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Dennis Lehane Move from Book to Film to “Literature”

Lehane, a favorite with filmmakers, expands his literary horizon
By Chris Vognar
The Dallas Morning News

Until now you’ve been able to find Dennis Lehane’s work in two places: the mystery paperback shelves, where his superbly crafted novels have been confined to a sort of genre fiction ghetto, and the multiplex, where filmmakers have converted his cinematic prose into movies such as “Mystic River” and “Gone Baby Gone.”

The film streak won’t stop with “The Given Day,” Lehane’s epic historical novel built around the 1919 Boston police strike. Columbia Pictures has already snapped up the rights, and Sam Raimi is expected to direct. But when the book hits stores in September, you can expect to find it in the literature section — where, some might argue, Lehane’s work has belonged all along…[read the rest]

Award :: Tupelo Press First Book Award

Tupelo Press is delighted to announce the results of the 9th annual First Book Award, in conjunction with the journal Crazyhorse. This year the annual First Book Award, which will be published by Tupelo Press with the generous support of The College of Charleston in fall 2010, goes to:

Megan Snyder-Camp of Seattle, WA for The Forest of Sure Things

Co-runners up:
Shane McCrae of Iowa City, IA for Mule
Marc McKee of Columbia, MO for Fuse

Other finalists:
Matthew A. Andersson of Barrington, IL for What a Vessel in a Stem
Beth Bachman of Nashville, TN for Temper
Colin Cheney of Brooklyn, NY for Here There Be Monsters
Adam Fell of Madison, WI for Human Resources
Paul Legault of Charlottesville, VA for With
Erin Lyndal Martin of Newport, VA for Hive Mind
Rob Schlegel of Missoula, MT for flame & fern between our fingers flow
Matthew Shindell of La Jolla, CA for In Another Castle
Amanda Rachelle Warren of Kalamazoo, MI for Ridge Runner

All manuscripts were read by Carol Ann Davis and Garret Doherty, Editors of Crazyhorse, and the winner was selected by a panel of three judges consisting of Carol Ann Davis, Garret Doherty, and Jeffrey Levine, Editor-in-Chief of Tupelo Press.

Jobs :: Various

The Department of Literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz, invites applications for a tenure-track or tenured position in Creative Writing-Poetry. This is a “re-opened” search. November 1, 2008.

The University of Wyoming English Department invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor in nonfiction to join the MFA faculty, appointment to begin in Fall 2009.

MFA in Creative Writing–Chair, Antioch University, Santa Barbara. Nanci Braunschweiger, Human Resources.

Colby-Sawyer College has an opportunity for an innovative and energetic full-time Assistant Professor of Literature and Creative Writing in the Department of Humanities. October 15, 2008.

New Online Lit :: Torch

Amanda Johnston, Cave Canem Fellow, Affrilachian Poet, and now founding editor, brings readers and writers the new online publication Torch: poetry, prose, and short stories by African American Women.

Torch was established to promote the work of African American women. We provide a place to celebrate contemporary poetry, prose, and short stories by experienced and emerging writers alike. We prefer our contributors to take risks and offer a diverse body of work that examines and challenges preconceived notions regarding race, ethnicity, gender roles, and identity.”

Torch accepts submissions of poetry, creative nonfiction, fiction, photography and artwork, from April 15 through August 31.

The inaugural Spring/Summer 2008 issue includes FLAME – an interview, biography, and work sample of Tayari Jones, and SPARK – featuring work by Kamilah Aisha Moon, poetry and prose by Lauren K. Alleyne, Tara Betts, Renee Breeden, Kelly Norman Ellis, francine harris , Lilian Oben, darlene anita scott, Nancy Shakir, Bianca Spriggs, a short story by Keli Stewart, and artwork by Nicole Goodwin (work featured above: “Flowers for the Fallen”).

New Lit on the Block :: The Normal School

“The Normal School is a bi-annual journal featuring nonfiction, fiction, poetry, criticism and culinary adventure journalism. We are nestled happily into the California State University at Fresno like a comfy spore in a benign and mighty lung. We dig quirky, boundary-challenging, energetic prose and poetry with innovations in content, form, and focus, which isn’t actually as high-falutin’ as it sounds. We’re just sort of the lit mag equivalent of the kid who always has bottle caps, cat’s eye marbles, dead animal skulls, little blue men and other treasures in his pockets.”

The Normal School accepts submissions of nonfiction, fiction, poetry, criticism, culinary adventure journalism, and video and audio essays. No previously published works, sim/subs okay.

Subscriptions are $20 for for two years (4 issues) and can be ordered online using PayPal. Single issues are $7 each.

Jewish Adventures in the Graphic Novel

The Thomas Library of Wittenberg University will be hosting a reading and discussion series on Jewish Adventures in the Graphic Novel. Associate Professor of Communication Dr. Matthew J. Smith will discuss five graphic novels about the Jewish experience: A Contract With God by Will Eisner (Sept 9). The Complete Maus by Art Spiegelman (Sept 23), Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer by Ben Katchor (Oct 7), The Quitter by Harvey Pekar (Oct 28), and The Rabbi’s Cat by Joann Sfar (Nov 11 ).

Participation is free and open to the public, and thanks to a grant from Nextbook and the American Library Association, books will be provided to registered participants.

Best of the Net Nominations Sought

Calling all Internet-only journals!

