Wednesday 21 December 2011

BANANA MOON: A short story from the archives



 

Banana Moon


- A Kinda Christmas Story -



It was nearly Christmas but I was broke and I was hiding. I felt like I didn’t have a friend in the world. I liked my own company, that is to say I could bare it. I absorbed most of my solitude in writing and reading books. I’d take a walk sometimes, but it was never easy to leave the house. I looked at the time, it was already past three in the afternoon. I had been reading since waking at eight and I didn’t want to finish my book or I’d have nothing to read in the middle of the night. I had bathed and had some tea but I hadn’t dressed yet. I looked at the sky, a lovely wintry December blue and I thought it would do me some good to take one of my walks - I needed to get out of the house.


 Not giving myself a chance to bottle out, I threw on a coat, scarf and boots over my pajamas and descend the stairs. I saw a packet had come in the post. It was from Yorkshire and addressed to Miss Saliva. I opened it and discovered somebody had printed and made mini-booklets out of one of my poems. It was a funny little hashed together thing, photocopied and cheaply made. It had a yellow paper pages. It was being sold for twelve pence per copy. They had scribbled little matchstick men on each page, it was a poor mans flick book. The poem was squew-whiff, the words slanted off the page. I grinned, I quite liked that the poem had its own life, its own little book. It was a poem which made people laugh, so the joke would spread. The idea that a complete stranger had done this and that somewhere there were a thousand copies of these yellow fellas being sold for twelve pence each up north somewhere made me happy, I let out a little laugh and walked towards the Heath.


I think it was the noise that got my attention first, the swish-swish sound. Or maybe it was the lights through the branches. No I remember it was the two schoolboys packing large snowballs in their gloved hands. I stared and wondered: where had they got snow? Perhaps a car windscreen or the rooftop of the park cafe but that seemed unlikely. It was a crisp December, the weathermen had told us there was to be no white Christmas this year. Then it as I looked at the snowballs, I heard the swish swish and it was then I saw the fairy lights, the tops of tents and I heard a generator. My heart raced, I swallowed a lump of excitement and hurried around the hedge to see for myself and there it was. Ice-skating, a real outdoor ice-skating rink. I followed the arrowed signs to the entrance and saw a young couple holding hands going around in unison making that swish-swish; there was a man clutching the fence at the side while his friend looked on laughing...




Ice skating what a wonderful idea. I wanted to call someone, anyone, to come and see, to come and skate. I didn’t have ten pence to phone anyone and besides there wasn’t a soul I could think of, everyone has real jobs and is so busy at Christmas. Maybe another day I would ask someone to come and skate with me. I went to take a programme, I read the leaflet and discovered the ice rink would be there for a whole six weeks.



Its not that I particularly like ice-skating but I smiled and carried on walking, with the swish-swish of skates in my head. The movie rolled on in my head, a film played of us, of you and me, ice-skating wearing furs and mittens, holding hands. Of you and I laughing and falling over, yes you, you would fall over and I would help you back up. Then we’d race and go around and around, we’d spin round holding both hands. You might begin to show off and skate backwards and knock a little girl over and her dad would frown and waggle his finger at us and that would be funny too. Ah and then that lovely ache in our thighs from the skating and our ribs from the laughing. The light weight of your foot when I finally managed to pull your ice-skate off for you. Then maybe we’d sit beneath the fairy-lights and have a hot chocolate or a mulled wine, flushed and red faced, hats and scarves, kisses and Christmas cakes, huddled together. And afterwards maybe we’d go to the pub opposite for Sunday lunch. What a perfect Sunday that would be one day, another day, sometime. It was open until late and the idea of ice-skating at twilight seemed magical and romantic. I would love to do that one day. 



I continued up towards Parliament Hill. The low sun made the wet grass glow a dark orange-red and I liked imagining skating with you one dusky evening at sunset. 



