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Endings :: Northwest Review

Editor Daniel Anderson bid readers farewell in the final issue of Northwest Review (v49 n2). The Creative Writing Program of the University of Oregon website notes: “This was not an easy conclusion for us to reach. However, the current economic climate, as well as the rapidly evolving nature of literary quarterlies today, present challenges that we simply do not have the financial and human resources to overcome. We would like to thank everyone who has supported us over the years – as readers and as writers – and we wish all of you success in placing your poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction elsewhere.”

The final edition is a celebration of the work of “poet, colleague, mentor, and friend” Charles Wright and includes poetry by Charles Wright, poetry in tribute to Charles Wright (Yusef Komunyakaa, James Tate, Charles Simic), reminiscences about Charles Write (James Tate, Chase Twichell, Ann Beattie, David Young, Adrienne Su, Mark Strand), essays on Charles Wright (Garrett Hongo, Mark Jarman), two symposium sections with a dozen works, and a final section of appreciations for Charles Wright (Michael Collier, Edward Hirsch, Aaron Baker, Dave Smith, Jahan Ramazani). Additionally, there is a final contribution of poetry to close this final issue of Northwest Review.

New Lit on the Block :: The Prompt

Editor Kim Hunter-Perkins brings us the prompt, a new online literary magazine that hopes to encourage submissions based on prompts. The editors clarify that they mean “to provide a place for work that often has no place in a traditional literary magazine because of its form or function.” That is, writing that is the result of a workshop or writing exercise that is “pretty darned good,” but is rejected on the basis of being “too workshoppy.”

To further encourage prompt-based writing, and to solicit submissions, the prompt provides an array of prompts, including text prompts, photo prompts, audio prompts and video prompts. If you haven’t tried it, it’s pretty amazing what a 30-second audio clip can inspire!

the prompt website also includes commentary and resources on a featured form (currently “The Post-Apocalyptic Genre”), and “practical pedagogy” on how teachers can use the prompt in the classroom.

Working to produce a quality publication are Associate Editors Dan Davis, Natalie Doehring, Luke Kingery, Kristi McDuffie, Whitney Noland, Anna-Elise Price, Clint Walker, and Artists in Residence Heidi Butler Mitchell and Christy Blew.

the prompt is accepting submissions of poetry, including flash-based poetry, prose – including fiction and creative non-fiction, and “non-traditional selections” such as scenes, character profiles, “snapshots,” etc. The Prompt accepts submissions via Submishmash.

Narrative Poetry Contest Winners

Winners of the Narrative Third Annual Poetry Contest have been announced, with poems available to read on the Narrative website:

FIRST PLACE
Willa Carroll “No Final Curtain”

SECOND PLACE
Emma Gorenberg “Miscellany”

THIRD PLACE
Shivani Mehta “Twenty-One People between My Legs (and Counting)”

FINALISTS
Melissa Barrett
Rebekah Bloyd
Heather Gibbons
Shane Lake
Jodie Marion
Kristina McDonald
Maya Pindyck
Diane Seuss
Allen Speed
Sarah Wedderburn

New Lit on the Block :: Petrichor Review

Founded and edited by Emma Nichols, Pete Viola, and Sean Case Petrichor Review is a new online triannual of poetry, fiction, and art.

The first issue features fiction and poetry by Corey Mesler, G.A. Saindon, Howie Good, James Valvis, Jason Kalmanowitz, John Grey, Joseph Farley, Kyle Hemmings, Larry Gaffney, Len Kuntz, Les Wicks, M. Chandler Rodbro, Matthew Dexter, Paul David Adkins, Peter Marra, Thomas Zimmerman, Valentina Cano, and Walter Campbell, and artwork by Charlotte McKnight, Doris Case, Jim Fuess, Kimberly Marra, Lindsey Buckley, Thomas Zimmerman, and Vinny Carnevale.

Petrichor Review is open for submissions for their next and upcoming issues.

Narrative Spring 2011 Story Contest Winners

The Narrative Spring 2011 Story Contest Winners have been announced and are available on the publication’s website:

FIRST PLACE
Nickolas Butler “Underneath the Bonfire”

SECOND PLACE
Jan Ellison “Second First Night”

THIRD PLACE
Katie Cortese “The Promised Land”

FINALISTS
Douglas Bauer
Wesley Brown
Leslie Ingham
Hannah Johnson
Jerry D. Mathes II
Lewis Moyse
Rina Piccolo
Rickey Pittman
Charlotte Price
Lynn Stegner

New Lit on the Block :: Antiphon

Edited by Rosemary Badcoe and Noel Williams, Antiphon (UK) is a new online quarterly of poetry and reviews of poetry books. The Antiphon website also includes an online forum for opinions on poems and articles related to poetry.

