Friday, December 28, 2012
Wally Lamb Workshop - Waiting List
If you are interested in being placed on the waiting list for Wally Lamb's class, please email us at taosconf@unm.edu. The office reopens Wednesday, January 2.
We recommend taking a look at the other fiction workshops that are being offered. We are proud to announce that Laura Brodie is again teaching a novel-in-progress workshop for intermediate and advanced writers, while Frank Huyler will be offering one for beginning writers. Pam Houston will also be joining us again in 2013, as will Robert Boswell and Demetria Martinez. Do not miss Priscilla Long's Prose Style workshop, which has become an annual favorite. You can find more information here.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Class Updates and Holiday Hours
Registration for the 2013 Conference opened December 3. There are currently three spots open in Wally Lamb's class and John Dufresne is opening a waiting list. You can still submit for Jonis Agee, Antonya Nelson and Summer Wood if you are interested in a novel master class.
This year we are offering two novel-in-progress workshops one with Laura Brodie (int/adv) and one with Frank Huyler. We are also offering two memoir classes, one with BK Loren and one with Brent Spencer.
Check the workshops page for more information. Be sure to read instructor letters which are linked to each instructor's page for detailed class information.
Our office will be closed until January 2, 2013 due to the UNM Winter Break. We will be checking e-mail sporadically and the "open space" numbers may not be accurate.
Taos Summer Writers' Conference wishes you Happy Holidays and a wonderful 2013. We hope to see you in July to celebrate our 15th birthday with us!
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Faculty New Releases: Demetria Martinez - The Block Captain's Daughter
Demetria Martinez's newest book, a novella set in Albuquerque called The Block Captain's Daughter, has just been released. In this story Martinez paints a portrait of six characters whose lives intertwine through their activism as they seek to create a better world and find meaning in their own lives. Published by the University of Oklahoma Press, the book encompasses political themes that have long been the author's passion and the landscape and people of New Mexico from which she draws sustenance.
You can find out more about this and other books on Demetria Martinez's new website: www.demetriamartinez.com/DemetriaMartinezBooks.htm
Click here for The Block Captain's Daughter on Amazon.com
You can find out more about this and other books on Demetria Martinez's new website: www.demetriamartinez.com/DemetriaMartinezBooks.htm
Click here for The Block Captain's Daughter on Amazon.com
Demetria Martinez is teaching at the 2013 Taos Summer Writers' Conference. Below is her class description.
The Freedom to Write: A Fiction Workshop for Beginners (All Levels - Weeklong PM) - Demetria Martinez
Starting a work of fiction should be a joyful experience. You will have the freedom to write without knowing much about your characters or even how the story will end. Your work is to be open to surprise as your characters reveal their lives. Like a reporter you will take notes until you have the makings of a story you and others will want to read.
In this workshop we will employ a variety of exercises that bring characters to life. We will get to know their surroundings and their secrets, their manner of speech and what they struggle with in silence. We will write in class and read our work out loud. Our goal is also to gather material for you to take home and use to build your story long after the workshop ends.
As part of the workshop, I offer an hour of creativity coaching to each participant to discuss what it will take to keep you inspired after the workshop ends. Many people depart from a creative writing workshop lacking techniques to remain motivated. We’ll make sure this doesn’t happen.
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Sharon Oard Warner Teaching Online Novella Class
Founding Director of the Taos Summer Writers' Workshop, Sharon Oard Warner, will be offering the class:
“Writing (and Reading) the Novella,” a three-credit graduate workshop offered entirely online.
This semester-long, three-credit workshop will be part of the curriculum for UNM's new low-residency program, which was introduced at the 2012 Taos Summer Writers' Conference. Credits earned will count towards an eventual degree, but the class can also be taken for personal enrichment reasons, or just to write a novella in the new year.
Sharon Oard Warner comments: "I am intrigued by the novella form and by the opportunities it offers to teach plotting and story structure. In recent months, I have revised and submitted a novella of my own, and in February I’ll be giving a conference presentation on the topic of teaching the novella workshop."
You can request the tentative syllabus and policies here. This link takes you to the tuition information at the Bursar’s Office.
It is necessary to enroll as a non-degree student of UNM to register for the class. Anyone interested in this class should feel free to contact Sharon with questions or in order to get additional information.
Past Participant Publications - Congratulations Larry Stillman!
Larry Stillman work-shopped a chapter of this book with Joseph Skibell in Taos a few years ago and it was just published. Larry has been awarded the I-Universe Rising Star and an Editor's Choice designation. Rope Catcher is available through amazon, B&N, and of course, your local bookstores.
Congratulations, Larry!
It is April of 1942, and twenty-eight-year-old Jimmie Goodluck leads an aimless existence on the Navajo reservation, where he knows only poverty, prejudice, and lack of opportunity. Everything changes when he hears a US Marine Corps recruitment message on the radio. Without a second thought, Jimmie heads out toward what he hopes will be a new and meaningful life.
