June 30, 2008
DaCapo Press sent over an advance copy of Toni Fiore's first cookbook, Totally Vegetarian, to be published in the fall. Fiore, a Portland resident, is the host of Delicious TV's Totally Vegetarian, which is broadcast on public access channels nationwide. Many of the recipes sound absolutely delicious -- Greek Stuffed Cabbage, Kasha Crunch Burgers, and Pumpkin-Bulgur Chili, for example. Here's my goal: Try at least one recipe per week, and report back to you readers, complete with food-porn photos and perhaps even the reviews of some outside taste-testers.
[Cross-posted at Word Up/About Town.]
June 26, 2008
This is hysterical and brilliant.
Now, if only someone could make a Shop-Urban-Outfitters at Work, a Deal-With-Romantic-Problems-Via-Email at Work, and a Stalk-High-School-Classmates-on-Facebook at Work, I'd be all set.
June 24, 2008
What better way to bid a bloggy farewell to Sharon than to address a few of her favorite things -- hot publishing deals, hot young New Yorkers, and YA fiction? To those ends, we contacted our (best) friend and author Lauren Oliver (indeed, she's hot), who recently got a "significant deal" (that's publishing lingo, not my own) for two young adult books. The first, tentatively titled If I Should Fall (Bowen Press/Harper), is due out in 2010. Here's an excerpt from our email Q&A:
1) What kind of
process did you go through to get this deal?
This wasn’t the first book
I’ve tried to publish, actually. I’d written two adult novels
previously. The first got me literary representation but no deal; the
second didn’t even get sent out because it was a big mess (I’m still planning
on returning to it at some point, though).
It was weird; the idea for
this young adult novel just came to me and I couldn’t stop thinking about
it. I spoke about it a little with my mom and dad, since I still need
their advice/approval for pretty much every decision I make. Everything
seemed to crystallize easily in this case (though I still feel as though I paid
my dues; I’ve been writing every day since I was about five). I wrote
sixty pages and a detailed outline. I had a pretty clear sense of where I
wanted to go with the story.
Then I approached one agent
and one agent only—Stephen Barbara of the Donald Maas Agency, who’s absolutely
amazing. He went to the University
of Chicago and he’s just
so good at his job, really committed, goes to bat 100 % for his authors,
etc. I’d reconnected with him at a publishing event (I work in publishing
as well) and so I gave him my sixty pages and outline and crossed my fingers he
would like it. He did; he got back to me in record time, we went out to
breakfast, I felt super fancy, and we formalized it. He’s the one who
came up with the pitch letter (that’s why having a good agent is so
important—an agent really can represent your work better than you, and
agents aren’t shy about bragging on behalf of their clients!). The
partial manuscript went out to about fifteen publishing houses and was
pre-empted by Brenda Bowen at HarperCollins. She’s starting up her own
imprint there and I am so, so thrilled that my book will be on her list. She’s the kind of person who just inspires trust and confidence—which is good,
because I tend to freak out a lot.
2) What's the book about? I
know it's a two-book deal -- will the second one be a sequel, or something
different?
I don’t want to give too
much away, but. . .the protagonist, Samantha, dies in the first chapter.
However, she continues to wake up, again and again, on the day of her
death. She ultimately figures out that the life she must save is not her
own, but beyond that the book is really about discovering what is important and
valuable about life. At first she feels cursed by the situation she finds
herself in, but ultimately she’s being given an opportunity that rarely
presents itself in real life: a second chance.
The second book will not be
a sequel. I didn’t think I could get away with killing Sam off and then
resurrecting her more than seven times, to be honest.
3) What's it like knowing
that you're going to be a published author?
It’s like the moment right
before a storm when everything gets still. . .just kidding! Wouldn’t it
be annoying if from this point on I started answering every question like a
“writer”? Seriously, it’s an amazing feeling, although it still seems
very surreal. I feel incredibly validated and very blessed; it’s just a
wonderful thing to know that there are people out there, smart people, who believe
that I have a talent for this thing I love so abidingly.
4) You're currently in
NYU's creative writing program. Why did you decide to go to graduate school for
writing? Do you ever think that now that you've got this deal, it's a waste of
time/money?
