Sunday, June 2, 2013

Meet our Readers - Koom Kankesan

Welcome to a new feature on the (Not So) Nice Italian Girls & Friends blog! We will be featuring the new work of our featured writers on a rotating basis. We begin with ... 

Preview
Big Trouble in Little Eelam or Rajapaksa meets Rob Ford
by Koom Kankesan

Rajapaksa and Gota fussed with their disguises in front of the mirror at the airport bathroom. Rajapaksa had shorn his head and wore a bright orange robe to look like a Buddhist monk. He had asked for a disguise that made him look like Caine from Kung-Fu but the robe reminded him of the time he had worked on The Dream of Dharmapala – how easier things had been then when he simply wanted to be a cinematic heartthrob and dramatic genius! Instead, he had become another kind of star, the leading actor in the new exciting drama known as Sri Lanka's Wars, Part IV: A New Hope. The progression of states and epochs in the island's bloody history were like lives lived, each phase as different from the other as if the island itself were going through reincarnations until it shook off its dire karma and emerged into the light of a brand new nirvana. A light that he, Rajapaksa, would usher in as its crowning Buddha.

Gota was dressed like Tupac Shakur. Rajapaksa sighed. What was wrong with his younger brother? He suspected it was nothing that medication could not fix. Even his ghostly father's spanking had not done the trick. If anything, Gota had become even more moody and sullen since that time, as if the spanking from the ghost of their father had reverted him to a sullen teenager, a child. He withdrew into his inner sanctum for hours on end or fed his sharks at his home compound and would entertain no visitors. Indeed, the ministers were hesitant to visit him there as he and his wife fed their 'children' slabs of raw meat which were eagerly consumed amongst rows and rows of teeth while a litany of swear words and four letter rants emitted from the living room speakers: Puff Daddy, Mase, Biggie Smalls, and of course, Gota's favourite, 2Pac.

In fact, Gota was wearing a 2Pac t-shirt right now, saying 'Thug Life' on it, a yellow FUBU jacket, Phillies baseball cap, retro Air Jordans, and Beats by Dr. Dre headphones. Rajapaksa and Gota were dressed incognito and travelling passenger class, like peasants, to Scarborough. Scarborough was part of the Greater Toronto Area, the de facto capital of Canada, and was said to hold the greatest concentration of Sri Lankan Tamils outside Sri Lanka. It burned his pride that so many Tamils had escaped the scourge that he and the other Rajapaksas had visited on their country. Somehow, these bastards had survived and thrived, only amassing their hordes and secret fortunes so they could continue their wicked terrorist ways in the new world. Not if Rajapaksa could help it!

It was Basil, the idea man, who had come up with the idea for this trip. Rajapaksa had been morose of late with no outlet for his mighty and imperious energies. Tourism was booming in Sri Lanka. The country's star was rising in the pan-Asian basin. They had finally fired that troublesome woman editor at The Sunday Leader. The future looked as cloudless as Colombo's bright skies. It would take Detective Columbo himself to discover the buried skeletons in Colombo's history! Rajapaksa's poor wife bore the brunt of his excess energy but she gave as good as she got.

Canada was a peace loving and unsuspecting country. Like a fat turtle, it might be just the place a ferocious and ravenous lion such as himself could find his next meal. So he and Gota were off to Scarborough or Little Eelam as they liked to call it. Without a worthy opponent like Prabahkaran to sharpen his claws against, Rajapaksa worried that his considerable energies would decay and founder. A scouting mission was just what was called for. They would go to Little Eelam and see what was what. With any luck, this time next year, a host of Chengdu J-7 fighter planes, on loan from Hu Jintao and the Chinese, would be carpet bombing the Scarborough Towne Centre.

“Do you have the passports, brother?” asked Gota, making sure his untucked T-shirt was just perfect.

“You must call me Field Commander Rajapaksa while we're on this mission,” replied Rajapaksa.

“Fine. Then I want to called Gota Shakur.”

Rajapaksa sighed. Was there no one in his family, besides himself, who had inherited any sense?

7:55 a.m. Toronto time.

Gota and Rajapaksa got out of a cab on Markham Rd. in Scarborough, just north of the Macdonald-Cartier Freeway. They knew the offices to the Canadian Tamil Congress were around here. Pulling their small suitcases with wheels on them up the grassy bank, the two brothers looked for the office building on Milner Avenue. They were pointed towards a suite by some helpful but giggling office workers. Rajapaksa assumed that they had never seen a pious Buddhist before.

