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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!

Asian American Poetry Retreat 3.1.08

kundiman Kundiman Asian American Poetry Retreat
June 25 – 29, 2008
University of Virginia, Charlottesville

In order to help mentor the next generation of Asian-American poets, Kundiman is sponsoring an annual Poetry Retreat at The University of Virginia. During the Retreat, nationally renowned Asian American poets will conduct workshops and provide one-on-one mentorship sessions with fellows. Readings and informal social gatherings will also be scheduled. Through this Retreat, Kundiman hopes to provide a safe and instructive environment that identifies and addresses the unique challenges faced by emerging Asian American poets. This 5-day Retreat will take place from Wednesday to Sunday. Workshops will be conducted from Thursday to Saturday. Workshops will not exceed six students.

Submissions must be postmarked between February 1, 2008 and March 1, 2008.

Festival :: Robert Frost Poetry Fest 4.08

The 14th Annual Key West Robert Frost Poetry festival will be held in Key West, Florida April 9th – 13th, 2008 on the grounds of the Heritage House Museum, the Robert Frost Cottage, and select Key West venues.

The festival will feature poetry and haiku workshops, poetry and haiku readings, art & film events and an international poetry and haiku contests. Featured poets are Dr. Michael Wyndham Thomas from England, Charles Trumbull, Lee Gurga, Rosalind Brackenbury, Barry George, Richard Grusin, Cricket Desmarais, Bob Muens, and Catherine Doty.

Art :: Poets Exhibit 2.08

Poets
ZieherSmith

533 West 25th Street
New York, NY
January 24 – February 23, 2008
(view images from the exhibit online)

“It makes perfect sense that poets be drawn to the plastic arts; whether that attraction is critical, ekphrastic or practical, the act of creating a composition from the ether of words shares many formal concerns with making something new from the relative nothingness of color, line and light. It seems that the impulse of painters toward the poetic and poets toward the painterly are indelibly intertwined.

“Co-curated with Alice Quinn of the Poetry Society of America, POETS is an exhibition of artwork in a range of materials by six pre-eminent American poets. A.R. Ammons, John Ashbery, Star Black, Joe Brainard, Mark Strand and Marjorie Welish have created works of art that elucidate the processes and approaches to their written output. With passion and vision, focus and fortitude, their visual voices are as singular as those written voices upon which their reputations rest.”

Submissions :: Palabra

Palabra
A Magazine of Chicano & Latino Literary Art
Biannual print magazine of Chicano & Latino writing invites submissions of short fiction, poetry, short plays and novel excerpts. Looking especially for fresh, inventive work that pays as much attention to language as to content, takes literary risks and explores new territory in Chicano & Latino literature. Sim/subs, 3-4 mo response, open year-round.

Jobs :: Various

The California State University, Los Angeles, Department of English offers a renewable lectureship in Composition, Linguistics, Creative Writing, and Film on an ongoing basis. The deadline for submissions of applications is on-going. Hema Chari, Chair, Department of English.

Endowed Chair in Creative Writing. Meredith College seeks an experienced fiction writer and teacher who has a substantial record of publication in fiction, demonstrated excellence in teaching creative writing to undergraduates at both the introductory and the advanced level; experience building and administering a creative writing program, and a commitment to continue publishing fiction. Dr. Robin Colby, Department of English. February 25, 2008.

Liberty University, Lynchburg, Virginia, seeks an Assistant Professor with specialization in Creative Writing. M.F.A. required, Ph.D. preferred. Dr. William Gribbin, Dean, School of Communication.

Submissions :: Passager 2.15.08

Passager
Special Call for Submissions: Journals
Deadline: February 15, 2008 (postmarked date)
Results announced (projected date): unknown – contact us for updates

“Do you keep a journal? Or do you have a journal from a family member you’d like to share? We’re collecting entries for a special issue on journals. We welcome your words, visual images, as well as journal entries that combine the two.

Passager‘s mission is to explore the imagination during the later years and to hear the passion that is so often attributed to the young. As our writer friend Djelloul Marbrook said to us about his own work, I’ve been writing all my life and finally I have something to say!

Submissions :: Fourth River 2.15.08

The Fourth River welcomes submissions of creative writing that explore the relationship between humans and their environments, both natural and built, urban, rural or wild. We are looking for writings that are richly situated at the confluence of place, space and identity, or that reflect upon or make use of landscape and place in new ways. Nature and environmental writing that is edgy and provocative, that goes beyond traditional nature writing, and contributes to a new type of place-based writing has the best chance of finding a home in our journal.”

Lit Mag Grab Bag :: Picked Up AWP 2008

Our lost luggage finally made it home, and I *finally* had time to sort through it all. This is only a fraction of those mags represented at AWP – given the bag/weight restrictions at the airport, we had to really limit ourselves this year…

For information about these and many other quality literary magazines, click the links or visit The NewPages Guide to Literary Journals. Also visit the NewPages Literary Magazine Reviews for new reviews as well as an archive of past reviews.