Oh, it’s totally a waste of
money and time. JUST KIDDING, NYU! I think it’s been a really
valuable experience, actually. I mean, look, many writers don’t go and
get their MFAs--most don’t. The only thing that makes you a writer is
writing. But attending an MFA program allows you to focus very heavily on
doing just that for a few years; it forces you to generate large quantities of
material, it forces a kind of discipline, it forces you to read, read,
read. In other words, it helps you hone and develop the habits of
a writer. I think that’s invaluable. And it’s amazing to benefit
from the critical eyes of so many intelligent people, and you become a more
analytical reader, as well. That can only help.
Plus, I think people in the
publishing world take MFA programs seriously. I think to them, again, it
indicates a certain amount of discipline. I really have no proof of that;
it’s just my general impression but I’m going to go ahead and claim it. Claiming things without proof: something I did not learn in my MFA
program. That technique was honed in college.
5) Tell us something
strange about you.
I eat ketchup on
everything. Even on tomatoes. People think it’s really gross.
June 23, 2008
On Big Love, Chloe Sevigny's character (Nicki) is tragically un-hip -- while her sister wives Barb and Margene wear stylish-mom and hot-mom clothes, respectively, Nicki's stuck with the traditional prairie garb of the polygamous compound (floor-length skirts, high-necked flowery shirts, etc).
In real life, super-cool Sevigny's clothes raise just as many eyebrows (she seems particularly devoted to giving high-waisted pants and skirts a good name). Last year, she helped design a 90s-inspired collection for the NY/LA boutique and showroom Opening Ceremony; it was released this year and is full of who'd-wear-this treasures like the one below. Now, we can enjoy Chloe's high/bizarre fashion in our own living rooms, courtesy of the Chloe Sevigny for Opening Ceremony paperback, which includes photos and accompanying illustrations. Fun!
June 20, 2008
So long, literary lads and lasses! I'll dearly miss drawing tenuous connections between Gossip Girl and meaningful literature. I leave you all in excellently capable hands.
June 19, 2008
The winning story of Boston Review's 15th annual fiction contest is online; I think it's unpretentious and moving.
Advance Reading Copies are the new cute dogs -- they do all the romantic luring for you. (They also make excellent -- and free -- birthday presents.)
"Hey babe, I have a great idea for this weekend!" I can just picture the look so many boyfriends' faces.
Sharon, Nina, and all you bookish Bostonians, please be careful at the BPL.
June 16, 2008
I bet this book-club-on-steroids can't wait for the release of this book.
June 12, 2008
So says People, which delivered the news that Mama Spears's manuscript -- put on hold after the teenaged Jamie Lynn Spears got preg -- will be published this fall. Originally titled Pop Culture Mom, the book is now called Through the Storm: A Real Story of Fame and Family in a Tabloid World, which seems both overly dramatic yet somehow more appropriate.
The question that remains on our mind is who is the unlucky sod tasked with fact-checking this fucking thing?
June 12, 2008
So says People, which delivered the news that Mama Spears's manuscript -- put on hold after the teenaged Jamie Lynn Spears got preg -- will be published this fall. Originally titled Pop Culture Mom, the book is now called Through the Storm: A Real Story of Fame and Family in a Tabloid World, which seems both overly dramatic yet somehow more appropriate.
The question that remains on our mind is who is the unlucky sod tasked with fact-checking this fucking thing?
June 11, 2008
Andre Dubus III's The House of Sand and Fog was probably THE saddest, most wrenching book we ever read. We were hoping his latest, The Garden of Last Days, would be similar in its delicious soul-killing-ness. But Janet Maslin doesn't think so! In her Books of the Times review, she notes that:
“The Garden of Last Days” explores the cultural chasm between Bassam’s
world and Spring’s. With a plot fueled by the certitude that something
terrible will happen, this narrative may mean to recall the devastating
forward motion of Russell Banks’s
“Continental Drift.” But Mr. Dubus shows none of Mr. Banks’s anguished
insight into such a clash of values and attitudes. Instead he often
treats this book as an occasion for easy irony, as in the way April has
left Franny to watch Disney videos. Thus the child can immerse herself
in “The Little Mermaid” despite the smoke, loud music, raucous men and
tawdry, real-life women surrounding her. Thus if Franny is to watch
“The Lion King” in these last days before the 9/11 attacks, April
insists that her daughter be shielded from the scary parts.