The inaugural issue offers new work from Catherine Edmunds, Martyn Crucefix, Andrew Shields, Larry Jordan, Angelina Ayers, Jane Røken, Richard Moorhead, James Howard, Michaela Ridgway, Cora Greenhill, Mario Petrucci, Claire Dyer, John C Nash, Janet Fisher, Thomas Zimmerman, Jan Fortune, Brian Edwards, David Harmer, Pippa Little, and David Callin. The publication also features book reviews of works by Christy Ducker, Michael Mackmin and Helena Nelson, and a column called “Debating Point,” with this issue’s focus being: “Truth is beautiful, without doubt; but so are lies.” (Ralph Waldo Emerson)

Submissions are open through Submishmash.

Occupy Wall Street Poetry Anthology

The Poetry Anthology at Occupy Wall Street currently cataloged in the Occupy Wall Street library and maintained by the Occupy Language (formerly Occupy Poetry) seeks poems to place in the anthology. Send poems via e-mail (attachments accepted) to the librarian at the People’s Library: stephenjboyer [at] gmail [dot] com. You will receive and automated response. The anthology is currently organized in binders by week, with plans to migrate portions or all to the Web. Read more: here.[via Sarah Sarai]

Occupy Wall Street Library

The People’s Library is the collective, public, open library of the Occupy Wall Street leaderless resistance movement.

Located in the northeast corner of Liberty Plaza, the library provides free, open and unrestricted access to our collection of books, magazines, newspapers, ‘zines, pamphlets and other materials that have been donated, collected, gathered and discovered during the occupation.

The Occupy Wall Street Library website provides an overview of how the borrowing system works at the lending FAQ, a link to a catalog for a list of titles, the library’s history, and information on contributing to learn how you can help.

New Lit on the Block :: FictionNow

Editor Marge Lurie of FictionNow writes that the online magazine’s mission is “connecting good writers of short fiction with hungry, interactive readers. You’ll find stories that honestly reflect what it’s like to be alive in the 21st century – stories that wrestle, as all good fiction must, with how to construct meaning out of the welter of untamed experience.”

The first issues features works by Elizabeth England, George Dila, Richard Smolev, Ray Abernathy, Joel Hinman, Pamela Painter, Joanne Avallon, Silvia Bonilla, Seth Kaufman, and Susan Buttenwieser.

Submissions are open for previously unpublished fiction between 250 and 4,000 words.

NewPages Young Authors Guide

Please check out the Young Authors Guide on NewPages.com.

This is guide where young authors (as defined by each publication – sometimes it includes college-age) can find places to publish their writing. It is not meant to be an exhaustive list, but rather a select list of publications in print as well as online that have open submissions with guidelines, an editorial selection process, and a regular print cycle. Some publish only young authors, some publish all ages for young audiences. For more specific submission guidelines, visit the publication’s website.

Also included in this guide are contests for young writers. These are carefully selected for quality and sensitivity to not wanting young writers to be taken advantage of (with promises of publication and high entry fees). Almost all are no-cost entry with some awarding scholarship money.

This is not a paid-for page or an advertising page in any way. It is a page I have put together as a resource to encourage young writers in their interest.

If you know of other publications or contests that could be added to this list, please e-mail me with information: denisehill-at-newpages.com

What’s New?! NewPages Updates

New addition to the The NewPages Big List of Literary Magazines:

Beecher’s Magazine Image – poetry, fiction, nonfiction
Clover Image – poetry, fiction
Efiction Notice [O] – serial novels, short stories, plays, essay, poetry, children’s stories
Efiction Notice [O] – poetry, fiction, serial novels, drama, essays, children’s stories
The Fib Review [O] – poetry
New Purlieu Review [O] – poetry, fiction, artwork, photography
Scintilla [O] – poetry, fiction, nonfiction, visual works
Shot Glass Journal [O] – poetry
Stoneboat Image – poetry, prose
Armchair/Shotgun Image – poetry, fiction, nonfiction, visual arts
The Coffin Factory Image – poetry, fiction, essays, art, interviews
Little Patuxent Review Image – poetry, prose, visual art
Magnolia Journal Image – poetry, fiction, nonfiction, art, photography
Matter Journal Image – poetry, fiction, nonfiction, visual art
Phantom Drift Image – poetry, fiction, nonfiction
Vlak Image – poetry, fiction, nonfiction, art, photography

[O] = mainly online
Image = mainly print

Newly added to the NewPages Guide to Literary Links:
Freshly Hatched – nonfiction
Glimpse – Your stories from abroad
Ray’s Road Review – poetry, fiction
Rufous Salon – flash fiction, poetry, artwork

Newly added to the NewPages Guide to Alternative Magazines:
Autostraddle – news, entertainment, opinion and girl-on-girl culture
Zocalo – connects people to ideas and to each other in an open, accessible, non-partisan and broad-minded spirit

Newly added to NewPages Guide to Independent Publishers & University Presses
ELT Press – academic, nonfiction, literary criticism

New Lit on the Block :: Yew

Edited by designer Stephenie Foster and poet Carolyn Guinzio, Yew: A Journal of Innovative Writing and Images by Women will showcase three writers per month online with visual art provided by the writers, their collaborators, other artists or the editors.

