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Friday, October 29, 2010

Submission Call for Short Forms

HFR is calling for flash fiction, prose poetry and short essays on/about/exploring these forms for our Spring/Summer 2011 issue. Our special focus on short forms is designed to explore and celebrate big achievements in small spaces. There are no restrictions on subject or theme.

In addition to this general call for short forms, we’re also asking writers to respond to the issue’s cover image, a photograph taken by artist Christian Houge on the island of Svalbard. This secluded island is one of the most untouched areas in the world and contains the cleanest atmosphere man can find. These physical circumstances make Svalbard a Mecca for scientists who have installed extensive technical machinery in the otherwise small and deserted landscape. To learn more about Christian Houge’s "Arctic Technology" project (and see a much bigger and better version of the photograph) visit his website. Responses to the image should be in either prose poetry or flash fiction forms. HFR editors will select one of each genre to be printed on the inside of our Spring/Summer issue’s cover.


The submission deadline is December 15th. Submit online through our submission manager. Select “flash fiction,” “prose poem” or “short essay” accordingly. Remember, no word caps, just keep it concise. We will look at up to three flash fiction pieces and six prose poems at a time, all in the same file. HFR pays its contributors. We do not accept previously published material. For complete submission guidelines, click here.

News Around the Net

The Whiting Award winners have been announced. You know who else is in the "early stages" of his career, except doesn't have a $50,000 grant to show for it? Me, that's who. Is it all because of this lack of talent thing I struggle with?

Reading of an unpublished David Foster Wallace story from 2000? Yes, why not? Also, here's a link to the text of the story, so you can follow along and spend a nice half hour of your time.

Dave Eggers brought his sketch book to game 1 of the World Series. Here is the result. No pictures of the game or the field.

Taylor Swift says people should read. Not unexpectedly, she was "inspired" by Dr. Seuss.

The new Nook will be released in the middle of next month for $259. Here's what it looks like. Looks pretty nice.

There was a LeBron James poetry contest. I really, really, really wish I knew. I would have written dozens of combined Nantucket/LeBron limericks and dominated this contest.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Submissions, submissions, and more submissions!

Publisher Seeks Submissions for 2011 MOTIF Anthology
MOTIF is a themed anthology series published annually by MotesBooks, Louisville, Ky. The theme or "motif" for Volume 3 is WORK. Submissions may be poems, short stories, song lyrics, short memoirs, essays, letters, creative nonfiction, or other forms. Combinations of forms are acceptable up to the limits described: Prose must be under 3,000 words. Send no more than three poems/lyrics. All genres will be considered as long as "work" is referenced or illuminated in the works. Submissions may address the theme either directly or indirectly, but work should figure significantly and artfully in the piece. The definition or concept of "work" can be interpreted in any way the writer sees fit. Submit by email only. Send manuscript (Arial 12 pt., single-spaced) as a .doc or .rtf file (MS Word) to MOTIF@MotesBooks.com. IMPORTANT: Use "MOTIF Anthology" as the subject line (email containing blank subject lines will automatically be deleted; other subject lines may inadvertently be tagged as spam). Include all author contact information (including phone, snail mail, and e-mail address) with each submission. Include a 50-60 word biographical note to appear in Contributor's section of the anthology in case of acceptance. Do not send previously published material, including online publications. Submission period closes November 30, 2010. Acceptances will be notified by early 2011. Publication slated for Summer, 2011. Editor is Marianne Worthington. For clarifications, visit www.MotesBooks.com or email us at MOTIF@MotesBooks.com.

30-Word Story Contest: SmokeLong Quarterly
In honor of SmokeLong Quarterly¹s 30th issue, we are holding a 30-word story contest. From November 1 to November 30, we will be accepting submissions of 30-word stories on any topic. The top 5 stories will be published in our 30th issue due out at the end of December. The rules: Thirty words exactly no less, no more. You MUST have a title for your story, though the title does not count toward the word count. You can submit up to three stories, but please submit each story SEPARATELY. No entry fee. Submissions open from November 1 to November 30. The final judge for this hint fiction contest is Robert Swartwood, the editor of Hint Fiction: An Anthology of Stories in 25 Words or Fewer, due out by W. W. Norton in November 2010. You may also visit our website.

Talking Writing seeking submissions
Talking Writing is an online monthly literary magazine that supports writers and those interested in literature by encouraging creative discussion of the writing process.Each issue of Talking Writing features the work of a poet, a fiction writer, and a visual artist or photographer. TW includes long reviews and personal essays, pieces that are often hard to place in print. We are committed to a new kind of magazine, one that¹s dynamic, talky, inspiring, and not too dusty. For poetry submissions, please send 6-8 poems, as TW features 2-4 poems by the featured poet in each issue. Send all submissions to editor@talkingwriting.com. We handle all correspondence through email. Guidelines for the various writing categories appear below. Please put "Submission" and the category name in the subject line of your
message.

Submission
s on Women and Poetry
Women and Poetry: Tips on Writing, Teaching and Publishing by Successful Women Poets.Book Publisher: McFarland & Company, Inc. Contributors needed for articles about: websites for women poets, using life experience, magazine markets, networking, managing family, blogs, unique issues women must overcome, lesbian and bisexual poetry, continuing education, queries and proposals, anthologies, conference participation, contests, promotion, self-publishing, teaching tips, and other areas women poets are interested. Practical, concise, how-to articles with bullets/headings have proven the most helpful. Please avoid writing too much about "me" and concentrate on what will most help the reader. No previously published, co-written, or simultaneously submitted material. Please send 2-3 topics you would like to contribute each described in a few sentences and a 65-75 word bio using the format of the bio's above. Please send in a .doc Word (older version) file by November 15, 2010 using POETS/your last name on the subject line to smallwood@tm.net. You will receive a Go-Ahead with guidelines if your topics haven't already been taken. Contributors will be asked to contribute a total of 1900-2100 words. Those included in the anthology will receive a complimentary copy as compensation.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Residencies!

