Seattle Literary Scene Examiner
Showing entries for Category: literary-calendar
miscellaneous
POSTED May 29, 2:08 PM
The past few weeks have been insanely busy, and I apologize for not getting fresh content up here. I'm finally caught up on reading submissions, and there are some cool things happening, so I want to get the word out while I have a second to breathe.

First off, Scott Garson and Chad Simpson have compiled a list of their favorite online flashes of 2007 over at Wigleaf. It's an incredible list, with lots of my own favorites from the past year there as well. It should keep you pleasurably busy for a few hours.

Also, TJ Forrester has started a project called Five Star Literary Stories, in which he asks editors of online lit mags for some of their favorites and then has reviewers check 'em out, too. A great idea, and lots of great stories have been highlighted.

As far as events go, there are a few beauties coming up here in Seattle:

Tamara Kaye Sellman let me know over on Facebook that she's going to be one of the teachers for Hugo House's Write-O-Rama. This looks fantastic: Richard Hugo House presents Write-O-Rama, an eight-hour extravaganza of mini-writing workshops, on Saturday, June 7, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. To attend, participants must raise at least $45 in pledges and come ready to write. Prizes are awarded for the highest fund-raisers. More information at www.hugohouse.org/giving/writeorama or (206) 322-7030.

Also on Facebook, Matt Briggs posted about an event happening this weekend: Lauren Hoffman will be reading about a dark and funny story about two people failing to do stuff together. Matt Briggs will read assorted stories described as "Ick Lit," by a reader who had only only two comments. 1) Ewww. and 2) Ick Lit. The two readers will read for a while and then Troubletown will play. And then The Dutchess and the Duke will also play. These things will occur at the McLeod residency which offers a number of accommodations such as a functioning bar and a camera TV hooked up to Flickr. Starts Friday night at 9:00, goes late. The McLeod Residency is at 2209 Second Ave. No cover, baby!

And 826 Seattle has a couple readings coming up:

On Saturday, June 7 from 1:00 to 3:00 PM at 826 Seattle, we are celebrating the publication of our third anthology of student-produced comics, Happiness?  The anthology is the result of two six-week-long comic-book-making workshops, taught by local comics artists David Lasky and Jessixa Bagley. Highlights of the party will include cupcakes and milk in fancy glasses; a toast in celebration of really good writing and illustration; and an opportunity to purchase Happiness? and have it signed by the students.

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On Thursday, June 12 from 1:00-3:00 PM, please join us to celebrate the second publication to come out of our Hamilton International Middle School partnership. As far as helping hands are concerned, we need cleaners, cupcake and milk servers and interior designers (aka, some people who can liven up a dreary school auditorium). Hamilton is located in Wallingford at  1610 N. 41st St. — let us know if you can help and we hope to see you there.

So there ya have it: some online reading to liven up your day, and a few events to get you away from the monitor. Go!

 
Seattle Lit Calendar May 5-May 11, 2008
POSTED May 5, 2:20 PM
Here are the literary events for this week that I could glean from the calendars of Richard Hugo House, Elliott Bay Book Company, University Book Store, and Third Place Books. In cases where no ticket cost is mentioned, the event is free. I'm running... Read More
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Seattle Lit Calendar April 28-May 4, 2008
POSTED April 28, 11:07 AM
Here are the literary events for this week that I could glean from the calendars of Richard Hugo House, Elliott Bay Book Company, University Book Store, and Third Place Books. In cases where no ticket cost is mentioned, the event is free.Question for... Read More
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Seattle Lit Calendar April 21-April 27, 2008
POSTED April 21, 1:39 PM
Here are the literary events for this week that I could glean from the calendars of Richard Hugo House, Elliott Bay Book Company, and University Book Store. I will, time permitting, edit in other events as I track them down (for example, I know there... Read More
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Dave Clapper
Dave Clapper is the founding editor of SmokeLong Quarterly, an online literary magazine, and helps to coordinate Seattle Pecha Kucha Night. His writing has appeared in dozens of literary magazines, and his plays have been produced as part of the Seattle Fringe Festival. Links to his fiction can be found on his author page at Red Room.


