800 JKS by Mark Francis Johnson
105 mm x 170 mm, 76 pages, Black and white printed, Perfect bound, Softcover, 2021
Memory plays tricks, but does it joke? In 800 JKS, a deceased gentleman who collected circus memorabilia endeavours to answer this question, unaware that the real difficulty lies in determining how to pose it. His method, no less than his failure, will be familiar to anyone who habitually asks questions formed to preclude the possibility of an unfunny answer. A book for everybody, then; but a book too late to help us. That is the 800th joke.
‘It’s a pretty obvious but nonetheless amusing paradox that, at least some of the time (and perhaps more like most of the time), jokes that aren’t funny are funnier than jokes that are funny. Mark Johnson writes directly into this problem, using
the form of the joke as a haphazard world-building (or anti-world-building) device.
The poems repeatedly promise punchlines, but before the set-ups are even finished, the characters and situations melt away and regroup in new formations. The effect is partly comedic, partly analytic. Johnson is one of the most fluid and stylish writers of disjunctive verse around, and 800 JKS is a terrific and odd book that deftly trips over the awkward structure of jokes, wringing dry humour from the form itself.’
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