Sundress Publications has opened submissions for its second volume of the Best of the Net Anthology.

“This project works to promote the diverse and growing collection of voices that are choosing to publish their work online, a venue that still sees little respect from such yearly anthologies as the Pushcart and Best American series. This collection is intended to bring more prestige to a innovative and continually expanding medium. Our second issue included work by Ron Carlson, Dorianne Laux, Simone Muench, Charles Jensen, Matt Hart, and more.”

Submissions from editors will be open from July 1, 2008 to September 31st, 2008. Winners will be announced in January, 2009.

For more information, visit http://www.sundress.net/bestof/

New Lit on the Block :: Hawk & Handsaw

Hawk & Handsaw
The Journal of Creative Sustainability
Unity College, Maine

“Like Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the contributors to Hawk & Handsaw know which way the wind blows. They know that a sustainable lifestyle can be messy and meaningful that it requires reflection, deep philosophical commitment and, more often than not, a good sense of humor. To this end, Hawk & Handsaw celebrates the thinking and reflection that ground sustainable practices and practitioners.

Hawk & Handsaw is published annually and accepts poetry, nonfiction, stories, and visual art from Aug 15 – Nov 15.

Contributors to the first issue include written works by James Engelhardt, Jennifer A. Barton, John Lane, Luisa A. Igloria, Bibi Wein, Andrew Tertes, Bruce Pratt, Michael Bennett, Mimi White, Christie Stark,, Paul Sergi, David Trame, Holli Cederholm, Tyler Flynn Dorholt, Michael P. Branch; and visual works by: Suzanne Caporael, Christopher Becker, Karen Gelardi, Lisa B. Martin, Emily Brown, Mark Newport, Emily Brown, Christopher Becker, Emily Brown, Karen Gelardi, Emily Brown, Suzanne Caporael

Festival :: Frank Stanford 10.17-19

Frank Stanford Literary Festival
October 17 – 19, 2008
Fayetteville, Arkansas

Featuring a Small Press Reading, a panel on Stanford’s life and works, a screening of the Stanford biopic It Wasn’t a Dream It Was a Flood, a celebratory reading from Stanford’s poems, and a marathon reading of The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You.

Hosted by The Burning Chair Readings, Cannibal Books, Lost Roads Publishers, Fascicle, Typo, & The Fayetteville Public Library.

If you would like to attend, publicize, sponsor, or otherwise query, contact Matthew Henriksen of The Burning Chair Readings: frankstanfordfest (at) gmail (dot) com.

Job :: Managing Editor @ The Southern Review

MANAGING EDITOR
The Southern Review

The Southern Review announces an opening for Managing Editor. This is a permanent, full-time position. Founded in 1935 by Robert Penn Warren and Cleanth Brooks, The Southern Review is published four times a year on the campus of Louisiana State University.

Required Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree; three years editorial and copyediting experience on the staff of an established literary journal, university press, or national press; able to demonstrate the following: editorial expertise with fiction, nonfiction, and poetry; a broad knowledge of literary history, literary criticism, and contemporary fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction; computer skills including Word Perfect; a solid understanding of the publishing, especially small presses and literary magazines; web design and database management.

Additional Qualifications Desired: Excellent human relation skills suitable for dealing with diverse artistic personalities; terminal degree (M.F.A., Ph.D. or equivalent); knowledge of languages other than English.

Responsibilities: oversees management and distribution of incoming manuscript; reads, evaluates, and provides detailed comments on manuscripts; copyedits and fact-checks, giving special attention to content, style, etc.; corresponds, when required, with authors regarding changes required to accepted manuscripts; works with designer and printer toward final publication.

An offer of employment is contingent on a satisfactory pre-employment background check. Application deadline is September 8, 2008 or until a candidate is selected. Applications should include: a letter of application, CV or resume (including e-mail address), one-page statement of editorial philosophy, and contact information for three professional references. Applications should be sent to the following address:

Jeanne M. Leiby
The Southern Review
Old President’s House
Louisiana State University
Ref: #018159
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
LSU IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/EQUAL ACCESS EMPLOYER

Ammon Shea and a Friendly Game of Dictionary

The Lexicographer and the Madman
By Gregory Cowles

When I asked Ammon Shea, the man who read the O.E.D., if he wanted to play a game of Dictionary sometime, he did me the favor of pretending I was sane.

“Do you have a specific dictionary in mind?” he wondered. “I would prefer Webster’s Third, if only because of all the bad blood between that edition and The Times.”

Bad blood?

Read the rest, including a retelling of several rounds of the game, on Paper Cuts.

Worst Ever Win Awards

Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest
2008 Results

Theirs was a New York love, a checkered taxi ride burning rubber, and like the city their passion was open 24/7, steam rising from their bodies like slick streets exhaling warm, moist, white breath through manhole covers stamped “Forged by DeLaney Bros., Piscataway, N.J.”
Garrison Spik
Washington, D.C.

The winner of the San Jose State University Dept. of English & Comparative Literature2008 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest is Garrison Spik (pronounced “speak”). Spik is the 26th grand prize winner of the contest that began in 1982.

