The Stories of Others is a blog post by Townsend Walker of Our Stories in which he shares stories he has collected over the years with a note about a particular technique he thought the author had accomplished (such as: “Steve Almond – ‘Pornography’ – Perfect flash, punch end”). He refers back to this resource when working on his own writing. By no means his complete list, it provides a helpful model for other writers.
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!
New Lit on the Block :: NAP
NAP is an online quarterly publication of poetry and fiction available free on Issuu and for a cheap 99
Spread the word!
New Lit on the Block :: Temporary Infinity
Edited by Andrew Fortier, Z.T. Burian, and Erin Jones, Temporary Infinity is a new online magazine of any and all forms that “Fill the White,” including short stories, flash fiction, poetry, creative non-fiction, artwork, comics, plays, photographs.
The second issue went live March 1, and submissions are open for the June 1 quarterly installment. Future plans for the publication include print issues, if start-up funds can be raised, and the addition of film and reviews of books, poetry chapbooks and more.
Contributors to the first two issues include Robert Louis Henry, Elizabeth Dunphey, Omar Bakry, Damian Lanahan-Kalish, A.D. Wiegert, Ingrid Cruz, Colin James, Ryan Quinn Flanagan, Thomas Sullivan, Jude Coulter-Pultz, Katie McLaurin, Bobbi Sinha-MoreyKat Urice, Michael Bourdaghs, Ariel Glasman, Alan Britt, Stacey Bryan, Subhakar Das, and Marika von Zellen.
Spread the word!
Our Stories Contest Winners
Winners of the Our Stories 2011 Richard Bausch Short Story Prize appear in the Winter 2011 issue, now available full-text online. The winner is Richard Hartshorn, “Sorry Dani”; Second Prize Anne Earney, “Lifelike”; and Runners Up Charles Hashem, “A Fine December Day,” Alyssa Capo, “The River,” and Alexis E. Santi, “It Only Takes One Mistake.”
Spread the word!
Phoebe’s Freebies
Phoebe literary-arts journal is trying out e-formats – PDF and ePub soon to follow – and encouraging readers to download the issue for free and give them feedback on how it looks.
Phoebe is also on Twitter and encouraging followers with a first-ever Twitter contest. The best three tweets received by the end of April will win print copies of the magazine.
Spread the word!
Get Ready to Put a Poem in Your Pocket!
Celebrate national Poem In Your Pocket Day on Thursday, April 14, 2011! The idea is simple: select a poem you love during National Poetry Month then carry it with you to share with co-workers, family, and friends.
Spread the word!
Bellevue Literary Review Honors Jill Caputo & Prize Winners
The latest issue of Bellevue Literary Review (v11 n1) features the winners of the 2011 BLR Prize. Jill Caputo, whose fiction received an honorable mention, died in August of 2010. In the foreword, Editor-in-Chief Danielle Ofri recounts the prize selection process and discovery of the sad news; BLR‘s decision came five weeks after Caputo’s death, and they had no way to know until attempting to contact her to congratulate her. Jill Caputo’s family gave permission for the publication of her story, and BLR has dedicated this issue in her memory.
Marica and Jan Vilcek Prize for Poetry, judged by Marie Ponsot
Winner: “Sinkhole” by Janet Tracy Landman
Honorable Mention: “Climacteric” by Cynthia Neely
Goldenberg Prize for Fiction, judged by Andre Dubus III
Winner: “But Now Am Found” by Patti Horvath
Honorable Mention: “Winston Speaks” by Jill Caputo*
Burns Archive Prize for Nonfiction, judged by Jerome Groopman, MD
Winner: “The Tag” by Elizabeth Crowell
The annual BLR Prizes award outstanding writing related to themes of health, healing, illness, the mind, and the body. The contest is open each year from February 1 – July 1.
Spread the word!
nanomajority & ART364B
nanomajority is interested in the various ways in which artists, writers, and critics intersect (or don’t), inviting “residents” to work on a project on the site for an extended period of time. In this way, nanomajority hopes to provide a flexible, unique space for projects to develop.
nanomajority has been featuring the women of ART364B in separate monthly installments. Current projects include works by Melissa Potter, Kate Clark, Jennifer Musawwir, Miriam Schaer, Marietta Davis, and Adriana Corona.
