Sunday, July 29, 2012

An Interview with Mathias B. Freese


Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?
This Mobius Strip of Ifs is a collection of essays written over four decades and published here and there as I pursued writing in the late hours of the night and weekends as I worked as an English teacher and later as a psychotherapist. So these essays as I look over them at the autumnal part of my life have some essential themes.

It is a kind of Bilsdungroman of my psychological life as a writer, spiritual seeker, teacher and curmudgeon, one of the perks of getting old. It is a mixture of memoir and essay, with me breaking the rules again. Reviewers in England have difficulty handling my honesty. Well, that’s the land of the politically correct, dysfunctional and constipated Queen Elizabeth and Philip the Extraneous. 


In short, it must be a dreary existence if as a writer you constantly struggle to write a message.

Here it is summed up, without messages: a compilation, hopefully compelling, of observations, psychological insights, and reminiscences for those possessing the requisite courage to feel and think, to struggle against cultural conditioning which I despise, and to create artistically in spite of an environment that impedes the awakening of intelligence. I wrote: “Although we are passing ephemera, human lint on this planet in transit, it is a powerful and nourishing feeling for me to have paused long enough to have observed the passage of time and my place in it.”

Is there any special method to your writing?
I don’t think there is a method to my madness. I write when a feeling comes through to me or a sense of awareness. I do not schedule the hours that I will write and I have always written when feelings made me write. Rules about writing, to my mind, are written in sand. I weary of all the injunctions other writers give to writers. It’s like brushing your teeth at least twice a day; sometimes life gets in the way and once suffices. The heavy hand of tradition often crushes. Obedience is not in my vocabulary as an author.

How many hours a day do you spend reading /writing?
Since I’ve been retired I have read more but I read as if I were sampling food from a buffet, this and some of that, and oh boy, a whole lot of that. I go back to old favorites, books by Freud, books about Freud  (Freud’s Vienna & Other Essays, Bruno Bettelheim), Krishnamurti’s vast array of works on seeing, for he  has profoundly affected the way I go about being in life (reading at present Krishnamurti to Himself). In my book I devote a chapter to what books and films impacted upon my life, my cinematic and literary gene base.

I write a blog once a week (www.mathiasbfreese.com). I need time for the aquifer to fill up. I am under no pressure during this autumn season, just observing the leaves falling. I have written a book of short stories on the Holocaust and will begin very shortly to send out queries to publishers. If no success, I’ll self-publish it. This past year 10 out of 24 stories have been published. Indeed, Leapfrog Press’s fiction contest saw me come in as one of three finalists out of 424 submissions. So I know I sitting on gold bullion.

What books have most influenced your life?
Kazantzakis’s Report to Greco, The Last Temptation of Christ, Krishnamurti’s The Flight of the Eagle

If you could be the author of any novel, which would it be and why?
To be the author of The Last Temptation of Christ or Conrad’s Nigger of the Narcissus is to have a profound understanding, in both cases, of man. I write about Conrad in my book:”When I first read it, I knew I was in a room with a genius, not only a literary one, for this was no mere writer of sea yarns. He knew men, and he understood their minds. The book, if it had Freud’s name under the title, might very well serve as the master’s statement about group psychology.” As to Kazantzakis, “Above all he makes you feel! He wrote most of his novels in his seventies and long before that he wrote two volumes in verse describing the further adventures of Ulysses and by all accounts, he equaled Homer. I am indebted to him as a writer.”

Do you think you will ever change audiences?
I have no audience. I write solely for me and a few others. I am not into grossly marketing my books. I have learned in life that writing is simply my perfume, the essence I give off, and it is not for sale in that I am pushing it upon you. Exuding who I am in print is much the same for me as engaging another human being and sharing who I am. Why merchandise who I am? Now and then I receive an award and that pleasures me but I don’t go crazy shouting from the rooftops what I have attained. I know that inwardly.

What are your current projects?
At this time my next effort is at the starting fate. I Truly Lament – Working Through the Holocaust is a varied collection of stories: inmates in death camps; survivors of these camps; disenchanted Golems complaining about their designated rounds; holocaust deniers and their ravings; collectors of Hitler curiosa; an imagined interview with Eva Braun during her last days in the Berlin Bunker; a nazi camp doctor subtly denying his complicity.The intent is to perceive the Holocaust from several points of view. An astute historian of the Holocaust has observed that it is much like a train wreck, survivors wandering about in a daze, sense and understanding, for the moment, absent. No comprehensive rational order in sight.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Celebrate Woody Guthrie in Poetry and Song


RIDGEWOOD – Calling all poets, musicians, foodies, fans, and anyone else who’s interested -- or curious -- to celebrate the 100th birthday of Woody Guthrie on Saturday, September 8 at 1 p.m. at Ridgewood Christian Reformed Church (271 Lincoln Avenue at West End Avenue).