Baltic Writers Residency
Applications for the 2011 Baltic Writers Residency, a funded month-long annual summer residency in Riga, Latvia for poets, playwrights, and writers of fiction working in English are now invited. Though, neither the writer nor their project need be connected with Latvia. Both emerging and established writers are encouraged to apply. Recent finalists and winners range from those who have yet to conceive of their first manuscripts, to writers who have extensive publication records, and have been finalists for the National Book Award and numbered in the New Yorker¹s ³20 Under 40². Emma Jones, author of one volume of verse, The Striped World (Faber & Faber, 2009), winner of the Forward Poetry Prize, is this year¹s resident, and we strongly encourage other young and emerging writers to apply. Previous winners include Salvatore Scibona and Amity Gaige. The deadline is December 15th, and we are accepting applications now. Details about the residency, about Riga, and about the application process can be found on the
website. Mail: The Baltic Writing Residency in Latvia, PO Box 17184, Louisville, KY 40217 E-mail: balticresidency@gmail.com.

Writers in the Heartland Writer's Residency
Writers in the Heartland is now taking applications for its 2011 season. Writers in the Heartland is a writing colony for creative writers in all genres. The colony is located in Gilman, Illinois, approximately 90 miles south of Chicago. It is located on a beautiful 32-acre wooded site with lakes and walking paths. A limited number of one-week residencies are available for September 2-9 and September 30-October 7, 2011. All lodging and food is included. Writers must reside in the Midwest region or have some Midwest connection. Applications must be postmarked no later than February 28, 2011, to be considered. Decisions will be announced on or around June 1st. Poets should submit 10 pages of work; fiction and non-fiction writers may submit up to and no more than 15 pages. All submissions are peer reviewed by a three person panel and are blind readings. Please staple the writings samples together and place your name on the top sheet only.
Send submissions to Dr. P. B. Erens; 180 East Pearson Street, #3802; Chicago, IL, 60611. For further information about apply to Writers in the Heartland, see our website or contact us at writersintheheartland@gmail.com.

Artsmith Artist Residency
The fifth annual Artsmith Artist Residency is open for applications until November 1, 2010, for the upcoming residency the week of February 25 to March 4, 2011. The residency includes lodging and continental breakfast on Orcas Island in Washington State. To learn more about the residency and to apply, please visit: http://www.orcasartsmith.org/residencies.html.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

National Novel Writing Month!

It’s that time of year again: pumpkin spice, Halloween costumes, and hanging out with friends in the fall weather. That last one might be difficult though, if you’re considering the other thing it’s time for: National Novel Writing Month. (NaNoWriMo means you will become a temporary hermit. In a good way.). Sure, it’s not until November, and we’ve got a good week or so, but if you want to make it all the way through November, you’d better start considering what your 50,000 words are going to be about, and how you’re going to manage to fit in enough time to write coherently for 30 days straight. When you think about it, it doesn’t sound like such an enormous undertaking. Writing every day. Meeting a word count. But if you’re anything like I was last year, you think plotting your story is a waste of time because, hey, it will just come to you as you go, and by the time you hit day 6 you realize that you’ve been ‘writing’ for hours (read: opening the document, thinking you need to research some stuff, and then spending the next three hours reading about geoducks and murder ballads), but your story hasn’t progressed—in word count or in action. And then you have the horrible realization that there are still 24 days to go and that if you can’t continue writing now, you will suffer the shame of having failed at your NaNo escapade after annoyingly trying to con all of your friends (and some strangers) into being your NaNoWriMo buddy by telling them how easy it will be.

And we just can’t have that.

So this year, plan on doing NaNoWriMo, and plan on winning. Continue your recruiting, but go out there with some weapons, like the official site itself (http://www.nanowrimo.org/), where you can register and track your progress against your friends’ and your region’s progress against any other part of the world. Check out local events, and read some of the pep talks by authors of all genres, like Maureen Johnson, Neil Gaiman, and Sara Gruen. Start thinking about your story, and prepare for a month of the most rewarding self-torture you’ll ever experience.

Who: You and some friends (hopefully)
What: National Novel Writing Month – 50,000 words by midnight, Nov. 30
Where: At your desk, in a closet, in a bouncy house castle, wherever
When: November (Yes, all of it.)
Why: Why not?
How: However you want (I work best with a full pot of coffee and a Costco-size bag of Swedish Fish and nonstop Christmas music. Maybe you work best in striped toe socks, snacking on Bugles in a soundproof band practice room. No one’s judging.)

I’ll be posting regularly on my NaNoWriMo experience, and I hope you’ll join me, because nobody likes to write alone. (A completely false statement. Still. We’ll be interacting online. Come on!)

Friday, October 22, 2010

News Around the Net

It's that time of the year again: November is National Novel Writing Month. Who's down to write 50,000 words next month?

A personally hand-written and illustrated unfinished Dr. Seuss book abandoned from the late 1960's was up for auction. It could have been yours for only about $34,000. What a deal.

Thanks to a grant from Amazon, the Best Translated Book Awards will now have a cash prize. Pretty awesome.

The New York Times asked students, 13 and up, their thoughts on digital versus paper books. Here's what they had to say. They kinda hate digital books, I guess. I think they've been brainwashed.

