It is difficult to determine what kind of writing this journal is looking for since they do not give any directions on their website, but I paused in my incessant trolling of the online lit mags to read a story, and was hooked. Continue reading “Umbrella Factory – June 2011”
NewPages Blog
At the NewPages Blog readers and writers can catch up with their favorite literary and alternative magazines, independent and university presses, creative writing programs, and writing and literary events. Find new books, new issue announcements, contest winners, and so much more!
Umbrella Factory – June 2011
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Literary Puppetry in Japan
Read David F. Hoenigman’s “Break on through (to the puppet side)” about Jesse Glass (Publisher, Ahadada Books) using puppetry to teach language and literature to his students at Meikai University in Urayasu, Chiba Prefecture, Japan.
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New Delta Moves Online
According to Editor Aimee Davis, New Delta Review, the literary journal produced by graduate students in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Louisiana State University since 1984, will be moving to an online format with the hope to create print supplements sometime in the future.
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Harrington’s Six Questions Blog for Writers
In response to a post on my personal blog, a reader suggested Jim Harrington publishes a series of interviews in which editors “list, in excruciating details, all that each editor desires in his/her stories.” Thus was born the blog Six Questions For…
Harrington asks six questions of magazine editors, some are the same, but he also mixes it up. Some general focus questions are: What do you look for? What do you reject? What are common mistakes writers make? Do you provide feedback? Do you accept blog-published work? Why did you start this publication? What have you learned about writing from your work publishing/editing? Etc.
Harrington believes this six-question approach provides authors with “specific information about what editors are looking for in the submissions they receive” as well as giving participants a supportive avenue for PR.
He welcomes visitors to contact him with questions/comments, to suggest a publication/editor/agent, or to participate if you yourself are an editor/publisher/agent.
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McCabe Poetry Prize Winner
Issue 21 (Autumn 2011) of Ruminate Magazine features the winners and honorable mentions of the Janet B. McCabe Poetry Prize, sponsored by Steve and Kim Franchini with finalist judge Naomi Shihab Nye.
First: Adrianne Smith, “In Bridgewater, my room”
Second: Kendra Langdon Juskus, “Suspension”
Honorable Mentions
Mathhew Burns
Michelle Tooker
Christopher Martin
It appears that the Ruminate Magazine is undergoing a digital redesign on their website, but you can find them active on Twitter.
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Nimrod Literary Awards 2011
Judges Amy Bloom and Linda Pastan selected the winner and honorable mentions of the 2011 Nimrod International Journal‘s 33rd Annual Literary Awards. Each are published in the Fall/Winter issue.
The Pablo Neruda Prize in Poetry
FIRST: Hayden Saunier, “Sideways Glances in the Rear-View Mirror”
SECOND: Suzanne Cleary, “Italian Made Simple” and other poems
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Patricia Hawley, “Transmutation” and other poems
Brent Pallas, “My Dear Emma” and other poems
Robert Russell, “Heaven” and other poems
The Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Fiction
FIRST: Sultana Banulescu, “Beggars and Thieves”
SECOND: Kellie Wells, “In the Hatred of a Minute”
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Judith Hutchinson Clark, “Girlfriend”
Caitlin Kindervatter-Clark, “The Pygmy Queen”
Stephen Taylor, “Jolly Old England”
A full list of winners and finalists in available here.
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Tribute to Bernadette Mayer
Issue #14 of Drunken Boat features “The Bernadette Mayer Folio,” recognizing the contributions and influence of her 30+ years of work in the literary and arts communities.
Contributors to the folio include: Steven Alvarez, Micah Ballard, BRASH with Jim Manning & Patrick Leonard, Lee Ann Brown, Laynie Browne, Megan Burns, Louis Bury, Eric Chapelle with Corinne Lee, CA Conrad, Stephen Cope, Brenda Coultas, Kathryn Cowles, Catherine Daly, Renée E. D’Aoust, Derrick Stacey Denholm, Emari DiGiorgio, Sandra Doller, Michael Tod Edgarton, Vernon Frazer, Nicholas Grider, Joseph Hall with Chad Hard, Joan Harvey, Christine Herzer, Janis Butler Holm, Jennifer Karmin with collaborators, David Kaufmann, Dorothea Lasky, Rachel Levy, Meg Matich, Michael Ruby, Jon Rutzmoser, Kate Schapira, Michael Schiavo, Emily Severance, John Sparrow, Sunnylyn Thibodeaux, Eleanor Smith Tipton, James Valvis, Nicholas YB Wong, and Changming Yuan.
