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Passings :: Harold Norse

Harold Norse, whose poetry earned both wide critical acclaim and a large, enduring popular following, died on Monday, June 8, 2009, in San Francisco, just one month before his 93rd birthday. Norse, who lived in San Francisco for the last thirty five years, had a prolific, international literary career that spanned 70 years. His collected poems were published in 2003 under the title In the Hub of the Fiery Force, and he continued to read publicly into his 90s, bringing his work to new generations.”

Read more about Norse on his site and on his page with the Beat Museum.

The Beat Museum will be hosting a Memorial for Harold on Sunday, July 12th, time TBA.

Espresso Isn’t Just for Coffee Anymore

The new Espresso Book Machine is out – currently in 15 bookstores, and another 100 projected (Strauss). “The EBM is a fully integrated patented book making machine which can automatically print, bind and trim on demand at point of sale perfect bound library quality paperback books with 4-color cover indistinguishable from their factory made versions.”

Badgerdog Instructors and Internships

Badgerdog Literary Publishing of Austin, Texas, runs both in-school and after-school creative writing workshops in elementary, middle, and high schools throughout Central Texas for which there are Workshop Instructor positions. Badgerdog also has internships available: Youth Voices in Ink editorial internships; Badgerdog teaching internships; American Short Fiction internships; business internships; and PR and journalism internships. More information about each and the application process can be found on the Badgerdog website.

Poetry is Everywhere

The Found Poetry Project was conceived by Timothy Green and Megan O’Reilly Green back in 2005 and launched December 2008. The intention of The Found Poetry Project is “to raise awareness of the poetry that appears anywhere we choose to look.” To that end, the editors have established the following guidelines for found poetry, or FoPo, to be considered on their ongoing blog site:

1. The original author must not have intended the text to be poetry.
2. The found poem may not be sourced from literary fiction, non-fiction, or poetry. If the author seems to have been intentionally using poetic elements, it does not qualify for our purposes, even if those elements were employed in prose.
3. The original source of the text must be known. Source material may be anonymous, such as graffiti, signage, etc., but all published works must be properly cited.
4. The original text must not be edited by the finder, except by omission, punctuation, or lineation. Finders may cut words and add line breaks, but may not add words or rearrange text.
5. Finders may either choose to leave the poem untitled, or add their own.

Submissions are open, limited only by your own vision to see the poetry.

New Lit on the Block :: A River & Sound Review

Based out of Puyallup, Washington, it is partly true to say that A River & Sound Review is one of many efforts created “to promote the literary arts in a rural community with an undernourished appreciation for belles lettres.” For the rest of the truth, visit the website! AR&SR publishes an online literary journal that features the best in poetry, fiction, nonfiction,and humor (currently reading August 1 to October 31, 2009).

Issue Number 1 features poetry by Wendy Taylor Carlisle, Adrian Gibbons Koesters, Anne McDuffie, Kristine Ong Muslim, Peggy Shumaker, Patricia Staton, and Julie Marie Wade; fiction by Simon Fruelund and David Huddle; essays by Susan Casey, Leslie Haynesworth, and Anne-Marie Oomen; humor by Brian Doyle.

AR&SR also produces a live literary productions and releases them as podcasts: “it’s a fresh and humor-filled presentation of a literary reading, one like you’ve never heard or seen before.” Averaging nee show every 12 weeks AR&SR will open to booking performances. Their upcoming live shows include Tacoma, WA on August 9, featuring David Huddle and Jennifer Culkin with musical guest Jerin Falkner, and on to Seattle in October with Crab Creek Review.

New Lit on the Block :: The Raleigh Quarterly

The Raleigh Quarterly is a new hybrid online/print publication of stories, essays and poetry. Selections from the ongoing web posts are compiled in a print quarterly, the first issue of which includes works by Christy Thom, Graham Misenheimer, Lauren Turner, Anna Podris, Nick Pironio, Benjamin Fennell, Caroline Depalma, Yvonne Garrett, Dorianne Laux, Alice Osborn, and Michael Fischer. The web posts allow readers to register as community members to comment on the works.