The most expensive book in the world, some silly thing about birds, is going to be up for auction. So you didn't have the $34,000 for the Dr. Seuss thing book. Just scratch up an extra $8 million and you'll be able to get Birds of America.

The University of Virginia has offered their audit of the Virginia Quarterly Review scandal.


Amazon is finding new ways to screw over bookstores. They're actually getting pretty creative here.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Attention Portland: Check Out The Bad Blood Reading Series

If you live in Portland, here's a great way for you to get your poetry fix: former HFR contributor, Joseph Mains, has put together a reading series at the Worksound Gallery that promises to be pretty awesome. First up next Thursday is Mathias Svalina, Joshua Marie Wilkinson, Solan Jensen, and Ally Harris, all great writers, all totally worth checking out.

Here's a link to the Bad Blood Reading Series blog, where you can keep up with future readings and contact Joseph and his fellow organizers. And check out Joseph's poems, "Self-Portrait as Ornament II" and "The Afternoon We & Light Held Still (I)," in Issue #45 of HFR.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

A Cup of Ambition: The Video Game Writer

We've all heard it before, at dinner parties, from relatives, from our therapists: "Oh, you write. Does that mean you'll be a teacher?" Fine, fine. We can't make enough money to "eat" or "live" from our poetry. Every MFA graduate knows the horrible feeling that settles into his/her stomach as graduation approaches. You finished a whole book!, you keep telling people. And still, no prospective employers come a-calling. Here at HFR, we know how you feel. We thought it might be interesting to take a closer look at some jobs we writers and lovers of books might enjoy. Or do enjoy. Or have tried, and regret. This regular post, A Cup of Ambition, will talk to those in-the-know about what the working world is really like. (To see our previous interviewees, click here.)

Introducing Mademoiselle...
Emilie Poissenot. I’m also known as Aheïla on the web. I work as a video game designer at Sarbakan, a renowned independent game studio specializing in global cross-platform development services and original game creations. A studio born here, in Quebec city, a little over 12 years ago. I also teach narrative structure for games part time. And when I’m not doing either of those things, I’m an aspiring author posting fiction on The Writeaholic’s Blog.

Game Designer huh, what about it?
The game designer’s job is a little challenging to explain. I don’t program and I don’t produce art. In a way, I write games but not just (and often not even) in a narrative way. I create the rules by which the game is played, the controls, the characters (if any), the scoring system, and the game levels that contain all that. The documentation I write contains the guidelines the team of programmers and artists need to turn an idea into a playable experience. In huge studios, game designer, level designer and game writer are different jobs. Sarbakan falling somewhere between large studio and indie developer, I’m more a jack-of-all-trade.

Getting Started

I’ve always dwelled in artsy things. I took acting classes from 5 and a half to 15, I wrote stories for the local newspaper when I was 10, I dance, I sing, and I studied cinema in college. When my college classes taught me to be a critic instead of a creator, I decided to take a step back from my education. I needed time to figure out the best route to something that would satisfy my urge for creation whilst reassuring the Taurus in me who likes job security. I worked a few very random, non-creative and outright weird jobs before I stumbled upon the idea of developing games. I took a 13 months intensive class to become a game designer. Now, I work in the business and I occasionally teach it. Suffice to say I fell in love with game creation.

Good Stuff

Everything!? Okay, I’ll narrow it down. In the course of my career, which is about to reach the 3 years mark, I have worked mostly on free online Flash projects. These projects are for clients such as Disney, Nickelodeon, Hasbro, MTV, Fisher Price, and others. I designed games for SpongeBob, Transformers, Hot Wheels, etc. There is an undeniable thrill to work with franchises that influenced a generation, brands that made, and are still making, childhood magical. It’s nice to become part of the magic. Moreover, though we do have crunch times and hard days, making game is all about fun. Plus, it’s ever-changing so I don’t get bored!

Bad Stuff

Games have yet to develop their language for storytelling. We rely on cinema’s language or plain text. Since games are interactive in nature, unlike any other medium, it’s not working quite right. Ultimately, we cannot/should not control elements of the story writers usually perceive as the key to storytelling, like pacing or even the main character’s actions for that matter. Since it’s partially charted territory, we’re often required to avoid stories or make them as short as possible. While it’s a great way to learn how to shorten dialog and make it snappy, it also means the depth of stories is limited. As someone who is obsessed with fiction and the way various mediums convey emotions, my biggest challenge at work also is my greatest motivation. One of my career goals would be to broaden the very limited emotional range of games by one emotion.

Something weird, something cool, or something surprising
Writing games allowed me to realize the weight of my words. They convince clients to invest anywhere from five to seven digits sums in our projects. They launch a journey of 2 months to over a year for a team of five to over a hundred people towards the realization of an outstanding product. And yet my words are worth very little. Without the trust of the client, without the budget, time, and technology, or the synergy of the whole team, my words aren’t a game; they’re a silly idea on paper. Who would read twice the story of a plumber jumping on turtles and eating mushrooms on his way to save a princess? A person might have the best idea in the world, if it is not expressed properly, no one will care. When games are concerned, “expressing properly” means molding ideas to constraints and realizing them with a team.