Spread the word!
Danahy Fiction Prize Winner
Heather Sappenfield of Vail, Colorado, has been selected as winner of the fifth annual Danahy Fiction Prize by the editors of Tampa Review. She will receive a cash award of $1,000 and her winning short story, “Indian Prayer,” will be published in Tampa Review 42, forthcoming in summer 2011.
The Danahy Fiction Prize is open to both new and widely published writers, with an annual postmark deadline of November 1. The $15 entry fee includes a one-year subscription to Tampa Review, and all entries submitted are considered for publication.
Spread the word!
Michigan Quarterly Review 2010 Literary Prizes
Michigan Quarterly Review has announced the winners of its 2010 literary awards:
Lawrence Foundation Prize
Shimon Tanaka has been awarded the Lawrence Foundation Prize for 2010. The prize is awarded annually by the Editorial Board of MQR to the author of the best short story published that year in the journal. Tanaka’s story, “Destruction Bay,” appeared in the Fall 2010 issue. The prize carries a cash award of $1000.
Laurence Goldstein Poetry Prize
Albert Goldbarth is the recipient of the 2010 Laurence Goldstein Poetry Prize, which is awarded annually to the author of the best poem appearing that year in the Michigan Quarterly Review. His poem “Our Argument, like the Thunderstorm” appeared as part of a sequence of poems in the Winter 2010 issue.
Page Davidson Clayton Prize for Emerging Poets
Eric Lee is the second recipient of the new Page Davidson Clayton Prize for Emerging Poets, which is awarded annually to the best poet appearing in MQR who has not yet published a book. The award, which is determined by the MQR editors, is in the amount of $500. Eric Lee’s poems “Getting Kicked out of Steamers Restaurant in Fairhope, Alabama” and “Kangaroo or Lion?” were published in the Summer 2010.
Spread the word!
Blogging from Japan
Freedom in Harmony is Poetry Kanto editor Alan Botsford’s blog “inspired by, but not limited to, events still unfolding in Japan.”
Spread the word!
Celebrate National Poetry Month with 32 Poems
32 Poems will feature five book recommendations (or an interview with a poet) for each day in April. Their goal is to share favorite poetry books with people and to promote the work of the recommending poet. Below is the month’s schedule thus far:
April 1: John Poch
April 2: Jonterri Gadson
April 3: Eric Weinstein
April 4: M.E. Silverman
April 5: Arielle Greenberg
April 6: Lucy Biederman
April 7: Eric Pankey
April 8: Deborah Ager
April 9: Collin Kelley
April 10: Jennifer Atkinson
April 11: Luke Johnson
April 11: Interview with Terri Witek
April 12: Holly Karapetkova
April 13: TBD
April 15: Carolina Ebeid
April 16: M. Scott Douglass
April 17: Adam Vines
April 18: Elizabeth J. Coleman
April 19: Bernadette Geyer
April 20: Sally Molini
April 21: Interview with Jeffery L. Bahr
April 21: Kelli Russell Agodon
April 22: Jeannine Hall Gailey
April 23: George David Clark
April 24: Rachel Zucker
April 25: Lisa Russ Spaar
April 26-on TBD
Spread the word!
2010 Walker Percy Fiction Contest Winners
New Orleans Review has announced the 2010 Walker Percy Fiction Contest winner, runner-up, honorable mentions, and finalists. The final judge was Nancy Lemann. The winning story and the runner-up will be published in the next print issue of the New Orleans Review.
Winner: “Prisoners of the Multiverse,” Jacob Appel
Runner-up: “War Story,” Austin Wilson
Honorable Mention: “The Junior Embalmer,” Jane Stark; “Goat Pharmacy,” Robert Glick; “What We Do,” Cassie Condrey
See website for full list of finalists.
Spread the word!
