March 2009

Word Spaces (8): Reb Livingston gives us a tour

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Reb Livingston recently posted over at her blog a tour of her office where she does a lot of her work on No Tell and other things. I asked her if I could link to that post here, and she said yes.

Anyhow, above is one of the pictures she posted. If you’d like to take the tour and see more, click on over to her blog.

Word Spaces / 9 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 5:02 pm

Sam Pink Interviews Barry Graham for Orange Alert

I love these guys

I love these guys

Author News / 7 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 3:24 pm

Haut or not: A Triad

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Alan Horn

Alan Horn apparently really wanted us to read the spines, as he included a very high-resolution pic accompanying the ‘regular’ pic. A lot a blood and sex if you ask me (and I’m not talking about the Bible): Psychopathia Sexualis: An [unclear] Forensic Study, Locked Room Murders, Philosophy in the Bedroom, A History of Secret Societies etc. I feel like I’m looking at Jack the Ripper’s bookshelf. ‘Summer Bachelors,’ ‘What is that?’ and ‘Kiss your ass goodbye,’ none of which I know anything about, are amazing titles. This is probably the most interesting bookshelf we’ve seen. I’ve been criticized often for relying too much on penis jokes, so let me just say that Neither Man Nor Woman: The Hijras of India sounds like a castrati — I mean, captivating read.

Rating: [fucking] Haut

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Haut or not / 40 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 2:46 pm

Dzanc Creative Writing Seminars

dzanc
New from the always creation-forward Dzanc Books comes the DCWS, a pay-by-the-hour series offering 1 on 1 creative writing tutorials online with a wide range of incredible authors.

Dzanc Books is pleased to announce our newest program: the Dzanc Creative Writing Sessions. The DCWS is an online program that will allow writers to work one-on-one with published authors and editors to shape their short story/novel/poem/etc.

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Web Hype / 14 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 12:49 pm

Maybe the only thing college is good for these days

basketballYes. I speak of March Madness, which started about twenty minutes ago. Take a break from all the hand-wringing, keyboard headbutting and stylistic nose-picking. It’s a yearly dose of last-minute heroics and jingoistic chaos that is otherwise missing from our collective Calvinist nightmare, and I for one plan on ignoring work to ride the Golden Gopher.

And just to make this a book post, check out this recent reissued gem. It’s about the 1979 Portland Trailblazers, and it will gut punch your life. Also: I heard Blake can dunk.

Random / 68 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 12:22 pm

The Daily Moth

Has anyone heard of this awesome thing? The Daily Moth is a mysterious pdf zine that comes via email on an extremely non-daily basis. They don’t have a website. They publish poetry, movie reviews, and graphs–at least so far. Who knows what will happen next? ONLY THE MOTH KNOWS. It’s average length is two pages. It is run by people named Justine and Timothy–one of each (one for each page?) Did I mention it’s mysterious? This dude who works at a bookstore thinks it’s cool.

I HAVE MADE A SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH THE MOTH. IT ALLOWS ME TO POST ALL THREE OF THEIR BACK ISSUES HERE AS DOWNLOADS. THE ARRANGEMENT WENT LIKE THIS: “Can I post the back issues?” “Yes.”

Here’s the first issue.

Here’s the second issue.

And here’s the latest issue.

If you would like to join the mailing list, and have future moths flock to your inbox, you should email thedailymoth@gmail.com.

Uncategorized / 11 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 12:13 pm

MLP News: You heard it here ninth

Uh
I woke up in the middle of the night, took my face off my keyboard bringing to life the monstrous beast that is my computer, named Zoroaster because it will smite you, no shit — and there in my inbox was an email from J.A. Tyler. It said, “I’ve been up all night typing this email to say you can order the next six months of MLP stories.”

So I did.

Between July and December I’m going to receive in the mail the books with the stories I could have read on the Internet. But these I can read on the john. You can too, and you oughta.

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Presses / 15 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 9:25 am

de-fête

[a guest post by our erstwhile friend & former colleague, Soffi Stiassni]


The New Yorker’s legacy of cartoon and caricature is not limited to anecdotal fodder about the Berkshires. In the March 9th Life and Letters feature on David Foster Wallace the eulogized writer is remembered with words by D. T. Max, and an eloquent portrait by Philip Burke. This frontal facing portrait is a caricature of photographer Nancy Crampton’s iconic shot of Wallace, featured in her book, “Writers: Photographs.” The book is a compilation of portraits and accompanying text from a wide array of novelists, poets, and people of the pen, from Lorrie Moore to Chinua Achebe. Sitters are pictured with pets (George Plimpton with cat and Cheever with dog), with cigarette (WH Auden and Anne Sexton), in the country and about town,  and in several cases, seated before a rather dour gray studio backdrop, reminiscent of a high school yearbook photos. Wallace is one of the writers photographed against this unceremonious backdrop; he sits, arms crossed,  backwards in the wooden chair, and dons a cut off Pomona College sweatshirt and the scratchy  beginnings of a beard. He is sans infamous bandanna, which Burke chose to include in his rendering. To  sit for a yearbook photo, particularly a senior portrait, can be the worry of an entire August. Though these photos often make their way to living room mantels and family mailers, they are very much the most public image one presents to themselves. Quite different than a candid snapshot which might accidentally reveal latent character, the formal posed portrait is a presentation deliberately selected by the sitter for the benefit of the viewer.

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Author Spotlight / 12 Comments
March 19th, 2009 / 8:50 am

WHAT IS THE MEANING OF SELLING-OUT

what is your definition of selling out in the context of writing?

also: watch this.

it’s really funny.

Random / 278 Comments
March 18th, 2009 / 6:10 pm

Oh Yeah, Sweet, Sure: A New HTMLGIANT Series of New Online Magazines Posted About So Chelsea Martin Doesn’t Have To (Featuring Pindeldyboz)

I told Chelsea that she didn’t have to worry about posting new issues of online magazines because tennis bullhorns like me did that and she was the Tom Bombadil of HTMLGIANT.

In other words, there’s a new issue of Pindeldyboz out which you should read. Thoughts about Pindeldyboz’s aesthetic I wrote behind this here clicky-link, so I’m just going to list the stories and gently suggest you read them all, gentle as a tazer made of marshmallows:

Pink Cowboy Boots — D. Elliot Wedge
How to Write About a Man Who Is Not Your Lover — Thomas Kearnes
Two by Two — Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich
Discharge Summary: Inez Ramos (Patient ID 080760) — Jennine Capó Crucet
Floor Work — Kat Gonso
Man’s Shadow — Corey Mesler

Web Hype / 4 Comments
March 18th, 2009 / 4:00 pm