Broken Bridge Review
Volume 2
2007
Annual

Cannibal
Issue 3
Winter 2008

Copper Nickel
Issue 9
2007-2008
Biannual

Evansville Review
Volume 17
2007
Annual

Florida English
Volume 5
2007
Annual

Florida Review
Volume 32 Number 2
Fall 2007
Biannual

Forklift, Ohio
“A Journal of Poetry, Cooking, & Light Industrial Safety”
Number 18
2008
Biannual-ish

The Fourth River
Issue 4
Autumn 2007
Biannual

Grist
University of Tennessee
Issue 1
2008

Hobart
“Hobart in America” on one side
“Candian Hobart” on the flip side
(or vice versa)
Number 8,
Late 2007
Biannual

Juked
Issue Number 5
Winter 2007/2008

Measure
An Annual Review of Formal Poetry
Volume 2
2007
Annual

Mid-American Review
Volume 28 Number 1
2007
Biannual

Mikrokosmos
Volume 53
Spring 2007
Annual

Phoebe
Volume 37 Number 1
Spring 2008
Biannual

The Pinch
Volume 28 Issue 1
Spring 2008
Biannual

Smartish Pace
Issue 15
April 2008
Biannual

Tin House
The Dead of Winter
Volume 9 Number 2
Winter 2007
Quarterly

Turnrow
Volume 5 Number 2
Fall 2007
Biannual

The Tusculum Review
Volume 3
2007
Annual

Washington Square
Winter/Spring 2008
Biannual

Weber
The Contemporary West
(Formerly Weber Studies)
Volume 24 Number 2
Winter 2008
Biannual

Residency :: Artist at Pine Needles 2.28.08

Artist at Pine Needles Residency Program
The St. Croix Watershed Research Station seeks applications from artists and writers for the summer 2008 Artist at Pine Needles residency program. The project invites natural history artists or writers to spend 2 to 4 weeks in residence to immerse themselves in a field experience, gather resource materials, and interact with environmental scientists and the local community. Applications will be accepted from writers and visual artists who focus on environmental or natural history topics. Participants will have an opportunity to interact with environmental scientists and to create links between their art, the natural world and the sciences. Download application for this residency here. Deadline: February 28, 2008.

Books :: American Sonnet

American Sonnets: An Anthology
Edited by David Bromwich
American Poets Project
Library of America

This unique anthology presents one critic’s selection from two centuries of American sonnets. Some of David Bromwich’s choices—Hart Crane’s tribute to Emily Dickinson, for example, or Emma Lazarus’s dedication of Lady Liberty to the world’s tired and poor—are classics cast in bronze. Others—Elizabeth Bishop’s short-lined “Sonnet” or any sonnet typed by Cummings—are hammers that shatter the mold. The heart of the book is in the clusters of sonnets by Longfellow, Very, Tuckerman, Robinson, Frost, Stickney, Wylie, and Millay. Here are our Petrarchs and Shakespeares, the American masters who, by living within the strictures of the octave and the sestet, found full voice, enlarged a tradition, and changed the sonnet forever.

Awards :: Michigan Quarterly Review

Michigan Quarterly Review congratulates Patrick O’Keefe, winner of the $1000 Lawrence Foundation Prize for the best short story in MQR in 2007: “Accidents” (Winter 2007 issue), and David Lehman, winner of the $1000 Laurence Goldstein Poetry Prize for the best poem published in MQR in 2007: “The Will to Live” (Spring 2007 issue).

Coming in MQR Spring 2008 a special issue on China. This special issue will contain writings about the territory of China – its people, its ways of thinking, its arts and media, its politics and social conditions. It will also examine the presence of China in the imagination and behaviors of the Chinese diaspora, especially in the U.S.

Nonfiction: Philip Beidler on the banishment of China during “America’s Great Reality Hiatus, 1948-1973”; Michael Byers on new volumes of fiction; Vivian Chin on Yiyun Li and Chinese American fiction, with an interview with Yiyun Li; Gloria Davies on moral emotions and Chinese thought; Liang Luo on the politics of androgyny in modern China; Jay Martin on the Shanghai underworld; Alex Ortolani on censorship in China; David Porter on binational understandings and misunderstandings between China and the U.S.; John Taylor on Franco-Chinese literature

Fiction: Marilyn Chin, Ha Jin, Shao Wang

Poetry: Tony Barnstone, Cai Qijiao, Victoria Chang, Michael Collins, Wing Tek Lum, Cathy Song, Fred Wah, Avra Wing, Yim Tan Wong, Ouyang Yu, Yu Guangzhong and new work by Gao Xingjian, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2000

Graphics: A portfolio of Chinese photography curated and introduced by Mark Bessire

Submissions :: Cliterature 2.28.08

Cliterature is an online magazine dedicated to expressions of women’s sexuality in writing. We publish both creative and critical works quarterly. Women’s sexuality deserves a medium in the writing and publishing worlds, two arenas where interest in male sexuality has prevailed far too long.

“Take a moment and submit to the upcoming issue, SONG. The deadline is February 28. This will be Cliterature‘s 7th time around the block, and getting better all the time. But a small lit journal can only survive if there’s submissions coming in. Consider it your cliteriffic duty to submit – we want YOUR writing.”

