About rewriting and editing the American playwright Tennessee Williams said, “You have to murder all your little darlin’s.” It’s been known for several decades that the editor Gordon Lish did more than slay a few precious lines in Raymond Carver’s 1981 story collection What We Talk About When We Talk About Love. In […]
Entries Tagged as 'Uncategorized'
The Tip of the Iceberg and What Lies Beneath
January 11th, 2008 Kris · 1 Comment
Tags: Commentaries · News · Uncategorized
Editors’ Prize Archives: “Bad Scouts and Nervous Indians” (2005)
September 27th, 2007 Evelyn Somers · No Comments
Our Editors’ Prize winners in the Essay category have pretty much been about serious subjects. We’ve given the prize to heartfelt elegiac memoirs about parents, childhood or the quasi-mythical ’60s. We’ve given it to tense, scary essays about grueling medical dramas. We’ve given it to indignant travel essays . . .
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Web Exclusive
July 5th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Michael Martone never lacks for interesting things to say, whether it be about his native Midwest or the craft of writing or himself (or more accurately, all of himselves, real and invented). In a web-only contribution to The Missouri Review, “Four False Starts: On Beginning and Continuing,” Martone (or rather, “the author”) “reveals (in a […]
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On the Move
May 23rd, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
On the academic calendar, May is one of those transitional months. For the Missouri Review, the end of this May means the end of an era. The physical offices of the Missouri Review are returning to the campus of the University of Missouri-Columbia. The Review, which has been housed for the past sixteen years in […]
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Further Adventures in Audio
May 16th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
As part of our effort to participate in the ongoing audio/video revolution that’s sweeping through the Internet, The Missouri Review offers its latest podcast. While previous editions have featured TMR writers reading from their work, with this edition, a pair of TMR interns chat with Steve Almond, which inevitably means conversation about sex. And chocolate. […]
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Joanna Luloff on “Let Them Ask”
May 16th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Joanna Luloff’s short story, “Let Them Ask,” received the 2006 Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize for fiction from The Missouri Review. It will appear in our forthcoming issue (29:1). Below, Luloff talks briefly about the roots of the story.
“This story was prompted by my experiences teaching English in a village school in southern Sri Lanka. […]
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A Few Words with Derek Mong
May 16th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Our forthcoming issue (29:1) features the winners of our annual Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize in fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction. As part of the celebration, we were able to bring two of the three winners to Columbia for a reading and reception in late April. Our poetry editor, Jason Koo, spoke with Derek Mong, […]
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A TMR Writer on NPR
May 3rd, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
As the assistant managing editor for metro news at the New Jersey Star-Ledger, David Tucker has acquired the reputation of a tough, gruff newsroom boss, the sort of presence whose persistence and sheer relentlessness embodies the hard-nosed, hard-news glory days of journalism. In fact, he was part of the team that won a Pultizer Prize […]
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Pulitzer Prize Winners Announced
April 25th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
The 90th annual Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism, Letters, Drama and Music, awarded on the recommendation of the Pulitzer Prize Board, have been announced by Columbia University.
In fiction, Geraldine Brooks received the Pulitzer Prize for her novel, March (Viking), which imagines the Civil War experiences of Mr. Peter March, the absent father in Louisa May […]
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Penguin Classics & the NBA
April 25th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
We can admit that when we think of the National Basketball Association we don’t exactly think “classic literature”–unless, of course, you count Wilt Chamberlain’s autobiography or Dennis Rodman’s tattoos. But both the NBA and Penguin Classics share this in common–they were launched in 1946 and this year they’re celebrating 60 years in the business. So […]
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News from Past Contributors
April 18th, 2006 Jason Koo · Comments Off
Davis McCombs, whose “Tobacco Mosaic” sequence won our Larry Levis Prize in 2004 (The Missouri Review, Vol. 28, No. 1), has won the 2005 Tupelo Press Dorset Prize of $10,000 for his second book, Dismal Rock, selected by Linda Gregerson. “Tobacco Mosaic” comprises a major part of his new book.
David Roderick, whose “The Good […]
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Danielle Ofri Audio File
April 18th, 2006 The Missouri Review · Comments Off
We are pleased to make available an audio file of Danielle Ofri reading the opening chapter from her new book, Incidental Findings: Lessons from My Patients in the Art of Medicine. The chapter, “Living Will“, first appeared as an essay in the Missouri Review (27:1, 2004) and was later selected by Susan Orlean for inclusion […]
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Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize Reception
April 17th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Please join us Saturday, April 29, at the Upper Crust in downtown Columbia for the Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize Reception and Reading, beginning at 6:30 p.m. The three winners of our annual contest–Joanna Luloff, of Boston, Mass. (fiction); Erica Bleeg, of Portland, Maine (essay); and Derek Mong, of Ann Arbor, Mich. (poetry)–will be honored […]
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Meeting New Poets at AWP
March 21st, 2006 Jason Koo · Comments Off
I had a great time at AWP this year. Usually AWP makes me feel as if I’ve stumbled into purgatory, but this year I met some people who really touched me. Derek Mong, our young contest winner, came up and introduced himself at our table, and I discovered that he grew up in […]
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AWP Conference
March 10th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Stephanie Carpenter; Speer Morgan; Edward Falco, author of Sabbath Night in the Church of the Pirhana; Greg Michaelson, Unbridled Books
Thank you to all of those who stopped by our bookfair table at the Association of Writers and Writing Programs’ (AWP) Conference in Austin, Texas, earlier this month. We gave away several hundred copies of the […]
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More News from Past Contributors
March 7th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Eric Puchner, whose short story, “Diablo,” appeared in TMR 26:3 (2003), will publish his debut collection, Music Through the Floor, with Scribner. Puchner, who earned his MFA from the University of Arizona and who was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, has also published stories in Zoetrope: All-Story, the Chicago Tribune, Glimmer Train, and […]
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News from Past Contributors
February 23rd, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Tim Bascom’s memoir Chameleon Days: An American Boyhood in Ethiopia will be published in June by Mariner Books. In the foreword, Edward Hoagland calls the book “a tale well-grounded in a little boy’s close-grained focus on apprehensive innocence and vulnerability.” Tim was the Editors’ Prize winner in essay in 2004, and the memoir […]
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The Missouri Review Podcast
February 20th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
As part of our efforts to bring quality contemporary literature to our readers and friends, the Missouri Review is proud to announce the availability of downloadable audio files of select readings from our authors. It is a service we hope to build upon in the months and years to come as more content is made […]
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Woof Woof
February 15th, 2006 Mike K. · Comments Off
This just in.