As a marine recruit, Jimmie becomes a code talker. He and his small, all-Navajo platoon develop a highly-classified code using the Navajo language—the only code in World War II the enemy cannot break. For the first time ever, Jimmie experiences equality, respect, and even admiration—everything he’s dreamed about all his life. But it is only when he returns home four years later that he discovers the devastating truth about what can happen after your dreams come true.
Hope, disillusionment, and redemption line Jimmie’s journey of self-discovery as he immerses himself in a world war and in the turbulent changes that sweep across the Navajo reservation—forever changing his own destiny.
Published:
11/12/2012
Format:
Perfect Bound Softcover(B/W)
Pages:
376
Size:
5.5x8.5
ISBN:
978-1-47595-552-1
Print Type:
B/W
Monday, December 10, 2012
WC&C Scholarship Competition Application Deadline March 30, 2013
Taos Summer Writers' Conference is a member program!
WC& C Scholarship Competition
AWP offers two annual scholarships of $500 each to emerging writers who wish to attend a writers’ conference, center, retreat, festival, or residency. The scholarships are applied to fees for winners who attend one of the member programs in AWP’s Directory of Conferences & Centers. Winners and four finalists also receive a one-year individual membership in AWP.
The WC&C Scholarship Competition, which runs each year between December 1st and March 30th, is now accepting submissions! Winners apply their $500 cash prizes toward attendance at the WC&C member program of their choice.
Last year WC& C received 49 poetry entries and 77 fiction entries--so it's a relatively small competition, but a great way to spread the word about the wonderful writing centers, conferences, festivals, residencies, and retreats that make up WC&C.
Here is a link to the AWP page: https://www.awpwriter.org/contests/wcc_scholarships_overview
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
Conference Synergy Once Again Inspires Published Works!
The Winter 2012 issue of El Palacio magazine includes a beautiful essay by Brenda Mantz, "Canned Corn and River Water." Brenda has regularly attended the Taos Summer Writers Conference and another participant, Cynthia Baughman, solicited this piece for a special food issue that was put together in conjunction with a show opening (Friday, December 7) at the Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe, "New World Cuisine: The Histories of Chocolate, Mate y Mas."
You can find Brenda's piece here: www.elpalacio.org -
http://www.elpalacio.org/articles/winter12/cannedcorn.pdf
R. Flowers Rivera Publication News
Troubling Accents, the collection Raquel Flowers Rivera work-shopped during the Taos Writers' Conference with Valerie Martinez, has been accepted for publication by Xavier [University] Review Press in New Orleans.
Find out more about Raquel Flowers Rivera at her website: http://www.promethea.com
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
We Will Miss Kit Ward
Kit Ward came to the Taos Summer Writers' Conference in 2011 as a publishing consultant. Her gracious manner and encouragement of everyone she met and worked with was so appreciated.
WARD, Christina L. (Potter) Of Weymouth, formerly of Lowell and Scituate, passed away on Monday, Nov. 19th, 2012 at the Leahy Clinic in Burlington after a brief illness. She was 59. She worked as an acquiring editor at Little Brown Publishers in Boston before founding Christina Ward Literary Agency. She later became co-owner of The Ward & Balkin Agency, Inc. She had a special interest in working closely with writers and was a guest faculty member at several writers' conferences throughout the United States. Beloved wife of George W. Ward of Weymouth and mother of Devin T. Ward of Milwaukee, WI, and Gareth M. Ward of Malden. Daughter of Thomas V. and Betty Hamlin Potter of Weymouth. Sister of Stephen Potter of Georgia, Van Potter of Arizona and Rebecca Hulbert of Plymouth. Also survived by many nieces and nephews. Mrs. Ward was an avid gardener and reader and had a wide and varied interest in literature and poetry. She was a loving wife, mother and daughter. A Memorial Service will be conducted on Saturday, Nov. 24th at 1 PM at the Old Ship Church, 90 Main St., Hingham. Visiting hours and flowers omitted by request. Rather than flowers, donations in her memory may be made to the Old Ship Church, Access to Education Fund, 107 Main St., Hingham, MA 02043. The interment is to be private. For online guestbook, pleasevisit www.downingchapel.com.
From Boston.com
Monday, November 19, 2012
U.S. Poet Laureate, Natasha Trethewey, Keynote Reader for 15th Annual Taos Summer Writers' Conference
We are proud to make the following announcement:
On Sunday, July 14th at 8 p.m., our newly installed U.S. poet laureate, Natasha Trethewey, will give the keynote reading for the 15th annual Taos Summer Writers' Conference (July 14-21, 2013).
Trethewey's reading is free and open to the public and will be followed by a book signing and reception.
Natasha Trethewey, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of three collections and a professor of creative writing at Emory University in Atlanta. Ms. Trethewey, 46, was born in Gulfport, Miss., and is the first Southerner to hold the post since Robert Penn Warren, the original laureate, and the first African-American since Rita Dove in 1993.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Boston Globe Obituary for Wendy Weil
Wendy Weil consulted and taught a number of times at the Taos Summer Writers' Conference, including this year. We shall miss her dearly and thank her for everything she has done for all of us.