I saw some women with three-wheeled pushchairs and overheard them boring holes into each other with talk about each of their babies. Look a kite! One said, look Marquis, a kite, she said pointing upwards. But the toddler could not have been more non-plussed and dazed. Instead Marquis was staring at the pavement and a dog lapping out of a puddle, not looking up at all, not a jot. I looked where she was pointing and the kite was impressive, part parachute, it was dragging its owner along the wet grass on his knees. He had special kneepads on for it to do that. The kite was a sky-dog yanking on its lead. 



I sat on a bench and I watched a girl on the next bench muttering into a Dictaphone. She was observing me, looking over, up and down, I knew she’d write about me when she got in, I knew because I knew I would write about her. She had a pointy elf-hat, scruffy curls framed her face, she had a stubby nose. She also had the same look in her eyes I knew I had. That glaze, that been-inside-alone-staring-at-a-screen too long look.



I thought she might be a writer, I liked to think she was. I smiled at her but she didn’t see. Then I felt self-conscious and hid my face in my scarf. She re-wound her tape and listened intently back to herself as she walked away. 





I wondered if I should have brought my Dictaphone out too, but I cannot bear the sound of my own voice at the moment its too brutal, too shrill and too wet. Recently I have had something serious playing on my mind, like the lack of daylight, like a dark weight. Its as though I am taking it all very seriously, I can see a dark cloud above my head, its like a stone in a shoe, but above my head, I know its a temporary state, like all states.



The mothers started screaming Grace! Grace! Grace, they screamed Grace! I thought what an unfortunate name for a dog, the word Grace should never she screamed, it must not be shouted across a park, yelled at a stinky mutt licking out puddles, it kills the meaning of the word, makes it undignified. I wish they had called their dog Freedom or even Free Ice-cream or Halleluiah or Eureka or Wannaseemyboobs!





Then I stopped watching people and let myself stare directly up at the colours, the glowing rock of magenta sun, an amethyst December sky, glorious and all the shades of plum and wine with clouds of dark lavender. I breathed and was quite content to watch as it quickly started disappearing.



I overheard someone say its a Turner sky and I thought yes it is isn’t it, a Turner sunset and I wanted to say I knew exactly the painting she meant, I wanted to tell her I knew Turners anniversary, December 19th, but instead I buried my face deeper into my scarf. 







I could hear the heavy panting of a passing jogger, somebody’s mobile phone, the name Grace being hollered like one might scream thief and the flapping of the kite-sky-dog. I watched the sunset contentedly listening to everyone else’s lives around me. There was the rumble of a train coming into Gospel Oak Station in the distance below and for as long as I wanted I could stare at the sun until I could see coloured spots.



I remembered reading a magazine and someone clever saying in an interview they didn’t believe in sunsets. What’s not to believe in? I pondered, there’s no argument, we all agree the sun rises and the sun sets, I decided then if I ever remembered where I had read it I’d write to that magazine and I began to compose a letter that began, Dear Sirs, Imagine my disappointment upon reading aforementioned article to discover clever clogs does not believe in sun sets… 

Maybe they meant they didn’t believe in spending time to watch a sunset? Maybe, but that’s like saying I don’t believe in seeing rain falling onto the window pane, I don’t believe in hearing thunder, I don’t believe in snow, catching snow on your tongue. I bloody do, I believe, I believe in sunsets I whispered.





It was then the lady sat next to me. She was dressed in purple, a burgundy bobble hat, fuchsia scarf and gloves and she matched the sky. I had to look twice, she was having a laugh, it was as though she had come to watch the sunset in camouflage? She was exactly the same colours as all the sky and the whole sun setting. Her cheeks bloomed a reddy colour too. She was a December fairy, a sunset angel, I told myself. She said hullo and sat next to me and I listened to see if I could hear her thoughts or if she could hear mine. I tried to think good things, Christmas things so if she was magic she would look upon me favourably. I asked her telepathically if she came here often to watch sunset at Christmas time. I told her I believe, I believe in sunsets do you? There was no reply. I couldn’t hear any special voices, she had no message for me, she didn’t start flying about or give me a magic Christmas sunset badge, her get-up matched the sky and that was all there was and as far as it would go. I was disappointed frankly. 



