Come See our New Website

Sunday, November 30, 2008

So, What's There to do in Phoenix? (LitWise)

Yeah, yeah, yeah, Phoenix may not be New York or San Francisco, but we've got our fair share of fun art and literature events. We'll keep you posted of these events (and more!) in our sporadically updated review "So, what's there to do in Phoenix?"

LitEvent: Undergraduate Readings

I’m sure some of you remember the hand-shaking, head-aching life of an undergrad. Lot of work, lot of fear, and, well, oftentimes a lot of cheap booze (not that that’s the point of this post…). Arizona State University’s creative writing undergraduates are coming out in full force this December, however, with two Changing Hand Bookstore readings featuring undergrad writers.

The first on Monday December 24th (tomorrow!) is from 7:00-8:30 PM at Changing Hands (McClintock & Guadalupe). For this reading, entitled “Emerging Writers of ASU,” students submitted both poetry and fiction entries for a chance to be one of the four readers at the event. After some hard decisions, the initial applicant pool was scaled down to ten semi-finalists. These ten had to compete in a final audition and after this, four students were chosen. Two students each will be reading their poetry and fiction entries with a short question and answer session at the end. All community members are invited (and encouraged!) to attend this very exciting reading, in what may promise to be the first of many for these budding authors.

Also, there will also be a showcase reading of the creative nonfiction form on Thursday, December 11 from 7:00-8:30 PM at Changing Hands. ASU instructor, Becky Byrkit and three undergraduate students will present pieces from the genre, and will also be accompanied by a special musical guest. For those interested in creative nonfiction and its (many) various forms, this is a great way to learn more about the genre and hear some local students (and author) read their own pieces.

So come on out and support these (likely shaking and nervous) undergraduate readers! For more Phoenix art and literature events, please see HFR’s calendar.

Friday, November 28, 2008

Art Intermission Vol. 5










After an extended break, Art Intermission returns with a gem. The work of Tauba Auerbach falls somewhere between poetry and design. From creating her own font to her paintings of color coated anagrams, to a piece showing an alphabet of the spaces inside letters, to reordering texts (the Bible included) alphabetically, it's hard to pin a genre on her lapel. She studies language as a scientist might, drawing parallels whose importance we are left to consider.





Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Happy Thanksgiving!

Hayden's Ferry Review would like to wish everyone a very happy Thanksgiving. Here is a poem by Chad Woody from issue #33 that shows the family spirit and the sometimes dysfunctional nature of family life. We hope you enjoy your family this holiday season!

A Different Kind of Life

My wife has named the boys
Ford, Lincoln & Chevy
so it will be funnier when they compete,
and I have named the girls
Galaga and Margarine.
I'm still trying to come up with
a good reason for mine.
My wife, who isn't really my wife
because we aren't religious & didn't marry,
is always making big bowls of frosting
to keep in the fridge and eat for snacks—
different flavors but her favorite is white,
whatever flavor white is. She jokes
about how fat she's getting, but
she's hardly fat at all and has a huge smile
and one eye higher than the other,
and sounds like she has a frog in her throat.
We have a great arrangement whereby
I do all the laundry and she does all the math.
We go to garage sales a lot. She loves
praying mantises and huge houseplants.
I invent small toys and set off fireworks
in the garage. We have a doctor
named Dr. Teat, and a dentist named Dr. Nail.
On weekends when the weather is nice
we pile into our old car and just drive,
no destination, and if we see something
neat growing in the ditch we stop to pick it,
and if we see a turtle we get out
and move it off the road. The kids
are getting bigger, and one of them
can even walk on stilts,
but we don't think we want any more.

-Chad Woody

Happy Thanksgiving!

News Around the Net

Stephen Baldwin wrote a book?

Random House is starting to explore the new fangled e-book more.

The moving image and the written word—what does it mean for writers?

Henry Hitchings wins the 2008 John Llewellyn Rhys Prize for his Secret Life of Words.

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt has asked its editors to stop buying books.

Not buying, but spending more? Are the publishers off their meds?

The State of the Story.

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone! Have a safe long weekend!

Ask the Archives: MFA programs

As an undergraduate student of creative writing, I have started a search involving everything about MFA programs, because it seems like the obvious next step. There is a lot to know about what different programs are offering and there is a lot of preparation before anyone can even get into one of the schools. Though many of you have learned the "do's" and "don'ts" of obtaining an MFA degree, I know that many people, like myself, are worried about making avoidable mistakes and maybe even deciding to get a masters without knowing if it's necessary. In fact, despite the ever-present cloud of MFA hovering over English majors like myself, I have absolutely no clue why I should go to school for another few years...just to spend my time workshopping instead of finding a job. And if I did decide to join an MFA program, what are my chances of getting accepted and where do I go?? Have you realized how many programs are offered for the hungry writer, promising chances of sustenance? The web, for once, was not a place of solace for the simple question: what is an MFA program? But through many a day spent trudging through statistics and words of advice and also obtaining a copy of The Creative Writing MFA Handbook, I have developed something that is hard to find: a simple fact or fiction about what an MFA program is and what it can do for you. Below this guide are a few commentaries from past interviewees in HFR, to give a little perspective on this issue. Let me take a moment first to thank Tom Kealey for relieving my search by recently publishing his guide to creative writing programs.

FICTION: The MFA is a terminal degree.
FACT: Not anymore! Several schools such as the University of Southern California and the University of Wisconsin offer PHD programs for those who want to distinguish themselves from the all-too-common MFA or MA degree. The work-load is much more strenuous, though of course, but if you love school and can't get enough of dedicating your life to writing, check these schools and others out!

FICTION: Having an MFA will get me published.
FACT: If only it were that easy. :/ Unfortunately, having a Masters does not guarantee anything in the world of money, but by sticking with the program for however many years, you can make alliances with fellow writers and perhaps even some higher-ups who just may possibly love your work. Anything can happen. This is also a great time to talk with other aspiring writers about where to publish and what publishers are looking for.

FICTION: You need to have a degree in order to be a good writer.
FACT: Au contraire, although many people's writings improve significantly with the benefits of a creative writing program, not everyone needs to go. In a MFA program, or any others, you spend a lot of time in workshops and being committed to the atmosphere of writing. So instead of putting that novel off because of work or family, you actually need to write and you are being forced to sit down and just do it. A lot of people find this push critical and therefore appreciate their experience in the MFA program, but not everyone will enjoy this. Since these programs don't guarantee you the sole career of writer, those who don't gain anything from workshops or being immersed with others bursting with ideas, would do better by staying far away from these programs and learning to set a time to write on their own day-to-day basis. It's also thousands of dollars cheaper!

FICTION: So now after going broke attending an undergraduate school, you're going to be owing your soul and body to the MFA programs once your huge bill puts you into debt.
FACT: Yes, it is very, very expensive. But as Kealey says, "about 20 percent of programs fund all or most of their students. Another 40 percent fund some of their students, and the remaining 40 percent fund only a few or none of their students" (12). So even if you don't wish to be in debt by more schooling, but still wish to attend a top school, it's possible. In fact, one school, Cornell University, accepts very few students each year, but their bills are paid by assistantships and internships. Here at ASU, all incoming students are also funded. And FYI, tuition can be anywhere from a couple thousand to thirty thousand depending on the school, so when looking for a school, check out their funding. If top ten schools can pay for you to be there, other schools should give you the same opportunity!

