
Another friend has a novel coming out this week: Gray Baby by Scott Loring Sanders will be released tomorrow.
Like a dog that returns to his vomit is a fool that repeats his folly. Proverbs 26:11

I tell writing students that stories about adultery and stories about cancer are tired and done to death, and that stories about adultery AND cancer are no better. A story about either of these subjects or both should actually be about something else; the adultery and cancer should be backgrounded. Otherwise—boring. We’ve seen it. A million times.
Check out Tom Ashbrook's interview with Elizabeth Strout, Pulitzer Prize winning author of Olive Kitteridge.
Check out the new issue of Right Hand Pointing, which looks like another good one.
I'm very excited to be preparing for a residency at the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. During my two weeks there, I hope to make substantial progress on my novel, and maybe also work on a few poems and stories that have been neglected.
Last night at the wonderful Darjeeling Cafe was the launch party for Blu Magazine, the new Arts and Culture magazine "serving Staunton, Harrisonburg, Augusta & Rockingham Counties." It was a fun time, with good music, food, and drinks. The highlight, of course, was the unveiling of the inaugural issue, which includes articles about Mockingbird, the new music venue in town, three local restaurants, the Blackfriars Playhouse (and the American Shakespeare Center), and much more.
Although it isn’t labeled a short story--The New Yorker doesn’t seem to do that--neither is this “fiction” by Jonathan Lethem labeled a novel excerpt, which it surely is. (The Contributor note for Lethem tells us that his novel Chronic City will be published in October.) I was enjoying the read, more or less, until I noticed that story-wise it wasn’t going anywhere; a check on that Contributor note confirmed my suspicion, and the lack of an ending left no doubt whatsoever. So, we’ve got another novel excerpt instead of a story, and as much as I liked Lethem’s novel Motherless Brooklyn and another story of his I’ve seen in TNY, this one gets a non-response from me. The sentences seem fine. Good, even. The protagonist--if this main character serves that function in the novel, as I would guess--has a funky name (Perkus Tooth), but I don’t think I’m interested enough by this to pay for the book, or read it, when it comes out.
I'm currently teaching an online course called "Writing the Literary Short Story" on a terrific site: Writers.com. The participants have varying degrees of writing experience, but we're having engaging discussions on topics such as plot, character, setting, dialogue, beginnings, time, endings, and other subjects. We've also been reading and discussing some great published stories (available online so there's no textbook to buy), doing writing exercises, and critiquing stories by participants. It's been a great class.
I recently linked to Ted Genoways's manifesto in support of university presses and journals which was written specifically in response to pressure on The Southern Review.
Hi, this is Jessica Handler guest-blogging for Cliff. (Thanks, Cliff!). Since my book, Invisible Sisters: A Memoir has been out just over a month, Cliff’s asked me to lend some insight and tips about promoting a book in those first weeks.
The Subversive Copy Editor
The new issue of Blackbird is up, with fiction by Christine Schutt and Michael Croley, among others, poetry by Julie Funderburk and Wyatt Prunty, among others. (These are just some of the folks in this issue with Sewanee Writers Conference connections; there's also a review by Sandra Beasley, and reviews of Sewanee alums Jennifer Chang, Aaron Baker, Dan Albergotti, and Lynn Chandhok. (Mary Flinn, Blackbird Editor, goes to Sewanee each year; I'm sure I missed some names here with Sewanee connections, for which I apologize.)
Bound Off #40 is now live with "Check Engine Light" by Mel Bosworth and "A Documentary About Sharks" by Gavin Broom.
This is a terrific story, possibly my favorite of the year so far. Senior and Junior are two old men with the same name who have come to the same place by taking very different routes. Junior is alone in the world, but Senior is crowded by his second wife and her family as well as hundreds of family members of his own. The groundwork that Rushdie lays is beautiful and intricate.“Neither man slept well anymore. At night they lay on hard beds without pillows and, behind their closed eyelids, their unsettled thoughts ran in opposite directions. Of the two men, V. Senior had lived by far the fuller life.”And so it is no surprise that Senior is the one who is ready to pack it in. It is the end of the year and the New Year approaches. He tells Junior that either he will die in the next five days . . . or “else a year will begin in which my end will surely come.” Junior scoffs. And in fact Senior does not die.
My review of E.C. Osondu's "Waiting" (Guernica) is up at Five Star Literary Stories. Happy Short Story Month!
Tunneling to the Center of the Earth
This book was not supposed to be out until June, but it arrived early, for reasons I can't explain. The author, Josh Weil, is another Sewanee Writers Conference friend. And I'm really looking forward to reading this book, which is a trio of novellas set in Virginia.
More allegory? I have not read much J.G. Ballard, who died last month, so I don’t know how typical this is for him. Perhaps someone more familiar with his work can enlighten us?
Murder. Revenge. Gambling. Belly Dancers. The spring season of the American Shakespeare Center at Staunton’s Blackfriars Playhouse has something for everyone.
Indpendent Publisher Online Magazine awards the IPPYs each year, awards for the best books from the independent presses. Awards are offered in a lot of categories--a good thing--and so there will be lots of winners. As I understand it, there are also silver and bronze medals awarded in some cases. In the fiction categories I see some familiar names: David McGlynn, Allison Amend, and Steven Gillis. Congratulations, and Good Luck!
Kicking off Short Story Month!