Cool Story, let's hear it
Just one? How am I supposed to pull that off? The working environment in games is prone to anecdotes. How can I choose between Formal Fridays, guys jealous of the Transformer RPM race track Hasbro sent me or chasing the boss with a Super Soaker during the summer party? I’ll use something that has nothing to do with the social aspect of my work. I’ll tell the story of a task I actually had to perform. MTV premiered a new comedy last June entitled The Hard Times of RJ Berger. The lead game designer (aka my immediate superior) worked on a game called Chain of Thoughts to accompany the premiere. One morning, he dropped by my desk to delegate the dialogs of the game to me. “You have to write a few scenes of an awkward teenager flirting with the most beautiful girl in school,” he said. I already had ideas bubbling in my head and a wide grin. “Those will be the good lines. Then change one word to turn the lines into sexual innuendos, dorkish/geekish references or, you know, wrong things to say when you’re flirting.” So I worked for a couple of days on the awkward teenager’s line and the messed up versions of said lines. Both were a lot of fun to write. I even did some extra ones so the lead game designer could choose his favorites. But, you know, my job is very serious.

The Key to Game Designing
The core traits are an interest for games, creativity that can work within specific constraints, teamwork capability, and the capacity to express ideas clearly (written and spoken). Humility is always a plus: people might be working on your idea but they know things that you don’t and you should listen when they speak. Besides that, lots of skills are useful and make each designer unique. I talk “programmer-speak” but I don’t code. Some of my coworkers do. I can devise the flowchart of the behavioral pattern of an artificial intelligence but I don’t enjoy it. My desk neighbor does. So I might drop my flowcharts on his desk and he’ll give me the storytelling required for his game. We work as a team whenever possible to play on everyone’s strength.

Advice for the people of tomorrow
A lot of people think they can be game designers because they have ideas and they play a lot of games. It is not enough. Your creative horizon needs to be wide so you can draw inspiration from an array of things. Expressing yourself clearly is key and learning to let other people alter your ideas is a must. Because like a movie, game development involves a multi-disciplinary team. You should also be prepared to work for it. There aren’t a whole lot of game designers within a company. I’m one of the few of my class who got hired; I went the extra mile during my formation and networked whenever I had the chance.

Thoughts for those people who write poetry or non-fiction
The job itself teaches a few skills that are useful for people who want to pursue publishing. I alter my ideas on a daily basis which is a good trial run for the editing process. I create according to a target audience which contributes to the marketability of any oeuvre. I write proposals to convince people my ideas are worth investing large amounts of money in (query letter, anyone?). As I said before, game stories also teach concision which is something I, personally, constantly need to work on. The work schedule itself being somewhat flexible, except during crunch times, I can find time to work on my blog.

Outside work and the Job, how is that going?
Because storytelling in games is fairly limited, my blog and my other writing projects channel my need to explore emotionally complex narratives but I started them for other reasons too. The primary goals of my blog are to work on my writing flaws and build my confidence in storytelling in English (my first language is French). Unforeseen Dives, my first blog novel, has a rigid structure that forces me to be concise and write steadily. The readers comment right away which gives me instant feedback. Since its inception, my blog has grown to serve other purposes as well, such as giving writing tips and networking to help my attempts at publication. Good writing comes with practice so the time I spend blogging is never lost.

Aheïla wants anyone who has any questions to go to her blog. She is ready and willing to answer.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Unusual Calls for Submissions

Magazine Seeking Submissions on a Work of Art
At Length is seeking submissions from writers of all stripes for a recurring feature in its art section. The feature will include and promote prose pieces (essays, prose poems,letters-to-the-world) that explore one work of art. The first installment, an essay by poet Anna Journey on Remedios Varo's Catedral
vegetal, can be found on the site.Please send a query letter with a brief synopsis to At Length's art editor,Elaine Bleakney at art@atlengthmag.com.

13th Anniversary Issue Seeking Submissions
With its current issue, Writer Advice turns thirteen. Woo-hoo! Want to help us celebrate? Share a memory of your own thirteenth year in a mini-memoir (500 words or less for prose 24 lines or less for poetry). Complete guidelines are available here. We'll publish the best submissions in the winter issue (Jan-March). Questions? Contact B. Lynn Goodwin at Lgood67334@comcast.net.

Got Crazy Exes or Psycho Brothers and Want Revenge?
Writing Revenge: Don't Get Mad, Get Even. Seeking submissions for an anthology about crazy exes, the brother who stole your fiancée, inattentive spouses, domineering bosses, inept co-workers, nosy neighbors, and anybody else who¹s pissed you off so much you had to shame them by writing about them. We want poems, stories, essays, and memoir, serious or otherwise, for a proposal to send to potential publishers. E-mail attachments preferred. Email: Carl Jenkinson & Stephen Powers at writingrevenge@gmail.com. Snail mail (with SASE for response) to:Dr. Carl Jenkinson /Mount Ida College /777 Dedham Street, Newton, MA 02459.Deadline: May 15th, 2011

Submissions For Music Related Prose, Art, and Poetry
Forest Publications has opened Submissions for This Next One Goes Out To... Forest Publications, UK, is publishing a book featuring short stories, poetry, biographical accounts, musical journalism, essays, photography and artwork inspired by a particular song. Whether it was a tune that drove you to tears, then to the page; a melody that can transport you to different time and place, or a debaucherous adventure centred around a killer gig, we'd like to present your work as an homage to the relationship between literature and music.Submissions should generally be less than 5000 words. Send submissions to submissions@forpub.com. Send photos and artwork as high-res images. Deadline: October 30, 2010

Calling For Gay and Lesbian Jewish Poetry Submissions
A Midsummer Night's Press announces a call for submissions for 2 anthologies celebrating queer Jewish poetry to be published Spring 2011:
Flamboyant: A Celebration of Jewish Gay Poetry edited by Lawrence Schimel and Milk And Honey: A Celebration of Jewish Lesbian Poetry edited by Julie R. Enszer. We welcome voices from across the spectrum of Jewish identity, from observant to merely cultural, and their intersections with gay, lesbian,bisexual, and transgender identities and experiences. We are open to all styles of poetry, from formal to free verse. We welcome queer Jewish voices from outside the US, and are willing to consider translations into English. (It is the translator's responsibility to secure permission to reprint the poem in English.) Both anthologies are open to previously published work, but it is the poet's responsibility to secure permission to reprint the poem. Submission instructions: Title file with the initials of the anthology and author's last name: F-Surname.doc or MH-Surname.doc Include your name, your mailing address, your email address, and a bio WITHIN the .doc file with your essay, as submissions will be separated from emails to be read. Submit your work by email, as an attachment in .doc or .rtf format, to queerjewishpoetry@gmail.com. Deadline: November 30, 2010.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Still Time to Register for Our Online Writing Classes!