Art :: AWP Postcards


I love postcards. They are nearly becoming a lost art thanks to e-mail. But snazzy postcard art will grab my attention every time. At AWP, I enjoy cruising the tables and grabbing up these rectangles of art. Here are two of my favs, I *believe* came from Meridian. Of all things, they weren’t tagged on the back. But, then again, I can guess why. I’ll be sure the boss gets one…

YA Writing Workshop :: Broken Bridge

Walk onto the Pomfret School campus each June and you’ll find an intense group of students immersed in the creative arts alongside a noted group of faculty mentors fully focused on the creative process. Broken Bridge Summer Arts Workshops, now in its sixth year, offers students in grades 9-12, this dynamic living and learning experience to immerse themselves in their art of choice with creative faculty and peers. Students choose between five opportunities to hone skills in poetry, fiction, drawing, acting, or 3D assemblage

Brad Davis, Workshop Director, twenty-year Pomfret School faculty member, and award-winning poet, emphasizes that “through personal affirmation and critique, student artists receive encouragement to commit their enthusiasm, vision, and skills to the daily work of making art. Broken Bridge is an experience of living in community with all our senses up and running.”

Workshop faculty have been selected for their accomplishments in their respective arts disciplines and for their ability to help secondary school students realize their artistic goals. Faculty are published and award-winning writers, artists, and performers, many of whom graduated from Pomfret School and personally understand the value of a dynamic residential community for fostering artistic growth.

New Issue Online :: Mad Hatter 9


From Mad Hatter Carol Novack, Publisher/Editor-in-Chief:

Once again, we’re delighted to present our most extravagant and colossal uber issue to date, overflowing with wondrous art, music, recitations, cartoons, and writings.

As usual, we’re offering new and updated columns, book reviews, cartoons (including a new cartoonist), custom-made art, audio collages, audios, videos (a “featured film” cameo this time), a “foreign” country or part of country section (in this issue, a Brazilian special), and a new “combination special” video contest co-sponsored by Web Del Sol (the grand prize winner will get $500). We may well offer additional elements in the future, as the global community of Hatters continues to expand and grow. I’m still pondering the erection of an e-concert hall.

We working stiffs will take another long break after we’ve agreed on the contents of Issue 10, which will emerge in October. Our reading period for that issue will be March 1st through 14th. Anything sent before or aft will be tarred and feathered. As we continue to trim our issues due to financial constraints, the selection process is turning even more arduous for the editorial posse. So – don’t hate us ‘cause we’re beautiful but poor. Thanks to all of you who’ve donated money to keep us going in the manor to which we’d like to borne. Even a modest, tax-exempt donation helps!

Speaking of money, my least favorite topic, we’re organizing a second, multi-media benefit to take place on Sunday, May 4th, 4 – 8pm, at The Bowery Poetry Club, NYC. Our lineup of stars so far is impressive and inspiring. We’ll email our press release to all of you as soon as we’re set. In the meantime, SAVE THE DATE! And if you want to help the Benefit Anti-Committee, let us know!

TO ALL VISUAL ARTISTS, VISPOETS and VIDEOGRAPHERS WHO HAVEN’T CONTRIBUTED TO OUR PAGES: IF YOU’D LIKE US TO CONSIDER SHOWING YOUR WORKS ON THE BIG SCREEN, PLEASE EMAIL THE URLS WHERE THEY MAY BE ACCESSED TO madhattersreview@gmail.com, subject line: MAY 4TH BENEFIT.

Valentine’s Special :: Calyx Books

Pick from four books of poetry published by Calyx Press and add a box of handmade Bursts’s Chocolates to send to your sweetie for Valentine’s Day and get a 20% discount on the books. Order by February 8 to assure delivery by February 14. Titles for 20% discount include: Idleness is the Root of all Love by Christa Reinig; Femme’s Dictionary by Carol Guess; The White Junk of Love, Again by Sybil James; The Country of Women by Sandra Kohler. Nothing says love like poetry and chocolate! (Okay, well, maybe beer and poetry…)

Bill Moyers :: What Books Should the Prez Read?

“What book should the next President take to the White House next January?”

You can add your pick by posting at The Moyers Blog .

Watch Bill Moyers Journal, Friday night February 8th at 9 on PBS (check local listings), to see Bill review the submissions and offer his own suggestion for essential presidential reading.

Submissions :: Prairie Margins Undergrad Lit Mag 2.11.08

Prairie Margins, the national undergraduate literary journal of Bowling Green State University, is accepting submissions for its 2008 issue. Work by undergraduate students from any accredited institution is eligible for consideration. Work that is not by a current student will not be considered. Poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and art submissions may be e-mailed to the editors by Monday, February 11.

Reader Contest :: Indie Writers Deathmatch

Broken Pencil‘s first annual short story contest, the Indie Writers Deathmatch, has finally begun! Stories are posted on the site, and readers can vote between two stories pitted against one another, as well as leave comments.

Round One is over, and blood was spilled. Congratulations to Emma Healey, whose story, “Last Winter Here” progresses to the next stage of competition. This week, two new stories battle it out: “Gynecomastia” by Janine Fleri and “Panties” by Greg Kearney. Go read and have your say, and vote as many times as you want. Round three begins in two days – don’t miss a round of it!

Isotope Authors Recognized

Isotope
A Journal of Literary Nature and Science Writing

Alison Hawthorne Deming’s scientific meditation “The Rabbit On Mars” (Isotope 4.1) is now included in the 2007 edition of the annual collection, Best American Science and Nature Writing (Houghton Mifflin) edited by Richard Preston.

Sunshine O’Donnell’s essay “Consumption” (Isotope 3.1, and winner of Isotope’s 2005 Editor’s Prize in Nonfiction) has been reprinted in the first volume of The Best Creative Nonfiction, edited by Lee Gutkind.