Maslin is disappointed that in this novel, Dubus's "forces of darkness are less subtle." Maybe Dubus wrote out all the baddies and doesn't have anything left to forward his sad muse. Kinda like Rivers Cuomo. But at least Dubus doesn't have a porn-stache. There are still some things to be grateful for.
June 11, 2008
In this week's Portland Phoenix, I review the latest offering from Boston-based Rose Metal Press: A Peculiar Feeling of Restlessness: four chapbooks of short short fiction by four women, by Amy L. Clark, Elizabeth Ellen, Kathy Fish, and Claudia Smith. (You can find the review here, once it's posted online.)
I also got the chance to interview Kathleen Rooney and Abby Beckel, the founders (both in their late 20s, and graduates of Emerson College grad school) of Rose Metal. An edited version of the interview is in the paper; I'm pubishing it in its entirety here, along with links to some of the literary influences / blogs / journals that the women cite as favorites. Enjoy!
PHX:
What was the impetus behind launching the press?
AB: Well, truthfully I
had been dreaming of starting a publishing company since I was a teenager. I
think it was being a yearbook editor in high school that really solidified my
ideal of combining my love of reading with producing something tangible for
other people to read and enjoy. It just felt so great to see people carrying
around, poring over, and enjoying a publication I had helped create (even if it
was rife with horrible high school mug shots and an overuse of clip art).
The more linear answer is that Kathy and I were in grad school at
Emerson College together and ended up working closely on the journal Redivider — her as the editor-in-chief
and me as the managing editor. We found that we worked extremely well together,
while also having a lot of fun. So when we graduated, we looked at the
publishing scene, saw a need for someone to champion and publish innovative
works in hybrid genres, and decided that it was time to start a press. We
founded Rose Metal in January 2006.
KR: As Abby said,
there were a number of reasons why it seemed like the right time to start Rose
Metal — a lifelong love of literature, a desire to make beautiful books, an
interest in helping talented authors get their work into the hands of an
appreciative audience, a fascination with hybrid forms, and an ever-deepening
sense of disappointment and disillusionment with the increasing lack of vision
and risk-taking in the mainstream publishing industry.
PHX: RMP has been around
for about two years. What have been the biggest challenges so far? What are you
most proud of?
KR: It’s been going
well. The biggest challenges are probably two-pronged and not that unusual to
anyone who runs an independent press: that we could always use more money (who
couldn’t?) and more time (since we both work nine-to-five day jobs). That said,
our first two and a half years have been great, and we’re psyched about the
books we’ve got in the works. One of the things I’m most proud of is our
authors, who in addition to being talented producers of the kind of work we
like to see in print, are also consistently nice, thoughtful, fun, and
hard-working, and very much team players in terms of helping us to promote
their and their fellow authors’ work.
AB: I agree with Kathy
that working with our authors and seeing their work get out to a wider audience
has been super rewarding and a lot of fun. I’m also proud of the way our books
look and of our designers and cover artists for helping us present the work in
interesting ways that reflect the innovativeness of the writing. Our first
chapbook contest winner The Sky Is a Well
and Other Shorts, by Claudia Smith, was included in the New England Book
Show this spring, and we felt honored to have one of our books recognized in
that way.
PHX: What are your
thoughts on the current state of publishing?
KR: I guess it depends
on what kind of publishing. I’ve come to have a certain amount of skepticism
regarding large commercial publishing houses and the trade publishing industry.
So often, individuals who work in this world — agents, editors, publicity and
marketing people, etc. — say things like, “The market being what it is, I can
only afford to get behind projects I really love,”
when all too often what they seem to mean is “I can only be bothered with
projects I think will appeal broadly to the widest possible demographic
thereby.” This risk aversion, though it is a matter of self-preservation, seems
to shut the door to a lot of potentially exciting and original new work.