[Photo by Phillip Good via Bernadette Mayer’s website.]
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2011 Drue Heinz Literature Prize Winner
Our congratulations to Shannon Cain for being awarded the University of Pittsburgh Drue Heinz Literature Prize. Her manuscript The Necessity of Certain Behaviors was selected by senior judge Alice Mattison and is now available for purchase from the press.
The Drue Heinz Literature Prize recognizes and supports writers of short fiction and makes their work available to readers around the world. The award is open to writers who have published a book-length collection of fiction or at least three short stories or novellas in commercial magazines or literary journals.
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Symposium: In Praise of the Essay
Join Welcome Table Press at Fordham University’s Lincoln Center campus on Saturday, October 15, 2011, for the symposium, “In Praise of the Essay: Practice & Form.” Their honoree is Phillip Lopate. Speakers include Robin Hemley, Barbara Hurd, Helen Benedict, Joshua Wolf Shenk, and Matthew Swanson & Robbi Behr (creators of Idiots’ Books). A panel on teaching the essay will feature presentations by Richard Hoffman, Patrick Madden, Suzanne Menghraj, Robert Root, Suzanne Strempek Shea, and Dustin Beall Smith. With readings by Amy Leach, E. J. Levy, Shelley Salamensky, Jerald Walker, and Ryan Van Meter. And a Q&A with editors from Cabinet magazine, Creative Nonfiction, Defunct, Fourth Genre, The Pedestrian, River Teeth, and Sarabande Books.
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Check Out New and Noteworthy Books
NewPages New & Noteworthy Books is a regularly updated page where we list books received for listing and review consideration. If you want to browse a variety of independent, university and small press titles as well as literary imprints, then bookmark this page and make it a regular visit to keep up with what’s new and noteworthy!
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Read Why I Read
“Why I Read” is a short essay by Agustin Cadena that opens the newest issue of Chattahoochee Review. It is not available online, making it worthwhile to seek out print copies to reinforce in ourselves and others that “Of course, there are things more urgent than reading, but there is nothing more important than reading.”
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Frances Locke Memorial Prize & Sze-Lorrain
The newest issue of The Bitter Oleander (v17 n2) includes The Frances Locke Memorial Poetry Award Winner for 2011: Gardenia’s Scent by Sunghui Chang.
Also featured in this issue with an in depth interview and a large selection of her poetry is the French poet Fiona Sze-Lorrain, as well as translations from the Chinese of poets Yi Lu and Bai Hua likewise translated by Sze-Lorrain. The Bitter Oleander includes both original language texts as well as translations in English.
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Matchbook
Don’t let the size (nor former function) fool you – these matchbooks pack a lotta lit into them. Published by Small Fire Press, this third volume includes poets Anna Moschovakis, Jen Hofer, Tony Mancus, MC Hyland, Kate Lebo, Vince Gotera, Daniela Olszewska, Sophie Klahr, Brooklyn Copeland, Anne Marie Rooney, Ben Pelham, Trey Moody, Justin Runge, Marshall Walker Lee, Lisa Ciccarello, W. Vandoren Wheeler, Greg Weiss, Jasmine Dreame Wagner, Chris Hosea, Fred Schmalz, & Stacy Blint with letter-pressed illustrations by Cherie Weaver. Yes, all in a matchbook cover.
Due to the vintage upcycling, each cover is different. I got: Loyal Order of Moose, Lodge No. 1151 (“For Fun and Fellowship”), Greensburg, PA, and the other: Larry’s Utoco Service, Twin, Idaho. Considering the number of no-smoking cities cropping up, it’s a treat to see these covers given new life and purpose.
As for reading, the font is maybe a 10-point, not difficult at all (even for my elder eyes) thanks to quality printing – which includes color. The stapled edge makes some of the margins a bit close, needing a precarious pull to read final lines, but the construction held firm to every tug. And again, don’t let the size fool you. The density of the writing is not one I would recommended reading all in one sitting, though it could be done. These are great ‘volumes’ to carry along in a purse, bag, or pocket, and pull out on those bus rides or while in queues (though not a recommended pun for smokers looking for a light).
