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Poster Contest

Let’s Save Michigan!

The Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) and Let’s Save Michigan have issued an open call to artists, illustrators, and graphic designers for original posters to inspire Michiganders to revive their state. The new posters should be a call to action, and serve as part of a campaign to rally citizens to do the hard work that’s necessary to position Michigan as a state that will thrive in the future. Ultimately, the posters should aim to be forward-looking, inspirational, and must include the phrase “Let’s Save Michigan” in the design.

The hope is to highlight the actions and assets that are critical to moving the cities forward, whether that is renovating historic homes, planting community gardens, extensive public transportation and bike lines, public art, or whatever the artist believes will carry Michigan through the 21st century—and beyond.

Ideally, the new posters will be in the fashion of Works Progress Administration artwork of the 1930s, which is the subject of DIA exhibition, and depict regional, recognizable subjects—ranging from portraits to cityscapes and images of city life that remind the public of quintessential American values such as hard work, community and optimism.

Open for Entry: December 15 to February 15

The winner will be awarded $1,000 and the runner-up will receive $250.

December Lit Mag Reviews Posted

A new batch of literary magazines reviews has been posted, including reviews of Bartleby Snopes, Bellevue Literary Review, Bloodroot, Evergreen Review, Fifth Wednesday Journal, Gander Press Review, Gigantic Sequins, Hanging Loose, inscape, Iowa Review, Long Story, MAKE, make/shift, Malahat Review, The Meadow, Moon City Review, Paul Revere’s Horse, and Shenandoah

Poet Lore Celebrates 120 Years in Print

BETHESDA, MD (Oct 14) — Poet Lore, the nation’s oldest continuously published poetry journal, marks its 120th anniversary this year.

At a time when many literary journals (and the publishing industry of which they are part) are struggling, Poet Lore, with its distinctive historic look, has remained true to its core value — bringing great poetry to light — and created a proven and lasting nationwide identity. E. Ethelbert Miller and Jody Bolz carefully read every submission they receive, and their work reaffirms the value of poetry in a landscape that often devalues the written word. “Poetry may not be regarded as culturally central,” Jody Bolz explains, “but it’s still what people turn to at the most important moments in their lives. At every life-cycle ritual—from naming ceremonies to funerals—the language of poetry speaks to us and speaks for us. As editors, our role is to connect poets and readers, building upon Poet Lore‘s 120-year-long record of literary discovery.”

That 120-year-long record is what Poet Lore and its publisher, The Writer’s Center, honor. It’s a rich and varied story, and as you’ll see below, the journal has played an active and important role in bringing literary talent to light.

Founded in 1889 by two brilliant, iconoclastic scholars, Helen Clarke and Charlotte Porter, as a journal “devoted to Shakespeare, Browning, and the Comparative Study of Literature,” Poet Lore developed an early following among literary societies and later expanded its influence by offering unique features, such as its “Play Series” — which in 1913 was the first to print a complete, English-language edition of Anton Chekhov’s play “The Seagull.” And Walt Whitman, in the final year of his life, ran three paid advertisements in Poet Lore for Leaves of Grass.

During the course of its illustrious history, Poet Lore has played an active role in introducing American readers to the likes of some of the finest international poets. In its early years, in fact, very few American authors were published in Poet Lore. For the majority of its content, Poet Lore set its sights abroad. Among the many authors who were discovered or whose careers on the international stage were advanced by Poet Lore include Maxim Gorky, Henrik Ibsen, Frederic Mistral, and August Strindberg. And it was among the first publications to introduce the work of Bengali poet and Nobel Prize winner Rabindranath Tagore to American readers. In the late 20th Century, Poet Lore published the early work of such remarkable American poets as Mary Oliver, Colette Inez, Cornelius Eady, Carl Phillips, Carolyn Forché, Sharon Olds, Dana Gioia, Pablo Medina, and Alice Fulton, among many others. In recent years, the editors were the first to publish the poetry of Dwayne Betts, who sent his submission from prison.