The festival will celebrate the life, music, and legacy of Woody Guthrie--the legendary folk singer/writer--upon the centennial of his birth.  Contact ERGO atergo.therefore@gmail.com for more information or to be included in the roster of participating poets, musicians, or chefs.

All poets are invited to attend and read their works that reflect the many themes of social, political, and spiritual justice in Woody’s “people songs.” Musical performers are welcome to share Woody’s music or their own folk music. Any chefs willing to share the foods of America are welcome to participate. This event follows similar events by New Jersey poets, musicians, and chefs who gave successful tributes to Fats Domino and Elvis Presley at the same church.
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"manUP"

This play "manUP" captures what it means to be a man. Written, Produced and Directed by Elijah M. Brown and Jamal T. Hinnant. Showing the journey from boys to men and our importance of why men need to step up in the community. manUP journeys through the life of a teacher and a student and their challenges with self esteem, substance abuse, jail, family, women and their roles as men in today's society. This play should be at every school because of the impact it'll have on staff and students. If you don't believe me come see for yourself on July 27th & July 28th. Please spread the word. If you can't come see it we can bring it to your church, school or organization.
July 27th & July 28th, manUP!!!!

Doors open at 7:30
showtime 8pm

1st show Doors open at 5:00
Showtime 5:30
2nd show Doors open at 7:30
 Showtime at 8:00

$15 advanced tickets and $20 at door




Kick back with these six new books, plus Oprah's favorite sweet and salty reads from years past.


Seating Arrangements

Literary Ink: Famous Authors and Their Tattoos

The National Book Foundation’s 2012 Best Of BookUp Selections


Texas WinnersFor the first time ever, we present the Best of BookUp Selections, a summer reading list straight from the source: our BookUp students! We asked the students at all six sites in New York City and Texas to vote on their top two favorite books read in BookUp during the 2011-2012 year. One site had a unanimous favorite, and others couldn’t limit their choices to just two. University Settlement students ranked all of the books read and then averaged each book’s individual score by rating them in the following categories: Relatability, Readability, Likability, Attractiveness, Universality, and Importance.

Dog Days of Summer: Poetry and Hot Dogs


Poets.org has your cookout covered! Visit our Tumblr for a look at some poetry-related hot dog ephemera, including lines from Langston Hughes, Sandra Cisneros, Nick Demske, and even a description of Charles Olson eating a hot dog at the Black Mountain School.




On the web at:www.poetsorg.tumblr.com/tagged/hot+dog

Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar By Cheryl Strayed









Winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

By Tracy K. Smith
With allusions to David Bowie and interplanetary travel, Life on Mars imagines a soundtrack for the universe to accompany the discoveries, failures, and oddities of human existence. In these brilliant new poems, Tracy K. Smith imagines a sci-fi future sucked clean of any real dangers, contemplates the dark matter that keeps people both close and distant, and revisits the kitschy concepts like “love” and “illness” now relegated to the Museum of Obsolescence. These reveal the realities of life lived here, on the ground, where a daughter is imprisoned in the basement by her own father, where celebrities and pop stars walk among us, and where the poet herself loses her father, one of the engineers who worked on the Hubble Telescope. With this remarkable third collection, Smith establishes herself as among the best poets of her generation. 

Bundle Deal: Five Books for $25 or Ten Books for $50 (plus eBooks and Free Shipping)

Pacazo Cover


For just $25, choose any five eligible Dzanc books from our catalog (eligible titles include all titles published before November 15, 2011), and also receive the corresponding eBooks by email within 24 hours. And for an even better deal, you can choose any ten titles for $50!  

To order, simply type your desired titles into the text box provided under your preferred bundle, then click the Add to Cart button to check out. Thank you!

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

This Mobius Strip of Ifs is the winner of the 2012 National Indie Excellence Awards in the non-fiction category of autobiography/memoirs.



From the author: I authored The i Tetralogy, a Holocaust novel, winner of the Allbooks Review Editor’s Choice Award, and Down to a Sunless Sea, a collection of short fiction, finalist for the Indie Excellence Book Awards.

This Mobius Strip of Ifs, a new book of essays and memoirs written over four decades, a kind of  Bilsdungroman of my psychological life as a writer, psychotherapist, spiritual seeker, and teacher was published in February.