The brothers entered the suite but no one was there. Beside the abandoned reception desk was a large stuffed tiger, its whiskered face staring benignly at them. A framed photo of Prabahkaran, smiling during better days, looked down upon them from the wall.

Rajapaksa put two and two together. “It's a terrorist cell!” he cried.

The unexpected and sudden discovery scared his brother. His voice quivering, Gota tugged at the folds of Rajapaksa's robe. “Big brother, I'm scared!”

Rajapaksa used to hate it when Gota had done this as a kid. The boy would get scared of the dark and come to him for emotional succor. “Pull yourself together!” he hissed. “You're the secretary of defense! What would Tupac say?”

“Hai! hai! Hai!” came sounds from the basement.

“What are those sounds, big brother?” whispered Gota.

“Terrorists performing their terrorist rituals, obviously” declared Rajapaksa. “They're probably sacrificing a kitten. Let's go see...”

“But I'm scared,” reiterated Colombo's Secretary of Defense. Honestly, he was like Scooby Doo shaking and trembling before going into a haunted house! Would Rajapaksa have to pick him up and carry him down the stairs?

“Hai! Hai! Hai!” came the terrorists' chants, in unison, stripped of their individuality, brainwashed to obey and act like machines, their indoctrination audible through the simplicity and repetition of their cries.

Rajapaksa pushed open the door, trying to make it creak as little as possible. The brothers, by themselves, would have made the stairs buckle and groan. Together, it was all they could do to stop the pinewood stairs from splintering and collapsing. Luckily, their shifting steps were drowned out by the kathas and choreographed movements of a class of eight year old Tamil girls doing karate lessons before school.

Sensei Lakshman was the master of the dojo and he ran the class for girls. His mother and sister had been killed by a mortar blast during the heavy siege of their village in the early months of 2009. Sensei Lakshman had only lost his sight but his mother and younger sister had been killed. He bore an especially poignant hatred for Rajapaksa. Lakshman channelled it by teaching karate to little girls so they could defend themselves, so they would not become victims like his poor mother and sister. On especially maddening days, when the memories were most potent, he had the girls practice their roundhouse kicks on a punching bag with a black and white image of Rajapaksa's face taped to it.

Now, Sensei Lakshman may have been blind but his other senses were sharp. He acutely heard the bend and heave in the stairs as they took on their added load. Rajapaksa and his brother descended cautiously down the steps but Sensei Lakshman turned towards them and spotted their wheezing and smell as if Goebbels and Goring had walked into a Jewish deli, speaking German. The venerable sensei's blood boiled and war sirens started going off between his ears. He thrust an accusatory finger at the two intruders and yelled to his charges, “Attack!”

The eight year old girls stopped their kathas and turned around in slow motion. Their little black terry cloth karate robes billowed and swooped around their swivelling bodies. The ends of their belts slapped against their lengthy ponytails. They recognized the three dimensional likeness of the face they had been practicing upon. Without question or hesitation, the class of eight year old Tamil girls leapt forward and aimed their roundhouses at Gota and Rajapaksa. A flurry of honed, driven eight year old feet slapped the two brothers' faces, bellies, and thighs. It was like being stung by a hornet's nest.

“Retreat! Retreat!” cried Field Commander Rajapaksa and the two brothers scurried up the steps, the pine groaning and moaning, and stumbled out of the office as the swarm of young hornets chased them across the parking lot.

Their suitcases long abandoned behind them, the priest and rap enthusiast hurried down the grassy knoll and tried to flag a cab.

“Hai, hai, hai!” the cries of the eight year old karate students pursued them, promising imminent destruction and a world of pain.

“Let's split up, bro!” panted Gota. He took some sachets of bubble gum he had in his FUBU jacket's pocket and threw them in the air. The gum scattered as it fell to the ground and the little hornets stopped to pick up the sweet sweet sugar. Gota had a natural instinct for eluding Tamils and Rajapaksa realized it had not diminished in the intervening years.

“Okay, you're right – they won't be able to pursue us both,” he wheezed. “What are you going to do?”

“I'll take a bus,” replied Gota and ran after a red and white TTC bus which slowed at a nearby stop. “Good luck, bro!”

Rajapaksa picked up the folds of his robe and began running again. He saw a large SUV stop at the red light across the street and ran for it. A large burly man sat in the front seat, texting furiously while others honked their horns around him. The girls came sprinting to the intersection but the light had changed against them. Having been taught about observing crossing lights and to guard themselves against 'stranger danger,' they opted not to run through traffic.

