Saturday, December 23, 2017

CFS: "Bearing Arms: Responding to Guns in American Culture"

The Editors at Broadsided Press write:

Broadsided

We have, according to the constitution, the right “to keep and bear arms” in the United States. But how, in the wake of Las Vegas, Pulse, Sandy Hook, Trayvon Martin, and other abuses of firearms—by citizens and in some cases by those trained to protect and serve—do we bear that right? How do we bear it?

At Broadsided, we believe that art and literature belong in our daily lives. They inspire and demonstrate the vitality and depth of our connection with the world. We had to speak out—we had to make a space for you to speak out—on this issue as part of our ongoing "Broadsided Responds" feature.

We put out a call to visual artists asking for submissions. Work came from all over the country, in all media. Powerful, provocative, dynamic work. Guest Arts Editor Stacy Isenbarger selected six pieces that offer a range of attitudes, aesthetics, and opportunities. Of her decision, Stacy has this to say:

How do we confront that of which we already hold tightly? Collectively, these chosen works offer a dimensional conversation of this weighted issue. Some may suggest a boundary of societal judgement, but they don’t necessarily reveal what side they are one. Instead these pieces offer evolving space. They welcome an opportunity for viewers to discuss how we bear that which touches our lives.

We now ask you to respond with words to six works of visual art by Sandra Cohen, Jonathan Frey, David Kamm, Osceola Refetoff, Dixie Salazar, and Kristen Woodward.

See full images and guidelines here.

When you submit your writing, be sure to be clear as to which piece you are responding.

DEADLINE: December 27, 2017.

 



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Tuesday, November 14, 2017

SLOW DOWN!!!

From the Chronicle of Higher Education, Lindsay Waters, the executive editor for the humanities at Harvard University Press, is calling for a “revolution in reading” by asking people at all levels to read slowly for the pleasure of the words, as opposed to reading quickly to synthesize the information. This seems like a brilliant idea. … Continue reading SLOW DOWN!!!

Friday, November 10, 2017

New Lit on the Block :: The Indianopolis Review

the indianapolis review fall2017The Indianapolis Review is a new online quarterly of poetry and visual art supporting the growth of new voices in the literary scene in Indianapolis and beyond. Founder and Editor in Chief Natalie Solmer and Associate Editor Rachel Sahaidachny started the publication “to give back to the poetry and art world by curating a platform to showcase poets and artists. We desire to create connections among writers and artists in our community and around the globe. In our own publishing experiences, we've seen there is always a need for venues to publish new work.”

the indianapolis review fall2017The Indianapolis Review is a new online quarterly of poetry and visual art supporting the growth of new voices in the literary scene in Indianapolis and beyond. Founder and Editor in Chief Natalie Solmer and Associate Editor Rachel Sahaidachny started the publication “to give back to the poetry and art world by curating a platform to showcase poets and artists. We desire to create connections among writers and artists in our community and around the globe. In our own publishing experiences, we've seen there is always a need for venues to publish new work.”

Each issue will include a featured poet, which spotlights an Indiana poet with a short interview and a review of some of their recent poems, in addition to visual art and poetry of all styles. The editors seek a wide array of aesthetics to showcase for their readers: “We don't want you to be able to ‘expect’ a certain style; we like surprise and hope to delight the reader with a variety of voices.”

Some of those voices from the first two issues include Scott Chalupa, Curtis Crisler, Samantha Fain, Jennifer Givhan, George Kalamaras, Maya Maldonado, Dheepa Maturi, stephanie roberts, Eli Sahm, Joanna Valente, Brendan Walsh, and featured poets Adrian Matejka and Mitchell L. H. Douglas.

Both coming from strong literary and publishing backgrounds, Solmer earned her MFA in Creative Writing from Butler University and teaches English at IUPUI and Ivy Tech Community College as well as Indiana Writers Center, a non-profit dedicated to fostering a vibrant writing community in Indiana. Sahaidachny is an award-winning poet and co-editor of Not Like the Rest of Us: An Anthology of Contemporary Indiana Writers . She earned her MFA in Creative Writing from Butler University and works as programs manager and teaches for the Indiana Writers Center.

“The goal for The Indianapolis Review ,” the editors say, “is to continue to support the poets we publish, by nominating for Pushcart for Best of the Net. We hope to publish eighty poets and twenty artists through the year (20 poets per issue, and five artists).”

Writers who submit to The Indianapolis Review  can be assured that every submission is read by the publication’s current masthead, who then discuss each piece before making final selections. Writers are invited to submit once during each reading/publication period via e-mail.