Wendy Weil, 72; literary agent had an eclectic roster
By Hillel Italie
| ASSOCIATED PRESS
OCTOBER 04, 2012
NEW YORK — Wendy Weil — a beloved literary agent known for her low-key but determined style and an eclectic clientele of groundbreaking, best-selling authors, from Alice Walker and Rita Mae Brown to Fannie Flagg and Mark Helprin — has died. She was 72.
Ms. Weil died Sept. 22 of a heart attack at her country home in Cornwall, Conn.
‘‘It’s like a face fell off Mount Rushmore,’’ Brown told the Associated Press.
A New York City native and graduate of Wellesley College, Ms. Weil was in publishing for 50 years, starting in the training program at Doubleday, then becoming an agent and eventually founding Wendy Weil Agency Inc. in 1986. Among the books she helped get published were Walker’s ‘‘The Color Purple,’’ Helprin’s ‘‘Winter’s Tale,’’ and Andrea Barrett’s ‘‘Ship Fever,’’ a 1996 story collection that was dedicated to Weil and won the National Book Award.
‘‘I don’t think I’ve ever had another reader as instantly and thoroughly supportive,’’ Barrett said Monday. ‘‘Whether a book did well in the market or poorly, won nice prizes or got no attention at all, Wendy always made me feel like she loved it and was thrilled I’d written it.’’
Ms. Weil became an agent during a time of profound cultural upheaval, and in 1972 she helped get Walker’s work published in the newly created Ms. magazine. Her clients included feminists, political activists, and gay writers, among them Susan Brownmiller, Letty Cottin Pogrebin, Paul Monette, and June Jordan. She also represented the music critic Greil Marcus, essayist Philip Lopate, and journalist James Fallows.
She was as likely to take on a commercial novel, such as Flagg’s ‘‘Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe,’’ as a work of serious nonfiction, such as Lawrence Wright’s ‘‘The Looming Tower.’’
Helprin, whose Republican politics contrasted with those of Ms. Weil’s more liberal writers, marveled at how she could work with so many different kinds of people. He knew Ms. Weil for 40 years and said she was the rare person who had not a ‘‘nanogram of malice in her.’’ She was also improbably organized; the kind of agent who kept piles of papers and other materials on her desk, yet somehow always found the document she was looking for.
‘‘She had an ability to manage chaos like no else,’’ said Helprin. ‘‘At one time, she had some 200 clients, all writers, all crazy, all under tremendous stress. And yet she was able to adjust to so many people coming from so many points of view.’’
Ms. Weil had presence. She stood tall, around 6 feet, and her face was often likened to Diane Keaton’s. Her appearance was so youthful that when she signed up Brown in the 1970s, the author thought she could have passed for a teen.
Emily Forland, of the Weil agency, wrote iMonday that Ms. Weil had an ‘‘unusual personality for an agent.’’ She was not fast-talking or overbearing, but was instead described as ‘‘ladylike’’ or ‘‘quietly tenacious.’’
‘‘She used charm, meticulousness, reasonable arguments, creativity, and incredible tenaciousness . . . as persuasion in deal-making, rather than being confrontational,’’ Forland wrote.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
BK Loren - Feb 2013 Release of Animal, Mineral, Radical: A Flock of Essays on Wildlife, Family, and Food
BK Loren is teaching Beginning Memoir at the 2013 Taos Summer Writers' Conference.
Animal, Mineral, Radical: A Flock of Essays on Wildlife, Family, and Food
by BK Loren • Counterpoint Press
ISBN 978-1-61902-073-3 • Publication Date: February 2013 • 6 x 9 • $16.95 • Paperback • 176 pp
Distributed by Publishers Group West • 800-788-3123
New In February 2013
Animal, Mineral, Radical: Essays on Wildlife, Family & Food
by BK Loren
Loren dares readers to follow her as she ventures far beyond the ordinary and experiences the sublime
For Review Copies or Author Interviews Contact:
Earlita Chenault at (510) 704-0230, ext. 202
Earlita.Chenault@Counterpointpress.com
“Radical, before it meant a person who advocates strong political reform, meant getting to the root of things, the origin. It comes from the Latin radix, radicis, meaning radish, a root vegetable.” - BK Loren
Animal, Mineral, Radical is a collection of meditative essays on subjects ranging from author BK Loren’s transcendental encounter with a pack of coyotes, her mother’s gradual deterioration from Parkinson’s, to the unexpected way the Loma Prieta earthquake eroded her depression by giving her a sense of her small place in a wild, beautiful world.
Loren has an empathetic and gentle approach to the world that is reflected in her writing. In detailing the intricacies of human relationships and consciousness—fear of death and time, tradition’s beauty even when destructive, a love of language, a sense of loss amid the fast-paced materialistic world—she peels back the film of popular thinking to reveal to herself and her readers secrets few of us ever see.
About the Author
BK Loren attended the Iowa Writer’s Workshop and currently teaches writing at Chatham University’s low-residency program, the Iowa Summer Writing Festival, and other venues throughout North America. She is a winner of the Mary Roberts-Rinehart National Fellowship and the author of the novel Theft. Loren lives with her partner, two dogs, and two cats in Colorado.