Now, some thoughts from HFR's archives...
Vivian Gornick, 1993: "In the M.F.A. program here, which I'm sure is true for almost every one of them, you have a division, I think it's fair to say, between writers like myself who are old-fashioned readers of literature and speak in the large-what are the issues, who's speaking, why-and pull writing apart from that point of view, always asking these large questions. And then there are people who have developed craft, not theory, which comes very close to being practiced somewhat like theory in that it's a highly reduced and specific skill that's being taught to students. I presume that's what students are here for, but I couldn't ever teach or think that way about literature." and later... "But the M.F.A. programs, like television, don't really develop taste. They give the public what it wants and memoir writing is a piece of understanding in contemporary literature that is growing very, very slowly."

Rick Moody, 1998: "I think that many American graduate writing programs are warehouses really. They don't teach much (because the workshop is a faculty form) and they don't prepare the degree candidates for the life afterwards." and later talking about low-residency M.F.A. programs..."It remains to be seen what the effect of these courses of study will be, but I think they represent, theoretically, an interesting departure from business as usual. I think my low-residency students get a lot more attention from me than I ever got from my workshop instructors when I was in graduate school."

Michael Cunningham, 2003: "I think they succeed, all of them to one extent or another, for the simplest and most basic of reasons: because they are the only places young, unpublished writers are taken seriously in this country. The only places where what you're doing, as an ambitious but unknown writer, is treated as a matter of utmost importance. Everywhere else, you're treated as a hack, poseur, fraud, or slacker."

Still have questions? Check out this blog. It is dedicated to everything MFA and very helpful.

For more information, feel free to send us questions. We are chalk full of resources and answers to help you on understanding the MFA and we are always thrilled to receive opinions from our reader's personal experiences in the program.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Literary Review's Bad Sex in Fiction Award


That's right. You didn't misread it. There's a Bad Sex in Fiction award, it's been going for fifteen years, and the winner was just announced for this year! John Updike's The Widows of Eastwick, Paulo Coehlo's Brida, and Russell Bank's The Reserve all made the shortlist. Alistair Campbell's first novel All in the Mind was the critics' favorite for this year. It was, however, Rachel Johnson's novel Shire Hell that took the prize and joined the ranks of such illustrious writers as Norman Mailer, Ian Hollingshead, Tom Wolfe, A.A. Gill, and Sebastian Faulks. But don't worry, Updike was awarded the lifetime achievement award for having been nominated four times in a row without actually winning. He was not present to receive his award.

The award was presented, appropriately, at the In and Out club in London on Tuesday night. Johnson is the 16th winner of the award, established by Literary Review editor Auberon Waugh "with the aim of gently dissuading authors and publishers from including unconvincing, perfunctory, embarrassing or redundant passages of a sexual nature in otherwise sound literary novels." Johnson seems to be looking at the upside of this award, however, in being included among some literary giants and to be getting any attention at all—even "dubious" attention. She accepted the trophy, a plaster foot, before 400 attendants.

For a taste of the competition (i.e. how not to write a sex scene) go to The Guardian and enjoy! Or cringe. Whatever comes first.

Monday, November 24, 2008

2008 National Book Award Winners Announced

The always anticipated winners of the National Book Awards were announced November 19th at the National Book Foundation's 59th Annual National Book Awards Ceremony in New York City.

The winners for 2008 are:

Fiction: Peter Matthiessen for Shadow Country

Nonfiction: Annette Gordon-Reed for The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family

Poetry: Mark Doty for Fire to Fire: New and Collected Poems

Young People Literature: Judy Blundell for What I Saw and How I Lied

Also presented awards were Maxine Hong Kingston, the recipient of the National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, and publisher Barney Rosset, recipient of the Literarian Award for Outstanding Service to the American Literary Community.

Congratulations to all winners!

Phoenix 2-Day Creative Writing Workshop

From Ordinary to Extraordinary
In this creative writing workshop participants will start to see how everyday incidents can be crafted into amazing personal narratives. Through writing exercises, group discussions, and writing without editing participants will transform the ordinary into the extraordinary. There will be opportunities for participants to share and respond to each other’s writing. At the end of the course participants can invite family and friends for an exciting evening of live readings from writing created during the workshop. No writing experience is necessary.

Instructor: Tania Katan
Date: December 13th and 14th, 2008
Time: 10:00am to 2:00pm each day (with reading on December 14th at 6:00pm)
Place: Phoenix (40th Street and McDowell)
Fee: $125
Note: Please bring a writing utensil and paper. A light lunch will be provided for you both days.

About Tania Katan
Tania Katan is an author, playwright and performer. Her one-woman show, Saving Tania’s Privates (adapted from her memoir My One Night Stand With Cancer), made its European premiere at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 2008 where it was a critical success. In the U.S. Saving Tania’s Privates has been seen at ACT in Seattle and The Painted Bride in Philadelphia. Her memoir My One Night Stand With Cancer is the winner of several literary awards including 2006 Judy Grahn Award in Nonfiction, and the Stonewall Book Award. Katan is a regular contributor to The Advocate, Sports Out Loud, OurChart.com, and Stand Up To Cancer’s online magazine. Her work has been written about in The New York Times, Bust, Library Journal, Running Times, DIVA, GCN Ireland, The Scotsman, and other international publications. Katan spends summers in Italy teaching creative writing with her small, but mighty, company Two Little Wishbones. For more information please visit her website.

Congratulations to Julie Platt!

Congratulations to Julie Platt, whose poetry chapbook, In the Kingdom of My Familiar, has just been published by Tilt Press. The chapbook includes "Les Yeux Sans Visage," which appeared in issue #42. Visit the Tilt Press catalog to place your order.

As added incentive, check out Julie's poem...

LES YEUX SANS VISAGE

What I am now has much to do with the number
of diamonds left in the world. There’s been an accident,

and I am the child of a scientist. My father lays the phases
of my face out in his mind like an undressing

interrupted. He’s looking for one among the many.
I think all diamonds must be raw inside, like the girls

he carries down the dark staircase of ether
to be mined. When I surfaced from that same numb

dusk I was a multiple, an infinite pack of dogs,
the red crawls of my raw face naming themselves you,

and you, I am you. Did you know skin keeps that wild howl
down below the surface? Sometimes you hear it when you die,

if they flay you, if your face is turned toward the dirt.
Did I tell you I was born with a caul? Caulbearers

cannot drown. My nurse pressed it between photographs,
and father kept it with his mother’s diamonds.

I am to have them on my wedding day. I am the bride
of a scientist; it has something to do with my face,

with the number of faces left in the world, with the number
of times a name stretches over a gaping hole

and snaps back, that wretched sound shocked
back into the raw cawing. My diamond, father weeps.

CONTEST REMINDER!!!

So now that Halloween and the elections are over, we can finally concentrate on what everyone really wants to talk about—the holidays! So here's the skinny: We want you to write a good holiday story or poem. Interpret this liberally. If you want to write about the Solstice (I know I will be!), go right for it. Or how about Thanksgiving, that most eclipsed holiday, or Kwanzaa or Hanukkah or the Islamic New Year or just plain old New Year? Yes, these holidays all get a lot of visibility already, but so much of it is commercialized or relegated to "political correctness" that the underlying possibility for conflict (the lifeblood of storytelling) is largely untapped. So see what you can make of it. And for anyone of the agnostic or atheist persuasion, this contest does not exclude you! The antithetical viewpoint of religion, spirituality, holidays, or what have you would be equally compelling if you do it the right way.

To recap:

1. Write a short story (under 2000 words) or a poem that somehow includes either the season or one of the upcoming holidays.