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Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Glimmer Train 2017 July/August Very Short Fiction Award Winners

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their July/August Very Short Fiction Award. This competition is held twice a year and is open to all writers for stories with a word count under 3000. The next Very Short Fiction competition will take place in March. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.

chase burke1st place goes to Chase Burke of Tuscaloosa, AL [pictured], who wins $2000 for “That’s That.” His story will be published in Issue 101 of Glimmer Train Stories. This will be his first major print publication.

2nd place goes to Brian Yansky of Austin, TX, for “The Curse.” His story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing his prize from $500 to $700.

3rd place goes to Ajit Dhillon of Singapore, for “Waiting.” His story will also be published in an upcoming issue of Glimmer Train Stories, increasing his prize from $300 to $700.

A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here.



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Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Best ‘I Voted’ sticker of 2017

Advertisements Filed under: Cool Things, News Tagged: democracy, election, I voted, New York, politics, suffrage, votes, voting

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Brevity Celebrates 20 Years!

Dinty W. Moore"Twenty years ago," writes Brevity Editor Dinty W. Moore, "I had an idea for a magazine that combined the swift impact of flash fiction with the true storytelling of memoir, and Brevity was born. To be honest, I expected it to last a year."

Instead, Brevity has aged into the most well-known publication of its kind, with a rich history of publishing new authors who have become some of the most respected in the genre, and guiding writers as they learn and practice their craft.

In celebration, Brevity reached out to authors who have appeared multiple times in Brevity over the years and commissioned their submissions for an anniversary issue. Authors includes Lee Martin, Diane Seuss, Brenda Miller, Sue William Silverman, Rebecca McClanahan, and Ira Sukrungruang. Moore notes that readers "may detect a common theme (or at least a common word)" among the works.

Read Brevity: A Journal of Concise Literary Nonfiction as well as book reviews and craft essays online here.



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Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Photo: An early all-girls basketball game in the Philippines

  Basketball is a huge sport in the Philippines. In trying to figure out how that happened, I came across this image in the archives University of Michigan Library Digital Collections, which includes lots of images from the early interactions of the US in the Philippines. I was particularly curious to know if girls got … Continue reading Photo: An early all-girls basketball game in the Philippines

Monday, October 30, 2017

Twitter names as Halloween costumes

One of the things I’ve come to enjoy about Twitter is the ease with which people can change their names, especially around Halloween. It’s like an easy avatar costume. For example, here’s mine: And here are some others I like: What are some of yours? Advertisements Filed under: Reading Tagged: avatars, Halloween, twitter, twitter costumes, … Continue reading Twitter names as Halloween costumes

Glimmer Train 2017 July/August Fiction Open Winners

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their July/August Fiction Open competition. This competition is held twice a year and is open to all writers. Stories generally range from 3000-6000 words, though up to 20,000 is fine. The next Fiction Open will take place in March. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.

AriannaReichePhCred LauraGallantFirst place: Arianna Reiche, of London, England, wins $3000 for “Archive Warden." Her story will be published in Issue 101 of Glimmer Train Stories. [Photo Credit: Laura Gallant.]

Second place: Randolph Thomas, of Baton Rouge, LA, wins $1000 for “Heir Apparent.” His story will also be published in an upcoming issue.

Third place: Sharon Solwitz, of Chicago, IL, wins $600 for “We Enter History.”

A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here.

Deadline soon approaching! Short Story Award for New Writers: October 31
This competition is held quarterly and is open to all writers whose fiction has not appeared in a print publication with a circulation over 5000. No theme restrictions. Most submissions to this category run 1000-5000 words, but can go up to 12,000. First place prize wins $2500 and publication in Glimmer Train Stories. Second/third: $500/$300 and consideration for publication. Click here for complete guidelines.



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Monday, October 23, 2017

Would you vote for either of these guys?

In the newspaper business, we avoided using people’s names in a humorous way. But with these names popping up for local elections, I can’t help but wonder if these names are truth in advertisements.  Advertisements Filed under: Cool Things Tagged: albany, crummy, culture, lol, political signs, politics, snide

Thursday, October 19, 2017

#tbt: M.C. Escher done up in Lego

   M.C. Escher done up in Lego. inothernews: Re-posting this from over the weekend: M.C. Escher done up in Lego. (Via the Telegraph) (Source: http://ift.tt/2l11w8J) Advertisements Filed under: Art Tagged: Art, lego, m.c. escher

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Friday, October 13, 2017

Happy Friday the 13th!