The inaugural issue features Laynie Browne’s poem “An Urgent Walk Across a Moor” paired with Stephenie Foster’s photograph series “Drawn to the Light: Images of Mexico”; Andrea Baker’s work comprised of her own text and images; and Doro Boehme’s text paired with her own photographs.

Upcoming issues will feature writing and art by Maureen Alsop, Rosebud Ben-oni, Carol Berg, Grace Cavalieri, Jeri Coppola, Carolina Ebeid, Merlin Flower, Michaela Gabriel, Anne Gorrick, Endi Bogue Hartigan, Rebecca Gayle Howell, Megan Kaminski, Genevieve Kaplan, Deborah Poe, Maritza Ranero, Petra Whitaker, Marcela Sulak, and Carol Szamatowicz.

Yew welcomes submissions of poetry, hybrid writing, photography, or other visual art via email.

Lit Mags Gone Gorgeous :: South Dakota Review

Part of what makes the newest issue of South Dakota Review so stunning, in addition to the cover art by Oscar Howe (and design by Holly Baker) is the fact that the magazine changed its format to a luxurious 9×9, which allows two columns to ease the prose and wide margins to frame poetry.

Professor of English, Director of Creative Writing at The University of South Dakota, and now the new Editor-in-Chief of SDR, Lee Ann Roripaugh says the format change is permanent: “Our former editor, Brian Bedard, retired from USD this past spring, and I subsequently inherited the editorship of SDR. While I definitely wanted to retain the unique flavor of South Dakota Review, particularly with respect to its longstanding commitment to explorations of place/space/landscape and support of place-based and indigenous writers, I also wanted to both complicate these explorations, as well as contextualize them within larger national and even global literary contexts. Our goal is to broaden the aesthetic and cultural scope of the magazine in eclectically exciting ways, and broadening this conversation, to my mind, also included broadening the design. In particular, I wanted a larger page to allow for more possibilities in terms of framing and accommodating a wider variety of poems. Also, with the proliferation of so many excellent electronic magazines, it seems that if one is going to do a print magazine, the magazine should take delight in the sensuous and aesthetic pleasures of its own ‘printishness.'”

Mission accomplished SDR.

New Lit on the Block :: scissor and spackle

Jenny Catlin, Founder/Editor In Cheif, and Matt Schmid, Editor, bring readers scissors and spackle an online publication with a print companion, both available on the twenty-third of each month.

Issue II includes poetry and fiction Adrian Mitchell, Alex Schillinger, Anja Vikarma, Ariana D. Den Bleyker, Carla Sarett, Chris Castle, Cody Deitz, Corey Mertes, D.G. Bracey, Dennis Nau, DJ Swykert, Donna d. Vitucci, John Fields, Josh Goller, Kaydi Johnson, Laura LeHew, M.P. Powers, Mark.Farrell, Mather Schneider, Robert Kulesz, Robert Levin, Sandra K. Woodiwiss, Steven Finkelstein, Tim Schumacher, and Wendy Bradley, as well as the photo essay “Making of the Gods: Snippets of the life and craft of the god makers of Kumortuli as seen and felt by Anurima Das and Saikat Sengupta.”

scissors and spackle is open for submissions of comics, short stories, poetry, art, photography, erotica, genera-fiction, audio, and video.

Lit Med Database


Literature, Arts, and Medicine

This site, sposored by NYU, is a resource I keep coming across in my research. Time and again, when working on analysis of literature, this site pops up, and I have found it immensely helpful in guiding some of my work. Specifically, “The Literature, Arts, & Medicine Database is an annotated multimedia listing of prose, poetry, film, video and art that was developed to be a dynamic, accessible, comprehensive resource for teaching and research in MEDICAL HUMANITIES, and for use in health/pre-health, graduate and undergraduate liberal arts and social science settings.”

Fine for med students, as a lit student/teacher, this site works great for me! Each entry specifies genre (including medium for art), keywords (which help direct analysis from a medical perspective and are linked to others with the same theme), summary and commentary. Bibliographic information is also provided.

Narrative Medicine

Two related pieces from MedPage Today:

A Love Story, in Print and in the Clinic
Kistina Fiore’s special report on the practice of medical professionals and writing. Includes interviews with editors and contributors from The Healing Muse, Bellevue Literary Review, Ars Medica, Creative Nonfiction, and Third Space. Also includes a video interview with BLR’s publisher, Dr. Martin Blaser.

Fiore writes: “Physicians are, by virtue of their profession, enmeshed in the human condition, so it’s not surprising that many are drawn to literature…Moreover, there is an increasing recognition of the value of the reflective process involved in writing as a means of honing a healer’s skill.”

Narrative Medicine and the Godfather

An excerpt from Kristina Fiore’s interview with Lee Gutkind.