An international literary parody contest, the competition honors the memory (if not the reputation) of Victorian novelist Edward George Earl Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873). The goal of the contest is childishly simple: entrants are challenged to submit bad opening sentences to imaginary novels. Although best known for “The Last Days of Pompeii” (1834), which has been made into a movie three times, originating the expression “the pen is mightier than the sword,” and phrases like “the great unwashed” and “the almighty dollar,” Bulwer-Lytton opened his novel Paul Clifford (1830) with the immortal words that the “Peanuts” beagle Snoopy plagiarized for years, “It was a dark and stormy night.”

Other categories include: Adventure, Children’s Literature, Detective, Fantasy Fiction, Historical Fiction, Purple Prose, Romance, Science Fiction, Spy Fiction, Vile Puns, Western, and plenty of Miscellaneous Dishonorable Mentions, inlcuding:

Behind his pearly white smile lay a Bible black heart, not like the Psalms with its, “Make a joyful noise unto the Lord,” but like Revelations where God just smites people.
Elaine Deans
San Jose, CA

There are certain people in the world who emanate an aura of well being — they radiate sunshine, light up a room, bring out the best in others, and fill your half empty glass to overflowing – yes it was these very people thought Karl, as he sharpened his mirror-finished guthook knife, who were top of his list.
Jason Garbett
London, U.K.

Penguin Win Rights to Steinbeck’s Books

Cup of Gold: Publisher wins rights battle over Steinbeck books
Martha Graybow, National Post
Published: Wednesday, August 13, 2008

A U.S. court was wrong to award rights to some of John Steinbeck’s best-known novels, including “The Grapes of Wrath,” to his son and granddaughter, a federal appeals court ruled on Wednesday.

The appeals court said copyrights to the author’s early works should belong to publisher Penguin Group, a unit of Pearson Plc. The case has been seen as having ramifications for heirs of other artists seeking to control future use of famous works.

Other Steinbeck works affected by the ruling include “Of Mice and Men,” “Tortilla Flat,” and the author’s first published novel, “Cup of Gold.”

Steinbeck, who set many of his books in his native California, received both a Pulitzer Prize and the Nobel Prize for Literature. He died in 1968.

Read more here.

Top 12 Titles for Booksellers

A gentle reminder that what sells may not always fit our personal ideas of what’s “best.”

The 12 Top Titles that Booksellers Must Always Stock
By Stephen Adams, Arts Correspondent
Telegraph.co.uk
09 Aug 2008

The 12 books a bookseller simply cannot afford not to stock have been named.

But the list contains no Bible, no Jane Austen titles and no Lord of the Rings.

Rather it is headed by Sebastian Faulks’ Birdsong and Eric Carle’s The Very Hungry Caterpillar.

These are the top two publications of a dozen that booksellers must keep on their shelves at all times, according to market research firm Nielsen.

Its BookScan research of 1.8 million titles reveals that only 12 have appeared in the top 5,000 selling books every week for the last decade, making them the most consistent sellers.

Some books on the wide-ranging list might make the odd literary editor weep.

Read the full list here.

NewPages Facebook & MySpace

Yes, NewPages is on both Facebook and MySpace.

On Facebook, I have a personal site, which is mostly for my students and friends, though I see some writers/publishers are finding me there. Better would be for you to join as a fan of the NewPages Group. Matt Bell is more in charge of that, and posts notices of when new book review and lit mag reviews are published, and you can write on the wall there.

NewPages on MySpace is purely NewPages stuff – loads of publishers and magazines and writers we know. I keep that site updated with info about book and lit mag reviews.

Other than those, the NewPages blog and NewPages home page are really the best feed into what we’re doing here, related news and updates.

Jeanne Lieby Sighting

Jeanne Lieby has been sighted in her new post as editor of The Southern Review: “The summer 2008 issue of The Southern Review is editor Jeanne Leiby’s first issue. She comes to Louisiana State University and the Baton Rouge community from Orlando, Florida, where she was previously the editor of The Florida Review.” Jeanne is also author of Downriver, a collection of short stories, some previously published in Fiction, New Orleans Review, The Greensboro Review, and Indiana Review, among others. The title comes from Jeanne’s having grown up “downriver” Detroit. She graduated from the University of Michigan, earned her MA from the Bread Loaf School of English/Middlebury College, and her MFA from the University of Alabama. She has always been a great supporter of and steadfast advisor to our work here at NewPages, and we’re pleased as punch to see her happy in her new role.

Wear It :: Sweet Tees & More

Cool, cool t-shirts and pint glasses from Use Small Words. A group of hipsters out of New Orleans, who at the peak of boredom, came up with the idea for combining graphic design and quotes from famous writers and thinkers.

My fav? The pint glasses, of course! With a quote from Oscar Wilde, “Work is the curse of the drinking classes.” A close second is the Ben Franklin t-shirt, “Beer is living proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.”

Other t-shirt quotes include Poe’s “I became insane, with long periods of horrible sanity.” Freud’s “One is very crazy when in love.” and two from Twain: “It’s no wonder that truth is stranger than fiction. Fiction has to make sense.” and “Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society.”

Something from this collection is a must for the fall wardrobe! And I hope to see even more designs from this conscientious group of entrepreneurs.

Movies with Poetry

Amy King, writer and teacher, recently posed the following request to the poetry community: “I’m looking for a few good films that offer up poetic content, to put it vaguely, or a representation of a poet that doesn’t completely romanticize the poet, disintegrating the person in the process… films with a poetry angle, please!”

Thanks to the responses of many, she has compiled an incredibly impressive list on her blog – Movies with Poetry – some with notes from the ‘recommender’. The post is open for comments and additions.