Grabbing the door of the SUV and pulling it open, Rajapaksa jumped inside. “Go, go!” he yelled, “I'll pay you anything! Just get me out of here!”

The burly man stopped texting and turned around, twisting his lips in surprise and alarm. The straw blond spikes in his crew cut seemed to jump up in alarm from his head. “Why? What's going on? Is it the goddamned press?”


To continue ... and to see who this "burly man" with blond spikes is please go to Koom Kankesan's website at koomkankesan. You may also order the book by clicking on the cover of the book featured in the right column of the blog. above.


Thursday, May 30, 2013

Italian Heritage Month Literary Marathon


Q Space at 382 College Street
June 1st, 2013 from 3:00–10:00 pm


Damiano Pietropaolo
Terri Favro
Maria Coletta McLean
Elena Basile
Bruna Di Giuseppe Bertoni
Darlene Madott
Michael Mirolla
Valentino Assenza
Sam Pupo
John Romano
Michelle Alfano
Isabella Colallilo-Katz
Caroline Di Giovanni
Celestino Di Iuliis
Luigi Ferrara
Norman Cristofoli
Joseph Maviglia
Romina Di Gasbarro
Marisa Buffone
Daniela Saioni
Rocco De Giacomo
Pier Giorgio Di Cicco
John Calabro
Domenico Capilongo
Corrado Paina
Gianna Patriarca
Luciano Iacobelli
Claudio Gaudio

Contact Luciano Iacobelli
liacobelli1@yahoo.com
416-893-7979
for more information ...

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

May Reading

Bocelli starts the evening with singing
Elizabeth Ruth reads from Matadora
Ania Szado reads from Studio Saint-Ex
Nancy Jo Cullen reads from Canary
Koom Kankesan reads from The Rajapaksa Stories
Terri Favro, co-organizer & emcee, reads from The Proxy Bride
Michelle Alfano, co-organizer and emcee, with Terri
The appreciative crowd at QSpace

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

May Reading

Nancy Jo Cullen is the fourth recipient of the Dayne Ogilvie Prize for Emerging Gay Author.  She has published collections of poetry with Calgary’s Frontenac House Press. Her short story collection, Canary is the winner of the Metcalf-Rooke 2012 prize and was long-listed for the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award.

Koom Kankesan is a writer with a background in English Literature and Film Studies. He has written short stories and small anecdotal pieces for various journals, and has published film and book reviews with newspapers such as the Montreal Gazette. The Panic Button was his first book. The Rajapaksa Stories is his new one. Visit koomkankesan.webs.com.

Elizabeth Ruth's first novel, Ten Good Seconds of Silence was a finalist for the Writer's Trust of Canada Fiction Prize, the Amazon.ca Best First Novel Award and the City of Toronto Book Award. Her second novel, Smoke, was chosen for the 2007 One Book One Community program. In April, 2013 Elizabeth Ruth published her third novel, Matadora, to critical acclaim. In addition to Matadora, Elizabeth will also publish a GoodReads novella this year, entitled, Love You To Death. Elizabeth Ruth teaches creative writing at UofT and mentors within the Humber School for Writers. Visit www.elizabethruth.com.

Ania Szado's
new novel, Studio Saint-Ex, is a national bestseller in Canada and is forthcoming in the U.S., Russia, Italy and Poland. Her first novel, Beginning of Was, was regionally shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers' Prize, Best First Book. She holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia, and an AOCA from Ontario College of Art. Ania currently mentors writers one-on-one. She is the 2013 Writer in Residence for Whistler, B.C., and will be teaching creative writing at University of Toronto in 2014. Visit her website: www.aniaszado.com.

With music by ...
Bocelli is an urban vocalist, DJ, and producer. His creative focus however is his unique form of sinjaying, a reggae infused blend of singing and rapping. Native to and living in Toronto, Bocelli is currently working on his first official EP that will feature a variety of urban genres from dance to hip-hop. Though not one to express lofty ideas in his music - preferring instead to stick to feel good, love, and even erotic lyrics - Bocelli is a philosophy professor outside the world of music, recently obtaining his Ph.D. from the University of Ottawa. As a doctor and an urban artist it perhaps comes as no surprise that Bocelli sometimes confuses himself as Clark Kent, turning into full superhero form only on the mic.