Also included on the site is a video of RQ publishers, Greg Behr and Billy Warden on the program The Artist’s Craft hosted by Stacey Cochran in a discussion of the future of literature, publishing on the Web.

More Turkey on the Shelf?

According to Turkey’s Today’s Zaman, a Nobel Prize, the European Union, and İstanbul named as a European Capital of Culture for 2010 are a few of the reasons why we might be seeing more Turkish works in translations. Of course, money helps: “…the project called The Introduction of Turkish Culture, Art and Literature (TEDA) has served as a turning point. As part of the project which is led by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, close to 600 publications have been translated into different languages since 2005, giving foreign readers the opportunity to get to know 150 Turkish authors. The number of books translated within the context of the project in the last four years is almost six times as many as the number of books translated in the history of Turkey…TEDA is a translation subvention project running in developed countries such as England, Germany and the US. Foreign publishers that want to translate Turkish works into their own language apply to TEDA; publishers who receive subsidies from the project can then pay for translation and copyright expenses. Publishers report the sale figures of translated books to TEDA every six months. Owing to the project, the works of many Turkish authors and poets are being read in foreign countries.”

Read more here.

NewPages Updates :: June 10, 2009

New additions to the NewPages Big List of Literary Magazines:
Labletter – fiction, poetry, text and image, photography, criticism, interviews
Puffin Circus – poetry, prose, creative non-fiction, artwork, cartoons
Mayday Magazine – nonfiction, microfiction, poetry, political/cultural commentary, translation, and visual art
The Writer’s Block – poetry, fiction, flash fiction, reviews, photography, and artwork
322 Review – fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, art

AND

New additions to the NewPages List of Writing Conferences, Workshops, Retreats & Book & Literary Festivals:
Rosemont Writers Retreat
DePaul Summer Writing Conference
Words Alive Literary Festival
Hay Festival
Wordstock Festival
Roaming Writers Workshop

If you have suggestions for additions to any of our guides, please drop us a line: denisehill[at]newpages[dot]com

Yes Virginia, There is a Hockey Poetry

In honor of the playoffs, and rootin’ for the Red Wings to take the cup, a brief highlight on Randall Magg’s Night Work: The Sawchuk Poems, “a saga written in the character of Terry Sawchuk, one of hockey’s greatest goalies”:

Denied the leap and dash up the ice,
what goalies know is side to side, an inwardness of monk
and cell. They scrape. They sweep. Their eyes are elsewhere
as they contemplate their narrow place. Like saints, they pray for nothing,
which brings grace. Off-days, what they want is space. They sit apart
in bars. They know the length of streets in twenty cities.
But it’s their saving sense of irony that further
isolates them as it saves.

– from “One of You”

Published by Brick Books: “In compact, conversational poems that build into a narrative long poem, Night Work: The Sawchuk Poems follows the tragic trajectory of the life and work of Terry Sawchuk, dark driven genius of a goalie who survived twenty tough seasons in an era of inadequate upper-body equipment and no player representation. But no summary touches the searching intensity of Maggs’s poems. They range from meditations on ancient/modern heroism to dramatic capsules of actual games, in which the mystery of character meets the mystery of transcendent physical performance. Night Work: The Sawchuk Poems is illustrated with photographs mirroring the text, depicting key moments in the career of Terry Sawchuk, his exploits and his agony.”

New Lit on the Block :: 322 Review

Editors John Schoen, Jackie Cassidy, Steven Harbold, David Brennan, Jonathan Perrotto, John Schoen, Chris Vicari, Mark Buckalew, Sean Piverger, and readers Jamie Elfrank, George Ganigan, Shannon Spillman are the powerhouse behind 322 Review‘s impressive debut. The online journal includes and accepts submissions of of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, and mixed media, as well as plans to include podcasts and video.