New Lit on the Block :: Aesthetix

Aesthetix is a new online poetry publication with a unique approach: poets are required to write a poem using one specific title per issue. According to the editor, “This results in a really interesting variety of approaches to a subject (‘aesthetix’) juxtaposed in ways that are not common in the average poetry journal.”

The first issue, “Red Car in the Future,” includes works by Seth Landman, Wendy Xu, Sean Williams, Rob MacDonald, Adam Clay, Ed Haworth Hoeppner, Matt Anserello, Parker Tettleton, Nick Lantz, B. Medrev, John Gallaher, Nick Sturm, Matthew Henriksen, Kimiko Hahn, JoAnna Novak, and Elisabeth Workman.

Aesthetix will post one featured title quarterly for submission consideration. Submissions accepted from new and established writers, with a particular interest in publishing long poems, collaborative poems, poems with nontext elements, poems by children, and poems by non-poets.

New Lit on the Block :: ffrrfr

Jim Cole is founder and editor and Ana Machuca the fiction editor of the newly launched ffrrfr, an online and “occasional print journal” of short fiction devoted to “creative storytelling and intriguing uses of language.”

The first issue features works by Miranda Mellis and David-Glen Smith along with an interview with each.

ffrrfr is accepting submissions for their winter 2011-12 issue through November 30. ffrrfr us “open to all styles” and is “most interested in writers who are doing interesting things with language, such as the use of Oulipian constraints.”

Six Poets on Six Movies

Issue #10 of New Ohio Review includes a section in which six poets were asked to write about movies that had a particular impact on them. Claudia Rankine writes about 35 Shots of Rum, Jeffrey Harrison about Antonioni’s The Passenger, George Bilgere about No Country for Old Men, Lloyd Schwartz about Angel by German-born director Ernst Lubitsch, Laurence Goldstein about the 1946 film Tomorrow if Forever, and Linda Bamber about the 2011 documentary Long Night’s Journey Into Day.

PEN’s Prison Writing Fundraiser

Breakout: Voices from Inside
The 2011 PEN Prison Writing Program Fundraiser

With Cara Benson, Hettie Jones, Claudia Menza, Marie Ponsot, Susan Rosenberg, Jackson Taylor, John Paul Infante, Randall Horton, and other special guests

Join PEN Members and special guests for a reading of award-winning prose and poetry from the PEN Prison Writing Contest. Proceeds from the event help ensure that PEN’s hallmark program continues to promote the restorative and rehabilitative power of writing by providing hundreds of inmates with skilled writing mentors, free Handbooks for Writers in Prison, and a forum where inmates are encouraged to use the written word as a legitimate form of power.

This event will feature a special reading of poems and prose by incarcerated men and women everywhere from El Paso to Riker’s Island, from Ft. Leavenworth to San Diego.

When: Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Where: The National Arts Club, 15 Gramercy Park South, New York City
What time: 7 p.m.
Tickets: $25. Purchase online or e-mail [email protected]

**If you can’t attend, please sponsor an MFA writing student to go in your place.**

In 2011, PEN’s Prison Writing Program:
• Distributed more than 8,000 copies of the PEN Handbook for Writers in Prison free of charge to men and women serving sentences throughout the United States
• Connected over 100 mentors with writers in prison for one-on-one instruction
• Judged over 1,500 manuscripts in our Prison Writing Contest
• Reprinted an Anthology Doing Time, with a new forward

New Lit on the Block :: Magnolia

Published by the Institute of Arts and Social Engagement, Magnolia: A Journal of Women’s Literature publishes “socially engaged works of fiction, creative non-fiction, and poetry that interact with and challenge social injustices of our time.”

Misty Ericson, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of HerCircleEzine.com, an online portal of women’s creative arts and activism, writes in the journal’s foreword: “Magnolia: A Journal of Women’s Literature, and its precursor, HerCircleEzine.com, were established in an effort to bridge the gap created by both political and market censorship, as a space wherein women can speak freely the truth of female experience, to draw our attention to the atrocities of our world, and to act as catalysts for social, cultural, and political change.”

With selections chosen and introduced by Gayle Brandeis, Volume One features works by Mary Akers, Andrea Berthot, Lorraine Caputo, Stephanie Dickinson, Bonnie Fortune, Ana Garza G’z, Eliza Kellley, Kathleen Kirkm Sari Krosinsky, Peggy Landsman, Simone Martel, Adriana Paramo, Carol Smallwood, Sami Schalk, Jill Stukenberg, Sheila Thorne, and Linda Whittenberg.

Submissions for this annual print publication are accepted from September – December. See the magazine’s website for full guidelines.

New Lit on the Block :: Armchair/Shotgun

John Cusick, Laura McMillan, Adam Read-Brown, and Evan Simko-Bednarski make up the editorial board at Armchair/Shotgun, a print journal of poetry, fiction, non-fiction and visual arts “published occasionally, and for good reason.”

