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Interview: Joe Sacksteder

July 21, 2020

  Joe Sacksteder debuted twice last year: with his first full-length story collection Make/Shift in April, and his first novel Driftless Quintet in November. Between the two, he showcases a number of forms and a blend of genres. Flip through…

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Revise Like a Scientist: A Method Approach to Finding the Right Treatment for Your Story

July 14, 2020

  By Lynne Griffin •   “My pencils outlast my erasers.” —Vladimir Nabokov “I’m all for the scissors. I believe more in the scissors than I do in the pencil.” —Truman Capote   There’s consensus among writers that writing is…

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This or That: Simultaneity in John O’Hara’s BUTTERFIELD 8

July 7, 2020

  By Ian Randall Wilson • When I wrote in third person, it was in third-person close. The concerns of simultaneity didn’t occupy much of my attention. There may be a flaw in my thinking here, but my reasoning was…

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The Grind: Revelatory Repetition in Edward P. Jones’s “An Orange Line Train to Ballston”

June 30, 2020

  By Alyson Mosquera Dutemple • In the very first line of his story “An Orange Line Train to Ballston,” Edward P. Jones signals to readers to expect repetition and recurrence throughout the rest of the piece: “The first time…

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On (Not) Writing the Bar Story Part II: The Instructor

June 24, 2020

  By Mike Goodwin • In my brief career teaching fiction workshops, the bar story has appeared too often as a genre vying for literariness. Students have written about debauchery at house parties, barns, parks, cemeteries, and, of course, bars.…

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On (Not) Writing the Bar Story Part I: The Amateur Writer

June 23, 2020

  By Mike Goodwin • I once earned a well-deserved reaming for my writing an awful story involving who I viewed as lower-class patrons inhabiting a dive bar. The narrative too often emphasized these characters giving each other the business…

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Hybrid Interview: Gayle Brandeis

June 16, 2020

  “We want you to know how we lived. That we lived. That we were girls before we were game. That we were alive.”   Essay by Melissa Benton Barker • Gayle Brandeis’s recent novel-in-verse, Many Restless Concerns (a testimony):…

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Art of the Opening: Raymond Carver and Crafting a Hook

June 2, 2020

  I am heaving in the southwestern corner of an open-air outlet mall five days before Christmas. This is the desperate and empty sort of heaving required to stop a sob and close off the valve of emotion. A hiccuping…

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Interview: Barbara Poelle

May 26, 2020

  Holly Root: Hi Barbara! So, you wrote a book. Congratulations! My memory, supported by reviewing our text threads and Gchats from the time this was going on, is that writing a book is, to use some official industry jargon,…

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Empathy as Craft: James Baldwin’s “Sonny’s Blues”

May 19, 2020

  By Gerry Stanek • James Baldwin finds a unique way to interiority in “Sonny’s Blues,” which was first published in 1957. I say unique, because I’m not sure there’s another story like this; a character’s thoughts and perceptions are…

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