SURPRISING FACTS ABOUT POET LORE:

Founders Charlotte E. Porter and Helen A. Clarke were writers, editors, Shakespeare and Browning scholars, and literary critics at a time when women in these roles were few and far between. Porter composed poetry, Clarke wrote musical compositions, and both wrote essays and reviews that appeared in early editions of Poet Lore and elsewhere.

Porter and Clarke were both named “Helen” at birth. Charlotte later changed her name from Helen Charlotte Porter to Charlotte Endymion Porter, borrowing her middle name from the Keats poem. The two women exchanged rings in a commitment ceremony and lived together until Helen A. Clarke died at age 65. Charlotte Porter scattered Helen’s ashes by their summer home in Penobscot Bay, Maine.

Whitman advertised his finally completed Leaves of Grass in three 1892 editions of Poet Lore.

Poet Lore was famous in the early 20th century for translations, publishing, for example, an early edition of Chekhov’s “The Seagull” in its folios and presenting literary luminaries like Ibsen, Strindberg, Gorky, D’Annunzio, Mistral, and Tagore to readers early on.

The first piece of writing F. Scott Fitzgerald ever placed (outside of school publications) was the poem “The Way of Purgation.” He sold it to Poet Lore in September of 1917, but for reasons unknown to the current publishers, it didn’t appear in the next issue, or any subsequent. It was finally printed in our Winter 1989-1990 issue (Vol. 84, No. 4) with the note: “Poet Lore apologizes for any inconvenience this delay may have caused.”

Poet Lore’s executive editors read all submissions, without regard to the reputation of the poet, year-round. They meet in Washington, D.C., to read aloud their selections and winnow the stacks of poems.

About The Writer’s Center: Since 1987, Poet Lore has been published by The Writer’s Center in Bethesda, MD. The Writer’s Center cultivates the creation, publication, presentation, and dissemination of literary work. We are an independent literary organization with a global reach, rooted in a dynamic community of writers. As one of the premier centers of our kind in the country, we believe the craft of writing is open to people of all backgrounds and ages. Writing is interdisciplinary and unique among the arts for its ability to touch on all aspects of the human experience. It enriches our lives and open doors to knowledge and understanding. The Writer’s Center is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization. We are supported in part by The Arts and Humanities Council of Montgomery County, and by a grant from the Maryland State Arts Council, an agency funded by the State of Maryland and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Jobs

Quinnipiac University (CT) invites applications for an Assistant Professor position beginning in Fall 2010. Applications must be received by February 28, 2010.

Kent State University (OH) tenure-track Assistant Professor position in poetry writing. January 15, 2010

Seton Hill University seeks published genre novelist (priority for popular mystery/crime/suspense writer; will also consider fantasy or romance author) for tenure-track position in our low-residency MFA program in Writing Popular Fiction, starting June 2010. February 3, 2010

The Pearl Hogrefe Creative Writing Fellowship offers a talented writer one academic year to study creative writing full time at Iowa State University and focus on his/her creative work without distraction. January 5, 2010

Bath Spa University seeks Lecturer/Senior Lecturer: Creative Writing and Lecturer/Senior Lecturer: Creative Writing (Nature Writing. Closing Date: 12 noon, 11 January 2010

Emerson College Department of Writing, Literature, and Publishing seeks a full-time, tenure-track Assistant Professor in the area of Creative Nonfiction writing. Review begins December 15 until filled.

Minnesota State Universit Mankato English/Creative Writing – Fiction, Assistant Professor. January 15, 2010. Additional information on Minnesota State University, Mankato can be found here.

Stephen F. Austin State University
(Nacogdoches, TX) Faculty – Liberal Arts – English and Literature. Posted December 4, 2009 until filled.

For Better for Verse

For Better for Verse is “an interactive on-line tutorial that can train you to scan traditionally metered English poetry. Here you can get practice and instant feedback in one important way of analyzing, and developing an ear and a feel for, accentual-syllabic verse.”