Then I heard her rustling and getting something out of a plastic bag. I looked around and we were alone, we were the only two people sitting down and we were surrounded by empty benches, why did she sit next to me? I looked at the vast sky like an ocean of damson juice and at all the empty benches and wondered why on earth she had chosen to come and sit next to me? Then I looked in horror to see she was eating a banana. A big bright yellow banana. I could hear her jaw moving, I could feel her teeth sinking into the flesh with each bite, I could taste it too. It was so, so terribly yellow and I hated that she was eating that banana. I tried to ignore it and stare deeper into the sun until I was blinded. I tried to picture her eating blackcurrants but then I imagined her gloved hands all full of sticky jam.



Above us the half-moon was rising, ghostly white and the shape of a slice of melon. I thought if the moon had been in a banana shape it would have matched and it would have made sense, but there was no sense in this otherwise. I mean a banana? I could not get my head around it. I wished she had been eating a big half moon slice of purple melon then it would have been all right, the correct colour and I would have forgiven her. It was as if the banana clashed, it was too much, too summer and too tropical and not the right shape or season and I got up in disgust.




I wanted to say to her:  Why? Why a banana? It doesn’t make any sense? You were the sky; you were the purple setting sun, why did you spoil everything with all that yellow? Tell me why? To think I thought you were the December angel or even a sunset fairy…



I stood up and momentarily looked down at her and shook my head, disillusioned, it was as if she had done something unspeakable and intrusive. It was as if she had passed wind or asked me for money. I tutted at her, sniffed and marched purposely away in a diagonal across a field, only narrowly avoiding getting 
entangled with the kite sailor gliding waves of pockets of air with his kite parachute powered boat.


I took wide strides down a muddy bank and I walked by the lake. I started to snigger remembering the poor sunset fairy and her face as I scowled at her. She was something magic, for look at me laughing, the black cloud slipped away and it wasn’t so serious after all was it.



I felt in my pockets, I had the programme for the ice-skating in one pocket and in the other pocket one of those yellow photocopied booklets of my poem. I walked up to a tree and stuffed them both into a hole in the trunk. Whoever finds thus poem in a hole in this tree will go ice-skating and will believe in sun sets. This made me happy. The idea of someone finding that poem in the heart of a tree by the lake, yes, that made me truly happy. 





With a skip in my step, I remembered you, maybe we’ll see each other soon and maybe we’ll go ice skating, maybe we’ll take a walk or maybe we’ll just talk on the phone but if you read this I wish you a very merry Christmas and all the magic of the season. I wish you a prosperous and peaceful new year. I see you smiling and it makes me grin like its not all so serious, it’s a serious as a monkey in a banana moon. There was a last vibrant splash of cherry across a darkening sky, I turned my collar up and headed homewards down the hill, I heard myself singing…


Say its only a paper moon
sailing over a cardboard sea
But it wouldn’t be make believe
 if you believed in me
Yes its only a canvas sky
hanging over a muslin tree
But it wouldn’t be make believe
 if you believed in me…









© December 2005. Salena Godden 
© New version: December 2011






Mose: I got scruples too, you know. You know what that is... scruples?

Addie: No, I don't know what it is, but if you got 'em, sure bet they belong to somebody else.




 




Website: www.thebookclubboutique.com

Out Now 'UNDER THE PIER' published by Nasty Little Press: www.nastylittlepress.org

Out Now: SIXTY-SIX Books: 
http://www.parthianbooks.com/content/raconteur-america

For quick updates twitter: @BookCBoutique or @salenagodden

Also check out these sites for published work by Salena Godden:

www.shortfirepress.com 













Monday 12 December 2011

The Book Club Boutique Xmas Social: Free party for all our friends!!


Huzzah! The Book Club Boutique return to Soho for one night only!

Its a reunion and its a Christmas knees up and its a happening downstairs at El Camion - codename 'Dicks Bar' - This year we have a Mexican feel for Christmas! The brilliant Bea Bradsell, daughter of cocktail legend Dick Bradsell will be serving tasty margaritas, there will be pepper and spice and all things nice, Books, Booze and Boogie-Woogie for you to warm your hearts and toast your cockles on the nearly- eve of winters solstice.

