Sunday, May 6, 2012

Short-Story Month 2012: Day 6, The Juniper Tree

The Juniper Tree
by Paleontour,
Used under CC license
My Mama She Kil't Me
My Father He Ate Me
Oh, What a Good Boy Am I!






It's Day 6 of National Short Story month, and today's selection is the folk-story, 
"The Juniper Tree"



A long while ago, perhaps as much as two thousand years, there was a rich man who had a wife of whom he was very fond; but they had no children. Now in the garden before the house where they lived, there stood a juniper tree; and one winter's day as the lady was standing under the juniper tree, paring an apple, she cut her finger, and the drops of blood trickled down upon the snow. "Ah!" said she, sighing deeply and looking down upon the blood, "how happy should I be if I had a little child as white as snow and as red as blood!" And as she was saying this, she grew quite cheerful, and was sure her wish would be fulfilled. And after a little time the snow went away, and soon afterwards the fields began to look green. Next the spring came, and the meadows were dressed with flowers; the trees put forth their green leaves; the young branches shed their blossoms upon the ground; and the little birds sung through the groves.  And then came summer, and the sweet smelling flowers of the juniper tree began to unfold; and the lady's heart heaped within her, and she fell on her knees for joy. But when autumn drew near, the fruit was thick upon the trees. Then the lady plucked the red berries from the juniper tree, and looked sad and sorrowful; and she called her husband to her, and said, "If I die, bury me under the juniper trees." Not long after this a pretty little child was born; it was, as the lady wished, as red as blood, and as
The following version is from the 1875 collection, German Popular Stories, edited by Edgar Taylor.

Click to 
The Juniper Tree! 

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Short-Story Month 2012: Day 5, The Brewsters by Laura Ellen Scott

Metal shed overlooking waterfront
Room with a View by Rick Kempel,
Used under CC license
"We always called that rusty metal shack the Brewster house."

In continuing the celebration of National Short Story Month, today's selected story is this linguistic beauty:


by Laura Ellen Scott
from her collection Curio
(2011)

Friday, May 4, 2012

Short-Story Month 2012: Day 4, Diagnostic Drift by Michael Martone

Photograph of girl under autumn umbrella
Transparent by Kasia,
used under CC license
Since 1996, April has belonged to the poets.  But it has only been a few years, at least in her memory, that May has been unofficially officially declared National Short Story Month.

So, to celebrate the art of the short story, each day of May a story will be selected and posted at What She Might Think.

Since we're four days in, rather than catch up with four different stories, here's a lyrical short story in four parts:


 "Diagnostic Drift" by Michael Martone  



Saturday, April 28, 2012

The End of National Poetry Month, 2012

Photograph of pink hyacinths
Hyacinth Happiness by Lachlan Rogers. (CC)
We are at nearly the end of April, which means it's the end of this year's National Poetry Month.  


And, so, a bit of a medley to celebrate poetry month in a single shot, if you haven't already been celebrating. 


One passage like a poem, one poem, one poet, one excerpt.


A passage like a poem:
1) “Once a little boy sent me a charming card with a little drawing on it. I loved it. I answer all my children’s letters — sometimes very hastily — but this one I lingered over. I sent him a card and I drew a picture of a Wild Thing on it. I wrote, “Dear Jim: I loved your card.” Then I got a letter back from his mother and she said, “Jim loved your card so much he ate it.” That to me was one of the highest compliments I’ve ever received. He didn’t care that it was an original Maurice Sendak drawing or anything. He saw it, he loved it, he ate it.”    —Maurice Sendak

A poem:
2) Eating Poetry by Mark Strand 


A poet:
3) Also, if you haven't read the Interview with Laura Read, a poet, then there's this, too.


An excerpt from a poem.
4)
“You gave me hyacinths first a year ago;  35
They called me the hyacinth girl.”
—Yet when we came back, late, from the Hyacinth garden,
Your arms full, and your hair wet, I could not
Speak, and my eyes failed, I was neither
Living nor dead, and I knew nothing,  40
Looking into the heart of light, the silence.

                                             (from The Wasteland by our man T.S. Eliot)

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

How the Sun Burns: Forthcoming in The Minnesota Review

Photograph of stone quarry near nightfall
Rock Quarry
by paparutzi (CC)
 The minnesota review has just accepted her story "How the Sun Burns Among Hills of Rock and Pebble", which will be a story in her next book Midwest in Memoriam. 

The story is slated for Spring 2013 publication.

Cheers!

Thursday, April 19, 2012

To Shift & Grit: New Review of The Floating Order


"It’s Pringle’s ability to get inside the mind of a child and see the adult world from their perspective that is the real strength of this collection. Another is the shifting nature of reality from this perspective."

Photograph through a green bottle
Faye Through Glass
by Aislinn Ritchie (cc)









~writes John Kenny, in a new review of The Floating Order. Kenny is a writer, and co-editor of Dublin's Albedo One and Aeon Press. Please find the full review at his website.

