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jessstoner:

This is just what I needed the internet to be today.

breathingtimemachine:

helloimdave:

lepluspetitmonstre:

I will always reblog this no matter what.

(via blanklove)

OH MY GOD IT HAS 228000 NOTES

EVERY TIME I SEE THIS I CRY

Falcons on the Floor is a novel about the Iraq war by Justin Sirois. It’s getting a lot of cool attention. You can order it here for just $10.

(I’m trying out this LaunchRock doohickey. That’s what this post is about.)

Falcons on the Floor is a novel about the Iraq war by Justin Sirois. It’s getting a lot of cool attention. You can order it here for just $10.

(I’m trying out this LaunchRock doohickey. That’s what this post is about.)

cuttyspot:

EDWARD MULLANY INTERVIEW 
Edward Mullany recently released his first book of poems, called If I Falter at the Gallows. I heard him read at a series called 851 in an abandoned loft on Haight Street in San Francisco. He caught me off guard. His deadpan style reading only heightened the impact of his work. His pieces are so visceral and brief; I could listen to him read them for hours. Luckily I serendipitously caught him the second night at another house reading, spoke to him some more, and finally bought his book. You can buy his book here: http://publishinggenius.com/?p=59
Here’s one of my favorites from him, followed by the interview I’ve been fortunate enough to conduct with him. 
“The Dogs of War”
Two men dancing the foxtrot
in tuxedos on the beach were shot
at midnight, simultaneously,  
as they danced, so that both fell
while executing, or attempting
to execute, a step, and were thus
found dead in the morning by two  
female joggers who’d jogged  
together for years and who’d said,  
jokingly, they wanted adventure,  
but who now, in the gray dawn,  
having first mistaken the bodies
for pieces of black driftwood,  
were frightened to differing
degrees, one of them in tears,  
the other glancing nervously  
at the cliffs. 
*** 
Matthew Sherling: What first drew you to making poems?
Edward Mullany: I like how poems can convince you of something without communicating the exact nature of that thing they are convincing you of. When I read a good poem, I feel as though whatever kernel of belief still exists within me has suddenly been fortified. I think this actually applies to every form of art.
Matthew Sherling: I’m interested in your use of “belief” here. Can you expound upon that?
Edward Mullany: Art can remind us of the human situation, which, to me, can be phrased like this: humans exist in relation to eternity. This is a very particular belief because it posits eternity as fact. And insofar as eternity is a religious concept, I am a religious artist. So when I say that “art fortifies the kernel of belief that exists in me”, I mean ‘belief’ in a religious sense. But I also mean it as separate from doctrine. What revives me, in making art and seeing art, is the reminder that the human will face eternal consequences. I realize not everyone believes this.
Matthew Sherling: So, when you say “eternity,” are you referring to a sort of afterlife in which we receive judgment, reincarnation, or a certain immortality through art (as in, your art will last a whole lot longer than your physical body)?
Edward Mullany: I’m referring to an afterlife, as in: when I die, my soul will persist, and the circumstances under which it will persist will be related to the manner in which I have lived. I say this because I’m Catholic, though the thought itself is not exclusively Catholic, and though angst, rather than faith, might be the prevailing characteristic of my work.
MS: Very interesting, I wouldn’t have identified your Catholicism through your work.
Do you experience this fortification of belief during the process of making a poem as well?
Also, how much spontaneity / premeditation / editing is involved in your process?
EM: In making a poem, if I feel that I’ve said something true in an original way, then I experience that fortification, though maybe “fortification” is too grand a word.I’m thinking of the difference between poetry and prayer. In my view, prayer ‘fortifies’ faith and chases away doubt, even if the prayer itself acknowledges the existence of doubt. But a poem cannot be fortifying in the same way. It must leave itself open to interpretation. It recognizes the problem of being human, without trying to solve that problem, while a prayer does try to solve that problem. A prayer is a means of relieving one’s angst through the contemplation of the divine.
What I’m saying is that prayer, to a believer, at some point becomes more necessary than poetry, though poetry itself can shape a person’s faith, can lead that person to it, and can be a reminder of it. My poems are generally short; sometimes I can’t tell if I’m editing as I’m writing, or if I’m editing in the moment after I’ve written.
MS: I’ve heard you say that you read a lot of fiction - perhaps more even than poetry. Have you ever tried to write fiction? What do you think accounts for the brevity of your work? 
EM: I wrote fiction before I started writing poetry. Gradually, the stories I was writing became shorter and shorter until what I was looking at, on the computer screen, could have been described as poems. I don’t actually think of myself as a writer of poems. I just tend to write these short things that sometimes have ‘story’ in them and sometimes don’t.
The reason for the brevity is, I think, the importance I place on absence, or omission, in a story. Much of this came from reading Hemingway, but it was crystalized for me when I was shown the work of Lydia Davis and Amy Hempel. They taught me that the parameters of a story can be warped. You don’t have to start with ‘exposition’, or develop the ‘rising action’, for instance. You can just start right at the climax, even of the most trivial human event, and explore it with a kind of insane precision.
MS: That’s beautiful. I love those writers, especially Lydia Davis. Thank you so much, Edward, for your time and insight.
As a last question, what’s your personal take on how advanced technology—especially the Internet—is transforming the writing culture?
EM: It’s hard to overestimate the influence that the internet is exerting on writing culture.  We will still have people who continue to write manuscripts that are turned into printed books that will be sold in bookstores, but a new kind of writer or literary artist is going to emerge (and already has been emerging), and what this type of person produces will be interesting too.  I see these people constructing themselves more as ‘personae’ than as ‘authors’, but I don’t mean ‘personae’ in an easy way, or in a pejorative sense. I mean it in the sense that the careers these people will construct for themselves will arrive through a kind of eccentric mastery of several different avenues of internet media.
We’re seeing it already with people like Jimmy Chen, Mark Leidner, Melissa Broder, Steve Roggenbuck, Blake Butler and Tao Lin. These artists (for I don’t think they need to be considered solely as writers) might also produce printed books, and may in fact become most known for the work that they produce as authors, but no longer will there exist a silent and respectful distance between the ‘author’ and the ‘author’s work’. The internet is creating the opportunity for something like ‘livestream’ art, wherein the challenge is to manipulate the given platforms in a way that results in the creation of an original and compelling persona, one that can be updated, and viewed by the general public, not only on a daily basis, but on a minute-by-minute basis. I use the word “manipulate” very consciously, or seriously. Forms of social media are most interesting to me when the person who uses them is able to divert them from their most straightforward purposes, and into something slightly or radically askew.