The only unfortunate issue I had with one Matchbook I received was that some pages were out of order. I found following one of the poems difficult when it dawned on me that this might be the issue. I looked through the second copy of the matchbook I’d received and realized this had been the error. Well, oops. While it detracted momentarily from my reading, I had a certain level of empathy in considering these are most likely DIY hand-pieced together. Still, in fairness, I need to mention it. I’m sure as a subscriber, I could have contacted Small Fire Press for a replacement.
For lovers of literature and the simple oddities of life, Matchbook is truly a publication small and cute enough to coddle, but big enough to feed your soul. Pack it along, I say.
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NewPages Book Reivews
NewPages Book Reviews are fresh for October!
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The Broad River Review Awards
The current issue of Gardner-Webb University’s annual The Broad River Review features a number of award winners.
In 2010, The Broad River Review began The Rash Awards, named in honor of Ron Rash, a 1976 graduate of Gardner-Webb University. Sarah Gordon was the selected winner in poetry for “Apertures: Andalusia” and Christine Bates the winner in fiction for “The Night I Killed the Devil.”
Each year, The Broad River Review recognizes certain undergraduate students for outstanding achievement and publishes their works. The J. Calvin Koonts Poetry Award is awarded to a senior English major at Gardner-Webb University whose group of poems is judged most outstanding by a committee of department members. This year’s winner is Nikki Raye Rice, and two of her poems “Transformation” and “Stranded” appear in this year’s issue.
Finally, The Broad River Review Editors’ Prizes in Poetry and Fiction are selected from among all Gardner-Webb student submissions for a given issue. J. Lauren Fletcher’s “Woman” was selected for poetry and Amy Snyder’s “Fire” for fiction.
The Broad River Review welcomes submissions of original poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, and we also encourage visual artists to submit samples for possible cover art.
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Videopoem Collection & Contest
Curated by Dave Bonta, Moving Poems is “an on-going anthology of the best videopoems, filmpoems, animated poems, and other poetry videos from around the web, appearing at a rate of one every weekday most weeks.” The videos can be searched using a directory by poet, nationality, filmmakers, and several other tags.
Moving Poems also provides web resources for videopoem makers covering issues such as determining what’s free to use, free and Creative Commons-licensed film and video, spoken word, sounds, and music as well as free software.
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2011 New South Contest Winners
The 2011 New South Contest winners appear in the newest issue:
Poetry, judged by Rodney Jones
First Place: “Benthos” by Bruce Bond
Second Place: “Archery With Alex” by Maya Jewell Zeller
Prose, judged by Karen E. Bender
First Place: “Who’s Akela?” by Gregory J. Wolos
Second Place: “Palimpsests” by Jill Kronstadt
New South is Georgia State University’s Journal of Art and Literature.
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Gloss
Musical and deeply rooted in a sense of place, Ida Stewart’s debut poetry collection highlights the essential element of sound within contemporary poetry. In a series of free verse poems that engage with the lyric quality of traditional nature poetry, Stewart delves beyond a simple examination of nature; instead, nature ties into a sense of past and place, ever-present in the depths of memory. Set within the concrete of ground, the minuteness of soil, Gloss condenses language to its potential as rich medium for the human voice and soul. Continue reading “Gloss”
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What Have You Done to Our Ears to Make Us Hear Echoes?
Now wake up it’s time to eat! Show me
your tongue, my sweet…
boil her down to bone. Continue reading “What Have You Done to Our Ears to Make Us Hear Echoes?”
