NYT Joyce Hor-Chung Lau “chats” with Margaret Atwood.
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!
Margaret Atwood
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International Lit Fest
Blue Metropolis Montreal International Literary Festival
Including the Blue Metropolis Children’s Festival
April 22-26, 2009
The world’s first multilingual literary festival – and the best five-day literary party there is. In 2008, Blue Met gathered about 350 writers, literary translators, musicians, actors, journalists and publishers from Quebec and from all around the world for five days of literary events in English, French, Spanish and other languages.
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New Lit on the Block :: Wag’s Revue
Behind the screen at Wag’s Revue are Editors Sandra Allen (nonfiction), Will Guzzardi (poetry), and Will Litton (fiction), with Webmaster Dave Eichler.
Publishing interviews, fiction, nonfiction and poetry, with room to play the media card within these forms, the first issue includes interviews with Dave Eggers, Mark Greif, Wells Tower, and works by Alexa Dilworth, Ernst Jandl, Travis Smith, Jessica Laser, Pauline Masurel, Winston Daniels, Tina Celona, Robert Moor, Eve Hamilton, Alison Fairbrother, Michael Paul Simons, Brian Evenson, John Sellekaers, Raleigh Holliday, Raymond Sumser, Maureen Halligan, Brandon Chinn, Janine Cheng, and Julia McKinley.
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Jobs :: Various
Centenary College seeks application for an instructor for 2-credit poetry writing course for the fall semester (September through December, 2009) at, Hackettstown, NJ. MFA required. The course meets once a week for approximately two hours. Salary $900. Centenary College is in the process of developing a creative writing minor and anticipates ongoing teaching opportunities. Please send c.v. and/or inquiries to: Mary Newell: newellm-AT-centenarycollege-DOT-edu
Savannah College of Art and Design, Atlanta is accepting applications for a part-time faculty position in the Professional Writing department to teach creative writing.
Central Michigan University seeks qualified part-time temporary instructors to teach Technical Writing (Metro Detroit, Michigan), Fantasy and Science Fiction (Michigan and Online), The Literary Dimensions of Film (Michigan and Online). Amy Courter, Off-Campus Programs. June 30
The program in Creative Writing at Hollins University invites applications for a one-year, endowed distinguished professorship to begin August, 2009.
The University of Mississippi Department of English invites applications for the position of half-time Instructor.
Grinnell College‘s Center for the Humanities seeks to appoint a visiting scholar actively engaged in research on Place and Memory. Daniel Reynolds, Director, Center for the Humanities. April 25
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Ok, Ok, So We’ve Twittered on our Facebook
Yep. We’ll give it a shot. But you have to show us the love if you want us to keep at it. Follow us on Twitter, and/or be a fan on the NewPages Facebook page. Be patient as we learn the ropes, or, uh… the jargon. That’s a Big Ten-Four Big Buddy?
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Passings :: Corin Tellado
Spanish romance writer Corin Tellado has died
Associated Press
MADRID, Spain — Corin Tellado, a well-known Spanish author of more than 4,000 romance novels, died Saturday while celebrating the Easter holidays with her family. She was 81.
Tellado, whose real name was Maria del Socorro Tellado Lopez, collapsed at her home in the northern seaside city of Gijon and died of heart failure, a Cabuenes hospital spokeswoman said.
A funeral service is to be held in Gijon’s Iglesia de la Inmaculada church on Monday, the regional newspaper El Comercio said Saturday.
Born on April 25, 1927, in the northern coastal village of Viavelez, Tellado’s novels became popular throughout the Spanish-speaking world, particularly in Spain and Latin America.
In 2007, the regional government of her native Asturias honored the author for a lifetime dedicated to literature with an exhibition called “Corin Tellado, 60 years of love novels.”
“I’m not a romantic, nor a dreamer or visionary,” Tellado said at the inauguration. “However, someone had to write novels about love and it just happened to be me.”
Despite ill health that forced her to have blood dialysis three times a week since 1995, Tellado kept on writing right to the end, delivering her final novel to Variedades magazine on Wednesday.
Tellado was survived by a daughter and a son, El Comercio said.