2. Email your story to hfr@asu.edu with the subject line BLOG HOLIDAY CONTEST and remember to include ALL of your contact information. This is important. Since we're the ones judging, it's probably best not to annoy us.

3. The submission due date is set for December 1 and the winners will start to be posted the following Monday, December 8.

The prize to all winners will be a posting on our blog as well as a free, one-year subscription to Hayden's Ferry Review and a free gift subscription that you can give to whomever you like. As this season is one of peace, love, tolerance, and joy irrespective of any religion, every story that contains unresolved hatred or intolerance toward any sect or group of people WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED. You're story doesn't have to be all sparkling lights and tinsel with everyone going home happy at the end, but this one restriction against intolerance, I believe, is reasonable. Not that you would have written a story like that anyway! We look forward to as many wonderful submissions as we received last time!

Fellowships in Applied Literary Translation

DESCRIPTION: Beginning in the fall of 2009, Dalkey Archive Press at the University of Illinois will be offering a unique opportunity for young translators of fiction working from world languages into English to gain experience in translation and publishing. This program is in response to the need to create the means for translators to take the next major step in their careers.

During the fellowship year, translators will:

• Complete their first book-length fiction translation to be published by Dalkey Archive Press
• Help to edit translations from other translators and see how editors respond to issues of translation so that they will learn how best to work with editors in the future
• Work closely with translators who are submitting manuscripts to Dalkey Archive
• Identify works that Dalkey Archive should consider publishing
• Learn how to work with translators, agents, and other publishers
• Work first-hand with funding agencies to secure grants for translations and thereby establish relationships with the funders that translators need to know
• Establish contacts with editors at other publishing houses in order to have the means to submit work to them in the future
• Learn how to write reader reports and learn through experience how to write cover letters to publishers

Application Process:
Fellowships are open to any translator holding a Bachelor’s degree or higher. Those interested in applying should submit the following by March 1, 2009:
• A letter explaining interest in the fellowship, career plans, and previous translation work, and a detailed description of literary background (areas of interest, favorite authors, aesthetic interests, and familiarity with works published by Dalkey Archive Press)
• A complete resumé, including a clear indication of skill levels in languages
• A minimum of three translation samples of fiction work from the language or languages of specialization

Applications should be submitted by e-mail to: John O’Brien, Publisher of Dalkey Archive Press, at obrien@dalkeyarchive.com. Awards will be announced April, 2009. Fellowships will include an $18,000 stipend and medical benefits. Funding for this pilot program has been provided by an international consortium of agencies as a result of priorities established by Arts Council England to identify the best means for supporting young translators and developing a new generation of translators. In conjunction with Dalkey Archive Press, this program will be expanded upon in years to come.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Website of the Week: The One Minute Writer

3, 2, 1, write! The One Minute Writer's headline explains it all; "You Have 1,440 minutes a day. Use one of them to write."

How it works: Head on over to The One Minute Writer. Read the daily writing prompt. Click "start" on the 60-second timer. Then, be brilliant. Quickly.

For those of you who don't think you have time to write daily, here is your answer. With prompts ranging from: "A new Broadway musical is about your life. Come up with a title for the big show, and write a mini-review of it" to "Take on the fictional persona of a beauty pageant contestant" to "Listen. Write about what you hear, right now," there's all kinds of ideas to get the juices flowing. Once you've written for your minute, you can also read what other writers have posted in response to the prompts.

A daily trek to The One Minute Writer is a minute (or many more) well spent.

News Around the 'Net

Washington novelists ponder Obama.

Filipino author Miguel Syjuco wins 2008 Man Asian Literary Prize.

Miami Book Fair and Comix Galaxy collide!

The Ezra Pound collection being given to the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin includes more than 700 letters, some photographs, a scrapbook and two chess sets. And on that note, U.S. collector John Wolfson has pledged his library of 450 early Shakespeare texts to the Globe Theater.

Though dead, Nabokov's still got one left in him.

Penguin and author Khaled Husseini have built a school in Afghanistan.

2008 Costa Book Awards' shortlist is announced!

Congratulations to Patrick Ness for winning the Book Trust Prize!

Four women writers meditate on how their age influences their writing.

Erica Heller, daughter of Catch-22's author, meditates on the book deals thrown at Palin and Joe the Plumber.

Sue Grafton and James Lee Burke will be this year's recipients of the Grand Master Award, presented by the Mystery Writers of America.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

It's Holiday Time - Give Books!

News flash—the economy is in the dumps and Christmas is in a month. This year there might not be so much a "Black" Friday, as a "Red" Friday. Before you panic, though, realize that there are still plenty of ways for you to get your Christmas shopping done without hurting your wallet too much. Vested interests aside, it's my personal belief that books can be a far more personal gift than most other things. When you give a book (or perhaps a gift subscription to Hayden's Ferry Review, free with your purchase of a year subscription available on request from hfr@asu.edu) you are offering hours of intellectual diversion. If you get the right book, you'll strike a heart string that resonates far more loudly and profoundly than jewelry, perfume/cologne, or silk could ever do. The right book says, "I understand you." For really a very small amount of cash you can give a loved one the assurance she needs that she doesn't live in this world alone because you, at least, see her and care about what makes her happy.

And apparently, I'm not the only one pushing that point this year. Random House has launched a marketing campaign "books=gifts." Barnes&Noble has added a "holiday station" to their Barnes&Noble Studio online that plays holiday classics, such as a dramatization of A Christmas Carol. And virtually every other bookseller and publisher has been coming up with similar holiday marketing ventures. The last couple of months (that is, since the stock market's 1929-esque plummet) have seen continued unpromising sales numbers and more and more lay-offs and resignations in the publishing and bookselling industry. This after one of the worst summers in book sales recent history. Despite the bad news, there have even been several independent book sellers opening their doors across the country. Given the economic state in general and the state of the book industry in particular, these entrepreneurs are either extremely courageous or extremely dense. In either case, more power to them. Get out there and go buy their books!

But what you need are some clues as to what to do for Christmas gifts this year. First of all, avoid the chain stores at all costs. Stores like Barnes&Noble and Borders are wonderfully spacious and good-smelling from the cafe strategically placed within doors, but they are also far more expensive than your local independent booksellers. Also, they will survive this economic downturn, your average New&Used might not. The more patronage that goes to them the better. Besides which, every now and then you can find absolute treasures from those independent book sellers, like out of print books or first editions. Second, consider subscriptions. Find the magazine or journal that your loved one reads the most and cover the next year or two for them. As a random example, if you buy a year subscription with Hayden's Ferry Review (send your requests to hrf@asu.edu!) you'll receive a free gift subscription to give away this holiday season! (Did we mention that already? Mention what? The free gift subscription with every year subscription? Oh, yes, that!). Finally, ask for books. You don't have to be the only person sustaining the book industry. Others can do it for you!

(P.S. If you're living in the Tempe area and frequent Changing Hands Bookstore, mention your favorite Arizona school and 20% of the profit from your purchase will go there!)

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Our Pushcart Prize Nominees

Our editors for issues #41 and #42 are very pleased to announce the follow nominations for The Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses this year.

Fiction
: "Miracle Making" by Tara Warman; "When You Watch Me" by Elizabeth Searle

Poetry: "Pageantry" by John Lundberg; "To Make a Woman Come" by Jen McClung (featured below)

Translations: "The Glass Dead in Old Polska" by Sylva Fischerova, translated by Stuart Friebert; "Motherhood and Childhood" by Polina Barskova, translated by Ilya Kaminsky

One of our nominated poems...

To Make a Woman Come

Dislocate the legs from the hips
and push back gently but firmly.

