News and Notes
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Chris Gavaler's story "Is" (29.2) was selected for the anthology Real Unreal: Best American Fantasy 3, just out from Underland Press.
Four writers whose work has appeared recently in NER were awarded 2010 Literature Fellowships in Creative Writing (Prose) in the amount of $25,000 from the National Endowment for the Arts: Roy Kesey (28.1, 26.3), Suzanne Rivecca (28.1), Gregory Blake Smith (30.3, 26.1, 6.3), and Rebecca Solnit (26.2, 24.1).
D. A. Powell (Vol. 29, #4) received the Kingsley Tufts Award, which comes with a prize of $100,000, for his poetry collection Chronic. His book is also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle’s poetry award.
Jericho Brown was among ten recipients of the 2009 Whiting Writers' Awards. The awards of $50,000 each are given annually to writers of exceptional talent and promise. His first book, Please, includes two poems first published in NER Vol. 28, #1.
G.C. Waldrep's poem "Their Faces Shall Be As Flames" (NER Vol. 30, #1) appears in the Readings section of the February issue of Harper's.
Robert Cohen's new novel, Amateur Barbarians, was selected for the New York Times list of "100 Notable Books of 2009." His work appeared most recently in NER Vol. 30, #3.
CLMP (Council for Literary Magazines and Presses) has selected New England Review to participate in a new program, the Literary Magazine Engagement Program for Creative Writing Students. The program offers half-price subscriptions for selected literary magazines to writing classes adopting them for course use (with desk-copy subscriptions to the professors). Additionally, once during the semester, senior editors from adopted magazines will participate in a virtual or in-person meeting with the class, allowing students to better understand the publishing community.
The ultimate goal of this program is to expose students to the variety of magazines out there and promote an active, engaged reading culture among young writers. Teachers will be able to choose from six different literary magazines for the pilot program, and if it is successful the menu of magazines will grow significantly in the future. For more information, and to participate in the program, please visit the CLMP website.
Traci Brimhall's poetry manuscript, Rookery, won the Crab Orchard Review Series in
Poetry First Book Award. The book will be out from Southern Illinois University in late 2010.
Josh Weil, whose story “Liberation Square,” appeared in Vol. 27, #2, was chosen as one of the National Book Foundation’s “5 under 35” for 2009.
Lori Ostlund, whose story "The Children Beneath the Seat" appeared in Vol. 27, #1, and who has two stories forthcoming in Vol. 30, #3, will receive a 2009 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writer’s Award, which is given annually to six women writers who demonstrate excellence and promise in the early stages of their careers. The Awards of $25,000 each will be presented to the six recipients on September 24th in New York City.
Joel Brouwer’s poem “For What the Hell They Needed It For,” which appeared in Vol. 29, #1, was selected for the Pushcart Prize. The anthology, Pushcart Prize XXXIV: Best of the Small Presses, 2009, also cites for special mention other works first published in NER: poems by Kevin Prufer ("Cancer") and Carl Phillips ("Night"), nonfiction by Bruce Mills ("Sleeping with Jacob") and Janet Groth ("Homage to Mister Berryman"), and fiction by Jon McMillan ("The Fishman of Point Cripp").
The "Best American" anthologies for 2009 are out, and included in them are works first published in NER.
Rebecca Makkai’s story “The Briefcase,” which appeared in Vol. 29, #2, was selected for Best American Short Stories 2009 and for Best American Nonrequired Reading 2009.
Alexandra Teague’s poem “Heartlines,” which appeared in NER Vol. 29, #2, was selected for Best American Poetry 2009.
Suzanne Rivecca's short story collection, Death is Not an Option, will be published by W.W. Norton in July 2010. The book will include "Uncle," which first appeared in NER, Vol. 28, #1.
Two NER contributors were among the finalists for this year's National Book Award: Carl Phillips for Speak Low and Ann Lauterbach for Or to Begin Again.
Elizabeth Haukaas talks to NPR for the All Things Considered series “How Artists Make Money,” and reads her poem “The Blues,” which appeared in Vol. 28, #1.
Ted Gilley won the 2009 Prairie Schooner Book Prize for his story collection, Bliss. He will receive $3000 and the book will be published in fall 2010 by the University of Nebraska Press. The title story appeared in Vol. 29, #3.
David Philip Mullins won the 2009 Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction. His book, True Love Vs. the Cigar Store Indian, will be published by Sarabande Books next year. It includes three stories originally published in NER--the title story (Vol. 21, #2), "Driving Lessons" (Vol. 25, #3), and most recently, "First Sight" (Vol. 29, #2).