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New and Noteworthy Books
Check out NewPages New and Noteworthy Books page for a list and information about some of the newest releases and soon-to-be-released titles from small, independent, alternative and university presses. Updated regularly, but also archived monthly, so you can go back and take a look at previous posts.
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NewPages Book Reviews April
Swing by and check out this great lineup of book reviews for April:
Vienna Triangle
A Novel by Brenda Webster
Wings Press, January 2009
Review by Jason Hinkley
First Execution
Novel by Domenico Starnone
Translated from the Italian by Antony Shugaar
Europa Editions, March 2009
Review by Laura Di Giovine
The Bathroom
Novel by Jean-Philippe Toussaint
Translated from the French by Nancy Amphoux and Paul De Angelis
Dalkey Archive, November 2008
Review by Josh Maday
Camera
Novel by Jean-Philippe Toussaint
Translated from the French by Matthew B. Smith
Dalkey Archive, November 2008
Review by Josh Maday
Last Night in Montreal
Novel by Emily St. John Mandel
Unbridled Books, June 2009
Review by Christina Hall
The Adventures of Cancer Bitch
Memoir by S.L. Wisenberg
University of Iowa Press, February 2009
Review by Cyan James
First We Read, Then We Write:
Emerson on the Creative Process
By Robert D. Richardson
University of Iowa Press, February 2009
Review by John Madera
Bending the Notes
Poetry by Paul Hostovsky
Main Street Rag, December 2008
Review by Jason Tandon
The Suburban Swindle
Short Stories by Jackie Corley
So New Publishing, October 2008
Review by Josh Maday
Morning in a Different Place
YA novel by Mary Ann McGuigan
Front Street Press, February 2009
Review by Jessica Powers
At or Near the Surface
Short stories by Jenny Pritchett
Fourteen Hills Press, November 2008
Review by Josh Maday
Light Boxes
Fiction by Shane Jones
Publishing Genius, February 2009
Review by Brian Allen Carr
Comfort
YA novel by Joyce Moyer Hostetter
Calkins Creek Books, April 2009
Review by Jessica Powers
Shuck
Fiction by Daniel Allen Cox
Arsenal Pulp Press, April 2009
Review by Brian Allen Carr
Me As Her Again
Memoir by Nancy Agabian
Aunt Lute Books, October 2008
Review by Ryan Call
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Joy Fielding :: Where do Stories Come From
Here’s a lovely short piece by Joy Fielding from the National Post, The germ of an idea: What is fiction but a reimagining and restructuring of reality?
“People are always asking, ‘Where do you get your ideas?’ It’s a little like asking a doctor where she gets her diagnostic or surgical skills, or a gardener where he gets his green thumb…”
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Rejected? You’re in Good Company
Okay, so don’t feel so bad about that next rejection letter, since you’ll find yourself in the company of George Orwell, whose work Animal Farm was turned down by TS Eliot. Apparently, when Eliot was director of the publisher Faber & Faber, he rejected Orwell’s work as “good” but “not convincing.” Does that sound familiar?
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Kids Say the Coolest Things about Books
Of course, this is from our state here, but I’m sure you’ve got some cool kids in your state too:
The Michigan Center for the Book announced the three state winners of Letters About Literature, a national writing contest in which young readers wrote letters to authors, living or dead, describing how the authors’ work changed the students’ way of thinking. One of the state winners also received recognition at the competition’s national level.
“We received many thoughtful, heartfelt letters that demonstrate the power of books to touch the lives and engage the minds of young people,” said Michigan Center for the Book Coordinator Karren Reish. “Each year we welcome this opportunity to help foster Michigan students’ interest in literature and encourage them to cultivate the reading and writing skills that are key to academic success.”
The Michigan winners are:
Level 1 (grades 4-6) – Valerie Reeves of Mancelona who wrote to author Erin Hunter about the book Warriors: Dawn.
Reeves reflected on how the book taught her about the value of teamwork and leadership, writing: “When I was younger, I sometimes felt like I was a loner at school. I always wanted my mom to go to school with me because I didn’t want to be alone. I felt just like the rogue cat, Yellow Fang, who was without a clan. After reading your book, Warriors: Dawn, I found I wanted to be a warrior, too.”