Rufus—formally “Rocky Top’s Sundance Kid”—took Best in Show last night at the 130th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show. The photograph printed today in newspapers worldwide shows a joyous Rufus nuzzling Kathryn Kirk, his ecstatic trainer. Rufus is the first colored bull terrier ever to take the top dog show’s top honor. You could […]
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A Defense of Poetry
January 31st, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Jason Koo, newly appointed Poetry Editor of the Missouri Review, examines Bachelard’s Poetics of Space in a web-exclusive piece, “In Defense of Daydreaming: Bachelard’s Poetics of Space.”
Koo writes, “I love the title of this book, but it could easily be retitled, In Defense of Daydreaming. Bachelard argues for a certain kind of reading (one that […]
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Roses and Cognac
January 19th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
For the past 57 years, on January 19, a man has slipped inside a graveyard in Baltimore to pay tribute to Edgar Allan Poe on the writer’s birthday. The man leaves roses and a bottle of cognac on Poe’s grave and then slips back into the night. Despite the efforts of the curious to discover […]
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Stephen King on A.M. Homes
January 17th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
When Stephen King weighed in for Entertainment Weekly recently with his best books of 2005, his list included–at No. 2–a book that isn’t yet available, but of which King had read an advanced copy. The book? This Book Will Save Your Life, by A.M. Homes. An interview with Homes, by Michael Piafsky and Christie Hodgen, […]
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The Annie Proulx Interview
January 17th, 2006 The Missouri Review · Comments Off
With all the media attention surrounding Brokeback Mountain, the Ang Lee film based upon the short story by Annie Proulx, Proulx has ceased granting interviews, as of December 9, 2005, according to her website, in relationship to the film. However, she encourages interested parties to consult her online biography, her curriculum vitae, and an “Interview […]
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News from a Past Contributor
January 12th, 2006 Kaukonen · Comments Off
The University of Wisconsin Press has published Funny by former TMR contributor Jennifer Michael Hecht. Winner of the 2005 Felix Pollak Prize in Poetry, Funny isn’t your typical poetry collection. Divided into three sections–”Sonnet on Mirth,” “Prosody on Comedy,” and “Sonnet on the Ribs of Laughter”–and including an 11-page essay on the “philosophy of funny,” […]
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Results: 2005 Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize
January 5th, 2006 kenny · Comments Off
Results of the 2005 Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize in
Fiction, Essay, and Poetry
The $3,000 winners:
Fiction: Joanna Luloff, Boston, MA
Essay: Erica Bleeg, Portland, ME
Poetry: Derek Mong, Ann Arbor, MI
The Finalists:
Fiction: Shimon Tanaka, Erin Soros, Dan Brooks
Essay: Michele Morano, Nita Noveno, David Kirby
Poetry: John Brehm, Marie Carvalho, Sue Ellen Thompson
We hope that you’ll check out missourireview.com in […]
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Featured on iTunes
December 21st, 2005 Kaukonen · Comments Off
Beginning Wednesday, December 21, and over the next week, the Missouri Review Podcast is being featured on iTunes. Visitors to the iTunes home page for podcasts will find our banner among those in rotation at the top of the page. Be sure to check it out as we seek to introduce our writers to an […]
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National Book Awards
November 18th, 2005 Kaukonen · Comments Off
In case you missed it on your late local news, the winners of the National Book Awards were announced in a ceremony hosted by Garrison Keillor. Joan Didion took top honors in nonfiction for The Year of Magical Thinking, which recounts the year in which her husband, the author John Gregory Dunne, suddenly died and […]
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For Your Review
November 18th, 2005 Kaukonen · Comments Off
To reach the desk of TMR associate editor Evelyn Somers, one must often skirt around, step over, wade through, lift-and-move precarious stacks and leaning piles of books–hot-off-the-press, ink-not-yet-dry, here-for-your-review books. It’s a feast of words awaiting her consumption, and, like a grand dinner, it’s simply impossible to finish them all. In “A Feast of Books,” […]
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College Days and Books We Love
November 18th, 2005 Kaukonen · Comments Off
As part of its “College Week,” Slate asked a handful of journalists, celebrities, CEOs, professors, writers, and editors, “What’s the most influential book you read in college?” Among the respondents were James Fallow, Nicholson Baker, Mark Cuban, David Brooks, Gish Jen, Chris Matthews, Bill Simmons, and Daphne Merkin. Among the answers were The Fountainhead, The […]
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Librarians Unite!
November 16th, 2005 kenny · Comments Off
Radical Reference, a group of librarians “who believe libraries have a duty to be actively involved in the day’s social issues, including feminism, poverty and racism,” are out to prove that “the stereotype of the quiet librarian is just that.” Created during the heated election year of 2004, Radical Reference currently aims at taking […]
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