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
Elimae archives: the Bauman years
Everyone writing online now knows the presence of Elimae, currently under the magisterial editorialship of Cooper Renner.
Before Cooper there was the founding editor, Deron Bauman, who helmed the site from its launch in 1996 up to when he handed the reins over in 2004.
If you haven’t yet spent some time with Bauman’s archives, now is the time. Pretty much any even important language-driven writer considered massive now is lurking around, with full length stories and texts to be read for free.
Among them: Eugene Marten, Matthew Derby, Brian Evenson, Norman Lock, Brandon Hobson, Michael Ives, Michael Kimball, Stacey Levine, Eugene Lim, Gary Lutz, Peter Markus, David Ohle, Dawn Raffel, Shya Scanlon, Jane Unrue, Diane Williams, Derek White, etc. etc. etc. There is much greatness to be read.
It’s almost like a full free web edition of the Quarterly.
There are also essays on minimalism, Cormac McCarthy, there are in depth reviews of important books.
If there is any model for what an online magazine should strive for in terms of quality, this is it I think.
November 12th, 2008 / 2:10 am
Deal of the Week: Keyhole Magazine
Two news items from Keyhole Magazine:
1) The editors are offering a special discount this week only (November 10-17). You pay them $15 and they sign you up for a yearlong subscription. That’s four issues, if my math is correct. The subscription starts with Issue 6, so it looks like you’ll have to free up another $12 to purchase the nice-looking Handwritten Issue, but that shouldn’t be a problem, right?
2) And in week-old staff-related news, Molly Gaudry, of Willows Wept and Twelve Stories fame, has recently joined the Keyhole masthead as an editor (via Molly’s blog). Handshakes all around.
(sorry if this was already posted before – i have a headache)
Rauan Klassnik’s Ron Silliman Dreams
In support of his excellent book of violent prose poems, Holy Land, Rauan Klassnik has been blogging from the Holy Land. There are lots of violent, strange drawings, weird rants, and recently, a series of dreams he’s had about Ron Silliman. They are quite fun.
Here’s the beginning of the first one:
I’m sitting on a rock with God. Below us in a field of cactus a naked Ron Silliman is scurrying after a rabbit.
Again and again it looks like Ron’s about to nab it but he either mistimes his final leap or the rabbit’s too slick and he ends up in cactus. Usually face-first.
But, a couple of times, tumbling over, it’s ass-first. All credit to Ron, though, he’s diligently and painstakingly removing all the needles (sometimes with the help of a mirror he’s produced from who knows where.)
I look over at God. He’s blank-faced.
Check out some more on the blog, and buy Rauan’s book. It is a quick and mind fucking read.
i’m drunk and it’s stupid how awesome this is
Except I might mean it’s awesome how stupid this is. But no promises.
He’s wrapped up so pretty
And I can unwind
His neat little ribbons,
And then I find –
His tummy comes open
And what do I see?
Special little organs that
Belong to you and me.
I wash them all off
So he can be clean
Then put them back in
And do up his seam.
Then just like a mummy,
I wrap him up tight
Then I cuddle him close
And hold him all night.
Mean Monday: Christy Call Talks Shit About(2) Irish Literature
We have had no real ‘good’ gchats recently, so I must post this (and invite you to comment on the Wells Tower thread – things are trying to happen there). It’s not real shit-talking, I guess.
Does anyone know of good irish literature I can read, aside from the obvious? At Swim-Two-Birds is sitting on my shelf right now. Should I read that?
Okay, our discussion of Irish Literature:
me: dang olwhat aboutoktalk aboutirish literatureno that is dumbChris: irish literature?me: ignora that
Wells Tower
Next March, Wells Tower will publish a book of short stories wuth FSG. So I will talk about Wells Tower now before it is too late.
I really like Wells Tower. I have come across maybe four short stories by Tower in the last five years. Fence. McSweeeney’s. A Public Space. This. His work seems to be leaking out very slowly.
Whenever a new New Yorker comes out, I open it up and check halway down the table of contents to see who wrote the story in the issue. Often it is Alice Munro. Quite often, really.
When that happens, I am just a little let down. Not because I dislike Alice Munro. Alice Munro is fine. Good, in fact. I eventually get around to reading the Alice Munro story, and often enjoy it. And now and again, I really enjoy it.
Sometimes it Yiyun Li, and that’s fine as well. Or Roddy Doyle. Or William Trevor. Or Stuart Dybek.
Lovely, one and all. But still, my heart sinks just a little.
This is why: I like short fiction because I like reading a lot of different people over shorter periods of time. I want more voices.
But, hell. Who am I to tell The New Yorker how to pick their fiction.
Hey! Last issue, Wells Tower. Go read it. Great stuff. (And then find “Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned.” It’s in that Ben Marcus Anchor Anthology.)
Here’s something to admire about the story: he manages the second person (a narrator who refers to “you” instead of “I” or “he”). A lot of people fuck that narrator up because they figure “you” means “you” instead of “you” means “me trying not to talk about me by pretending to talk about you.”
Bright Stupid Confetti – Change
Christopher Higgs astounds me. The content he posts over at Bright Stupid Confetti always gives me something to watch, look at, think about, etc. I am always amazed at the stuff he finds.
On October 28th, he wrote the following:
CHANGE: I’LL BE POSTING LARGER IMAGES & PERHAPS MORE CHANGE WILL COME, MAYBE, PROBABLY, YES, IT WILL, STAY TUNED…THINGS HAVE GOTTEN TOO STATIC…
And now he’s followed through. The site has changed. He’s reorganized the site. Everything is bigger, easier to look at. The emphasis is on the content much more so than before. The new layout forces you to look at one thing at a time, to sort of pause before moving on. I like the new change.
New York Tyrant 5
A sneak peek of the greatest cover of a literary magazine this year, if not this decade, if not…
Wow.
November 10th, 2008 / 2:24 am