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Drifting into Darien
Drifting into Darien, part memoir and part natural history, logs the memory of not only the people of the Altamaha River region in Georgia, but the landscape itself. In a multi-part larger essay and a series of smaller essays, Janisse Ray reminds us of this essential but little-known river. Readers who already possess knowledge of ecology and biology, as well as novice environmentalists, will appreciate the detail displayed by Ray’s knowledge of her native landscape. A strong environmental focus propels this collection of essays forward, urging the reader to take action to preserve not only the Altamaha, but their own rivers as well. Continue reading “Drifting into Darien”
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The Necessity of Certain Behaviors
In a world where habit drives and consumes lives, Shannon Cain’s short story collection takes steadfast aim at those who cannot resist the pull of what society deems illicit. Nine stories delve into seemingly average people, who, upon closer inspection, engage in the illegal, the deadly, and the bizarre, risking their lives and jobs to continue pursuing their obsessions. Continue reading “The Necessity of Certain Behaviors”
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The Trees The Trees
The Trees The Trees, the second poetry collection from Heather Christle, is a loosely-knit collection of poems that sometimes has to do with trees, that often has to do with the dichotomy of relationships, and that always has an overwhelmingly and wonderfully infectious use of rhythm: Continue reading “The Trees The Trees”
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Damn Sure Right
Meg Pokrass’s collection Damn Sure Right packs in a whopping eighty-eight stories. Short-shorts. Flash fiction. Whatever you call them, Meg Pokrass is their queen. She’s made a career out of flash fiction. She teaches flash fiction workshops nationally and has published over a hundred pieces in journals. In a market that goads short story writers to crank out novels, she’s firm in her commitment to keep it tight. But while most of us literature lovers have enjoyed a brilliant short-short in our time, few of us have read a whole book of them or even know how. Continue reading “Damn Sure Right”
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Called
The Battleship Potemkin, either the film or the ship itself—the allusion, in any case—makes its appearance early on in Kate Greenstreet’s single-poem chapbook, Called: “First we hear it. Trucks, helicopters. The / Battleship Potemkin. He’s building the shape.” Throughout the poem, Greenstreet works in concise stanzas such as this, each image and line constructed with a controlled hand. As such, the Potemkin is no toss-away detail. Its facts and mythology, of restless soldiers and fledging revolutions, and of propaganda, get bundled and pulled into the poem, while calling to mind the montage theories made standard by director Sergei Eisenstein, the great-grandfather of all modern film editing techniques. Continue reading “Called”
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The Rest of the Voyage
Bernard Noël is a cerebral, urban-realist mystic caught up by the extraordinary in everyday language as it passes by, carried in things themselves. He captures the instant of wonder, filled with longing, lust, and above all necessity, grounding it in earthy satisfaction. What the eyes see wanes but lives on as a concern of thought. The book is a record of a life of such sight: Continue reading “The Rest of the Voyage”
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From the Darkness Right Under Our Feet
Winner of the 2009 Hudson Prize, Patrick Michael Finn’s short story collection From the Darkness Right Under Our Feet includes plenty of dark circumstances, all set in the industrial sinkhole of Joliet, Illinois in the mid- to late 20th century. The stories are of the type popular in the early 20th century literature, when American Naturalism dominated the landscape. Every character’s fate feels pre-determined, based upon heredity and social conditioning. Continue reading “From the Darkness Right Under Our Feet”
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Correct Animal
Rebecca Farivar’s Correct Animal, released in July from Octopus Books, is not unexpected or aggressive or raw or surprising. It is not a collection of poetry that blew me away. But this isn’t to say that I disliked Correct Animal—in fact, I liked it quite a bit, and I liked it for not being unexpected or aggressive or raw or surprising. I liked Farivar’s methods of quiet, of understatement, the lithe quality of her poems: Continue reading “Correct Animal”
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The Other Walk
We’re walking. We’re walking. Like “those colored paddles and banners (the new tourist universal)” that tour guides wield to direct their charges’ attention, Sven Birkerts holds up a metaphorical banner to keep us following along. When he wanders, it is not without direction. Invoking Robert Frost’s diverging road: “This morning, going against all convention, I turned right instead of left and took my circuit…in reverse.” The author, one of the country’s foremost literary critics and editor of the literary journal AGNI, links walking with thought: “There is the rhythm, the physics, of walking, the drumbeat of repetition, stride, stride, stride, and then there is the fugue of the walking mind, laid over it, always different, always tied in some way to the panning of the gaze and the eye’s quirky meandering.” Continue reading “The Other Walk”
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Lucky Fish
