CONTENTS


UPCOMING: Nicholas Ripatrazone on Robert Olen Butler and the short story; Greg Weiss on recent Witness "Dismissing Africa" issue; The threat to university literary magazines; An in-depth look at Asia Literary Review; more of our Writers/Editors interview series...

Interview: Erin Fitzgerald, Northville Review
By Marcelle Heath

"I like when someone's very quietly or very openly fooling with an emotional manipulation dial."
"While my stories aren't autobiographical, I really do believe in the whole write-what-you-know thing. One time I wrote a story from the point of view of an old sick man and it was just terrible. It was like really bad Carver. The man sat around watching daytime television and eating pie."

Sort-of Prose Poems
By Nicholas Ripatrazone

"James Harms offers a contemplative effort in a lean essay that turns the prose poem discussion in a noteworthy direction..."

Poetry 2.0
By Marcelle Heath

"Setting aside, for now, its ideological nomenclature, its appeal lies in the interpretative dynamic between text and image..."

Greetings from Knockout
By Brett Ortler

"We started KO because we wanted to try something that was different than we'd seen in other literary magazines, both in terms of thematic slant and in terms of mission..."
"He said that if he were asked to be poetry editor of a magazine, he would aim for unity. I told him that was more or less the exact opposite of what I wanted to do..."

Bon Voyage
By Marcelle Heath

"I imagine party-goers huddled around a fire pit as they share stories about stalking a would-be lover..."

In Brief: The Appeal of Brevity
By Nicholas Ripatrazone

"Contemporary flash fiction has been slugged, whipped, and slapped: dragged through the literary mud, pegged as incidental..."
"Kayla Soyer-Stein recreates the wonderful magic and sense of the uncanny that fairy tales offer..."
"Recently I won a best humorous poem competition, and it appears I have a knack for healthy self-ridicule..."
"I think about that a lot—about the balance of light and dark and about allowing my characters to have an open destiny. I think that’s one of the most important aspects of story writing..."
"It calls itself the 'farthest north literary journal for writing and the arts,' which sounded a bit suspicious to me, so I did a little poking around to verify the assertion..."

Some Thoughts on Poetry
By Ben Leubner

"The history of Poetry is a history of resistance in all directions..."
"The 1990s was a wild, wonderful, idealistic decade in Prague. Excellent exchange rates and the possibility of a relatively uninhibited way of life lured expatriates in droves to the Czech capital. In short, it was the perfect time for the founding of a literary journal..."
"One author climbs to the top of a tree trunk support beam that’s part of the architecture of the writing space. Another is balancing a couch cushion on his head and explaining wog: a dog who uses a dog-sized wheel chair to get his back end around San Francisco..."

Avian Arts: The LBJ
By Nicholas Ripatrazone

"While literary niches often result in suffocation, eighty pages of plaid, The LBJ’s aviary focus proves malleable enough..."

The 7th Annual New Orleans Bookfair
By Kenneth Harshbarger

“'In consideration of what looks like a total collapse of our economic system,' he said, 'I thought the bookfair went very well...'"
"There are two wooden figures on my husband’s desk. Figurines. They are meant to resemble humans, black humans. African-Americans..."
 
 

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

"To start a little magazine, thento commit yourself to making an immutable, finite set of perfect-bound pages that will appear, typos and all, every month or two, or six, or whenever, even if you are also, and of necessity, maintaining an affiliated Web site, to say nothing of holding down a day job or sweating over a dissertationis, at least in part, to lodge a protest against the tyranny of timeliness. It is to opt for slowness, for rumination, for patience and for length. It is to defend the possibility of seriousness against the glibness and superficiality of the ageand also, of course, against other magazines."
from "Among the Believers," by A. O. Scott

"In the so-called cultural sphere, things have been changing quite radically if not dramatically, but it is difficult to write about this, perhaps because the change has been creeping up on us for years."
—William Phillips, co-founder of
Partisan Review

 

1. Hype and Hyperlinks

My first introduction to n+1 was not, as might be expected, through an issue of their magazine, but instead through a series of hyperlinks and Google searches about the magazine (which, sadly, is how I receive all too much of my information these days). Though I am somewhat embarrassed by my first opinions about n+1or, more specifically, embarrassed about the origins of those opinionsI nonetheless relate them below, as they seem a good example of what n+1 was established as a reaction against.