The Guggenheim Memorial Foundation awarded its 2009 fellowships to nine poets, 11 fiction writers, two biographers and a dozen nonfiction authors. Among them are four NER contributors. Winners in poetry include Saskia Hamilton (Vol. 14, #4) and Laura Kasischke (Vol. 29, #2), and in fiction John Haskell (Vol. 25, #3) and George Singleton (Vol. 24, #2). The American
Academy of Arts and Letters has presented its 2009 Awards
in Literature, and Michael Collier (Vol.
26, #4 ) is among the recipients of this year's $7500
award.
Robert
Schine's essay "'The
Deleted Word': Implications of an Altered Text by Hermann
Hesse" has been published in Hebrew translation
in the Israeli journal Yekinton (Tel Aviv), November
2008. The essay originally appeared in NER Vol.
25, #3.
Norman
Lock has
been awarded a 2009 fellowship in fictional literature
from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, in part for "The
Monster in Winter," a
story published in NER Vol. 28, #3.
Brenda
Wineapple's White Heat: The Friendship of Emily
Dickinson & Thomas Wentworth Higginson, which was
excerpted in NER Vol.
29, #3, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle
Award.
Ted Gilley (Vol. 29, #3) won the Alehouse Press (San Francisco) annual national poetry contest. The prize was $1000.
The 2008 TLS Poetry Competition has been won by Susan Rich (Vol. 29, #1), of Seattle, WA, for her poem “Different
Places to Pray.” She receives $4,000.
The National Endowment for the Arts has awarded its 2009 Literature Fellowships in Poetry. Among the recipients of the $25,000 award are NER poetry editor C.
Dale Young and NER contributors Xochiquetzal Candelaria (Vol. 27, #3), Henri Cole (Vol. 23, #3), Stuart Dischell (Vol. 2, #4), Robert Gibb (Vol. 17, #1), Douglas Goetsch (Vol. 26. #4), Bob Hicok (Vol. 29, #2), Lynne Knight (Vol. 16, #4), Orlando R. Menes (Vol. 27, #1), Aimee Nezhukumatathil (Vol.
26, #1), Patrick Phillips (Vol. 27, #3), and Gabriel Spera (Vol. 14, #2).
Suzanne Rivecca's story "Uncle," which
appeared in NER Vol. 28, #1, was selected for the Pushcart
Prize. The anthology, Pushcart Prize XXXIII: Best of the
Small Presses, was just published (November 2008). Selected
for "special mention" were the stories "Quality
of Life" by Christine Sneed and "Love Story" by Rachel
Kadish, and the poem "The Ocracoke Ponies" by Jennifer
Grotz, all of which first appeared in NER.
Lori Ostlund's story collection, The
Bigness of the World, was selected for the Flannery
O'Connor Award for Short Fiction from the University of
Georgia Press. The book, which includes "The Children
Beneath the Seat" (Vol. 27, #1), and two stories
that are forthcoming in Vol. 30, #3, will be published
in fall 2009.
Richard Howard's poetry collection Without
Saying, which
includes a poem first published in NER Vol. 27, #1, was a
finalist for the National Book Award. The
Boston Globe recognizes New England as a hotbed for
literary magazine publishing, including New England
Review among the top 10. Artnet.com has
begun publishing
Peter Plagens's
novel, The Art Critic, online. The 24 chapters
will appear weekly. Plagens's nonfiction appeared most recently
in NER Vol. 29, #1.
“Contemplating Quiet,” a poem by Robin Ekiss that appeared in NER Vol. 29, #2, was featured on Poetry Daily on August 24.
Ricard Pau-Llosa, whose poetry most recently appeared in NER Vol. 29, #1, appeared on the Jim Lehrer NewsHour program on PBS as part of the Poetry Series. The segment can be viewed on “streaming video.”
E. V. Slate's story "Purple Bamboo Park" (Vol. 28, #2) has been selected for the PEN/O.Henry Prize Stories 2009 to be published in May 2009 by Anchor Books.
A podcast of the New York Public
Library's "Periodically Speaking" event featuring
NER editor Stephen Donadio
introducing poet Patrick Phillips (most
recently appearing in NER Vol. 27, #3) is now
available by podcast on
the NYPL website.
Philip F. Gura's book American
Transcendentalism (Hill & Wang, 2007) was a finalist
for the National Book Critics Circle Award. An excerpt
from this book appeared in NER Vol. 28, #3.
