Blake Butler

http://www.gillesdeleuzecommittedsuicideandsowilldrphil.com/

Blake Butler lives in Atlanta. His third book, There Is No Year, is forthcoming April 2011 from Harper Perennial.

Stephen Schmunk is the winner of the Lamination Colony nice sentence raffle, receives a free copy of Scorch Atlas. Stephen, please email me your address for shipping. Forgive me the indulgence, too, for mentioning that you can read the shortest story in Scorch Atlas now at 52 Stories. Leave a comment on the story there from now until Friday and I’ll give another copy away to a random person. Thanks!

Nice interview with Laird Hunt by M.T. Fallon @ elimae: “Both of these books got started because I was unable to let go of the books they evolved from.” See also strong pieces by Jaclyn Dwyer, Sean ‘Blank Nacho’ Lovelace, Zack Wentz, and many others.

Blank Bodies

blankbodymap

Imagine all authors did not have names or genders or races or other traits, and all books were no more than the sum of what they held or caused in on upon the world or you. Imagine the words are the words. How would this affect your ‘top ten’ lists and concerns? What would you say then about the problems with this list, and the perspectives (not bodies) of its creator(s)? [And yes, I do believe that the aura of author does affect something in the object’s presence, but we’re talking about books as books here, not commodities, or careers.]

Is the gender of the book the author’s gender? Is the history of the book the author’s skin? By what other, individual features might a creator’s identity be transmitted and/or formed?

Behind the Scenes / 30 Comments
November 4th, 2009 / 12:46 am

Warm Milk Printing Press

Museum Cover 2 blog picWarm Milk Printing Press is live out of the hands of Atlantan Ben Spivey and crew, dropping their first joint in February 2010 via David Peak’s quite excellent Museum of Fucked.

Warm Milk Press is the publisher of handmade chapbooks. We publish 1- 2 books per year. At this time, we do not accept unsolicited manuscripts, but you can submit to our online literary journal here.

Check these fresh heads out, and preorder David’s chapbook. It’s a real faceeater. 7 blurbs on the site agree.

See also David’s recent interview with Keith Nathan Brown at his blog.

Author News & Presses / 5 Comments
November 3rd, 2009 / 10:39 pm

Classic but Yeah

dali_on_set_of_spellbound

I don’t do drugs. I am drugs.”

Power Quote / 92 Comments
November 3rd, 2009 / 5:20 pm

Finwake.com illuminates Joyce’s fatboy with ‘glosses, tips and explanations’ of its bonkers words.

Heather Christle Week (2): Stroking My Head With My Deception Stick

This poem from The Difficult Farm kind of inverts me, which is one of the reasons I read. It happens to contain the title of the book, set in the midst of a very disturbing smear of grass and animal and wind. It is made somewhat of human words. Seeing Heather read recently in Atlanta made realize even more distinctly what it is about her language that spins my back. ChristleShe read a series of poems from her book all while holding the book open in front of her, but almost never looking at it. The language was in her teeth. Instead, she peered around the room with eyes and watched her voice come out of her and stick to people. There was no food inside the room during this time. She recited as if instead of speaking she were being squeezed gently, deep inside her, a feeling that she had long since become used to, and had even learned in training to enjoy. Her reading voice is not robot-y as such, but like someone’s mechanical welcome creature in an area where your home was several years ago and the land is still the same, but that house smells like ammonia and the wood makes you dizzy. Words kind of giggle out of her and then appear stern, then poke you in the cheek. It’s a nice overall effect, even if thereafter you want to go find the food that was not there and put it in you to rub against the feeling the words have on your organs. It’s neat. And kind of fantastic. Here are some more fantastics, from the book:

STROKING MY HEAD WITH MY DECEPTION STICK

Someone shut down the local shimmer
but not the police who thought

it was Sunday and so spent hours
arranging their long and pliant hair.

Constable Jacques is the best man I know
but even he won’t converse with the dead.

The dead are so vain and hungry—
they will straddle your mirrors and swallow

your oak trees with their huge elastic lips.
And then you hear the screaming, not to be found

within the dead, but rather in the tiny
black pot which holds the greater part

of our mass and the difficult
farm where all the hens are black

and black are the wheatfields through which
runs a black and silent wind. Thin teachers

explain to our children: if the farm is a burgeoning
snowglobe, then the screaming’s a legend, like glass.

And again, this week the book’s on sale, with special offers at Heather’s blog.

Author Spotlight / 15 Comments
November 3rd, 2009 / 12:15 pm

My very Christian cousin just emailed to let me know she had bought my book, and her and her husband are going to read it to each other soon. As kind as this is, I imagine I might not be invited to the summer reunion next year. How does your family respond to your writing? Do they care? Are they down?

What is it?

sator

Click

Presses / 36 Comments
November 3rd, 2009 / 12:07 am

Free copy of Scorch Atlas for someone who comments with a sentence they like from the current issue of Lamination Colony. Winner will be selected at random from all entrants by Wednesday afternoon.