My n+1 web surfing began, if I remember correctly, with a 2005 article about current trends in literary magazines by A. O. Scott on The New York Times website. Googling the magazine's editors I had read about in Scott's article—Keith Gessen, Marco Roth, Benjamin Kunkel, and Mark Greifled me to some much more spirited (and critical) discussions about the magazine on the literary blogs The Millions, The Elegant Variation, and Wet Asphalt. To counteract these blogs' largely hostile opinions of n+1, I found some interviews with Gessen at The New York Inquirer and Emerging Writers. Eventually, drawn on by the easy clickability of internet research, I ended up locating the largest repository of secondary information (if it could be called that) about the magazine on the internetthe sensationalist (and humorous) postings about n+1 editors on the New York tabloid blog Gawker. At some later point I read reviews of Kunkel's 2005 novel Indecision (and, more recently, reviews of Gessen's 2008 novel, All the Sad Young Literary Men). I heard rumors about the elitist, arrogant nature of the magazine and its editors. Somewhere in all of this, I actually glanced at the magazine's own website, but not long enough to finish any of the articles there (articles quite long in comparison to similar pieces on other literary websites). Instead I continued my glance, click, glance, click click, glance, etc.

Without yet cracking the spine of a single issue of n+1, I eventually joined the chorus, spreading rumors about the arrogance and elitist attitudes of the magazine. I did this at parties, in conversations with writers, and at home with my wife. Why? How did I come to have an opinion about a magazine without ever actually reading the magazine? I do not know for sure. It was easy, actually, came naturally even, like bad-mouthing James Frey or criticizing of the bigotry of Martin Amis. Everyone talks about books they haven't read.

*

A review copy of n+1 number 6 arrived in the Luna Park mailbox last February, sent along by one of their interns who in January had expressed an interest to write about Luna Park's New York launch party. Said intern never made it to the partymost likely due to our own delay in responding to his request—but thanks to him I was reminded of the dangers of becoming a mouthpiece for what a recent article in n+1 succinctly refers to as "the hype cycle."

Not that I ever meant harm to anyone at n+1 by the occasionally tossed off "I read that the editors of n+1 are kind of elitist" or "The magazine is supposedly full of snarky reviews" in conversation. I did not portray these observations as my own, and, in my view, I was only repeating what I had read. But such repeating dulls reason, both individually and on a larger, societal level. And after reading an issue myselfchecking the evidence against the observations of others—I saw the much greater complexity that criticism of the magazine must deal with, because what n+1 is most criticized forits stubborn, polemical positioning on literary issuesis actually one of its greatest strengths.

 

2. Pharmakos

"One of the things you learn, if you write for enough different magazines, is that each has its own culture, and that culture is very powerful and affects the way you write for the magazine, even unconsciously."
—Keith Gessen, in an interview with
The New York Inquirer

Let me go on record to say that n+1 is currently one of the most interesting literary magazines being published. It is Lewis Lapham's Harper's editorials transformed into a literary magazinewith the fiction of Fiction magazine and the criticism of Dissent tacked on. It is The Paris Review crossed with New Left Review. It is what New England Review might be if it were edited by Arianna Huffington and Jonathan Franzen after drinking three pots of coffee. It is the literary world's first response to the gaping whole left by the passing of Partisan Review, no doubt the most effective politically engaged literary magazine of the twentieth century (sorry Masses, Salmagundi, and others). It is a movement literary magazine in the tradition of Blast, The Masses, Poetry, Hound and Horn, Big Table, Fuck You, and The Outsider, because, like these magazines, it is not merely a venue but a voice as well.

Or maybe this is true of all magazinesthat they serve as both venue and voice. The quote by Gessen above from an interview with The New York Inquirer argues just this, that each magazine "has its own culture." One supposes this would be true then for every context one writes withinwriting programs, etcand not just periodical cultures. Either way, what is particular about movement literary magazines (a phrase I am borrowing from a recent interview I did with n+1 editor Marco Roth) is that they are blatant about their positioning, about what culture/community they want to foster. For n+1 this is one in which, as Greif says, "arguing about things could be impersonal, because it advances thought."

Information about the beginning of n+1 is widely available (see hyperlinks above), so I won't get into it in detail here. To sum up: n+1 was started in 2004 by four men with graduate degrees as an intellectual magazine meant to shake up the literary worlda world which in their view had become too reliant on unearned praise and lazy criticism. True to this editorial vision, n+1 leapt right away into the fray, criticizing literary elites such as James Wood and McSweeney's. They moved on to criticize the literary blogosphere and the reputations of established authors, such as Kevin Brockmeier, whose writing is archly described on the n+1 website as "magical feelism."