In addition to and interview with and featured writing by Thaddeus Rutkowski, issue one includes fiction by Douglas Bruton, Kristopher Jansma, Douglas Bruton, and George Ganigan; creative nonfiction by Kaysie Norman; poetry by Richard Fein, Howie Good, Jill Jones, Niels Hav, Robert K. Omura, Charles Musser, Ray Succre, Leslie Tate, and Rachel Bellamy.

The site also features an online gallery of works by artists Boz Schurr, Danni Tsuboi, Lauren Taylor Tedeschi, Peter Schwartz, John Berry, Sean Jewell, Christopher Woods, and Adriana Brattelli.

322 Review will publish online quarterly and run its “most exemplary” submissions in print twice a year. Full submission information and deadlines can be found under Writer’s Guidelines.

[Image: jaco2 by Danni Tsuboi]

What Book Got You Hooked on Reading?

What book got you hooked? First Book wants to know: “This summer we are all about celebrating the stories that no child should grow up without – the classics, bestsellers and quirky favorites that got you reading and reading and reading some more. To introduce children to great stories, we need your support and we’ve set a goal to raise $100,000 by the end of August. Tell us What Book Got You Hooked and make a donation so that all children have access to great books!”

First Book will also be bringing back their “vote for a state” campaign to give the state which receives the most votes 50,000 new books. Past winners include Oklahoma and Kentucky.

Isotope on the Endangered List

This is indeed sad news for me, since it was only after reading Isotope that I believed English and science could really get along in the same mind of appreciation and learning. Something countless years of education failed to convince me of.

From the Terrain.org blog, posted by Simmons B. Butin:

Worst Event/Activity

I have very sad news to share — news I learned yesterday but wasn’t prepared to share until today (and I do have permission). As many of you know, Christopher Cokinos founded and has served as the editor of the outstanding journal Isotope: A Journal of Literary Nature and Science Writing for more than a decade now. Many of you also know that state university funding has been drastically cut nearly everywhere. Combine those two, and we learn that Utah State University will no longer be publishing Isotope.

Folks, Isotope is one of the three or four best environmental literary journals, and its closure is a huge blow not only to the good folks working on the journal at USU, but to environmental and science literature readers and writers everywhere. But what to do? We need to find a large endowment to sustain the journal, under Chris’s excellent editorial skills, and find it now. So ante up!

There is a possibility that Isotope will move to another university or other editing team, but unless it stays at USU, as far as I know Chris will no longer be the editor. That is sad, indeed.

Exhibits: Graphic Art & Grand Text Auto

Two cool exhibits at the Krannert Art Museum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign:

Vivid Lines in Graphic Times
May 21 to July 26, 2009

This selection of works, specifically paintings and works on paper from the museum’s permanent collection, shares a graphic quality. Whether these artists appropriated images from consumerist culture, took influence from comic books, or simply utilized graphic techniques in their creative process, their works illustrate how meaning and feeling can be conveyed differently through the graphic line. While clearly referencing the Pop Art movement, these works from the 1970s through the late 1990s incorporate the movement’s vibrant color and readymade images but deliver a more serious message. [Image: David Wojnarowicz]

Grand Text Auto
April 14 through July 26, 2009

Many blogs have spawned books over the last few years, but grandtextauto.org is the first to become an art exhibition. This blog about computer mediated and computer generated works of many forms—including net.art, hypertext fiction, and computer games—is collaboratively written by Mary Flanagan, Michael Mateas, Nick Montfort, Scott Rettberg, Andrew Stern, and Noah Wardrip-Fruin. In this exhibition, the bloggers put their ideas into practice by displaying a variety of cutting edge works of digital art of their own creation.

