Amway-style poetry samples
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'''A Bible Salesman''' | '''A Bible Salesman''' | ||
- | An experiment with form and presentation, this form of poetry was developed by Jorge Suarez but elaborated by Stimes Addisson in the early 1960's in what he referred to as, "Basically time off -- in that my wife has kicked me out." The purvey of only the young, this method of literary distribution is nearly identical to the distribution of vacuums and religious tracts so popular in the previous decade of [[Poob Culture]], the main product of which is the travelling salesman, source of endless myth, vaporic construction. In later years, [[Addisson]] would elaborate endlessly on this theme. | + | An experiment with form and presentation, this form of poetry was developed by [[Jorge Suarez]] but elaborated by Stimes Addisson in the early 1960's in what he referred to as, "Basically time off -- in that my wife has kicked me out." The purvey of only the young, this method of literary distribution is nearly identical to the distribution of vacuums and religious tracts so popular in the previous decade of [[Poob Culture]], the main product of which is the travelling salesman, source of endless myth, everpresent [[vaporic construction]]. In later years, [[Addisson]] would elaborate endlessly on this theme. |
'''A Charming Lunchoenette.''' | '''A Charming Lunchoenette.''' |
Revision as of 08:18, 14 Aug 2004
A Bible Salesman
An experiment with form and presentation, this form of poetry was developed by Jorge Suarez but elaborated by Stimes Addisson in the early 1960's in what he referred to as, "Basically time off -- in that my wife has kicked me out." The purvey of only the young, this method of literary distribution is nearly identical to the distribution of vacuums and religious tracts so popular in the previous decade of Poob Culture, the main product of which is the travelling salesman, source of endless myth, everpresent vaporic construction. In later years, Addisson would elaborate endlessly on this theme.
A Charming Lunchoenette.
A loosely strung network of poets, the poetry distributed yada yada yada, someone jump in -- upon which what if one went door to door selling epic poems with selected strophes, stanzas and spondules?
That's just what Stimes Addisson did for a few weeks in 1963. He went door to door through the suburbs of Chicaco with a briefcase full of pamphlets and weird product descriptions. He made 300 dollars and got laid twice.