Bob Hicok, whose work has appeared frequently in NER, most recently in Vol. 27 #1, was awarded the Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry for his book This Clumsy Living (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2007). The $10,000 prize recognizes a book of poetry written by an American and published during the preceding two years and/or the lifetime achievement of an American poet. The prize is donated by the family of the late Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt of Austin, Texas, in her memory, and awarded at the Library of Congress.
C. D. Wright has selected G. C. Waldrep (Vol. 28, #3) as winner of the 2007 Dorset Prize for his poetry manuscript Archicembalo. He will receive $10,000, and his book will be published in 2009 by Tupelo Press.
Molly McNett's collection One
Dog Happy, is
the winner of the 2008 John Simmons Short Fiction Award from
the University of Iowa Press. It was published in August
2008 by University of Iowa Press. Her story "Catalogue
Sales" first appeared in NER (Vol. 25, #4).
Emily Mitchell's novel, The Last Summer of the World, was chosen as a finalist for the New York Public Library's 2008 Young Lions Fiction Award. Her work appeared in NER vol. 28, #2.
Cate Marvin, whose work has appeared frequently in NER, most recently in Vol. 24, #4, was one of ten recipients of the 2007 Whiting Writers’ Awards from the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation. The awards, which are now $50,000 each, have been given annually since 1985 to emerging writers of exceptional talent and promise.
Christine Sneed's story "Quality
of Life" (Vol. 28, #2) was chosen by Salman Rushdie,
guest editor, and series editor Heidi Pitlor to appear
in The
Best American Short Stories 2008.
Suzanne
Rivecca's
story"Look
Ma, I'm Breathing" was chosen for the Harcourt
anthology Best
New American Voices 2009, guest-edited by Mary Gaitskill
and forthcoming in October 2008. She was published in NER, 28,
#1.
Anthony Varallo's second short story collection, Out Loud, has
won the 2008 Drue Heinz Literature Prize, judged by Scott
Turow, and will include "Parade Rest," from NER,
28, #2. University of Pittsburgh Press has just been published.
Glen Pourciau's short story
collection, Invite, won
the 2008 Iowa Short Fiction Award. It will be published in
the fall of 2008 by University of Iowa Press. Several of
the stories from this collection first appeared in NER: "How
Tommy Lee Turned Out Abnormal"(Vol.
17, #3),
"Among the Missing" (Vol.18, #2), "Deep
Wilderness" (Vol. 21, #1), and "Snub" (Vol.
27, #3).
Charles Wright selected Chris Forhan's poem, "Rock
Polisher" (NER Vol. 28, #1) and New England Review
poetry editor
C. Dale Young's poem "Sepsis" (published in VQR) for Best
American Poetry 2008.
An interview with
NER editor Stephen Donadio appeared in Burlington newspaper Seven
Days on December 19, 2007.
Poet Henri
Cole (NER
Vol. 23, #3) and novelist John
Haines (Vol. 9, #2) were among the recipients
of $50,000 United
States Artists fellowship grants for artistic
excellence.
Pushcart Prize XXXII is just out, and "Bear
Story" by Sage Marsters (NER Vol. 27, #4) is included among
the winners. Special mention also goes to the following NER
selections: "Happy for You," a story by Gregory
Spatz, "The Origin of the Specious," a poem by Richard
Kenney, "Singe," a poem by Bob Hicok, and "The Lord God Returns," a poem by Susan Wood.
NER
editor Stephen
Donadio introduced
poet Patrick Phillips at "Periodically
Speaking," a reading series at the New York
Public Library, consponsored by the Council of Literary
Magazines and Presses in October 2007. The National Endowment for the Humanities announced
the 2008 recipients of the Literature Program's Fellowships
for Translation Projects. Two recent NER contributors are
among them. Nicholas Benson will use the fellowship
to continue work on his translation of Italian poet Aldo
Palazzeschi’s book The Arsonist, part of which
appeared in NER Vol. 27, #2. Dick Davis will use
the fellowship to continue his translation from the poetry
of 14th-century Persian princess Jahan Khatun. His translation
of “The Legend of Seyavash” by Abolqasem Ferdowsi
appeared in NER Vol. 26, #4. These fellows will each receive
a $20,000 award.
Robin Ekiss (NER Vol. 24, #4) and Jennifer Grotz (NER Vol. 27, #2) are among the emerging women writers who were singled out for excellence by the 2007 Rona Jaffe Foundation and will receive awards of $25,000 each. "The Necessity of Certain Behaviors" by Shannon Cain has been chosen to be included in The O. Henry Prize Stories 2008. The story appeared in NER in Vol. 27, #2. "Bear Story" by Sage Marsters (NER Vol. 27, #4) was selected for a Pushcart Prize and will appear in Pushcart Prize XXXII: Best of the Small Presses, 2008.