Laura Veirs – Magnetized

What NewPages is listening to: Laura Veirs. As one YouTube user comments: “I am angry at the world that she isn’t extravagantly famous. This song is amazing.” (DrGrabow) Her range of style is what’s amazing, and her videos a fun venture into alt-indie media – more artistic than flashy.

Pongo Teen Writing Resources

The Pongo Teen Writing Project has just launched a new web site that features 34 online writing activities for youth who have led difficult lives. These activities are geared to teens who may never have written before. The activities may also be downloaded for use in the classroom, etc.

As examples of writing exercises, the web site has an activity “I Just Thought You Should Know,” which could be a letter to a missing parent, or “Letter After a Time,” which is a letter to someone important who died. There are activities called “You Don’t Know Me” and “Anger” and “Love, Sometimes” and “Addicted.”

When teens finish their poems online they have the option of printing and emailing their poems to themselves and their friends, and also of submitting their poems to Pongo. In addition, the site contains information for teachers, 100 teen poems, and a project journal.

This web site brings together some of Pongo’s best work from the last 15 years. Pongo’s writing program has served over 4,000 teens in juvenile detention, the state psychiatric hospital, homeless shelters, and other agencies.

New Lit on the Block :: Still

Still: Literature of the Mountain South is an on-line literary journal featuring literature of the Southern Appalachian region with fiction editor – Silas House, poetry editor – Marianne Worthington, and nonfiction editor – Jason Howard.

Still is published three times a year, in October, February and June, with submissions accepted from December 1 – 31.

The first issue of Still features fiction by Mark Powell, Kathi Whitley, Tiffany and Williams, poetry by Steve Holt, Ron Houchin, Irene Latham, Lisa Parker, and Joshua Robbins, nonfiction by Donna McClanahan, Karen McElmurray, and Beth Newberry, an interview with Jack Wright (filmmaker, musician, writer, scholar, activist, veteran, and Appalachian “cultural worker” – Jack’s label for himself), and a video/audio of the song, “Who Owns Appalacia” performed by Sue Massek on banjo with vocals.

Rain Taxi Online Auction

Rain Taxi: Review of Books, a nonprofit literary organization, is running their annual online fundraising auction this week. There are first editions, gorgeous broadsides, rare chapbooks, quirky used books, as well as original art, an article of clothing, a decorative bag, a crazy quilt, and more. Many items are SIGNED by the authors and/or artists. This is a great way to support a valued publication in the literary culture and get some cool stuff (think holiday gifts!). Bidding is conducted on eBay.

Black Lawrence 2009 Book Award Winner

Black Lawrence Press has announced Brad Ricca the winner for the 2009 St. Lawrence Book Award for his poetry manuscript American Mastodon. Ricca receives $1,000 and publication. American Mastodon will be available from Black Lawrence Press in late 2011.

In addition to naming the winner of the 2009 St. Lawrence Book Award, Black Lawrence Press editors have chosen Finalist Eric Gamalinda’s short story collection People Are Strange for publication from Black Lawrence Press in late 2011.

Semi-Finalists:
Sean Bernard
Seth Borgen
Valerie Finn
Amy Havel
Tyrone Jaeger
Marylee MacDonald
Marjorie Manwaring
Andrew McIntyre
Edward Mullany
Mike Schiavone
Ira Sukrungruang
Steven Tarlow

Finalists:
Joshua Butts
Carrie Conners
Tracy DeBrincat
Christine DeSimone
Sarah Wetzel Fishman
Jeremy Griffin
Tina May Hall
Karen Holman
Steve Kistulentz
Mary McCray
Jennifer Moses
Carrie Oeding

Updates :: December 2009

Added to NewPages Big List of Literary Magazines:

nthWORD – satires and allegories, articles on politics and pop-culture, fiction, poetry, visual art
Rust and Moth – poetry, photography, art
The Mom Egg – poetry, creative prose, short fiction
Eudaimonia Poetry Review
The Lyric Magazine
nthWORD satire, allegory, articles on politics and pop-culture, fiction, poetry, visual art
The Round
Mythium
moonset
The Poetry Porch
Porchlight
Beatdom
Fact-Simile
Write This
shady side review – fiction, non-fiction, poetry

