Yesterday I (finally) received the proof of Joseph Young’s collection of microfiction, Easter Rabbit. A company in St Louis is handling the printing. They are eco-friendly and their pricing is very competitive, but they were slow as cold shit getting this proof out. Anyway — the book is gorgeous. Really damn hell gorgeous.

Now I’m hard at work on the next book, for a late January/February release. It’s a 200-page collection of poetry by Mairéad Byrne. If you’re unfamiliar with her work, I HIGHLY recommend checking out her eBook released from ubu/web: SOS Poetry.

My Favorite Kind of List

[melissa.jpg]All this blahblahblah about end of the year lists makes me hungry. So lets talk about my favorite kind of list: the grocery list. Amanda Nazario recently completed a project that compiled a bunch of grocery lists into a zine titled THE GROCERY LIST LIST. You can go to her blog post about it here and contact her if you’d like her to send you one (or if you’d like to send her your own lists). The above picture is a sample of the zine, which you can see big here.

Web Hype / 4 Comments
November 4th, 2009 / 5:02 pm

Two More Sweet New Journals You Can (Should) Hold in Your Hands: PEN America #11 and Saltgrass #4

PEN America‘s MAKE BELIEVE issue is seriously out of this world. Poetry by Christian Hawkey, Mathias Svalina, Cynthia Cruz; A forum on the titular theme featuring Lynne Tillman, Terese Svoboda, Cynthia Ozick, and Damion Searls; plus Brian Evenson, Philip Gourevitch, Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche, and a whole lot more. Super bigtime.

SALTGRASS 4, meanwhile, features poetry from the sweet likes of G.C. Waldrep, Anne Boyer, Ben Mirov, Ish Klein, Danielle Pafunda and Brett Price. Here’s Mirov’s poem “Ghost Receptor”-

I have no questions for anyone.

They want to be held by the neon light of the OPEN sign.

They fill their pockets with sand.

They wake up and look at a deer.

I lay the crumpled body next to the convenience store.

Noah puts a plastic medal around my neck.

I’m tangled in the branches.

Something wants me to fall asleep.

Also, as long as we’re talking about new issues of things, the current Harper’s (Richard Rodriguez’s “Twilight of the American Newspaper” cover)  has Diane Williams in the READINGS section and Christine Schutt as the fiction feature. Seems to be another piece of Christine’s new novel. Good times!

Uncategorized / 8 Comments
November 4th, 2009 / 4:45 pm

Salt Hill 23

SH23websiteNEWNew issue of Salt Hill looks fairly amazing, with new words by some big badasses in Robert Lopez, Eugene Marten, Elisa Gabbert, Joseph Salvatore, Daniel Grandbois, and several others. Salt Hill is always one of the best looking and reading journals around. Excerpts on the site, as well as ordering information.

Uncategorized / 4 Comments
November 4th, 2009 / 3:54 pm

Chesterton Redux

We have all read in scientific books, and, indeed, in all romances, the story of the man who has forgotten his name. This man walks about the streets and can see and appreciate everything; only he cannot remember who he is. Well, every man is that man in the story. Every man has forgotten who he is. One may understand the cosmos, but never the ego; the self is more distant than any star. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God; but thou shalt not know thyself. We are all under the same mental calamity; we have all forgotten our names. We have all forgotten what we really are. All that we call common sense and rationality and practicality and positivism only means that for certain dead levels of our life we forget that we have forgotten. All that we call spirit and art and ecstasy only means that for one awful instant we remember that we forget.

Orthodoxy, Chapter Four, “The Ethics of Elfland”

Power Quote / 6 Comments
November 4th, 2009 / 2:42 pm

Glengarry Revisited

A week or two ago I posted about Liam Rector’s use of the Alec Baldwin speech from Glengarry Glen Ross. Here is a later scene in the same movie, a monologue by Al Pacino, which in that context seems to open up the holding in another kind of way–not to subvert it, but to gather out:

Here is a list of people who have disappeared.

Craft Notes / 10 Comments
November 4th, 2009 / 1:56 pm

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!

Wack Bible Stories

wackYou know Jonah – God sent him to Ninevah but he didn’t want to go, so God made a whale eat him. Then Jonah had a change of heart and God made the whale barf him up.

Here’s the rest of the story: in Ninevah, Jonah told everyone that God was going to wipe them out in 40 days. They panicked and dressed themselves in burlap and the king said no one should eat anything. He said no animals should eat anything either, so God spared them. This irked Jonah because he looked like he didn’t know what he was talking about. Surely thinking about the Mediterranean storm, this time he fled into the desert. That night God grew a plant to shade Jonah.  Then God sent a worm to eat the plant.

It’s in the Bible: READ MORE >

Power Quote & Random / 27 Comments
November 4th, 2009 / 12:40 pm

This just in: Collective nouns for supernatural beings. Truly beautiful. What’s your favorite?