Submit Your Piece of Peace

Judy Lucas is gathering 1000 Pieces of Peace – or more! Modeled after the story of Sadako and the 1000 origami cranes, Judy is “gathering poems, quotes, and prose pictures about peace from writers around the world, of all ages and backgrounds, published or not. They will be arranged in a book, the proceeds of which will go exclusively toward building in West Virginia the worlds first silly hospital, a proto-typical model of health care delivery” – this based on the medical philosophy of Patch Adams. Visit the Patch for Peace page or the Gesundheit! Institute site for more information.

To participate in the 1000 Pieces of Peace, visit this page for submission information. Though the website says the deadline has passed, Judy has assured me she will accept submission until June 30. Don’t delay your piece of peace!

Teaching Artists Survey

From Teaching Artist Research Project (TARP):

The Survey Lab is collaborating with the National Opinion Research Center to carry out the first large scale survey of teaching artists. They are currently in the phase of locating teaching artists to participate in a web survey they expect to field in Spring 2009.

If you are a teaching artist, or if you manage a program that hires teaching artists – you can register for the survey on the site. They will send a link to the survey itself as soon as it “goes live” in your community.

If you are someone who hires teaching artists, you can help the project to develop a more complete list. Contact info available on the site.

Learn more about the Teaching Artist Research Project here.

Blue Mountain Center Residency/Award

The Richard J. Margolis Award of Blue Mountain Center combines a one-month residency at Blue Mountain Center with a $5,000 prize. It is awarded annually to a promising new journalist or essayist whose work combines warmth, humor, wisdom and concern with social justice. The award was established in honor of Richard J. Margolis, a journalist, essayist and poet who gave eloquent voice to the hardships of the rural poor, migrant farm workers, the elderly, Native Americans and others whose voices are seldom heard. He was also the author of a number of books for children. Deadline July 1, 2009

Colbert Guest Edits Newsweek June 8

From The Gawker: “In a move that sort of reeks of desperation more than it does slick PR, Newsweek‘s Jon Meacham announced that Stephen Colbert will be the magazine’s guest editor for the issue hitting newsstands on June 8.” As if the last issue with “Crazy Oprah” on the cover wasn’t enough…

Passings :: William Witherup

From The Stranger: John Marshall, the owner of Open Books up in Wallingford (WA), informs us that local poet William Witherup died yesterday of leukemia. Here is what Marshall has to say about him: “Bill was, to various degrees, very sweet and very crusty. He spent much of his life, politically and through poetry, focused on the plight of Downwinders, of which he was one—people who grew up and lived downwind of the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.”

From West End Press: Bill Witherup was born in 1935. He grew up in eastern Washington, around Hanford from the time his father took a job there.

After graduating from the University of Washington, he moved to San Francisco in 1960, later dividing his time among rural retreats near Monterey and Big Sur in California and a ranch outside Santa Fe, New Mexico.

His poetry darkened following the death of his father in 1983. While Witherup has endured periods of breakdown and hospitalization during his adult life, his dedication to poetry has remained unrelenting.

Passings :: David Bromige

From the Press Democrat:

David Bromige’s bold and experimental poetry won him multiple literary honors and the respect of readers around the world. But the retired Sonoma State University professor and former Sonoma County Poet Laureate, who died June 3 at home in Sebastopol at the age of 75, will be remembered by those who knew and loved him for his rapier wit and generous support of other writers.

“I am happy to say that in the last week of his life his family was reading to him my new memoir and he was laughing at my jokes. He never missed a joke,” said former SSU colleague and novelist Jerry Rosen.

Bromige, he praised, “knew as much about contemporary poetry as any person in the world” and managed to communicate his love for poetry to his students during 25 years at SSU.

Read the rest here.