Added to NewPages Independent Publishers & University Presses:

Palm Press

Added to NewPages Writing Conferences, Workshops, Retreats, Centers, Residencies & Book & Literary:Festivals

Page Turner Literary Festival

Image Inspired Writing Contest :: Underwater New York

From Nicki Pombier Berger, Editor-in-Chief, Underwater New York:

The Underwater New York Shipwreck Story Contest: In conjunction with the American Folk Art Museum

Underwater New York is an online anthology of stories, art and music inspired by the underwater objects and phenomena that surround New York City.

Artists and storytellers have long drawn inspiration from our cityscape, but underneath the water’s surface is another landscape entirely. On the floors of New York City’s waterways, no fewer than one hundred and seventy shipwrecks languish. Although their exact locations must remain secret to thwart the efforts of amateur looters, we are asking you to dive in and mine the wreckage.

Draw your inspiration from our gallery of shipwreck images and tell a story—fiction, creative nonfiction or poetry—in 3000 words or less, that brings these ghost ships back to life.

As with our regular submissions, we are not asking for explanations, but rather the stories that these shipwrecks evoke. Be as creative as possible, but to qualify for the contest, your story must reference a shipwreck specifically in the NYC waterways.

Underwater New York presents the Shipwreck Story Contest in conjunction with the American Folk Art Museum’s exhibition, Thomas Chambers (1808-1869): American Maritime and Landscape Painter.

The winning story will be published in Underwater New York, and its author* will have the chance to read at Underwater New York Free Music Friday: Shipwreck Stories at the American Folk Art Museum on March 5, 2010.

• Submit contest entries online.

• The deadline for submissions is February 12, 2010.

• Contest winners will be announced on the Underwater New York website on February 23rd.

• Visit the site for more details, and to view the gallery of shipwreck images.

*Provided the author is located in, or can travel to, New York City

Narrative 30 Below Contest Winners

Narrative Magazine has announced the winners and finalists of the 30 Below Contest (all entrants are between the ages of 18-30):

First Prize: Montana Ray “The Blessing”
Second Prize: Greg Brown “Smokejumpers”
Third Prize: Christa Hillstrom “Depth of Field”

Finalists:
Carrie Braman
Ashley Kunsa
Kate Levin
Michael Mitnick
Golan Moskowitz
Richard Sonnenmoser
Diana Spechler
Jackie Thomas-Kennedy
Emily Van Kley
Sara Zandieh

MFA Program-Off Contest

Time to make your MFA program shine with this contest from Creative Nonfiction. Win a reading at the 2010 AWP Conference in Denver, publication in the summer 2010 issue of CNF, and bragging rights for your program!

Judge: Barbara Lounsberry, co-author (with Gay Talese) of Writing Creative Nonfiction: The Literature of Reality

Guidelines:

Contest is open to any student currently enrolled in an MFA creative writing program.

Submissions should be typed, double-spaced, no more than 3,000 words, and unpublished.

This is a blind read; your name should appear only in the cover letter, and each page of the manuscript should include the title of the piece.

No excerpts will be considered; your submission should be a single and complete piece.

Only one submission per author will be considered.

Please send submission and a cover letter with your name, university, complete contact information and title of the work to:

Creative Nonfiction Foundation
Attn: AWP Program-Off
5501 Walnut Street, Suite 202
Pittsburgh, PA 15232

New Lit on the Block :: experiment-o

experiment-o is an annual PDF magazine established in 2008. “Its aim is to bring attention to works that do what art is supposed to do and that is to risk.” The magazine is published by Amanda Earl of AngelHouse Press.

experiment-o will consider interviews, reviews, visual art, visual poetry, concrete poetry, poetry, prose, manifestos, maps, rants, blog entries, translations and other digital miscellany.