Wednesday, November 07, 2012
2013 Registration Opens December 3, 2012
The list of confirmed 2013 Faculty for the 15th rendition of the Taos Summer Writers' Conference can already be found on our website at: http://www.unm.edu/~taosconf/Workshops/Workshops.htm
Registration opens December 3, 2012. Master classes tend to fill up very quickly in case you are planning on workshopping your ms this year.
We are very pleased to have Jonis Agee, John Dufresne, Antonya Nelson, and Summer Wood on board for novel/fiction, as well as Joy Harjo teaching poetry and Emily Rapp, facilitating the memoir.
Weeklong instructors include: Robert Boswell, Trey Ellis, Pam Houston, Frank Huyler, Wally Lamb, Priscilla Long, BK Loren, Demetria Martinez, Valerie Martinez, Brent Spencer, Luci Tapahonso, and Robert Wilder.
Weekend instructors are: Amy Beeder, Stephen Benz, Annie Dawid, Allison Hunter & Alexis Hurley, Valerie Martinez, Daniel Mueller, and Hilda Raz & Ouida Touchon.
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Grand Opening, Living Labyrinths for Peace, Taos
Mayan light labyrinth: photo from tenthousandthingsfromkyoto.blogspot.com
Grand Opening
Living
Labyrinths for Peace, Taos
November 3, 2012
3PM – 9PM
Free Community Event
We invite you to join us as we dedicate the new
National headquarters of Living Labyrinths for Peace, Inc.
relocated from Washington D.C.
to
Experience the light, sound & mystery of the
“Dance of the Labyrinth”
Feel inner peace after walking the “Rainbow
Labyrinth of Peace.”
Schedule of Events
3PM – Walk the Labyrinths and Enjoy the Center
5:30PM – 10-minute Film Screening about Living
Labyrinths for Peace
6PM – Dedication of the Center and Peace Ceremony with
Drumming
7:00PM – Enjoy indoor & outdoor labyrinth walking,
art, music, books
Finale: Raffle Drawing for Sandra Wasko Flood
Labyrinth Art
For more information contact:
Sandra at 575-377-6369 or Julia at 575-779-4778
Email: livinglabyrinths@gmail.com
Inner Peace to World Peace through
Labyrinths
Priscilla Long on Taos Light
The American Scholar - Science Frictions
Let It Shine
Print
Light, from the Southwest’s high desert to the surface of Mars
By Priscilla Long
In Taos, New Mexico, in July, the sky morphs its blues as if a painter were at work. One day last summer the sky was lapis lazuli with clouds so white they couldn’t be real. To the north, Pueblo Peak rose jagged and hazy green. This is high desert: sagebrush, ferric red dirt pocked with prairie dog pitfalls. On black asphalt, a pile of sand on a crack crawled with red ants. I stayed at the Sagebrush Inn—thick adobe and old brick walkways—while teaching at the Taos Summer Writers’ Conference. Georgia O’Keeffe painted in one of these rooms. She traveled to Taos for the uncanny quality of the light.
And just what is this light and just what are these colors?
Color is a form of light, and light enters our eyes in waves. Different wavelengths cause us to see different colors. Red arrives in long light waves, blue in short. But the light spectrum is much wider than we can perceive. The shorter the wave the faster it moves and the more energy it carries. Shortest and fastest are gamma rays. Following gamma rays are x-rays; then ultraviolet light; then the visible light spectrum starting with the shorter waves we see as violet and ending with the longer waves we see as red; then, infrared; and finally, radio waves, long and slow. (Yes. Radio waves are light waves. Your radio converts light into sound.) The range from infrared to radio is sometimes referred to as microwaves.
Telescopes work due to the tremendous amount of information that light carries. Any given substance, whether your purple shirt or the red planet Mars, absorbs some wavelengths and reflects others. The reflected light waves give the object color. For example the element iron absorbs shorter wave lengths and reflects longer (red) waves, giving Mars that red look. My lapis lazuli ring absorbs long light waves and reflects shorter ones—blue.
In a vacuum, light travels at the rate of about 186,000 miles per second (at, by definition, the speed of light). But what is light? It’s both a particle (a thing, like a baseball) and a wave (a pattern). Light comes in pieces, called photons. And photons exhibit both wave behavior and particle behavior.
A particle is simple, but what’s a wave? An ocean wave is not water moving. Instead, it is energy moving through water. The energy vibrates the water molecules, which pass the energy to the next water molecules. When you toss a pebble into a pond, the ripples ripple, while the leaf floating on the surface merely bobs up and down. Energy is moving through the water, bobbing the leaf as it passes, different from water passing through.
Light is an electromagnetic wave.
Consider the concept of a field. A field is associated with a force that affects particles. We have gravitational fields, magnetic fields, and electric fields (areas surrounding charged particles such as electrons or protons). Magnetic and electric fields are linked. When charged particles vibrate they create electromagnetic fields, and these fields transport “electromagnetic radiation”—that is to say, light. In the words of my astronomy book, “Light waves are vibrations of both electric and magnetic fields, caused by the motions of charged particles.”