Delicately remove the fingers, the arms,
one sad joint at a time.
This is the unraveling
of the stomach’s sinewy strands.

Peel away the right breast,
then the left, being careful to
sing or hum as you go.
The smell of discovery
should come fresh and sudden,
like the first cut of an onion.
The stinging that follows
is inevitable, is the
possible side effect of desire.

Press back the head,
the flushed face,
the blue eyes.
Press decisively, with determination,
until the skin glows golden
and the flesh comes softly
off the core of its own accord.

Congratulations to Tara, Elizabeth, Jen, John, Polina, Ilya, Sylva and Stuart!

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

FREE ISSUES!



In honor of sending issue 43 off to the printer, we're offering free copies of issue 42! That's right, FREE. Just send your name and address to HFR@asu.edu before midnight tonight (Arizona time), and we'll send off a copy of issue 42 - our very cool grotesque-themed issue - post haste. At no cost to you. We just ask that you read it. And maybe - we won't be pushy - consider subscribing.

Breakthrough Novel Awards to Consider

Although the novel is more viable in the reading marketplace, the short story is how many writers get their start in the publishing world. Most workshops center on them. An undergraduate degree in Creative Writing spends most of its time learning to work small before going large. Even MFA classes spend their time on the short story. I suppose that's to be expected. After all, who has the time or creative energy to read, edit, and comment on an entire manuscript just for a class that meets once or twice a week? Who has the time or creative energy to write that story for such a class?

But that leaves potential novel writers in a peculiar state of having a lot of practice with the short story, but having very little practice with the longer story. It has been said by many that the art of novel writing isn't really something that can be taught, it can only be done. Thomas Pynchon has supposedly said (though I can't find it on the internet), "I learned a lot after writing my first novel. When I sat down to write my second, I forgot all of it." Not a lot of help to novel writers who are just starting out. Apparently, the only advice that can be given and taken is to just sit down and do it, which is a little daunting to be sure. Giving someone a wrench and a few bolts and saying "Build me a car" is just as easily accomplished. But thankfully, there are those who know how to speak the language of the emerging artist—money—and are saying all the right words of encouragement. As this is National Novel Writing Month (how's the word count coming, by the way?) it would be a good idea to take a look at the people who might accept your manuscript once it's finished (and edited).

First on the list, are Amazon and Penguin. These two are pairing up for their second annual Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award, starting February 2 and continuing through February 8, 2009. Unpublished writers with an English-language novel manuscript can submit their work here. Bill Loehfelm won last year from a pool of about 5,000 entrants and Putnam published his novel, Fresh Kills, in August 2008. This year, up to 10,000 submissions will be accepted. The winner of the contest will receive a publishing contract with Penguin and a $25,000 advance.

Next on our list, Wilkes University and the James Jones Literary Society are holding their 17th Annual James Jones First Novel Fellowship contest. The award will go to an American (U.S. specifically) author with a first novel, novella, or collection of closely linked stories (think Winesburg, Ohio) who has never been published before. There is no entry fee, the award is $10,000, and the deadline is March 1, 2009. Hurry to their website to see how to enter!

Brighid's Fire Books, a relatively new imprint, is looking for new talent to build up a repertoire of respectable publications. To this end, they have set up an annual contest for unpublished authors to get their work read, critiqued, and possibly published. Last year, the contest was canceled due to lack of submissions—and as we all know an untapped market is the holy grail in the publishing industry. This is definitely a contest you want to consider since the competition is low and the rewards are great. There is an entry fee of $25 and the deadline is April 30, 2009. Finalists will be chosen in October and each one will receive criticism, regardless of place. The grand prize winner will get a publishing contract and a $1000 advance. Check their website to see what they're looking for in submissions.

Delacorte Press is holding a similar contest for first-time YA novelists, its 26th Annual contest of the sort. Submit a book-length, unpublished manuscript for readers ages 12-18 to be considered. But the deadline is December 31, 2008, so you'll have to hurry on this one. There's no entry fee and the prize is a $1500 cash prize, a book contract, plus a $7500 advance. You should check out the website for more information on submission details.

Finally, James River Writers and Richmond Magazine will be holding their 35rd Annual Best Unpublished Novel Contest. There's a $25 entry fee but a prize of $500, publication of an excerpt in Richmond magazine, a spot at the 2009 James River Writers Conference, and one-on-one feedback from a JRW board member. As always, check their website for submission guidlines.

So hurry back to your NaNoWriMo manuscript! The clock's a-ticking and opportunity is a-knocking!

Hay Fever! Pictures

Thanks to everyone who came to Hay Fever! on Friday night, especially our performers Amy Silverman, Kim Porter, David Rodney Nash, DJ *ekb and Kevin Vaughan Brubaker. It was great to see so many people come to support these artists and HFR. Enjoy the photos below, and we'll see you at the next one!

Monday, November 17, 2008

Unusual Calls for Submissions

THE CHALLENGE: Write an Inaugural Ode
Write an inaugural ode, suitable for reading aloud on January 20, 2009. It must consist of sixteen lines broken into four quatrains, rhyme scheme optional. The ode must include one line lifted from a poem in The Best American Poetry 2008 or from the book's foreword or introduction, and it must also include at least three of the following words: honor, integrity, faith, hope, change, power. The contest will be judged by a former Best American Poetry guest editor whose name will be revealed when the winner is announced. More here.

Exploring the Experience of Disability through Literature and the Fine Arts
KALEIDOSCOPE MAGAZINE call for submissions on the theme of "Giving & Receiving Care: A Delicate Balance." Deadline 3/1/09. Kaleidoscope Magazine has a creative focus that examines the experiences of disability through literature and the fine arts. Unique to the field of disability studies, this award-winning publication expresses the experiences of disability from the perspective of individuals, families, healthcare professionals, and society as a whole. The material chosen for Kaleidoscope challenges and overcomes stereotypical, patronizing, and sentimental attitudes about disability. Although content always focuses on a particular aspect of disability, writers with and without disabilities are welcome to submit their work. More here.

Protest Poems Org is inviting submissions of political poetry.
We are looking for excellent poetry that just happens to shout about current political and humanitarian concerns. Please be aware that our interest in bipartisan and US- or Euro-centered politics is limited. For example, we think it’s much more interesting to contemplate the affect that the oil industry has on the human rights of Nigerians living along the pipelines, than the affect it has on our wallets. Nuanced issues are interesting. Partisan campaigning is not. More here.

Write2Help.Org Fall 2008 Short Fiction Contest
Proceeds benefit World Relief, a worldwide humanitarian effort based out of Baltimore, MD. Topic: Write a short story (1500 words or less) about an exciting or awakening experience in childhood. Prizes: 1ST Place - $1,000 2ND Place - $250 3RD Place - $100. Deadline: December 20, 2008. Entry Fee: $10. More here.

Babel Fruit is currently inviting submissions of poems specifically written *under the influence of other poems*.
Have you got two roads diverging in a yellow wood? Do you do “you do not do, you do not do / Any more, black shoe” polished or tap-dancing? Do you think of breakfast cereal when you hear “O Captain! my Captain!” Satire especially welcome. (Please let us know which poem you are under the influence of. Sometimes we miss the obvious). We are also accepting general submissions for the January issue until December 7th. More here.

Speculative Prose Poem/Flash Fiction Contest
sponsored by OdysseyCon, a science-fiction convention in Madison, Wisconsin, USA April 4-6,2008. $500 for 500 words of speculative prose poetry or flash fiction. Deadline: January 1, 2009. Details: Send 500 words or less of speculative (SF & F) fiction or prose poetry (paragraph form) by January 1st. No previously-published work, but simultaneous submissions are allowed, and multiple adult submissions are encouraged. A $10.00 entry fee must be paid for each entry submitted.