With “The Secret of Soil,” Aimee Nezhukumatathil opens her new book of poems, her fourth, within a secret: “The secret of smoke is that it will fill / any space with walls.” This secret truly belongs to the poetic imagination, of course, and speaks to how we daily embody the world, “no matter how delicate” the space, by giving it breaths of us, taking back lungfuls, placing ourselves here, and pressing our weight onto it: Continue reading “Lucky Fish”
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The New Moscow Philosophy
The New Moscow Philosophy by Vyacheslav Pyetsukh, translated in many languages since its publication in 1989, has finally been translated into English this year by Krystyna Anna Steiger. As Steiger notes, this is a gentle parody of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, but even if the reader is unfamiliar with that book, The New Moscow Philosophy is easy reading and full of insights into literature—particularly the Russian reverence for it. The book offers a mystery story and a debate, often humorous, over good and evil. And the reader may have heard of the competition for apartments in Moscow, which is at the heart of this book. Continue reading “The New Moscow Philosophy”
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War of the Crazies
For better and usually much worse, fictional runaway teenage girls end up on ships bound for the colonies, the big city of offices and/or brothels, behind enemy lines, or never far from an estate with a wealthy young landowner. Ruth is the Florida native taking refuge in an upstate New York commune in John Oliver Hodges’ neo-Gothic coming-of-age novella, War of the Crazies. Though set in 1989, the situations this 19-year-old beauty finds herself in recall those of her literary ancestresses: growing up too fast, local men and boys falling hard for her, the hysterical obsessive of love (Silva, who prefers “meditation over medication”), and a serious household accident. Continue reading “War of the Crazies”
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A Symposium on John Keats
The newest issue of The Kenyon Review features “A Symposium on John Keats” which includes:
David Baker, “Re: Keats” (Introduction)
David Baker, “Corresponding Keats”
Stanley Plumly, “The Odes for Their Own Sake”
Ann Townsend, “Myopic Keats”
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NewPages Classifieds
NewPages now has classified listings for calls for submissions, contests, conferences, and services, as well as our popular LitPak of PDF fliers.
Our new format allows for more text and the inclusion of a PDF – unique to The NewPages Classifieds! Print out the PDFs to post or photocopy to share with others (great for classroom use!).
Editors: All basic calls for submissions which fit our guidelines and which have no fee for writers are free ads. For contact information, click here.
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Updates to NewPages Guides :: October 03, 2011
Added to The NewPages Big List of Literary Magazines:
Shangri-La Shack [O]
Adventum [O]
Blue Lake Review [O]
Certain Circuits [O]
Ragazine [O]
Spittoon [O]
Journal of Renga & Renku
West Marin Review
Stone Highway [O]
Broad River Review
The Carolina Quarterly
The Citron Review [O]
The Rusty Toque [O]
The Sandstar Review [O]
Buddhist Poetry Review [LO]
The Helix
[O] = mainly online = mainly print
Added to The NewPages Big List of Alternative Magazines:
Mental Shoes [O]
Places
Satellite
Stone Voices
Added to The NewPages List of Independent Publishers & University Presses:
Anthem Press
Vagabondage Press
Western State College Press
Chain Links
Verse Chorus Press
Added to The NewPages List of Literary Websites:
Art Faccia
MOLT
O Sweet Flowery Roses
The Public Domain Review
Slow Muse
Sundryed Affairs – nonfiction prose
Whale Sound
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Closings: Earth Song Books, Del Mar, CA
Earth Song Books & Gifts, which has been part of the Del Mar community for more than 40 years, will close its doors in November.
“For a long time, we’ve been competing with Amazon and Kindle, and our customers haven’t been supporting us in this economy,” said owner Annette Palmer. “We have to close because the funding just isn’t there. The numbers just don’t add up.”
Read the rest by staff writer Claire Harlin on Del Mar Times.
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Jeanne Leiby Memorial Chapbook Award
The Florida Review has announced the first annual Jeanne Leiby Memorial Chapbook Award in Fiction or Graphic Narrative to be judged by David Huddle. See the website for full guidelines. Deadline: December 1, 2011
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Creative Nonfiction Winning Essays
Issue 42 of Creative Nonfiction features a number of winning essays. Cosponsored by the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies for best essay related to the them of “The Night,” Bud Shaw’s essay “My Night with Ellen Hutchinson” was selected by Susan Orlean from among 350 entries. Also included in this issue is Minh Phuong Nguyen’s “Suffering Self,” the 2010 Norman Mailer College Nonfiction Writing Award winner, and S.J. Dunning’s “for(e)closure,” the winner of the Creative Nonfiction’s MFA Program-Off.
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New Art Publication :: Stone Voices
Stone Voices is “an exploration of the connections between visual arts and the spiritual journey.” Each print issue of Stone Voices contains extensive portfolios of notable artists along with feature articles, essays, regular columns, and poems.
Stone Voices is a trade-sized publication sparing no expense in heavyweight, full-color, semi-gloss paper throughout. As a publication, Stone Voices is exemplary in its treatment of art as equal to text, and more often as is due, primary.