Audio Podcast: The Bat Segundo Show
Newly added to the NewPages Guide to Literary Podcasts, Video, Audio:
Edward Champion’s The Bat Segundo Show is a cultural and literary podcast that involves very thorough long-form interviews with contemporary authors and other assorted artists. Standard questions that have been asked of guests over and over are avoided, whenever possible. The show is updated (ideally) every week and sometimes every two weeks. There are at least five podcasts unveiled to the listening public every month and, more often than not, considerably more. Currently, there are nearly 400 shows available, with a full index of guests.
Spread the word!
Intern at Habitus
Habitus is offering two internship opportunities for organized, independent, globally minded individuals. As a small, independent publication with growing visibility and acclaim, we are able to offer highly personalized internships that will provide substantive experience, diverse responsibilities, and direct contact with our esteemed contributors around the globe. Both internships require a minimum commitment of two full days a week for a minimum of three months. These positions are unpaid.” See website for more information and application process.
Spread the word!
Brian Clements Leaves Sentence
After founding and seeing Sentence: a journal of prose poetics through eight issues, Brian Clements will be turning over editorship to Brian Johnson, who had previously held the position of Associate Editor. “I look forward to seeing the ways in which Brian’s vision for the journal leads it in new directions,” Clements writes. “I can assure you that he will maintain Sentence‘s mission of representing an eclectic mixture of styles, poets, and features.” As well as maintaining what now seems to be the established editor first name! Best to both Brian and Brian on their new ventures.
Spread the word!
Art :: Bent Objects
Bent Objects blog and art posts by Terry Border. Worth every click on ‘Older Posts’ to see his creations.
Spread the word!
Kings of the F**king Sea
The concept of poet Dan Boehl and visual artist Jonathan Marshall’s Kings of the F**king Sea feels like something thought up in an Austin bar after an MFA workshop, between their third and fourth Lone Stars. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. There’s an appealing looseness in the execution of the book’s idea, which I’ve mentioned twice now without explaining. Jack Spicer is the captain of a pirate ship whose crew goes by the name in the book’s title, and includes Jasper Johns and Robert Motherwell. The Kings face off against Mark Rothko, the captain and sole member of a rival ship called the Cobra Sombrero. Continue reading “Kings of the F**king Sea”
Spread the word!
If You’re Not Yet Like Me
Edan Lepucki is a master at characterization and humor. Her novella If You’re Not Yet Like Me, narrated by a pregnant woman describing to her unborn child the series of events leading to its conception, would likely be a sentimental flop if not for the enormous personality of its protagonist, Joellyn. Joellyn is a woman who boosts her self-esteem by gazing at her breasts in the bathtub faucet, whose reflection makes them huge, “the nipples wide-eyed, like they’d just walked into their own surprise party.” She is someone who imagined as a kid that she would grow up to be a Valkyrie, warrior-type woman, “vicious and beautiful, the roar of some exotic animal made physical.” She habitually imagines herself intimate with men she’s not attracted to and sleeps with them as good deeds, but wears the ugliest pair of underwear she owns on first dates to prevent herself from taking off her clothes too early. Continue reading “If You’re Not Yet Like Me”
Spread the word!
Visitation
The latest translation of the German author and theatre director Jenny Erpenbeck’s work, Visitation, is a philosophical thesis on permanence/impermanence filtered through the lens of a small lake and neighborhood near Berlin. This lake, called Brandenburg, is the setting for the entire work. More specifically, the reader is introduced to a singular plot of land, from its very formation to the present day. Most of the book is constructed as a series of closely intertwined short stories, each presenting the viewpoint of a character inhabiting or interacting with this particular piece of land. Continue reading “Visitation”
Spread the word!
A Fireproof Box
Unlike much poetry in translation that seems to lose its flavor and to blend together into the bland, uniform “translated” voice, Christopher Mattison’s translation of Gleb Shulpyakov retains his unique voice and undeniable cultural heritage. Some poems emphasize his foreignness, with references to Russian history and culture, such as, on page 17, when the poem references “Suvorov’s infantry,” “beards from Vladimir,” and the phrase “From Moscow to Podolsk no Pasternak could find / the way through such weather.” Leaving in these cultural markers adds an air of authenticity and believability to the work, and, most importantly, ensures the preservation of the poet’s original voice. Continue reading “A Fireproof Box”
Spread the word!
