Rose Metal Press Chapbook Contest

Rose Metal Press’s  Fifth Annual Short Short Chapbook Contest submission period begins October 15 and ends December 1, 2010. This year’s 2010 judge will be  Kim Chinquee.

During the submission period, please email your 25—40 page double-spaced manuscript of short short stories under 1,000 words each to  rosemetalpress@gmail.com either as Word docs or rtf files. Individual stories may have appeared in journals or anthologies, but they ask that collections as a whole be previously unpublished. Please accompany your entry with the $10 reading fee, either via the payment button on our  website or by check. They  prefer the former, but the latter can be sent to PO Box 1956, Brookline, MA 02446.

Writers of both fiction and nonfiction are encouraged to enter, and they are open to short shorts on all subjects and in all styles. Check out the books of our previous contest winners, including, most recently  How Some  People Like Their Eggs by  Sean Lovelace (selected by  Sherrie Flick) and  We Know What We Are by  Mary Hamilton (selected by  Dinty W. Moore).

The winner and finalists will be announced by February 2011. The winning chapbook will be published in July 2011 in a limited edition of 300 copies, with an introduction by the contest judge. As with all previous winners, Rose Metal Press will be letterpressing the covers of the winning chapbook by hand at the  Museum of Printing in North Andover, Massachusetts.

Submit to Super Arrow 3

Super Arrow is a fine magazine in need of fine submissions, from you, from people you know, from people they know.

They are looking for fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, experimental criticism, and any hybrid thereof. They are also looking for visual art. The assignment (folio) for this issue is collaboration, meaning that they are looking for collaborations of all kinds, anything from a game of lyric epistolary catch, to a group-made painting — anything arts- and/or words-based done any way by two people or more.

More details about the collaboration can be found here.

General submissions guidelines may be found here.

Any questions, suggestions, considerations, (and submissions!) can be directed to  superarrowfliestrue@gmail.com.

Submissions for Super Arrow 3 close on 10/31/10.

We Love Lori Ostlund so Buy Her Book

I loved Bigness of the World (my review can be found here) by Lori Ostlund so I was really happy to hear that the book is now available in paperback because hardcover books are evil. I have this book in hardcover and now I can give it away and replace it with a book I won’t resent. A book giveaway is coming. Hang tight. In the meantime, The Bigness of the World can be ordered through  Amazon or the  University of GA Press, or, best of all, you could ask your favorite  independent bookstore to order it.

You may also like to know that two stories from the collection will soon be anthologized elsewhere. “All Boy,” originally published inNew England Review, will be out on September 28 in  The Best American Short Stories 2010. I can’t tell you where the other story will appear yet but it will be in a big book with many pages covered in lovely words.

Our Island of Epidemics Has Been Blurbed!

OURISLANDcover lores

Extended sickness, packed-in sexspace,  a  she-god named Sam, stone sandwiches, ganglions, weight gain, dookers,  spells of fainting: this book about making a book is full of hell, though  a giddy kind of hell you might like to read aloud to someone loving, to share its magic logic, its dragonfruit, its rare disease.
–Blake Butler, author of Scorch Atlas and Ever

I loved this book. Matthew Salesses creates a new world and pours his entire imagination into it. There’s so much magic. I felt it on my fingertips while reading. I’ll say it again – I loved this book.
–Shane Jones, author of Light Boxes

On Matt Salesses’ strange and infectious Island, dragonfruit have wings and the aftertaste of fire, illness is freedom, dreams are shared, and interventions are staged to stop citizens’ obsessing. You may fall in love with these small stories of free will and fate, but they might not requite you. And while their epidemic of short term memory loss might make it impossible for them to remember you, you will recall them: magical and complex.
~Kathleen Rooney, author of For You, For You I Am Trilling These Songs

One of the great feats of fiction is to create a world where anything can happen. Matthew Salesses has done this with Our Island of Epidemics and, in doing so, he has revealed the great difficulty of the human condition.”
–Michael Kimball, author of Dear Everybody

Unrequited love, dissociation, unstoppably growing hearts, extrasensitive hearing–these are just a few of the epidemics that strike the island at the center of Matthew Salesses’ dazzling collection. The voice of the island’s inhabitants is hypnotic, and Salesses’ exploration of the epidemics and their effect, of the ways we construct history and identity, are surprising and smart and richly, devastatingly human. With Our Island of Epidemics, Salesses has established himself as a brilliant new force in contemporary fiction. I loved this book, and I would gladly follow the author anywhere.
–Laura van den Berg, author of What the World Will Look Like When All the Water Leaves Us

“In Our Island of Epidemics, Matthew Salesses conjures from the sea a nation populated by a people struck together by one universal affliction after another. This is a citizenry more unified than that of our own land, but also one whose members have nowhere to turn for aid from their various ailments, their short-term memory loss, their unrequited loves, their fits of magic and insomnia and shared dreams. It is only from within their ranks that they might find the means to prevail through a series of charming interventions and endless sincerity, and through the telling of their story, this one one you hold now in your hands, the fantastic tale of those longest and strangest years yet seen upon their island.”
–Matt Bell, author of How They Were Found

Despite the plague of frustration and hardship that is Matthew Salesses’ Island of Epidemics, it’s a place I’d like to visit, just to live the language and ingenuity of its creator. Salesses is a crack shot in pinpointing how we all cope, nailing this microcosm of humanity within these little stories. They are all fantastic and hilarious and beautiful, well beyond their length, well beyond any island.
— Michael G Czyzniejewski, Editor, The Mid-American Review

Get your copy of Our Island of Epidemics before this marvel of a book succumbs to the epidemic of popularity.

