digital emunction | a multiauthor blog founded and edited by robert p. baird

Berry in Best American Fantasy

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Jede­diah Berry’s “Minus, His Heart,” a short story that first appeared in Chicago Review 53:2/3, will appear in this year’s Best Amer­i­can Fan­tasy, edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer.

(via Mumpsimus)

Chicago Review’s Barbara Guest Issue Now Available!

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I’m very pleased to announce the launch of Chicago Review 53:4 & 54:1/2, a 368-page triple issue with a spe­cial sec­tion ded­i­cated to the life and work of Bar­bara Guest. The issue costs $18 and may be pur­chased here, or you can sub­scribe to CR for a year–good for three issues–for just $25 here.

The Bar­bara Guest fea­ture includes three pre­vi­ously unpub­lished plays by Guest and a port­fo­lio (edited by Cather­ine Wagner) of five uncol­lected poems. The fea­ture also includes crit­i­cal and per­sonal responses to Guest’s work by Charles Altieri, Eileen Myles, Donald Revell, John Wilkin­son, Mei-​mei Berssen­brugge, Martha Ronk, Andrea Brady, Brenda Hill­man, Nancy Robbin, Patri­cia Dien­st­frey and Rena Rosen­wasser, and Gar­rett Caples.

The issue also includes:

John Latta on C.D. Wright

A few days ago at Isola di Rifiuti, John Latta named C.D. Wright’s “Rising, Falling, Hovering” “the most ambi­tious U.S. anti-​war poem of the bloom­ing idi­otic twenty-​first century.”

Latta being Latta, that praise—and I don’t think it’s ten­den­tious to take it as such—is asserted only after he’s com­pleted his shift of crit­i­cal heavy lift­ing, here cen­tered on the con­nec­tion between the two halves of the poem. (Which, dear reader, I beg for­bear­ance to repeat were first pub­lished in Chicago Review 51:3 and 53:2/3.) Latta writes:

The move­ment between “Rising, Falling, Hov­er­ing” and “Rising, Falling, Hov­er­ing, / cont.” is one of refus­ing surcease, increased con­cern, anger unabated and rising. (Indeed, one fully expects the poem to con­tinue for­ever with purer and purer distill’d rage, dog­ging the “end­less war” sce­nario of the crim­i­nal U.S. policy-​makers.) If the “cont.” story wor­ries about a son trav­el­ing unaccompany’d in Mexico and about tend­ing to a friend’s “bad diag­no­sis” and appar­ent cancer treat­ment in Mexico City (jux­ta­posed against—on the flight down: “The mon­i­tor from the over­head / begins its info­tain­ment Not shown: white phos­pho­rous falling / on the city of minarets”), thus seem­ing to focus in, off the high civic stakes of its beginnings—too, it ends by bray­ing out a mag­nif­i­cent curse…

Latta’s review gives me occa­sion to men­tion that the forth­com­ing issue of CR, due back from the press in a few weeks, includes C.D. Wright’s own take on the poem, an auto­com­men­tary some­what along the lines of the expli­ca­tion de soi-même that John Matthias under­took for CR 52:2/3/4.

Numbers Trouble: The Boxed Set

Erika Staiti at saidwhatwesaid.com has put together a for­bid­dingly com­pre­hen­sive record–236 pages at last count–of the online con­ver­sa­tions that took place in the wake of the “Numbers Trouble” debate pub­lished in Chicago Review 52:2/3. Follow this link for the whole mas­sive PDF, or click here for Staiti’s Editor’s State­ment and Appendices.

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