Historic Diary
That history and personal memory can become one and the same is nothing new. The Internet and Facebook are merely faster ways to gather fact and thought. Continue reading “Historic Diary”
Spread the word!
Hank
After reading only a page of Hank, I remembered the “point” of poetry. Or art in general, really. To make the experiencer experience feelings. That's it. Isn't it? Hank is good at that. Continue reading “Hank”
Spread the word!
Our Island of Epidemics
In Our Island of Epidemics, Matthew Salesses presents a series of fourteen pieces of flash fiction which work together to tell the history of an island of, well, epidemics. On this island, one epidemic follows another and the community suffers collectively. While epidemics of oversensitive hearing, hunger, and farts may not be so appealing, the epidemic of memory loss brought immigrants to the island who “came, after a bout of suffering, to catch the disease and stay.” Other epidemics the island must suffer through include unstoppably growing hearts, bad jokes, insomnia, obsession, unrequited love, magic, lost voices, and talking to animals, to name a few. The narrator writes: Continue reading “Our Island of Epidemics”
Spread the word!
Nazareth, North Dakota
What if the Messiah hadn’t been born yet? What if we never had Jesus? Or, what if he had been born in an insignificant town in North Dakota? Well, history would certainly be different, and Nazareth, North Dakota tells us how it may have happened in modern times. Tommy Zurhellen weaves a story of biblical intrigue, giving an age old story a new spin. Zurhellen makes it truly easy to step into a foreign world, but a world that has been known since childhood by many. Continue reading “Nazareth, North Dakota”
Spread the word!
Pictures of Houses with Water Damage
The short stories in Michael Hemmingson's Pictures of Houses with Water Damage offer a disturbing, sometimes harrowing, portrayal of human relationships. Like water seeping down behind plaster walls, once the problems come into the open, it's already too late. Continue reading “Pictures of Houses with Water Damage”
Spread the word!
Becoming Weather
Becoming Weather is introduced by a quote from Nietzsche that describes the shifting changeability of the collection—“That the world is not striving toward a stable condition is the only thing that has been proved.” Like the weather, Martin’s poems can quickly change from light to darkness, frigidity to a blazing heat. The writer explores this movement and the act of writing about movement—in poem 3 of the first section, “Disequilibrium,” he states: Continue reading “Becoming Weather”
Spread the word!
The Made-Up Self
If personal essays are supposed to be nonfiction, then how can essayist and teacher Carl Klaus begin a scholarly book of essays with the following premise? Continue reading “The Made-Up Self”
Spread the word!
Metal and Plum: A Memoir
Soccer balls, crusty heels of bread, Grandmother’s hands, fishing poles. Andrei Guruianu’s Metal and Plum: A Memoir is strewn with such images, such scraps—scraps of metal, scraps of food, red brick, fence posts, gypsy tunes, and scraps of words, language, and memory. Continue reading “Metal and Plum: A Memoir”
Spread the word!
Approaching Ice
In her profession as a naturalist, Elizabeth Bradfield (Interpretive Work) uses a writer’s attention to detail and research. Approaching Ice, her second collection of poetry, captures the frozen climate of the poles, exploring not only the external packed snow of the Arctic and Antarctic but also the internal “climate of the heart.” Her poems resonate with a need to discover what lies beneath the ice, such as when she echoes John Cleve Symmes’s longing to find “another earth / within our earth, more perfect, richer,” to claim our planet’s last unexplored frontier. Continue reading “Approaching Ice”
Spread the word!
Makeshift Instructions for Vigilant Girls
Erika Meitner's Makeshift Instructions for Vigilant Girls begins with sexual awakening and its inherent perils and ends just short of marriage, its poems trading in both nostalgia and uncertainty. Meitner deftly tackles lust, harassment, dating, death, alien abduction and the ever-important life skill that is filling out a form, all while rendering her images in clear and unique ways. Continue reading “Makeshift Instructions for Vigilant Girls”
Spread the word!
apt: Reversing the Trend?