Issue Two (2009) features works by Jamie Bradley, Peter Cicariello, K. S. Ernst, Caroline Gomersall, John C. Goodman, Jeremy Hanson-Finger, Gil McElroy, Christine McNair, Sean Moreland, and Dominik Parisien.

Issue One (2008) features works by Gary Barwin, Emily Falvey, Spencer Gordon, Camille Martin, rob mclennan, Sheila E. Murphy, Pearl Pirie, Roland Prevost, Jenny Sampirisi, and Steve Venright.

Emerson Society Awards 2010

The Ralph Waldo Emerson Society announces three awards for projects that foster appreciation for Emerson.

*Research Grant*
Provides up to $500 to support scholarly work on Emerson. Preference given to junior scholars and graduate students. Submit a 1-2-page project description by March 1, 2010.

*Pedagogy or Community Project Award*
Provides up to $500 to support projects designed to bring Emerson to a non-academic audience. Submit a 1-2-page project description by March 1, 2010.

*Subvention Award*
Provides up to $500 to support costs attending the publication of a scholarly book or article on Emerson and his circle. Submit a 1-2-page proposal, including an abstract of the forthcoming work and a description of publication expenses, by March 1, 2010.

Send Research, Pedagogy/Community, and Subvention proposals to:

Leslie Eckel
leckel(at)suffolk(dot)edu

and

Daniel Malachuk
ds-malachuk(at)wiu(dot)edu

How Poems Work Essay Contest – Canada

From Arc Poetry Magazine: Write and submit an essay deconstructing a published poem by a Canadian poet. Arc will select a winning essay from each province for publication in their How Poems Work webzine. Arc will select a national winner whose essay will appear in their print magazine, and who will be commissioned to write two new essays for Arc’s How Poems Work webzine. (The winner will also be offered a mentorship opportunity with Arc’s Poet-in-Residence.) All winners receive a free one-year subscription to Arc.

Deadline: February 1, 2010

A Few Fellowships and Residencies

Winter Fellowship at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA. The postmark deadline for the 2010-11 Writing Fellowships is December 1, 2009. 2010-2011 Visual Arts Fellowship applicants may apply online beginning December 1, 2009. Online submissions must be received by midnight February 1, 2010.

The Reginald S. Tickner Writing Fellowship is an annual writer-in-residence position named in honor of Reginald Tickner, whose 41-year career at Gilman impacted thousands of Gilman students. Jan 8 deadline.

Philip Roth Residence in Creative Writing at The Stadler Center for Poetry, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA. Deadline Feb 20.

T-Shirt Subscriptions from McSweeney’s

McSweeney’s is now offering a new subscription: A Year of New Shirts. They’ve asked six artists to each come up with a t-shirt idea, which is then printed and sold as both a subscription and as individual shirts. Currently, subscribers will start with Tucker Nichols’s “Hetch Hetchy”. Visit McSweeney’s website for more info.

Ever Been Autocompleted?

Autocomplete Me is site devoted to submissions of “autocomplete” strands from Google searches. Autocomplete is explained on the site: “Remember that time you were innocently searching for ‘how to avoid swine flu’ but Google assumed you were searching for ‘how to avenge your brother’s death’? Yeah, that totally wasn’t what you were searching for, but it ended up being super helpful after your best friend ‘accidentally’ stabbed Michael.” There are text as well as screen capture submissions, so you can see better how this works. You submit the strand, it could end up on the site, and readers vote for their favorites.

Lit Mag Mentors

A regular section in The Louisville Review, “The Children’s Corner” accepts submissions of previously unpublished poetry from students in grades K-12.

The Fall 2009 issue features works by Kian Brouwer, fifth grade, Danielle Charette, high school senior, Carla Hasson and Katie Metzger, both seventeen-years-olds, and Ema Williamson, eleventh grade.

