JAMES BROWN was born in
1966, grew up in Palmerston North, and now lives in Wellington with
his partner and two children. He was a finalist for the 2002 Prize
in Modern Letters. His books to date are Go Round Power Please
(Victoria University Press, 1995), which won the Best First Book,
Poetry, Award at the 1996 Montana New Zealand Book Awards, and Lemon
(VUP, 1999). A third collection, Favourite Monsters, will be
published by VUP in 2002.
Brown writes: Loneliness
was written during my tenure as the 2001 Writer in Residence at the
University of Canterbury, which was, at times, an isolating experience.
The feeling of being on the outside, however, can be quite attractive,
especially to writers, and is, more often than not, a commonly held
delusion. Elvis strikes me as a tragicomic hero, someone whose myth
is vastly bigger than he was. Its the cliche pitfall of the
rich and famous that they end up with many more admirers than friends
and die sad and lonely. The poem tries to sight Elvis
at a point when his myth is starting to gain ascendancy.
I should mention
that I really did see Elvis out my window on a number of occasions.
Apparently he works in the Psychology Department.