What Plagiarism Looks Like

It makes it really difficult to have conversations with students about plagiarism when we know about incidents such as this one in which Jacksonville State University President William Meehan’s dissertation was found to have the highlighted passages copied directly from Carl Boening’s dissertation (and supposedly more that was not verbatim). Both received their doctoral degrees from University of Alabama, and to date, investigations of this were dropped when JSU spokesperson said “there was no substance to the accusations.” Apparently, someone else thinks there is substance to the charge and posted the What Plagiarism Looks Like website, which includes this image as well as the full text of both Meehan’s and Boeing’s dissertations as pdf files. To think I was giving students zero grades on papers for plagiarizing while Meehan was given a PhD and a presidency.

For more on the issue, see also The Chronicle of Higher Education News Blog and Michael Leddy’s blog Orange Crate Art.

Confess Your Secret Food

Alimentum: The Literature of Food has a special offer for new and renewing subscribers: “Tell us your Secret Food and receive one free issue! Your Secret Food is the food you love but tell no one about. Tell us and we’ll not only gift you an extra issue but broadcast your Secret Food on our website this Fall. Your chance for Food Fame!”

All you have to do is place a regular subscription order online (or by mail) then send Alimentum an email with your secret to secretfood[at]alimentumjournal[dot]com. You’ll get three issues for the price of two.

The Splinter Generation Becomes Ongoing

The Splinter Generation, a one-time-only publication received so much positive attention, the editors have decided to re-launch the journal as an ongoing publication featuring short fiction, poetry and nonfiction from writers born between 1973 and 1993. They’ve also given the site a new look, added some great new editors and are now accepting submissions.

The Splinter Generation is looking for the best poetry, creative nonfiction and fiction. In particular, they’re looking for work that captures what it is to be a member of this generation. Submissions are accepted on a rolling basis, but the reading period will end on November 1.

Where is All the Writing About Our Work?

Alain de Botton in his Boston Globe article Portrait of the Artist as a Young Data-Entry Supervisor says, “It’s time for an ambitious new literature of the office[. . .]many contemporary writers are notably silent about a key area of our lives: our work. If a proverbial alien landed on earth and tried to figure out what human beings did with their time simply on the evidence of the literature sections of a typical bookstore, he or she would come away thinking that we devote ourselves almost exclusively to leading complex relationships, squabbling with our parents, and occasionally murdering people. What is too often missing is what we really get up to outside of catching up on sleep, which is going to work at the office, store, or factory.”

Though we readers of literary magazines and small press publications know that these stories are being written and published, you just may not find them on the chain bookstore best seller shelf or paid-for-promotional-space tables.

Two such examples of these pockets of publication include two upcoming collections:

Anthology. On the Clock: Contemporary Short Fiction of People and Their Work. Working Lives Series from Bottom Dog Press Inc. Oct 1

Anthology: Out Behind the Desk: Workplace Issues for LGBTQ Librarians (a working title), edited by Tracy Nectoux and published by Library Juice Press as part of the series Gender and Sexuality in Librarianship. Dec 31

Audio :: Wordslingers

Hosted by poet Michael C. Watson, Wordslingers is live radio for poetry and the conversations and culture it ignites, with a particular emphasis on Chicago. Twice each month, poets and writers convene in WLUW’s studios to read their work aloud, and explore how poetry interacts with Chicago’s broader literary culture.

Redivider Quickie Contest Winners

Redivider Quickie Contest 2009 Winners & Finalists

Prose
Judged by George Singleton
Winner: “Confession” by John Stadler
Finalists: J. Bowers, Ashley Luster, Roberta Hartling Gates, James Tadd Adcox

Poetry
Judged by Rane Arroyo
Winner: “Tinnitus Valentine” by Erin Keane
Finalists: Judy Halebsky, T.A. Noonan, Sean Keck, Donna Vorreyer

Glimmer Train March Fiction Open Winners :: 2009

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their March Fiction Open.

First place: Justin Torres of New York, NY, wins $2000 for “Surrender Unto Us”. His story will be published in the Summer 2010 issue of Glimmer Train Stories, out in May 2010.