Deadlines, Deadlines, Deadlines!

You only have a few hours left to register for an online Piper Writers Studio class. Classes include: "Coloring [Inside] the Lines: The Practice of Poetry," "Writing the World a Better Place," "Press Start/Restart: Getting on Track [Again] with Your Writing Project," "Writing for Real" and "Writing the Memoir." The registration deadline is midnight tonight (Oct. 15). Details and registration information are available here.

If in-person classes are more your speed, the Piper Writers Studio is also offering several one-day classes on Saturday, Oct. 23. The deadline to register for of these classes is midnight Sunday (Oct. 17).

News Around the Net

The 2010 National Book Award finalists are nearly man-free and also 100% Franzen-free. Also, they include an Australian-born author living in London. You figure it out.

Hilary Duff's new novel, Elixir, came out on Tuesday. I could go (and have gone) on and on and on and on, but let's just say that I'm super excited for this one.

Secondary news from Tuesday: Howard Jacobson won the 2010 Man Booker Prize.

Looking for a bookshelf? Why not get this ridiculous thing?

A group of self-publishers is throwing a challenge out to anyone else who's ever self-published a magazine or comic. They want at least one new issue in 2011. And they have lots of participants so far.

This week's edition of 'Bret Easton Ellis is a douche' is brought to you at the expense of the recently rescued Chilean miners.


Here's a list of literature's 10 best-dressed authors. I'm still trying to figure out whether this piece is ironic or not. On one hand, these people are all horribly dressed. On the same hand, look at Edmund Spenser and Tom Wolfe. Let's just move on from this.

To wrap things up, here's a fun long, long profile of Philip Roth, whose new book (his 31st and 8th in 10 years) just came out.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Website of the Week: Fiction Writer's Review

The Fiction Writer's Review Book of the Week Giveaway has earned the title of Website of the Week. Fiction Writer's Review is a group of writers that is committed to covering quality fiction, be it big name novels or debut novels, by reviewing it and discussing it. One of their recent projects is a weekly book giveaway.

Of course, you are probably wondering how to win. Who doesn't like free things, especially if they are books? All you have to do is became a fan of their Facebook page. All of their fans are automatically entered into a drawing to win one of several copies of the book they are giving away that week. (I just joined it. College students especially love free stuff.)

The book they are giving away this week is The Quickening by Michelle Hoover, which follows two Iowa families that try to establish their lives while living in the middle of the Great Depression.

I suggest that you check out the entire Fiction Writer's Review site as well. It has everything from interviews to essays and reviews.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

R. Cheran's 'Not By Our Tears' in Toronto this November!

R. Cheran, Toronto-based poet and playwright (as well as upcoming HFR contributor for issue #47) is returning home to Toronto for another performance of his play, Not By Our Tears, this November. The play premiered in Toronto in November of 2009 and has since spent the year touring North America before returning to Toronto for one night, two shows, on November 13, which just so happens to be my birthday, so someone needs to buy me plane tickets to go check it out. Seriously.

If you live in Toronto or even close, take the opportunity to see this great work!

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Book Review: In The Eyes, In The Mouth by Adrienne Ross

In the Eyes, In the Mouth by Adrienne Ross. Lost Coast Press, Fort Bragg, CA, 2010. Review by Debrah Lechner. Fiction collection.

This volume of short stories by Adrienne Ross is a very rewarding to read. I drew the experience out a little longer than I ordinarily would, saving stories for the hour before bedtime. I hope my editor didn't mind.

What I found most enjoyable about this compilation was that most of the characters in these stories, though they may experience loneliness, still find their identities very much determined by the people who surrounded them. Often this causes frustration for the reader, but it also imparts on every story a sense of hope and possible redemption, even when the characters flounder or fail.

In "Substance," even if the addict/writer protagonist, Joel, chooses to bunk down with the easy-going drug-enabler, Lenny, who will enable the habit that is ruining his work, there are still Joel’s friends Philip and Judith to contend with. The reader can't help but think that the exacting Philip and emotionally demanding Judith will not easily let go of their friend.

If Polly, in the story "Getting Rid of Randall," fantasizes obsessively about the way she might murder her husband, there are still her teenage boys to interrupt her homicidal tendencies and keep her grounded.

In the cleverly written "Kay Kay and Jay Jay," in which the narcissistic narrator wears down and eventually loses her partner and most of her friends, the alternate personality that she begins to construct reaches out both to her and to others to effectively, even if tenuously, reconnect her to the world.

In the story "The Lost Objects Box," the narrator is easily exhausted by social relationships (this might have been exacerbated by her friendship with Kay Kay) and chooses a solitary life. Yet when her siblings invade her home, the relief she feels when they leave coexists with the happy expectation of seeing them again, leading her to savor even more deeply the life she lives alone.