cuttyspot:

EDWARD MULLANY INTERVIEW

Edward Mullany recently released his first book of poems, called If I Falter at the Gallows. I heard him read at a series called 851 in an abandoned loft on Haight Street in San Francisco. He caught me off guard. His deadpan style reading only heightened the impact of his work. His pieces are so visceral and brief; I could listen to him read them for hours. Luckily I serendipitously caught him the second night at another house reading, spoke to him some more, and finally bought his book. You can buy his book here: http://publishinggenius.com/?p=59

Here’s one of my favorites from him, followed by the interview I’ve been fortunate enough to conduct with him.

The Dogs of War”

Two men dancing the foxtrot

in tuxedos on the beach were shot

at midnight, simultaneously,

as they danced, so that both fell

while executing, or attempting

to execute, a step, and were thus

found dead in the morning by two

female joggers who’d jogged

together for years and who’d said,

jokingly, they wanted adventure,

but who now, in the gray dawn,

having first mistaken the bodies

for pieces of black driftwood,

were frightened to differing

degrees, one of them in tears,

the other glancing nervously

at the cliffs.

***

Matthew Sherling: What first drew you to making poems?

Edward Mullany: I like how poems can convince you of something without communicating the exact nature of that thing they are convincing you of. When I read a good poem, I feel as though whatever kernel of belief still exists within me has suddenly been fortified. I think this actually applies to every form of art.

Matthew Sherling: I’m interested in your use of “belief” here. Can you expound upon that?

Edward Mullany: Art can remind us of the human situation, which, to me, can be phrased like this: humans exist in relation to eternity. This is a very particular belief because it posits eternity as fact. And insofar as eternity is a religious concept, I am a religious artist. So when I say that “art fortifies the kernel of belief that exists in me”, I mean ‘belief’ in a religious sense. But I also mean it as separate from doctrine. What revives me, in making art and seeing art, is the reminder that the human will face eternal consequences. I realize not everyone believes this.

Matthew Sherling: So, when you say “eternity,” are you referring to a sort of afterlife in which we receive judgment, reincarnation, or a certain immortality through art (as in, your art will last a whole lot longer than your physical body)?

Edward Mullany: I’m referring to an afterlife, as in: when I die, my soul will persist, and the circumstances under which it will persist will be related to the manner in which I have lived. I say this because I’m Catholic, though the thought itself is not exclusively Catholic, and though angst, rather than faith, might be the prevailing characteristic of my work.

MS: Very interesting, I wouldn’t have identified your Catholicism through your work.

Do you experience this fortification of belief during the process of making a poem as well?

Also, how much spontaneity / premeditation / editing is involved in your process?

EM: In making a poem, if I feel that I’ve said something true in an original way, then I experience that fortification, though maybe “fortification” is too grand a word.

I’m thinking of the difference between poetry and prayer. In my view, prayer ‘fortifies’ faith and chases away doubt, even if the prayer itself acknowledges the existence of doubt. But a poem cannot be fortifying in the same way. It must leave itself open to interpretation. It recognizes the problem of being human, without trying to solve that problem, while a prayer does try to solve that problem. A prayer is a means of relieving one’s angst through the contemplation of the divine.

