Books

Boston and back

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Timothy Gager invited me back to the Dire Reading Series in Cambridge, Mass. on Friday. T’was awesome. Wish I had more time to wander around Boston but this weekend was too cramped.

Advance review copies of Timmy Waldron’s WORLD TAKES are in the mail. The files for the final copies are at the printer and the books should be ready in a few weeks.

Big news on the horizon for WRP’s next title. It’s an anthology with some big names attached. I’m keeping mum until the contracts are signed and make their way back to me.

Midnight Picnic love

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Latest on Midnight Picnic by Nick Antosca:

Nick Antosca tells Tao Lin a thing or two

The Bat Segundo Show: Nick Antosca

Popmatters reviews Midnight Picnic

Book trailer

Also, Amazon.com sold out of Midnight Picnic but more copies are on the way.

Bad blogger

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Quick recap on the life o’ Jackie

1) 34th Parallel has an interview with me and the first short story I ever wrote in their 5th issue.

2) I started Bennington’s MFA program in January. Best decision ever. It’s a low-residency program, so I have to go up to Vermont twice a year for 10-day residencies. The rest of the time I work from home and mail in packets of writing and book annotations to my professors.

This is my book list this term:

Rabbit, Run by John Updike
Home Land by Sam Lipsyte
The Stranger by Albert Camus
Last Exit to Brooklyn by Hubert Selby
Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game by William Kennedy
This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Falconer by John Cheever
American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis
Naked Lunch by William S. Burroughs
Beautiful Children by Charles Bock
Drown by Junot Díaz
Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates
Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin
Reasons to Live by Amy Hempel
Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller
The Girl in the Flammable Skirt: Stories by Aimee Bender
Affliction by Russell Banks
Hunger by Knut Hamsun
The Wonders of the Invisible World by David Gates
We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson
Jesus’ Son by Denis Johnson
In the Bedroom by Andre Dubus
In Cold Blood Truman Capote
A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway
Molloy by Samuel Beckett
Black Tickets by Jayne Anne Phillips

3) Word Riot Press news: New version of Midnight Picnic by Nick Antosca arrived from the printer. Galley copies for World Takes by Timmy Waldron are in the works.

4) I have a reading in Mass. coming up:

Dire Reading Series
Friday, March 6, 2009 @ 8 p.m.
106 Prospect Street
Cambridge, Massachusetts

Aw schucks

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decomP Editor-in-Chief Jason Jordan named The Suburban Swindle the best collection of 2008.

I got to meet Jason in Pittsburgh last week. Great dude. He reminded me a lot of the guys I used to hang out with in high school. I’ve had Powering the Devil’s Circus on my shelf for far too long. (It’s my next read. I stumbled into Don Quixote and am just starting to stumble my way out. I loves me some fat books.)

Backlist bundle sale

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If you’re participating in <HTMLGIANT>’s Secret Santa, these Word Riot book bundles would be great for giving.

  • Johnny Red + We Were Ugly… by David Barringer = $20
  • Eighty-Sixed by Brian Ames + Scott Bateman’s Sketchbook… = $18
  • Eighty-Sixed by Brian Ames + Naughty Sweet Boy by Ryan Robert Mullen = $15
  • Scott Bateman’s Sketchbook… + Naughty Sweet Boy by Ryan Robert Mullen = $15

Win Nick Antosca’s MIDNIGHT PICNIC

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Copies of MIDNIGHT PICNIC have arrived!

To celebrate, I offered two copies to <HTMLGIANT> for contest purposes. Nick came up with this most excellent contest question:

What is the way you would least like to die?

Head over to <HTMLGIANT> and put in your best death wish.

Better hurry, though. The competition is heating up and the contest ends Monday night.

Workshop

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I start Bennington’s MFA program in January. I have to get 25 pages into them by Dec. 1 for workshopping. It’s going well. I’m going to send a novel excerpt, which is probably dumb, but all the promoting for The Suburban Swindle has left me drained and wanting to back off short stories for awhile. I kind of disappear into a novel when I’m in that writing headspace. I like that. I know I’m getting into the right tempo when I start forgetting whether or not an event happened in real life or in the book I’m working on. Those kind of non-memory memories are wonderfully redeeming. If I can trick myself, maybe I can trick y’all.