Currently in its second issue, Armchair/Shotgun features works by Zachary White, Brian Morrison, Kimberly Grey, Marvin Shackelford, Sono Osato, Sarah Kate Levy, Alanna Bailey, Kevin Brown, Alicia Dreilinger, Cory Schubert, Kevin Dugan, Matthew Montesano, Cecilia Galarraga, and Jackson Culpepper.

Armchair/Shotgun accepts submissions “on real honest-to-goodness paper” and professes to “not care about your bio. We read all submissions anonymously, and conceal even an author’s name until a piece has been selected for publication. We feel that good writing does not know one MFA program from another. It does not know a PhD from a high school drop-out. Good writing does not know your interstate exit or your subway stop, and it does not care what you’ve written before. Good writing knows only story.”

Arkansas Review: 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Movement

The Summer/August 2011 issue of Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies, commemorates Civil Rights Activism in Arkansas. Induced in the issue are the articles: “Battle Cry of Freedom: Little Rock, Arkansas, and the Freedom Rides at Fifty” by John A. Kirk, “‘We Became Radicalized by What We Experienced’: Excerpts from an Interview with William (Bill) Hansen, Director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee’s Arkansas Project, July 22, 1997” by Jennifer Jensen Wallach, and “Why the 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Movement is More Important than the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War” a panel discussion with John A. Kirk, Grif Stockley, and Spirit Trickey.

New Lit on the Block :: The Coffin Factory

Published & Edited by Laura Isaacman & Randy Rosenthal, with Managing Editors Brendan Kiely & Jessie Chaffee, and Editorial Assistants Darcey Glasser, Jessica Kagansky, and Leah Clancy, The Coffin Factory intends to serve as “a nexus between readers, writers, and the book publishing industry” and to “provide great literature and art to people who love books, including those who do not usually read literary magazines.” The Coffin Factory publishes fiction, essays, and art three times a year in print.

The inaugural issue features written works by Roberto Bola

NOR Contest Winners

The Fall 2011 (#10) issue of New Ohio Review includes their 2011 Contest Winners. The poetry winners, selected by Nancy Eimers, are Julie Hanson (“A Mile In”), awarded first prize of $1,500; and Angie Mazakis (“Pretending to be Asleep” and “Owen and Paul”), awarded second prize of $500. The fiction winners, selected by Don De Grazia, are Daniel Larkins (“The Rush of Losing”), awarded first prize of $1,500; and Emily Nagin (“The Truest Thing”) awarded second prize of $500.

Happy NaNoWriMo!

Ready, set, sharpen your pencils, fire up your computers – write! November is National Novel Writing Month. NaNoWriMo starts Nov 1 and ends at midnight Nov 30 – all you need to do is complete 50,000 words within the month and upload your novel to the site. Of the 200,500 participants last year, 37,500 were “winners” in completing the task. Needless to say, for at least the next few weeks, writing is not a lonely task!

New Lit on the Block :: Phantom Drift

Made possible by a grant of support from Wordcraft of Oregon comes Phantom Drift: A Journal of New Fabulism, an annual print publication “dedicated to building an understanding of and appreciation for New Fabulism and a Literature of the Fantastic.”

The publication editorial board is comprised of David Memmott, Managing Editor, Leslie What, Fiction Editor, and Matt Schumacher, Poetry Editor.

The first issue includes fiction by Brian Evenson, Eliot Fintushel, Stefanie Freele, Carolyn Ive Gilman, Daniel Grandbois, Peter Grandbois, Joe L. Murr, Nisi Shawl, Geronimo G. Tagatac, David Eric Tomlinson, and Ray Vukcevich, poetry by Aaron Anstett, Jonathan Ball, Richard Crow, Wade German, Joshua McKinney, Stephen McNally, Lawrence Raab, and Anita Sullivan, nonfiction by Thomas E. Kennedy and Matt Schumacher, and featured artist interviews with Jessica Plattner and Richard Schindler.

Phantom Drift accepts submissions from December 1 – March 31. Full guidelines are available on the magazine’s website.

[Issue One Cover Art by Jessica Plattner]

Glimmer Train Short Story Award for New Writers Winners :: October 2011

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their Short Story Award for New Writers. This competition is held quarterly and is open to all writers whose fiction has not appeared in a print publication with a circulation greater than 5000.

First place: Karen Malley [pictured] of Springfield, MA, wins $1200 for “Roof Dog.” Her story will be published in the Winter 2013 issue of Glimmer Train Stories, out in November 2012.

Second place: Anne Walsh Miller, of Eleebana, Australia, wins $500 for “The Rickman Digression.” Her story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing her prize to $700. This is her first story accepted for publication.

Third place: Adva Levin, of Tel Aviv, Israel, wins $300 for “Stand Clear of the Closing Doors, Please.” Her story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing her prize to $700. This is also Adva’s first story accepted for publication.