Level 2 (grades 7-8) – Daniel Harrison of Kalamazoo who wrote to author Ben Mikaelsen about the book Touching Spirit Bear.
In his letter, Harrison expressed how the book inspired him to change his negative behavior: “About two years ago, I had been a real bully. I used to pick on kids and call them names and not even realize how much of a jerk I was. I had been in trouble a couple times, and ended up in detention. It was there, ironically, where I read your book, Touching Spirit Bear. It transformed my life.”
Level 3 (grades 9-12) – Nilesh Raval of Saginaw who wrote to author Jhumpa Lahiri about the book The Namesake. Raval also was named one of 12 Letters About Literature national honorable mention winners (four per level of competition) and will receive an additional $100 Target gift card and an additional $1,000 grant for the selected library.
Raval’s letter described lessons learned about pride in our unique cultural heritage and identity: “After reading your culturally enlightening novel, The Namesake, I have realized the importance of my name in Indian culture and that I am not alone when it comes to possessing an unusual one. … The Namesake has compelled me to understand that a name has an inherently profound power to shape its bearer. It has bestowed upon me a newfound respect for names in our culture.”
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Birds+Haiku+Watercolors
Another beautiful book of poetry from Candlewick Press. I just happened to come across several of these lately, so I’ll be having something to say about them here. This one is The Cuckoo’s Haiku and Other Birding Poems by Michael J. Rosen, illustrated by Stan Fellows. Divided into four seasonal sections, each includes 5-7 birds for a total of 24. Each bird gets a two-page spread that includes full color watercolor images, a haiku, and script-style notes on the bird, such as this comment on the Common Grackle’s call: “harsh song is a rusty gate: ‘readle-eak!'”
The illustrations are absolutely lush. Some are full two-page scenes of the birds and their habitats, others include scenes with a variety of collage inset images of the bird. I cannot image anyone who enjoys poetry or birds not finding a comfortable liking in this book. That it is a “children’s” book is almost a misnoemer; indeed, I know a half dozen adults who would appreciate it. The script-style text might actually even be difficult for some younger children, but that only helps to make it a book best shared between adult and child.
An additional four-page section at the back of the book, “Notes for Birdwatchers and Haiku Lovers,” includes more specific species details as well as some author comments on the influence of the bird on his haiku. A neatly complete little book, perfect for National Poetry Month, and *finally* spring!
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DIY Glossy Mags? HP’s MagCloud
Do-It-Yourself Magazines, Cheaply Slick
By ASHLEE VANCE
The New York Times
Published: March 29, 2009
PALO ALTO, Calif. — For anyone who has dreamed of creating his own glossy color magazine dedicated to a hobby like photography or travel, the high cost and hassle of printing has loomed as a big barrier. Traditional printing companies charge thousands of dollars upfront to fire up a press and produce a few hundred copies of a bound magazine.
With a new Web service called MagCloud, Hewlett-Packard hopes to make it easier and cheaper to crank out a magazine than running photocopies at the local copy shop.
Charging 20 cents a page, paid only when a customer orders a copy, H.P. dreams of turning MagCloud into vanity publishing’s equivalent of YouTube. The company, a leading maker of computers and printers, envisions people using their PCs to develop quick magazines commemorating their daughter’s volleyball season or chronicling the intricacies of the Arizona cactus business.
Read the rest on NYT.
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Math Across the Curriculum
Our English division just got done discussing ideas for integrating “Math Across the Curriculum.” Since English had asked for the same oh so many years ago, we felt it was our place to step up to the plate on this one and consider how we might be using or could be using math in our English classes. Thanks to Gerry Canavan, here’s an insightful collection of work by Craig Damrauer entitled, New Math. I’ll certainly be working this into my classes soon.
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MLA Updates
In case you’re not all over it yet, MLA has come out with updates. Finally! Until the new publication is available, Purdue OWL has a quickie page that’s helpful. And those new editions of handbooks that just came out this year? Students will be thrilled to find there to be “no buy back” as the even newer editions are ordered for next year. Now, who planned that?
