TMR Editors’ Prize

Postmark deadline is October 1st, 2012!
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Our new, enhanced online anthology
Current Issue: 35.1 (Spring 2012)

Featuring the winners of the 2011 Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize, as well as work by Steve Gehrke, Jessica Francis Kane, Thomas Pierce, Mark Wunderlich, Mako Yoshikawa, and Dave Zoby… and an interview with David Milch.
Poem of the Week- David Kirby: “If Any Man Have an Ear, Let Him Listen”
- Larry Levis: “Labyrinth as the Erasure of Cries Heard Once Within It or: (Mr. Bones I Succeeded. . .’ Later)”
- Amy Newman: “The Day After The Dean of Michigan State College Admits Him To Lansing Sparrow Hospital For Rest, A Naked Theodore Roethke Barricades Himself Behind A Hospital Mattress”
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Category Archives: Media
The Tom Waits Highway
Every morning, I write for a couple of hours, working on various projects: stories, essays, a novel. I don’ t have a particular good reason why I choose one over the other on any given day, but usually, I stick with one thing for a few weeks (or, with a novel, a few months) and then, for no clear reason, I turn to something different, re-reading with a bit of surprise, like seeing an old friend in an unexpected place.
The wonder of what I’m working on, or why I’m working on it, doesn’t concern me a great deal. The important thing to me is that I do it everyday. On weekdays, I have less time, of course, because I need to head over to The Missouri Review offices and get to work. Weekends provide me more time, but I don’t have different plans for Saturdays or Sundays. I just write. There are many, many pieces of advice on how to write, whole books, (thousands of books, actually) but for me it’s just a matter of writing everyda. No big mystery.
This doesn’t work for everyone. Other needs something to get them going, a way of contextualizing the work so that it makes sense. A way to nurture creativity.
So, here’s this interesting video of Elizabeth Gilbert, the author of Eat, Pray, Love, discussing creativity and Tom Waits (the title of this post does have some relevance), among other things. At the beginning of this short talk, Elizabeth acknowledges something a bit scary: she’s probably already had the biggest success she’s going to ever have as a writer. So, now what?
It’s definitely worth your time to watch and found out.
Michael Nye is the managing editor of The Missouri Review
TMR Podcast: Audio Winners Series: 1st Place: "Basement Story" by Austin Bunn
We’ve just posted the final episode in our 2009 Audio Winners series. This episode features the first place winner for 2009, “Basement Story” by Austin Bunn. You can listen to this podcast here, or browse all of our podcasts to check out some of our previous winners. Congratulations to all of our 2009 finalists, and check back here this summer for information and guidelines for our 2010 competition!
TMR Podcast: Rachel Yoder, "The Thing at the Foot of the Bed" (2009 Finalist)
On this Missouri Review podcast, we present “The Thing at the Foot of the Bed” by Rachel Yoder, a finalist in our 2009 Audio Competition. Look for more audio winners throughout the month of March!
Listen here: .
TMR Video: "Life of a Manuscript"
Take a look behind the scenes of a literary journal as The Missouri Review reveals what happens to a manuscript once it arrives at our offices. Thanks for the creativity and diligent work by our team of video production interns: Scott Scheese, Kate McIntrye, Lindsay Sihilling, Cody Horton, and Emily Wunderlich. Original music by Kyle Stokes.
On the intersection of docs and lit magazines
In addition to the dozens of docs screened during the True/False Film fest, a number of workshops and classes are offered. Wanting to deepen my knowledge of the industry, I checked out a couple, including “Hybrid Cinema: A Filmmaker’s Guide to DIY, Web and Self-Distribution.”
Jon Reiss, director of Bomb It, a doc about the “battle for public space throughout the world” (or graffiti), led the presentation. I was struck with the similarities of marketing a literary journal and marketing a documentary film. At one point, Reiss stated that when the doc was completed, the filmmaker was only half-way through the process. He or she must get it out in the public. I think, in some broad way, that’s true of a literary magazine. After we’ve accepted the final prose or poetry piece for our journals, we’re ready to put our feet on the desk, lean back in our office chair, and congratulate ourselves on putting together another fine publication. But as wonderful as our magazines may be, we haven’t done our job fully until we’ve reached the largest audience possible given our budget, personnel, and time constraints.