With emcees …
Michelle Alfano is a co-organizer of the (Not So) Nice Italian Girls & Friends Reading Series and a Co-Editor with Descant. Her novella Made Up of Arias (Blaurock Press) won the 2010 Bressani Prize for Short Fiction. Her short story “Opera”, on which her novella Made Up of Arias is based, was a finalist for a Journey Prize anthology. Her fiction and non-fiction work has been widely published in major literary publications. She was recently featured in the documentary Saturnia featured on OMNI-TV and at the Moving Images Film Festival. She is currently at work at a new novel entitled Vita’s Prospects. She blogs at alitchick.blogspot.ca.

Terri Favro is a freelance writer and copywriter whose work has been published in magazines and anthologies, and broadcast on CBC Radio. She has won second and third-place in the Accenti Magazine Writing Contest, Honourable Mentions in the Prism Non-Fiction and Room Fiction contests, and was a Broken Pencil Deathmatch finalist. Terri has also been shortlisted for three CBC Literary Awards, the FISH Publishing Memoir, EVENT Magazine Non-fiction and Vanderbilt-Exile Short Fiction contests. Her novella, The Proxy Bride (2012), received a Ken Klonsky-Quattro Books Award. Terri collaborated on the graphic novels Bella and the Loyalist Heroine (Grey Borders, 2012) and Waiting For Mario Puzo (forthcoming). She blogs at terrifavro.ca

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Celebrating love and desire ...

Emcee/co-organizer Giovanna Riccio
Giovanna
Poet Nancy Bullis
Poet Norman Cristofoli
Norman
Poet Sheila Stewart
Sheila
Writer & co-organizer Michelle Alfano
Michelle
KD Miller, writer
Our gracious QSpace host Luciano Iacobelli

Monday, January 21, 2013

February Reading



 
Michelle Alfano is a co-organizer of the (Not So) Nice Italian Girls & Friends Reading Series and a Co-Editor with Descant. Her novella Made Up of Arias (Blaurock Press) won the 2010 Bressani Prize for Short Fiction. Her short story “Opera”, on which her novella is based, was a finalist for a Journey Prize anthology. Her fiction and non-fiction work has been widely published in major literary publications. She was recently featured in the documentary Saturnia featured on OMNI-TV and at the Moving Images Film Festival. She is currently at work at a new novel entitled Vita’s Prospects.

Nancy Bullis hosts HOWL, CIUT 89.5FM which airs every other Tuesday evening at 10pm. She is the author of a novella Henry (Lyrical Myrical Press), a full-length poetry book The Eel Ladder (WatershedBooks), a chapbook Leather Lattice and a spoken word performer.

Norman Cristofoli has published seven chapbooks of poetry and prose and produced two CD’s of poetry/musical collaborations. He is also the publisher of the Labour of Love literary magazine. Norman would rather sit in the back row of the balcony, as far away from the spotlight as possible, and believes bios should be buried with the artist.

Sheila Stewart has two collections of poetry, The Shape of a Throat (Signature Editions, 2012) and A Hat to Stop a Train (Wolsak and Wynn, 2003), now in its second printing. She co-edited The Art of Poetic Inquiry with Suzanne Thomas and Ardra L. Cole (Backalong Books, 2012). Sheila’s poetry has been recognized by several awards, including the gritLIT competition and the Pottersfield Portfolio Short Poem Contest. Formerly a community- based adult literacy worker, Sheila is using poetic inquiry in her Ph.D. at OISE, University of Toronto. 

And as emcee ...
Giovanna Riccio was born in Calabria and immigrated to Canada as a child. Her poems have appeared in newspapers, magazines, journals and anthologies. Her work has been translated into Romanian and a number of her poems are being translated into Italian for an upcoming anthology to be published in Italy. She is the author of Vittorio (Lyricalmyrical Press) and Strong Bread (Quattro Books).

Thursday, November 29, 2012

November Reading

Sam Bernstein reading from her memoir



Sam

Writer Andrew Borkowski

Andrew
Poet Sonia DiPlacido
Sonia
Writer Garry Dwyer Joyce
Andrew and Garry
Bianca Lakoseljac
Bianca
Emcee & co-organizer Giovanna Riccio
NSNIG&F friends Christine Elias & Danielle Richardson
KD Miller and friend
Giovanna, writer Diane Bracuk and Andrew
Danielle and emcee/co-organizer Michelle Alfano