Thanks Amy and all of the contributors to this great resource!

Springsteen’s Ten Suggestions for Spiritual Living

From The Gospel According to Bruce Springsteen by Jeffrey B. Symynkywicz – posted in full with comments on NPR.

1. The world has gone awry.

2. There is a power within the souls of men and women to transcend the world and to achieve real victories in spite of the world.

3. The world is as it is.

4. Life without connections is empty and dangerous.

5. Our stories symbolize something deeper.

6. Life is embodied.

7. It’s all about change.

8. There is no guarantee of success.

9. Hope is resilient.

10. There is always something more.

New Lit Online :: Emprise Review

With a masthead combining Patrick James McAllaster (Editor-In-Chief/Creator), Kris Loveless (Editor-In-Chief), and Karen Rigby (Poetry Editor/Adviser), I would expect to see Emprise Review kick into high gear without a hitch.

Online in the first issue (August 2008) are works by Emily Brungo, William Doreski
Maurice Kilwein Guevara, Christine Hume and Christopher Woods. Submissions – especially non-fiction and photography – are being accepted until September 20 for the next issue. Additionally, the publication accepts fiction and poetry – and overall is looking for work that has a “punch-in-the-gut, hard to define, memorable quality that inspires more than one reading.”

I’m sure you’ve got that, right?

VQR Young Reviewers Contest

We don’t normally run contest information on the blog, but this one from Virginia Quarterly Review is being publicized via word of mouth only – with no entry fees being charged, so it warrants a blog spot. From VQR Managing Editor Kevin Morrissey:

To encourage and cultivate young reviewers and critics under the age of thirty, the Virginia Quarterly Review is holding a “Young Reviewers Contest” in September 2008.

The prize for the winning entry is $1,000, publication in VQR‘s Winter 2009 issue, and a publishing contract for three additional reviews worth up to $3,000. Finalists (up to five) will receive a complimentary one-year student or associate membership in the National Book Critics Circle, a one-year subscription to VQR, and may also be offered paid publication in VQR (in print or online).

For more information, visit the VQR website at or contact VQR at [email protected] or 434-924-3124.

Two Cool Projects

LISTENING BOOTH & 4000 WORDS 4000 DEAD
A public project by Genine Lentine & Jennifer Karmin
Sunday, August 10, 2008
2-5PM in Dolores Park
San Francisco (near 18th & Dolores)

LISTENING BOOTH offers pedestrians a place to sit down and talk to an attentive listener for five minutes. Participants choose their desired level of listenership: 1. Silence 2. Non-verbal backchannel responses: hmm, nodding, etc. 3. Neutral verbal responses: “I hear you,” “I understand,” requests for clarifications, etc; 4. Comments, questions, analogous examples, stories, etc; 5. Advice 6. Freestyle. After five minutes, the listener bows and says “Thank you.” (2-3:30pm) FREE – all are welcome

4000 WORDS 4000 DEAD is a public poem. Submissions are ongoing as the Iraq War continues and the number of dead grows. During street performances, these words are given away to passing pedestrians. Send 1-10 words with subject “4000 WORDS” to jkarmin-at-yahoo-dot-com. All submissions become part of this project. (4-5pm)

***

GENINE LENTINE’s poems, essays, and interviews have appeared in American Poetry Review, American Speech, Diagram, Gulf Coast, Ninth Letter, O, the Oprah Magazine, and Tricycle. She collaborated with Stanley Kunitz and photographer Marnie Crawford Samuelson on The Wild Braid: A Poet Reflects on a Century in the Garden (W.W. Norton, 2005). Her manuscript, Mr. Worthington’s Beautiful Experiments on Splashes was a finalist for the National Poetry Series. Her project, Listening Booth was recently part of Southern Exposure Gallery’s 1st Annual Public Art day. She lives in San Francisco.

JENNIFER KARMIN curates the Red Rover reading series and is a founding member of the public art group Anti Gravity Surprise. Her multidisciplinary projects have been presented at a number of festivals, artist-run spaces, and on city streets. She teaches creative writing to immigrants at Truman College and works as a Poet-in-Residence for the Chicago Public Schools. Recent poems are published in Bird Dog, MoonLit, Womb and the anthologies A Sing Economy, The City Visible: Chicago Poetry for the New Century and Growing Up Girl: An Anthology of Voices from Marginalized Spaces.

CUTTHROAT’s Online Only Issue

What’s the issue with CUTTHROAT‘s online only issue? I posed a few questions to Pamela Uschuk, editor-in-chief, about why, the decision-making behind this, and what it might indicate for the future of CUTTHROAT (does going online mean no more print?). Her resonse gives some great insight into how a magazine is run and all the behind-the-scenes people and work required to maintain a quality publication. Here’s her response:

“I can tell you why we made the decision to publish one online edition and one print edition per year. The reason is mainly monetary, but there are side issues worth discussing.

CUTTHROAT is largely unfunded, so Bill Root and I pay to publish this magazine. We receive so many worthy submissions in poetry and short fiction, we felt that printing one issue a year didn’t allow us to publish enough of these wonderful submissions.

CUTTHROAT is truly a labor of love.

None of our editors/staff is paid – except for the judges we hire to judge our national literary prizes. All work is volunteer, and our editors work hard, reading through a mountain of material for each issue.