Midwest Book Review writes: We often live in lives of regret and unfulfilled dreams. "This  Mobius Strip of Ifs" is a collection of essays from Mathias B. Freese as he discusses American culture and how we determine our goals and dreams, as well as our doubts. Speaking clearly on this history and offering much pondering on the nature of the truths of the world, "This Mobius Strip of Ifs" is a thoughtful and inspirational collection of essays on psychology, philosophy, and thought, very much recommended. 
Synopsis: A mixture of the author’s reminiscences, insights, observations, and criticism, This Möbius Strip of Ifs examines the use and misuse of psychotherapy, childhood trauma, complicated family relationships, his frustration as a teacher, and the enduring value of tenaciously writing through it all. Freese scathingly describes the conditioning society imposes upon artists and awakened souls.




Publish Like the Pros: A Brief Guide to Quality Self-Publishing



Summary: Publish Like the Pros: A Brief Guide to Quality Self-Publishing. Written by Michele DeFilippo, owner of 1106 Design, this book offers an insider’s perspective as to the steps necessary to create a high-quality book. In just 88 pages, Publish Like the Pros takes the confusion out of self-publishing and gives authors the six steps to publishing quality professional books that don’t scream “I’m self-published!!” 

From the Author: Publish Like the Pros: A Brief Guide to Quality Self-Publishing is a must-read for new authors who want to get it right when self-publishing their books. Self-publishing is a perplexing and ever-shifting landscape; it’s easy for new authors to get taken in by self-publishing companies that promise the moon but don’t deliver. The self-publishing author will find everything he or she needs to get started, including cover design, book titles, typesetting, editing and proofreading, and a special chapter on book distribution, pricing and marketing. Written by a book designer with years of experience working with both first-time authors and seasoned publishers, Publish Like the Pros speaks directly to new authors who want to publish a book that they can feel proud of and that sells!

About the author: Michele DeFilippo owns 1106 Design, a Phoenix-based company that works with authors, publishers, business pros, coaches, consultants, speakers . . . anyone who wants a beautiful book, meticulously prepared to industry standards. 1106 Design offers top-quality cover design, beautifully designed and typeset interiors, manuscript editing, indexing, title consulting, and expert self-publishing advice.

Resurrecting the Street: Overcoming the Greatest Operational Crisis in History

Summary: In Resurrecting the Street, author Jeff Ingber analyzes the financial story behind 9/11 – weaving in interviews, first-hand accounts and well-researched facts and data. The financial crisis was ultimately resolved through the willpower and wisdom of groups of disparate individuals, accompanied by an unprecedented climate of cooperation among fierce competitors. This story, which is an important aspect of the overall 9/11 narrative, has never been told. 

From the author: The events of 9/11 presented the financial industry with the greatest operational crisis in its history. Key officials were killed; others could not be located. Primary and backup sites were unavailable or inadequate. Massive amounts of critical data were lost, and there was a crushing inability to communicate, locate or verify information. It was not known for a time which firms could participate in the markets, nor was it clear to what extent certain markets had been damaged and when they should reopen. Nor could the human impact of the 9/11 events be divorced from the business issues. Those grappling to restore the markets had to cope with their own feelings of anxiety, shock and loss, and to deal with a uniquely horrific blend of personal and professional difficulties. Resurrecting the Street tells the largely unknown and heroic story of the regeneration of the U.S. markets, day by day, immediately following 9/11.

About the author: Jeff Ingber is a native New Yorker and a graduate of Queens College and NYU Law School. He has worked in the financial industry for over three decades, including positions with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation. Jeff currently is a Managing Director with Citigroup.

Monday, July 16, 2012

An Interview with Charly Fasano



Is there any special method to your writing?
I don't usually have any method to my writing. I sit and write as much as I can. When I reach a point that I can't write anymore I usually put down what ever I am working on and start on the visual aspect of the writing. Lately, I've been illustrating my poems with linocut prints. I have also dabbled around with film and self producing recordings of stories/poems accompanied with music. It all starts with the poem in some form or another and then I explore other ways of telling the story through film, music and block printing. I want the reader to be able to "walk through" the poems by presenting them with a multimedia experience. With my new book of poems "Excuse Me, I Think You Dropped Your Dreams" I've been able to tie together the read, watched, and listened aspects of my art through the use of QR Codes that the reader scans with a "smart phone" to gain access to films, slideshows and recordings. I guess the method is keeping busy.


How many hours a day do you spend reading/writing?
I am always doing something that is related to my writing. I would say that watching and listening to what is going on around me, whether I am riding the bus or sitting at a bar, is always part of writing  When I finish a project I always take  time off to read poetry and flip through art books and websites. I find going on walks and taking black and white pictures frames up the world in a certain way that serves as inspirations for a lot of ideas.  