Aaron Baker's book of poems, Mission Work, was selected by Stanley Plumly as the winner of the 2007 Bakeless Prize and will be published by Houghton Mifflin in the spring of 2008. He had poems in NER Volume 25, #1-2.
Natasha Trethewey, a frequent
contributor of poems to our pages, most recently in Vol. 27,
#2, is the recipient of the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for
her collection, Native Guard (Houghton Mifflin, 2006).
Barnard College announced that writer Joyce Carol Oates has chosen Lisa Williams and her collection Woman Reading to the Sea as the winner of the 2007 Barnard Women Poets Prize, an annual contest to publish an emerging poet’s second collection. The Prize, awarded jointly by Women Poets at Barnard and tW.W. Norton & Company, includes publication of the work and a free public reading at Barnard. Williams appeared in NER Vol. 21, #3.
Peter Pereira's "Nursemaid's Elbow" (NER
Vol. 27, #1) was chosen by Heather McHugh for the 2007 edition
of The Best American Poetry. His latest book of poems,
What's Written on the Body, was recently released by
Copper Canyon Press.
Beverly Jensen’s “Wake” ( Vol. 27, #2) has been selected for the 2007 edition of
The Best American Short Stories. NER will
publish another story by Jensen in Vol. 28, #2.
Keith Ekiss,
whose work appeared in NER Vol. 25, #1-2, and
will appear in Vol. 28, #2, has recently been named a Jones
Lecturer in Poetry at Stanford University.
David Roderick has been named the 2007-2008 Amy Lowell Poetry Travelling Scholar. Roderick will spend a year abroad living and writing and will receive a stipend from the Trust set up by the poet, Amy Lowell. David Roderick's poems last appeared in NER Vol. 24, #2, and since then, has worked as one of our poetry readers.
Elmo Lum's "What I Never
Said" (Vol. 27, #3) was selected for New Stories from
the Southwest, to be published in January 2008
by University of Ohio Press.
Martha Carlson-Bradley's first
full-length collection of poems, Season We Can't Resist, will be published in June 2007 by Word Tech Editions. Two poems
in this book were first published in NER: "At the Falls"
in Vol. 20, #2 and "Winter Botany" in Vol. 18, #1.
Frederick Brown’s Flaubert:
A Biography (Little Brown), chapters of which first appeared
in NER Vol. 25, #4 and Vol. 26, #4, was a finalist for the National
Book Critics Circle award in biography.
Major Jackson, a longtime poetry
reader for NER, was a finalist for a NAACP Image Award, in the
category of Outstanding Literary Work, for his recent book,
Hoops (Norton).
Milan Kundera's New Yorker essay about
world literature and how we read each other (Jan. 8, 2007) offers
an oblique but intriguing follow-up to Allison Stanger's
open letter to the Czech author, which appeared in NER's Vol.
18, #1. We invite readers to have another look at Stanger's
letter here.
Peter LaSalle's short
story collection Tell Borges If You See Him has been
named a recipient of the 2006 Flannery O'Connor Award for Short
Fiction. The collection will be released in October by the University
of Georgia Press and includes two stories originally published
in NER: the title story "Tell Borges If You See Him"
(Vol. 25, #1-2) and "Where We Last Saw Time" (Vol.
21, #2), which was nominated for a Pushcart Prize by Joyce Carol
Oates.
The National Endowment for the Arts announced
the 2007 recipients of the Literature Program's Creative Writing
Fellowships in Poetry. Each literature fellow receives a $20,000
award. The following NER contributors were among those awarded:
David C. Barber, Andrea Hollander Budy, Joseph Campana,
Averill Curdy, Jonathan Fink, Christopher Forhan, Saskia Hamilton,
James Hoch, Lance Larsen, Kevin Prufer, Karen Rigby, Martha
Ronk, Mark Sullivan, G. C. Waldrep, and Greg
W. Williamson. Brock Clarke's story "The
Apology," which appeared in NER Vol. 24, #3, has been chosen
by Symphony Space for its "Selected Shorts" series.
It was part of a live reading program on February 9, 2007, at
the Getty Center in Los Angeles and recorded for subsequent
broadcast on NPR.