For the present, we decided that the best option for us is to publish one print edition (this past year’s issue ran to 180 pages!), and to publish one online edition per year. Because we don’t have to pay for reproduction of art work inside the magazine, this online edition allows us to feature visual artists as well as writers.

We choose one guest fiction editor each year to edit the online fiction submissions. This year’s guest editor was William Luvaas. Our poetry editor, William Pitt Root, edits for both online and print editions each year.

The future of CUTTHROAT is bright. We are all committed to publishing this magazine for the long term. We are old-fashioned and love the feel of the print edition in our hands, so we have no plans to to to an entirely online format. We are lucky, each year, to have interns to help us out with logging in submissions, creating data bases, mailings, etc. We also have two terrific web designers, Laura Prendergast and Kevin Watson, who help me maintain our website and set up the magazines.”

Volumes 3 and 5 of CUTTHROAT are available online in PDF format.

Award :: FIELD Poetry Prize

Oberlin College Press is pleased to announce Dennis Hinrichsen of Lansing, Michigan as the winner of the twelfth annual FIELD Poetry Prize. His manuscript, Kurosawa’s Dog, was chosen from over 425 entries. It will be published in spring 2009.

Dennis Hinrichsen is the author of four previous collections of poetry, The Attraction of Heavenly Bodies, The Rain That Falls This Far, Detail from The Garden of Earthly Delights, and Cage of Water, as well as a chapbook, Message to Be Spoken into the Left Ear of God.

The FIELD Poetry Prize contest, open to all poets, is held annually each May. The winner receives $1,000 and the manuscript is published in the FIELD Poetry Series. FIELD: Contemporary Poetry and Poetics is published twice yearly and has featured the works of both well-known writers and new talents since 1969.

Poetry Festival :: Geraldine R. Dodge 9.25-28

12th Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival
Thursday, September 25 – Sunday, September 28, 2008
Waterloo Village in Stanhope, New Jersey

This biennial festival is the largest poetry event in North America, with this year’s event expecting 20,000. These four-day celebrations of poetry have been called “poetry heaven” by former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Hass, “a new Woodstock” by the Christian Science Monitor, and simply “Wordstock” by The New York Times.

The Festival, held in even-numbered years since 1986, immerses audiences and nearly five dozen internationally acclaimed poets in readings, discussions, and conversations focusing on poetry. Events are held all day and evening in performance tents accommodating anywhere from 100 to over 2,000 people. During each day of the Festival, ten or more separate stages offer different activities simultaneously. The most recent Festival, in September of 2006, attracted a total audience of nearly 17,000.

An essential component of each Festival is a series of special programs for high school students (Sept. 25) and for teachers (Sept. 26)at all levels, elementary through college. More than 4,500 students and 2,000 teachers from throughout the country participate in conversations and readings designed specifically for them during the first two days of the Festival.

Admission is well within reason, with the most costly four-day pass topped at $78 (discounts at all levels for students!).

This year’s line-up includes Chris Abani, Coleman Barks, Taha Muhammad Ali, Coral Bracho, Billy Collins, Lucille Clifton, Mark Doty, Martín Espada, Joy Harjo, Robert Hass, Brenda Hillman, Edward Hirsch, Jane Hirshfield, Ted Kooser, Maxine Kumin, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sharon Olds, Linda Pastan, Charles Simic, C.D. Wright, Franz Wright and dozens of other accomplished poets, musicians and storytellers.

NewPages Update :: August Book Reviews Posted

The NewPages Book Reviewers have been especially busy this last month with a unique selection of books. Stop by and check out these reviews:

The Withdrawal Method
Fiction by Pasha Malla
Anansi, 2008
Review by Matt Bell

Nylund the Sarcographer
Novel by Joyelle McSweeney
Tarpaulin Sky Press, October 2007
Review by Cynthia Reeser

Structure of the Embryonic Rat Brain
Poetry by Christopher Janke
Fence Books, March 2007
Review by Cyan James

Awesome
Novel by Jack Pendarvis
MacAdam/Cage, August 2008
Review by Matt Bell

Margarita, How Beautiful the Sea Novel by Sergio Ram

‘Man Booker Dozen’ Announced

29 July 2008
The judges for the 2008 Man Booker Prize for Fiction have announced the longlist for this year’s prize. The longlist of 13 books, often referred to as the ‘Man Booker Dozen’, was chosen from 112 entries; 103 were submitted for the prize and nine were called in by the judges.

The titles are:

Aravind Adiga
The White Tiger

Gaynor Arnold
Girl in a Blue Dress

Sebastian Barry
The Secret Scripture

John Berger
From A to X

Michelle de Kretser
The Lost Dog

Amitav Ghosh
Sea of Poppies

Linda Grant
The Clothes on Their Backs

Mohammed Hanif
A Case of Exploding Mangoes

Philip Hensher
The Northern Clemency

Joseph O’Neill
Netherland

Salman Rushdie
The Enchantress of Florence

Tom Rob Smith
Child 44

Steve Toltz
A Fraction of the Whole

Jobs :: Various

The MFA in Writing Program at the University of San Francisco invites applications for a tenure-track position in Creative Nonfiction at the Assistant Professor level to begin Fall 2008. Eve-Anne Doohan, Communication and Social Interaction Search Committee Chair. Apply online.