CONTEST REMINDER!!!

So now that Halloween and the elections are over, we can finally concentrate on what everyone really wants to talk about—the holidays! So here's the skinny: We want you to write a good holiday story or poem. Interpret this liberally. If you want to write about the Solstice (I know I will be!), go right for it. Or how about Thanksgiving, that most eclipsed holiday, or Kwanzaa or Hanukkah or the Islamic New Year or just plain old New Year? Yes, these holidays all get a lot of visibility already, but so much of it is commercialized or relegated to "political correctness" that the underlying possibility for conflict (the lifeblood of storytelling) is largely untapped. So see what you can make of it. And for anyone of the agnostic or atheist persuasion, this contest does not exclude you! The antithetical viewpoint of religion, spirituality, holidays, or what have you would be equally compelling if you do it the right way.

To recap:

1. Write a short story (under 2000 words) or a poem that somehow includes either the season or one of the upcoming holidays.

2. Email your story to hfr@asu.edu with the subject line BLOG HOLIDAY CONTEST and remember to include ALL of your contact information. This is important. Since we're the ones judging, it's probably best not to annoy us.

3. The submission due date is set for December 1 and the winners will start to be posted the following Monday, December 8.

The prize to all winners will be a posting on our blog as well as a free, one-year subscription to Hayden's Ferry Review and a free gift submission that you can give to whomever you like. As this season is one of peace, love, tolerance, and joy irrespective of any religion, every story that contains unresolved hatred or intolerance toward any sect or group of people WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED. You're story doesn't have to be all sparkling lights and tinsel with everyone going home happy at the end, but this one restriction against intolerance, I believe, is reasonable. Not that you would have written a story like that anyway! We look forward to as many wonderful submissions as we received last time!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Hay Fever! Tonight

Tonight, November 14 at 7 pm, HFR will host the first event in its ongoing reading/performance series called Hay Fever! at The Trunk Space in downtown Phoenix. The event will showcase local talent in a variety of genres, and will also benefit HFR. Cost is $5 at the door, which will get you a copy of the current issue or half off a year's subscription. We will also be raffling off art, back issues, and other prizes. The economy is bad, but art, writing, friends and our President-elect are all good, so we must celebrate!

Performers are:

*Kim Porter, playwright, performing an excerpt from a hilarious solo show,"Passed Over," about her desire to be Jewish

*Kevin Vaughan-Brubaker, poet, performing poetry with DJ *ekb

*Amy Silverman, Managing Editor of New Times and KJZZ commentator, reading nonfiction

*David Nash, fiction writer, reading from forthcoming novel Van Gogh's Ear

Questions? Email HFR@asu.edu. We'd love to see you there!

Fine Art Swap Meet this Sunday


Prints! Drawings! Photographs! Ceramics! Sculpture! Paintings! EPHEMERA! Oh MY!

Current and Former ASU Art graduate students are clearing out their studios and letting go of their originals at bargain basement prices for one day only!

When? Sunday, November 16th, 10:00am - 2:00pm
Where? Neeb Plaza, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ

No entry fee. Cash, check & paypal payment accepted. Come early for the best selection! Featured artists include HFR art editor Chad White. Snatch up some amazing deals before the Holidays!

News Around the 'Net

Nam Le wins 2008 Dylan Thomas prize.

Maya Angelou writing poem for Obama.

The surprisingly successful British stage adaptation of Woolf's The Waves is coming to the States.

The first literary festival ever is coming to the Middle East.

It's not Thanksgiving yet, which means Christmas has already started, especially for Random House.

Shakespeare and Rap?

Kathi Kamen Goldmark honored by the Women's National Book Association.

Website of the Week: Kids on the Net

Kids on the Net is celebrating a decade of being a tool for children who love to write.

Here's a rundown of what Kids on the Net offers:
*The "Writing With a Difference" section has an online teacher, tips on media, and takes submissions.
*"Authors and Reading" has book reviews and advice from authors.
*"All About Me" is where kids can create their own profiles. Membership is free.
*"Creative Writing" is the forum of stories, poems, friends, animal stories and a section of teen writing.
*"Tell Us About It" has reports, competitions (that offer prizes!), computer games and events.
*"Teachers" has resources for teachers.

The site also has links to other creative writing sites for kids that are more specific, such as a site for Haikus. This site lets kids be creative and provides a smoother transition into being an teen and adult writer.

I wrote a series of stories about Carmel the Killer Whale when I was about eight. I even drew pictures to go with the stories. To this day, the only animal I can draw is a killer whale. If Kids on the Net was around then, Carmel would have been famous.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Contributor Spotlight: Mina Otsuka

Falling in Love With Languages

When I was a child, I didn’t have a computer at home, and none of my friends had one. I’ve heard people say good and bad things about the Internet, the anonymity of Myspace and blogging, but admittedly, I can’t do anything without a computer these days. And I have to pause for a second here. Well, maybe that’s not true.

For some reason, whenever I write something, whether it’s a term-paper for my biology class, an analytical essay on Mark Twain’s implicit claim in “Pudd’nhead Wilson,” or a journalistic profile story, I just can’t type on the computer. My very first draft always has to be hand-written no matter what. If there is such a thing as a writer’s spark or whatever is supposed to come to the mind of writers as if given by god, it only happens to me when I sit on my desk with my favorite mechanical pencil in hand, playing a non-stop staring game with a blank sheet of paper. There is something that my own clumsy handwriting tells me, something that the words on the computer screen can’t: that I’m fully responsible for what I write. Writing is a form of expression where we can be most careful, and thus should be careful of what to say, how to say it, and most importantly to whom we say it.

My very first experience with writing was through a “journal exchange” with my friends. What we did was very simple: we shared one notebook and wrote a journal in turn, commenting on each other’s writing. Now I think of it as a print-version of the modern day blog. The pleasure of writing, to me, certainly came from the assurance that someone would read my work, and I think that we all have an instinctive desire to share what’s on our mind. This is probably the reason why I’m so passionate about languages.

I haven’t studied linguistics before, but I love and hate the very abstraction of languages. Often times I’m relived that I have a control over what I choose to say, out of all thoughts, feelings, and ideas floating in my head which can’t even put in a word or a sentence; and I get frustrated because most of the time I find myself unable to say the things I really want to say.

But still, I want to immerse myself and get lost in translation—and here I mean to get lost in the translation within myself, from wordless thoughts to the visible and audible languages. As long as I have things I want to share with someone, and it doesn’t have to be an audience of a million (though it would be nice), I want to keep writing—just like I was doing it with my friends, long time ago, passing one notebook, reading each other’s journal and commenting on the writing. It was a small, very personal readership, but that’s where it all starts because there is always someone I specifically want to address my writing for.

About translation: I think it’s just unavoidable that things always get lost no matter how well-trained a translator is. Of course there is nothing better than reading the originals, but at the same time I believe that the very essence of a work can be passed on from one language to another. And once again, translation is all part of a desire to share that work with others.

Here I want to introduce legendary Japanese singer Ozaki Yutaka who “lived too fast and died too young,” as often described by his admirers. His words and songs have had a huge impact on me, though I never had a chance to “see” him alive. For this reason I’m truly grateful for the modern technology which virtually brings me back to the past and helps me reach the impossible (namely, YouTube, of course). I grew up in a relatively non-religious family, but I can certainly understand why people have absolute beliefs and admiration for a person like Ozaki Yutaka. Among the youth, he was literally the Pope; and this is perhaps the only word I can find in English to describe how popular he was.