I also enjoyed how adroit Adrienne Ross is in taking the simple challenges we all meet in life and turning them into familiar but suspenseful conundrums. In Ross's world, you can't lose a tooth or take up composting without having it change your life.

This beautiful passage from "In Common" gives the flavor of Ross's writing:
What's around me is all I know, and also all I don't know. Gasping, thrown on the rocky sand, drowned in the seventh wave, I'd like to know the wave, but too late: it's already engulfed me, it's become me, and I can't know it now… When it's gone, I'm drenched and stunned, drooling, bruised, in need of warm blankets, gazing at the sea the wave presumably came out of, was extruded from, but there's no sign, and now perhaps I'll never know. But I’ve been in it, and that's something.
Ross speaks easily in the voices of the young and the old, the male and the female, but her own voice remains remarkably consistent over the space of time that these stories cover.

This consistency makes me believe that although her characters may not always know who they are, Adrienne Ross knows who she is. I wish I knew more about her. There's not too much information on the web, but I noticed that she is generous with her in-person appearances. So if you have the chance to see her in public, or visit with her at someone's home, do so.

Hayden's Ferry Review was pleased to publish two of Ross’s stories from this collection: "The Dream Of Ten Normas" and "Jack Bailey's Beach Story." Pick up your copy of In The Eyes, In The Mouth, available here, here, or at your local independent bookseller. Ross is also the author of another novel, In the Quiet, published by Delacorte Books for Young Readers.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Foreign Tongues: Isthmus Zapotec

HFR publishes contributors from all over the world, in languages and from places that some people (we're not pointing fingers) have never heard of. This recurring post Foreign Tongues will give you a little culture and a little history, a way to better understand the background behind some not-so-familiar peoples and languages.

Victor Teran is a Mexican poet who writes not in Spanish, language of the conquerors, but in a little known language by the name of Isthmus Zapotec. Teran was born in Juchitán de Zaragoza in 1958. The city is located in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. He is a well-established poet in Mexico, with many works published in anthologies and magazines. Although he is considered a poet, he has also written novels in Zapotec. When he is not traveling the world showcasing his poetry, his day job is a teacher of media education in the Oaxacan Isthmus.

Zapotec is a varied language, meaning that there are different dialects and versions of the language. The names people call it in their dialect or version vary from Diidxaza to Didxsaj. What’s really interesting about Zapotec is that some of the dialects and variants are completely different. One person speaking in one dialect will not understand another person speaking in a different dialect. Because of these differences, the Mexican government now recognizes about 60 Zapotec languages. Zapotec is related to Chatino, which is a sub group of the Oto-Manguean family, which is mostly spoken in Mesoamerica. Oto-Manguean is a family comprised of Native American languages. Another cool thing about Isthmus Zapotec is that it got its current alphabet in the 1950s.

The Zapotec civilization is about 2500 years old. Zapotecs or present day speakers of Zapotec, live in the same Valley of Oaxaca as their ancestors. Although Zapotecs have been using the Isthmus Zapotec alphabet only since the 1950s, they did have ancient writings using glyphs. Zapotecs also have a different cuisine then many other Mexicans and Native Americans. In their enchiladas, for example, they put a variety of black mole as their stuffing. They also eat iguana and armadillo. So if you are ever in the Valley of Oaxaca don’t forget the enchiladas!

Teran's work, translated by David Shook, appeared in HFR issue #45.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Jobs!

Brown University invites applications for an Associate Professor or Professor specializing in Poetry, position to begin 1 July 2011. Candidates should have a strong national and international reputation as a poet, a substantial publication record, and extensive teaching experience; additional expertise in other areas such as translation or poetics. An ideal candidate will also have leadership potential and be interested in helping to develop and administer the future of the Literary Arts Program. We are looking for a strong and committed teacher who has made and will continue to make important contributions to contemporary poetry. Course load is 2/2. Duties including teaching poetry workshops and literature courses, directing graduate and undergraduate theses, and advising graduate and undergraduate students in poetry and related topics. Candidates should send letter of application, writing sample, C.V. and names of at least five referees to C.D. Wright, Search Committee Chair, Literary Arts, Brown University, Box 1923, Providence RI 02912. Applications received by December 1, 2010 will be given full consideration. Brown is an EEO/AA employer. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply.
Postal Address: CD Wright / Literary Arts / Brown University / Box 1923 / Providence, RI 02912 / Phone: 401-863-3260

The George Washington University. 2011–2012 Jenny McKean Moore Writer-In-Washington (Fiction). For appointment beginning in the fall of 2011, we seek a writer of fiction to teach two semesters at The George Washington University as the Jenny McKean Moore Writer-in-Washington. The successful candidate will teach a small fiction workshop each semester for members of the metropolitan Washington community. No tuition is charged for these workshops, which are not open to University students. The successful candidate will also teach two classes, one each semester, for students at The George Washington University. This position is funded by an endowment from the Jenny McKean Moore Fund for Writers. The late Jenny McKean Moore, who had been a playwriting student at The George Washington University, left in trust a fund to encourage creative writing, & the trustees of the Fund helped design the program. The position is intended to serve as a fellowship for the visiting writer, since it involves only a moderate teaching load, & the program's location at a university in the center of Washington should offer additional attractions for the writer. The writer must have significant publications (fiction published by a well regarded press) & a demonstrated commitment to teaching. Like students in the community workshops, the writer need not have conventional academic credentials. He or she should reside in the Washington area while the University is in session, 1 September through early May. The historic Lenthall House, a 4-story Federal-era townhouse on campus, is normally available to the visiting writer through a subsidized rental agreement. The salary for 2011–2012 is expected to be $58,000 plus an attractive benefits package. To be considered, applications for the 2011–2012 Writer-in-Washington position must be made by letter, indicating publications & other projects, extent of teaching experience, & other qualifications. The application must also include a resume & a selection of published fiction. Applicants are encouraged to send a book as their sample. Books will be returned if accompanied by an appropriate SASE. Only complete applications will be considered. Review of all applications will begin on November 1, 2010 & will continue until the position is filled. Applications should be sent to: Professor Gayle Wald, Chair, Department of English, 801 22nd St., NW (Suite 760), The George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052.