But then if you consider the state of independent publishing,
things seem much more promising. University and independent presses seem to be
able to take more risks in what they publish, and also to be viable with books
that can sell modestly to a sort of smaller, more targeted audience (instead of
having to constantly hunt for huge runaway best-sellers). There’s a lot more
room for diversity, idiosyncrasy, and originality in the books being published
by independent presses. And there are so many indie presses, and more springing
up every year, so if you don’t happen to like the books published by one,
there’s no problem because there are dozens if not hundreds more to look into.
It’s a super-exciting time to be working in (or reading books produced by) independent
publishing.
AB: Publishing is a
hard business economically. It’s tough for even the biggest mainstream
publishers to turn a profit on a book after the cuts the printer, author,
distributor, and bookstores take, so I don’t begrudge them their desire for
bestsellers. But I do worry a lot about the conglomeration of many of the
mainstream publishers and bookstores because as a writer, I hate to see the
options for publication in that arena narrowing, and as a reader, I’d rather
not have all my information coming from a few sources. That’s what makes
independent and not-for-profit literary publishing so important culturally.
Small presses form the springboard for new voices and innovative styles to be
heard and read. And the best part is that we get to make relatively
uncompromised decisions about what to publish.
PHX: Who/what are some of
your professional/literary influences and inspirations?
AB: I think I can say
that both Kathy and I admire anyone who has started a small press or
publication and really tried to make a go of it. It’s not easy, and the longer
we work on Rose Metal, the more inspired I am by the vitality and creativity of
the independent literary publishing community and the dedication the people who
work within it have to broadening the field of literature. That said, I
particularly admire the way that Chase Twitchell of Ausable Press and Martha
Rhodes of Four Way Books have grown and developed their small presses.
As far as literary influences for Rose Metal go, we owe a debt of
gratitude to fiction writer and Emerson College professor Pamela Painter for
encouraging us to make short short fiction one of our flagship genres.
KR: I agree with Abby
— there are so many that if I tried to list them all, I’d surely leave some
out. But just off the top of my head, Kelly Link and Gavin Grant of Small Beer
Press are two of my indie publishing heroes, plus Kelly Link is an amazing
writer in her own right. I am also consistently impressed by the work being
published by (and the professionalism of the people working at) Wave Books,
Action Books, Featherproof Books, dancing girl press, Kitchen Press, Black
Ocean, Future Tense Books, Red Morning Press, Switchback Books, Dzanc Books,
Akashic Books, Ahsahta Press and on and on.
PHX: What makes short shorts
or flash fiction special? What role do these types of stories play among the
genres?
KR: It’s partly
because their role among the genres isn’t totally clear or established that
short shorts are so compelling, at least to us. Short shorts — they have the
economy of a poem, and often the linguistic and syntactic richness, but so too
do they incorporate the elements of narrative and prose fiction — are
intelligible to a wide readership because of these similarities to other forms,
but they also have their own distinct character, in much the same way that a
sonnet or a haiku has a distinct character.
AB: As Kathy
mentioned, we’ve found that short short fiction appeals to a wider audience
than many other literary forms — not because it’s easy, but because it captures
what’s essential and packages it with precision. And reading short shorts is
often a fascinatingly interactive experience: when they are well written they
automatically beg questions like “What does this mean?” or “How does this story
work?” and leave the reader pondering the characters or situation presented so
fleetingly yet vividly. They stick in the mind — we hear from readers all the
time that they like short shorts because they find themselves thinking about
the stories again long after they’ve read them.
PHX: How often do you two
talk? How do you divide up responsibilities?
KR: This is like The Newlywed Game or something, where we
might give hilariously different answers. But, barring unusual obstacles or
circumstances, we usually talk at least 3-4 times a week, and sometimes every
or every other day, both about press stuff and normal
friends-who-don’t-live-in-the-same-city-anymore stuff. I guess, if you wanted
to oversimplify a bit, Abby handles more of the layout/design and
business/budget side of the press than I do, and I probably handle more of the
author correspondence, slush pile, and promotional side of the press than she
does, but honestly, we both have a hand in every aspect, and we make even the
smallest decisions jointly. We are extremely fortunate in that we seem to have
skill-sets and personality traits that complement each other, and in that we
are able to be very good friends and effective business partners at the same
time, which is probably kind of lucky and rare.