Carl Phillips, whose poetry
and essays have appeared frequently in NER (most recently in
Vol. 27, #4), has been selected as the recipient of the 2006
Academy of American Poets Fellowship, given in memory of James
Ingram Merrill. The Fellowship is awarded once a year to a poet
for distinguished poetic achievement at mid-career and provides
a stipend of $25,000. Fellows are elected by the Academy’s
Board of Chancellors. More recently, he was elected to the Board
of Chancellors himself.
"The Company of Men" by Jan
Ellison has been chosen to be included in The O.Henry
Prize Stories 2007, to be published in May 2007 by Anchor
Books. The story appeared in NER in Vol. 26, #4.
Robert Pinsky has selected David Roderick's
manuscript, Blue Colonial, as the winner of the 2006
American Poetry Review / Honickman first book prize. The
prize includes publication by APR and distribution of the book
by Copper Canyon Press as well as a $3,000 award. Roderick
last appeared in NER in Vol. 24, #2, and since then, has
worked as one of our poetry readers.
"Myth" by Natasha Trethewey
(NER Vol. 25, #4) was selected for a Pushcart Prize and appears
in Pushcart Prize XXXI: Best of the Small Presses, 2007.
Elizabeth Rollins's "Joint Custody,"
Steve Almond's "Open Up and Say Ow," and Gregory Spatz's "Any Landlord's Dream" were all selected for Special Mention.
Ian Ganassi received a grant
from the St. Botolph Foundation to continue work on his translation
of Virgil's Aeneid, sections of which have appeared
in NER, most recently in Vol. 26, #4 and forthcoming in Vol.
28, #1.The Claremont Graduate University has announced
the winners of the 2006 Tufts Poetry Awards. The winner of the
$100,000 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award is Lucia Perillo
for her collection, Luck Is Luck (Random House, 2005). Perillo's work appeared in NER in Vol. 26, #3.
Recent essays by Myles Weber ("Reading Salinger's Silence," Vol. 26, #2) and A.
J. Sherman ("Schools for Scandal," Vol. 26,
#3) have been selected for excerption in Wilson Quarterly
(autumn 2005, winter 2006, respectively).
Keith Lee Morris's "Tired
Heart" (NER, Vol. 26, #2) was selected for New Stories
from the South: The Year's Best, 2006.
Laura Kasiscke's "At Gettysburg," which appeared in NER, Vol. 26, #4 and David Yezzi's
"The Call" (NER, Vol. 26, #3) were selected
for Best American Poetry, 2006.
Jan Ellison received the Clark-Gross
Award in the Novel from San Francisco State for her novel-in-progress.
Myles Weber was awarded a 2005
Individual Artist Fellowship from the Ohio Arts Council in the
category of literary criticism. The amount of the award was
$5000. Weber appears frequently in the pages of NER, most recently
in Vol. 27, #4, with his essay on Phillip Roth.The National Endowment for the Arts announced
the 2006 recipients of the Literature Program's Creative Writing
Fellowships in Prose. Each literature fellow receives a $20,000
award. The following NER contributors were among those awarded:
Shannon Cain, Bret Anthony Johnston, Barbara Klein Moss, Ron
V. Rash, and Nancy Zafris.
Christopher Sorrentino's novel
Trance, which was excerpted in NER, Vol. 26, #2, was
a National Book Award finalist for 2005.
Sebastian Barry's novel A
Long Long Way was shortlisted for the 2005 Man Booker Prize.
This novel was excerpted in NER, Vol. 25,#4 and published by
Viking Penguin in February 2005.
Richard Wollman's "Relativity
in America, 1936" was selected by Susan Howe for the 2005
Gulf Coast Prize in poetry. His poem "Paper in Autumn" appeared in NER, Vol. 25, #4.
Jennifer Chang's poem "Conversation
with Owl and Clouds" (NER Vol. 25, #1&2) was selected
by George Garrett for inclusion in Best New Poets 2005,
published in November 2005 by UVA press. She was also named
2005 Van Lier Fellow in Poetry by the Asian American Writers'
Workshop.
Carla Panciera's first collection
of poetry, One of the Cimalores, received the Cider Press
Book Award and was published in September 2005 by Cider Press.
Her story "All of a Sudden" appeared in NER Vol. 25,
#3.Molly McNett's short story "Catalogue
Sales" was chosen by Dave Eggers and his team to appear in
Best American Nonrequired Reading, published in October
2005 by Houghton Mifflin. This story was included in NER Vol.
25, #4.