Temenos/Rusty Barnes/Sequoia NagamatsuNominating Editor: Marc MacdonaldThe site was put together by Editor-in-Chief Mike Shafer. Temenos provides links to artwork as well as fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction.This story was picked for our magazine because of the sharp language and clever idea. The images evoked were powerful and interesting, and there was very little cliched or boring language. The overall sarcasm of the piece also made it humorous and enjoyable to me and the rest of the editorial staff.Overall, I look for stories that are creative and fresh, stories that take an old idea and give it a new spin or new life or begin with a new idea in the first place. The language is important to me, but I still look for some semblance of plot (at least something has to happen; a collection of images is not a story in my opinion). I am also really attached to flash fiction.Nominated Story: "The First Time He Met a Communist" - Rusty BarnesReview: by Sequoia NagamatsuThe title of this short piece would certainly pique the interest of any leftist heart or those on the other side of the political spectrum that hope to find something to get angry about. The story begins around “State street” at a protest but we aren’t given any details as to city or country. At first, a reader might think that we are in South America as the protest concerns “the plight of Corzabia, a small anarchist collective ranch located within Patagonian Argentina,” however, our protagonist, Corsley, quickly points out that he has never been to Argentina, his mother’s native country. Corsley is an apathetic nut seller and as to what kind of nuts and if they are organic or not (we are at a protest after all), we never find out. The story focuses over his observations of Tracey, who is introduced as a communist at the protest, wearing “calf-high boots and tight paisley shorts and a wife beater.” As strange or atrocious as her attire may sound, Tracey is seen as a kind of exotic, bohemian femme fatale in the eyes of Corsley, who lives in a world so far removed from the object of his fantastical desires.As the story continues, we take a joy ride through Corsley’s day dreams full of milking llamas and riding tiny horses in Patagonia with his idealized Tracey. When Tracey finally speaks to Corsley in reality, “God, it’s so hot. I wish we could protest somewhere, you know, cool?,” the reader is pulled out of Corsley’s head for a moment and presented with some very revealing gems that likely evade our narrator. Tracey’s one line in the story and the fact that she pays for a bottle of water with a fifty dollar bill give the reader a sense of her true character which is most likely not anything resembling anarchists of the Spanish Civil War, Che Guevara or even the student anarchists of late 1960’s France as Corsley pictures her. Instead, Tracey is likely an archetype for the modern (often bourgeois) anarchist that is often far removed from the struggles that are being fought for.Corsely brings the reader back to his world with his ruminations on anarchist pubic hair or lack thereof and the brutal fact that he will never know for certain. When he reaches into his pockets for Tracey’s change, he discovers that his money is gone. Whether Corsley has simply misplaced his roll of bills or if he has been the victim of a nut-stand heist, we aren’t really sure and probably don’t care. Corsely, enraptured with Tracey as he is, doesn’t seem to worried about it either. Tracey takes off with her free bottle of water and the reader is left with Corsley gazing at her in the distance, wondering, “what could you say to someone so committed, so anarchistic, so damned attractive?” and the reader perhaps has an answer for our simple minded, wide-eyed protagonist – nothing at all.Reviewer's Bio:Sequoia Nagamatsu is a fiction writer, playwright, event organizer, artist and activist. Over the past years he has been involved in the San Francisco International Arts Festival, several Fringe Theatre and performance festivals in the United States and has written and directed two plays. He is a former national campaign manager for an arm of the Sierra Club, where he helped coordinate several national protests and also produced the multi-state Green Planet environmental festival. His poetry has appeared in the Grinnell Review and he has fiction forthcoming in Underground Voices. He is also part of a team of international writers, One World, that has put together an anthology of short stories commenting on the third world and indigenous communities. Originally from the SanFrancisco Bay Area and educated in Iowa, he currently resides in Niigata City, Japan with his two guinea pigs.Thanks for visiting Five Star Literary Stories.Five Star Literary Stories combines three integral facets of the writing life: publisher, story, and reviewer. Each story is editor nominated and considered one of the best the mag has published.
1 day ago (Five Star Literary Stories)

 
 

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