All of which explicates, but fails to capture, the intense blue—both thick and pale—of the Taos sky.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Greg Martin Reads from Stories for Boys November 8 at 7 pm
In case you missed Greg Martin's faculty reading at the Taos Summer Writers' Conference this year, next month you have another chance to hear him read from his new memoir Stories for Boys (Hawthorne Press), which was selected by Barnes & Noble for their "Discover New Writers" series.
When: November 8 at 7 pm
Where: Dane Smith Hall, Room 123 on the University of New Mexico campus in Albuquerque
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Robert Taylor wins first place in Royal Palm Literary Awards Competition
Robert Taylor’s manuscript, Ping Pong with the Aga Khan, has won first place in the Royal Palm
Literary Awards Competition for an unpublished memoir. The winners were
announced October 20th at the 2012 Florida Writer’s Association
Conference. Robert attended the 2011 Taos Summer Writers’ Conference where he
won the Barbara Robinette Moss prize for his essay Beauty in Pakistan: Hidden and Revealed. He also attended Debra
Monroe’s Masters Class where he introduced a first draft of his memoir.
“Debra’s guidance and the tough love of my classmates were exactly what I
needed at the time,” he said. “They hammered me with ‘Yes, Robert, but how did
you feel’ until my nerves were raw.” He’s now hoping to attract a literary
agent and publisher.
Monday, October 22, 2012
Emily Rapp's Blog Little Seal hits TIME charts
Little Seal has made the annual list of the TIME, 25 Best Blogs of 2012. You can find Emily's blog here.
Emily Rapp is the author of Poster Child, her 2007 memoir about her life with disability. Emily was born with a congenital defect that required that her left foot be amputated at the age of 4.
In January 2011, Emily and her husband, Rick Louis, learned that their 9 month old son, Ronan, has Tay-Sachs disease. Tay-Sachs is a rare, incurable, genetic, progressive disease that will claim Ronan’s life in the next few years. Shortly thereafter, Emily began Little Seal, her blog to chronicle her family’s time with Ronan and their struggle with the disease.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Robert Wilder's Newest Project
We are excited to announce that Robert Wilder will once again be joining us for the 15th Annual Taos Summer Writers' Conference. He will be teaching a class on personal essay.
In the meantime, have fun with his newest project Letter America.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Joy Harjo inducted into MVSKOKE Hall of Fame
TULSA, Okla. – The Muscogee (Creek) Nation has announced the first four inductees into its MVSKOKE Hall of Fame, and they will be honored at an Oct. 11 gala at the River Spirit Event Center.
The MVSKOKE Hall of Fame takes the place of the tribe’s Living Legends ceremony that was held each June at the Muscogee (Creek) Nation Festival. Living Legends honored in previous years include former MCN Principal Chiefs R. Perry Beaver and Bill Fife, and Bataan Death March survivor Phillip Coon. Muscogee (Creek) Nation Living Legends honorees will be grandfathered into the MVSKOKE Hall of Fame.
Tiger said the MVSKOKE Hall of Fame received a number of excellent nominations, however, four were selected as 2012 inductees.
Muscogee (Creek) Nation citizens Simon Harry, Elsie Martin, Joy Harjo and the late Allie Reynolds are the 2012 recipients of the award.
Harjo is a prominent poet, musician and author, and has had 15 works of poetry published. Her accomplishments cover many genres in the art field, and she’s a major proponent for Indian issues and Muscogee (Creek) issues, and always stresses her heritage as a proud Muscogee (Creek) citizen. Harjo has produced five well-received albums, written two children’s books, a memoir and co-wrote a screenplay.
The mistress of ceremonies for the Oct. 11 gala will be Salina Jayne-Dornan, Mayor, City of Eufaula and Muscogee (Creek) citizen.
The MVSKOKE Hall of Fame induction requires that the individual must have brought recognition to the Muscogee (Creek) Nation or have made outstanding contributions to the quality of life and development.
“I felt like a MVSKOKE Hall of Fame was long overdue, especially to recognize people that have contributed to the success of this Nation, whether it was on the community or national level,” Tiger said. “It’s a celebration of the Nation to be able to display the type of people who are contributing to the Nation. I’m excited that it’s come to fruition.”
MCN Director of Tourism & Recreation William Lowe said the final details of the event are coming together.
“Plans for the MVSKOKE Hall of Fame Induction Gala are coming along great. We are planning a fabulous evening that includes cocktails, dinner and a silent auction,” Lowe said. “All proceeds will benefit the Creek Nation Foundation, Inc. and the Muscogee (Creek) Nation Festival.”
