New England Review

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More New Books by NER Authors

December 18, 2015

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Paine’s stellar collection offers readers a transporting experience.—Publishers Weekly

NER is pleased to announce the release of Tom Paine‘s new book A Boy’s Book of Nervous Breakdowns (LSU Press). Tom Paine is a member of our editorial panel, and his work has appeared in NER 20.3.

The author of The Pearl of Kuwait and Scar Vegas, Paine is associate professor in the MFA program at the University of New Hampshire. He has published work in the New Yorker, Harper’s, and Story, among others, and has been featured in anthologies for the O. Henry Awards, the Pushcart Prize, and New Stories from the South: The Year.

A Boy’s Book of Nervous Breakdowns is available from LSU Press and other booksellers.

 

♦

517vSWKUVsL._SX327_BO1,204,203,200_

The world in its raging, rich variety fills these poems, overflowing into vivid images that root Maia’s political and social attention firmly in the real scenes and objects all around us. —Cole Swenson

University of Pittsburgh Press has recently released The Invisible Bridge/El puente invisible: Selected Poems of Circe Maia, written by Maia and translated by Jesse Lee Kercheval, an NER author. His work was most recently featured in Vol. 16.2. 

Kercheval is a poet, fiction writer, memoirist, and translator. She is the author of fifteen books, most recently the bilingual poetry collection Enxtranjera/Stranger (Editorial Yaugarú, 2015) and the novel My Life as a Silent Movie (Indiana University Press, 2013). She was the director of the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing for six years, and is now the Director of the MFA Program of Creative Writing there. She has been the recipient of various fellowships, including one to the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference.

The Invisible Bridge/El puente invisible is available from University of Pittsburgh Press and other booksellers.

 

41WLEkIU8YL._SX328_BO1,204,203,200_[The I Ching is] the only thing that is amazingly true, period . . . You don’t have to believe anything to read it, because besides being a great book to believe in, it’s also very fantastic poetry. ―Bob Dylan

We are pleased to announce that David Hinton‘s translation of I Ching has been released by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. His work has previously appeared in NER in 1984.

Hinton’s many translations of classical Chinese poetry have earned wide acclaim for creating compelling contemporary poems that convey the actual texture and density of the originals. He is also the first translator in more than a century of the four seminal masterworks of Chinese philosophy: Tao Te Ching, Chuang Tzu, Analects, and Mencius. He has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Humanities, and has won the Landon Translation Award, the PEN Translation Award, and, most recently, the Thornton Wilder Award for lifetime achievement from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Hinton’s I Ching is available directly from Macmillan and other booksellers.

 

♦

51JjcqtnioL._SX327_BO1,204,203,200_If the devil is in the details, then the devil has met his match. Castle Freeman Jr. conjures an intricate tete-a-tete with the devil into a Vermont home-brew of brimstone and beneficence. Fast-paced, compulsive, The Devil in the Valley leaves you wanting more. Temptation on the page. —Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and After Alice

NER is excited to announce Overlook Press’s release of The Devil in the Valley, by Castle Freeman Jr. Freeman’s work has appeared frequently in NER, most recently in Vol. 35.4.

Freeman is the author of four other novels, including All That I Have and Go With Me (coming as a film starring Anthony Hopkins and Julia Stiles), two collections of short stories, and many essays and other nonfiction. His stories have been mentioned or included in The Best American Short Stories and other collections. He lives in southeastern Vermont.

The Devil in the Valley is available at the Vermont Book Shop and other booksellers.

 

♦

41kbYmCgjJL._SX331_BO1,204,203,200_Huddle is a source of light in an often gray world.―Booklist

[Huddle’s poetry is] luminous and majestic.― Philip Deaver, Southern Review

NER congratulates poet David Huddle for recent publication of his collection Dream Sender: Poems by LSU Press. His work has appeared in Vol. 13.2 in 1990 and he formerly served as acting editor for NER in 1995.

David Huddle is from Ivanhoe, Virginia, and he’s lived in Vermont for 44 years. His fiction, poetry, and essays have appeared in The American Scholar, Esquire, Appalachian Heritage, The New Yorker, Harper’s, Poetry, Story, Shenandoah, Agni, Green Mountains Review, The Sow’s Ear, Plume, and Georgia Review. He is the author of nineteen novels, short story collections, essays,  and volumes of poetry, including Glory River and Blacksnake at the Family Reunion.

Dream Sender is available from LSU Press and other booksellers.

Filed Under: NER Authors' Books Tagged With: Castle Freeman Jr., David Hinton, David Huddle, Jesse Lee Kercheval, Tom Paine

NER Classics | Scotland | David Huddle

October 1, 2015

David Huddle’s story, “Scotland,” was published in NER 13.2 (1990).

800px-Dunnotar_CastleWhen I came home from school, I knew my dad was in the house, even though there was absolute quiet everywhere. This was years ago, when we lived in London and I was twelve and trying to get used to going to school at St. Catherine’s Academy where they made us wear flannel skirts and knee socks. My dad was mostly living with his mistress, as my mom called her. He had stopped paying our cook and maid; so that day there wasn’t even any noise coming from the kitchen. My dad drank, and he had always been a very tense man. Even when he was in a good mood, you didn’t want to startle him, or come up on him by surprise. So after I got myself a snack, I went very quietly to my room, which was down the hall from my mom’s room, and took off my skirt and blouse and dropped them to the floor as I always did but still being careful not to make much noise.

All the while I was putting on my jeans and sweat shirt and eating my crackers and cheese, I kept imagining that I could hear murmuring voices from her room. I lay down on the bed to read and maybe take a nap, but I also wanted to be as quiet as I could to see if I really was hearing them talking. I even held my breath, but the quieter I was, the more my imagination seemed to be playing tricks on me. One minute I’d be certain I heard my father speaking actual words, things like “I have every right” and “You don’t know” and once I even thought I heard my mom say my name, “Angela,”in this real tight voice. But then the next minute I’d be just as certain that I wasn’t hearing anything except my own blood beating in my ears.

After awhile I think I must have dozed off or gone into this trance or something, but I seemed to know that it was getting dark outside. Then I was aware of my dad standing in the hallway just outside my door. He stood there for an unusually long time, and while he did, I became more and more alert. By the time he had started down the steps, a little sweat had broken onto my forehead.

Probably he opened and closed the front door as softly as he could, but I was so tense waiting for him to leave that it sounded like a small explosion when he finally did shut it behind him. A second later,my mom screamed for me to come to her room.

[read more]

Filed Under: NER Classics Tagged With: David Huddle, NER Classics, Scotland

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Tomas Venclova

Literature & Democracy

Tomas Venclova

“A principled stance against aggression should never turn into blind hatred. Such hatred does not help anyone to win . . .”

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