What inspires you to continue being a writer? 
Writing is what makes me go. Being a story teller/poet gives me the opportunity to engage with people at every angle. Sharing my story or my persona's story, observations and version of life makes me understand the human condition. It gives me an opportunity to relate to people through observation. It gives me time to laugh at a really dysfunctional world.  


If you could have been the author of any novel, which title would it be and why? 
Jesus' Son by Denis Johnson because it is recklessly poetic and tragic. The film is great as well.



Do you think you will ever change audiences? 
I think I am still at the point where I am still trying to find an audience. I like to do readings in all different kinds of situations. I will read on any stage or sidewalk where there is an opportunity to share my stories.  I have recorded with every kind of rock and roll and indie band. I always read at concerts, galleries, parties, coffee shops, record stores, clothing boutiques and tattoo shops around Denver and around the country. I guess I want everybody to enjoy what I do so I make every effort to read whenever I can. Kind of idealist but that's how I feel. Whoever reads my books or watches my films is none of my business.



What advice would you give anyone who wants to become a published author? 
Work as hard as you can as much as you can. Always work at becoming a better writer. We all can be better. Always realize that the big story never ends and that a writer of any genre has to observe what is going on around them. Watching is learning and writing. Ideas are everywhere.


Favorite Books right now
Novels:
Turning Failure Into Ideology by Brian Polk
Taft 2012 by Jason Heller
Poetry:
Open Letter (To Dark Gods of the Ancient World) by Jason Ryberg
Cue the Bedlam (More Desperate with Longing Than Want of Air) by Mark Hennessy
Further Down Road by John Franklin Dandridge

KP Liles

The poems in Singing Back the Darkness dare to feel. In his second full-length collection, Liles guides us into fraught spaces—from bar room to battlefield, schoolyard to interior recesses—to confront grief with what he's proving to be characteristic insight, humor, outrage, and wonder. Always sincere, each poem offers the possibility of emerging from ruin both personal and collective with dignity if not hope intact. Truth wounds, then heals in these pages. Here is a poetry that sings reminder: Language remains our great means of redress in a heartbreaking world.

Steve Henn

And God Said: Let there be Evolution! was written during Steve Henn's sometimes relieved, sometimes reluctant, and ultimately aborted return to the Catholic church. The poems express faith, doubt, the conflict between dogmatism and reason, and a disdain for orthodoxy that Henn picked up while teaching 1984 over and over to public school students. Some of the poems, though, are about a bad beard trim at Great Clips, or a bunch of made-up reasons why California doctors grant medical marijuana licenses. You never can tell what Henn will think of next, but then again neither can he. And God Said: Let there be Evolution! is heretical yet nevertheless spiritual, profound yet profane, looking toward salvation even as Henn questions the virtue of religious and spiritual certainty. Henn is hoping the sins of this authorship are ultimately venial from the perspective of Whoever's In Charge, and not mortal.

Word 126 Franklin St. NY


Messy_large
Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan, founders of the must-read blog Go Fug Yourself, present their second YA novel, Messy (sequel to Spoiled), which continues the adventures of Brooke Berlin and Molly Dix.When she teams up with a ghost-writer to create the ultimate Hollywood insider blog, Brooke gets a taste of the big time. But how long can she keep up the charade?
Heather and Jessica will dish on their blog, writing for teens, and the meta-fun of their newest book.
Wednesday July 18 (7pm)

A contemporary poet from Paraty, Brazil

Flávio de Araújo (b. 1975) His debut poetry collection, Zangareio, was published in conjunction with the 2008 Paraty International Literary Festival. Araújo has also been a featured reader at the International Literary Festival of Porto de Galinhas-Pernambuco, the International Literature Festival in Havana, Cuba, and the Salvador Díaz Mirón Iberoamericano Festival of Poetry in Las Choapas, Mexico.

Poet D. Nurkse

‘A Night in Brooklyn’
We undid a button,
turned out the light,
and in that narrow bed
we built the great city — 
water towers, cisterns,
hot asphalt roofs, parks,
septic tanks, arterial roads,
Canarsie, the intricate channels,
the seacoast, underwater mountains,
bluffs, islands, the next continent,
using only the palms of our hands
and the tips of our tongues, next
we made darkness itself, by then
it was time for daybreak
and we closed our eyes
until the sun rose
and we had to take it all to pieces
for there could be only one Brooklyn.