For many in literary publishing, marketing may be the least favored part of the job. As Reiss said early in his presentation, he went into filmmaking because he didn’t want to go into business—but that career choice turned him into a businessman. Likewise, I’m sure many of us feel the same way about marketing, but if we want our journal to succeed, we need to make smart choices.
Reiss uses his blog (http://jonreiss.com/blog/) to raise attention for his films and long-term audience development. You can check out his blog to see what he’s doing in this regard. And if anyone is interested in some of his specific blogging tips, comment below and I’ll add a “part two” later in the week.
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This Overrated Post
This weekend on The Huffington Post, writer and critic Anis Shivani posted a piece called “The 15 Most Overrated Contemporary Writers.” Some of the authors declared overrated are Amy Tan, Michael Cunningham, William T. Vollman, and Antonya Nelson. Why have these authors been inappropriately “rated”? According to Shivani, it’s because of the lack of good criticism, the proliferation of MFA programs, and prose that is politically irrelvant. Shivani writes:
“If we don’t understand bad writing, we can’t understand good writing. Bad writing is characterized by obfuscation, showboating, narcissism, lack of a moral core, and style over substance. Good writing is exactly the opposite. Bad writing draws attention to the writer himself. These writers have betrayed the legacy of modernism, not to mention postmodernism.”
Well, okay.
Shivani’s post has received quite a bit of attention: there are over 1100 comments on his article, and a quick trip around the literary blogosphere will have all sorts of response about what one commenter called a “drive by shooting of criticism.” From reading other criticism by Shivani – he’s a frequent contributor to the Huffington Post and the literary journal Boulevard – he has always struck me as a smart, well-read critic. Which is why his post is so disappointing.
The goal of good criticism is, in part, to show you something you haven’t seen before. Agreeing or disagreeing isn’t the point at all. Whether or not I agree with Shivani isn’t relevant if he can get me, or any other reader, to experience the reading of these books in a different and interesting way. Here are just a couple of his passages that were interesting and worth more exploration:
On John Ashberry: “Mixes low and high levels of language, low and high culture, every available postmodern artifact and text, from media jargon to comic books, to recreate a reality ordered only by language itself. When reality=language (as his carping cousins, the language poets, have it, just like him), politics becomes vacuous, and any usurper can and will step in.”
On Antonya Nelson: “She can stuff in two or three similes in a single sentence she won’t do with only one. Has engineered a peculiarly depthless style, evoking sitcom scripts, where narrative moves by accumulation of insults and incomprehension.”
On Junot Diaz: “Replaces plot in stories and novel with pumped-up “voice.”
Whether or not Shivani is correct, none of the ideas gets any additional thought or consideration (wouldn’t, say, an example or two of the writer’s work be really helpful here?); further, they are often surrounded by a foaming rage at how connected these people are to the world of publishing. With it’s bullet-point sentence style and unexplored ideas, it’s difficult to read his post as anything other than the sour grapes of a writer with a bully pulpit and a microphone on the outside of the publishing world. The ideas are always suggested – again, Shivani isn’t dumb – but there isn’t any exploration of them in a way that might be the type of thoughtful criticism that he claims doesn’t exist anymore.
The construction of the column itself is an excellent example of exactly what Shivani complains is wrong with modern literature. Is there any easier column to write (or conversation to have) than overrated/underrated? Sportswriters have been using those for years, and at least have statistics to back them up. Overrated compared to what, exactly? It’s the type of word that stops thought, like any cliche, and strips away meaning. The title is inflammatory and the column is a rabid attack, which is what it is supposed to be. Check out the way the post is designed: pictures of all the authors, with a box to the side so you the reader can vote on the author’s “true” rating, all in a slideshow that we must click-thru to generate revenue and load new ads (see those on the side of the author photos?) for The Huff. Everything about Shivani’s post – the title, the writing style, its “criticism,” the construct of the text – is designed to kill thought and generate clicks.
Too often that’s what writers are doing now: saying things very loudly and with tremendous emotion, like a talking head on the news, with only one or two talking points to generate all the noise. That’s not what we need from our books, our authors, or its critics. What we need is Shivani to explore those ideas that are only touched upon in his post – and there are compelling thoughts that could be fascinating – rather than savage famous writers with the kind of personal attacks that are far too common nowadays.
Michael Nye is the managing editor of The Missouri Review.