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Film :: Autism: The Musical
ErikaJ on Disability Nation offers her response to Autism: The Musical, an Emmy-award-winning HBO documentary: “I don’t know what I was expecting from a film called ‘Autism: The Musical.’ It was just a title that attracted my attention, even as a dark-humored part of me wanted to suggest that it should be a rock opera to better accommodate all the head-banging…” [read the rest]
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Odysseus’s Anniversary? April 16 – Noon
“In the epic Odyssey, one of the cornerstones of Western literature, the legendary Greek hero Odysseus returns to his queen Penelope after enduring 10 years of sailing the wine dark sea. Now scientists have pinned down his return to April 16, 1178 B.C., close to noon local time, according to astronomical references in the epic poem that seem to pinpoint the total eclipse of the sun on the day that Odysseus supposedly returned on.” Read the rest on MSNBC
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Writing Residency :: Great River Writers Retreat
Deadline June 15: The winning writer will receive seven nights accommodation at Fulton’s Landing Guest House on the Mississippi River, plus travel and meal stipends, as well as an invitation to read at the Midwest Writing Center. A spouse or partner may accompany the writer on retreat.
Great River Writers Retreat
Oct. 17-24, 2009
Fulton’s Landing
Davenport, Iowa
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Congrats Alimentum
Alimentum has won first place in the Bookbinders Guild New York Book Show for “Quality Paperback Series.” This is the second year in a row Alimentum has won this honor. Congratulations to Alimentum designers Claudia Carlson and Peter Selgin.
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Poetry Festival :: Slash Pine Press
Slash Pine Press is pleased to announce the first annual Slash Pine Poetry Festival, to be held in five distinct locations in the greater Tuscaloosa, AL area on April 24th and 25th. With 40 readers, the festival draws from local and national writers, from first year graduate student poets to National Poetry Series winners, from the traditional writer to the highly experimental one. The festival aims to show that poetry at its best is an inclusive, community-building endeavor, and that such an endeavor is well and alive in one of many small cities in the Deep South.
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Residency :: ArtsEdge, UPenn
ArtsEdge Residencies
University of Pennsylvania
The ArtsEdge Residency project is designed to encourage and support the careers of emerging artists and writers. rtsEdge Residencies offers two one-year residencies in a live/work space near Penn’s campus. ArtsEdge aims to support the creative work of young artists and writers, and create a live/work environment that will inspire interdisciplinary exploration. Deadline April 15.
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Performance Summer Institute – Chicago
Abandoned Practices – something out of the ordinary
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
July 6-24, 2009
This New Performance Summer Institute looks forward by looking backward, researching, enacting, and embodying practices that for one reason or another have been disregarded in the wake of progress, and relegated to the archives of history. Students will participate in individual and collaborative projects involving writing, installation, documentation, and live performance. Teachers and visiting scholars will lecture on related subjects. Available for credit or non-credit enrollment.
Week one: Abandoned technologies.
Mode: installation.
Forgotten machines, crafts, stagecrafts, thought as craft, the place of the hand in art making, player pianos, slowness as resistance.
Week two: Abandoned concepts.
Mode: writing.
The archive as repository of outmoded ideas; the pastoral; the senses.
Week three: Abandoned behavior.
Mode: performance.
Forgotten labor practices; town criers; discontinued social customs.
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Online Book Swaps
Phil Dzikiy of The Tonawanda News reviews five of the “most popular” online book trading Web sites that offer free membership: “Raw numbers and service details were taken into consideration, but we also checked to see if certain books were available, in ascending order of rarity: The relatively recent and popular Life of Pi by Yann Martel, anything by noted Japanese author Haruki Murakami and This Perfect Day, a dystopian novel by Ira Levin which has been out of print for years.”
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Jobs
University of Wisconsin-Madison Teacher & Program Coordinator in Writing for UW-Madison Liberal Studies & the Arts. Tom Boll, Writing Area Search. April 15
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Dead at Your Age
Ever look at the “born on this day” sections in papers/magazines to see who shares your birthday? Well, here’s a somber twist on that: Dead at Your Age matches your birthday and current date with people you’ve outlived: “Congratulations! You’ve just outlived some interesting people. Tell us your date of birth, and we’ll tell you who they were.” Includes biographical information on each person, and you can subscribe to receive daily updates to keep track of who else you have outlived. Cheery stuff!
