November 2010

A moment of thanks and praise

In the spirit of today, what writers, editors, journals, and presses are you most thankful for? Preferably living, but dead works too.

Random / 29 Comments
November 25th, 2010 / 9:50 am

Author Spotlight / 7 Comments
November 24th, 2010 / 6:29 pm

30 Minutes

How long it will take to print your book.

How long it will take to turn your book into toilet paper.

Random / 3 Comments
November 24th, 2010 / 3:31 pm

Get Tethered

Black Ocean & Octopus are offering some vicious subscriptions deals to float your boat, and theirs.

from Black Ocean

The 2011 Subscription – $40 (ships 2/2011)

Includes one copy of every title we will release in 2011 plus a free book.
Almost a 20% savings! And as always, free shipping!

Destroyer of Man by Dominic Owen Mallary

Ordinary Sun by Matthew Henriksen

The Girl Without Arms by Brandon Shimoda

Handsome Vol. 3

READ MORE >

Random / Comments Off on Get Tethered
November 24th, 2010 / 1:26 pm

Term 12

Catch 22 caught on. So did blog. Jabberwocky, kids, jabber-fuckin-wocky. Writers make words. Go right ahead:

1.      Term for stealing a simile.

2.      Term for writing drunk.

3.      Term for moment you know you’ve lost the audience at a reading.

4.      Term for author groupie.

5.      Term for moment you know you will not finish reading the book in your hand.

6.      Term for guilt felt for playing video games when you should be writing.

7.      Term for sentence you wish you wrote.

8.      Term for disappointment of meeting the writer in person after glowing his/her words.

9.      Term for hatred of flash fiction.

10.   Term for writer who gets drunk and discusses own books.

11.   Term for person at reading who laughs loudly at things not funny.

12.   Term for the feeling you get when meeting someone in person you only knew online.

Random / 15 Comments
November 24th, 2010 / 12:31 pm

“When I wake up, my mental illness is in the microwave.”

The traffic is bad today. Stay home and paint your mustache dusk, lace mustard with cocaine, crash your plane on a beach, fly a goat kite, fight a snow goose, make yourself independent of daylight, or let other people enact these things for your brain eyes by reading the newly-released NOÖ [12]. You can also find out what some people think about books from Dorothea Lasky, Adam Gallari, Alissa Nutting, Ben Mirov, and more. You can look at ghostly illustrations from Christy Call. You can end with skirt steak. You can go home again, Dorothy. Just don’t drive.

Web Hype / Comments Off on “When I wake up, my mental illness is in the microwave.”
November 24th, 2010 / 12:12 pm

MARWENCOL: A GREAT FILM ABOUT STORYTELLING

a marriage in Marwencol

The big art documentary of 2010 is Banksy’s Exit Through the Gift Shop, a great film which my best friend told me he found profoundly reassuring and inspiring on a creative level.  If this Mr. Brainwash guy, who overcomes apparent lack of actual artistic talent, can succeed through sheer force of will, then anyone can. I loved it too, but I found it profoundly depressing to watch the man mass-producing his artworks and corralling hype like a magician.

Last night, however, I saw Jeff Malmberg’s Marwencol, an extraordinary documentary about a man named Mark Hogancamp.  This film was the one that affected and inspired me.  It reminded me what a rich and complex experience it is to create a world.

Hogancamp is a man whose memory and motor skills were destroyed by a brutal assault that left him in a coma.  Afterward, kicked out of the hospital and denied sufficient physical therapy because he had no insurance, he continued his therapy on his own, regaining his dexterity by building models.  He built an entire WWII-era Belgian town called Marwencol in his backyard, and populated it with dolls who represent people in his life–people with whom he shared history he could no longer remember, so he created a new history–a lurid, sexy, illustrative history that indulges his fantasies.

Those fantasies include finding love (he was married once, before the attack, but he can’t remember anything about it, and he can’t remember the experience of sex at all, so he was psychologically a virgin when he emerged from his coma) and taking brutal revenge on the men who attacked him.  The stories he tells with the Marwencol characters channel those fantasies in fascinating ways that sometimes affect his relationships with people in the real world.  Have you ever written something based on a friend, had it published, then had the awkward experience of explaining this to that friend?  Parts of Marwencol may seem familiar.

Hogancamp was profoundly damaged by his experience, and if you met him without knowing anything about his past or about the complexity and detail of the world he created–that is, if he just started introducing you to his dolls–you’d think he was unhinged.  But I challenge anyone who’s ever experienced creative euphoria–flow–while constructing a narrative to watch Marwencol and not recognize the immersive quality of his invented world and the emotional investment he makes in it.  It is a reminder of how transformative, how elevating, the process of creation can be, and how it can have the vertiginous effect of making your life feel like it’s worth more than it was the day before.  (Vertiginous because on unproductive days, you feel the decline in value, too.)

I’d say more but the film is best appreciated without too much preamble, and the point of posting this is not to analyze it but to say go see it, if at all possible.   Marwencol is maybe the best film I’ve ever seen about the reasons for making art.

Film / 8 Comments
November 24th, 2010 / 11:42 am

Interview with E.E. Cummings

READ MORE >

Author Spotlight / 10 Comments
November 24th, 2010 / 11:15 am

Extra congratulations to Christopher Kennedy (my Tyrant 7 neighbor) and Maggie Nelson (author of the incredible Bluets) for winning a $25k NEA grant for poetry. Full list here.

Third Annual Indie Lit Secret Santa Gift Exchange

From now until December 14th, you can sign up to participate in our annual Indie Lit Secret Santa Gift Exchange. We are again using Elfster this year to handle the exchange, so if you’d like to sign up, head over to our gift exchange page and join.

When you click on the link, it will take you to the exchange page with an RSVP field. Add comments if you want, click ‘Yes’ in the left top corner of the field, and then click the green RSVP button. If you haven’t joined Elfster before, then you will be prompted to join.

If you’re unfamiliar with the exchange, it’s pretty simple. We’d like everyone to exchange gifts related to indie lit presses and publications. We’re thinking that $20 is a solid gift value. We’ll draw names the 15th, the day after the exchange closes, and then participants will have about a week and a half to buy and ship out their gifts.

If you have any questions about the exchange, let me know. Email me, comment here or at the Elfster page, and we’ll figure it out.

Random / 18 Comments
November 23rd, 2010 / 3:51 pm