A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here.

The next Short Story Award competition will take place in November. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.

Family Matters: October 31
This competition is held twice a year and is open to all writers for stories about family. Most submissions to this category are running 1500-6000 words, but up to 12,000 are welcome. Click here for complete guidelines.

Interview :: Theresa Williams on The Letter Project

Theresa Williams is Senior Lecturer in English and Creative Writing at Bowling Green State University and founder and editor of The Letter Project, an online repository for actual letters written and sent. Williams encourages the love and appreciation of traditional mail in soliciting letters from writers of all walks of life. The guidelines: You must actually write a letter to a real person, and the subject matter must be “a writer or written work that is important to you. It may also deal with writing or engaging in any other art. Your letters may also include your own stories or poems or be written in the form of stories or poems.” Williams selects submissions to post online, often with images of the mailart sent or received.

Intrigued by this project, the possibilities for individuals to become involved as well as for teachers to engage students, I posed a few questions to Theresa via e-mail, which she was so kind as to answer. (Sometimes e-mail is great, too!)

***

NP: It looks like you’ve been doing this for some time. Do you hope to continue it indefinitely? Is it a project you’re working on with an end in sight?

TW: The blog has been going since 2009. I started it because I love writing and receiving letters and because I wanted to introduce my university students to the experience of writing letters. The blog is a repository of letters and mailart, and it will continue to be. In the near future, I want to create a website called The Epistolarium. The Epistolarium will include interviews, letters, mailart, and epistolary poems and stories. The main criterion will be, as always, that the published piece must pass through the snail mail system.

NP: Has the site provided you with what you were expecting? In what ways has it surprised you?

TW: I expected that my university students would create some amazing letters, and they have. I expected that I’d love reading their letters, and I have. I expected that I’d write and receive more letters, and I certainly have.

I didn’t expect to get involved in making art again because of the site. To give you some background: I have undergraduate degrees in both art and creative writing, but visual art had fallen by the wayside in my life for many years. I went on to get two Master’s Degrees in English and Creative Writing. My commitment to my writing was strong, and I spent many years developing my skills so I could produce work which could get published. The Letter Project got me interested in doing art again. It is the discovery of mailart that has been the biggest surprise.

I didn’t know mailart existed until a few months ago when I found the International Union of Mail Artists online. I found it as a result of researching material for The Letter Project. IUOMA is 2000+ members strong, and has been going since the late 1980s. Anyone who loves to send and receive mail is free to join. I was surprised to find so many people who loved mail as much as I do! Much of the mailart I’ve received has come from people I met at IUOMA. So far I’ve exchanged mail and art with people from Belgium, Latvia, Russia, Germany, Iceland, Argentina, Brazil, and from many U.S. states.

NP: Can you name a couple specific ways in which you have found the effort beneficial for your students as well as for yourself as a teacher? (As teachers we know we learn from our own teaching!)

TW: When I got involved in mailart, it opened up a whole new way for me to create literary works. For instance, I began writing a series of prose poems based on the mailart that I was making and sending. So far, I’ve finished fifteen parts of a prose poem collection called “the eternal network.” Parts of “the eternal network” have appeared or will appear soon in qarrtsiluni, Rufous City Review, Ink Sweat & Tears, Thrush, and Infinity’s Kitchen. In most cases, the prose poems were accepted along with the original artwork. I’ve always loved making art, and I hoped someday I’d find a way to combine art and writing. Mailart has proven to be a way for me to do that. One form feeds another.

I’ve been encouraging students at my university (Bowling Green State University in Ohio) to try their hand at epistolary works, too. I’ve had students who have written letters that have positively changed their lives. One student, for instance, reconnected with her father through her letters about James Wright, and another student had remarkable discussions with her mother about the same author (her mother wrote letters back to her) and this student is thinking about creating a chapbook containing the letters of herself and her mother. Moreover, several students have told me about their parents crying (in a good way) upon receipt of their letters. Getting a letter in the mail is a powerful thing.

I’d like to see more being done with epistolary forms literary world. I have a fear of letter-writing and epistolary poems and stories disappearing, and that’s why The Letter Project is something I plan to keep doing.

I think for artists and writers, mailart and letter writing can serve many purposes. Here are just three:

1. Through mailart, an artist can exchange art with people from all over the world. You grow as an artist because you hold the artwork in your hands and evaluate the techniques being used. Most mail artists are very open about their materials and techniques.

2. Through letter writing, an author might clarify thoughts or discover the answer to a problem. The act of writing–any kind of writing–cures writer’s block. Look at the letters of Jack Kerouac and you’ll see an author working through his story ideas with his friends.

3. Writing and receiving mail helps break through the isolation that creative people often feel.

NP: Would you encourage teachers to use this as an assignment in their own classes with students who choose to do so sending you their work? If so, any advice on teaching this?

TW: Yes, I would. It’s a great way for students of all ages to avoid stilted writing. And it’s easy to teach because students are very receptive.