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Festival of International Literature
PEN World Voices
Evolution/Revolution
April 27 – May 3, 2009
New York City
A stellar line-up featuring 160 writers from 40 countries, established and emerging authors of world literature will take the stage in venues across the city for six days packed with conversations, panels, readings, film screenings, a translation slam, and a cabaret night.
2009 is a year of significant anniversaries—from Galileo’s telescope (1609) to Darwin’s On the Origin of Species (1859), from the Cuban Revolution (1959) to the collapse of Communism across Eastern Europe (1989) and Tiananmen Square (1989). For this year’s festival, writers from all over the world will consider how the world changes and how we change.
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Ann Arbor Book Festival & Writer’s Conference 2009
The third annual Ann Arbor Book Festival, May 15-17, 2009, includes a full-day Writer’s Conference where attendees can hone their skills in sessions led by visiting Festival authors. The conference will be held on the University of Michigan central campus in Palmer Commons. Over the years, this campus has been home to many well-known writers from Arthur Miller to Elizabeth Kostova.
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Dueling Austen Scholar Responds
Last week I posted a newslink re: Oxford academic and Austen authority Professor Kathryn Sutherland claims that Claire Harman (award-winning biographer) copied some of her ideas for a new book.
I said this should be interesting, and sure enough, not what I was expecting, but the post received a response from Claire Harman herself, which you can now read on the entry page.
Additionally, in a follow-up e-mail from Harman, she notes: “I was getting intensely frustrated by the end of last week that I couldn’t get ‘my side of the story’ heard at all, but now the Bookseller has quoted part of the same letter I sent you and I’ve been told (by my publisher) that another blog called Book Brunch might put it up in full. Also there’s an interview coming along on The Book Depository and a guest blog on a university site, both of which allude to Prof Sutherland’s horrible attack, and perhaps that’s enough. I have no desire to prolong the row unduly.”
Nor do we, though as an educator, topics own “intellectual ownership” are always of interest to me. Unfortunately, what’s of interest to one person is often the result of many sleepless nights to those living the story. So, for their sake, I hope this dwindles to downright dull, soon.
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Kick Off National Poetry Month with A Foot in the Mouth
From Candlewick Press, A Foot in the Mouth, have Editor Paul B. Janeczko and Illustrator Chris Raschka teamed up again to create another playfully brilliant book of poetry for children (a-hem – including us really tall children!). The other two equally as fun and engaging books in this series include A Poke in the I, a collection of concrete poems, and A Kick in the Head, which focuses on poetic forms. This final addition, however, is a selection of “Poems to Speak, Sing, and Shout” and is more like the Wii of poetry (only much more affordable, and less likely to go out of use in two years).
Janeczko’s introduction encourages readers to play with the sound of poetry by reading aloud: “Poetry is sound…To hear the sound of a poem, really hear it, you need to read it out loud. Or have someone read it to you.” Janeczko also encourages memorization for the joy of recitation. And of course, getting others to join in is something the book begs for. Raschka’s artistry livens every page and helps to further create a playful environment for the poems and readers.
The contents are divided into categories of interest and performance, such as Poems for One Voice, Tongue Twisters, Poems for Two Voices, List Poems, Poems for Three Voices, Short Stuff, Bilingual Poems, Rhymed Poems, Limericks, and Poems for a Group.
The collection encompasses a broad variety and diversity of works, which is refreshing to see in a collection for young people. A couple of my favorites include “Speak Up” by Janet S. Wong (pictured), in which one speaker confronts the other about not being able to speak the language of her cultural heritage (Korean). The poem ends in the reality that both speakers are American born, and thus provides children a means of confronting such stereotypes. “The Loch Ness Monter’s Song” by Edwin Morgan is just plain silly fun, and yet one of the most challenging poems in the book, beginning: “Sssnnnwhuffffll? / Hnwhuffl hhnnwfl hnfl hfl?” I’m still working on it.