Usually I don’t translate lyrics because songs are composed of words and music, built on their own balance, and there is something just so unique to each language in which a song is written. Ozaki’s songs are no exception for that and especially in his songs, every single word matters. So this is just an introduction of the introduction—for I believe that translators can only introduce whatever the culture they are translating. Even if we succeed in passing on the essence of the works, an acquisition of languages is the ultimate pathway to understand the other world. It’s just the way it is. For that, I can definitely say I fell in love with English and of course, my mother tongue, Japanese.

Mina Otsuka was born in the Nagano prefecture, Japan. At the age of four, she moved to Amstelveen, the north province of the Netherlands, with her family and developed her very first interest in foreign languages. Having spent five years there, the family went back to Japan and then once again transferred their residence, this time to the United States. She currently studies literary journalism at the University of California, Irvine, and hopes to pursue her lifelong interest and passion in languages and translation. Her translation of Miyabe Miyuki's story, "The Ten-year Plan" from the Japanese, will appear in issue #43.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The Write Playlist

Okay, horrible pun. But I do wonder how many people have soundtracks for when they write. The songs I listen to while I do work are different than the songs that play while I write. And that also depends on what kind of story (or poem, if the mood strikes) I happen to be writing. Usually, there's a list filled with melancholia when I'm using a lot of dark, magic-realist elements and while I'm doing things like paperwork or housework it's almost always trance or happy-hardcore playing in the background (I defy anyone who would laugh at me). Classical while I'm driving. Pandora while I'm doing homework. The Beatles while I'm cooking. And, of course, nothing when I meditate.

With the advent of the iPod and iTunes (and the like, of course), it's possible to literally mete out your life in different, appropriate rhythms. And, contrary to popular belief, having all this going on actually helps me to concentrate. It gets to the point where the music I hear is absorbed only subconsciously. It's white noise that gives the ADD side of my brain something shiny to play with while the workaholic side of me gets down to business. And songs are often stories and poetry in their own right. "Hallelujah" as performed by Rufus Wainwright and "Hide and Seek" by Imogen Heap are great examples of this. Then there are the times that you just need a good political dissension song like "Handlebars" by Flobots or "Hands Held High" by Linkin Park or "Master of Puppets" by Metallica. (Hey, if it's good it's good).

When I hear a song I like, often I'll write down the lyrics in my journal and usually they fit perfectly with a character, or an aspect of a character, I'm working on. Or sometimes they fit with a situation instead. When I heard Linkin Park's "Leave Out All the Rest" for the first time, I immediately imagined one character saying it to another if perhaps my story was a musical instead of a novel and that revealed a part of him I hadn't necessarily considered prior to that moment. That was an exciting day! As writers we're trained to read other writers within our genre (poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction, etc.) but I think it's possible that songs and songwriters get overlooked at times because their art is oral and aural rather than something that's encountered first as words written on a page. I've only had one teacher present songs (by Bob Dylan, of course) as poetry before he would let us listen to them. But perhaps my own experience is not the norm. What has your experience been?

So, here's a list of songs I like to listen to that get me into the mood for writing:

Xanax, by Maria Taylor
Imagine, John Lennon
Yellow, Coldplay
In My Place, Coldplay
Into the Ocean, Blue October
Breathe Me, Sia
My Sweet My Lovely, Plumb
Further Away, Evanescence
Breath, Breaking Benjamin
Everything, Alanis Morissette
All the Things She Said, TaTu
What a Wonderful Word/Somewhere Over the Rainbow, Brother Iz
Better Than Me, Hinder
Leave Out All the Rest, Linkin Park
Become, Goo Goo Dolls
Sympathy, Goo Goo Dolls
Hide and Seek, Imogen Heap
Hallelujah, as performed by Rufus Wainwright
Mad World, as performed by Alex Parks

I think that's a good start. What do you listen to, Readers?

Monday, November 10, 2008

November is National Novel Writing Month!

We're 10 days in to NaNoWriMo (NationalNovelWritingMonth condensed) this year and hope all of you participating are happily chugging along with word counts! Michelle, an ASU writer and veteran NaNoWriMo participant, shares some of her hard-earned wisdom and continuing battles with the 50,000 word count goal.

How long have you been doing NaNoWriMo?

I've been trying to write a novel in a month for five years now, ever since I first heard about it back in 2003 when I was a wee high school baby.

For the curious, here are my stats:
2003: 846 words
2004: 12,417 words
2005: 20,182 words
2006: 18,926 words
2007: 5,906 words
2008: 27,124 words and counting!

What have been your experiences with NaNoWriMo?

Well, I guess the "bad" experiences would be when I didn't win--which has so far been every year. This year, though, is definitely looking up in that regard! But even losing isn't that bad, because you still have a start on a novel! I actually finished my first NaNo novel the summer before I entered college. I also continued work on my (super failed, second worst word count ever) 2007 NaNo for a workshop class...which was possibly a mistake because it kind of made me hate it and life, but I'm sure the feeling will pass...

What have been the benefits of doing NaNoWriMo for you?

I think the number one benefit of doing NaNoWriMo is that it takes that ancient legendary beast of writing--the writer who writes every day--and turns it into a reality for a lot of people. Then it's not just some mythical author with a kajillion published books saying, "Oh well, if you really want to be a writer, you have to write every day." It's something infinitely more understandable and approachable: a deadline that says, "Well, if you want this ridiculous task to be anything like easy, you need to write every day, even if it's crap. Especially if it's crap." And it's that ability to write crap, because every word counts, that really makes NaNoWriMo such a liberating experience.

I know some people who participate who ask for criticism during NaNoWriMo, and that's just wrong. I mean, hey, I guess if your ego can take it, by all means, but I know that all that is going to do to someone like me is take what could be the best story ever, or at least that person's best story ever, and shoot it dead in the street. It drains all of your passion for writing it if you're told what's wrong with it before it's even begun. It's a dumb idea anyway, because what isn't wrong with it at the very beginning? Some people don't even know what their story is going to be about at that stage! I made the mistake of arranging a weekly sharing of works and write-in with one of the former types one year and it just killed my desire to write. By the time finals hit, I was almost glad to have an excuse not to keep writing. I'm keeping it under an extra lock and key this year, even from people I trust, just in case.

But really, to rewind a bit, that "let's write some crap, YEAAAAAH" feeling is an amazing self-esteem boost (and as anyone who's ever talked to me about my writing can tell you, I kind-of need it). My friend Tako*, who is giving NaNoWriMo her second go this year, said during one of our encouragement parties that NaNoWriMo lets her find everything she's written awesome, rather than doubting yourself like she would normally, and I agree 9000%.

So I'd say the number one best thing about NaNoWriMo is the way it allows you to find everything you write to be awesome. All of it.

And, as the official guidebook to NaNoWriMo says, even if you didn't win, perhaps you've written more than you ever have before! And if not even that, well, don't you still have the start of a novel in your hot little hands? Unless you don't start writing at all, there's no way not to benefit from NaNoWriMo, at least just a little.

Oh, and also there is the benefit of NaNoWriMo selling the softest shirts known to man, I'm not even joking. They are like heaven in shirt form.

Downsides?