Advertisements Filed under: Photography Tagged: Friday the 13th, lol, Photography, photos, unicorn

Thursday, October 12, 2017

#tbt: ‘OMG’ at ‘LOL’ at Albany Airport Gallery

Originally posted Oct 12, 2011: Art worth a look. “OMG,” Brian Kane, 2011, Red vinyl, metal, electronics, is on exhibit at the Albany Airport Gallery’s “LOL” show, from Oct. 1, 2011, to March 25, 2012. (Photo Courtesy Albany Airport Gallery) Advertisements Filed under: Art Tagged: albany airport gallery, Art, brian kane, lol, omg, sharon bates

Thursday, October 5, 2017

#TBT: Capital District Sings, 2011

  Originally posted October 10, 2011: Capital District Sings at timesunion: Capital District Sings brought together a bunch of choruses on Sunday afternoon at Proctors in Schenectady. Albany Pro Musica hosted the event that also featured Albany Gay Men’s Chorus, Chinese Community Center Chorus, Ne’imah Jewish Community Chorus, Electric City Chorus, Capital District Youth Chorale, Mendelssohn Club … Continue reading #TBT: Capital District Sings, 2011

Monday, September 25, 2017

Mike Jarboe, in memoriam; or, snapshots of a newspaperman

I am still in disbelief that Mike Jarboe is gone. I am so glad to have read so many stories about him and tributes to him, and that his family knows how many people he has touched and how deeply. Everyone who’s ever met Mike Jarboe has a Mike Jarboe story. Here are some of … Continue reading Mike Jarboe, in memoriam; or, snapshots of a newspaperman

We Gon' Be Alright: Notes on Race and Resegregation


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The Silkworm (Cormoran Strike, #2)


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Friday, September 22, 2017

New Lit on the Block :: Virga

virga coverVirga is the name for the cloud streaks that stream hazily down from the sky, snow or rain precipitation that evaporates before having a chance to reach the ground. Virga can often fool radar into recording precipitation while the ground remains dry. Perhaps in this same way, poetic and hybrid forms can be as elusive as nature herself, and why Virga is an appropriate name for new online literary biannual dedicated to poetry and hybrid writing.
virga coverVirga is the name for the cloud streaks that stream hazily down from the sky, snow or rain precipitation that evaporates before having a chance to reach the ground. Virga can often fool radar into recording precipitation while the ground remains dry. Perhaps in this same way, poetic and hybrid forms can be as elusive as nature herself, and why Virga is an appropriate name for new online literary biannual dedicated to poetry and hybrid writing.

“Virga – the word sort of romanced me when I heard it,” says Founding Editor-in-Chief, Laura Page. “I have always loved watching that cloud-spill, but had not previously known there was a name for it. I like the idea of a little sky falling to earth, and I like to think that human language can do that too — pull some heaven down to where we live and work and love.”

Page is a graduate of Southern Oregon University, where she studied English Literature and Writing and was the recipient of her program’s annual award for non-fiction writing. Her stories and poems have appeared in numerous publications, and her forthcoming chapbook, epithalamium  won Sundress Publications’ 2017 chapbook prize. Assistant Editor Dillon Wiengart is a published poet and a musician. He was a two-year resident at Timeless Instruments in Saskatchewan, where he studied luthiery: the craft of making stringed instruments.

Page says she started Virga  because she wanted to be a more involved literary citizen, and because she’s “always seeking poetry that shows me new ways to be human. I wanted to curate work that defines our humanity in sensitive and empathic, but also bold and innovative ways.”

Available to read open access online as well as on Kindle, Virga  features around twenty contributors per issue with poems and hybrid pieces of any length, with the unifying feature that they are “elegantly crafted and lean toward the lyrical.” Page explains, “We seldom publish formal or metered pieces.” Twice a year, summer and winter, readers can also enjoy a featured book review or interview with a poet. The inaugural issue, in addition to an interview with Sarah Nichols, features writing by Melanie Janisse Barlow, Bill Gholson, Lindsay Illich, Anonymous, C. Kubasta, Danny Ross, Gia Grillo, Hannah Kimbal, Jennifer Atkinson, Kevin Quitt, LeighAnna Schesser, Mark Jackley, Rebecca Hart Olander, Ryan Tahmaseb, Shaindel Beers, and Tammy Bendetti.

For writers interested in submitting, Virga  reads year-round for issues released in May and October. The website includes specific deadlines for each issue’s consideration, and the publication accepts submissions via Submittable.


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Friday, September 15, 2017

New Lit on the Block :: Embark

embark coverTeaching a course in The Novel, I took my students to the fiction section of the library and had them pull down books at random and simply read the first several pages, sometimes just the first sentence. I wanted them to sample as many “beginnings” as they could, then comment on the exercise. Some said they liked it as a way to consider a lot of books and see which one might grab their interest; overwhelmingly, they all wanted to go back and keep reading at least one or more of what they had sampled. Now, imagine this experience of sampling first chapters at your fingertips, on the computer, in one publication, and you will have imagined Embark.
embark coverTeaching a course in The Novel, I took my students to the fiction section of the library and had them pull down books at random and simply read the first several pages, sometimes just the first sentence. I wanted them to sample as many “beginnings” as they could, then comment on the exercise. Some said they liked it as a way to consider a lot of books and see which one might grab their interest; overwhelmingly, they all wanted to go back and keep reading at least one or more of what they had sampled. Now, imagine this experience of sampling first chapters at your fingertips, on the computer, in one publication, and you will have imagined Embark.