Stone Voices also invites artists to share their art and their stories – exploring the connections between art and spirituality. Artists may create their own virtual gallery within Stone Voices larger virtual Art Gallery. Artists may show as many as ten images and may post information about themselves as well as an artist statement at no charge. Full guidelines are available on the publication website.
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On Rejection and the Limitations of Space
Magnapoets edito-in-cheif, Aurora Antonovic, writes this “Editor’s Lament” in the most recent issue:
“Editors have various methods of choosing what gets into an issue and what doesn’t. I liken putting together a magazine like putting together the pieces of a puzzle. Some images may be quite pretty and deserving on their own merit, but they don’t necessarily fit into this particular puzzle. In other words, sometimes I have to turn down high quality work because there simply isn’t space for it, or it doesn’t fit an unintentional theme that’s developed all on its own for the issue…I am both a writer and editor, and believe me when I say it is much harder to send a rejection letter than to receive one myself.
“So, if you’ve sent work to this magazine in the past and been rejected, or if you sent work to another publication and it’s not been accepted, rather than assuming it’s not ‘good enough,’ realize that maybe there’s a harried editor somewhere who feels badly about the limitations of space.”
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Big Muddy 2010 Contest Winners in Print
Winners of the Big Muddy 2010 contests appear in the newest issue (11.1) of Big Muddy: A Journal of the Mississippi River Valley. A full list of finalists is available on the Big Muddy website. Published winners include:
Mighty River Short Story Winner: Kathleen Knutsen Rowell, California – “The Resolution”
The Wilda Hearne Flash Fiction Winner: Natalie Hamm DeVaull, New York – “In the Kitchen”
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New Lit on the Block :: Buddhist Poetry Review
Edited by Jason Barber, Buddhist Poetry Review is a quarterly online poetry magazine “dedicated to publishing fresh and insightful Buddhist poetry.”
Issue One includes works by Alison Clayburn, Yvette Doss, Peter J. Greico, Paul Hostovsky, Becky Jaffe, Stephen Jones, Ed Krizek, Hal W. Lanse, J.D. Mitchell-Lumsden, Andrew K. Peterson, Ron Riekki, Stephen Rozwenc, J.R. Solonche, and Alex Stein.
Issue Two features poetry by Gary Gach, Allison Grayhurst, David Guterson, David Iasevoli, Leslie Ihde, James Mc Elroy, Mark J. Mitchell, Kaveri Patel, Emeniano Acain Somoza, Jr., and Lucien Zell.
Buddhist Poetry Review is open for submissions from October through November.
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Art :: Fred Valentine Paintings
Fred Valentine‘s paintings are featured in the literary section of the newest issue of Bomb. The website features an exclusive video interview of Valentine in his studio where he discusses his process, working with individuals under psychiatric care, and his own consideration of ‘psyche’ in his work.
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Persecuted Cartoonists
Sampsonia Way is an online magazine that provides global leadership in support of the value of freedom of speech and creative expression, and provides a forum for the work and support the careers of writers in exile. The newest issue features “Persecuted Cartoonists” with interviews with Tony Namate (Zimbabwe), Alfredo Pong (Cuba), Pedro Le
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Patricia Grodd Poetry Prize for Young Writers Winners
The Fall 2011 issue of The Kenyon Review features the winners of the 2011 Patricia Grodd Poetry Prize for Young Writers with an introduction by David Baker.
First Prize: Natalie Landers, “Ode to Words”
Runner up: Hayun Cho, “Halmoni”
Runner up: Emily Nason, “Ripening”
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New Lit on the Block :: The Rusty Toque
Founding and Managing Editors Kathryn Mockler and Aaron Schneider, along with issue editors and advisors, introduce readers to The Rusty Toque, an online literary journal produced and edited by the faculty and students of the University of Western Ontario Writing, Rhetoric, and Professional Communication Program. The Rusty Toque publishes students nominated from their writing program and also welcomes submissions from all writers – both new and established.
The first issue (Summer 2011)includes fiction by Josh Romphf, Marshall John Christie, Rhiannon Dickson, and Jamie Lively; screenplays by Jessica Kotzer and Lauren Wing; nonfiction by Ashley McCallan, G.P. Parhar, Cam Parkes, and Spencer Matheson; and poetry by Scott Beckett and Blair Swann.