The Department of English of Wheaton College invites applications for a tenure-track position in Creative Writing – Creative Nonfiction. Dr. Sharon Coolidge, Chair. November 14.

New York Public Library – Editor. Under the direction of the Director for Publications, contributes to and manages the timely publication of the Library’s donor magazine, Bookmark and writes development-based materials in support of Development Office activities, including capital campaign pieces, membership brochures and membership pages of nypl.org.

Artist in Residence :: Northwestern University 11.3

Northwestern University Department of English is seeking applications for an Artist in Residence, a two-year appointment, renewable for two additional three-year terms (total of eight years), to start September 2009.

This position is for a poet who meets four criteria: 1) significant creative publication, 2) critical expertise in poetry & prosody, 3) acquaintance with criticism & technical analysis in prose genres, as well as the ability to teach fiction or creative nonfiction reading-and-writing courses, 4) experience teaching both creative & literature courses in a curriculum with a strong reading & analytic component.

Cover letter should be specific about your involvement in 2), 3), & 4) & should include names of referees, at least one of whom can comment on teaching. Please send letter, c.v., & a writing sample of five poems not to exceed ten pages in total (no books or complete MSS at this time) by November 3 to: Mary Kinzie, Director of Creative Writing, Department of English, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208.

Applications from women & members of minority groups are strongly encouraged.

Google Lit Trips

Okay, so maybe Google is making us stupid in some ways (though it doesn’t act alone…), but in others, I think it’s a wonderful TOOL for learning. The latest and greatest: Google Lit Trips. You have to download Google Earth first before you can open the .kmz files, but, once you do, such works as The Road, The Grapes of Wrath, The Kite Runner, The Aeneid, The Odyssey, Hana’s Suitcase, and The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants are mapped out with notes.

Books are divided into grade categories (K-5, 6-8, 9-12, HiEd), some come with slide shows as well as podcasts.

All of this is thanks to (besides Google) contributors who have provided the lit trips. More contributors are welcome, including teachers AND students! What a great class project this could make.

New Lit on the Block :: The Broome Review

From Editor Andrei Guruianu: “The Broome Review is a new national literary magazine that seeks to bring further local and national exposure to the Broome County, NY arts community by attracting writers and artists of many genres from across the country and across the world. The journal promotes cultural development in and outside the immediate area through the creation of a wider audience for the works of established and emerging artists.”

The annual publication accepts submissions of poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction and art July-November of each year and currently is accepting works through November for the Stephen Dunn Prize in Poetry.

Authors included in Issue Number 1 whose works can also be found on The Broome Review website include Stephen Dunn, Timothy Liu, Katharyn Howd Machan, Carmen Firan, and Katherine Lien Chariott. Also available on the website is an artist gallery of works not found in the publication.

The Broome Review is also active in their community, in cooperation with The Center for Gender, Art & Culture, sponsoring several series of free creative writing workshops through the end of 2008. The workshops are led by magazine editors, and participants’ works will be considered for possible inclusion in a perfect-bound collection, titled Our Voices, to be published December 2008.

The Broome Review has really hit the ground running – c’mon everyone, catch up!

Wordstock on the West Coast 11.7-9

Wordstock 2008
November 7-9, 2008
Oregon Convention Center
Portland, Oregon

Best known for the Book Fair, other events include a children’s festival, live wire radio show, literary feasts each night, and workshops. The 2007 roster included nearly 200 locally- and nationally-known authors.

Wordstock is expecting 15,000 attendees this year, and exhibit tables are still available.

Teachers! Wordstock for Teachers is for teachers of all grade levels. The one-day accredited writing workshop designed to provide teachers with hands-on strategies for the classroom as well as inspiration and tricks to improve their own writing. WFT will be held on Friday, November 7th.

Residency :: Colorado Art Ranch

Colorado Art Ranch and Art Works for the Heart of the Rockies will host five visual and literary artists near Salida Colorado. The residency Begins September 28, 2008 and ends October 30, 2008. Deadline for applications is August 1, 2008. Colorado Art Ranch and partners host 4+ visual and lieterary artists in different towns throughout Colorado. The residencies generally run four weeks. See their website for more information about ongoing opportunities.

New Online Lit :: Post No Ills

Editor Kyle G. Dargan, formerly of Callaloo, brings Post No Ills to the online and print lit scene, featuring book reviews, book review interviews (cool concept: reviewing a text via a dialogue between you and another writer/artists who has read the same book), author interviews, live event & exhibit reviews, art & photography, and creative written works.

Already on the site is an interview with Abdel Shakur, editor emeritus of the Indiana Review, and a conversation between literary activist and D.C. icon E. Ethelbert Miller and literature scholar Keith D. Leonard. Uche Nduka’s work Eel on Reef is reviewed by Sarah Valentine, and Eve Dunbar reviews Other People’s Property: A Shadow History of Hip-Hop in White America by Jason Tanz.

The site is set up using a social network platform, so participation and conversation is encouraged. Post No Ills accepts submissions of certain works on a regular basis for online posting and will produce an annual “best of” print anthology.

Photo by Comtesse DeSpair – which inspired Post No Ills to accept other images of stencil artwork and photography for their section called “The Wall.”