More importantly, all are young writers who have the support and encouragement of others in their lives who have helped them take this step in sharing their work with others. And most importantly, The Louisville Review has provided this opportunity for them. Let’s call it “Lit Mag Mentoring.” It sure would be nice to see this in more publications; not only does this foster a new generation of writers, but readers of literary magazines. Sounds like a win-win to me.

AROHO’s 2009 Contest Winners

A Room of Her Own Foundation’s 1st To the Lighthouse Poetry Publication Prize Winner was Genevieve Kaplan’s manuscript, In the Icehouse. Her book of poetry will be published by Red Hen Press in the fall of 2010.

2nd Annual To the Lighthouse Poetry Publication Prize
Postmark Deadline: August 31, 2010
Judge: Alice Quinn

Fall 2009 Orlando Prize Winners

Orlando Poetry Prize Winner
Mary Ellen Sanger, “Secrets of a Wooden Saint in a Church in Jalcomulco”

Orlando Nonfiction Prize Winner
Patricia Henritze, “Learning to Talk”

Orlando Sudden Fiction Prize Winner
Alyssa Cooper, “Tin Man Tick-Tock”

Orlando Short Fiction Prize Winner
Lyn Hawks, “The Flat and Weightless Tang-Filled Future”

Orlando in 2010, New Deadlines and Information
Orlando Nonfiction & Short Fiction Deadline — 1/31/10
Orlando Poetry & Sudden Fiction Deadline — 2/28/10
New dates and online forms will be available the week of 11/16/09

On the Importance of POV

“Point-of-view is arguably the most important decision for an author to make since it determines—from the first word of the narrative—how the prose will be presented to the reader.”

From “On Point-of-view” by Bret Anthony Johnston, Grist (vol. 1, 2007).

Glimpse Interns, Guest Editors and Design Leads

Glimpse is an interdisciplinary journal that examines the functions, processes, and effects of vision and its implications for being, knowing, and constructing our world(s). Each theme-focused issue features articles, visual essays, interviews, and reviews spanning the physical sciences, social sciences, arts and humanities.

Glimpse is currently seeking conscientious, self-directed interns that can commit to meeting in person as a team for 2-4 hours on Saturday mornings in Boston (or via Skype, if necessary), and to working independently for 6-18 hours per week. Internships are available for 10, 15, and 20 hours per week. Glimpse can endorse work for college or graduate credit, or offer access to office and studio resources for your own projects. Their objective is to create opportunities that benefit their interns and the journal equally. Application deadline for Spring interns is December 20.

Glimpse also welcomes inquiries for Guest Editors and Guest Design Leads for upcoming themed issues.

Open Minds Honorable Mentions

The newest issue of Open Minds Quarterly includes poems from the honorable mentions from their seventh annual BrainStorm Poetry Contest: Tracy King, David O’Neal, Michale Conner, Diane Klammer, Benjamin Hawkes, and ky perraun. Open Minds Quaterly is a publication of The Writer’s Circle, a project of Northern Initiative for Social Action. NISA is “built on the premise that consumer/survivors of mental health services are intelligent, creative, and can make a valuable contribution to society if given the opportunity to do so.”

Ugly Duckling Presse 2010 Subscriptions

Another great holiday gift – UDP basic subscriptions (limited to 200) receive more than 20 books throughout the year, sent directly to your home, including new works of poetry, essays, and artist books by emerging and established writers and artists. The books are all uniquely designed, with frequent use of letterpress, hand-sewn binding, and more, demonstrating “a philosophical curiosity about what makes a book a book” (Michael Miller, Time Out New York).

Eudora Welty Review

In 2009, the Eudora Welty Newsletter from Georgia State University metamorphosed into the Eudora Welty Review, an annual journal, published each April. The innaugural issue contains essays chosen from past Eudora Welty Newsletters.

Beginning in 2010, the Eudora Welty Review will publish lengthier scholarly essays, inaugurate a book review section, and maintain regular features for news and notes, textual analyses, checklists, and new archival materials, still with appropriate illustrative materials. Additional scholars have been invited to assist EWR editors as peer reviewers and members of the Advisory Board.