What I’m saying is that prayer, to a believer, at some point becomes more necessary than poetry, though poetry itself can shape a person’s faith, can lead that person to it, and can be a reminder of it.

My poems are generally short; sometimes I can’t tell if I’m editing as I’m writing, or if I’m editing in the moment after I’ve written.

MS: I’ve heard you say that you read a lot of fiction - perhaps more even than poetry. Have you ever tried to write fiction? What do you think accounts for the brevity of your work? 

EM: I wrote fiction before I started writing poetry. Gradually, the stories I was writing became shorter and shorter until what I was looking at, on the computer screen, could have been described as poems. I don’t actually think of myself as a writer of poems. I just tend to write these short things that sometimes have ‘story’ in them and sometimes don’t.

The reason for the brevity is, I think, the importance I place on absence, or omission, in a story. Much of this came from reading Hemingway, but it was crystalized for me when I was shown the work of Lydia Davis and Amy Hempel. They taught me that the parameters of a story can be warped. You don’t have to start with ‘exposition’, or develop the ‘rising action’, for instance. You can just start right at the climax, even of the most trivial human event, and explore it with a kind of insane precision.

MS: That’s beautiful. I love those writers, especially Lydia Davis. Thank you so much, Edward, for your time and insight.

As a last question, what’s your personal take on how advanced technology—especially the Internet—is transforming the writing culture?

EM: It’s hard to overestimate the influence that the internet is exerting on writing culture.  We will still have people who continue to write manuscripts that are turned into printed books that will be sold in bookstores, but a new kind of writer or literary artist is going to emerge (and already has been emerging), and what this type of person produces will be interesting too.  I see these people constructing themselves more as ‘personae’ than as ‘authors’, but I don’t mean ‘personae’ in an easy way, or in a pejorative sense. I mean it in the sense that the careers these people will construct for themselves will arrive through a kind of eccentric mastery of several different avenues of internet media.

We’re seeing it already with people like Jimmy Chen, Mark Leidner, Melissa Broder, Steve Roggenbuck, Blake Butler and Tao Lin. These artists (for I don’t think they need to be considered solely as writers) might also produce printed books, and may in fact become most known for the work that they produce as authors, but no longer will there exist a silent and respectful distance between the ‘author’ and the ‘author’s work’. The internet is creating the opportunity for something like ‘livestream’ art, wherein the challenge is to manipulate the given platforms in a way that results in the creation of an original and compelling persona, one that can be updated, and viewed by the general public, not only on a daily basis, but on a minute-by-minute basis. I use the word “manipulate” very consciously, or seriously. Forms of social media are most interesting to me when the person who uses them is able to divert them from their most straightforward purposes, and into something slightly or radically askew.

I can’t wait! I’m so happy to be included in this.

hobartpulp:

Busy times round the Hobart offices!

Coming in February 2012:

Lucky HOBART #13 (w/ Amy Butcher, Brian Allen Carr, Steve Castro, Jimmy Chen, Ashley Farmer,  Tod Goldberg, Amelia Gray, Jac Jemc, Adam Levin, Rolf Potts, Sean Lovelace, M. Owens, Micah Riecker, Shya Scanlon, Curtis VanDonkelaar, and Joshua Ware, with drawings, “lucky items,” a Q&A on superstition in baseball, and thoughts on luck by Donald Averill, Paula Bomer, Joshua Brandon, Chloe Caldwell, Noah Cicero, Molly Gaudry, Tom Giesler, Barry Graham, Joseph Lappie, Robert Lopez, Chelsea Martin, Donald Ray Pollock, Adam Robinson, Kevin Sampsell, Laura van den Berg, Brandi Wells

FAST MACHINE by Elizabeth Ellen

and then in March:

I HAVE BLINDED MYSELF WRITING THIS by Jess Stoner!

NOTES:

  • Subscribe (or resubscribe) between now and February 1st and receive Fast Machine for free!
  • at least a couple LUCKY subscribers will find $CASH MONEY$ with their Hobart #13!
wth?

baltiamore:

Old Spice Guy places a print ad in Baltimore Sun to “Every Single Business Institution in Baltimore.”

wth?

baltiamore:

Old Spice Guy places a print ad in Baltimore Sun to “Every Single Business Institution in Baltimore.”

(via phuuuuu)

New Amazon eBook Program

Amazon is offering a new thing for new things. Publishers can list their eBooks with them exclusively (for at minimum 90 days) and get enrolled in their Amazon Prime lending program thing. That is for people who have the Kindle and pay for Amazon Prime; they can borrow one book a month and read it for free. Something like that.

I have a Kindle Fire but can’t figure out the system. Maybe because not that many books are participating in the program.

I’m tempted to do this with PGP books — like Tim Sanders’s ORANGE JUICE, which now has sweet ePub and mobi editions — but I’m reluctant to do ANYTHING exclusive to ANYONE. Especially Amazon, who seems to be getting even more aggressive with usurping all market share of everything, ever.

John Ashbery answers 10 Questions for Time Magazine.