Ryan Call

Last Day to be a Secret Santa

Above is you and your Secret Santa before the exchange.

 

Below is you and your Secret Santa after the exchange.

I will continue to accept signups through midnight (CST) tonight. Then I’ll begin assigning randomly the Secret Santas.

Do it.

Be a Secret Santa and support independent authors/presses/publishers.

You just might like it.

Web Hype / 8 Comments
December 5th, 2008 / 12:24 pm

‘I Am Also In This Play!’

Wigleaf, the flash fiction wild child of internet sensation Scott Garson, has gone bonkers with excellence, and the latest update proves it.

Stop everything and read Sean Kilpatrick’s “Progress: A Play in _ Acts.”

You won’t regret it. It is funny. It is fucked up. It has the following line in it:

Character A (to audience): In answer to your question, this play was written because we love audiences. Our love is almost Swedish.

Folks, my love for Sean Kilpatrick is all Swedish.

Author Spotlight / 8 Comments
December 3rd, 2008 / 4:31 pm

Cutbank contests

Hi.

Annual contests now open over at Cutbank. This is a pretty standard post.

Joy Williams is judging the fiction contest. If you’re interested:

We are honored to have three talented judges participating in the second year of these contests. The Patricia Goedicke Prize in Poetry will be judged by Noah Eli Gordon. Joy Williams will select the winner of the Montana Prize in Fiction. The winner of the Montana Prize in Creative Nonfiction will be selected by Brian Bouldrey. 

Submissions are accepted December 1 through February 29. Winners receive $500 and publication in CutBank 71.All submissions will be considered for publication inCutBank.

The contests’ $13 entry fee includes a one-year, two-issue subscription to CutBank, beginning with the prize issue, CutBank 71.

That’s all.

Good luck.

Contests / 2 Comments
December 3rd, 2008 / 5:45 am

MASSIVE PEOPLE(5): Interviewers Around The Web

It’s been really busy around here. I mean, not around HTMLGIANT, but around our lives that are not related to HTMLGIANT: some of us were eating too much food and giving thanks, others were editing forthcoming books, others were grading student papers, and others were researching remote control helicopters. As a result, we don’t have a specific interview ready today for our series on MASSIVE PEOPLE.

Also, we are bad at checking our email. Things are a little disorganized at the moment (except for Secret Santa, which is really really organized – I’m serious).

Apologies.

What we do have, though, is a small festival of links to other interviewers around the web, those who are doing the work we failed to do for today. Please have a look at their stuff, and please add more links in the comments section if we haven’t mentioned it here. If you are working on a project like this, comment on it too.

That’s all I can think of so far – should be enough to satisfy people looking around for an interview at HTMLGIANT. We’ll get on things and get MASSIVE back soon.

Massive People / 6 Comments
December 2nd, 2008 / 5:20 pm

100 Secret Santas and counting…

That’s right. 100 of you have signed up for our Secret Santa Gift Exchange for Independent Literature. Things are happening.

Hooray!

One of you has even signed up twice!

Okay, what should the next goal be? 125?

If you’ve signed up and you’re wondering what to do next, don’t worry. I’ll have an email/post out to you with details about the exchange as soon as we get every last name on the list.

Remember, December 5th is the deadline.

Web Hype / 2 Comments
December 2nd, 2008 / 3:00 am

Capitol Letters Writing Center Seeks Donations

A friend of mine, the talented Mike Scalise, is working on this new project in DC to open a creative writing center for high school students. The project is called Capitol Letters; here is the program’s mission statement:

Capitol Letters Writing Center believes that within every student lives a brilliant writer. We support and challenge those writers through workshops, tutoring, and student publications that complement the classroom goals of educators in a safe and creative environment.

Based on what he has told me, Capitol Letters is working towards establishing for DC school children an extracurricular community similar to what is going on in 826. I think in DC especially, given the state of the school system there (according to what I’ve read, anyhow), such a community can make a big difference.

This post is to say, hey, these people are asking for donations. I dropped $5 off to them. If you’re interested in donating, head on over to Mike’s page and do a quick paypal transfer.

Just another way to get involved.

Random / 15 Comments
December 1st, 2008 / 7:07 pm

Mean Monday: Christy Call Talks Shit About(4) Lit Blogs

Here is a piece of our latest gchat about lit blogs:

me: hey
  we need to do
  like a talking shit thing
  for tomorrow
  what do you ant to talk shit about?
9:41 PM hey
  talk shit about something
  !
  HEY
 Chris: WHAT
9:42 PM me: we need to have you talk shit about something
 Chris: oh right
  must talk shit
  about something
  give me a topic
 me: ok
  your topic is
  lit blogs
 Chris: uh oh
  i first read little blogs
  that was weird
9:43 PM so like now i know though you want lit blogs
 me: yes
  we are not communicating very well tonight
 Chris: no
  we are communicating brilliantly
 me: there is nothing brilliant
  about this gchat
 Chris: this conversation is a microcosm for lit blogs
 me: microcosm?
9:44 PM Chris: microorganism
 me: microgasm
  this is dumb
  we need to start over
 Chris: microwave it
 me: stop
 Chris: HAHAHAHAHA
  YES
 me: ok
  lit blogs
  talk shit
  go
 Chris: WE NEED TO START OVER
  AGAIN
 me: we already started over goddamn it
 Chris: like whose lit blog
 me: i dont know

I want to start over again. I want to go to sleep.

Yawn.