Second place: Vauhini Vara of Iowa City, IA, wins $1000 for “We’ll Rise Above the Sky”. Her story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories.

Third place: Keith Meatto of New York, NY, wins $600 for “Tierra Santa”.

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

And beginning June 1, Glimmer Train opens a brand new category! Guidelines here: Best Start.

Fellows Announced in Applied Translation

The first four recipients of Dalkey Archive Press’s Applied Translation fellowship program have been announced.

The new program, which is the first of its kind in the world, was created in response to the need on a national and international level for providing practical experience to young literary translators. Although only in its first year, the program received over 130 applications from 35 countries.

The four recipients are Rhett Warren McNeil (USA), Ursula Meany Scott (Ireland), Jamie Richards (USA) and Kerri Pierce (USA).

Read more about the fellows here.

Film :: Two of the Missing

According to Press 53, movie rights have been optioned by Millennium Films and shooting is scheduled for Two of the Missing: Remembering Sean Flynn & Dana Stone, a Vietnam War memoir written by Perry Deane Young, first published in 1975. The new edition released by Press 53 includes 18 pages of photos, many published for the first time.

On April 6, 1970, Sean Flynn, along with his friend and fellow photojournalist Dana Stone, were captured by Communist forces near Cambodia and never seen again. Sean was 28 at the time of his capture; he would have been 68 years old this year. Sean Flynn was the son of legendary film actor Errol Flynn. His capture in 1970 set off an international plea for his release and the release of several other journalists who were captured while covering the war.

Job :: Adbusters CW

Adbusters magazine is looking for a creative writer who can deliver colourful, edgy copy on myriad subjects. Assignments will range from short blurbs for the magazine and website to full-length articles, email broadcasts and fund-raising letters. Looking for a dynamic person interested in writing about the environment, art, technology, activism and politics. Open to Vancouver residents only. Email your resume, cover letter and two writing samples to: editor[at]adbusters[dot]org

New Lit on the Block :: Puffin Circus

Edited by poet Anthony Kendrick, Puffin Circus is a new independent, semi-annual literary journal based in Somerset, Pennsylvania that prints poetry, art, short stories, essays, book reviews, and cartoons.

The first issue features poetry and prose by Joseph Reich, Kenneth Pobo, Michelle Danner, Laura Garrison, Hannah C. Langley, Barbara Crooker, James Rioux, Richard Fein, and Rudy Sturk, short stories by David Moyer and Wayne H. W. Wolfson, an essay by Francis Raven, creative nonfiction by Robyn Bolton, and art by Francis Raven, Paul Woods, and Tim Welch.

Submissions are being accepted for the second issue of Puffin Circus, and, as always, writers are encouraged to read a copy before deciding if their work is right for submission.

Text as Art: Other C/lutter

Other Clutter is an online gallery space designed to explore “text as art”. Taking inspiration from the visual poetry of bpNichol and Steve McCaffrey the site has set out to examine text (words, letters, phrases, sentences, found text, pictures etc.) as an inherently visual space.

Contributors are often artists and poets who view language and its component parts as visual objects that lend themselves to shifting meanings and therefore recognize that words visually contain multiple entryways into understanding. Other Clutter is a space for both writers and artists to dismantle and reconstruct the political and representational overtones of text and art.

Other C/lutter also sponsors The Scream Literary Festival, July 2-13 in Toronto, for which they are seeking art submissions for gallery display.

[Image: from (th)ink: a collaboration between andrew topel and john m. bennett]

Controversy in Dublin, Ireland

Apparently the controversy with the Dublin Writers Festival is that it excludes Irish-language writers:

Dear Administrators,

Once again the Dublin Writers Festival has excluded Irish-language writers from any meaningful participation in the Festival events and activities. This behaviour by the organizers is shameful, offensive, and imperious. Indeed, I call for a boycott of the Dublin Writers Festival. It is my intention to urge writers, artists, and other citizens (in Ireland, Britain, the U.S. and other countries) to withdraw any and all support from the Festival and its activities. I urge an earthquake of a protest campaign until there is a constructive remedy to this imperiousness!