AB: I think this is
the part where I’m supposed to hold up the sign that says “10 times a day” and
the laugh track rolls, but Kathy described our work style the same way I would.
We communicate via multiple e-mails most days, and then talk a couple of nights
a week and on the weekends. It’s a challenge to have the majority of our
meetings over the phone, but we’ve gotten good at communicating productively
that way. And as she said, although she does a lot more query reading and I do
a lot more number crunching, we work very closely and collaboratively on each
book: editing the manuscripts separately and then discussing and combining our
edits; reviewing cover art and page designs together; proofreading page proofs,
etc. We have come to realize that the work we do together tends to be better
quality than the work we do apart, so I would say that at least 90 percent of
the work we do as a press is a true joint effort of the two of us.
PHX: What are some of your
favorite book blogs and literary publications?
KR & AB: This list,
too, could easily get out of hand, but to name a few: Bookslut, Boston Review, DIAGRAM, Quick Fiction, Smokelong Quarterly,
Double Room, Open Letters Monthly, Octopus (especially the reviews), elimae, Bookforum, sawbuck, Poetry Daily, and
Redivider.
KR: I’m also a regular visitor to Ron
Silliman’s blog, and I like the work of Jim Behrle (//americanpoetry.biz
and //www.jimbehrle.com
). One of my favorite newer publications is Moon
Lit and I cannot get enough of the quarterly magazine Cabinet (//www.cabinetmagazine.org).
-Deirdre Fulton
June 11, 2008
In this week's Portland Phoenix, I review the latest offering from Boston-based Rose Metal Press: A Peculiar Feeling of Restlessness: four chapbooks of short short fiction by four women, by Amy L. Clark, Elizabeth Ellen, Kathy Fish, and Claudia Smith. (You can find the review here, once it's posted online.)
I also got the chance to interview Kathleen Rooney and Abby Beckel, the founders (both in their late 20s, and graduates of Emerson College grad school) of Rose Metal. An edited version of the interview is in the paper; I'm pubishing it in its entirety here, along with links to some of the literary influences / blogs / journals that the women cite as favorites. Enjoy!
PHX:
What was the impetus behind launching the press?
AB: Well, truthfully I
had been dreaming of starting a publishing company since I was a teenager. I
think it was being a yearbook editor in high school that really solidified my
ideal of combining my love of reading with producing something tangible for
other people to read and enjoy. It just felt so great to see people carrying
around, poring over, and enjoying a publication I had helped create (even if it
was rife with horrible high school mug shots and an overuse of clip art).
The more linear answer is that Kathy and I were in grad school at
Emerson College together and ended up working closely on the journal Redivider — her as the editor-in-chief
and me as the managing editor. We found that we worked extremely well together,
while also having a lot of fun. So when we graduated, we looked at the
publishing scene, saw a need for someone to champion and publish innovative
works in hybrid genres, and decided that it was time to start a press. We
founded Rose Metal in January 2006.
KR: As Abby said,
there were a number of reasons why it seemed like the right time to start Rose
Metal — a lifelong love of literature, a desire to make beautiful books, an
interest in helping talented authors get their work into the hands of an
appreciative audience, a fascination with hybrid forms, and an ever-deepening
sense of disappointment and disillusionment with the increasing lack of vision
and risk-taking in the mainstream publishing industry.
PHX: RMP has been around
for about two years. What have been the biggest challenges so far? What are you
most proud of?
KR: It’s been going
well. The biggest challenges are probably two-pronged and not that unusual to
anyone who runs an independent press: that we could always use more money (who
couldn’t?) and more time (since we both work nine-to-five day jobs). That said,
our first two and a half years have been great, and we’re psyched about the
books we’ve got in the works. One of the things I’m most proud of is our
authors, who in addition to being talented producers of the kind of work we
like to see in print, are also consistently nice, thoughtful, fun, and
hard-working, and very much team players in terms of helping us to promote
their and their fellow authors’ work.