EWR editors are currently accepting essay submissions for the 2010 issue.

Afghan Women’s Writing Project

The Afghan Women’s Writing Project began as an idea during novelist Masha Hamilton’s last trip to Afghanistan in November 2008. Her interest in Afghanistan was sparked in the late 1990s during the Taliban period, when she understood it was one of the worst places in the world to be a woman.

The project reaches out to talented and generous women author/teachers here in the United States and engages them, on a volunteer, rotating basis, to teach Afghan women online from Afghanistan…Portions of the work will be put on a blog on a regular basis…it is intended to instill a sense of pride for these women…it is also intended to educate us, the teachers and readers of the blog, about what the Afghan women’s childhoods and young adulthoods were like under the Taliban, and what they feel about current conditions in their country…[it] is also meant to be a record of the project itself…it is intended to provide a positive link between Afghans and Americans at a time when those relationships have to some degree soured.

Bonfire Broadsides

Run by Sasha Steensen and Gordon Hadfield, Bonfire Press is the Center for Literary Publishing’s letterpress imprint. Using a Vandercook SP15 letterpress, type, and photopolymer plates, Bonfire produces a series of poetry chapbooks and broadsides. Two new broadsides recently added by G.C. Waldrep and Martha Ronk. Great for holiday gifting.

Bigger Burnside

The newest Burnside Review breaks away from it’s trademark 6×6 format for a special “All-Oregon Issue.” According to its publishers, “With the prize money from last year’s Literary Arts publishing fellowship, we decided to give back to our state. The special edition is a truly Oregonian creation; cover art by the Mercury’s art director Justin Scrappers, design and printing and stiching by Pinball Publishing. The issue features 33 of Oregon’s finest writers, including, Willy Vlautin, Kevin Sampsell, Vern Rutsala, Mary Szybist, Michele Glazer and Floyd Skloot.”

Jobs

The MFA Program in Creative Writing at California State University, Fresno invites applications for the position of Assistant Professor, Fiction Writing, Tenure Track to teach creative writing and literature at undergraduate/graduate levels beginning Fall 2010. Corrinne Hales, Search Committee Chair. Materials received by December 21, 2009 will receive full consideration.

The Undergraduate College of Rosemont College invites applications for an adjunct instructor to teach Creative Writing Poetry in the spring 2010 semester.

Fifth Wednesday Editor’s Prize

Every year, Fifth Wednesday Journal reviews the work of contributing artists to make selections for the Editor’s Prize in short fiction, poetry, and photography. The fall 2009 issue includes the editors comments on their selections. This year, Ann Leahy selected the work of Ray Gonzalez (“Canto” fall 2008), with a special note of recognition to Rebecca B. Rank and Mary Biddinger. Andrew Coburn’s fiction (“Hearty Women” spring 2009) was selected by Keith Gandal, and Barbara DeGenevieve selected the photography of Harry Wilson (“Classroom Turkey” fall 2008), with an honorable mention to Leigh Wells.

New Lit on the Block :: Sugar House Review

Sugar House Review is an independent, semiannual poetry journal based out of Salt Lake City, Utah edited by John Kippen, Nathaniel Taggart, Jerry VanIeperen, and Natalie Young.

The first issue is slim but packed with poems by Jeffrey C. Alfier, Rane Arroyo, Ruth Bavetta, Candace Black, Kenneth Brewer, Teresa Cader, Rob Carney, Star Coulbrooke, Tobi Cogswell, Brock Dethier, Cat Dixon, Gary Dop, William Doreski, Justin Evans, Howie Good, Dustin M. Hoffman, Natasha Kessler, Robin Linn, Grant Loveys, Matt Mason, Michael McLane, Paul Muldoon, J.R. Pearson, Nanette Rayman Rivera, Richard Robbins, Jerome Rothenberg, Sam Ruddick, Ki Russell, Natahsa Saj

Writers’ Room Fellowships

The Writers’ Room of Boston, Inc., a nonprofit organization that provides affordable, quiet, and secure workspace in downtown Boston for area writers, is now accepting applications for four fellowships for 2010. The fellowships award use of the Writers’ Room to Boston Area residents at no cost for one year. The submission deadline for applications is December 31, 2009. Residencies will begin in February 2010.