Toni Morrison Dedicates the First Bench by the Road

Saturday, July 26, 2008, in Charleston, South Carolina, Toni Morrison dedicated the the first Bench by the Road. The Bench by the Road Project is a community outreach initiative of the Toni Morrison Society. It originates in Morrison’s remarks about Beloved in a 1989 interview: “There is no place you or I can go, to think about or not think about, to summon the presences of, or recollect the absences of slaves . . . There is no suitable memorial, or plaque, or wreath, or wall, or park, or skyscraper lobby. There’s no 300‐foot tower, there’s no small bench by the road. There is not even a tree scored, an initial that I can visit or you can visit in Charleston or Savannah or New York or Providence or better still on the banks of the Mississippi. And because such a place doesn’t exist . . . the book had to” (The World, 1989).

‘Bench by the Road’ Tribute to Slaves
By Dottie Ashley (Contact)
The Post and Courier
Sunday, July 27, 2008

Carrying opened yellow umbrellas, a large crowd filled the dock Saturday at Fort Moultrie on Sullivan’s Island, swaying to the rhythm of the Adande Drummers.

On this humid day, more than 300 years after the first boat carrying newly enslaved Africans crossed the Atlantic Ocean and delivered its human cargo barely a mile away, the mood was upbeat but also bittersweet.

When strains of “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” burst from the crowd, the melody set the stage for writer Toni Morrison, 77, the first black to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, to come forth and toss a wreath made of yellow daisies into the cove’s waters.

This was the Maafa ceremony in remembrance of those 60 million souls torn from their homeland and their loved ones, and brought into a life of pain and misery, and it was also for those who never made it.

As the wreath floated from sight, a black steel bench, a more tangible symbol of remembrance, was set in cement overlooking the cove in a ceremony called “The Bench by the Road.”

Placed and maintained by the National Park Service, the bench provides a place to sit and recall the travails of ancestors in a spot where 40 percent of all those who survived the Middle Passage set foot on the North American continent for the first time.

Both ceremonies were outreach programs of the Fifth Biennial Conference of the Toni Morrison Society, an international organization hosted by the College of Charleston for four days last week.

Read more and see video clips here.

Ben Segal with No Record Press

Started in 2006 by “private donations,” No Record Press has already made splash in the lit world with its goal to be “an organization dedicated solely to publishing promising literary works by previously-unknown writers…new writers that, for various reasons, may find it difficult to interest mainstream publishers.”

There’s no question that Ben Segal would have found some difficulty getting his first book accepted in mainstream publishing: 78 STORIES: A CROSSWORD NOVELLA. This book is a giant fold-out with multiple puzzles and blocks of text (image from Diet Soap).

About the work: “As the price of oil skyrockets to heaven, NASA flights plummet back to earth, contemporary philosophy runs on dualistic fumes and the National Football League all but forbids end zone dance fiestas, you decided that humanity was officially out of good ideas. But you were thinking in terms of ‘left’ and ‘right.’ 78 Stories, unlike the vast majority of the Western hemisphere’s chirographic offerings, conceived of the world in terms of ‘across’ and ‘down.’ Challenging our core assumptions of textual linearity while tickling our funny bones, Ben Segal’s astonishingly original debut pirouettes from the Mayan Long Count, ghost/human romances, seedy Native American hotels, pie-creamed art critic, bears transfixed be cellular phone ringers, and much more. As in an American crossword puzzle, the text is readable in two directions.”

For more information about the work, visit No Record Press. Diet Soap has a brief review of the work with photos, and What to Wear During an Orange Alert posted an interview with Ben Segal.

Awards :: Travis Holland Wins for First Novel

Travis Holland wins VCU Cabell First Novelist Award
PR via Tom Gresham
VCU Communications and Public Relations
7/23/2008

Travis Holland has won the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award honoring the best debut novel published in 2007 for The Archivist’s Story, his tale of a prison archivist in the Soviet Union shortly before World War II.

Holland will receive the award at the First Novelist Festival at Virginia Commonwealth University this November. Holland, a Michigan resident whose short stories have appeared in Glimmer Train, Five Points and Ploughshares, was one of three finalists for the prize, which is now in its seventh year. The other finalists were Jesse Ball for Samedi the Deafness and Joshua Harmon for Quinnehtukqut.

Read more on VCU’s website.

Pan African Literature :: Chimurenga Library

A fascinating and essential global resource of both past and present, reminding me that as the world gets smaller, it just keeps getting bigger. The following is from the Chimurenga Library site:

Curated by the editors and contributors of Chimurenga Magazine, the Chimurenga Library is an online archiving project that profiles independent pan African paper periodicals from around the world. It focuses on cultural and literary magazines, both living and extinct, which have been influential platforms for dissent and which have broadened the scope for print publishing on art, new writing and ideas in and about Africa.

The aim of the Chimurenga Library is not to produce a comprehensive bibliography of periodicals published in Africa; our approach is purely subjective. These are simply objects we read and admire, and which have in one form or another, influenced publishing and editorial choices at Chimurenga.

Some of these periodicals are deep in the postcolonial canon, others smaller and obscure, virtual even. All these projects built on the work of Drum, Presence Africaine, Transition, Black Orpheus and so on but are also alternatives to those monuments. It’s a sort of archipelago of counter-culture platforms that impacted on our concept of the paper-periodical, the publishable even.

The Chimurenga Library invites writers, readers and artists to share their personal experiences and perceptions of these and other periodicals through texts, films and multimedia works. Visitors to the Chimurenga Library can join the conversation but adding comments and updating information.