Tuesday, October 09, 2012
Amy Beeder #12 on Poetry Foundation Best-Seller List
BEHIND THIS WEEK'S LIST
Trethewey, Collins, and Smith are still rocking the top three spots on this week’s contemporary best-sellers list. Last week Mark Strand’s Almost Invisible disappeared from the list, only to materialize this week in the #4 position. Topping off the top five is a revitalized Nikky Finney, moving from #17 to #5 with Head Off & Split. We have a whole slew of new titles this week, starting with Richard Blanco’s Looking for the Gulf Motel, “a genealogy of the heart, exploring how [Blanco’s] family's emotion legacy has shaped—and continues shaping—his perspectives,” debuting at #7. Also new to the list at #12 is Amy Breeder’s latest, Now Make an Altar. Entering the list at #24 is Valzhyna Mort’s Collected Body. From The California Journal of Poetics: “Collected Body is the first book Valzhyna Mort has written in English. It is a rich and complex tapestry of characters and their memories, histories, and—most importantly—their personal stories, which often take on mythical elements as they proceed on their shared journey of survival and transformation.” Jumping over to the small press list, Joshua Corey’s The Arcadia Project: North American Postmodern Pastoral tops the list this week, while the Les Figues anthology of conceptual writing by women, I’ll Drown My Book, comes in at #5. Of note is Ben Friedlander’sOne Hundred Etudes, described by K. Silem Mohammad as “…virtuoso performances that reflect movingly on the historical conditions through and against which writers have adapted their strategies and attitudes. Over a century of poetic principles and theorems are focused here into a concerted series of expressions, operating within the rigorous, even alienating, requirements…” Finally, David Lehman’s The Best American Poetry 2012 leads the away again on the best-selling anthology list.
About the List
Our poetry best-seller lists are based on data received from Nielsen BookScan, which tracks sales from more than 4,500 retail booksellers. Retailers included in the list include both large, high-volume retailers such as Borders and Amazon.com, and more than 400 smaller, independent bookstores. We generate the lists each week by tallying the number of books sold for recently published volumes of contemporary poetry, poetry anthologies, and children's poetry. The contemporary poetry best-seller list is meant to reflect the current market for new poetry, and so excludes translations and new editions of classical works. Our small press list is based on Small Press Distribution's poetry sales to bookstores and individual customers, which are reported to us on a monthly basis.
Our poetry best-seller lists are based on data received from Nielsen BookScan, which tracks sales from more than 4,500 retail booksellers. Retailers included in the list include both large, high-volume retailers such as Borders and Amazon.com, and more than 400 smaller, independent bookstores. We generate the lists each week by tallying the number of books sold for recently published volumes of contemporary poetry, poetry anthologies, and children's poetry. The contemporary poetry best-seller list is meant to reflect the current market for new poetry, and so excludes translations and new editions of classical works. Our small press list is based on Small Press Distribution's poetry sales to bookstores and individual customers, which are reported to us on a monthly basis.
Out of this book's gathering of speakers (arsonist, leper, Captain Haddock, the maitre d' of an unusual restaurant) and subjects (dung beetle, Aristophanes, medieval surgeon, methamphetamines) emerges a baroque, musical, and formally inventive history of creation and destruction. Now Make an Altar dispassionately suggests that there can't be one without the other. And there is nothing, however broken, absurd, atrocious, or sublime that cannot be brought into ecstatic focus in this "mysterious feast" of dense and exacting language. "Come in, come sup," Beeder invites us in the book's opening poem. "You'll never feel full."
Interview with Gregory Martin - Author of Stories for Boys
NW Book Lovers
Making Sense of Memory: Questions for Gregory Martin
An Interview by Sally McPherson
At Broadway Books, we’re great fans of the books published by Portland-based publisher Hawthorne Books, under the guidance of owner and publisher Rhonda Hughes. They’re well chosen, well written, and well edited, and the books are beautifully produced, right down to the double-fold French flaps.
So I was thrilled to be asked by NW Book Lovers to interview Gregory Martin, author of Hawthorne’s recently published memoir, Stories for Boys. With a theme of fathers and sons–Martin and his father; Martin and his two sons, Oliver and Evan; and his father’s relationship with his own father—the author attempts to redefine his relationship with the father he thought he knew, after his father attempts suicide. As a result of the suicide attempt, Martin learns that his father was abused by his own father for years. He also learns that during the almost forty years of his father’s marriage, he had been having anonymous sexual encounters with men. Shortly after the suicide attempt, his mother and father divorce, and his father begins living his life as a gay man.
The book explores the question: are your memories valid if you suddenly find that they’ve been based on a life of deception and lies? How can Martin reconcile the man he knew as a loving, happy, “normal” husband and father with this person who had a whole other life he knew nothing about?
Cheryl Strayed calls Stories for Boys “moving, brave, and unforgettable.” And Pam Houston says, ‘This finely made, deeply felt memoir restores our faith in the power of language and story to make sense of a broken world.”
I found this book simultaneously quirky and heart-wrenching. I was left with admiration for the author’s courage in revealing his own struggles and his sometimes less-than-noble responses as he worked to reconcile his memories with this revelation and to re-establish his relationship with his father.
Martin teaches creative writing at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, where he lives with his wife and two sons. His first book, Mountain City, is a memoir of the life of a town of thirty-three people in remote northeastern Nevada. The book, published in 2000 by North Point Press, received a Washington State Book Award.
Martin will read from Stories for Boys at Powell’s City of Books this Thursday, October 11 at 7:30 pm. He’ll also read and teach a class at Wordstock. I interviewed him recently via e-mail.—Sally McPherson, Broadway Books
SM: What prompted you to write this book? Will you tell us about its evolution from an essay that was published in The Sun (Oct. 2008)?