Lectureship

Emerging Writer Lectureship Department of English Gettysburg College

One-year appointment, beginning August 2010, for a creative writer who plans a career that involves college-level teaching, to teach three courses per semester, including Introduction to Creative Writing and an advanced course in the writer’s genre, as well as to assist with departmental writing activities. Mentorship for teaching and assistance in professional development provided. M.A., with a concentration in creative writing, M.F.A., or Ph.D. with creative dissertation, required. Teaching experience and literary magazine publications are essential. Competitive salary.

To apply, send letter of application, curriculum vitae, names of three references, and a 5-10 page writing sample to: Emerging Writer Lectureship, Department of English, Campus Box 397, Gettysburg College, 300 N. Washington St., Gettysburg, PA 17325, postmarked by January 29, 2010. Electronic applications will not be accepted. Do not send entire monographs, books, etc.

Gettysburg College is a highly selective liberal arts college located within 90 minutes of the Washington/Baltimore metropolitan area. Established in 1832, the College has a rich history and is situated on a 220-acre campus with an enrollment of over 2,600 students. Gettysburg College celebrates diversity and welcomes applications from members of any group that has been historically underrepresented in the American academy. The College assures equal employment opportunity and prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, sexual orientation, age, and disability.
Application Information

Postal Address:
Emerging Writer Lectureship
Department of English
Gettysburg College
300 North Washington Street
Box 397
Gettysburg, PA 17325

Phone:
(717) 337-6750

Fax:
(717) 337-8551

TDD:
(717) 337-6833

CFS: Creative Works for Grad Conference

CFS for scholarly and creative submissions for a National Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference entitled “The End?” to be held at Indiana University in Bloomington from March 25th-27th, 2010.

Looking for graduate student writers to give readings of their work that engage with the conference theme either thematically or formally (or both). Readings that challenge notions of endings, structure, or traditional formal boundaries, are all welcome, along with work that engages with the conference theme within the piece itself, through narrative or language. This conference hopes to examine how endings and limits are depicted, along with how we surpass (or are constrained by) them as writers.

Other topics might include, but are not limited to:

Endings as beginnings / beginnings as endings
The end of genre, crossing genre
Translation
The apocalypse and apocalyptic literature
The end of the human
Violence, death, grief, trauma
Moments of crisis
War
The ends of the earth
Fringe, margins, outlines
The future of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, etc.

Accepting proposals for individual projects as well as panel proposals organized by topic/theme/form. Organizers are committed to involving as much creative work as possible in the conference and representing a wide variety of writers.

Please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words describing your work and its relation to the conference theme, as well as five representative pages of creative work and as a short description of yourself, by January 15th, 2010: iugradconference-at-gmail-dot-com

Graduate Student Advisory Committee
Department of English
Indiana University

New Lit on the Block :: Eudaimonia Poetry Review

Eudaimonia Poetry Review is new on the web and well put-together by John Boyle, chapbook editor; Elaine Burnet, art editor; Kris Clements, reviews editor; Scott Forence, production design; Allison McEntire, poetry editor.

Publishing poetry and reviews of both new and classic works of poetry, the first issue includes works by Bob Mohrbacher, Liz Garcia, William Doreski, Derek Phillips, Kimberly Sherman, Clay Carpenter, M.V. Montgomery, Joel Solonche, Noah Lederman, Jay Snodgrass, Steven Joyce, Jill Caputo, Samuel Piccone, Caleb Puckett, Cesca Janece Waterfield, Angela S. Patane, Fredrick Zydek.

Eudaimonia is open for submission until November 30 for its next issue (ars poetica on the pursuit of happiness: Ars Joetica) , and is accepting submissions for its first chapbook contest until December 31.