Monday, August 06, 2007

The Bridge and the River



The Bridge and the River by Timothy Carmody

"In the years I have worked with Timothy Carmody I have been frequently amazed and occasionally annoyed by his habitual production of really outstanding work. If The Bridge and the River sometimes betrays its influences—Charles Simic, James Baldwin, Frank O'Hara—it must be conceded that the poet's choices are admirable, and the raw materials are always his own. These are early poems, and in them Mr. Carmody experiments with imagery, narrative, and voice, but his experiments are never simply academic, and the results are both sophisticated and affecting. Place matters. Memory persists. The pleasures of the world, slow and hard-won, are worth savoring. The same can be said of this collection."
—Gavin Craig, editor of Offbeat/1

From Detroit and Chicago to Harlem to Dublin, The Bridge and the River gives us a poetry as notable for its geographic exploration as its literary ambition. While Timothy Carmody's poems create new landscapes of the temporal, linguistic, and structural, it is, in the end, Carmody's empathy that makes his writing so powerful.

Poetry, 25 pp. Click here to download PDF in new window.

Timothy Carmody was born in Detroit, Michigan. He currently lives with his family in Philadelphia, where he studies Comparative Literature and Literary Theory at the University of Pennsylvania.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Letters to My Sister



Letters to My Sister by Angela Vasquez-Giroux

Composed as a series of letters to a family member serving in Iraq, Angela Vasquez-Giroux's first poetry chapbook is a vivid evocation of the fear, displacement, and uncertainty that war imposes on those who are left behind. Through images of fragmentation and fragility—misreadings of scripture, partial glimpses of a loved one in a news report—Letters to My Sister speaks of the challenges of survival, both for those in the field and at home.

Poetry, 15 pp. Click here to download PDF in new window.

Angela Vasquez-Giroux is a textbook middle child. Her fascination with words began at age three, when her mother taught her to say extraordinary. She lives in Lansing with her partner and daughter.

Proliferation

"Line Jester" by Michael Duncan has been published by the online magazine Void.

Congratulations to Mr. Duncan, and for those who like "Line Jester," be sure to check out the additional stories available in Line Jester and Other Stories.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Up next

We've been quiet for a while, but we've been busy, and over the next several weeks, you'll finally get a chance to see what we've been working on.

As I write, we're putting the finishing touches on Letters to My Sister, a powerful set of poems from Angela Vasquez-Giroux. We're also knee-deep in The Bridge and the River, a collection of poems from Timothy Carmody. Finally, we have third project in the works, which is a bit of a stretch for us, but we're really excited about it. I don't want to say too much and ruin the surpise.

So that's what we're working on, but we'd also like to know what you'd like to read. What should we be looking for? More stories? More scripts? Poems, poems, and more poems? If you have ideas or requests, please let us know.