Donna Steiner’s essay “Cold,” (Isotope 4.1) has been listed as a Notable Essay of 2006 in the 2007 edition of Best American Essays, edited by David Foster Wallace.

Sharon White’s essay “Bamboo” (Isotope 4.2) recently won the AWP 2007 Award Series Prize in Creative Nonfiction for her book Gardens, which will be published by the University of Georgia Press in 2008. “Bamboo” is featured as a chapter in the book.

Isotope has received several favorable reviews on NewPages, one from yours truly who found the publication a surprisingly delightful blend of science and nature and literature. An unassuming publication that has never disappointed; the kind of writing you didn’t know existed until you read it, and then you wonder why you never knew of it before. Check it out.

Submissions :: Valley Voices 3.1.08

**I posted this a few weeks back, and a reader let me know there is no e-mail address here. It does sound like a great publication, but I have tried several times to call the school and speak with someone in the English Department. No one answers the phone, and I tried several different extensions. The school website is a horrific mess to navigate, and has endless unused template pages, so either it’s new or they just don’t have anyone to maintain it. If ANYONE out there can provide more info on this sitaution, please post a reply.**

Valley Voices: A Literary Review (ISSN: 1553-7668) now seeks submissions on two special issues to be published in 2008: Landscape and Literature (Spring issue) and Richard Wright (Fall issue). Critical essays, poetry, fiction, nonfiction, memoir or photographs on the Mississippi landscape, Mississippi Delta history, literature, art, music, civil rights movement, and folklore studies are always welcome.

Poetry: Maximum of 5 poems that must be typed and single-spaced Critical essays, fiction, nonfiction: one manuscript (5,000 words) that must be typed and double-spaced

Photographs: B/W

Please email your work by attachment with a cover letter before March 1, 2008 for the spring issue and June 30, 2008 for the fall issue to

Valley Voices, The Editors
Mississippi Valley State University
14000 Highway 82 W., #7242
Itta Bena, MS 38941-1400

Submissions :: Malahat Review CNF

Creative Non-fiction wanted all year, all the time!
The Malahat Review is pleased to announce that, starting with its Summer 2008 issue, it will publish at least one work of creative non-fiction in every issue. Submit previously unpublished works of creative nonfiction for the consideration of the Creative Non-fiction Board. No restrictions as to subject matter or approach apply. For example, a submission may be personal essay, memoir, cultural criticism, nature writing, or literary journalism. Seeking highly original submissions that range in length from between 1,000 to 3,500 words.

Afghan Reporter Senetenced to Death

Dear friends and colleagues:

This was posted on the Reporters Without Borders web site:

“Sayed Perwiz Kambakhsh, a 23-year-old journalist, was arrested in Mazar-i-Sharif, the capital of the northern province of Balkh, on 27 October 2007 on charges of blasphemy and ‘disseminating defamatory comments about Islam.’ Under repeated pressure from the Council of Mullahs and local officials, a Mazar-i-Sharif court sentenced him to death on 22 January 2008 at the end of a trial held behind closed doors in which he was not defended by a lawyer.”

The short version of the story is that Kambakhsh downloaded an article off the internet that discussed what the Koran says about women, and distributed a few printed copies. For this “crime” he has been sentenced to death. In another article in The Independent, Jean Mackenzie of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting is quoted saying, “We feel very strongly that this is designed to put pressure on Pervez’s brother, Yaqub, who has done some of the hardest-hitting pieces outlining abuses by some very powerful commanders.”

Please consider joining the international campaign to stop this sentence from being carried out.

Link to the full story and link to petition on the Reporters Without
Borders site is here.

A petition launched by The Independent (UK Publication) can be found
here.

Full story in The Independent is here.

Many thanks for your attention to this. Please pass it on.

Sincerely,

Paula Lerner
Artist of AFGHAN STORIES: Giving Women A Voice
Photographs from Kabul and Kandahar.

Writing on Writing :: Segue Online

Segue: A Journal of the Arts
Miami University – Middletown

Writing on Writing: essays from instructors (including graduate students), writers, scholars, and others that address creative writing in some fashion.

Current essays available full-text as .pdf download include:

“How the University Workshop Hinders New Writers from Engaging with Ideas (And What to Do About It),” by Catherine Cole

“Creating Nonfiction,” by Jill L. Talbot

“One Art: ‘Neither Out Far Nor In Deep’—25 Workshopping Essais Toward a Maker’s Mark,” by GTimothy Gordon

“Selling the Script! The Pedagogy of Film Co-production Scriptwriting,” by Cher Coad and Patrick West

“Ban Writing,” by Jenny Sinclair

“Tales of a Chicago Freelancer,” by David McGrath

“‘Why Experimental Writing Not’: A Class Collage,” by Janis Butler Holm

The WoW materials are free to read, print, and distribute only in their entirety and only for personal or classroom use. Seque requires that you credit both Segue and the authors, and also welcomes your feedback on how the materials were used.

