Hello, Online Submission Manager
More journals are turning to the online submission manager option. It’s fast, easy, and organized. Response time can still be slow, but that’s just how it is. The following seven linked journals are some “bigger” places that now have an online submission manager option:
One Story, Columbia, Quarterly West, Ploughshares, Ninth Letter, Fence, Agni
There are many more out there (ex, Diagram) and most likely through 2009 more journals will adopt the online submission manager model. One major plus, after you send that story or poem with a few mistakes you just caught, you can simply withdraw with the click of a button.
January 5th, 2009 / 1:32 pm
How Hated Is Jonathan Safran Foer?
The Guardian just released an article about how much shit talking is being directed at Jonathan Safran Foer. Having never read his work, does he really suck that bad?
All I know is that he’s a young successful writer. And from New York. And wears glasses. Wait, I’m looking at his bio photos…I think I hate him…No…Hmm…
From the Guardian comments section:
I always presumed Foer would be exactly the kind of author I would hate. He writes long, self-important books that fill 3 for 2 sections of chain bookstores, marketed perfectly as the clever read for stupid people.
Nice. Read the Guardian article HERE.
I like Russell Edson A Lot
Russell Edson is really old. He was born in 1935. I like a lot of things about Russell Edson but one thing his writing is not, is old. His stuff is always really fresh and modern, full of sadness and amazing images. Sometimes you read writers who really inspire you to write. When I read Russell Edson I don’t feel like writing because he’s already done it.
Russell Edson is having fun when he writes. In an interview he said, “I have no formal background, as you suggest, in anything. I just make up things as I go along without a program. It’s more fun that way.”
What I like is that his writing is really strange, but branching off the strangness is dozens of feelings. I think strange writing or surreal writing has to be done well. I read lots of stuff that is strange, but that’s all it is. It’s just fucked up with no where to go.
I really like this poem by Russell Edson. Every time I read it I love it more. I want to live in this poem. I want to meet the Closet-Man. I can feel and taste this poem and it’s dreamy and mysterious and it’s a shape and it’s wonderful.
THE REASON WHY THE
CLOSET-MAN IS NEVER SADThis is the house of the closet-man. There are no rooms, just hallways and closets.
Things happen in rooms. He does not like things to happen.
… Closets, you take things out of closets, you put things into closets, and nothing happens…
Why do you have such a strange house?
I am the closet-man, I am either going or coming, and I am never sad.
But why do you have such a strange house?
I am never sad…
Sunnyoutside Holiday Deal
Indie lit publisher Sunnyoutside announced today a Holiday Deal – a buy two, get the third free – running until December 19.
I encourage everyone to check out their catalog of high-end chapbooks and paperbacks.
From the site:
Buy any three titles, get the least expensive one free.
Keep the free one for yourself or just save some money. Simply order the two more expensive/equal value books and when checking out drop a note letting us know what you’d like your free title to be. A particularly good deal for overseas buyers, too, as the free title won’t be calculated in the shipping. Give the gift that can be enjoyed in the warm glow of your auto’s dome light after your power has been shut off and you’ve been evicted from your home. Happy holidays!
Dave Church Died
On Thanksgiving, poet Dave Church passed away.
The reason I know Dave Church is that when I first started sending poems out to small magazines, about ten years ago, he was in every journal. We wrote letters back and forth and his letters were always on thin sheets of paper and written in this crazy longhand. Some were typed on a typewriter. Tough, compassionate, and funny, I always liked corresponding with Dave Church.
Prolific in publishing, Dave Church was also this kind of larger than life character that I always heard about through other writers.
From PoetryMagazine.org.uk: in an articled title “Dave Church: a well kept American Secret:”
“From the tomato plantations of Florida, where he spent time on a ‘chain gang’ for being drunk and disorderly, the eighteen year old youth had set out on a Beat odyssey that was to occupy much of his life from then on in. He has worked as a roofer, bouncer, street barker (for Big Al’s, a strip joint seen behind the opening credits on the old ‘Streets of San Francisco’ TV series), and even cut the lawn for a doctor who paid him in drugs.”
Dave Church was old school indie lit, publishing hundreds of poems in small venues and numerous chapbooks and broadsides.
Sorry to be so dark on a Monday morning, but I thought this was important.
Free Novel? Yes, Free Novel
I’m not sure I’ve ever seen this done before, but Concord Free Press is giving away their entire first printing – 1500 copies – of their novel Give and Take by Stona Fitch.
Currently, there are less than 100 copies left.
The editors encourage people who request the novel to make a donation to a charity or person in need.
I’ve seen free e-books, but a free printed novel, no shipping, no cost, is an interesting idea. Is there some kind of catch? There doesn’t appear so.
Request your copy here.
Fence Likes Obama Too
If you didn’t get enough of Barack Obama in the past few weeks, well, it’s your lucky day because the man himself is on the cover of the new Winter issue of poetry/fiction/essay lit mag FENCE.
I like Obama. I’m just not sure why he’s on the cover of FENCE. Maybe it’s a political issue, but it doesn’t look that way.
Since FENCE moved and teamed up with SUNY ALBANY I’ve seen the mag take a nose-dive.
Still, I’m interested in every issue. It’s just not the same. Maybe it’s the university connection that bothers me. Or that the content has seemed to suffer. I’m sure there is some solid work in this issue — I’ve especially interested in the work by Brandon Shimoda who I’ve been reading online and being blown away by.
But I do find it strange that a SUNY Professor (Edward Schwarzchild) is included in the issue. Maybe this isn’t such a big deal. Maybe other university journals include their own staff?
FENCE always seems to catch my interest no matter what they are doing. You can stay up-to-date by checking out the FENCE PORTAL BLOG.
November 12th, 2008 / 12:16 pm
ML Press Adds More Authors
Announced last Friday, ML Press has quickly expanded their catalog from their opening line-up of: Ken Baumann (chap pictured), Jimmy Chen, and Shane Jones, to Nick Antosca, Brandi Wells, and Blake Butler.
From editor and publisher J.A Tyler on the first three chaps released, “we’ve sold nearly a third of each title, & as ml press will do only one run of each, place your orders soon.”
The chapbooks are single works and cost a economy friendly two dollars including shipping.
Browse and buy here.
Centennial Press
Having been around for a while — I think I remember first hearing about the journal Anthills about six years ago — Centennial Press is one press I never hear people talk about. I mean, nothing. From chapbooks, to broadsides, to perfect-bounds, editor Charles Nevsimal does an excellent job at creating interesting paper works. One of my favorite pieces is Anthills #4 – a journal of poetry and short prose that on first look appears to be a mini-chapbook but unfolds into a 17×25 poster complete with incredible graphic art.
The site says submissions are always open, but from what I remember response time is slow and the publication schedule is pretty inconsistent.
Browse the site here.