Other authors include: Tracie Vaughn Zimmer, Charles R. Smith Jr., George Ella Lyon, Irene McCleod, Lewis Carroll, Charles Follen Adams, Bobbi Katz, David McCord, April Halprin Wayland and Bruce Balan, Patricia Hubbell, Douglas Florian, A.A. Milne, Beverly McLoughland, Georgia Heard, J. Patrick Lewis, William Shakespeare, Edward Lear, Arnold Spilka, Max Fatchen, Sandra Cisneros, Eugenio Ablerto Cano Correa, Allan Wolf, Avis Harley, Rebecca Kai Dotlich, Walt Whitman, and a few traditional and anonymous selections.
Considering the NCTE’s continued lament regarding our culture’s demise of poetry reading, this kind of collection can’t help but influence the next generation not to give up on it entirely. Heck, it could it be helpful to share this book with some adults!
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MLA Mid-Year Report on Jobs
From the MLA Office of Research. Probably not much you didn’t already know:
“Through 20 February, the English edition of the MLA Job Information List (JIL) has carried 322 (21.9%) fewer ads this year (2008–09) than last; the foreign language edition is down 270 ads (21.2%). On the basis of the number of jobs announced in the JIL through the April print issue, we project that this year’s totals will drop by 26.1%, to about 1,350 jobs, in the JIL’s English edition and by 27.4%, to about 1,220 jobs, in the foreign language edition. The declines follow a period when the number of jobs advertised in both English and foreign languages increased from fewer than 1,100 in the mid-1990s to 1,826 in English and 1,680 in foreign languages this past year, 2007–08. We are projecting an estimated 480 fewer jobs in English in 2008–09 than a year ago and 460 fewer in foreign languages. These declines mark the biggest one-year drops in the thirty-four-year history of the JIL, both numerically and in percentage terms. Even so, this year’s projected totals are still higher than the historic low numbers to date—1,075 jobs in English and 1,047 jobs in foreign languages—recorded in 1993–94.”
Having graduated with my MA in 1992, I can sympathize with the plight for many graduating into this low swing. I got my first, full-time teaching job in 1999 – yes, that’s seven years of pieced-together part-time teaching and working in jobs not at all related to my degree. So, no whining until you’ve got me beat on that.
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Haiku Tea Contest
From the like it or not pile:
ITO EN (North America), INC., the world’s leading purveyor of green tea products and beverages, today announced its call-for-entries for “Haiku Project 2009.” Inspired by the spirit of change in our country today, participants can enter a haiku around the themes of “Change,” “Hope” and “Progress”. ITO EN representatives will evaluate all submissions and select 3 winners of the 2009 Haiku Project on July 20, 2009. The winning contestants will be notified by ITO EN and may be required to sign and return a Submission Release form and their haiku will be printed on bottles of TEA’S TEA in 2010. Submissions will be accepted from March 6, 2009 to July 6, 2009.
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ViennaTriangle
Brenda Webster’s new novel, Vienna Triangle, employs the historical context of the early psychoanalysis movement to create a mystery that explores the dark side of intellectual enlightenment. Using Freud and his inner circle as case studies, she investigates the rise of egoism and the tension of professional ambition within the group. Like most historical fiction that focuses on intellectual movements and figures, Vienna Triangle plays largely on the relationship between ideology and character that exists whenever you have someone trying to change our cultural perspective. Continue reading “ViennaTriangle”
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First Execution
On the surface, First Execution by Domenico Starnone is a novel about terrorism, filled with the requisite twists and turns that are the driving force of a crime thriller. Yet, it’s also a metafictional narrative reminiscent of Calvino’s If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler, becoming a text on the act of writing and editing, switching from protagonist to author, and back again. Continue reading “First Execution”
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The Bathroom
The nameless narrator of Jean-Philippe Toussaint’s debut novel, The Bathroom, takes up residence in his bathroom and refuses to leave, while others attend to him and try in vain to coax him from the bathtub, where he cultivates the “quietude of [his] abstract life.” The premise brings to mind Ivan Goncharov’s Oblomov, the 19th-Century Russian nobleman who does not get out of bed for the first 150 pages of the novel. However, while The Bathroom is no satire, neither does Toussaint weigh it down with seriousness. Continue reading “The Bathroom”
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Camera
