“There should be more room for more perspectives and less gatekeeping or curating the trends and landscapes that dictate what sells and what sinks.”
Kristen McGuiness discusses the vitality and necessary endurance of small publishing companies.
https://t.co/YlPntaSvKP
“By commingling the present action with this bit of backstory, Cather is finally explicit about the connection she has been implicitly working toward all along.”
Sorbel dives into Willa Cather’s writing and discusses the physical actions in her writing.
https://t.co/8v60nzBChZ
“Writing mystery comes with opportunities and responsibilities—to engage your reader…and hopefully not to let them down at the end.”
Martin MacInnes discusses his new book, writing during the pandemic, Virginia Woolf’s influence, and more.
https://t.co/t7FcDqoMAc
Seema Reza discusses finding a time and environment to write that works for you. She writes about how writing doesn’t need to be something to squeeze into the middle of your schedule. Writing can be spontaneous and intermittent.
https://t.co/JRpPbOZbvX
Happiest of happy book birthdays to @mrbnatural and his amazing new novel, WE ARE GHOST LIT. Pre-orders will begin to ship by the end of this week and James's first event in St. Louis is on 8/28. Help him celebrate by picking up a copy today.
https://t.co/xFmqemeFhM
@BraddockAveBook is proud to reveal the cover of @khemaryal's forthcoming story collection, The In-Betweeners. These are amazing stories and we're thrilled to share them with you. Pre-orders now open!
https://t.co/zZVOvR7h2l
✨Cover Reveal✨
I'm thrilled to share the cover of my forthcoming short story collection, THE IN-BETWEENERS. Incredibly grateful to the @BraddockAveBook team for the amazing work 🙏🙏
The book is available for pre-order at https://t.co/USVDWLs8wo
Congratulations to @BraddockAveBook author, @MichalskiJen, whose story collection, THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS, has been named "Best Book" in Baltimore Magazine's "Best of Baltimore 2023."
Much gratitude to Curtis Smith and @jmwwjournal for this wonderful interview with @BraddockAveBook author, @MCzyzniejewski about his new story collection, THE AMNESIAC IN THE MAZE!
https://t.co/E0ot7SJHbd
So thrilled to see @MichalskiJen's @BraddockAveBook story collection, THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS, getting some wonderful attention in Electric Literature! Huge thanks to @WendyJeanFox for this article.
https://t.co/YNz3MIPOIf
My happiest LR bars to write in are Cigar Republic and @MidtownLR. The happy hour regulars at Midtown call me "Teach" and think I'm insane--"put that book shit away"--but don't let them fool you. They'd run into a burning building to save you--and the whiskey.
@artsletterskuar
Have you read A.O. Scott's essay about reading in last weekend's @nytimesbooks? May not new material, but nicely written with just the right tone--not Luddite-alarmist, but also not pulling any punches.
"Reading...had become our union card to humanity."
https://t.co/ue3S6PcFyS
In 2018, @BraddockAveBook began to publish memoir. The latest, October's A WRITING LIFE, is by scholar and bestselling author, Robert Alter. Describing writing as "intrinsic joy," Alter shares his literary adventures from Columbia to Harvard to Berkeley.
https://t.co/Npy8RNCm8c
Check out this interesting new piece in The Paris Review about Simone de Beauvoir. “Walking through spaces usually possessed by men was proof of her own physical presence, proof of her autonomy and resilience."
https://t.co/3RRKYC8KCr
The Paris Review's column, Re-Covered, explores books that are out-of-print or forgotten. This issue discusses what Lucy Scholes has dubbed "The Madame Bovary of North-East London." Check it out!
https://t.co/g2FlOnKcbX
In his new essay published in The Millions, Ed Simon discusses ghosts haunting literature throughout history. “Not all writing is cursed, but surely all of it is haunted. Literature is a catacomb of past readers, past writers, past books.” Check it out!
https://t.co/b1ZKwW4e45
“Nous Nous is both a suspenseful story about a kidnapping and an incisive meditation on what it means to be held hostage...With striking...empathy, Vanderslice presents the minds and hearts of complex characters united, and reunited, by tragedy.”--@michael_kardos, author of Bluff