The Rusty Toque accepts unpublished literary and experimental poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and unproduced drama (both short film and short play scripts). Artwork for the homepage is also accepted.
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Glimmer Train July Very Short Fiction Winners :: 2011
Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their July Very Short Fiction competition. This competition is held twice a year and is open to all writers for stories with a word count not exceeding 3000 with no theme restrictions. The next Very Short Fiction competition will take place again in January. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.
First place: Sanja Jagesic [pictured], of Chicago, IL, wins $1200 for “Bibby Challenge.” Her story will be published in the Winter 2013 issue of Glimmer Train Stories, out in November. This is her first story accepted for publication.
Second place: Meredith Luby, of Springield, VA, wins $500 for “Boxes.” Her story will also be published in a future issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing her prize to $700. This is also Meredith’s first story accepted for publication.
Third place: Rafael Alvarez, of Linthicum, MD, wins $300 for “The Spaniards.”
A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here.
Deadline for the September Fiction Open is September 30. This competition is held quarterly and is open to all writers. Most submissions to this category are running 2,000-8,000, but up to 20,000 words are welcome. No theme restrictions.
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Solstice MFA Announces New Partnership, Fellowships
The Solstice Low-Residency MFA in Creative Writing Program of Pine Manor College (Chestnut Hill, MA) has announced a new partnership with The Foundation for Children’s Books (FCB), a nonprofit organization that “cultivates children’s curiosity, creativity, and academic achievement by igniting in them a love of good books.” Pine Manor College is one of the few low-residency MFA programs to offer a concentration in writing for children and young adults.
The FCB and Solstice MFA Program will co-host the first in a series of biannual events, “What’s New in Children’s Books” — a half-day conference featuring authors, illustrators, and library and bookstore professionals — Saturday, November 5th from 8 a.m.– noon.
The Solstice Low-Residency MFA is also offers four $1,000 fellowships for writers: The Dennis Lehane Fellowship for Fiction; the Michael Steinberg Fellowship for Creative Nonfiction; the Jacqueline Woodson Fellowship for a Young People’s Writer of African or Caribbean Descent; and the Sharon Olds Fellowship for Poetry. All fellowship awards are based on the quality of a writing sample. Fellowship applications are due October 14, 2011 (not a postmark date; materials must be received in our offices before or on October 14).
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New Lit on the Block :: The Sandstar Review
Editors Lin Wang and Tyler Pratt bring readers The Sandstar Review, an online literary journal that “strives to publish polished, lyrical work that seeks an active connection between places and people.”
The first issue is poetry only, featuring works by William Doreski, Eva Eliav, Antoinette Forstall, Howie Good, Kenneth Gurney, Danielle Hurd, Steven Mayoff, Corey Mesler, Ananya Mishra, Rodney Nelson, Nathanael O’Reilly, Kenneth Pobo, Eric Rawson, Fiona Sinclair, Mark Stopforth, Persephonae Velasquez, Musing on Cézanne’s Mont Sainte-Victoire, Nicola Walls, and William Winfield Wright.
The Sandstar Review seeks unpublished prose for its second issue. Poetry is also accepted, but will be deferred to the third issue. Prose deadline is November 15, 2011.
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The Kenyon Review Fellowships
The Kenyon Review Editor David H. Lynn writes: “In our enduring effort to support authors in the early stages of promising careers, I am delighted to announce a new model for the Kenyon Review Fellowships. Beginning in the autumn of 2012, two outstanding writers, one poet and one prose author, will be invited to join us in Gambier, Ohio, in each two-year cycle. Our expectation is that candidates will have completed an MFA or PhD. Selected in a rigorous process that will evaluate their gifts as writers as well as teachers, KR Fellows will pursue a significant creative project in consultation with a mentor. They will also each teach one course in creative writing per year, also mentored by faculty of the Kenyon College English Department. In addition, they will work closely with the staff of The Kenyon Review, gaining editorial and production experience, from letterpress to Internet.”
The Fellowship is open for application October 1 – December 1, 2011.
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Black Lawrence Press Chapbook Competition Winner – 2011
Black Lawrence Press has announced that Russel Swensen has won the Spring, 2011 Black River Chapbook Competition for his manuscript Santa Ana.
Complete lists of the finalists and semi-finalists can be found on the Black Lawrence Press blog.