Sentence 5 is now available (see info below). All members of the program are welcome to a free copy--you can pick one up in the MFA office, or we'll mail you one at your request (please email request to me).
Since there are no interns on staff at the moment, I am in desparate need of help stuffing, labelling, and stamping envelopes to get copies out to contributors and subscribers. If anyone is willing/able to help one weekend day or one evening, I'll buy the food and beverages during/afterward. And if anyone is interested in interning this semester, just let me know--you're guaranteed to learn how literary journal publishing works.
Best,
bc
Sentence 5 is now available, including:
Feature section on The Prose Poem in East-Asia, edited by Steve Bradbury with co-editors and translators Don Mee Choi, Jeffrey Angles, Andrea Lingenfelter, Sawako Nakayasu, and Hiroaki Sato; translations of Lu Xun, Shang Qin, Liu Kexiang, Hsia Yu, Xi Chuan, Jiao Tong, Hung Hung, Ye Mimi, He Chuanfu, Ch’oe Sung-ja, Yi Yon-ju, Kim Hyesoon, Kasuya Eiichi, Takahashi Mutsuo, Suzuki Shiroyasu, Ito Hiromi, Hirata Toshiko, Yuko Minamikawa Adams, Abe Hinako, and Tatehata Akira.
Prose poems by Joe Ahearn, Kazim Ali, Erica Anzalone, Sally Ashton, Edward Bartók-Baratta, Bill Berkson, Raymond L. Bianchi, Daniel Borzutzky, Geoff Bouvier, Jenny Browne, Christopher Buckley, Kevin Cantwell, Peter Conners, Mark Cunningham, Chloe Daimyo, Jon Davis, Neil de la Flor, Carrie Etter, Kass Fleisher, Charles Fort, Angela Jane Fountas, James Fowler, Alex Galper (translated by Mike Magazinnik and Igor Satanovsky), Christine Gelineau, Daniel Grandbois, James Grinwis, Kelle Groom, Maurice Kilwein Guevara, Richard Gwyn, Tanesia Hale-Jones, Kalev Hantsoo, Kevin Haworth, Karen Holman, Brooke Horvath, Ann Howells, David James, Brian Johnson, George Kalamaras, Luke Kennard, Jill Khoury, Rauan Klassnik, Michael Koshkin, Richard Kostelanetz, David Lazar, Robert Hill Long, Sandy McIntosh, Michael Meyerhofer, Steve Myers, Andrew Neuendorf, Ed Orr, Virgilio Pinera (translated by Alexander Cuadros), Emma Ramey, Jessy Randall, Kristin Ryling, Catherine Sasanov, Liana Scalettar, Siobhan Scarry, Jim Scrimgeour, Ravi Shankar, Jay Snodgrass, D. E. Steward, Julia Story, Robert Strong, Wayne Sullins, Eileen Tabios, Steve Timm, Nick Twemlow, Alexandra van de Kamp, Monique van den Berg, and Mark Yakich
Joe Ahearn reviews Daniel Rzicznek, Sally Ashton reviews Noah Eli Gordon, Brian Brennan reviews Gloria Frym, Thomas Fink reviews Sheila E. Murphy, Brooke Horvath reviews Etal Adnan and Sherwood Anderson, Matthew W. Schmeer reviews Skip Fox, Ellen McGrath Smith reviews Elizabeth Willis, Rebecca Spears reviews John Olson, Jerry McGuire reviews Peter Johnson, Chris Murray reviews PP/FF: An Anthology; and an essay by Brian Johnson.
Forthcoming features: The Prose Poem in Italy (#6) edited by Luigi Ballerini and Gian Lombardo, Native American Prose Poems (#7) edited by Dean Rader
4 comments:
What a cool concept to focus on a region - can't wait to dig in.
Would a one day a month intern be worth the headache?
Thanks, Ron. One day a month is probably not effective. The intern would just end up doing nothing but menial tasks in that case. I prefer to give interns at least some degree of responsibility so they can feel like they're doing something other than opening or stuffing envelopes. I'm hoping to get most of the books packed up this weekend--maybe I'll put my kids to work.
Brian,
I'm going to Maine this weekend, but I'd be interested in doing some interning starting next week. I can do any evening (3:30 p.m. on)except Tuesday (that's the day I'm obligated for icky, awful boring HS faculty meetings). Is one evening a week good? Or are you looking for more time than that?
Mary Ann
Hi, Brian,
I was out of town last week, but have time this coming week if you still need help getting Sentence out. Let me know --
Holly
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