Poetry Podcasts :: PBS NewsHour Poetry Series

NewsHour Poetry Series is a special NewsHour series that couples profiles of contemporary poets with reports on news and trends in the world of poetry (Updated periodically). Archives include: John Ashbery, Virginia Bennett, Lucille Clifton, Eliaz Cohen, Leonard Cohen, Gregory Djanikian, Claudia Emerson, Donald Hall, Joy Harjo, Paul Hunter, Galway Kinnell, Brad Leithauser, Agi Mishol, Wallace McRae, Taha Muhammad Ali, Jack Prelutsky, Wyatt Prunty, Samih al-Qasim, Alberto Rios, Kay Ryan, Mary Jo Salter, Aharon Shabtai, Charles Simic, Brian Turner, Natasha Trethewey, Robert Wrigley, Kevin Young, Ghassan Zaqtan, Paul Zarzyski. Funded by the Poetry Foundation. Site includes bios, selected works, a transcript of the program, related links, free program podcasts, and student and teacher resources. (Photo: Kevin Young, featured poet)

Submissions :: Rougarou 3.31.08

Rougarou the new online literary magazine edited by graduate students of the Department of English at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, is currently seeking submissions of fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction and book reviews for their Spring issue, due to launch in May 2008. Their first issue features new work by Stephen-Paul Martin, Erin Elizabeth Smith, Carolyn Mikulencak, William Greenway, Larissa Szporluk, Robert Vivian and others. Sim/subs accepted. Reading period: December 1 – March 31.

Lit Fest :: Saints and Sinners 5.8-11.08

Saints and Sinners Literary Festival
May 8 – 11, 2008
New Orleans

This event was a new initiative designed as an innovative way to reach the community with information about HIV/AIDS, particularly disseminating prevention messages via the writers, thinkers and spokes-people of the GLBT community. It was also formed to bring the GLBT literary community together to celebrate the literary arts.

The “Saints and Sinners” LGBT literary festival presents panel discussions and master classes around literary topics to provide a forum for authors and editors to talk about their work for the benefit of emerging writers and the enjoyment of fans of LGBT literature.

For 2008, Dorothy Allison, Mark Doty, Jewelle Gomez, Jim Grimsley, Aaron Hamburger, Stephen McCauley, Val McDermid, Tim Miller, Michelle Tea, and Elizabeth Whitney will join participants in the French Quarter for a weekend of literary revelry.

AWP 2008 :: Some First Notes

AWP was a blast, and I’m exhausted. My *poor* students had to put up with my slacking coherence and lagging memory of what I had assigned last week and what was due today, so class lectures started with the outcome of the Superbowl, the bowl ads, and the cost of burgers and beer in New York.

As for AWP – I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I love it.

I know – trust me I know – it has its faults, for exhibitors working the bookfair as well as for attendees. That said, I am absolutely supercharged from my weekend of contact with some of the nicest, most generous and brilliant people in the publishing industry, education, and writing community. A bit gushing? Maybe. Heartfelt? Yes.

Four years ago, when Casey and I hit the floor at AWP, hardly anyone we talked with knew about NewPages, and those who did had to roll their eyes upward and search their mental files first. There are some folks who have supported us from start to now, and those who have jumped on board along the way. We couldn’t be what we are now without their supportive encouragement and guidance.

This year, our third year of having a table presence at the bookfair, and my first year presenting on a panel, NewPages “got alotta love” from the constant stream of people passing by. “Oh, I love you guys!” “NewPages is great!” “You’re my homepage!” (The web equivalent to being the main “homie,” I think.) What a great connection it is for us to meet our fans and supporters, whose comments about what they like and what they’d like to see made better really do help guide our work here. And, still, there were just as many folks who didn’t know us who got schooled at AWP. I hope they will follow through and stop by for visit after visit.

My favorite part of AWP was being able to walk the floor and finally meet Face2Face with all of the people I know online and via e-mail – some for the first time, some renewing connections from AWPs past. We meet and in the frenzy that is the book fair floor, we bemoan the exhibitor situation, console one another on the state of reading and publishing in this day and age, shake fists at the postal hikes that are killing the small publications, and then make plans to meet again online to work on changing the literary world. And, as we have, so we will continue. There is so much to be done on the backs of those that have gone before us, we will continue, and I can only hope the new generation of writers, so timid about claiming themselves “writers,” will join with us in our efforts and sally forth – in whatever form that may mean for us and them and the next generation while still respecting those that have passed the torch – the rolled publication lit afire.

There’s much more to be reported on our attendance at AWP – and as soon as our missing luggage makes its way here, I will sort through all the wonderful materials and magazines, books and photos I gathered. Stay posted, and I will do the same!

Workshop :: The Kenyon Review in Italy 5.08

The Kenyon Review Writers Workshop
Vitorchiano, Italy
May 26 – June 2, 2008

David Lynn, editor of The Kenyon Review, takes the unique model of the KR Writers Workshop—where real writing is accomplished—and translates it to Italy. Join David, along with KR’s poetry editor, David Baker, and Rebecca McClanahan for eight fabulous days in a medieval village an hour north of Rome. Combine work and pleasure—and bring a partner or special friend along.

Workshops include:

Fiction – The Art of the Short Story with David Lynn
Poetry – A Window on Poetry Outside with David Baker
Non-fiction – Shaping Memory: People, Places, and Real Life Stories with Rebecca McClanahan

Workshop :: Kenyon Review in Ohio 6.08

The Kenyon Review Writers Workshop
“It’s a bit like boot camp (without the yelling and obstacle courses) for serious writers. Intensely creative, pushing you beyond what you thought you were capable of achieving—you eat, sleep, drink, breathe writing. And all around you are your fellow writers and instructors, cheering you on, encouraging you, word by word. Workshops are held for three hours each morning, focusing on writing exercises, reading and critiquing work, and talking about writing technique. The afternoons allow private time for reading and writing. Evenings are spent with public readings from instructors, visiting writers, and workshop participants.”