In the geology of Jean-Philippe Toussaint’s career and development as a writer, his third novel, Camera, is easily placed in the same strata as his debut, The Bathroom. However, Camera is funnier and more romantic (in the nameless narrator’s weird way). The book opens: Continue reading “Camera”
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Last Night in Montreal
This novel doesn’t cross lines. It blurs them. What first seems to be a flaw on the part of the author turns out to be the intention. Last Night in Montreal subtly breaks boundaries throughout, whether through aspects of the plot or the ways in which it was written. Because of this, the words get under our skin, making us feel as if something is off, but we are still urged, through Mandel’s words, to keep reading and to push past the discomfort that looms on every page. Continue reading “Last Night in Montreal”
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The Adventures of Cancer Bitch
Join me, please, in trotting out an old chestnut to roast over the open fire of winter passing. I'm talking about that oldie-but-goodie, "Can't judge a book by its cover" chestnut. Roast it. Crack it open and spread it on your melba toast. Because that chestnut lies to you sometimes, and certainly is lying to you if you're staring at the cover of S.L. Wisenberg's The Adventures of Cancer Bitch. I know. It's nearly spring. We don't want to think about cancer right now. We'd rather not be bitches. But join me for just a moment, please, and help me contemplate this cover. We've got the title, for one, emblazoned over an oddly appealing, oddly alarming photograph of a papier-mâché figure of Wisenberg (presumably) complete with flaunted hero-cape, peace-sign earrings, cancer-cropped hair, and defiant red circle with a bar through it smack over the place you'd expect her left breast. Continue reading “The Adventures of Cancer Bitch”
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First We Read, Then We Write: Emerson on the Creative Process
Ralph Waldo Emerson never wrote an essay on writing. The closest he ever came to it was “The Poet,” a work that inspired Uncle Walt to write Leaves of Grass. However, Emerson was far from silent on the issue. Careful excavation of his works reveals numerous thoughts on the writing craft. But rather than combing through everything Emerson wrote, you might start with First We Read, Then We Write: Emerson on the Creative Process. Robert D. Richardson’s new book excavates these gems of wisdom for any writer aspiring to refine their own art. And it wouldn’t hurt to learn from Richardson’s own crisp, erudite, and unfussy prose, a style sure to have met Emerson’s approval. Continue reading “First We Read, Then We Write: Emerson on the Creative Process”
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Bending the Notes
The term “accessible” has had its fair usage in poetry reviews, and I’ll use it here to describe Paul Hostovsky‘s Bending the Notes, a selection for the Main Street Rag’s Editor’s Poetry Series. Hostovsky‘s poems require no specialized knowledge of literary tradition or poetics. Set against the working-class suburbs of Boston, a milieu of duplexes and bowling alleys, populated by aggressive drivers and girls named “Cece Santucci,” these poems speak of parenting, childhood, love, and writing. Hostovsky‘s diction is colloquial and his tone, intimate. Often narrative, his lines unfold meditatively and lyrically to empathetic moments that illustrate commonplace, human struggles. One can see why poems from this collection with their abundance of emotional forthrightness were featured on Garrison Keillor’s The Writer’s Almanac. Continue reading “Bending the Notes”
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The Suburban Swindle
Jackie Corley’s debut story collection, The Suburban Swindle, features a blurb that says, “Stories like poetry made from the gritty stuff of hard scrabble life.” It’s not often that a book blurb is all that honest or accurate. Hyperbolized and syrupy? Yes, almost always. But capturing the essence of the book in a line or two is indeed rare, and refreshing. This blurb definitely captures the essence. Corley’s characters do live hard, gritty lives. They live in a perpetual moment where things are always about to ignite, or burn out, or both – relationships are going to end, friends and lovers are going to leave – giving each story the sense that it takes place on the edge of a cliff. Continue reading “The Suburban Swindle”
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Morning in a Different Place
The year is 1963. Yolanda and Fiona have already been friends for two weeks, and Yolanda is in the hospital because some thugs came looking for Fiona’s brother’s stash of drugs. The two aren’t supposed to be friends. Yolanda is black, Fiona is white. But here they are, and Fiona is helping Yolanda escape from the hospital before they release her. Yolanda wants to run away before her mother arrives, her mother who is traveling up from South Carolina, where she lives now, and who is planning to take Yolanda back to South Carolina to live with her. So the two girls sneak out of the hospital, where a distressed woman asks them to watch her dog so she can take her son to see her dying mother. And this is how their adventure begins. Continue reading “Morning in a Different Place”