Debora Greger and William
Logan were the recipients of the 15th annual John William
Corrigan Award for Literary Excellence. Greger, who appeared most
recently in NER Vol. 25, #4, and Logan, who was included in NER
Vol. 26, #1, shared the $2000 prize. Named for the writer and
Centenary College alumnus, the award recognizes a career of dedication
to literary excellence.
Rosanna Warren, who published
her work in NER Vol. 18, #2, has been elected to American Academy
of Arts & Letters.
Doug Trevor's story "Central
Square"(NER Vol. 23, #3) is included in his short story collection, The Thin Tear in the Fabric of Space, which was awarded
the Iowa Short Fiction Award.
The Claremont Graduate University has announced
the winners of the 2005 Tufts Poetry Awards. The winner of the$100,000
Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award is Michael Ryan for
his collection, New and Selected Poems (Houghton Mifflin,
2004). The winner of the $10,000 Kate Tufts Award is Patrick
Phillips for his collection, Chatahoochee (Arkansas,
2004). Both Mr. Ryan and Mr. Phillips have had their work appear
previously in NER.
Geri Doran has been named the
2005-2006 Amy Lowell Poetry Travelling Scholar. Doran will spend
a year abroad living and writing and will receive a stipend from
the Trust set up by the poet, Amy Lowell. Geri Doran's work regularly
appears in NER, most recently in Vol. 24, #4.The National Endowment for the Arts announced
the 2005 recipients of the Literature Program's Creative Writing
Fellowships in Poetry. The following contributors to NER were
among those awarded Creative Writing Fellowships: David
Baker, Jane Hirshfield, Kimberly Johnson, Laura Kasischke, Eric
Pankey, and Mark Wunderlich.
Jane Hirshfield
is also the recipient of the 2004 Academy Fellowship from the
Academy of American Poets. She appears frequently in NER.
Marilyn Hacker's "For Kateb Yacine" and Charles
Simic's "Sunlight," which appeared in NER's
vol. 25, #1&2 and vol. 24, #4, respectively, were selected
for Best American Poetry 2005, guest
edited by Paul Muldoon.
Geoffrey Brock was announced
as the winner of the fifth annual New Criterion Poetry Prize.
He receivee $3,000 and his book Weighing Light was published
by Ivan R. Dee in the fall of 2005. Brock last appeared in NER's
vol. 24, #2 (2003), and his translations of Umberto Saba appeared
in vol. 25, #1&2 (2004).
Ted DuBois's
translation of Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart's
"Characteristics of the Musical Keys" was excerpted
in the January issue of Harper's, appearing in the "Readings"
section. This translation appeared in NER's vol. 25, #1&2
(2004).
Sidney Wade's
poem "Insurance," which appeared in NER's vol. 24, #4
(2003), has been selected for inclusion in The Autumn House
Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry, published by Autumn
House Press in 2005.
Trenton Lee Stewart's
story "Moriah," which appeared in NER's vol. 24, #2
(2003), is cited among the "100 Other Distinguished Stories"
in the 2004 Best American Short Stories."Names we sing in sleep & anger,"
a poem by Amaud Jamaul Johnson, was featured online on
Poetry Daily on September 30, 2004.
Dick Davis's
essay, "On Not Translating Hafez," was Poetry Daily's
prose feature on October 12. Both pieces appeared in NER's vol.
25, #1&2 (2004).
Bret Anthony Johnston's
story "The Widow," which appeared in NER's vol. 24,
#2 (2003), has been selected for inclusion in New Stories
from the South: The Year's Best, 2004.
Virgil Suárez's
poem "La Florida," which appeared in NER's vol.
24, #1 (2003) was selected for Best American Poetry 2004,
guest edited by Lyn Hejinian.
Barry Sternlieb was
recently awarded a 2004 Artist Grant in Poetry for $5,000 from
the Massachusetts Cultural Council. His work last appeared in
NER's vol. 24, #1 (2003).
Geri Doran won the
2004 Walt Whitman Award for her first book-length book of poems, Resin, published by Louisiana State University Press
in spring 2005. Doran's poetry last appeared in NER's vol. 24,
#4 (2004).
Brock Clarke's story "The
Apology" was selected for the 2004 Pushcart Prize. "The
Apology" appeared in NER's vol. 24, #3 (2003).
Victoria Chang won the Crab Orchard
Review's Award Series in Poetry for her first book-length collection,
Circle, published by Southern Illinois University Press
in April 2005, and she won the Taylor Fellowship to attend the
Kenyon Review Writer's Workshop in summer 2004. Her poetry most
recently appeared in NER's vol. 26, #4 (2005).
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