DRESS CODE: Frida Kahlo / Mexican Wrestler / wear Red or wear a Sombrero!

ENTRANCE: Free!!! £zero!!! $nada!!!

You are all invited to a gathering of some of The Book Club Boutique's finest!
So far we can confirm performance and readings by:
TIM WELLS, FRANCESCA BEARD, NATHAN PENLINGTON, NIALL O'SULLIVAN, MC ANGEL, POETCURIOUS, XAVIER LERET, AMAH-ROSE MCKNIGHT, KAREN HAYLEY, MICHELLE MADSEN, RACHEL ROSE REID and your host the General
SALENA GODDEN with Major MAX DORAY! Plus live music from the kick ass talents of CLAIRE NICOLSON and also BCB heart throb ORLANDO SEALE Watch this page for updates and confirmations, they are coming in thick and fast...

Come join BCBoutique revellers and dance on the tables to DJ DAN CARRIER and his Dig It Sound System and drinky the best cocktails in town.

Happy Hour: 7pm - 11pm but we will rock you and lock you in until 3am!!!

Get there early though, its gonna be intimate and cosy, first come, first served, capacity is limited - Those who bring membership cards for either the El Camino Club or The Book Club Boutique will be ushered in by bouncers quickquicktime!

Have you have ever wanted a gig with BCB?
Please bring books or demos and we'll check them out - we get so many emails - but why not come, hang out, read us a poem, its more fun than doing the admin! And we promise not to bite! We are curating our 2012 series and always on the look out for more beautiful, brave soldiers with your weapons of mass inspiration.

If you cannot make it, we will miss you, you lovelies!

We wish you all a very Merry Christmas,

Well done to all for getting through such an 'eventful' year - to say the least!

We'll see you superstars in the glittering year that they'll call 2012!

love.life.live.long.alive-o
sgxxx



LOOK HERE FOR ADDITIONS TO BILL:

TIM WELLS, FRANCESCA BEARD, NATHAN PENLINGTON, NIALL O'SULLIVAN, MC ANGEL, POETCURIOUS, XAVIER LERET, AMAH-ROSE MCKNIGHT, KAREN HAYLEY, SIMON EGERTON, LISA LORE, JOE CAIRO, MICHELLE MADSEN, RACHEL ROSE REID and your host the General SALENA GODDEN with Major MAX DORAY! Plus live music from BCB heart throb ORLANDO SEALE and the kick ass talent of CLAIRE NICOLSON!!! Watch this page for updates and confirmations, they are coming in thick and fast...We missed you!

Monday 28 November 2011

New news, read all about it!



Out Now 'UNDER THE PIER' published by Nasty Little Press: www.nastylittlepress.org

Out Now: SIXTY-SIX Books: http://oberonbooks.com/66-books.html

Out Now: RACONTEUR: http://www.parthianbooks.com/content/raconteur-america

For quick updates twitter: @BookCBoutique or @salenagodden

Also check out these sites for more published work by Salena Godden:

www.shortfirepress.com 


www.paraphiliamagazine.com 

www.tellermagazine.com


www.eatmytangerine.com

Saturday 29 October 2011

UNDER THE PIER / DIBAWAH DERMAGA









UNDER THE PIER / DIBAWAH DERMAGA

INDONESIAN TRANSLATION BY ALAN MALINGI

Under The Pier  Dibawah Dermaga


Under the pier
I’d meet you here
on Saturday lunchtimes
in technicolours and rainbows.

Dibawah Dermaga
Dinsini kubertemu dirimu
Di hari sabtu saat makan siang
Pada warna dan pelangi 

There were four of us that day
walking along Bottle Alley
I’d touch shards of saffron-coloured glass
pressed into the bleached concrete
and wonder what came in yellow bottles.