The real kicker is the loss of free time, which can be hard, especially for us student writers who usually have all sorts of crap piled on us around the NaNoWriMo time of year. And also, possibly, how easy it is to talk yourself out of working on it. I mean, I already start out with a bad habit of when I have a super great idea for writing and a crap ton of homework, I will usually end up doing neither until the homework stands up for itself and says, "Um, you know I'm due right? And you will fail if you don't do me?" and NaNoWriMo has no tangible punishment or reward. As the joke went back when I first joined, the plans to give every winner their own Emu farm fell through due to financial constraints (the Office of Lights and Letters that runs NaNoWriMo is a non-profit organization, after all).

I mean, yes, the feeling of winning is pretty awesome (I'm going by the time I won Script Frenzy, NaNoWriMo's script equivalent, because obviously I have no clue what it feels like to win NaNoWriMo), and having a completed work is pretty awesome, but that's a whole lot of "awesomes" and not a lot of say, "sandwiches." Unless of course you bet people that if you won, they have to buy you sandwiches. Which is a pretty good idea, actually...

How successful are they at creating a community for writers?

Very successful, I would say, and you can choose your level of involvement. You don't have to be involved at all, or you can do everything there is to do (and there's quite a bit). Most of the community centers around the forums, but NaNoWriMo doesn't just let it sit at online involvement. There are Municipal Liasons all over the place organizing everything from start parties to write-in nights to TGIO (Thank God It's Over) parties. There are also the more official, or at least fancier, ones in San Francisco (home of Office of Lights and Letters) like the Write-a-thon (which is sadly expensive as hell, because I really want to go sometime). And the community isn't just focused on adults, either. There's a Young Writer's Program that tries to bring NaNoWriMo to classrooms, with an adjustable word goal (because asking babies to write 50,000 words is a little mean).

Anything else? Any funny anecdotes you'd like to share?

Uh, I'm not that exciting. Well, I didn't get to start my first NaNo on time because I worked concession at a football game the night before and got terribly sick for about a week. My 2004 NaNo was inspired by what my mom bought me for my birthday-- this huge store display of a megablocks ship, complete with a dragon! Yes, I got children's toys for like my 17th birthday... I'm that awesome. Also, if you want to see how pretentious your NaNo can potentially be, the answer is a lot! One year I switched every gender indicative word in my novel (hes were shes, girls were boys, etc etc). Strangely enough, before this year that one was my highest word count...

You can keep up with Michelle's word count (which is now at 31,000 words!!) here. Cheer her on as she approaches that long sought after goal of 50,000 words. Also let us know if you have any NaNoWriMo stories of your own!

*Names changed to protect the awesome

A Cup of Ambition: The Professors (and Literary Power Couple)

Caitlin Horrocks, Assistant Professor of Writing, and Todd Kaneko, Visiting Assistant Professor of Writing, Grand Valley State University, Grand Rapids, MI

How did you come to be a professor?
Caitlin: It’s the classic job, the only job, that an MFA really qualifies you for. But at the same time, all the way through an MFA program, it’s the job you’re told you’re never going to be able to get. I didn’t really allow myself to think about academic jobs too seriously when I was in graduate school, because I assumed I’d end up waiting tables or digging ditches or adjuncting, at best. After grad school I applied for a one-year teaching gig at GVSU, just to see what happened. I got the job, and it lead to my current position.

Todd: I love teaching, and it’s something that I’ve been looking toward since I made a decision to go to grad school when I was an undergraduate at Washington. After I got the MFA, I spent about a year adjuncting. When my partner Caitlin got tapped for a position at GVSU, I decided to go with her. For whatever reason, the Writing Department decided that they didn’t mind me tagging along and gave me a few classes to teach. So now I have a temporary position as a professor with two sets of crossed fingers that I can make something more permanent happen in the near future.

The Good Stuff
Caitlin: My students. My coworkers—I work in a happy, functional department. The flexibility of my schedule. Having a job in which I’m expected to get my own writing done. Having conversations all day about stories, taking them apart and putting them back together and talking about how they work. Reading wonderful stuff and having that be part of my job. Reading stuff that’s not so wonderful yet, and thinking about how it could be. Watching students’ writing, and their conception of who they can be as writers, evolve. On good days, teaching is genuinely fun, and I learn new things about what stories and essays can do.

Todd: I get to teach. The Department of Writing at Grand Valley State is really a great place to work. The people who work in the department are invested in the students and the program, and are awesome to work with. The students, for the most part, are dynamite—they are hard working and willing to invest in classes, which really makes all the difference in terms of the writing that they get done. Moreover, the teaching schedule is more conducive to creative endeavors for me than is the private sector.

The Bad Stuff
Caitlin: It’s not a job you leave behind at the office. I’m always haunted by the essays I haven’t graded, the stories I haven’t read for workshop, the lesson that I haven’t planned, or the assignment that I have planned but am now doubting. This is something anyone who’s taught a class as a TA knows—the teaching part of your life will expand to fill any and all space you give it. This doesn’t change when you have a tenure-track job; the balance just becomes even more unwieldy with new responsibilities like university service or advising.

Todd: The grading gets in the way of writing. The private sector is worse to me, in terms of the time spent on the job outside of the workplace, so I’m not complaining too much. But I love to make my art, and I’ll complain about anything that gets in the way of that. The other bad thing, I think, is the nature of my current position—it’s a one-year position renewable for up to three years. After that, I have to figure out what I am going to do, assuming I don’t find something more permanent before then. And with the economy in the toilet, I’m nervous.

And the Michigan winter sucks big time.

Surprise Me
Caitlin: It may or may not be surprising that I don’t care about grades, and wish I never had to give them. When I was a student I think I suspected teachers of deriving guilty pleasure from assigning grades, especially bad ones. But it’s infinitely more important to me just to have students write, learn from it, and care about what they produce. I know that there usually have to be carrots and sticks involved to keep a class on track. But grading creative work, especially, I struggle with: I can try to grade revision rather than talent, effort rather than idea, but if I didn’t have to do it all, I’d be thrilled.

Todd: I am a painfully slow writer, and it takes me weeks to finish a draft, and up to a year to revise—and sometimes the grading I have makes it tough for me to become as immersed in a story as I like to be when writing fiction. The result is that I have been writing a lot of poetry. No disrespect meant to my poet friends, but I can get a draft of a poem done in a couple of days (of course it takes a bit more time to revise). Because of the conciseness of the poem, I can immerse for less time and more will come of it than when I try and write a story. The result of this is that I’ve not written a story in the last year, but I’ve got just about a half a draft of a poetry manuscript. I never expected to be writing lots of poetry, but here I am. Surprise.

Spin a Yarn
Caitlin: Too many teacher stories are of the “Man, students do the darnedest things!” ilk. I mean, they do, but I don’t want to throw my students under the bus. In public. Anyway, teachers definitely do the darnedest things, too. Like this: a short lesson I give in nonfiction classes involves me sprinting out of the classroom with an object stolen from one of my students. This takes some forethought into footwear but I’ve still slid out of control, smacked into a garbage can, and hit my shoulder on a doorframe. Very dignified.

Todd: I wasted my yarn on the previous question. I’m not sure I have any yarn left, at least none that should be spun here. How about this: I run an exercise when teaching narratives that involves being able to tell a good lie—we tell two truths and one lie and then talk about the evenness of details in a piece of writing. One example I use is the night I met Hulk Hogan in the Detroit airport a couple nights before he bodyslammed Andre the Giant at Wrestlemania III: he was reading a newspaper, I was reading Better Homes & Gardens, and he made me feel his bicep. I’ve been telling this story for years, and last semester, when I ran the exercise, I went for it with gusto—I elaborated on the story over a period of about two weeks until a student asked me point blank if the story was true. When I admitted that it was a lie, the whole class was disappointed, reacting as if they had just found out that the world really was flat after all.