It is this sort of criticism (most famously, I think, of the aforementioned literary bloggers) that makes people frustrated with n+1. And they have a point. The editors of n+1 often come across as youthfully idealistic in their declarations and maxims (e.g. "It's time to say what you mean"), but, as I mentioned above, these declarations are much of the attraction of the magazine. Like the Derridean pharmakos, the controversy n+1 creates in the literary establishment is both the magazine's poison and cure. It is what joins them to their famous antithesis McSweeney's: both ventures take risks, are willing to possibly makes fools of themselves, and in the end often achieve impressive results.

Like great actors, great literary magazines—if we use magazines like the original and revived Salmagundi, the German language Athenaeum, Eliot's Criterion, Poetry, The Masses, the New Directions anthologies, The Paris Review, kayak, and Story as examples—seem clearly to be the ones which, like n+1, are willing to take risks. Just take a look at some pieces from n+1 number six alone: a criticism of "the hype cycle," a questioning of the position of such 'classics' publishing series as NYRB's, a take-down of proto-literary "how to read" books, a call to lower the voting age, a wildly experimental story by Helen DeWitt and Ilya Gridneff, a heart wrenching and unexpected reading of the Virginia Tech shooting, a novella-length story by Caleb Crain, a look into the effect of Orham Pamuk's fiction in Turkey, an elegy for independent bookstores, a history of tabloid blog Gawker, and etc. Not only are these not the sort of pieces one is used to seeing in literary magazines with more conservative editorial visions, but the range of subjects is more diverse than other literary-minded periodicals.

It is most often not until a person sees the new thing (or, more likely, the rebirth of the old thing) that they realize something is missing. Controversy, such as that elicited by Susan Sontag's "Notes on Camp" from Partisan Review, is much of what n+1 has brought to the literary world. Such controversy, which is, at least for n+1, the offspring of passion, is a welcome addition. What's more, like Sontag's essay, the pieces in n+1 are written with intellectual rigor and a love of language. Though it is often critical, n+1 is serious—or "responsible" as they see it—in its estimations of the literary world. On occasion, they even publish laudatory pieces, such as on the work of David Foster Wallace. Whether or not one agrees with the work published in n+1, it is hard not to appreciate that literary and social matters are being looked at with such passion and consideration in some corners.

Travis Kurowski is the editor of Luna Park, and also works as assistant editor at Mississippi Review and as soliciting editor for Opium.

FEATURED MAGAZINE / JULY 2009:
CONJUNCTIONS

Conjunction issue 52 cover image

Conjunctions 52: Betwixt the Between, Impossible Realism
Editor: Bradford Morrows and Brian Evenson. Bard College, NY. Est. 1981. www.conjunctions.com


NOTICE: Luna Park will be moving to York College of Pennsylvania this coming August. Please update your contact information:

Luna Park
441 Country Club Road
York, PA 17403-3651


NEWSREEL

New literary magazine from Dzanc Books, The Collagist, edited by Matt Bell (in case you forgot, we are fans of Mr. Bell)

Granta teams up with Flavorpill for The Rehearsal Project Short-Film Contest

Isotopeliterary/science hybrid magazinelooks like it will be losing its funding from Utah State University

Waldo Jaquith of Virginia Quarterly Review busts Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson for wiki-plagiarism

Canadian magazines such as Malahat Review threatened by national funding changes

John Freeman steps in as new editor of Granta—previous editor Alex Clark stepped down after just 18 months in the job

Ted Genoways & Michael Lukas blog at VQR on threats to New England Review and The Southern Review

New literary magazine out of Oxford, Mississippi: Kitty Snacks

Utne Reader announces 2009 Independent Press Awards, winners include VQR, Lapham's, and etc.

New literary magazine wordriver dedicated to creative writing of all non-tenure instructors at universities

io9 blogs about "New Wave Fabulists" issue of Conjunctions

PAST NEWSREEL...


EVENTS

July 15: Park Lit in Fort Greene Park. An evening of readings and music with A Public Space contributors, editors, and friends. Park Lit, a summer reading series in New York City's parks, is sponsored by The New York City Department of Parks & Recreation, Open City, and Mr. Beller's Neighborhood. Fort Greene Park Visitor Center Brooklyn, NY 7:00 PM

Opium magazine Literary Death Match: NYC, San Fran, Denver, Beijing, etc [ongoing series]

One Story cocktail hour at Pianos, New York City [ongoing series]


Luna Park is a proud member of the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses



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