Hari itu kita berempat
Berjalan menyusari Bottle Alley
Aku menyentuh pecahan kaca warna kuning kunyit
Ditekan pada yang menggelantang
Dan bertanya botol kuning apa yang akan datang
 
Ceri balanced along the ledge
like a gymnast on a beam
her wild gold hair trapped
in the corners of her mouth.

Ceri berjalan keseimbangan di birai
Bagai persenam di balok titian
Rambut emasnya terjebak
Diujung mulutnya 

Claire wore thick mascara
in turquoise and royal blue
her eyelashes were insects
bluebottles and beetles legs.

Claire memakai mascara tebul
Warna hijau kebiruan dan biru yang indah
Bulu matanja serangga
Lalat hijau dan kaki kumbang 

Becky was tall and gangly
we talked about suicide.
We believed 1987
was gonna be just like 1967

Becky tinggi dan berkelompok
Kami berbicara tentang bunuh diri
Kami yakin tahun 1987
Akan menjadi seperti tahun 1967 

as we swigged from the Thunderbirds red
fifty pence more expensive
than the blue
but we were all sick of Scrumpy.

Sambil kami menengguk minuman thunderbird merah
50 pence lebih mahal
Daripada yang biru
Tapi kami semua menikmatinya

The four of us sheltered there from
the rain and the boys and our parents.
It was our secret place
that nook and ledge,

Kami berempat berlindung disama dari
Hujan bersama anak anak kecil dan orang tua
Itu tempat rahasia kami
Tempat persembunyian dan birai itu 

with our backs against the sea wall
our voices drowned out
by the crashing of waves
a wash of froth and brine
an echo of footsteps
across the soft rotting wood
of the boardwalk above us.

Dengan punggung yang membelakangi laut
Suara kami tenggelam
Oleh deburan ombak
Buih busa dan air asin
Pantulan suara langkah kaki
Melewati kayu rapuh yang lembut
Diatus papan untuk berjalan diatas kami 

There were gaps between the planks
prisms of watery light
brown broken pipes emptied
in slurps of sewage.

Ada sela-sela diantara papan papan itu
Kilauan sinar air
Pipa coklat yang kosong
Dalam hirupan kotoran 

Lightening flashed
between the rusty barnacled legs
of the dear old lady pier
and the magic mushrooms
made the sea all blood and ink.

Sinar berkilauan
Diantara kaki-kaki kijung yang berkarat
Di dermaga tua tersayang
Dan jamur yang mengagumkan
Membuat laut darah dan tinta 

We shared ten B&H
bubble-gum lip gloss
smeared and slipped off the tip
and the lip of the bottle
and we sang Purple Rain
memorised the words like a prayer.

Kami berbagi 10 B&H
Permen karet pembasah bibir
Melumuri dan melepaskan ujung
Dan bibir botol
Lalu kami bernyanyi Purple Rain 
Mengingat kata-kata layaknya pendoa 

With a tiny crumb of hash
we huddled around the light
we cupped our hands
to make the spliff, right,
we were grounded
because we had lovebites
we were nearly fifteen
and we had catfights.

Dengan remah-remah kecil potongan daging dan kentang
Kami berkumpul mengelilingi cahaya/lampu
Kami menangkupkan tangan kami
Membentuk ganja, iya kan
Kami berbaring
Karena kami punya cinta
Kami hampir 15 tahun
Dan kami punya... 

We swore to be best friends forever
that our children would play together
one for all and all for one
forever and ever…

Kami berjanji untuk berteman selamanya
Anak-anak kami akan bermain bersama
Satu untuk semua dan semua untuk satu
Selamanya 

And as the storm died
the rain stopped and
God was a solitary shaft of sunlight
hitting the sea with a silver path to the horizon,

Dan saat badai berakhir
Hujan berhenti
Tuhan adalah sorotan matahari
Memukul laut melalui jalan menuju kaki langit 

Under the pier
I’ll meet you
here.

Dibawah dermaga
Aku akan bertemu kamu
Disini.