Edited by Randolph Pfaff, Carissa Halston, Robin E. Mørk, and J.F. Lynch, apt magazine of literature and art has been publishing online since 2005, and will continue to do so, but have now initiated an annual print issue.
Reversing the trend over the past years of print magazines going online, apt editors comment, “In a time when readers are crying that print is (finally, honestly, genuinely) dead, we’ve moved to a the tangible pages. Our approach to this shift is similar to our aesthetic. . . We want apt to surprise its readers with its willingness to showcase experimental work alongside traditional pieces, but also for the delivery of the material.”
And, aptly enough, this first issue is available in paper or PDF.
The inaugural print issue of apt features the work of Brian Bahouth, David Bartone, Franco Belmonte, Liam Day, Javier Berzal de Dios, Shannon Derby, Cyndi Gacosta, Carissa Halston, Christina Kapp, J.F. Lynch, Seann McCollum, Dolan Morgan, Robin E. Mørk, Pete Mullen, Randolph Pfaff, Vincent Scarpa, Janelle M. Segarra, N. A’Yara Stein, and Curtis Tompkins.
apt is part of Aforementioned Productions. Aforementioned is a small press and producer of readings, theatre, and other literary events.
Spread the word!
New Lit on the Block :: Toad
Toad is an online bimonthly of new poetry, prose, and visual art. Toad‘s “habitat is protected by conservationist, Bob Hicok, and nourished by the Creative Writing graduate students of Virginia Tech,” and currently includes: Elias Simpson, Lauren Jensen, Julia Clare Tillinghast, Raina, Lauren Fields, Ashley Nicole Montjoy, Bryan Christopher Murray, Brianna Stout, and L. Lamar Wilson.
Toad {:1} includes works by Dorthea Lasky & Matthew Zapruder, Remica Bingham, Elisabeth Tonnard, Amit Majmudar, Randall Horton, Jack Ridl, Ghangbin Kim, Susan Schorn, Kimberly Grey, Katherine Bode-Lang, Lisa Norris, Peter Tonningsen, Quinn Latimer, Ashley David, Caren Beilin, and Brandon Downing.
Submissions to Toad are open year-round.
Spread the word!
Discounted & Free Books from First Book
If you’re an educator or program administrator, and at least 50 percent of the children in your program come from low-income families, First Book can help.
Eligible programs receive access to the First Book Marketplace, offering new books at 50 to 90 percent off retail prices. And if you serve a higher proportion of children in need — 80 percent or more — then your school or program may also be eligible for free books through the First Book National Book Bank and book grants through First Book’s local Advisory Boards.
Visit First Book online to learn more.
Spread the word!
Room 2010 Writing Contest Winners
The newest issue (34.1) of Room Magazine, Canada’s oldest literary journal by and about women, includes the first and second prize winners of the 2010 Contest.
Fiction, Judged by June Hutton
1st Place: “Chocolate Season” by Amy Kenny, Hamilton, ON
2nd Place: “Pill-Sorting for Dummies” by Judy McFarlane, West Vancouver, BC
Honourable Mention: “Sum our Polaroids” by Kathleen Brown, Markham, ON
Poetry, Judged by Jennica Harper
1st Place: “Pre-med, Prepatoria” by Melissa Walker, Stratford, ON
2nd Place: “The Mountain Pine Beetle Suite” by Chantal Gibson, Vancouver, BC
Honourable Mention: “The First Word” by Kim Trainor, Vancouver, BC
Creative Non-Fiction, Judged by Lynne Van Luven
1st Place: “The Goddess of Light & Dark” by Jane Silcott, Vancouver, BC
2nd Place (tie): “Love and Other Irregular Verbs” by Sigal Samuel, Vancouver, BC
2nd Place (tie): “The Visitor” by Lesleyanne Ryan, Holyrood, NL
Spread the word!
New Lit on the Block :: Asymptote
Newly launched online translation magazine Asymptote publishes poetry, fiction, drama, criticism, interview, essay, as well as original English-language essays introducing a foreign writer and a wildcard special feature that varies issue to issue. Their first issue showcases 77 writers and translators working in 17 languages, and features Du Fu, Mary Gaitskill, Thomas Bernhard, Alain de Botton, Aim
Spread the word!
