Review
Anachronistic Beat? Kerouac blown back from the past? Michael Madsen s style has often been compared to Beat Poetry. Hip. Existential. Transient. But where does this notion derive from? Actor and friend Dennis Hopper, once summed it up that he liked him better than Kerouac. That Madsen was raunchier, more poignant. In fact, when Hopper asked Madsen point blank in an interview who influenced him: Rimbaud s A Season in Hell or Kerouac s On the Road? Madsen replied: For sure it was Kerouac. He went on to say: There s a page in On the Road about waking up in a lonely railroad yard that stuck in my mind and led me to believe that I wasn t the only guy who understood the complexity of being lonely and was concerned about the future of the male animal. Loneliness, alienation and the absurdity/humor of quotidian lives, at times, is exactly what the reader will find when traveling back 10 years on the road with Madsen. Through his poems and stories you will see the world through his eyes, the way he saw it at that place in time. Some offbeat observations and non sequiturs he ll make you laugh and he ll make you cry, as David Carradine said, and things will never look the same to you again. Madsen s style and rhythm are tough, trenchant and pull no punches with the reader. That should come as no surprise; he writes much like he acts. However, to get the best insight, assessment, and understanding of Madsen s work, I would recommend the reader peruse or revisit the Forewords by: Hopper, Tarantino and Carradine or best of all, Madsen s own reflection in the Afterward (p. 425). In The Complete Poetic Works of Michael Madsen, Vol. I: 1995-2005, the reader will find six books in one volume of work books that have either been previously out-of-print and hard-to-find or just unavailable. This book is the only authorized, current and comprehensive compilation of all of Michael s work. Although the poetry has been reconstructed and/or reconstituted on the page, the poems are word perfect, to-the-letter, just as Madsen wrote them. Also included is an array of photos from his private collection; including candid home photos and those from the movies you love; many being rare and never before seen especially included for this special anniversary edition. It might surprise some fans or readers that Madsen has been writing poetry for ten years. As the story goes, he started out writing on match books, napkins and hotel stationery, in between the takes... of his trade. In fact, back in 1998, his book Burning In Paradise, won the Independent Firecracker Poetry Award. He has evolved, as the reader will see, into a bonafide American poet whose time has come at last. Madsen is a true rebel poet. You can understand his disdain for authority in early youth in his poem Tears, where his 6th grade teacher pointed him out to the class and said something is wrong here and his early rebellion against authority is evinced in such poems as: Jacks and Christmas where we follow Madsen through a series of menial, dead-end jobs where his employer lacked human dignity and how Madsen responded to that Other poems also illustrate his zen-like contemplation and/or detachment that he experiences with inanimate objects, whether it s a single black cowboy boot in Movie or Late June where a barren roadside reminds Michael of the horror of Marilyn Monroe s dead body. This 10-Year Anniversary Edition chronicles Michael s complete poetic works, his acting and his life. This is his personal journey and viewpoint and therefore critics are persona non grata. A critic, as Kenneth Tynan once said, is a man who knows the way but cannot drive the car. Madsen has driven the car at 100 mph. --Michael P. Naughton, Editor, 13 Hands Publications
Product Description
This 10 year Anniversary Special Edition of Michael Madsen's poetry is six books in one: The Complete Works includes previously unavailable books: "Beer, Blood & Ashes," "Eat the Worm," and "Burning in Paradise"--plus, now out of print "A Blessing of the Hounds" and "46 Down: A Book of Dreams & Other Ramblings," in addition to new selections from "When Pets Kill," with over 50 photos.