AB: I agree with Kathy
that working with our authors and seeing their work get out to a wider audience
has been super rewarding and a lot of fun. I’m also proud of the way our books
look and of our designers and cover artists for helping us present the work in
interesting ways that reflect the innovativeness of the writing. Our first
chapbook contest winner The Sky Is a Well
and Other Shorts, by Claudia Smith, was included in the New England Book
Show this spring, and we felt honored to have one of our books recognized in
that way.
PHX: What are your
thoughts on the current state of publishing?
KR: I guess it depends
on what kind of publishing. I’ve come to have a certain amount of skepticism
regarding large commercial publishing houses and the trade publishing industry.
So often, individuals who work in this world — agents, editors, publicity and
marketing people, etc. — say things like, “The market being what it is, I can
only afford to get behind projects I really love,”
when all too often what they seem to mean is “I can only be bothered with
projects I think will appeal broadly to the widest possible demographic
thereby.” This risk aversion, though it is a matter of self-preservation, seems
to shut the door to a lot of potentially exciting and original new work.
But then if you consider the state of independent publishing,
things seem much more promising. University and independent presses seem to be
able to take more risks in what they publish, and also to be viable with books
that can sell modestly to a sort of smaller, more targeted audience (instead of
having to constantly hunt for huge runaway best-sellers). There’s a lot more
room for diversity, idiosyncrasy, and originality in the books being published
by independent presses. And there are so many indie presses, and more springing
up every year, so if you don’t happen to like the books published by one,
there’s no problem because there are dozens if not hundreds more to look into.
It’s a super-exciting time to be working in (or reading books produced by) independent
publishing.
AB: Publishing is a
hard business economically. It’s tough for even the biggest mainstream
publishers to turn a profit on a book after the cuts the printer, author,
distributor, and bookstores take, so I don’t begrudge them their desire for
bestsellers. But I do worry a lot about the conglomeration of many of the
mainstream publishers and bookstores because as a writer, I hate to see the
options for publication in that arena narrowing, and as a reader, I’d rather
not have all my information coming from a few sources. That’s what makes
independent and not-for-profit literary publishing so important culturally.
Small presses form the springboard for new voices and innovative styles to be
heard and read. And the best part is that we get to make relatively
uncompromised decisions about what to publish.
PHX: Who/what are some of
your professional/literary influences and inspirations?
AB: I think I can say
that both Kathy and I admire anyone who has started a small press or
publication and really tried to make a go of it. It’s not easy, and the longer
we work on Rose Metal, the more inspired I am by the vitality and creativity of
the independent literary publishing community and the dedication the people who
work within it have to broadening the field of literature. That said, I
particularly admire the way that Chase Twitchell of Ausable Press and Martha
Rhodes of Four Way Books have grown and developed their small presses.
As far as literary influences for Rose Metal go, we owe a debt of
gratitude to fiction writer and Emerson College professor Pamela Painter for
encouraging us to make short short fiction one of our flagship genres.
KR: I agree with Abby
— there are so many that if I tried to list them all, I’d surely leave some
out. But just off the top of my head, Kelly Link and Gavin Grant of Small Beer
Press are two of my indie publishing heroes, plus Kelly Link is an amazing
writer in her own right. I am also consistently impressed by the work being
published by (and the professionalism of the people working at) Wave Books,
Action Books, Featherproof Books, dancing girl press, Kitchen Press, Black
Ocean, Future Tense Books, Red Morning Press, Switchback Books, Dzanc Books,
Akashic Books, Ahsahta Press and on and on.
PHX: What makes short shorts
or flash fiction special? What role do these types of stories play among the
genres?
KR: It’s partly
because their role among the genres isn’t totally clear or established that
short shorts are so compelling, at least to us. Short shorts — they have the
economy of a poem, and often the linguistic and syntactic richness, but so too
do they incorporate the elements of narrative and prose fiction — are
intelligible to a wide readership because of these similarities to other forms,
but they also have their own distinct character, in much the same way that a
sonnet or a haiku has a distinct character.
