Announcing the New Issue of NER (Vol. 32, #4)

Categories: News & Notes

The new issue of New England Review has just shipped from the printer, and a preview is available here on our website. Order a copy or subscribe today to receive the full content of this beautifully printed issue of NER.

In these pages, you’ll find new stories by Peter LaSalle, Zana Previti, Katya Reno, Caedra Scott-Flaherty, Gregory Spatz, Megan Staffel, and David Yost, appearing alongside new poems by Larry Bradley, Adam Giannelli, Janice Greenwood, A. Van Jordan, Laura Kasischke, Matthew Olzmann, Jacques J. Rancourt, and Carrie Shipers.

In nonfiction, Eileen Pollack revisits the ranch house of her childhood, Theodore Leinwand contends with Charles Olson contending with Shakespeare, Robert B. Ray asks if movie stars are ultimately unskilled workers, and Jonathan Levy makes a case for the use of dialogues in learning. Plus a new translation of Virgil’s Aeneid Book 5 by Ian Ganassi, Samuel Butler‘s thoughts on memory, Norman Davies on “How States Die,” and cover art by Tim Fitts.

Jennifer Grotz Selected for NPR’s Top Five

Categories: NER Authors' Books, NER Community, News & Notes, Poetry

For NPR, Gregory Orr chooses Jennifer Grotz‘s new collection, The Needle, as one of five best poetry books of 2011 in “Truth and Beauty: 2011′s Best American Poetry.” (Grotz’s poems “The Fog and “The Forest” appear in the current issue of NER.) Orr also recommends NER poetry editor C. Dale Young’s book Torn, because, as Orr writes, “no critic can refrain from recommending more books than he’s supposed to.”

One of the few things almost everyone can agree on about contemporary American poetry is that no one can agree on much. At present, poetry is a jumbled landscape, with no single, dominant style and few living figures whose importance is accepted in more than one or two of the art form’s tiny fiefdoms. Although some might find this state of affairs discouraging, I think there’s good reason to be optimistic — poetry often needs to undergo periods of confusion to achieve the clarity for which we’ll later remember it. Here are five books that suggest that even if American poetry isn’t entirely sure where it’s going, that doesn’t mean it’s gotten lost.

[read more]

Luminous Airplanes Hypertext

Categories: NER Recommends

Paul La Farge on his project Luminous Airplanes, which features both a printed novel and a hypertext for the web:

In the fall of 2003, I wrote a novel about a young man who’s summoned back to his family home in Thebes, NY, a sleepy town in the Catskills, in order to clean the house of five generations of junk. His grandfather has just died and no one else wants the job. So he goes. This was the seed of Luminous Airplanes, a book which would surely have been easier to finish if I hadn’t been haunted by the idea that the novel could be something more, that it could extend its branches indefinitely in the vast space of the Internet. After many false starts and dead ends, Luminous Airplanes became both a book and a hypertext.

[read more about the project]

[or start reading the hypertext at luminousairplanes.com]

25th & Dolores by Monica Youn

Categories: NER Classics

Wires & Sky, San Francisco

Monica Youn’s poem, “25th & Dolores,” appeared in NER 22.3:

“The most beautiful freeway

in America” is beginning
to the right: its heaped-up hills,
its full-strength sunlight burning off

the camphor-infused fog.
You were wrong. I’m still capable
of begging.

[read more]

Works from NER Chosen for “Best American”

Categories: News & Notes

Otto Penzler has selected Kathleen Ford’s “Man on the Run” 31.4 for Best American Mystery Stories 2012.

For Best American Poetry 2012, Mark Doty has chosen four NER poems:

• Amy Glynn Greacen, Helianthus Annus (Sunflower) (32.2)
• Reginald Dwayne Betts, “At the End of a Life, a Secret” (31.4)
• James Allen Hall, “One Train’s Survival Depends on the Other Derailed” (32.2)
• Natasha Trethewey, “Dr. Samuel Adolphus Cartwright on Dissecting the White Negro, 1851″ (32.3)

Congratulations to NER Poets Tomas Q. Morin and Greg Wrenn

Categories: NER Community

Tomas Q. Morin

Tomás Q. Morin (32.2) is the winner of this year’s APR/Honickman First Book Prize for his manuscript A Larger Country. His book was chosen by this year’s guest judge, poet Tom Sleigh, who will also write an introduction for it.

Greg Wrenn (32.2) of San Francisco is the winner of the 2012 Brittingham Poetry Prize from the University of Wisconsin Press. His collection South of Jacksonville will be published by UW Press in 2013. Terrance Hayes selected the award winners.

 

 

Christine Sneed on “Quality of Life”

Categories: NER Community

Christine Sneed (31.4), whose work has appeared in NER a number of times over the years, is the subject of the Chicago Tribune’s “Remarkable Woman” feature:

Christine Sneed has spent much of her life writing—short stories, mostly, and poetry. And for nearly 20 years, her rewards were small. Some were published in prestigious literary journals, but many more didn’t make it.

One short story, “Quality of Life,” was rejected 19 times before it was accepted by the New England Review in 2007. Then stuff started happening.

[read more]

Reader’s Almanac

Categories: NER Recommends

The Library of America’s blog, Reader’s Almanac, features a guest post by Elizabeth Dowling Taylor, author of A Slave in the White House: Paul Jennings and the Madisons. Jennings had this to say in his 1865 Reminiscences about Dolley Madison after her tenure as first lady had ended. Jennings’ book is available in full at the web site Documenting the American South, a project of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill:

Mrs. Madison was a remarkably fine woman. She was beloved by every body in Washington, white and colored. Whenever soldiers marched by, during the war, she always sent out and invited them in to take wine and refreshments, giving them liberally of the best in the house. Madeira wine was better in those days than now, and more freely drank. In the last days of her life, before Congress purchased her husband’s papers, she was in a state of absolute poverty, and I think sometimes suffered for the necessaries of life. While I was a servant to Mr. [Daniel] Webster, he often sent me to her with a market-basket full of provisions, and told me whenever I saw anything in the house that I thought she was in need of, to take it to her. I often did this, and occasionally gave her small sums from my own pocket, though I had years before bought my freedom of her.

[read more]

The Forest read by Jennifer Grotz

Categories: Poetry

Jennifer Grotz’s new poems “The Fog” and “The Forest” are published in the current issue of NER, while the web site features audio recordings of Grotz reading these poems at The Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. An excerpt from “The Forest”:

There was a little carpet of stream so clogged with leaves

it had stopped being a stream. And such a surfeit of silence,
it had become a kind of sound
to which, for a while, you could pay attention. Though
it’s inaccurate, I want to say it was like staring at a light.
All you could do was sense it; then you had to recover,
by which I mean to wait for everything to grow dim again.
Then the mind was the only flashlight, a little bobbing beam
that would illuminate randomly and too little.

(“The Forest,” read by the author, Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, 2011)

[read more]

Kathryn Kramer on Johns Hopkins

Categories: NER Community

In her essay “Still Life with Caged Lion” (NER 32.2), Middlebury College professor Kathryn Kramer writes about life in one of the earliest creative writing programs at Johns Hopkins:

The heady moment of the week, when social and academic intensity came together, was in John Barth’s weekly writing seminar, in each of which two student stories were discussed. “I’d give that another turn of the dramaturgical screw,” Barth would say, in his courtly way—this cleverest of writers, whom I’d been startled to see in living color after his black-and-white book jackets, on which he appeared in heavy glasses and what looked like a lab coat.