Monday, April 16, 2012

One Bull-Running Over: 2012 Pulitzer-Prize Winners Announced

Image of 1970 Pulitzer Prize medal
Pulitzer Prize Medal
All those running in fiction were trampled, no one survived.

The announcements might get a bit more press this year since, of the list of winners, the winning work of fiction is a blank space--the committee decided that none of the finalist-books in the fiction section merited the Pulitzer.  Finalists, but not fine enough, evidently for more than that.

According to the administrator of the prizes (via the L.A. Times), This isn't the first, but eleventh, time to happen in the fiction side of the Pulitzers.

No doubt this decision will raise a flurry of discussion in the fiction world--among writers, editors, publishers, and readers.  For, while we've gotten the memo that there was no prize, now it's time to decide, or consider, what the memo means in terms of what the committee is suggesting about quality.

Photograph of Picasso drawing a bull in light
Picasso and the Bull Out of Light, in Life
And, perhaps, another sort of discussion will occur from this in regards to the $50 "handling" fee that must accompany each work (and four copies of each book) submitted into the running for the Pulitzers.  A $50 fee that is hardly a scratch on the bucket for the large presses, but the weight of a brick in the bucket for small presses.

For a list of all the winners, visit the Pulitzer website.

***
The next running of the writers is for The National Book Award. Deadline for submission is June 15, 2012 (postmark date).  Works published between December 1, 2011 and November 30, 2012 are eligible . . . but with eligibility also must come a publisher who can afford these conditions (among others) of the prize:


All publishers submitting books for the National Book Award must agree to:
  • Contribute $1,000 toward a promotional campaign if a submitted book becomes a Finalist.
  • Image of National Book Award MedalInform authors of submitted books that, if selected as Finalists, they must be present at the National Book Awards Ceremony and at related events in New York City.
  • Cover all travel and accommodation costs for Finalists and provide them with seats at the Awards Ceremony.
  • Purchase from the National Book Foundation, when appropriate, medallions to be affixed to the covers of Finalist and Winning books. [bold, mine] The Foundation will also license the medallion image artwork for reproduction on the covers of Finalist and Winning books.
  • Inform authors that, if selected as Finalists, they must agree to participate in the Foundation's website-related publicity.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Emrys Issue 2012 Now Available

Cover photo of Emrys Literary Journal, 2012
Her short "Skydivers" is in the new issue of Emrys Journal (Volume 29), which is now available for purchase


Emrys Journal is a part of a large-scale arts group out of South Carolina that supports writers and artists through scholarships, activities, lectures, and much more.


Cheers!

Literarily Speaking: GetLit! in Spokane, 2012

Childlike illustration of tree with leaves and birds for 14th annual GetLit! festival
A strange phenomenon is currently happening in Spokane. The readers have crept out from their reading chairs, the writers out of the coffee shops and studies, and the libraries are empty for a different reason.  Even the airport is taking part, in its way, bringing us a Poet Laureate, Ted Kooser, and Lois Lowry, award-winning writer of children's literature.

A festival is upon us, friends!  It's time for the Spokane, WA annual event: GetLit!

All week Spokane is celebrating the word--spoken and on the page. Today, for example, there are poetry slam competitions happening, from grade-school-age to college-age.  On Saturday, workshops and panels all day, and then, a play that night.  On Sunday, Kooser will read and be interviewed by the poet Christopher Howell.  And, of course, much, much more!

From the 10th to the 15th, writers and readers will mingle among words and, sometimes, wine.  From one side of town to another, it's true: Spokane believes in writing.

*

For the calendar of events, please visit the GetLit! website.

**
Update: She read as part of the Inland Northwest Faculty Reading at Barrister Winery, and was quite glad to be a part of listening and sharing work in such a lovely space.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Butterfly Fears Heights

Cover photograph with one dog-person holding a butterfly while another dog-person tries to fly
Photographers Kirby and Cindy Pringle have finished their third Happy Tails children's book, The Butterfly That Would Not Fly.  Main characters, Earl and Pearl, discover an acrophobic butterfly and attempt to help the butterfly migrate to Mexico.

To pre-order a copy of The Butterfly That Would Not Fly, go to the book's page on kickstarter.com.

Kickstarter is a website where artists post either project ideas or completed projects in order to  find funding.  Sometimes, the artist(s) asks for a partial amount necessary to fund the project, outside of other funding that they already have; or the artist(s) asks for full funding.  

Book photo of two dog-people wearing sombreros and trying to send butterfly to winter homeThe Pringles are offering pre-order of The Butterfly That Would Not Fly through Kickstarter in order to help defray the printing costs for the 32-page, full-color book. Readers may contribute any amount to the project; with a $20 donation comes an autographed, and paw-o-graphed, copy of the book.

From the photographers: "We're very excited about the new book. We also hope to inspire people to grow flowers and milkweed to help the butterflies."

For more information about the Pringles, outside of their Kickstarter page, please see their website, Dogtown Artworks.