Embark  is an open access online quarterly designed specifically for novelists. Founding Editor Ursula DeYoung explains, “It features the openings of unpublished novels, through which people embark on their novel-reading experiences (hence the name!).” Every issue features ten novel openings (the first 2,500-4,000 words of the book), and each opening is accompanied by a brief Author's Statement (250-500 words).

Before starting Embark, DeYoung worked as a novelist and editor in Cambridge, MA. Her first novel, Shorecliff, was published in 2013 by Little, Brown, and she is currently in the process of selling her second novel. DeYoung’s inspiration for founding Embark  came partly from her work as a fiction-writing teacher at the GrubStreet Writing Center in Boston. “I've been very impressed by the enthusiasm and talent of my students,” she says, “and I feel that their work, and the work of other striving novelists, deserves promotion.

"I've also found very few ways for novelists to publicize their works-in-progress. While short-story writers can choose from a plethora of literary journals when seeking publication, novelists often feel constrained to wait until an entire project is finished and sold to a publisher before receiving any feedback or recognition from the reading public. Yet the openings of novels need especially careful polishing, given that the first pages must hook the reader and set the stage for the entire book. For this reason, I hope that the process of refining a submission to Embark  is in itself helpful for writers, and that those writers who are chosen as contributors will both feel encouraged in their projects and receive deserved notice for their novels' beginnings.”

For readers, DeYoung says Embark 's novel beginnings will offer “fascinating and manageable reading experiences that may be tantalizing (they should be, if they are well-crafted!) but are also satisfying in themselves.” As the editor, DeYoung finds it heartening and inspiring to know that there are so many working novelists out there, producing such interesting work. For writers, her hope is that eventually Embark 's contributors will find agents and publishers – perhaps in part because of their inclusion in Embark 's issues! “In any case,” she says, “I am very pleased to offer a forum in which novelists can publish and promote the beginnings of their works-in-progress.” And as readers, we are fortunate to share in this!

The first issue of Embark  includes novel beginnings by Elizabeth Bell, Sean Griffith, Judith Haran, Derek Heckman, Margo Orlando Littell, Bill Mesce, Jeffrey Perso, Jo-Anne Rosen, Marian Szczepanski, and Shannon Connor Winward. Readers will enjoy a broad range of genres, DeYoung writes in the Editor's Introduction, "from science fiction to surrealism, from the story of a would-be saint to a suspenseful police thriller. The characters are similarly wide-ranging: mothers, teachers, doctors, robbers, an officer on a spaceship, a teenage composer. What unites all ten openings is their power to engage the reader and deliver the unexpected."

For writers, quarterly deadlines are posted on the publication’s website. Submissions are accepted via e-mail with a response time of two-three months. Embark  welcomes submissions from working novelists everywhere!


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Thursday, September 14, 2017

A modest proposal for a future word that means ‘self-driving vehicle’

  One thing I often say to visitors to the contemporary museum where I work is that when they look at something they don’t quite understand their brains will try to make meaning out of the new or strange thing by equating it to things they already know. That is, the experience of something new … Continue reading A modest proposal for a future word that means ‘self-driving vehicle’

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

The portable video game truck

We heard the screams from down the block during our evening walk. They could’ve been coming out of any of the homes in the neighborhood, sounds muffled with windows and doors closed up from the heat. Then we turned a corner and saw this truck. Maybe it was a birthday party inside. Kids were screaming. … Continue reading The portable video game truck

Friday, September 8, 2017

New Lit on the Block :: Sky Island Journal

sky island journalBorn in the southern reaches of Arizona and New Mexico, Sky Island Journal is a new, open access online quarterly of poetry, flash fiction, and brief creative nonfiction. Just like its unique geographical namesake, Sky Island Journal  promises, “as a writer, no matter who you are, where you're from, or what you write about – if you’ve ever felt a connection to landscapes, art, or people, your writing might very well find a home with us. As a reader, you're in for a real treat.”
sky island journalBorn in the southern reaches of Arizona and New Mexico, Sky Island Journal is a new, open access online quarterly of poetry, flash fiction, and brief creative nonfiction. Just like its unique geographical namesake, Sky Island Journal  promises, “as a writer, no matter who you are, where you're from, or what you write about – if you’ve ever felt a connection to landscapes, art, or people, your writing might very well find a home with us. As a reader, you're in for a real treat.”

