THE QUARTERLY

CONTENTS

Editor's Introduction: Hobart and the Future of Lit (Mags)
By Travis Kurowski

"Through Other Eyes": An Interview with Nam Le
By Editors

A Poetics of Emptiness: On the Poetry of Five Points
By William Wright

Guerilla Publishing : An Interview with the Editors of The Lumberyard
By Editors

The Last Movement Literary Magazine: n+1
By Travis Kurowski

A Chronicle of Slush
By Thomas Washington

Ultra-Talk: Triquarterly 128
By Deja Earley

971 MENU: An Interview with Gregory Napp
By Sam Ruddick

How to Start a War: McSweeney's 26
By Travis Kurowski

Art Canada: Review of Border Crossings
By Nigel Beale

How to Criticize: A Writer Attends Meeka Walsh’s Workshop on Art Criticism
By Nigel Beale

Cave Wall: The First Three Issues
By Greg Weiss

The Gettysburg Review Celebrates Twenty Years of “Carrying Literary Elitism to New and Annoying Heights”
By Heather Simons

"You Are the Bad Smell": A Fiction Excerpt from Apple Valley Review
By Kathy Anderson

Letters to Luna Park: Rhett Iseman Responds to Thomas Washington; Albert Goldbarth's Brief Missive About the LP Blog; and more

 


 
 
THE CARNIVAL
Newer Carnival
MAy/JUNE 2008

IN ADDITION
May 19 , 2008

Look here during the upcoming week for the following:

  • Awaited articles from LP2 [at left] on McSweeney's [click for article] war stance and what's really going on over at n+1 [click for article];
  • An exclusive look at the upcoming June issue of Poetry—most notably, some smashing new poetry by Ange Mlinko;
  • plus more Founds from new issues and Newsreel updates [at right] from around the lit mag world.

Also, check out our recently added Letters to Luna Park section of our spring issue, with notes to our editors from Rhett Iseman, Albert Golbarth, Jordan Bass, and others.

[Above image is cover of one-third of McSweeney's 26, guest edited by Stephen Elliot.]


LP2
May 15 , 2008

Luna Park 2 has arrived just in time for the tail end of spring. Enjoy.

-Editors

 

 

 

[Photo by Masao Yamamoto from Five Points vol. 11 no. 3 reviewed in this issue of Luna Park.]


THE BOAT IS HERE
May 13 , 2008

Today is the long-anticipated United States' release of Nam Le's first story collection: The Boat. (Australian, British, Canadian, German, Italian, and Netherlands editions are to rapidly follow the U.S. release.) Recent 2008 Pulitzer Prize winner Junot Diaz calls the book, "An extraordinary performance. Nam Le is a heartbreaker, not easily forgotten." Charles D'Ambrosio--a stunning fiction writer himself--goes so far as to say, "The Boat is tremendous, challenging and ambitious, worthy of the same shelf that holds Dubliners and The Things They Carried." And the notoriously difficult to please Michiko Kakutani at The New York Times calls the title piece, "a haunting marvel of a story that says as much about familial dreams and burdens as it does about the wages of history."

Below is an excerpt of an interview with Le from the upcoming May 15 issue of Luna Park.

EXCERPT OF NAM LE INTERVIEW / LUNA PARK 2

Luna Park: How were you first drawn to writing fiction professionally? Could you briefly explain how you moved from a lucrative career as a corporate lawyer to applying and getting in to the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and having your stories then published in such acclaimed literary magazines as Zoetrope, A Public Space, Harvard Review, and One-Story? It would seem you are far from a dawdler—as a new reader to your work, I actually wonder when you have the time to sleep.

Nam Le: I don’t think I was ever drawn to writing fiction ‘professionally’; I was always drawn to writing, and, until a few years ago, I was drawn mainly to poetry. I started ‘seriously’ writing a novel (an appellation that really applies by the mere fact of so doing) during a one-year hiatus from the law. So I guess you could say I was drawn, during that time, to the pipedream of being able to write professionally. Iowa was a bit of luck and a lot of timing—I’d recently finished my novel and was back in Litigation and M&A when I read a review of an Australian book (John Murray’s A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies—a fantastic collection) that mentioned the program. This was late 2003; I Googled it, was intrigued, realized the deadline was upon me, and sent off the first few chapters of my (since abandoned) novel on a whim. Dawdling?—man, I do plenty of that, I’ve just gotten so good at it now it looks like something else.

LP: Is there any relationship you have had with a literary magazine editor that has been more than usually helpful to you as a writer? Maybe not a Gordon Lish type, but someone who has maybe pushed you in directions you didn’t realize, or perhaps just helped clear up your work with remarkable skill?

NL: The first story I had taken was taken by Brigid Hughes of A Public Space—I’ll not soon forget that. The first story I had published was published by Michael Ray in Zoetrope: All-Story. Both are extraordinary editors: open-minded, meticulous, bold, assertive, learned. The most extensive and inspiring editorial exchanges I’ve enjoyed have been with Robin Desser, my editor at Knopf. She’s everything I didn’t dare hope for in an editor (and she would’ve slaughtered this sentence).

*

The complete Luna Park interview with Nam Le will be available online here as part of Luna Park 2 on May 15.

[Above The Boat cover photo by Clifford Ross; cover design by Carol Devine Carson.]


Previous Carnival


FEATURED ARTIST: ROBERT GOLDWITZ


Georgia—Twenty Years Ago
Photograph, Leica M-4, Fugichrome original

THE NEWSREEL

Ted Solotaroff, founder and editor of New American Review, has died.

Mahmoud Darwish, poet and activist, has died.

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn has died.

Alma Newhouse steps in as new editor of Nextbook.

New Philadephia literary magazine: First City Review [link to the magazine here]

New, free literary magazine for Washington, DC commuters: Bit o' Lit

Objects As Magazines / Magazines As Objects exhibition part of Art Book Triennale in Milan

New Letters & Thomas E. Kennedy win national magazine award

New UK literary magazine: Pen Pusher

Alex Clark becomes Granta's first female editor

Senator Obama's literary journal publications


Hitotoki — A narrative map of the world