If teachers want to use this strategy in their classes, there’s one thing I’d beg them not to do. Don’t ask the students to write letters en masse to a living writer. Many writers resent receiving this kind of mail. They see it as an imposition. Instead, let the students write letters to people they know well about those authors.

I’d love to receive letters from people of all ages for use on the blog, especially letters on literary topics and creativity, but I wouldn’t want to receive letters en masse from an entire class. I’d prefer it if the teacher would sort through the letters, sending only the best ones. By “best” I mean those letters in which the writer was totally receptive and engaged.

NP: And anything else you’d like to add?

TW: The hardest thing about writing a letter or making a piece of art to send through the mail is getting started. We all claim that we don’t have enough time, but it doesn’t take much time to jot off a few lines or to glue together a collage. Letters contribute to our creative lives and help us to make enduring connections with others. Opening the mailbox and seeing real mail inside is the crowning glory of any day.

I’d also like to add that there are many great collections of letters out there for people to read. My favorite letters are those written by Van Gogh, Jack Kerouac, and James Wright. Their letters really explore the creative life in a deep way. If you are an artist or writer (even if just a would-be artist or writer), think now about creating and saving snail mail correspondences.

[Images of mailart created by Theresa Williams.]

Interview :: Maxine Hong Kingston

The newest issue of Caliban Online includes an extensive, insightful (and at times quite funny) interview with Maxine Hong Kingston:

“When I’m writing, I’m just thinking and noticing the world. When I’m writing, it’s a very difficult task for me to write it real, to make a character real. Their clothes have to be real. Their face and personality, their voice. The furniture has to be real, the trees, the ocean, railroad. I’ve got to write a real railroad. The work it takes me to write something real makes me realize what an illusion it all is. It’s much, much later, after I’ve done a lot of writing and living, that I start to notice the Buddhists talking about ‘reality’ being an illusion.”

(The interview starts on page 35 for quick search.)

Take Five on Film

Friend and colleague, Delta College Professor Ryan Wilson jam-packs Take 5 on Film, a five-minute, weekly public radio program, with intelligent critique and commentary on current film, small-venue film festivals, and DVDs for holidays and special events.

Rescue Press Contest Winners

Rescue Press has announced Blueberry Morningsnow as the winner of this year’s Black Box Poetry Prize. Blueberry’s manuscript, Whale In The Woods, was chosen by Sabrina Orah Mark. Rescue Press also selected Philip Sorenson’s Of Embodies for publication as the Editor’s Choice. Both of books will be available Spring 2012.

Finalists for the contest were Michael Rerick, Rochelle Hurt, Brenda Sieczkowski, Lesley Yalen, Laressa Dickey, Nicole Wilson, Lily Ladewig, Eileen G’Sell, and Phil Estes.

New Lit on the Block :: Efiction Notice

Edited by Saraline Grenier (contributing editor) and JP Savard, Efiction Notice is an online literary magazine specializing in serial novels. The editors write: “During the Victorian era many writers, including Charles Dickens and Elizabeth Gaskell, published their books one section at a time in journals. Efiction Notice revisits the past in a contemporary format. Novels, short stories, poems, and plays are available to read directly on the website or in e-book (epub and mobi) formats. We also hope to have essays and children’s stories in the future.”

The first two issues include works by David Bernans, Deepak Chaswal, Darlena Cunha, Howie Good, Kyle Hemmings, Terrence Kuch, Daniel Lavigne, Michael Little, Jacqueline Monck, Kat Patenaude, and John Patrick Tormey.

New deadlines for submissions are posted regularly, and submissions are accepted in French or English.

New Lit on the Block :: Scintilla

Scintilla is an independent literary arts journal published biannual online with an annual print volume. Founder and editor Tim Lepczyk writes, “While we are not walking away from traditional print publication, we are embracing digital publication in new formats. As we move forward in this domain, we may explore other types of publication such as novels, short story collections, and poetry collections.” To do so, Scintilla is “looking for new voices.”

The first issue features fiction by Rachel Hruza, and poetry by Lauren Eriks, Melissa Fondakowski, Eric Heyne, D.R. James, David James, Elizabeth McBride, Ben Moeller-Gaa, Linda, Nemec Foster, Pablo Peschiera, Jack Ridl, J. Sperry Steinorth, Alison Swan, and Holly Wren Spaulding.

Scintilla accepts fiction, nonfiction, poetry and visual work via Submishmash.

Documentary :: Miss Representation

Written and directed by Jennifer Siebel Newsom, Miss Representation explores how the media’s misrepresentation of women has led to the underrepresentation of women in positions of power and influence. Miss Representation premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and will have its broadcast premiere on OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network Oct. 20th at 9pm ET/8pm CT, followed by a special with Rosie O’Donnell.

New Delta Moves Online

According to Editor Aimee Davis, New Delta Review, the literary journal produced by graduate students in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Louisiana State University since 1984, will be moving to an online format with the hope to create print supplements sometime in the future.