Founders and Co-Editors-In-Chief Jason Splichal and Jeff Sommerfeld explain the publication's name: “Sky islands are small, isolated mountains that rise up dramatically—like bright battleships—from the flat sea of desert that surrounds them. Physically separated from other mountain ranges, and much higher in elevation than the surrounding desert, sky islands are refugia for exotic species found nowhere else, animals that only migrate vertically, and relict species that have found themselves stranded by a continually warming climate.

“Known for their ecological diversity, many sky islands are places where species from radically different biomes meet and mingle. Conversely, some promote extreme specialization in the species isolated there. Sky islands loom large in human culture as well. They are the homelands of the Apache, the Akimel O'odham (Pima), and the Tohono O’odham (Papago). At one time, sky islands formed the beating, northern heart of Old Mexico. After the Gadsden Purchase of 1854, they became the collective muse of raiders and ranchers, writers and warriors, painters and potters — the lawful and the lawless, the indigenous and the immigrant, alike.”

Splichal, author of six books of poetry—most recently Flux  (2012) and Katsura  (2015) – divides his time between his ranch in Luna County, New Mexico (the birthplace of Sky Island Journal ) and his home in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, where he teaches English. Sommerfeld, a former high school English teacher born and raised in Wisconsin, now resides in Tucson, Arizona, and comes with a diverse professional writing background. He developed successful litigation strategies for Fortune 500 clients, secured millions in grant funding for nonprofit organizations, such as the Boys and Girls Clubs of Chicago, and recently held the role of Lead Writer for the daily fantasy sports website, ReDraft Hero.

The desire to start a literary magazine, Jeff and Jason explain, comes from “our singular mission to provide readers with a powerful, focused, advertising-free literary experience that transports them: one that challenges them intellectually and moves them emotionally.” Unique to their selection process, the editors do not allow submitters to include cover letters or bios with their submissions. The editors explain, “This creates a refreshing challenge for well-established professionals who have been favored by literary journals in the past because of their credentials, while simultaneously encouraging emerging voices — writers, young and old, who would normally be rejected out-of-hand by many literary journals because of their lack of pedigree.” The writing must stand on its own merits alone.

As a result, readers can expect to be “transported emotionally and challenged intellectually by well-established authors and emerging voices, published side-by-side, on a clean, powerful, well-curated platform.” Some voices readers can find in the inaugural issue include Megan Pokrass (London, England), Carol L. Deering (Wyoming, USA), and B.J. Hollars (Wisconsin, USA).

Sky Island Journal  accepts submissions year-round via Submittable, and writers can submit as often as they like. SIJ  is currently reading for their second issue (Fall 2017). The average response time is seven days. “Our contributors are a top priority,” say the editors. “We consider it a privilege to experience the world of words inside every submission, and, as a result, every submission undergoes several deep cycles of reading and real-time discussion. Every submission — regardless of whether we accept or decline it — receives a prompt, respectful, and individualized response from our team that details what we appreciated and why.”

In the future, Sky Island Journal  editors hope to continue growing their readership domestically and internationally by continuing to provide a dynamic platform for authors to have their literary art displayed. “We believe our journey along the literary terrain of Sky Island Journal has just begun.”


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Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Glimmer Train May/June Short Story Award for New Writers

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their May/June Short Story Award for New Writers. This competition is held three times a year and is open to all writers whose fiction has not appeared in a print publication with a circulation greater than 5000. The next Short Story Award competition will start on September 1: Short Story Award for New Writers. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.

DanMurphy1st place goes to Dan Murphy [pictured] of Brooklyn, NY, who wins $2500 for “In Miniature.” His story will be published in Issue 101 of Glimmer Train Stories. This will be his first fiction publication.

2nd place goes to David Ye of Irvine, CA, who wins $500 for “Blue Water.”

3rd place goes to Jen Wellington of Buffalo, NY, who wins $300 for “Red Stick.”

A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here.

Deadlines soon approaching:

Fiction Open: August 31 (grace period extends through September 10)
Glimmer Train hosts this competition twice a year, and first place has just been increased to $3000 plus publication in the journal, and 10 copies of that issue. Second/third: $1000/$600 and consideration for publication. This category has been won by both beginning and veteran writers - all are welcome! There are no theme restrictions. Word count generally ranges from 3000 – 6000, though up to 20,000 is fine. Stories may have previously appeared online but not in print. Click here for complete guidelines.

Very Short Fiction Award: August 31 (grace period extends through September 10)
This competition is also held twice a year, with first place winning $2000 plus publication in the journal, and 10 copies of that issue. Second/third: $500/$300 and consideration for publication. It’s open to all writers, with no theme restrictions, and the word count must not exceed 3000. Stories may have previously appeared online but not in print. Click here for complete guidelines.


