Hidden Brook Press
Window Fishing: The Night We Caught Beatlemania - Second Edition
Window Fishing: The Night We Caught Beatlemania - Second Edition
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Doesn't think he knows anything for sure only Ed Sullivan and the Beatles,
Canadian poet Betsy Struthers confirms the spontaneous orgasm of screaming girls in her autobiographical account of her attendance at a Beatle concert in Toronto
When it's over, we slump in our seats as others shuffle past, limp, spent. Sis's face a mask of streaked mascara, smudged lipstick. She's panting softly now, eyes closed, hands folded on her breasts as if in prayer. My shift plastered to my spine, thighs gummed together, parched throat. Ears tingle in the aftermath. The scream that fades into this little death.
With record sales of over two billion to date, the Beatles remain a cultural phenomenon without parallel. What began in England in 1961, spread throughout North America in 1964, and continues to inspire writers from all over the world lives on in the work of fifteen-year old Korean poet, Paul Jeong who writes, "Imagine silence/after the fall/total quiet/where eyes are opened/amid awakening." In this poem he equates the falling of rain all over the planet with the impact of the Beatles on the awakening consciousness of people all over the world.
John B. Lee, Canada's premier anthologist, brings together several generations of writers, from China, Russia, Korea, United States, and Canada, in celebration of the movement that struck a spark in the imagination of people all over the world. For his part he puts it this way in his own poem, "Encountering Fame," a poem concerning a brief interaction with Paul McCartney, "and my heart pounded/like a child trapped in a trunk/marked 1964".
David McGimpsey in his hilarious poem writes,
"... Maybe it's just me.
I've seen people singing classic Beatles songs-
from "Hey, Moon Cat!" to "Love Is So Lovely"-
and they all seemed perfectly happy to me."
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