Derek White’s Marsupial Art Giveaway

Derek White is giving away a piece of the art from his novel Marsupial, on the occasion of its one year anniversary in print.

If you haven’t seen Derek’s art, shit, it’s pretty wild and beautiful and amalgamatic:

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Author Spotlight / 4 Comments
June 14th, 2009 / 3:46 pm

I think I’ll read Suicide Squeeze by Victor Gischler this week. I loved The Pistol Poets. Anthony Neil Smith, of, among other things, Plots with Guns fame, is guest blogging over at Gischler’s site.  Someday, I ‘ll write a longer post on Smith and the fantastic Plots with Guns ( featuring great work by Kyle Minor, Barry Graham, Pinckney Benedict and others in the past years), but check out all the links for now.

June issue of Elimae is now live with many wonderful words, as well as a particularly interesting interview of Unsaid’s David McLendon by Michael Kimball.

American Boy: A Profile of Steven Prince is a 1978 documentary directed by Martin Scorsese.  Steven is a fascinating guy and top-notch raconteur.  The whole documentary can be watched on YouTube. A sequel, American Prince, has been made & released exclusively via torrent form, and can be downloaded here.

Bay Area Reading Tour: A Report from Pirate Cat Radio

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAM45fYGgtE

[Photo Essay after the break.]

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Author Spotlight / 50 Comments
June 13th, 2009 / 3:16 pm

Excerpt from “Footnote to Howl” by Allen Ginsberg

The frequent commenter and all around nice man Ryan W. Bradley once told me that his mother gave him Howl to read when he was ten. This made me go buy Howl from the great City Light Books. James Blake will play Andy Murray in the final of Queens, the lead up event to Wimbledon. I just finished reading an old One Story story ( I subscribed at one time, I no longer do, but those little stories are scattered around my house) called “Selling the Apartment” by Danit Brown. It was written in the second person. Wells Tower wrote in the second person once and I liked that story, but it was really short. READ MORE >

Excerpts / 38 Comments
June 13th, 2009 / 3:05 pm

The Red Cavalry Riding

malevich_cavalry

Just a quick hello from St. Petersburg. The trip has gone well so far. We’ve seen quite a lot of ‘stuff.’ I’m a bit overwhelmed now. I’ll try to put together some posts about some of my favorites when I get back this coming Monday. For now, I’ll leave you with the above painting titled ‘The Red Cavalry Riding’ by Kazimir Malevich. It’s hanging in the State Russian Museum and I liked staring at it very much.

Random / 13 Comments
June 13th, 2009 / 10:53 am

Less time consuming than Moby-Dick or War and Peace. More colorful than Ocho Cinco.

greatauthorsI’m currently sitting on my parents couch in an undisclosed location in South Jersey. It’s 7am on Saturday, and I’m awake because my folks are both teachers and wake up, even on their days off and summer vacations, at painfully early hours. Since, when I come to their house, I opt to sleep on the couch in front of their flat screen TV and soak in the cable I don’t have in New York, they usually wake me up too. It’s worth it, I think, although I’m still a bit groggy. Now I don’t have to move much in order to turn on cartoons or Rocky IV, which I think I saw On Demand. But this place of rest also gives me a chance to continue reading a fun series from Harper Perennial called Fifty Two Stories, where those guys pair short works from great authors (Tolstoy, Cather, Melville, etc) with a piece from a lesser known contemporary acolyte of the form (our beloved Dennis Cooper has a story paired with Stephen Crane). I’m through Tolstoy and most of the Dostoyevsky, and I have to say that it’s a nice way to run through some iconic authors, most known to casual readers as writers of epically longer works, that I probably wouldn’t get around to any time soon. Hell, it’s worth $10 cover price just to see Fyodor’s dour, existentially pockmarked visage on the cover. Guy looks seriously bummed out about life. Someone get him a Dippin’ Dots.

Uncategorized / 21 Comments
June 13th, 2009 / 7:33 am

Emily Frey’s Airport

airport

I’ve been meaning to link to Emily Frey’s impressive book of short poems Airport for a little while. I’ve read it three or four times, and have enjoyed it.

I think, though, it is fair to say that I remain intimidated by poetry, as I am merely a prose writer who wishes he had the facility to express himself poetically with the power that a rare few do.

When I get intimidated, I figure it’s best to just say what I like about a piece of work and let the rest discover it without the subtracting influence of my numb-fingered, foggy-brained keyboard tappings on the it. Here goes. READ MORE >

Uncategorized / 16 Comments
June 12th, 2009 / 11:06 pm

I AM WATCHING FAMILY FEUD AND FANTASIZING ABOUT ONE OF THE CONTESTANTS AND I REMEMBERED SOMETHING

i asked chris higgs this question in an interview coming up. but i wanted to ask others too. i have heard many times, something along the lines of, “a man can’t write a woman, a white can’t write a black, a non-disabled can’t write a disabled, etc.” is this true? i am not sure how i feel about this. it seems pretty pervasive though. does this mean that it would be wrong for me to write about someone with a future? or who likes the grateful dead?

Uncategorized / 129 Comments
June 12th, 2009 / 3:54 pm