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Friday, September 1, 2017

New Lit on the Block :: Breathe Free Press

breathe free press coverEmma Lazarus’ sonnet “The New Colossus” has gained new popular attention of late, thanks in part to White House senior policy adviser Stephen Miller’s comments dismissing the value of its message to immigrants. But, before Miller, this poem engraved on The Statue of Liberty was the inspiration for Breathe Free Press, a magazine the Editor Deborah Di Bari says was “founded in great part to resist the Trump administration’s oppressive policies.”
breathe free press coverEmma Lazarus’ sonnet “The New Colossus” has gained new popular attention of late, thanks in part to White House senior policy adviser Stephen Miller’s comments dismissing the value of its message to immigrants. But, before Miller, this poem engraved on The Statue of Liberty was the inspiration for Breathe Free Press, a magazine the Editor Deborah Di Bari says was “founded in great part to resist the Trump administration’s oppressive policies.”

Published three times per year online, Breathe Free Press is a literary magazine of resistance and awareness dedicated to essayism, narrative; cross-genre; flash; experimental; critical; travel and (especially) lyric essays. Di Bari’s own background reflects her eclectic influences, “I received an MFA from The City College of New York, CUNY. My psychedelic drawings made with colored pencils led to my career in fashion, designing printed textiles and clothing. My casual journal writing seemed an end in itself until I took my first creative writing class.” All of this, further influenced by the current political climate, has now led to her editing and publishing Breathe Free Press.

Di Bari tells NewPages she started Breathe Free Press: “To keep my sanity — save democracy — resist fascism — subvert genre constraints — create a space for diverse voices.” And it’s this diversity and breaking free from constraints that readers can expect to find in each issue. “The essays we seek allude, intimate, insinuate, attempt, analyze, critique, express: attentive to language and cultural associations,” Di Bari says. Readers will get a fresh breath of “themes that transform and transgress metanarratives of authority and power structures.”

Authors recently published in Breathe Free Press include Tamlin Thomas, Alaina Symanovich, Samuel Cole, Nicole Yurcaba, Anna Keeler, Rosemarie Dombrowski, Abby Pullen, Lena Ziegler, Joseph Reich, Cleo Aukland, Joshua Baker, Robert Vivian, Mary Pacific Curtis, Chelsey Clammer, Kira-Rice Christianson, and Diane Payne.

The future for Breathe Free Press, Di Bari says, will be “Big!” Issue #3 is due out Winter 2018. Also in the works: a writing contest, a writing conference in Italy, a community workshop, and introducing and highlighting unique voices and perspectives.

For writers considering submission, Di Bari says, “We welcome, generous, graceful conscious writing: art, not journalism—in literary observation funneled through social awareness in essayistic narratives that subvert genre constraints.” Submissions are accepted through Submittable.


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Thursday, August 24, 2017

Aquifer Now Open to General Submissions

tfl aquiferAfter the first few months of getting their online feet wet, Aquifer: The Florida Reviw Online is now open for general submissions. Writers are encouraged [as always] to review the publication content to make sure their writing is a good fit before submitting. "We are seeking top-quality digital stories, graphic narrative, creative nonfiction, fiction, and poetry" the editors say. TFR  is also introducing a January annual $50 "staff picks" award from among all the authors published in the print TFR  and Aquifer.


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Monday, August 21, 2017

Congrats 2017 Poetry Marathoners!

poetry marathon successFor either 12 or 24 hours starting at 9am on August 5, 2017, an elite group of writers entered into - and finished - the annual Poetry Marathon. This was my second year I entered only the half marathon, writing one poem per hour for 12 hours, from 9am - 9pm.

While this may sound 'easy' enough at first thought, it's a far more grueling commitment than most can imagine - just like running a marathon or half marathon. I mean, how many of us can run? Run a mile? Run five or ten? It's when the miles - and poems and hours - start adding one on top of another that the breakdown enters in. In marathon running, they call it "hitting the wall." Even though running - or writing poetry - is something you love to do, the constraints of time and goal of a numerical accomplishment push that relationship to its limits.

Started by Caitlin Jans (Thompson) and Jacob Jans in 2011, there have since been six marathons. Every year, hundreds enter their names to compete, and every year, only a fraction of those actually do. This year, 95 poets successfully completed 24 poems in 24 hours and 123 poets successfully completed 12 poems in 12 hours. Congratulations to all on this accomplishment! See a full list of the 'winners' here, where the poems are posted via a WordPress site, and the organizers just closed submissions for the second annual anthology of winners' submissions.

If you missed the marathon this year - and the five other times it's been held - you may or may not still have a chance to enter. Caitlin and Jacob have announced that the future of the marathon is up in the air. They are looking for someone who might be interested in helping run it, or other options for keeping it going. It's clearly no 'easy' task on their end either, but their efforts to date have been immensely appreciated. I'm sure every one of us who has successfully completed this challenge will forever hold a sense of pride in that accomplishment. As well we should!