Kenyon Review Short Fiction Contest for writers under the age of thirty, Alice Hoffman, final judge. Submissions 1200 words or less. Deadline February 1st-February 15th. No entry fee.

The Kenyon Review will publish the winning short story, and the author will be awarded a scholarship to attend the 2008 Writers Workshop, June 14th to the 21st, in beautiful Gambier, Ohio.

Film :: Global Documentary Series

Human Stories. Global Issues. Wide Angle.

WIDE ANGLE was created in 2001 as a response to the lack of in-depth international news coverage in the United States. Six years later, WIDE ANGLE is the only program exclusively dedicated to international current affairs documentaries. For each broadcast, producers and journalists from around the globe report on an event, issue or trend through the eyes of the people who are living it day to day. In its first six seasons, WIDE ANGLE traveled to more than 50 countries to explore the forces that are shaping the world today, presenting global stories on a human scale and offering Americans uncommon and invaluable insight into today’s interconnected world.

WIDE ANGLE is anchored by former CNN International, ITN and BBC journalist Daljit Dhaliwal. Dhaliwal introduces the featured documentary by putting it in the context of the news of the day, and follows up with a hard-hitting one-on-one interview with a foreign policy expert, administration official, legislative leader, author or journalist who provides context and critical perspective on how global issues connect to American concerns and U.S. foreign policy.

WIDE ANGLE is a production of WNET/Thirteen and airs Tuesdays from July through September at 9 p.m. on most PBS stations nationwide. Check our TV Schedule to find out when WIDE ANGLE is broadcasting in your area.

Submissions :: Ecotone

Ecotone , the University of North Carolina at Wilmington’s national literary journal, has recently launched an online companion, which is currently seeking submissions for its current series, “Addiction as Ecotone.”

“We’re interested in exploring addictions (particularly their beginnings and, in some cases, their resolutions) as an ecotone—a transitional place separating past and present, reality and fantasy. We thus invite you to submit literary expressions you have related to this idea. Full submission guidelines here.”

Additionally, in Spring 2009, Ecotone will publish a special issue celebrating the bicentennial of Charles Darwin’s birth and the sesquicentennial of the publication of The Origin of Species. We are now accepting submissions in poetry, fiction, and nonfiction for the Ecotone Evolution Contest, which will creatively reflect the subject of evolution.

The reading period is October 15, 2007 – April 15, 2008. One Grand Prize winner will receive a $1,000 honorarium, a limited-edition chapbook of the winning manuscript, and publication in Ecotone’s Spring 2009 “evolution” issue. Two runners-up will receive chapbooks of their manuscripts and publication in Ecotone. The contest entry fee is $15 per manuscript. Full contest guidelines here.

AWP Report Friday

NewPages is fully enjoying AWP 2008! It’s absolutely crazy here from the moment we hit the floor until the moment our heads hit the pillows at night. We are basking in all the favorable comments the site receives from readers, and we also appreciate hearing how we can make NewPages better, better, better.

My special thanks to those who say they appreciate the blog. I am working the floor here to get an even more steady stream of news and events to post, so keep visiting the site and let others know about us.

A few fans stopping by even said they wanted to know how they could “support” NewPaqes. Well, while here at AWP, we’ve found our beer fund dwindling. If you like what you find on NewPages, and you appreciate the site, we don’t holler out alert colors to scare you into donating. Bottom line: We like beer. It really keeps us going. So, click the pint link in the upper right corner, and let us know how much you love us. No amount of beer-fund love is too small, since our tastes range from Stroh’s to Chimay.

And I haven’t heard yet, but I’m still hoping “Michael” is going to be ponying up soon!

Books :: WriteGirl

Lines of Velocity
Words That Move From WriteGirl

WriteGirl Publications

“The 6th Anthology is a wondrous and diverse collection – stories, poems, songs, musings, rants and essays – showcasing the unique and eclectic female voices of new and accomplished writers from WriteGirl. These girls and women speak freely and share openly on everything from the intensity of a teenager’s bad day to the exhilaration of finding love in urban Los Angeles. Touching on both personal and universal themes in response to the many worlds they live in, the WriteGirls invite you to spend some time exploring their words that move! Includes writing experiments from monthly workshops of the WriteGirl season.”

WriteGirl is a nonprofit organization for high school girls centered on the craft of creative writing and empowerment through self-expression. Through one-on-one mentoring and monthly workshops, girls are given techniques, insights and hot tips for great writing in all genres from professional women writers.

Submissions :: Barrelhouse 3.17.08

Never a boring submission period at Barrelhouse, that’s for sure. This time around? Roller Derby.

“That’s right: roller derby! Send fiction, essays, poems, whatever you got. Barrelhouse will select one winner who will receive original art created by Cory Oberndorfer, a genuine roller derby artist. Finalists will be published in our Very Special Roller Derby Section, which will be included in our next print issue.”