Who makes a good teacher?
Caitlin: Don’t teach unless you actually like it and care about it. You’ll make yourself miserable and take roomfuls of students with you. Enjoy working with students, and be willing to work at it: you have to be pretty self-reflective about what you’re doing in the classroom and how effective it is. You’re also not a sell-out if you care about being entertaining. If my students have to listen to me for hours on end, I should put some thought into what combinations of activities, exercises or discussions are going to keep things interesting. You also have to be able to read hundreds of pages of student work without going cross-eyed.

Todd: Teachers cannot be robots. I am not here to entertain students, but when I am in the room, I am in the room 100%—bad traffic, the poem that has been eluding me, the argument I just had with my neighbor about their yappy dogs—when I am in the classroom, all of that stuff gets set aside so I can pay attention to the class. I think it comes down to respect: I work under the assumption that students are in the class because they want to learn and I think that a good teacher teaches the class as if the students are completely invested in the subject at hand—to do otherwise is insulting to the student. And students aren’t robots either, they have lives outside of the class. For me, teaching isn’t about force-feeding anyone knowledge—it’s about creating an environment in which students be sparked to claim and create knowledge for themselves. No robots with Powerpoint, I say.

How do I become you?
Caitlin: Teach and publish as much and as well as you can. (Easier said than done, I know.) Beyond that, be savvy about the academic job market. You can have great credentials, but if you don’t know the difference between an academic CV and a resume, or what your cover letter should include for a university teaching job, you’re not going to get far. Most MFA programs don’t give us this knowledge, so go out there and inform yourself, and know that that will set you apart from a lot of other applicants.

Todd: You don’t want to be me. I’ve got allergies and asthma, and I’m too short to see the stage at concerts. But if you really want to be me, in addition to what Caitlin says, you have to make good decisions and look for opportunities to make yourself marketable. There are basically three different kind of writing that happens at Grand Valley—there are the two majors in Creative Writing and Professional Writing, and there are the composition classes that all students have to go through. Because I’ve made the right decisions, and partly because I’ve taken advantage of a few opportunities that have fallen into my lap, I am able to teach nearly anything in any of these three areas. As a result, I can be a valuable resource for the department in a way that most professors can’t.

Thoughts on this job for writers...
Caitlin: Some people find teaching really energizing and some find it draining, and some a bit of both. Sometimes the energy it takes to read and respond to student writing, or to lead a workshop, comes from the same well as writing energy. Sometimes it soaks up the whole well, and I spend my evening sitting on the couch watching bad reality television. Or maybe I’d do that anyway, and the teaching is my excuse. There are other nights when the student stories I’ve read give me an idea for a project, or help me see a current project in a new way. If you organize your life right (and I’m still working on that part), this can be an ideal job for writers: you get to work with interesting people (both students and colleagues) in a flexible environment where your creative work is a valued and direct part of what you do.

Todd: Get any job you can. You need to pay the rent and buy groceries. Outside of that, creative writers sometimes suffer from reputation of being un-academic. We are artists and not expected to be academically savvy—we have overdeveloped right brains that are the sources that fuel our creative work. But if you want to work in the academy, you have to be academically savvy. You can’t rely on your status as a writer to excuse your weirdness. You have to be on top of things in terms of what a CV should look like, how to read a job ad, and how to make yourself into a job candidate that other faculty members want to have as a colleague, as opposed to the crazy guy that produces great work but needs a handler. You’re a professional, so act like one.

Caitlin Horrocks' short stories appear in The O. Henry Prize Stories 2009, Tin House, The Southern Review, The Gettysburg Review, Epoch, and elsewhere. Her work has been recognized by the Atlantic Monthly and the Bread Loaf Writers Conference, and short-listed in Best American Short Stories.

W. Todd Kaneko lives and writes in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He was a Peter Taylor Fellow at the 2007 Kenyon Review Writers Workshop. His poems and stories have recently appeared or are forthcoming in Fugue, Passages North, Harpur Palate, The Comstock Review, Crab Creek Review, and other journals. Check out Todd's work at Writer-on-Line and Word Riot.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Website of the Week - Lyrikline

Lyrikline features authors from around the world reading their original work, with translations into various languages just a click away. It calls itself "a concert of verse in the voices and languages of the authors." 500 poets and 5000 poems in 49 languages are available as well as more than 5500 translations in 44 languages, including Arabic, Farsi, German, Turkish, Russian, Italian, Norwegian, Spanish, Hebrew, French, Lithuanian, Dutch, Serbian, Welsh, Slovenian, Polish, and the list goes on...

HFR
contributor Dorothea Grünzweig (four of her poems are appearing in our upcoming issue #43, translated from the German by Derk Wynand) reads several poems here. Dorothea was born in Germany, and now lives in Finland, where she writes and translates works by Finnish and English poets. She has published four collections of poems with Wallstein Verlag, Göttingen, including Glasstimmen lasinäänet (Glass Voice lasinäänet), 2004, for which she received the Christian-Wagner Prize for Poetry. The poems appearing in HFR are from her fourth collection, Die Auflösung (The Clearing), Wallstein Verlag, 2008. Listen to her read to hear how she, as Wynand says, "creates new music."

News Around the 'Net

Studs Terkel dead at age 96.

A tour of Saul Bellow's Chicago.

Five poets explore what's left to be said after this exhausting election.

Gay writers respond to Prop 8's win in California.

The readers of Harry Potter can be divided into the four Houses at Hogwarts based on their style of consuming the books.

John Leonard dies at 69.

Anne Kornblut to release Rejection: Why America Isn't Ready for a Woman President, a reflection on Senator Clinton's bid for the presidency.

Did Stephen King predict Palin?

Thursday, November 6, 2008

NEW CONTEST ANNOUNCEMENT!

So now that Halloween and the elections are over, we can finally concentrate on what everyone really wants to talk about—the holidays! So here's the skinny: We want you to write a good holiday story or poem. Interpret this liberally. If you want to write about the Solstice (I know I will be!), go right for it. Or how about Thanksgiving, that most eclipsed holiday, or Kwanzaa or Hanukkah or the Islamic New Year or just plain old New Year? Yes, these holidays all get a lot of visibility already, but so much of it is commercialized or relegated to "political correctness" that the underlying possibility for conflict (the lifeblood of storytelling) is largely untapped. So see what you can make of it. And for anyone of the agnostic or atheist persuasion, this contest does not exclude you! The antithetical viewpoint of religion, spirituality, holidays, or what have you would be equally compelling if you do it the right way.

To recap:

1. Write a short story (under 2000 words) or a poem that somehow includes either the season or one of the upcoming holidays.

2. Email your story to hfr@asu.edu with the subject line BLOG HOLIDAY CONTEST and remember to include ALL of your contact information. This is important. Since we're the ones judging, it's probably best not to annoy us.

3. The submission due date is set for December 1 and the winners will start to be posted the following Monday, December 8.

The prize to all winners will be a posting on our blog as well as a free, one-year subscription to Hayden's Ferry Review. Also, as this season is one of peace, love, tolerance, and joy irrespective of any religion, every story that contains unresolved hatred or intolerance toward any sect or group of people WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED. You're story doesn't have to be all sparkling lights and tinsel with everyone going home happy at the end, but this one restriction against intolerance, I believe, is reasonable. Not that you would have written a story like that anyway! We look forward to as many wonderful submissions as we received last time!