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To blurb or not to blurb; celebrating Toni Morrison's birthday with a read-a-thon of her work in Kansas; a resurgence of serial novels; Obama proposes a twenty-million-dollar cut to library funding; and other news.
Poet Evelyn Posamentier and painter Elizabeth Jameson, whose own brain scans are prominently featured in her work, use their respective art forms to interpret their experiences with multiple sclerosis.
Edouard Glissant dies in Paris at age eighty-two; the lost art of writing love letters; banning e-readers in New York City café; indie-run Bookstore Solutions Management; and other news.
For one week, collect words and phrases you encounter throughout the day from signs, advertisements, menus, overheard conversations, radio programs, headlines, television, etc. At the end of the week, write a found poem, using these snippets.
This trailer for the film adaption of Ayn Rand's 1957 best-selling novel Atlas Shrugged offers a sneak peak at the movie hitting theaters April 15.
Amazon is closing a distribution center in Texas; Salon launches awards for the best literary sex writing; an author and a librarian study the lifespan of the typical literary magazine; BEA announces breakfast hosts for 2011 conference; and other news.
This clip features photos of the demonstrations in Cairo's Tahrir Square by Hany Soliman as well as footage of poet Kamal Abdel Halim reciting two poems in protest of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.
Symphony Space in New York City is introducing a little competition to the ticket holders to the March 2 performance of Selected Shorts, its storytelling series. The theater, which houses one of New York City's most literary stages, will hold a story contest—Electric Shorts—on the occasion of Selected Shorts: Electric Literature, a presentation of stories from the digital (and print-on-demand) magazine performed by comedians including Mike Birbiglia and John Lithgow.
To enter, writers should purchase a ticket to the event (fifteen dollars for attendees age thirty and under, twenty-three dollars for Symphony Space members, and twenty-seven dollars for everyone else), then submit a story of up to five hundred words. Each e-mailed submission must include the writer's name, address, phone number, e-mail address, the work's title, its word count, and the date of ticket purchase. The deadline is February 25.
A winner, selected by Electric Literature author Rick Moody, will be announced at the March 2 event, and that winner's story will be read onstage by one of the evening's performers. The story will also be recorded for a Selected Shorts podcast. There is no cash prize for this award (but we do hear there'll be rum cocktails served gratis during the event).
For Nikky Finney, whose fourth book of poems, Head Off & Split, is out this month, fearlessness isn't just a character trait. It's a responsibility.