a guardian, and if we fail to solves its riddle, we shall be lost amongst graves whose date can no longer be read. The black birds sit on twisted boughs and the collapsing roof of a rest house reserved for ladies before spiders. We have glimpsed these birds before, by the side of the road, but there are more of them now. They were here long before the black cars and black carriages: perhaps longer even than the people who burned the leaves. They have always been here. Why else was this site chosen?

 

Proportions begin to shift, space expanding and contracting before our cloud-dazzled eyes. A discarded apple is revealed as gigantic, a globe with golden skin peeling away from the rot beneath. Human bodies are shrunken to dolls and given daisies for eyes. Plastic reduces a stately tomb to a take-away container, rib cages levitate and snatches of text emerge from every surface: beloved father, mother, husband, daughter, son and wife... Greater love hath none... Not death but love... the bird blocking our way now is gigantic, black plumage iridescent with green and purple, a heart caught in its talons. It shrieks triumphantly, but all at once, the answer to the riddle is clear.

 

We break out onto tarmac once again, our feet stained by a peculiar pallor of dust. The atmosphere is as hot and dense as the inside of a kiln, and the hour is late, oh so much later than we thought. The information stand is deserted now, as much of a relic as the Pitt Wood crypt. The slope where we left the car is sliding now, piling up against the fence, the green-grey turf rucking up like carpet. Our wheels spin in the rising tide of oil, spraying black droplets, and then we are moving. We slide out the gate with seconds to spare.

 

This is a place where the dead are remembered with love. It is the living who must be forgotten, with all their feuds, their ambition, passion and hurt. At four o'clock the gates must close, even on a day like this. Then will great flocks of rooks rise from the maze like black whirlwinds, to erase all trace of life for another night. We might have lasted a while, forced our way into a chapel or mausoleum, but sooner or later, they would have found us: they, or the other guardians. All that would have been left are a few nondescript remnants, that might after all have been bleached sticks or water-rounded pebbles.


Neither this nor the photo above are open license. If you want to reproduce the text then please ask me. Permission for use of the photo must be sought from the media department of the Rookwood Cemetery Trust.

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Weirdbook #37 is now available from Wildside Press. Amongst its multitudinous delights is my latest poem, "Tattered Livery"! Those who attended Poetry Readings 2.0 at Conflux 13 did receive a sneak preview, but this version will last longer and involve less arm waving. Unless you count the cover illustration, of course.




The inspiration for this work was very simple. I was reading the original King In Yellow tale cycle by Robert W Chambers-- you know, the one that predates Lovecraft and has nothing to do with the mythos at all-- in the grip of a mild fever.

"A paradox awaits their eyes,
A courtier in beggar's guise.
A ragged, jagged, mad array
and yet suggestive of the day
when I, perhaps, was much like them.
A most ingenious strategem!..."

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