I haven’t done a workshop session since college and never on any substantial work. Anybody want to scare me with workshopping horror stories or links to horror stories? Just trying to expel the demons.

Oh, and Word Riot Press got name-checked in GalleyCat for picking up Nick Antosca’s Midnight Picnic. I keep wanting to call it Midnight Panic for some reason. I don’t know why. At least one person found Word Riot by googling “Nick Antosca” and “Midnight Panic” so I’m not alone.

Pre-order Timmy Waldron’s World Takes

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Timmy Waldron’s short story collection World Takes is now available for pre-order at Word Riot.

Check out this gorgeous cover design by David Barringer:

Word Riot Press to release Nick Antosca’s Midnight Picnic

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Midnight Picnic We’ve made a very special announcement today. You can pre-order Midnight Picnic at Word Riot. And here’s the press release:

Middletown, NJ — Punk rock-spirited independent publisher Word Riot Press will release Nick Antosca’s second novel Midnight Picnic on Dec. 15.

Midnight Picnic was slated to be released by Impetus Press on Oct. 31. The book’s publication was put on hold when Impetus Press publishers Willy Blackmore and Jennifer Banash announced the dissolution of the company due to financial pressures. Shortly afterward, Impetus Press, Word Riot Press and Antosca began discussions about the novel’s future.

“Willy Blackmore and Jennifer Banash’s dedication to Impetus authors is remarkable,” Word Riot Press publisher Jackie Corley said. “When Willy and Jennifer learned of Word Riot Press’ interest in Midnight Picnic, they worked tirelessly to make a deal happen.

“I’m pleased and impressed by how fast Word Riot stepped up,” Antosca said. “Jackie didn’t hesitate, and I think it’s a wonderful thing for independent literature that she runs her press so fearlessly. It’s terrific that she’s going to publish Midnight Picnic.”

An eerie story about the nature of death, Midnight Picnic is a non-traditional ghost story in which a vengeful child searches for his murderer on the deserted roads of the American countryside, drifting in and out of the afterlife.

“If there’s a real Hell out there in the American heartland, and real ghosts, I suspect Nick Antosca has seen them. Midnight Picnic reinvents the ghost story for our unsettled times—it’s a riveting and terrifying 21st Century Book of the Dead that’s one of the most frightening novels I’ve read in years,” said Elizabeth Hand, author of Generation Loss, Mortal Love, and Winterlong.

Jami Attenberg, author of The Kept Man, has called Midnight Picnic “a thrilling follow-up to his contemplative debut, Fires. His imagination makes an astonishing show in this macabre, bizarre and witty story of ghosts and revenge. Impossible to put down until the extremely satisfying end, Midnight Picnic conjures up the mounting tension of the finest Bradbury story.”

John Haskell, author of American Purgatorio and I Am Not Jackson Pollock, concurred with Hand and Attenberg’s assessment of Antosca’s uncanny ability to unearth the darker elements of human nature: “Beneath the skin of emotion there are muscles and nerves, and that’s where Antosca takes us.”

Called a “page-turner” and “a demented little novel” by Publishers Weekly, Midnight Picnic will be at home in Word Riot Press’ diverse stable of literary and experimental works of fiction.

“Nick’s forceful authorial voice has made him a young writer to watch. I’m elated to have Nick as part of the Word Riot Press family,” Corley said.

Mind Games review at New Pages

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Laura Di Giovine reviewed David Gianatasio’s short story collection, Mind Games, for New Pages:

“David Gianatasio’s Mind Games messes with your head, but in the best way possible. A follow-up to 2006’s Swift Kicks, this brief collection of stories grabs you by the jugular. A mutiny of fervent voices bursts from the page, and each story is clever, bold, and off-the-charts surreal.

“Hilarious, irreverent, anxious, and at times unexpectedly poignant, Mind Games is full of compelling characters and outrageous contradictions. It also has something for everyone – sexed-up infomercials, sci-fi plot lines, stalker romance, and indecipherable riddles. Fans of witty experimental fiction will eagerly await Gianatasio’s next installment.”

Check out the entire review.

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