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Sunday, August 20, 2017

Congrats 2017 Poetry Marathoners!

For either 12 or 24 hours starting at 9am on August 5, 2017, an elite group of writers entered into - and finished - the annual Poetry Marathon. This was my second year I entered only the half marathon, writing one poem per hour for 12 hours, from 9am - 9pm.

While this may sound 'easy' enough at first thought, it's a far more grueling commitment than most can imagine - just like running a marathon or half marathon. I mean, how many of us can run? Run a mile? Run five or ten? It's when the miles - and poems and hours - start adding one on top of another that the breakdown enters in. In marathon running, they call it "hitting the wall." Even though running - or writing poetry - is something you love to do, the constraints of time and goal of a numerical accomplishment push that relationship to its limits.

Started by Caitlin Jans (Thompson) and Jacob Jans in 2011, there have since been six marathons. Every year, hundreds enter their names to compete, and every year, only a fraction of those actually do. This year, 95 poets successfully completed 24 poems in 24 hours and 123 poets successfully completed 12 poems in 12 hours. Congratulations to all on this accomplishment! See a full list of the 'winners' here, where the poems are posted via a WordPress site, and the organizers just closed submissions for the second annual anthology of winners's submissions.

If you missed the marathon this year - and the five other times it's been held - you may or may not still have a chance to enter. Caitlin and Jans have announced that the future of the marathon is up in the air. They are looking for someone who might be interested in helping run it, or other options for keeping it going. It's clearly no 'easy' task on their end either, but their efforts to date have been immensely appreciated. I'm sure every one of us who has successfully completed this challenge will forever hold a sense of pride in that accomplishment. As well we should!


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Thursday, August 17, 2017

#tbt: Soviet Fabrics of the 1920s and 1930s

Soviet Fabrics, 1920s-1930s via The Retronaut prostheticknowledge: Soviet Fabrics, 1920s-1930s via The Retronaut Amazing patterns – above is only a sample. Lots more to be found hereFiled under: Art Tagged: CCCP, fabric, pattern, retronaut, Soviet, textiles, USSR

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Florida Review 2016 Editor's Award Winners

The newest issue of The Florida Review (40.1, 2017) features winners of the 2016 Editor's Awards. This annual award accepts submissions in fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry. Winners receive $1000 upon publication in TFR  with finalists also being considered for publication.

florida reviewNonfiction
Winner: Rebekah Taussig, "I Called Mine Beautiful"
Finalist: Robert Stothart, "Nighthawks"

Poetry
Winner: Paige Lewis, "Angel, Overworked"
Finalist: Donna Coffey, "Sunset Cruise at Key West"
Finalist: Christina Hammerton, "Old Pricks"

Fiction
Winner: Derek Palacio, "Kisses"
Finalist: Nicholas Lepre, "Pretend You’re Really Here"
Finalist: Terrance Manning, Jr., "Vision House"

The Florida Review is avaiable for single issue purchase on the NewPages Magazine Webstore.


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Friday, August 11, 2017

New Lit on the Block :: Arkana

arkanaArkana is a new biannual online journal published by the Arkansas Writers MFA Program at the University of Central Arkansas. While the name may seem obviously connected to the place, “arcana” can also mean a secret or a mystery, or a powerful and secret remedy, some “great secret of nature that the alchemists sought to discover.” This definition, the editors explain, is what they want Arkana  to be all about: “discovering powerful voices that haven’t previously been heard, but speak to human nature and the human experience. Publishing every genre possible, and with the welcoming flexibility online offers, the editors want to “be the literary journal of mysteries and marginalized voices—to champion the arcane.”
Arkana is a new biannual online journal published by the Arkansas Writers MFA Program at the University of Central Arkansas. While the name may seem obviously connected to the place, “arcana” can also mean a secret or a mystery, or a powerful and secret remedy, some “great secret of nature that the alchemists sought to discover.” This definition, the editors explain, is what they want Arkana  to be all about: “discovering powerful voices that haven’t previously been heard, but speak to human nature and the human experience. Publishing every genre possible, and with the welcoming flexibility online offers, the editors want to “be the literary journal of mysteries and marginalized voices—to champion the arcane.”

Readers of Arkana  can find fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, scriptwriting (both screenplays and stage plays), illustrated narratives, book reviews, interviews and mixed-genre work. The editors are also always on the lookout for artwork to pair with literary works, and in their second issue, incorporated audio. For each text work, authors or a local actor read the work aloud, helping people who may be visually impaired and, the editors explain, “harkening back to the interest in previously silenced voices.”