AB: As Kathy
mentioned, we’ve found that short short fiction appeals to a wider audience
than many other literary forms — not because it’s easy, but because it captures
what’s essential and packages it with precision. And reading short shorts is
often a fascinatingly interactive experience: when they are well written they
automatically beg questions like “What does this mean?” or “How does this story
work?” and leave the reader pondering the characters or situation presented so
fleetingly yet vividly. They stick in the mind — we hear from readers all the
time that they like short shorts because they find themselves thinking about
the stories again long after they’ve read them.
PHX: How often do you two
talk? How do you divide up responsibilities?
KR: This is like The Newlywed Game or something, where we
might give hilariously different answers. But, barring unusual obstacles or
circumstances, we usually talk at least 3-4 times a week, and sometimes every
or every other day, both about press stuff and normal
friends-who-don’t-live-in-the-same-city-anymore stuff. I guess, if you wanted
to oversimplify a bit, Abby handles more of the layout/design and
business/budget side of the press than I do, and I probably handle more of the
author correspondence, slush pile, and promotional side of the press than she
does, but honestly, we both have a hand in every aspect, and we make even the
smallest decisions jointly. We are extremely fortunate in that we seem to have
skill-sets and personality traits that complement each other, and in that we
are able to be very good friends and effective business partners at the same
time, which is probably kind of lucky and rare.
AB: I think this is
the part where I’m supposed to hold up the sign that says “10 times a day” and
the laugh track rolls, but Kathy described our work style the same way I would.
We communicate via multiple e-mails most days, and then talk a couple of nights
a week and on the weekends. It’s a challenge to have the majority of our
meetings over the phone, but we’ve gotten good at communicating productively
that way. And as she said, although she does a lot more query reading and I do
a lot more number crunching, we work very closely and collaboratively on each
book: editing the manuscripts separately and then discussing and combining our
edits; reviewing cover art and page designs together; proofreading page proofs,
etc. We have come to realize that the work we do together tends to be better
quality than the work we do apart, so I would say that at least 90 percent of
the work we do as a press is a true joint effort of the two of us.
PHX: What are some of your
favorite book blogs and literary publications?
KR & AB: This list,
too, could easily get out of hand, but to name a few: Bookslut, Boston Review, DIAGRAM, Quick Fiction, Smokelong Quarterly,
Double Room, Open Letters Monthly, Octopus (especially the reviews), elimae, Bookforum, sawbuck, Poetry Daily, and
Redivider.
KR: I’m also a regular visitor to Ron
Silliman’s blog, and I like the work of Jim Behrle (//americanpoetry.biz
and //www.jimbehrle.com
). One of my favorite newer publications is Moon
Lit and I cannot get enough of the quarterly magazine Cabinet (//www.cabinetmagazine.org).
-Deirdre Fulton
June 06, 2008
Truly, life gets more amazing every day.
Cecily von Ziegesar, author of the Gossip Girl YA book series that was then adapted into the BSE, is working on her first adult series, according to Hyperion. Due out in 2009, the series
(first book is called "Cum Laude" -- really??????) will be about a
group of young adults who meet during their freshman year at a small
college in MAINE. (Via.)
[Cross-posted on About Town/Word Up.]
--- Deirdre Fulton
June 05, 2008
It's bkkeepr! We like. [Link via Russell Davies]
June 05, 2008
In the NYTBR's Summer Reading supplement, some famous writers suggested a few books they thought the Presidential candidates ought to read in between all the flesh-pressing and promise-making. (When this ran, Hillary Clinton was still in the picture. Er, technically.) Anyway, Loorie Moore and Junot Diaz had some excellent ideas. Several authors believe Clinton needs to re-read Macbeth. In particular, John Irving's Lady Macbeth/Hillary comparison made my skin crawl (she's Carrie Bradshaw! no, she's a Shakespearean femme-villian!), and Francine Prose makes it all sound too much like a freshman seminar. But I particularly enjoyed Scott Turnrow's suggestion:
More seriously, I would recommend the same three books to each. The
first is “Anna Karenina,” the fullest rendering I know of the
complexity of human motivation and thus a precious warning against
seeing the world as full of villains.
Nailing it.