The Chimurenga Library is supported by Lettera27 and Pro-Helvetia and is part of the WikiAfrica Literature project.

Humor Times in the Classroom

A great idea for Fall 2008 classes, especially considering the upcoming elections. Not only does Humor Times offer a hefty discount for classroom use (50 copies a month for apprx. $60 per semester), but there are also resources on their site for teachers. From the Humor Times website:

Using the Humor Times and Editorial Cartoons in the Classroom

Here’s a not-so-well kept secret many teachers have discovered: Editorial cartoons make great teaching aides! They are naturally entertaining, and therefore can be used to pique students’ interest in many subjects, including current events, government, history, social studies, etc. And as every teacher knows, getting a student’s attention is the first prerequisite for instructing them in any subject matter.

But getting them interested is just the first advantage of using editorial cartoons. They are also quite educating in their own right. Studying political cartoons will enable students to better understand the importance of current events. The cartoons may be used to help develop both factual knowledge and interpretive skills. Editorial cartoons can stimulate discussion and provide interesting writing topics.

Analyzing editorial cartoons helps to strengthen analytical and other higher-order thinking skills. Cartoons are used to convey not just political, but also social issues. Editorial cartoons can be used in a variety of ways, and can be integrated into any lesson plan. And best of all, students respond quite well to cartoons.

Marge Piercy in Anderbo Online

Anderbo?

It’s a made-up word, according to Rick Rofihe, Editor-in-Chief. Why? “I didn’t want to ruin an already existing word, so I tried to make up a new one. For example, it used to be that when you said ‘mustang’ people would think ‘horse.’ But now when you say, ‘mustang,’ people think you mean the car built by Ford.”

Far from ruining any word, even a made-up one, Rofihe and his staff (including June Eding, Jennifer Doerr, and Wayne Conti, in addition to over a dozen editors-at-large) have created a respected name in contemporary literature.

The online publication is built on an ongoing cycle of posting and is open for submissions of fiction, “fact”, poetry and photography.

The most recent additions to Anderbo include poetry by Marge Piercy, MRB Chelko, and Susan Peters, stories by Wayne Conti, Tom Cregan, and Cindy Jacobs, and a novel excerpt, “Boco Deli Days,” by Andre Medrano.

If you’re still sittin’ on the fence about online literary magazines, Anderbo would be a great first step. You’ve got nothing to lose, no words in your vocabulary to have tainted, and, if anything, you’ll gain a new word to share with your friends.

Awards :: Glimmer Train New Writers :: July 2008

Glimmer Train has just chosen the three winning stories of their May Short Story Award for New Writers competition! This competition is held twice a year and is open to all themes fiction (500-12,000 words) for anyone who hasn’t had their work appear in a print publication with a circulation over 5000.

First place: John Walker of Cordova, Tennessee, wins $1200 for “Among the Least of These.” His story will be published in the Spring 2009 issue of Glimmer Train Stories.

Second place: Matthew Mercier of New York City, wins $500 for “Valentine Ave.” His story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing his prize to $700.

Third place: Lisa Abramowicz, also of New York City, wins $300 for “Comings and Goings.”

Glimmer Train‘s Very Short Fiction competition will begin on August 1 for stories not exceeding 3000 words. Submissions online at www.glimmertrain.org.

Matt Bell Wins the Million

Congratulations to NewPages Book Review Editor Matt Bell!

The voting for the storySouth Million Writers Award is now over and the winning story is “Alex Trebek Never Eats Fried Chicken” by Matt Bell (originally published in Storyglossia). Matt wins the overall prize of $300, which is provided thanks to the sponsorship of the Edit Red Writing Community. Second place goes to “Friday Afternoons on Bus 51” by Sruthi Thekkiam (Blackbird).

We’ll be coming to visit now, Matt – you’re buying!

Submissions :: Poetry in a Box – Literally


Some calls for submissions just simply won’t fit on our CFS page and deserve their own blog post:

The Atlanta Poets Group is seeking proposals for work for the third issue of its magazine Spaltung. This issue will be packaged in the form of a box. They are looking for poem-objects. Pieces that address/embody the concept or experience of multiplicity/heterogeneity are encouraged.

*Please do not send work at this time.*

Instead, please send a proposal for the piece you propose to include to: [email protected]. Deadline for proposal submissions is September 31. Some parameters to consider in preparing your proposal:

–100 units of the magazine issue will be produced.
–We have not yet decided on the size of the box; in cubic inches it will likely be larger than a breadbox and significantly smaller than a moving crate.
–If your piece(s) require anything beyond mindless, cheap reporduction/assembly, we will likely look to you to provide us with 100 units, fully assembled.
–We are mostly looking for work that is beyond what can be accomplished on 8.5 x 11 inch paper and beyond what can be included on a CD-ROM.
–Proposals should include exact dimensions of the object(s) to be submitted.

You can familiarize yourself with past issues of Spaltung via the blog at www.spaltungmag.blogspot.com.

What’s Your Inspiration? :: Opium Wants to Know

Opium has a wildly ambitious idea that we want (need?) you to be a part of. We’re inviting every living writer to contribute. All we need from you: a quote told to you by another writer (in person, in email, overheard, while reading) that’s inspired or educated your work in some way. The goal is to create a sort of What I’ve Learned network. Details are here. Fire one over, pretty please, we have big ideas for this tiny project.”