Clockfire
By (Author) Jonathan Ball
Coach House Books
Coach House Books
3rd October 2006
Canada
General
Non Fiction
811.6
Paperback
80
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
155g
Shortlisted for the Manitoba Book Awards in the category of Most Promising Writer
Talented newcomer Jonathan Balls Clockfire is a suite of poetic blueprints for imaginary plays that would be impossible to produce plays in which, for example, the director burns out the sun, actors murder their audience, and the laws of physics are flagrantly violated. The poems in one sense replace the need for drama, and are predicated on the idea that modern theatre lacks both 'clocks' and 'fire' and thus fails to offer its audiences immediate, violent engagement. They sometimes resemble the scores for Fluxus 'happenings,' but they replace the casual aesthetic and DIY simplicity of Fluxus art with something more akin to the brutality of Artauds theatre of cruelty. Italo Calvino as rewritten by H. P. Lovecraft, Balls 'plays' break free of the constraints of reality and artistic category to revel in their own dazzling, magnificent horror.
'In these spare, nightmarish theatrescapes, Ball directs our 'impossible dreams' by blurring the script between actor and audience, the real and the staged, the lived and the dreamed, the self and the other ... At times reading more as horror-film treatments than prose poems (no doubt Ball's intention),Clockfire finds its strength in irony.' -- Winnipeg Free Press '[Ball is] one of our most exciting young poets.' -- Robert Kroetsch, author of The Studhorse Man
Jonathan Ball is the author of Ex Machina. He holds a Ph.D. in English from the University of Calgary, and is the former editor of the literary journal dandelion. He lives in Winnipeg.