GM: I started writing the essay “The Family Plot” only a few months after my father attempted suicide. I hoped at the time, and maybe my father did as well, that writing that essay would get the story out of my system. But it didn’t, because the essay only captures those first few months after his suicide attempt, when shock is only beginning to turn into other things, like acceptance and also anger. The essay doesn’t capture the evolution of my relationship with my father, much less his relationship with my sons. None of that had happened yet.
But I didn’t want to write about it. I really didn’t want to expose myself, and my mixed feelings, any more than I already had. I already felt unsettled by how much of myself I’d revealed. So, instead, I chose the hardest possible subject I could imagine and wrote a piece of literary journalism about pediatric hospice. I’m glad that I wrote that essay, and I think I did my subject justice, but it’s pretty clear to me now that doing so was an act of avoidance. I wanted to process something hard, something tragic, but just not the hard, tragic subject that was my father’s secret life and homosexuality and childhood abuse and betrayal of my mother. Couldn’t I just write about some other tragic subject? Apparently not. Because after I finished that article, whenever I sat down to write, out
came this book. After a few months, when I finally acknowledged that I needed to write a book and committed to it, I wrote for 100 days straight and more than 300 pages came out like wrenching open a fire hydrant on a summer day.
SM: How does your father feel about you writing this book?
GM: Not long after I finished the first complete draft of the book, I called my father and told him that I was about to email it to him and asked him if he would read it. He said sure. He’d print it out and read it right away. He had three reams of paper and a new ink cartridge. This was on a Friday night. The weekend passed. Then it was Monday night. Then it was Tuesday night. I couldn’t concentrate. I couldn’t eat much or sleep well. Rocky, our dog, was following me around the house, which is something he does when one of us is worried about something. Christine, my wife, said, “Why don’t you just call him?” My father answered on the second ring. “Hey, Son. How are you?”
I said, “I have an ulcer.”
I said, “Did you read it?”
He said, “Oh, yes. I’m reading it through again. I taught myself how to use that track changes feature in Microsoft Word. I’m making a few comments in those balloons that come up in the margins. Mostly small things. My father worked in the Newport News shipyard, not the one in Norfolk.”
“Is it okay?”
“What do you mean?”
“Are you okay with this? Is it okay for me to write this?”
“Oh. Of course. I hadn’t really thought about that.”
“Really?”
“Son, it’s yours,” he said. “It’s your story. I can only imagine what you went through putting all this into words. I cried a few times. I thought about my life in ways I’d never thought before. Of course I approve. You made this.”
SM: Memory is one of the big themes of your book— “the burden of memory and its costs and consequences.” You write that memories are “not fixed but ever-changing, because memories do not record the past but are only constructions invented in the present. They are a feat of imagination.” Will you talk about this?
GM: Since memory is highly unreliable, a real problem that every memoirist faces is: how do you become credible? One way, I think, is to explicitly refer to memory, its failures and gaps, and to make the book not just about the author’s particular memory—what I remember, what I don’t, what I wished I remembered, what I wished I could forget—but also about memory itself, about anyone’s memory. So a memoir can comment on the process of its own making, speculate about the past and its possibilities rather than render it without any qualification. One of the books I love the most, which I read and re-read while I was writing this, is William Maxwell’s So Long, See You Tomorrow. In it Maxwell often interrupts his story to say things like:
“What we, or at any rate I, refer to confidently as a memory—meaning a moment, a scene, a fact that has been subjected to a fixative and thereby rescued from oblivion—is really just a form of storytelling that goes on continually in the mind and often changes with the telling. Too many conflicting emotional interests are involved for life ever to be wholly acceptable, and possibly it is the work of the storyteller to rearrange things so that they conform to this end. In any case, in talking about the past we lie with every breath we draw.”
Memory isn’t linear and it doesn’t sit still. It can be as hard to transcribe a memory as it is to transcribe a dream. In So Long, See You Tomorrow, Maxwell acknowledges everywhere the difficulty of recapturing the past, and the longing for a more straightforward understanding that would make invention unnecessary. I wanted to emulate this way of thinking about memory and storytelling.
SM: You don’t always present yourself in the most flattering light in this book. How did you resist the impulse—or did you not have the impulse—to ‘clean up’ your reactions and actions when telling your story?
GM: The best stories hold their characters accountable, for their flaws, their actions, their mistakes. When this happens, the characters are given agency, rather than having their choices explained away or rationalized. This is just as important in memoir as it is in fiction, and especially so for the narrator, in an era when the memoir as a genre has credibility problems. Readers arrive at any memoir with justified skepticism, and the author’s task, on every page, is to attempt to earn their trust. I understood that there was no way I could characterize my father and his choices and mistakes and tragic circumstances, without at the same time showing the reader that I, too, did not always act with grace and poise. No one does. If I characterized myself as being noble all the time, no one would believe it, and it would also make for a lousy story. I was confused and unsettled and hurting, and so was my father, both of us in different ways. We blundered our way forward, doing the best we could, and failing one another at times along the way. That sounds a lot like life to me, and if the author doesn’t complexly render the mistakes, including his own, then the grace that does come, the connections and repair which emerge out of those mistakes, can’t be fully understood or appreciated by the reader.