Bucknell University. Tenure-track position as Assistant Professor of English (Creative Writing), entry-level (no more than four years of full-time post-doctoral teaching experience at the time of appointment), beginning August 2011. "Specializing in creative writing: fiction, with ability to teach fiction writing at beginning & advanced levels as well as introductory multi-genre courses. Ability to teach creative nonfiction, screenwriting, or playwriting is desirable." Duties & Responsibilities: Minimum Qualifications: MFA or Ph.D. & teaching experience required. Preferred Qualifications: Record of publication in fiction strongly preferred. Application deadline is October 15, 2010. Please submit letter of application, CV, & writing sample (Document 1). Please provide three references & their email addresses. Please visit the Bucknell English Department on the web athttp://www.departments.bucknell.edu/english. Bucknell University values a diverse college community & is committed to excellence through diversity in its faculty, staff & students. Job Requisition Number 06737. For more information, go here.

Texas State University. Assistant Professor of English, primary specialization in fiction writing, secondary specialization innon-fiction writing. Successful applicant expected to maintain active record of publication in fiction and/or creative non-fiction, to teach primarily in the graduate fiction program, & to direct MFA theses, with some teaching of undergraduate creative writing. Teaching assignment may include other undergraduate literature or composition courses. Course load is 2/2 plus direction of at least four thesis students each year. Reading of admission portfolios required every January. Required Qualifications: MFA or PhD in creative writing, with degree in hand by time of appointment; Primary specialization in fiction writing, secondary specialization in non-fiction writing; & one novel, book of stories, or book of creative non-fiction published with national press. Preferred Qualifications: High quality publication(s) in literary fiction/non-fiction; Evidence of potential for continued success as publishing fiction/non-fiction writer; Evidence of effectiveness in teaching graduate & undergraduate creative writing; Evidence of ability to work with graduate students individually in directing MFA theses; & evidence of ability to teach courses other than creative writing. Send letter of application, current CV, statement of teaching philosophy (maximum 500 words), & names of three references to: Prof. Tom Grimes, Chair, Fiction/Non-Fiction Search Committee, Department of English, Texas State University, 601 University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666. To ensure full consideration, all application materials must arrive by October 25, 2010. Selected applicants will be contacted for interviews at MLA or elsewhere.

The English department at Portland State University seeks a writer whose specialty is poetry for a position to begin September 2011. The successful candidate will be a core contributor to the MFA Creative Writing Program, teaching both graduate and undergraduate writing classes, including workshops and seminars, as well as directing MFA theses, contributing to the administrative responsibilities of the MFA, and helping to develop the MFA into a program of national prominence. Candidates should have significant poetry publications and a demonstrated ability to teach poetry writing. Preference for candidates with a book. Preference for experience teaching poetry craft and related seminars. MFA or Ph.D. in creative writing required. 2/2/2 course-load. Competitive salary and excellent benefits. Send letter of application, c.v., writing sample, and three letters of recommendation to: Chair, Poetry
Search Committee, Department of English, Portland State University, P.O. Box 751, Portland, OR, 97207-0751. Postmark: December 1, 2010. Include a SASE if you would like confirmation that your application is complete. We will begin reviewing immediately and continue until finalists have been identified. The position is contingent on funding and will remain open until filled.

The Department of English at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas is searching for a Fiction Writer, Assistant Professor. This is a full-time, 9-month tenure track position available fall 2011. Duties include teaching undergraduate and graduate courses, working on graduate theses and participating in screening applications for our distinguished MFA International Program. All applicants must possess the appropriate graduate degree (MFA or Ph.D.) from an accredited university and have at least one significant book publication. Salary competitive with those at similarly situated institutions. Position is contingent upon funding. Submit a letter of interest, a detailed resume listing qualifications and experience, and the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of at least three professional references who may be contacted. Applicants should fully describe their qualifications and experience, with specific reference to each of the minimum and preferred qualifications because this is the information on which the initial review of materials will be based. The review of materials will begin November 15, 2010, and will continue until the position is filled. Materials should be addressed to Dr. Donald Revell, Search Committee Chair, and are to be submitted via on-line application at https://hrsearch.unlv.edu. For assistance with UNLV's on-line applicant portal, contact Jen Martens at (702) 895-2894 or hrsearch(at)unlv.edu (replace (at) with @).

Friday, October 8, 2010

News Around the Net

Mario Vargas Llosa was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize for literature. This marks the first time since 1993 that the award has gone to a writer whom I've even vaguely heard of (Toni Morrison). Congrats!

Jonathan Franzen's glasses were held for ransom at a recent London party for $100,000. He probably went and bought another pair for like $6. Have you seen his glasses? That might be overpriced. Anyone had enough of Franzen mania yet?

Why characters you hate are good things. I hate liking characters too. Harry Potter? What a jerk.

A lost Ted Hughes poem detailing his anguish over the dead of wife, Sylvia Plath, has been uncovered and published.
Not the most uplifting read in the world, but certainly worth noting.

The National Book Foundation announced it's "5 Under 35" for this year. The writers are selected yearly (this is the fifth year) by past winners of the National Book Award. No Christopher Paolini this year. Maybe next year. Or the year after. Or the year after, etc.