For creative diversity in Ireland,

Seamas Cain
http://alazanto.org/seamascain

[Reprinted here by permission of the author.]

New Lit on the Block :: Pakistaniaat

Pakistaniaat is a refereed, multidisciplinary, open-access academic journal offering a forum for a serious scholarly and creative engagement with various aspects of Pakistani history, culture, literature, and politics.

Articles in this first issue include “Introducing the Urdu Short Story in Translation” by Muhammad Umar Memon; “Community Learning Center Programs and Community Literacy Development in Asian and the Pacific Countries: Bangladesh, Iran, Vietnam and Pakistan as Case Studies” by Akbar Zolfaghari, Mohammad Shatar Sabran, and Ali Zolfaghari; “The Mediatization of Politics in Pakistan: A Structural Analysis” by Muhammad Atif Khan.

The publication also features book reviews, poetry and prose, translations, interviews, and Urdu works. All text is available online and can also be ordered in print copy.

Press 53 Contest Winners Announced

Press 53 has announced the winners for their 2009 Open Awards – honorable mentions and finalists can be found on the Press 53 website.

Young Writers (13-17)
Judge Tavia Stewart
First Prize: Beckett Bathanti of Vilas, NC for Short Story: “The Return”
Second Prize: Clara Fannjiang of Davis, CA for Poetry: “Letter to My Sentry,” “Foible,” and “Shakespeare’s Curse”

Poetry
Judge Kathryn Stripling Byer
First Prize: Janice Townley Moore of Young Harris, GA for “Windows Filled With Gifts,” “I’d Like to Think the Truth About the World,” and “Beginning Homer’s Illiad Once Again.”
Second Prize: Malaika King of Pinehurst, NC for “On Your Birth Day,” “Sweat Test for Cystic Fibrosis,” and “Swift Water.”

Flash Fiction
Judge Mark Budman
First Prize: Shannon Barton-Wren of San Francisco, CA for “San Diego, 1978”
Second Prize: Jason Stout of Atlanta, GA for “Paper Boats”

Short-Short Story
Judge Scott Yarbrough
First Prize: Kirk Barrett of Wilmington, NC for “Sarajevo Roses”
Second Prize: Jesse Tangen-Mills of Bogata, Columbia for “Twenty Ways to Love Before Dying”

Short Story
Judge Rusty Barnes
First Prize: Ryan Stone of Rossville, IL for “Run Nowhere”
Second Prize: Taylor Brown of San Francisco, CA for “Kingdom Come”

Genre Fiction
Judge Laura Benedict
First Prize: Alexander Lumans of Carbondale, IL for “Haruspices”
Second Prize: Jeff Bond of Midland, MI for “Motown Mojo”

Creative Nonfiction
Judge Dinty W. Moore
First Prize: Laura S. Distelheim of Highland Park, IL for “On Ruth, Whom I Couldn’t Let Slip By”
Second Prize: Kate Carroll de Gutes of Portland, OR for “Cure”

Novella
Judge Ashley Warlick
First Prize: Jan Parker of Fuquay-Varina, NC for Hard Times and Happenstance
Second Prize: J.W. Robison of Effingham, IL for The True Adventures of Mustard Tater

Teaching Lost as Lit

University of Florida instructor Sarah Clarke Stuart teaches a literature course on Lost, the hit ABC show about the survivors of Oceanic Flight 815 who crashed on a mysterious island. Her course includes such academic ares as physics, philosophy, religion, literature, mathematics, all based on content from the weekly program. “Ross Spencer, sophomore, said he thinks he’s learned more because the material is contemporary. ‘I think it’s more applicable than a regular literature class because you’re learning about what’s going on now,’ he said. ‘It definitely has academic merit.'”

“Regular literature”?