Sunday 21 August 2011

"A Valentine At Waterloo" - Meet us in Soho in 2058










UPDATE: September 2nd 2011

We got 'Pick Of The Week' BBC R4 - Ian McMillan reviews 'A Valentine at Waterloo' and gave 'Verse Illustrated' a big thumbs up!
Found the link, Ian plays clip at about 5 mins in... http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qpdd


A VALENTINE AT WATERLOO on VERSE ILLUSTRATED

Listen: Wednesday, 23:00 on BBC RADIO 4 & Podcast FREE thereafter

In the third of the new series of illustrated poems, get in your time machines and set your GPS Sat Nav for Sohemia, The French House on the Old Compton Street River in 2058.

'A Valentine at Waterloo' written and performed by Salena Godden

An Orwellian post-apocalyptic vision of our sexual and hedonist future:

"The best show in England-Town, they have real flying femen, ladybirds and buttflies, cock-a-tails and flickbeans, hermaids and mermaids, 8-breasted gooligans, whippers, flippers and strippers-to-go-go, the finest black market moon juice in the whole of downtown Soho..."

Then you'll be transported presently and safely back to 2011 with 'A Hell of a Week' written and performed by the wonderful Scroobius Pip. This should be 'one of the biggest solo spoken word shows ever to be recorded', exclusively for Radio 4. But where exactly is Scroobius Pip...?

Actors: Carl Prekopp, Peter Polycarpou and Jonathan Forbes.

Directed by James Robinson.

website: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b013fj5t

podcast link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/vi


scroobius pip: http://scroobiuspip.co.uk/

salena godden: www.thebookclubboutique.com

Wednesday 17 August 2011

MAE WEST: Come up and see me sometime...








MAE WEST: 

“If you can’t go straight, you’ve got to go around”


She was a fast moving woman
who liked to take it slow,
it was not the men in her life
but the life in her men.

When she landed in London
they asked Ms West “How do you like Big Ben?”
She said she was disappointed
he was just a clock.

Her problem was never how much sex she had
but how much she could get away with -
submitting hot scripts loaded with lines she knew would be cut
she’d save the real script until shooting or first night and then
watch the studio managers, theatre bosses go white with fear
but change their minds quick when the queues grew and tickets sold out.

She was the first woman to dance the shimmy live on stage
a provocative move she picked up in late night clubs, speakeasys and ghettos
cohorting with poor white trash and coloured folk.
And when Duke or Louis played - they really played
she wouldn’t allow Hollywood bosses to pay white guys to mime
their tunes to camera.

Her lifes work was a revolt against censorship
whipping up a frenzy in red neck bible belts
challenging moralising bigots.
She wrote scandalous scripts
a black man kissing a white woman
and also a gay kiss.

She spent her life on the road and touring
whilst writing plays, books and live shows,
She was born in the 1890’s
and didn’t get to the silver screen and Hollywood
or become a real household name
until she was over 40 years old.

She once booked a cast of down and out homeless bums
she gave them shelter and paid work
whilst creating an authentic Harlem ghetto on stage
and it was a sell-out show.

She dated fit boxers and sportsmen,
perhaps because they could keep up with her stamina.
She had a voracious sexual appetite
fuelling gossip she must be hermaphrodite
but she was one hundred per cent woman.

She enjoyed sex, 
but like an athlete in training
she abstained when she was working.
She believed in sexual freedom
but never screamed off the rooftops
rather whispered to one man at a time.

And goodness has nothing to do with it,
there are no good girls gone wrong
just bad girls found out.

She reduced Cary Grant to a whimper,
when her male co-star reached to hold her hand
she said through smoldering eyes
“It aint heavy I can carry it for myself.”

They used to call me Saliva
as in spit
the stuff you use to polish a thing
when you are all out of elbow grease,

Well, whoever said
there is a book inside everybody
was inside a body
at the time.

So,
peel me a grape
you can be had

The only difference
between you and me, honey
is you can afford to give it away.

Throw discretion to the wind
and your hips to the north,
south, east and west.

There’s not a dry seat in the house
for the legendary
Mae West.



© 2011. Salena Godden.






Poem first published: 
Issue 23 / THE ILLUSTRATED APE MAGAZINE: www.theillustratedape.com