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Showing 3538 Columns
Showing 3538 Columns
March 30th, 2020
Photo by Lisa Fotios One of my favorite types of library service to offer is bibliotherapy. Yes, that’s a real thing. And it’s exactly what it sounds like—a reading list to help you process trauma, grief, and other difficult emotions when your world has turned upside down. And since our whole world is upside down right now, it seems imperative to me that the prescription would be for the big picture books, characters against the circumstances of the world, good people fighting the good fight.
Read Column →March 27th, 2020
Millionaire authors and billionaire authors and famous authors: It’s too late for you. Everyone else: Hear me out. Now is the time to make a list of things you want to do on the off chance you become rich and famous. It’s clear that once you become rich and famous, you lose perspective. You won’t have great ideas. You just spend your time trying to maintain your riches and fame. Or making mosquito nets. Like netting has ever helped tens of thousands of people...
Read Column →March 26th, 2020
You wrote the book and then edited the book. Then you found someone interested in publishing it and edited the whole thing again. Now you have to write copy for the back and, if you don't have a publisher that takes care of it, get some blurbs.
Read Column →March 25th, 2020
1. Death's Head Press Friends, Jarod Barbee and Patri
Read Column →March 24th, 2020
It feels kind of dumb writing about this when there is a pandemic going on, but I pitched this last month, and in dire times we turn to art. So fuck it, let’s talk about self-hype block. First, I want to say that hyping/branding and selling yourself has nothing to do with creating art. Existentially, if I could just write books and music for myself, I’d still do it. It would be less fun and probably less enjoyable, but the act itself is always worth doing.
Read Column →March 23rd, 2020
Lately I’ve been keeping these columns short. Buuuut I figured you all might be in the mood to think about something other than death. Human death, anyway. And I figured you might have some time to kill, whether that’s because you’re sitting at home and getting paid or sitting at home because you’re laid off. Let’s think about something else for a bit.
Read Column →March 20th, 2020
Photo by Karis Rogerson I’ve been a poet almost as long as I’ve been a person who breathes. Not an acclaimed poet; not even a published poet; but a poet nonetheless, someone who finds solace and freedom in playing with words, in language too pretty for prose, in different structures and stanzas and formats.
Read Column →March 19th, 2020
One may assume that us writers have it the easiest during a nationwide pandemic that calls for social distancing and working from home. To a degree, we are lucky, given that our careers require nothing more that click-clacking away on computers or typewriters all day, and so many of us are introverts anyway, that don't socialize even when there isn't a virulent upper-respiratory infection sweeping across the world.
Read Column →March 18th, 2020
Hazel Drew’s lifeless body was found floating in Teal’s Pond in Sand Lake, NY, on July 11th, 1908. She was young, attractive, and her violent demise baffled many. Over a century later her murder is still unsolved. All that remains is her gravestone at the Brookside Cemetery in Barberville, NY, not far from the scene of the crime. The autopsy revealed the cause of death to be repeated blunt trauma to the back of the head.
Read Column →March 17th, 2020
As 2019 recedes from our collective memory, it’s easy to forget the trends that defined it, from fashion to film to food. Naturally this applies to literature as well — and it can be especially difficult to pin down cover design trends of a given year, as they tend to evolve gradually and may even re-emerge after long periods of dormancy. Indeed, any seasoned cover designer will recognize that no cover design is 100% new. However, each year there will be certain colors, shapes, and textual arrangements that “has its day,” so to speak.
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