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At or Near the Surface
Jenny Pritchett’s characters in At or Near the Surface live lives that, on the surface, would seem comfortable, secure, normal – lives that are generally good enough. But Pritchett opens the heads and hearts of these women to find that, in one way or another, they feel unfulfilled and dissatisfied with their lives. They long, they hurt, they are hungry. Whether they find themselves cycling through an unbreakable daily routine, at the crumbling edge of an unhappy marriage, unable to appease the stalking guilt from their past, or dealing with the surreal grief of a miscarriage, each of Pritchett’s characters must decide what they will or will not do with the rest of their lives. Continue reading “At or Near the Surface”
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Light Boxes
Half way through Light Boxes Shane Jones drops his fiction mask. He pulls us back into reality. He gives us a list: Continue reading “Light Boxes”
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Comfort
In this sequel to Blue, Joyce Moyer Hostetter’s award-winning tale of a young white girl’s battle with polio and her friendship with a black girl in the hospital where she recuperates, we follow Ann Fay’s struggle to accept her polio-induced disability and the knowledge that she’s different from everybody else. At the same time, her father is suffering post-war psychological trauma. He’s not the same father or husband, and Ann Fay isn’t sure how to cope with his personality change, particularly the threat of violence. Continue reading “Comfort”
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Shuck
Daniel Allen Cox is brilliant with a picaresque vignette. He bobs and weaves through Shuck, throwing glimpses at the porn industry, New York City, gay sex and literary magazine submissions with steady grace, floating through the voice of Jaeven Marshall, aka the new Boy New York: Continue reading “Shuck”
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Me As Her Again
Toward the end of her memoir, the richly titled Me As Her Again, Nancy Agabian writes: Continue reading “Me As Her Again”
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Assistant Poetry Editor Sought
Editor-in-Chief Cynthia Reeser writes that Prick of the Spindle is looking for a new assistant poetry editor. Interested individuals can contact Reeser directly: pseditor-at-prickofthespindle-dot-com.
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New Lit on the Block :: ouroboros review
Jo Hemmant and Christine Swint have begun a poetry and art journal titled ouroboros review. The magazine is currently published online using a service called Issuu, and is also available in print through a print-on-demand service called Magcloud.
Issue 2 has just been released and includes the works of Jay Arr, John Borcherding, Tammy Brewer, Iain Britton, Dustin Brookshire, Julie Buffaloe-Yoder, Kelly Cockerham, Jill Crammond Wickham, Vanessa Daou, Jennifer Delaney, Nikki Devereux, Michael Doyle, Holly Dunlap, Marchell Dyon Jefferson, Andrew Erkkila, Hunter Ewen, Liz Flint-Somerville, Rebecca Gethin, Christopher Hileman, Dick Jones, Collin Kelley, Blake Leland, Chris Major, Rachel Mallino, Michelle McGrane, Joseph Milford, Steven Nash, January O’Neil, Scott Owens, Amy Pence, Allan Peterson, Robin Reagler, Deb Scott, Carolee Sherwood, Hannah Stephenson, Paul Christian Stevens, Amy Unsworth, J Michael Wahlgren, Christian Ward, Angie Werren, Ernest Williamson III, Robert E Wood
ouroboros is now reading for the third issue. The reading period ends Sunday, May 3.
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NewPages Updates :: Literary Magazines
The following have recently been added to NewPages Guide to Literary Magazines:
Zaum – poetry, prose, fiction, visual art
Antennae – experimental writing, language-based music, performance scores
Quiddity – prose, poetry
The Maynard – poetry, fiction, nonfiction, art
Ozone Park – poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, plays, translation
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On Newspapers and Journalism
There’s been much to read on this topic, but I found this article in The Nation especially informative for its historical perspective – all the way back to the founding fathers – and including the pre-internet decisions/legislation which actually began this downward spiral. Also included are suggestions for change, which is what I have found lacking in most other editorials and articles on the topic. Check it out:
The Death and Life of Great American Newspapers
By John Nichols & Robert W. McChesney
The Nation (April 6, 2009 ed.)
March 18, 2009