Arkana’s supervising editor is Dr. Jennifer Case, Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Central Arkansas, but all the other editors and readers are students in the Arkansas Writers MFA Program with some experience in publishing, visual art, and writing. Each new academic year will see some changes in the team, but the editors identify as students interested in learning new things about writing and the publishing world. Previous staffers included Managing Editor Rachel Hoge, whose prose has appeared in publications such as the Rumpus  and the Washington Post; Poetry Editor Drew S. Cook, published poet and co-executive editor at Trio House Press; Nonfiction Editors Heather Breed Steadham, who writes regularly for Arkansas Life Magazine, and Jacqulyn West; Fiction Editor Cassie Hayes, published author who, along with Rachel and Heather, worked as an editorial intern at the Oxford American; Art Editor Kirk Jordan, a photographer for the state of Arkansas.

When asked about the motivation to start a new literary publication (and keep it going), the editors commented, “We are and have always been incredibly motivated by our mission: to seek and foster a sense of shared wonder by privileging art that asks questions, explores mystery, and works to discover and uncover the overlooked, the misunderstood, and the silent. When reading through submissions, we’re constantly reminding each other of this mission—to find the voices that haven’t been heard before, the stories that explore mystery and ask questions. We want challenging work, and we want to be challenged by the work we publish and the act itself of publishing a literary journal in this day and age. Our motivation is education for the students of the Arkansas Writers MFA Program—experience putting together a journal and experience working with technology. Our motivation is to publish thought-provoking, previously marginalized work that speaks about the human experience. And our motivation is to further legitimize the digital, fully online literary journal—to help prove that good literature and art do have a place in the 21st century and on the Internet. We value experimentation and new discoveries, both in the work we publish and in the journal itself.”

Arkana  readers can expect to find thought-provoking poetry, prose, and mixed-genre work accompanied by vivid images, hearing, both through reading the work and listening to the audio, voices that have previously been silenced. Arkana  has published a couple of translated poems, poems that had never been published in English before, as well as interviews from established writers (Tonya Cherie Hegamin and Oliver de la Paz). And with their blog, the editors start conversations about the publishing world, Arkana  news, and various topics ranging from movies to MFA life, such as thesis defense. “The main thing readers can expect out of Arkana,” the editors stress, “is literature that finds wonder in the mystery of the human experience.”

Other contributors include J. D. Schraffenberger, Arkana’s nonfiction contest winner and editor of the North American Review; Shawn(ta) Smith-Cruz, coordinator at the Lesbian Herstory Archives; Marko Pogacar translated by Andrea Jurjevic, author of Small Crimes; CL Bledsoe, assistant editor for The Dead Mule.

For the future, Arkana  editors say, “We want to continue challenging ourselves to publish cutting-edge, thought-provoking work that promotes marginalized voices, and we’d like to further take advantage of our online format. We keep thinking about what an online journal can and should be doing that is different from a more traditional print journal. Most of all, we want to continue building a community around Arkana.”

For writers interested in submitting, the editors explain the process: "Once a submission comes in we assign it to an editorial team focused on that genre—an editorial team is made up of an editor and a handful of readers. It’s a very democratic process. The editor and the readers of each genre read every single work in that genre and discuss which ones to publish, eventually coming to a consensus within the group.” Writers can submit up to three poems or 4,000 words of prose to Arkana  by going to their Submittable page and choosing which genre best fits your work. It is free to submit, and Arkana  has published “everyone from writers with doctorates to writers still in high school—anyone with interesting, polished work is welcome.” Visit their website for more information.


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Thursday, August 10, 2017

tbt: Tsang Kin-Wah at Mori Art Museum, 2011

Originally published Oct 5, 2011: tsang kin-wah: the fifth seal  meggieschwendemann: tsang kin-wah: the fifth seal – he shall deliver you up to be afflicted and killed as he was mori art museum, tokyo on now until january 15th, 2012   via designboom.com Filed under: Art Tagged: Art, Design, Design bloom, Mori Art Museum, Photography, … Continue reading tbt: Tsang Kin-Wah at Mori Art Museum, 2011

Florida Review 2017 Editor's Award Winners

The newest issue of The Florida Review (40.1, 2017) features winners of the 2017 Editor's Awards. This annual award accepts submissions in fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry. Winners receive $1000 upon publication in TFR  with finalists also being considered for publication.

florida reviewNonfiction
Winner: Rebekah Taussig, "I Called Mine Beautiful"
Finalist: Robert Stothart, "Nighthawks"

Poetry
Winner: Paige Lewis, "Angel, Overworked"
Finalist: Donna Coffey, "Sunset Cruise at Key West"
Finalist: Christina Hammerton, "Old Pricks"

Fiction
Winner: Derek Palacio, "Kisses"
Finalist: Nicholas Lepre, "Pretend You’re Really Here"
Finalist: Terrance Manning, Jr., "Vision House"

The Florida Review is avaiable for single issue purchase on the NewPages Magazine Webstore.


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