The 2nd Annual New York City Poetry Festival

Saturday & Sunday, July 21st & 22nd, 11am-5pm
Governors Island, Colonel’s Row
Pre-sale tickets: $5 for both days
Day-of tickets: $5 per day

Books Beneath the Bridge

An inaugural outdoor literature series will feature 6 evenings curated by local, independent bookstores. Each program will include a reading, Q&A, and book signing with the authors.

Journeys of Recovery Salon


Bricolage: Journeys of Recovery will be held at 7:00 pm on Thursday, July 26 at the Asian American Writers’ Workshop in New York City.  The AAWW is located at 110-112 West 27th Street, 6th Floor. $5 suggested donation.

PAUL LEGAULT ON TOUR: THE EMILY DICKINSON READER

Emily_dickinson_reader_lores
From McSweeney's:
Perfect for the poetry fan who is short on time, The Emily Dickinson Reader offers Paul Legault's ingenious and madcap one-line renderings of each of Dickinson's 1,789 poems. Take that familiar chestnut, #314, à la Legault: "Hope is kind of like birds. In that I don't have any." Or the classic hymn, #615: "God likes to watch." As Dickinson herself said in #769 (basically, via our translator): "This dead person used to be a person!" —and The Emily Dickinson Reader is here to tell readers what that person meant.

Video: Blaney Lecture: The Whispered Rush, Telepathy of Archives by Susan Howe

Swimming Studies By Leanne Shapton


“Swimming Studies sets out, through a fusion of words and pictures, to capture a bittersweet part of the writer’s past as completely as a scent trapped in a bottle. The book is beautiful as both a story and an object. It’s about being very, very good at something, when you want to be great. I was moved by it in ways both expected and unexpected.”
—John Jeremiah Sullivan, author of Pulphead
“If there is a more beautifully observed examination of the weightlessness, silence, rigor, and delight of what it means to swim, I’ve never read it. Leanne Shapton is one of the most broadly creative and gifted people at work today; a true artist, both visual and verbal. There seems to be nothing she cannot write or paint about: adolescence, Canada, yearning, dawn—even cake, for heaven’s sake!—with a precision both surgical and poetic. The joys of Swimming Studies are in being in the care of someone of a prodigious and protean mind. My talent crush is official and deep.”
—David Rakoff, author of Half-Empty

“I’m so happy this book exists. Swimming Studies expresses what it’s like to be haunted by the person one used to be, and the search for how that person exists in the present. Leanne Shapton writes with such curiosity, ruefulness, intelligence, and grace. Here we see how the discipline of being an athlete can condition one’s ways of making art, and how the patience necessary to make art teaches other types of patience. Like the patience required to be a spouse and to love a person always. This book is a rare treat for anyone who cares about any of these things.”
—Sheila Heti, author of How Should a Person Be?

Monday, July 9, 2012

Author Jennifer Weiner at Princeton Public Library


Author Jennifer Weiner
65 Witherspoon Street Princeton, NJ 
Jul 11 2012 1:00pm - 2:00pm
The New York Times best-selling author makes her annual summer visit to the library to discuss her latest book, “The Next Best Thing,” the story of a young woman trying to make it in Hollywood. Jennifer Weiner will answer questions following her talk and a book signing will occur in the front lobby.
And yes, there WILL be cupcakes... courtesy of Jen herself as a thank you to her fans!
Update: Wear a vest to the event at the library and you will receive special "swag" from Jennifer (aka a totebag). Why a vest? Read the article to find out: Jennifer and the Vest


Dzanc's Dog Days of Summer Sale


Read 'Em While They're Hot!

Myth, Mountain & Imagination

A Getaway for Poets & Writers August 18-24
WRITE IN WALES. Join us in the mountains of Wales for a unique writing retreat. Make progress on your book or poetry while immersed in the breathtaking landscape which inspired the legend of King Arthur. Take advantage of plentiful writing time, workshops, organic meals & relaxing by the lake. All genres & levels.
Learn more

Brooklyn Bound, a new magazine

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Sarah Messer

Click here to hear a reading of her poem "Vacationing in the Fur Trade District".
Sarah MesserSarah Messer has received fellowships and grants from the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing, the NEA, and the Mellon Foundation. In 2008-2009 she was a fellow in poetry at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study (Bunting) at Harvard. She is the author of a hybrid history/memoir, Red House (Viking), and a poetry book, Bandit Letters (New Issues). Her work has appeared in The Paris Review, The Kenyon Review, Gulf Coast, and Ploughshares, among others. She teaches at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, and runs One Pause Poetry, a reading series in Ann Arbor, Michigan.