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Rebecca Tamás
REBECCA TAMÁS is a Lecturer in Creative Writing at York St John University. Her pamphlet Savage was published by Clinic, and was a LRB Bookshop pamphlet of the year, and a Poetry School book of the year. Rebecca’s first full-length poetry collection, WITCH, was published by Penned in the Margins in March 2019. She is editor, together with Sarah Shin, of Spells: 21st Century Occult Poetry, published by Ignota Books. Her collection Strangers: Essays on the Human and Nonhuman was published by Makina Books in October 2020.  

Articles Available Online


Interview with Ariana Reines

Interview

July 2019

Rebecca Tamás

Interview

July 2019

I first became aware of Ariana Reines’s work through her early poetry collection The Cow (2006), which went on to win the prestigious Alberta Prize. I...

Essay

Issue No. 24

The Songs of Hecate: Poetry and the Language of the Occult

Rebecca Tamás

Essay

Issue No. 24

  I have gone out, a possessed witch, haunting the black air, braver at night; dreaming evil, I have...

I started reading Geovani Martins’s The Sun on my Head in English, but within minutes I was sending emails, trying to get hold of a copy in the original Portuguese Not because I found Julia Sanches’s translation faulty, but out of a burning curiosity The prose was absolutely mad — Brazilian slang words I wasn’t familiar with, alongside what looked like 1950s AAVE, hybrid Portuguese-English swearing, and phrases that felt endearingly close to the ones I heard at school in London in the 2000s (‘[n]ervous and embarrassed, I felt like a real space cadet for wanting to drop acid at two in the afternoon’) Eventually, I read the two editions side by side, quickly and in awe   The Sun on My Head is a collection of thirteen ‘contos’ (stories or tales) which tell the stories of a loose cluster of men living in the periphery, or favelas, of Rio de Janeiro The contos move between the first and third person, using the past and the present tense; every page of the book is deftly, defiantly, joyfully oral You feel you are being spoken to directly to by these various men in various states of inebriation They appear in all stages of life: as children in ‘Bathroom Blonde’ and ‘The Mystery of the Vila’, in old age in ‘The Blind Man’, but most often as young adults on the cusp of something   Everything happens and nothing happens: bodies are disposed of, women seduce and help kill cops, people work shit jobs for shit pay, and get high with their friends Martins documents lives lived in proximity to death, masculinity forced to construct itself in the tight spaces between the armed military police and armed drug dealers, and the euphoria that comes from feeling both freedom and danger at the same time The book is full of the humiliation and alienation of work (particularly brilliant in ‘TGIF’, which as the acronym suggests, takes place on a Friday when the narrator has finished work and gets paid) Although the stories tend to focus

Contributor

July 2015

Rebecca Tamás

Contributor

July 2015

REBECCA TAMÁS is a Lecturer in Creative Writing at York St John University. Her pamphlet Savage was published by Clinic, and...

Interrogations

poetry

Issue No. 14

Rebecca Tamás

poetry

Issue No. 14

INTERROGATION (1)     Are you a witch?   Are you   Have you had relations with the devil?   Have you   Have...

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fiction

March 2016

Red

Madeleine Watts

fiction

March 2016

It was the first week of 1976 and she had just turned 17.   The day school let out...

Art

February 2013

Haitian Art and National Tragedy

Rob Sharp

Art

February 2013

Thousands of Haiti’s poorest call it home: Grand Rue, a district of Port-au-Prince once run by merchants and bankers,...

poetry

March 2013

The Humming Lady

James Byrne

poetry

March 2013

The humming lady arrives in a smiling orange smock and orders from the waiter a plate of overripe oranges,...

 

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