Want to know what James Franco's favorite poems are? Well, too bad. You're getting them anyway.

Stephen King is on a mission to make vampires scary again. He's probably the right man for the job.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Website of the Week: Mc The Book Mechanic

Kevin McIlvoy was a writer in residence here at the Piper Center last year, and he has now launched a new website offering writing help and guidance at www.mcthebookmechanic.com.

McIlvoy is the author of such books as The Fifth Station, Hyssop, Little Peg, and The Complete History of New Mexico (all of which can be ordered on the products page). He's the recipient of a fellowship from The National Endowment of the Arts, and taught in the MFA program at New Mexico State University, where he was editor of Puerto del Sol for twenty-five years.

Long story short: this guy knows his stuff and he can help YOU get your novel/short story collection/any writing you are working on in shape. As his website says, the "mission is to be a welcoming place for the restless people who believe in the 'radical decentering' (Elaine Scarry, On Beauty and Being Just) power of beauty." Even his mission statement is beautifully written!

McIlvoy offers services in editing and mentoring, as well as writer's workshops and a site feature called Inter-Nest, an area where he hopes to continue the "dialogue with the writers who once trusted me to fully inhabit their work and to respond to it from the inside; I ask that they help me place myself in the dynamic uncertainties in which I will challenge all my own first assumptions about writing and the teaching of writing."

Check out the site at www.mcthebookmechanic.com.

Matt Bell's 'How They Were Found' Now Available!

We posted a review a few weeks ago of former HFR contributor Matt Bell's then upcoming collection How They Were Found. It's good stuff. And lucky for you, it's now available for purchase.

The book includes his story "Dredge," which was originally published in HFR and was selected for the Best American Mystery Stories 2010 anthology. You can actually read "Dredge" in it's entirety in the HFR archives.

Check out Matt's website to learn more about the book, which is coming soon to your Kindle/Nook/iPad, but you should buy a physical copy here, here or here.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Foreign Tongues: Ladino

HFR publishes contributors from all over the world, in languages and from places that some people (we're not pointing fingers) have never heard of. This recurring post Foreign Tongues will give you a little culture and a little history, a way to better understand the background behind some not-so-familiar peoples and languages.

Dr. Avner Perez speaks and writes in a language that - according to Wikipedia - is only spoken by about 100,000 people in the world, give or take a couple hundred. He speaks Ladino or Judeo-Spanish, as it is sometimes called. Perez was born in Jerusalem in 1942. He is a translator and writer of poetry. He is one of the few people in the world who actually writes in Ladino. His poems have appeared in many places around the world from Europe to the Americas. In 1992 he founded the Maale Adumim Institute for the Study of Judeo-Spanish and culture, his way of continuing the learning of Ladino.

Ladino is a language that has many roots. It is derived mostly from Castilian, which apparently is another name for Spanish. (If ever you want to tell someone you speak another language and Spanish sounds too mundane, try Castilian.) Ladino also has a million and one names including Judezmo, Djudeo-Espanyol, and Spaniolit. Ladino used to be widely spoken in the Balkans, Turkey, Middle East, and North Africa. The Jews brought it there when they were expelled from Spain in 1492. (Side note: The expulsion was called the Alhambra Decree issued by the Spanish Monarchs Isabella I of Castille and Ferdinand II of Aragon.) Ladino is also a mixture of languages from all the places the Jews emigrated to after their expulsion. Those languages include Aramaic, Arabic, Turkish, Greek, French, and a host of other languages. So a whopping 30% of the language is a mixture of other languages with the rest being Castilian. When the Spanish Jews immigrated to the Ottoman Empire they were allowed to keep their language and customs. So the language was preserved for 500 years. In the Ottoman Empire the language was known as Yahudice or Jewish language. After the fall of the Ottoman Empire many of the Spanish Jews who lived there moved throughout Europe, and then of course the Holocaust hit. Many of the Jews who spoke the language were killed. After WWII many of the Jews who spoke Ladino moved to Israel. To this day most of the people who speak Ladino live in Israel. The translator for Dr. Perez’s poems, Brenda Serotte, has this to say about Ladino “Language, like one’s name, is personal. It’s important to me to keep Ladino alive. In doing so, I have recreated my cultural traditions.”

You can find examples of Dr. Perez’s poetry in HFR issue #45.

Friday, October 1, 2010

News Around the Net

Serialized novel delivered by an app. If only Dickens had an iPad. Author’s Neal Stephenson and Greg Bear’s new novel Mongoliad will be released in weekly, serial installments to subscribers’ smart phones and computers.

Stephen King on His Comics' Debut American Vampire. King fangs it up for hickeys (????) capitalism (☺) and the death of the Thought Bubble.

If after eating your fill of street vendor vegan dogs or protesting the Muslim Community Center (stupid people should really eat more street fare) you find yourself in New York City with seven free hours, head to Elevator Repair Service’s Gatz, a theater performance in which every word of Fitzgerald’s 47,000 word novel The Great Gatsby is read aloud. Heard Any Good Books Lately, Zelda? No, but I had an awesome Gyro at Ground Zero!

Obama Book Club. Freedom Frenzy: A Look at Presidential Reading Lists. Monroe Singing:"Happy birthday Mr. Franzen..."

OMG! the CEOs are not our BFFs!When did we start speaking in sets of capital letters? Lane Greene looks into the rise of the acronym and its sibling the initialism...OMG, ECT.

'Sourland,' by Joyce Carol Oates. Review of the author's newest short story collection released by Ecco this month.