Mean / Comments Off on Mean Monday: Christy Call Talks Shit About(4) Lit Blogs
December 1st, 2008 / 4:14 am

Win all of Bolaño’s stuff over at TQC

The person known as my wife eats pies inside out.  

 

 

*The person known as my wife eats pies inside out.

 

In the latest issue of The Quarterly Conversation, Scott Esposito is running a contest to give away to his readers

every single one of Roberto Bolaño’s works available in English, plus a special preview of his forthcoming novel The Ice Rink (New Directions, 2009). That’s eight books, including his mammoth new novel, 2666, and his new poetry collection, The Romantic Dogs, both reviewed in this issue.

The contest is pretty simple – read issue 14 of TQC, answer the questions on the contest page, and send your answers to Scott’s email address by December 31, 2008.

*Enjoyment of eating pie = enjoyment of reading TQC?

Contests / 2 Comments
November 30th, 2008 / 9:11 pm

A Thanksgiving Post: Secret Santa Update

Some things you won't regret include signing up for the HTMLGIANT Secret Santa Gift Exchange

 

Thank you everyone who has signed up so far for the HTMLGIANT Secret Santa Gift Exchange for Independent Literature. As of right now, we have 60 people signed up to take part in the gift exchange, including some people from the United Kingdom. I am amazed; this has sort of gotten out of hand. So thank you for this.

So. We have nine days until the due date. Those of you who are participating, I ask you for your help in spreading word. Some of you have already blogged about it; great stuff. Keep on doing that. Do other things too. Those of you who are still trying decide, well, you have plenty of time. I suggest you take Thanksgiving to think it over. Hopefully, you’ll get drunk and email us. Unlike other things that happen when you get drunk, this is one you won’t regret.

Let’s try for 100?

Web Hype / 14 Comments
November 27th, 2008 / 12:32 am

The Rome Review: an update

I emailed Tarek al-Hariri this (unnecessarily formal) email the other night after he commented on the post about his new journal, The Rome Review. He emailed me back and including a complete list of contributors for the debut issue.

Dear Tarek,

Thank you for commenting on my post at HTMLGIANT regarding The Rome Review.

I admit that it did not occur to me at the time that there had been a misunderstanding about Diaz being published in your journal. Thank you for clarifying that as well as providing for us a complete list of your contributing authors. That was much appreciated. I’ll have to link to it or bump it to the front of the page to make sure the rest of our readers have a chance to see it.

Also, thank you for being patient with us. We’re a rough crowd at times (both our contributors and our readers), and we like to gossip about things, to question them, to talk trash, etc. Everyone is kindhearted, but also opinionated over here.

I do sincerely wish you luck with the journal. I hope you can publish exactly what you want to publish.

Best,
Ryan

And here is his response:

Dear Ryan,

Thanks for the note; I really appreciate it.

We’ve received several submissions as a result of the publicity from your blog-post so we appreciate the attention! Blake Butler sent us an incredible piece; It’s exactly what we’re looking for.

I thank you for offering to link our author list. I’ve attached it.

“Everyone is kindhearted, but also opinionated over here.” Thank god for that; you have no idea how refreshing that is, a lot of people in college here seem to have forgot how to feel and think a long while back.

Best,

-t

And here is his list of contributors for the debut issue:

Authors who have been accepted and will appear in the debut issue of The Rome Review:

Steve Almond, author of the short story collections The Evil B.B. Chow and My Life in Heavy Metal, the non-fiction novel Candy Freak and Not That You Asked

Marshall Boswell, author of Alternative Atlanta, Trouble With Girls and Understanding David Foster Wallace

Patrick Bouvet (translated by Frank Wynne), author of the poetry collections Canon, Direct, and Shot

Blake Butler, (pending) work has appeared in Ninth Letter, Willow Springs, Harpur Palate, and others.

Stephen Cushman, author of Heart Island, Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics (ed.)

Junot Díaz (interview), Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao and the short story collection Drown

John Domini, author of Highway Trade, Talking Heads: 77, Books and Rough Business, and Earthquake ID

Thomas Sayers Ellis (artwork and poetry), author of The Good Junk, The Genuine Negro Hero, Song On, and The Maverick Room

Norton Girault (fiction and poetry), has appeared in MSS, Crescent Review, Timbuktu, and Snake Nation Review

Rigoberto Gonzalez, author of Men Without Bliss and Other Fugitives and Other Strangers

Joumana Haddad, administrator of Booker-IPAF prize, author of Time For a Dream, Invitation to a Secret Feast and Two Hands to the Abyss

Mickey S. Hess, author of Icons of Hip Hop and Is Hip Hop Dead?

Roy Kesey, author of All Over and Nothing in the World

Nestan-Nene Kvinikadze, author of Ispahan Nightingales

David Means, O’Henry Prize-winning author of the story collections A Quick Kiss of Redemption, The Secret Goldfish and Assorted Fire Events

Aimee Parkison, author of the short story collection Van Windows

George Singleton, author of Work Shirts for Mad Men, The Half Mammals of Dixie and Novel

Eric Vrooman, fiction has appeared in Kenyon Review, The Cream City Review, Passages North, and Ninth Letter

G. C. Waldrep, author of Goldbeater’s Skin and One Way No Exit

William Wall, author of This is the Country, The Map of Tenderness, Minding Children and Alice Falling

Daniel Wallace, author of Big Fish and Mr Sebastian and the Negro Magician

Jake Adam York, author of Murder Ballads and A Murmuration of Starlings

That is all. Carry on.

Uncategorized / 16 Comments
November 25th, 2008 / 6:55 pm