But that’s not all! Barrelhouse will select one work to be the inspiration for the cover art: “The one we like best (aka, “The Winner”) will recieve original artwork from Cory Oberndorfer, who creates (among other things) roller derby related art. Cory’s piece will take it’s inspiration from your work. This essentially means that you will become immortalized in two formats: your roller derby writing will appear in the pages of Barrelhouse, and will also be celebrated in or serve as inspiration for Cory’s work. Which will also be the cover of the next issue of Barrelhouse.”

What are you waiting for? Deadline is March 17, 2008.

Submissions :: DMQ Review

The Disquieting Muses Quarterly Review, an online journal of poetry and art since 1999 welcomes email submissions of poetry and art to our quarterly review for our winter issue. We seek work that represents the diversity of contemporary poetry and demonstrates literary excellence. Check out current and past issues and read & follow submission guidelines closely.

The Autumn 2007 issue features the poetry of R.S. Armstrong, Michael Baker, Chris Crittenden, Andrew Demcak, Brent Goodman, Melissa Holm, Kim Mahler, Rodney Nelson, Larry Rapant, Amy Bracken Sparks, Susan Varnot, Donna Vorreyer, Christine Walsh, and Cyril Wong with artwork by Bob Dornberg. Also appearing in this issue, essays by Noah Eli Gordon, Marge Piercy, and Reginald Shepherd from Poet’s Bookshelf 2, edited by Peter Davis.

All Over

Roy Kesey’s debut story collection, All Over, was also the groundbreaking ceremony for Dzanc Books, a new publishing house based in Michigan. Dzanc “was created in 2006 to advance great writing and champion those writers who don’t fit neatly into the marketing niches of for-profit presses.” Dzanc did well to procure talent like Kesey to launch their press.

Continue reading “All Over”

Dixmont

Rick Campbell is a friend of mine, someone whose capacious heart and mind have served me as a touchstone of the genuine for over a decade. As director of Anhinga Press, as well as founder and director of the Florida Literary Arts Coalition (FLAC), Rick has performed immense and selfless service for poetry both in Florida and nationwide. For years he has advocated for good poetry, worked to make poetry a larger presence in our culture, and supported the work of his fellow poets. His work promoting other people’s writing has been so significant, in fact, that his own fine poetry, while not exactly overlooked, has garnered less attention than it deserves. His new book, Dixmont, outshines his previous collections by a long shot; it is a powerful, honest, finely-crafted book of emotionally-honed poems whose cumulative effect is simultaneously harrowing and life-affirming. Quite simply, Dixmont is the real thing, a genuine contribution to our poetry. Continue reading “Dixmont”

Ryan Seacrest is Famous

If you’re the kind of person who reads book reviews, you’re also probably the kind of person who occasionally says things like, “I don’t really watch that much TV,” or who likes to pretend they’ve never sang along to a boy band in the shower. If this in any way describes you, then prepare to squirm a little while you read Dave Housley’s Ryan Seacrest is Famous. This debut collection is littered with pop culture references, and I can almost guarantee that you’ll catch way more of them than you’d like. These stories, which originally appeared in magazines such as Nerve, Backward City Review, and Hobart, take on a variety of pop culture types, including reality television, professional wrestling, and wedding DJs. Fortunately for us, Housley goes past the most obvious hipster-ironic observations and into the more earnest territories reserved for true pop culture fanatics. Continue reading “Ryan Seacrest is Famous”

Hiding Out

Jonathan Messinger’s debut collection of short stories, Hiding Out, hits the mark in every possible way. From the winding layout of the book, to the basic line drawings accompanying each story, to the wildly engaging story plots, Messinger’s book storms out of nowhere, his characters real enough to leave fingerprints on a windowpane. Continue reading “Hiding Out”

Temporary People

Like many readers my age, I grew up reading not literary fiction but the twin pillars of fantasy and science fiction.  As an adult, I’ve mostly left those pleasures behind, except for those genre-bending writers in the mainstream literary world, writers like George Saunders, Aimee Bender, Michael Chabon, or Jonathan Lethem. For the most part, I don’t regret the transition in my reading habits, but I do miss the invented worlds and cultures that came with the best genre writing. Thankfully, Steven Gillis has created just such a place in Bamerita, the floating island country of his newest novel, Temporary People.  Much like Tolkien raiding Norse and Christian mythologies to create his own world, Gillis paints his culture with shades of Central American dictators and revolutions, then puts American pop songs on his character’s lips while giving them the oppression, ingenuity, and knowledge needed to forge true revolutionaries from Bamerita’s most common citizens. Continue reading “Temporary People”

The Pale of Settlement

The nine linked stories in this collection follow Susan Stern, a New York City photo journalist who often finds herself operating between two lives. The life she leads in the U.S. has its problems, relationships mostly, but she does all right. Her personal and familial ties to Israel and the Middle East, however, provide a much richer source for conflict. Bombs in Haifa, buzzing helicopters, border patrol violence, a massacre in Palestine–these events are merely background noise compared to the nuanced consideration of the personal lives and family history deeply imbedded within this chaos. Continue reading “The Pale of Settlement”

The Sky Over Walgreens

The wonderings and wanderings of the maturing poet, recollected in elegy, self-deprecating humor, and moments of personal clarity seem to be a perennial favorite among Midwestern voices, and Chris Green’s first book clearly defines him as a champion of this mode. From his choice of puns and candid scenes to the obvious displays of technical skill and learning, Green exemplifies the ironies and neuroses that plague the writer who sees himself as Dante-prophet in the isolation of Midwest winters and towns. And his limits are as high as the skies over a Walgreens. Continue reading “The Sky Over Walgreens”

Young Writers :: Kenyon Review Summer Workshops

Young Writers
A workshop in writing for high school students (ages 16-18)
Kenyon college
Gambier, Ohio
Two sessions offered:
June 22 – July 5, 2008 or July 13 – July 26, 2008

“Young Writers is an intensive two-week workshop for intellectually curious, motivated high-school students who value writing. Our goal is to help students develop their creative and critical abilities with language—to become better, more productive writers and better, more insightful thinkers. For more than eighteen years, Young Writers has provided a lively, supportive environment where students can stretch their talents, discover new strengths, and challenge themselves in the company of peers who share their interests.