Harrington’s Six Questions Blog for Writers

In response to a post on my personal blog, a reader suggested Jim Harrington publishes a series of interviews in which editors “list, in excruciating details, all that each editor desires in his/her stories.” Thus was born the blog Six Questions For…

Harrington asks six questions of magazine editors, some are the same, but he also mixes it up. Some general focus questions are: What do you look for? What do you reject? What are common mistakes writers make? Do you provide feedback? Do you accept blog-published work? Why did you start this publication? What have you learned about writing from your work publishing/editing? Etc.

Harrington believes this six-question approach provides authors with “specific information about what editors are looking for in the submissions they receive” as well as giving participants a supportive avenue for PR.

He welcomes visitors to contact him with questions/comments, to suggest a publication/editor/agent, or to participate if you yourself are an editor/publisher/agent.

Nimrod Literary Awards 2011

Judges Amy Bloom and Linda Pastan selected the winner and honorable mentions of the 2011 Nimrod International Journal‘s 33rd Annual Literary Awards. Each are published in the Fall/Winter issue.

The Pablo Neruda Prize in Poetry
FIRST: Hayden Saunier, “Sideways Glances in the Rear-View Mirror”
SECOND: Suzanne Cleary, “Italian Made Simple” and other poems

HONORABLE MENTIONS
Patricia Hawley, “Transmutation” and other poems
Brent Pallas, “My Dear Emma” and other poems
Robert Russell, “Heaven” and other poems

The Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Fiction
FIRST: Sultana Banulescu, “Beggars and Thieves”
SECOND: Kellie Wells, “In the Hatred of a Minute”

HONORABLE MENTIONS
Judith Hutchinson Clark, “Girlfriend”
Caitlin Kindervatter-Clark, “The Pygmy Queen”
Stephen Taylor, “Jolly Old England”

A full list of winners and finalists in available here.

Tribute to Bernadette Mayer

Issue #14 of Drunken Boat features “The Bernadette Mayer Folio,” recognizing the contributions and influence of her 30+ years of work in the literary and arts communities.

Contributors to the folio include: Steven Alvarez, Micah Ballard, BRASH with Jim Manning & Patrick Leonard, Lee Ann Brown, Laynie Browne, Megan Burns, Louis Bury, Eric Chapelle with Corinne Lee, CA Conrad, Stephen Cope, Brenda Coultas, Kathryn Cowles, Catherine Daly, Renée E. D’Aoust, Derrick Stacey Denholm, Emari DiGiorgio, Sandra Doller, Michael Tod Edgarton, Vernon Frazer, Nicholas Grider, Joseph Hall with Chad Hard, Joan Harvey, Christine Herzer, Janis Butler Holm, Jennifer Karmin with collaborators, David Kaufmann, Dorothea Lasky, Rachel Levy, Meg Matich, Michael Ruby, Jon Rutzmoser, Kate Schapira, Michael Schiavo, Emily Severance, John Sparrow, Sunnylyn Thibodeaux, Eleanor Smith Tipton, James Valvis, Nicholas YB Wong, and Changming Yuan.

[Photo by Phillip Good via Bernadette Mayer’s website.]

2011 Drue Heinz Literature Prize Winner

Our congratulations to Shannon Cain for being awarded the University of Pittsburgh Drue Heinz Literature Prize. Her manuscript The Necessity of Certain Behaviors was selected by senior judge Alice Mattison and is now available for purchase from the press.

The Drue Heinz Literature Prize recognizes and supports writers of short fiction and makes their work available to readers around the world. The award is open to writers who have published a book-length collection of fiction or at least three short stories or novellas in commercial magazines or literary journals.

Symposium: In Praise of the Essay

Join Welcome Table Press at Fordham University’s Lincoln Center campus on Saturday, October 15, 2011, for the symposium, “In Praise of the Essay: Practice & Form.” Their honoree is Phillip Lopate. Speakers include Robin Hemley, Barbara Hurd, Helen Benedict, Joshua Wolf Shenk, and Matthew Swanson & Robbi Behr (creators of Idiots’ Books). A panel on teaching the essay will feature presentations by Richard Hoffman, Patrick Madden, Suzanne Menghraj, Robert Root, Suzanne Strempek Shea, and Dustin Beall Smith. With readings by Amy Leach, E. J. Levy, Shelley Salamensky, Jerald Walker, and Ryan Van Meter. And a Q&A with editors from Cabinet magazine, Creative Nonfiction, Defunct, Fourth Genre, The Pedestrian, River Teeth, and Sarabande Books.

Read Why I Read

“Why I Read” is a short essay by Agustin Cadena that opens the newest issue of Chattahoochee Review. It is not available online, making it worthwhile to seek out print copies to reinforce in ourselves and others that “Of course, there are things more urgent than reading, but there is nothing more important than reading.”