Cider Press Review Book Award Winner
Liz Robbins of St. Augustine, Florida won the 2010 Cider Press Review Book Award for Play Button as judged by Patricia Smith. She received $1,500, and her book will be published by Cider Press in 2012. The annual award is given for a poetry collection. The next deadline is November 30.
Spread the word!
CV2 Two-Day Ten-Word Poem Contest
At 12:00 midnight (CST), when Friday becomes Saturday, April 2, Canada’s print poetry magazine Contemporary Verse 2 sends a list of 10 words to registered participants by email. Participants then have 2 days (48 hours) to write their best poem using each word at least once. The final submitted poem may not exceed 48 lines. Only one poem may be entered per participant.
There is a $12.00 registration fee for the contest. Also, a special Play & Read discount is only available to contest entrants. For an additional $10.00, contestants get a 1-year subscription to CV2 (60% off the standard subscription price!), four issues of new Canadian poetry, interviews and reviews. The contest fee can be paid by credit card online through PayPal or by a cheque/money order sent to the CV2 office. Registration and an email address are required to play.
The contest is open to both Canadian and international residents.
$900 in prizes + paid publication
All entrants receive a copy of the issue of CV2 featuring the winners of the 2-Day Contest.
Spread the word!
Interview with Dean Spade
“Trans-Formative Change“: Meaghan Winter interviews Dean Spade,”America’s first openly transgendered law professor on the power of zines, the sacrifice social movements require, and the limits of legal reform.”
Spread the word!
New Lit on the Block :: Dragnet
Editors Andrew Battershill and Jeremy Hanson-Finger bring us Dragnet Magazine, a new online/eBook literary journal that “trawls the sea of stories for the best fiction.”
Dragnet Issue One can be read three different ways: Computer (website, flipbook, eBook); Tablet (flipbook, eBook); Phone or eReader (eBook).
The inaugural issue features works by Sheila Heti, Joe Yachimec, Sasha Manoli, Claire Battershill, Thomas Mundt, J. R. Carpenter, Luke LeBrun, Andy Sinclair, Catriona Wright, Erica Schmidt, Agnes von Pfifferling, Hamish Adams, Jeff Fry, Jacob Wren, Amelia Floortje, Alexis Zanghi, Matthew R. Loney, and Aaron Fox.
Submissions for Issue Two are open until May 1.
Spread the word!
Indian Review of World Literature Online
The Indian Review of World Literature in English is a bi-annual online scholarly literary journal that “aims to create an awareness among the general readers, research scholars and students of literature about the many forgotten and lesser-known classics of the world by publishing scholarly articles on various aspects of World literature.”
The Indian Review of World Literature in English welcomes submission of articles on various aspects of World literature in English. Scholarly articles on individual authors or works are welcome for publication, subject to the evaluation by the editorial team. Published in January and July every year, the articles that appear in the online journal will be published in book form either as collections or monographs.
Spread the word!
Collaboration Ciccariello & Breeze
Fogged Clarity features the slidewhow Eros, than[atos]kfully, “an expansive and cerebral collaborative series of visual poetry by artists Peter Ciccariello and Mez Breeze.”
Spread the word!
Narrative Fall 2010 Story Contest Winners
Winners and Finalists of the Narrative Fall 2010 Story Contest can be read on their website:
First Place
“Reading Henry James in the Suburbs” by Heather Brittain Bergstrom
Second Place
“The Barbarians” by Alexander Maksik
Third Place
“The Vanishing” by Russell Working
The WINTER 2011 STORY CONTEST, with $6,500 in prizes is open until March 31 at midnight, Pacific daylight time.
Spread the word!
New Lit on the Block :: Anomalous
Anomalous Press, launched in March of 2011, as a non-profit press and online publication, available in both visual and audio forms on various platforms. Anomalous Press “has its sights set on publishing chapbooks, advancing audio forms and creation, and supporting all sorts of alternative realities of the near future.”
Anomalous #1 is available online with PDF, MP3, Kindle, and eBook versions available in trade for a Tweet or Facebook post.
