Carve Magazine 2007 Anthology


Book Description

Since 2000, Carve Magazine has been honest fiction. In the past seven years, the magazine has set the standard for online literary fiction, publishing work that is talented, unique, and simply entertaining to read.The 17 stories featured in this 2007 anthology continues the tradition of publishing well-crafted stories that speak to the heart and mind. They also represent a new direction for the magazine under its new editorship. These stories are certain to push the boundaries of readers, challenging them to look into the lives of characters who are despairing, hopeful, lost, humbled, or ashamed, but ultimately-human.The 2007 Anthology includes stories by: Nate House, Stephen MacKinnon, Alyssa Morris, Michael Schiavone, David Andrew Stoler, Rob Bass, Marcy Campbell, Stephanie Dickinson, Craig Terlson, Ezra, Jaren Watson, Yuvi Zalkow, AC Koch, Julia Gordon-Bramer, Liz Skillman, Kami Westhoff, and Marc Phillips.




Furnace


Book Description

In evading an ingratiating unofficial guide, a hapless backpacker seals his fate. A woman undertakes a pilgrimage to where her boyfriend died with another girl. A young man abroad resists returning home for crucial medical treatment. A summer worker is drawn into a menage a trois with a colleague and his boss. From the scorched hillsides of Morocco and heat of a Californian summer to the ferocity of the Spanish afternoon and discomfort of a Scottish heatwave, Wayne Price's characters sweat under the glare of both the sun and their author's forensic gaze. Long-listed for the renowned Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award.




The Literary Press and Magazine Directory, 2006-2007


Book Description

Completely updated and revised, this guide covers independent book publishers, literary magazines, and online literary journals. Each listing provides journal and press descriptions, submission guidelines, contact names and addresses, and circulation figures. Extensive indexes -- alphabetical, editorial, geographic, and distribution -- make it easy to sort out the most promising options for publication. The 23rd edition also features sidebar tips from editors and publishers advising writers on submission do's and don'ts and profiles of 20 of America's leading editors.




Interfictions 2


Book Description

Selected as one of the Best Books of the Year in science fiction and fantasy by Amazon.com. Delving deeper into the genre-spanning territory explored in Interfictions, the Interstitial Arts Foundation’s first groundbreaking anthology, Interfictions 2 showcases twenty-one original and innovative writers. It includes contributions from authors from six countries, including the United States, Poland, Norway, Australia, France, and Great Britain. Newcomers such as Alaya Dawn Johnson, Theodora Goss, and Alan DeNiro rub shoulders with established visionaries such as Jeffrey Ford (The Drowned Life), Brian Francis Slattery (Liberation), Nin Andrews (The Book of Orgasms), and M. Rickert (Map of Dreams). Also featured are works by Will Ludwigsen, Cecil Castellucci, Ray Vukcevich, Carlos Hernandez, Lavie Tidhar, Elizabeth Ziemska, Peter M. Ball, Camilla Bruce, Amelia Beamer, William Alexander, Shira Lipkin, Lionel Davoust, Stephanie Shaw, and David J. Schwartz. Colleen Mondor, of the well-known blog Chasing Ray, interviews the editors for the afterword. Henry Jenkins, ex-director of MIT’s Comparative Media Studies program and now a member of USC’s Annenberg School for Communication and School of Cinematic Arts, provides a fantastic introduction sure to set readers’ imaginations alight. Interfictions 2 is here and ready to be read, discussed, taught, blogged, taken apart, and re-interpreted. Delia Sherman was born in Tokyo, Japan, and brought up in New York City. She earned a PhD in Renaissance Studies at Brown University and taught at Boston University and Northeastern University. She is the author of the novels Through a Brazen Mirror, The Porcelain Dove, Changeling, and The Magic Mirror of the Mermaid Queen. A co-founder of the Interstitial Arts Foundation, she lives in New York City. Christopher Barzak is the author of the novels One for Sorrow and The Love We Share Without Knowing. His stories have appeared in Nerve.com, Pindeldyboz, Strange Horizons, Descant, and the first volume of Interfictions. He teaches writing at Youngstown State University.




Dogs of God


Book Description

"An expansive story told in lush, extravagant prose, Dogs of God is a big book in every sense of the word." —Elizabeth Dewberry Vaughn




Miracle Boy and Other Stories


Book Description

The story collection Miracle Boy and Other Stories contains fourteen works of short fiction -published in some of America's top literary magazines and anthologies - by one of West Virginia's most well-recognized writers. The stories, set in the author's native Appalachia, concern themselves with the miraculous lives of boys and men.




The Light in Ordinary Things: Volume 1 of the Fearless Poetry Series


Book Description

The first volume of the Fearless Poetry Series presents the work of 42 accomplished poets, offering illuminations of everyday things, places, and beings. Co-edited by Sari Friedman and D. Patrick Miller with an introduction by D. Patrick Miller.




Alaska at 50


Book Description

In 2009 Alaska celebrates its fiftieth anniversary of U.S. statehood. To commemorate that milestone, Alaska at 50 brings together some of today’s most noteworthy and recognizable writers and researchers to address the past, present, and future of Alaska. Divided into three overarching sections—art, culture, and humanities; law, economy, and politics; and environment, people, and place—Alaska at 50 is written in highly accessible prose. Illustrations and photographs of significant artefacts of Alaska history enliven the text. Each contributor brings a strong voice and prescription for the next fifty years, and the resulting work presents Alaskans and the nation with an overview of Alaska statehood and ideas for future development.




Late-Night River Lights


Book Description

Late at night darkness is punctuated by stars; the river, by lights. Gathered from around the world, EditRED's second collection has twenty-three new stories by the emerging lights in contemporary short fiction. Contemplative, reflective, and disruptive these dark modern tales shine out of the shadows to flicker across continents. Their messages ripple like morse code mirrored on water, moving upstream and cast over oceans. Decipher their meaning.




Historical Dictionary of Asian American Literature and Theater


Book Description

Asian American literature is one of the most recent forms of ethnic literature and is already becoming one of the most prominent, given the large number of writers, the growing ethnic population from the region, the general receptivity of this body of work, and the quality of the authors. In recent decades, there has been an exponential growth in their output and much Asian American literature has now achieved new levels of popular success and critical acclaim. Nurtured by rich and long literary traditions from the vast continent of Asia, this literature is poised between the ancient and the modern, between the East and West, and between the oral and the written. The Historical Dictionary of Asian American Literature and Theater covers the activities in this burgeoning field. First, its history is traced year by year from 1887 to the present, in a chronology, and the introduction provides a good overview. The most important section is the dictionary, with over 600 substantial and cross-referenced entries on authors, books, and genres as well as more general ones describing the historical background, cultural features, techniques and major theatres and clubs. More reading can be found through an extensive bibliography with general works and those on specific authors. The book is thus a good place to get started, or to expanded one’s horizons, about a branch of American literature that can only grow in importance.