Support Our Friends at Artifice Magazine

A note from our fine friends at Artifice Magazine:

Issue #2 is just about ready to go: it’s got the car keys in its hand, it stole $5 from our handbag by the door, and it’s padded its bed with pillows to trick us when we check in around 2 am.

Where’s it going? ON TOUR.

Artifice Magazine Issue #2 is going on a Midwest-to-East-Coast tour, with stops in Chicago, Indianapolis, Baltimore, Washington DC, New York City, and Boston, so as you can imagine, those pilfered $5 won’t last very long.

Which is why I’m asking you to consider helping our baby on its way by pledging to our Kickstarter campaign!

There are some pretty fantastic pledge levels, in which the Artifice editors do your dirty work, make fools of themselves, and get sick just for you.

Check it out. And if you live in a city on the tour, by all means, please come hang out with us. There’s more info on dates, etc. here:http://www.artificemag.com/events.

We Nominate Because We Care

We nominate our writers for everything we can whenever we can so their work can receive the added recognition it deserves. Below are our nominees for the Best of the Web 2011 and the Puschart Prize. We knew ye when!

Our Pushcart nominees for this year:
Emily Rosko, From Weather Inventions, PANK 4
Jennifer Pieroni, Unlucky Babies, PANK 4
Karen Gentry, Denial in Miniature, PANK 4
Matt Bell, Mantodea, PANK 4
Peter Schwartz, Anonymous Confessions 1-24, PANK 4
xTx Do You have a Place For Me?, June 2010

Our nominees for Best of the Web 2011:
Jenny Bitner, Is This Part of the Love Ritual?
Nick Kocz, Dining by Candlelight
Ocean Vuong, The Prodigal Son’s Lament

Fall into the September Issue

It’s hard to believe that two years ago this month we started publishing content online to complement our annual print issue. That first issue shared the words of only three writers–Daphne Gottlieb, Bruce Cohen, and Gabriel Welsch. We’ve grown quite a bit since. This month’s issue is a special double issue because our October issue is a special issue guest-edited by Tim Jones-Yelvington. You’ll find an interesting mix in the September issue, with poems from Megan Falley that will keep you on the edge of your seat; a fantastic story, in the truest sense of the word, by Lisa Aldin about girls who cause earthquakes; a story told in notes on a story by Travis Hessman who always wows us with how he plays with form; a gladiator vampire space opera by Jesse Bradley that is also a little heartbreaking and will make you laugh or  ry or both and much much more. The full line up includes work from Jenny Bitner, DeWitt Brinson, Patrick Allen Carberry, P. Scott Cunningham, Phil Estes, Greg Gerke, Tania Hershman, Kristina Knappett, Tara Laskowski, Sunshine LeMontree, Derrick Medina, Robin Lee Mozer, Michelle Nichols, Jen Percy, Jeffry Pethybridge, Andrea Scarpino, Isabelle Serafin, Valerie Suffron, Brendan Todt and Michelle Valois. Go, read, spread the word, and tell us what you think about this awesome assemblage of talent.

Our Nominations for Best of the Net 2010

It’s always difficult to choose from the wonderful work we publish in our magazine when it comes time to nominate writers for recognition. As my co-editor said to me this morning, “We should just nominate the whole thing,” and he’s right because we fall in love with everything we publish. That said, we cannot nominate everyone so here are our nominees for the Best of the Net. Our nominees are some of the stories and poems we would grab if the magazine were on fire. Good luck, writers!

Fiction
Anne Leigh Parrish for Snow Angels
Shanna Germain for Big Red

Poetry
xTx for Do You Have a Place For Me
Rachel Andelman for Harquebus
J. Bradley for How Esmerelda Estrus Got Her Revenge
Carrie Murphy for The Strongest Men in Town
Ori Fienberg for Revolution

Mud Luscious Press Blind Faith Subscription Drive

Mud Luscious Press is having a limited-time ‘Blind Faith’ subscription drive: If you will trust us on the authors & titles of our forthcoming 2011 catalog without seeing any covers or blurbs, then you can get every book in the 2011 MLP season for $35 & free shipping. Titles include:

GRIM TALES : Norman Lock
THE HIEROGLYPHICS : Michael Stewart
I AM A VERY PRODUCTIVE ENTREPRENEUR : Mathias Svalina
[ C. ] an mlp stamp stories anthology

plus handmade chapbook volumes from Jessica Newman, Stephen Gropp-Hess, Neila Mezynski,
Kristina Marie Darling, John H. Henry, Andrew Borgstrom, Ani Smith, & others

This offer will only last until we confirm our covers & blurbs (mid Oct. at the latest) so get on it asap:

SUBSCRIBE NOW