SM: Your book offers some “micro” chapters, some photographs, some emails. How did you determine the structure this book would take?
GM: Figuring out the architecture of the book was one of the things I enjoyed most. I like ‘raw materials’—photographs and emails which are unadorned and uninterpreted—to give the reader another vantage point from which to view the story and understand the characters. I included my father’s emails in a deliberately patterned way so that readers could hear his voice at length, come to understand how he was trying to communicate his struggles to me, and, in some ways, judge him for themselves. But along with the emails and photos, there are also, arranged in somewhat of a pattern throughout, small sections on Whitman, or the social science of secret lives, or the “psychological immune system,” and with these, I was trying to show the reader how I was trying to come to terms with what my father was telling me.
SM: You grew up in a family in which reading books was important and was modeled for you by your parents. Do you think that goes away when people move to E-books, which conceivably will mean fewer shelves stocked with favorite reads, and parents holding electronic glowing gadgets instead of printed books?
GM: Unfortunately or not, I’m one of those parents with the glowing gadgets. I’m reading two books right now simultaneously: Assassination Vacation by Sarah Vowell, in a paperback version, and Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain on my iPad. I’m not sure what effect this will have on my sons, Oliver and Evan. After a quiet Saturday morning in our house, like the one we’re living out now as I type, there are comic books and graphic novels and books of every stripe—from Calvin and Hobbes to Watership Down to The Hobbit—in unruly piles on the living room rug, the coffee table, the couch. That, to me, is a great morning.
Obviously, the E-books on my iPad don’t pile up on the floor and something is lost when you can’t just stand at a bookshelf and pull a book off and wonder, what is this one about? There’s something far more deliberate about choosing to read a book electronically. But I love reading on my iPad at night in bed with the brightness on low while Christine is sleeping next to me. I used to have to go in the next room, which isn’t as good.
I’m hopeful we all will adapt. And the reading will still get done, just as the writing will get done. One very clear downside to reading on an iPad is the ease of distraction that comes when you’re holding a device on which you can also check your email or your fantasy football team standings. That kind of distraction is all too present in my life, and while I don’t much like it, at the same time I also like being able to check things online when they occur to me. I think many of us have mixed feelings about technological innovation.
SM: What kinds of books do you like to read? What books have you raved about recently?
GM: I’m pretty eclectic in my reading. I’ll try just about any book of any genre that is impressed upon me by someone I trust. I also have my go-to authors, which I’m reading and re-reading all the time: Alice Munro, Marilynne Robinson (even the difficult essays), Tobias Wolff, Antonya Nelson, George Saunders. When I find writers that speak to me, I try to read every single thing they’ve written.
Lately, I can’t stop talking about (Oregon Book Award winning) The Sisters Brothers by Patrick DeWitt. It’s hilarious and riveting in this truly strange way. Reading most influences my writing by making me want to do the hard work of trying to write myself. When I’m reading a great book, I often set it down after only a paragraph or a page and open up my laptop and get after it.
SM: What advice do you have for would-be writers?
GM: It’s ironic—the more I write and teach, the less I want to give advice. When I was a younger writer and teacher, I was always looking for the gem, the nugget, that piece of advice from one of the writers I just mentioned that I believed would point the way and save me from my ignorance—strategies to manage plot or character, ideas about process. Don’t get me wrong, I’m still doing this, still trying to learn the next thing. But I no longer believe that there is any one thing I need to know. That kind of craft intelligence is cumulative and takes a lifetime to gain. There are no clear steps, no method, no sequence—no plan or pattern to follow. Art just doesn’t work like that.
Putting in the hours is a good idea, because in some way, those hours are a real measure of commitment. I ask my MFA students to put in 18 hours a week and even to keep a journal to track those hours, so that they don’t kid themselves about how much they’re working. But even that requirement—18 hours, recorded in a certain way—is sort of arbitrary and perhaps a little silly. It’s really just an exercise in self-awareness and provides a kind of helpful illusion that there’s this path to follow.
What I try to do also, as a teacher of MFA students, is to give them a range of books and essays on writing strategies by a variety of writers, and say ‘these are your teachers.’ There’s all kinds of stuff here that will speak to you at different times: learn from them. Let your own desire to know more be your guide. Don’t look for any gurus. Devour it all. I mean books on craft like Charles Baxter’s Burning Down the House, or Robert Boswell’s The Half-Known World. These are master writers who have written entire books full of their ideas about writing. They’re invaluable, and they’re as gripping to the writer who is hungry to know more as the best novel. Also, Vivian Gornick’sThe Situation and the Story, Patricia Hampl’s I Could Tell You Stories, Milan Kundera’s The Art of the Novel, and Stephen Koch’s The Modern Library’s Writer’s Workshop. On Writing, Stephen King’s book on craft is great, too. There are just so many—I’ve read them cover to cover multiple times and, in different ways, they’ve sunk in and affected my sensibility.
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