Anomalous welcome submissions of literary works of texts (poetry, fiction, nonfiction and translation) and hybrid, muti- and new media, audio or video literary works, and images year-round.
Contributors to the first issue include Naomi Ayala, Luis Alberto Ambroggio, Alma Baumwoll, William John Bert, Emma Borges-Scott, Ann Cefola, Hélène Sanguinetti, Mike Czagany, Venantius Fortunatus (d. ca. 600 AD), Janis Freegard, A. Kendra Greene, Ashley Elizabeth Hudson, Sarah McBee, Colby Somerville, Patrick Swaney, Sarah Tourjee, Henry Vauban, and Eugenio Volpe.
From “In the Winter” by Naomi Ayala:
There’s a gulf between me and god.
I fill it with angry fish
whose backs catch the sun.
Spread the word!
2010 Anderbo Poetry Prize Winner
Jendi Reiter’s “Bullies in Love” was selected as the winner of the 2010 Anderbo Poetry Prize, as judged by MacArthur Fellow Linda Bierds. Honorable Mentions went to James K. Zimmerman and Thea S. Kuticka. All poems are available full-text on Anderbo.com.
Spread the word!
Tripwire Re-Launch & Translator Microgrants
Tripwire, a journal of poetics, was founded in 1998 by Yedda Morrison and David Buuck. Six issues were published between 1998-2002, with a special supplement published in September, 2004 for the RNC protests in New York.
Tripwire is being re-launched and is accepting submissions of essays (on contemporary writing, performance, and art), experiments in criticism, poetics statements and investigations, interviews, translations, black and white art work, long-form review essays (that consider several books or authors linked around central themes or questions), performance scores, etc.
Submissions should “engage or address” at least one of these “constellations,” each further described on the Tripwire website: PERFORMANCE/WRITING; CONCEPTUALISM AND IDENTITY; NARRATIVE/PROSE; WHAT IS POETICS?
Tripwire also has initiated “Microgrants for Translation,” a donation-based method of recognizing the important role of translators of contemporary avant-garde and experimental writing.
Spread the word!
Seriously
Spread the word!
Glimmer Train Very Short Fiction Contest Winners :: March 2011
Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their January 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. No theme restrictions. The next Very Short Fiction competition will take place in July.
Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.
First place: Matt Lapata, of Chicago, IL, wins $1200 for “Ohio Home.” His story will be published in the Summer 2012 issue of Glimmer Train Stories. [Photo credit: Dio Traverso.]
Second place: Jennie Lin, of Mountain View, CA, wins $500 for “Seven Winters of Teeth.”
Third place: Rav Grewal-Kök, of Brooklyn, NY, wins $300 for “Prisoners.”
A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here.
Deadline for the March Fiction Open: March 31
This competition is held quarterly and is open to all writers. Word count range: 2000-20,000. No theme restrictions. Click here for complete guidelines.
Spread the word!
Radio 3 & Naughty Bronte
“The BBC’s Radio 3 is to air an adaptation of Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights complete with foul language. Romantic figures Heathcliff and Cathy will be heard using strong swear words in the station’s adaptation of one of literature’s most famous and tempestuous love stories. It is understood the expletives are used in the heat of the moment as the two characters argue. But eyebrows have been raised at the decision to air the scenes at 8pm on Sunday night.” Read more on Mail Online.
Well, you know where I’ll be Sunday night…
Spread the word!
Habitus: The Berlin Issue
Issue No. 7 of Habitus, a publication “rooted in the experience and language of the Jewish diaspora,” focuses on Berlin. In his editorial, “Becoming Berlin,” Joshua Ellison explores the role of memory in the Berlin culture and society. He writes, “For societies, memory becomes a matter of public accountability, so the moral stakes are high. The painful process—very much active and agonizing in Germany—of defining and interpreting shared history is part of the pact we enter that creates community. In public, we decide what to remember, and that tells us something essential about who we are now. Berlin is so dense with reminders of the past that the contemporary city sometimes seems to recede, driven under the surface by their weight. But the question of what Berlin’s memorial culture tells us about contemporary Germany is still an open one.”
The full editorial is available online.