“Young Writers takes place at Kenyon College, a leading liberal-arts college renowned for its tradition of literary study. The program is sponsored by The Kenyon Review, one of the country’s preeminent literary magazines.”

Application deadline: March 1, 2008
Scholarships are available.

More information, a video about the Young Writers Workshop, and application materials online now at The Kenyon Review website.

Submissions :: Slipstream Anthology 2.29.08

Subtle Edens
The Elastic Book of Slipstream

This book will be a mixture of fiction and non-fiction, to be edited by Allen Ashley and published as an original paperback by Elastic Press (UK) in Autumn 2008.

For fiction submissions, Allen Ashley has made the following provocative statements: “Slipstream is essentially a 1990s and noughties extension and subtle reconfiguration of New Wave science fiction. How do I define science fiction? Somewhere between 1967 and 1974.” A few non-fiction articles will be published within the body of the book, but all of these have been commissioned.

Deadline: February 29, 2008

Jail or Read :: Changing Lives Through Literature

The History of Changing Lives Through Literature
An Alternative Sentencing Program

“Changing Lives Through Literature (CLTL) is a program that began in Massachusetts in response to a growing need within our criminal justice system to find alternatives to incarceration. Burdened by expense and repeat offenders, our prisons can rarely give adequate attention to the needs of inmates and, thus, do little else than warehouse our criminals. Disturbed by the lack of real success by prisons to reform offenders and affect their patterns of behavior, Professor Robert Waxler and Judge Robert Kane discussed using literature as a way of reaching hardened criminals.

“In the fall of 1991, Robert Waxler, Robert Kane, and Wayne St. Pierre, a New Bedford District Court probation officer (PO), initiated the first program at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth where Waxler is a professor in the English Department. Eight men were sentenced to probation instead of prison, with an important stipulation: they had to complete a Modern American Literature seminar run by Professor Waxler. The seminar was held on the university campus and included Judge Kane and PO St. Pierre. For 12 weeks, the men, many of whom had not graduated from high school and who had among them 148 convictions for crimes such as armed robbery and theft, met in a seminar room at the university. By discussing books, such as James Dickey’s Deliverance and Jack London’s Sea Wolf, the men began to investigate and explore aspects of themselves, to listen to their peers, to increase their ability to communicate ideas and feelings to men of authority who they thought would never listen to them, and to engage in dialogue in a democratic classroom where all ideas were valid. Instead of seeing their world from one angle, they began opening up to new perspectives and started realizing that they had choices in life. Thus, literature became a road to insight (see the New Bedford paradigm).”

Read more about the program here, including information on how to start a CLTL program in your own community.

Submissions :: STORYGLOSSIA 5.01.08

STORYGLOSSIA Breaks the Law

“Breakin’ the law, breakin’ the law…” Okay, maybe not quite like Judas Priest.

STORYGLOSSIA has enlisted Anthony Neil Smith as guest editor to help deliver a STORYGLOSSIA crime wave in Issue 28 (May 2008). Neil is the author of Psychosomatic, The Drummer, and Yellow Medicine and the editor of the re-emergent online noire-zine Plots With Guns, as well as a few kick-ass crime/noir issues for the Mississippi Review. He’s currently a professor of Creative Writing at Southwest Minnesota State University. Loves Louisiana Hot Sauce and Mexican beer. He’s already warned you once, which means next time you won’t see it coming. The guidelines for Issue 28 are simple: We’re shining our flashlights into the darkness to find what’s hiding there. We want hard-hitting crime and noir stories that walk the line between the worlds of literary fiction and genre. Push the envelope, see what pushes back. Word count max: 4000 words (no exceptions). Neil is reading submissions from January 15th until March 15th with the issue publishing May 1, 2008. See the complete guidelines for submission details and send in your best work.”

AWP :: FC2 Sweeps the Events!


FC2 Reception!
Clinton Suite
Hilton, 2nd Floor
7:00 p.m.

A Reading & Reception Hosted by FC2. Join us for drinks and a reading with Debra Di Blasi, Yuriy Tarnawsky, Diane Williams, Alexandra Chasin, Jeffrey DeShell and Pamela Ryder.

Signings at the FC2 table #278:

Thursday
Yuriy Tarnawsky 2:30 p.m.
Alexandra Chasin 3:30 p.m.
Jeffrey DeShell 4:30 p.m.

Friday
Pamela Ryder 2:30 p.m.
Diane Williams 4:30 p.m.

Saturday
Debra Di Blasi 12 noon

PLUS: FC2 is crazy wild on the session schedule! Stop by the FC2 table for a full listing, and check your AWP Program!

*NewPages Loves Brenda*