Rumpus Originals

All Past Was Once Now

Josh Cook  ·  May 25th, 2012

To Yang, poetry is capable of communicating the consumed during. It is a “library tablet found underground,” whose immediacy is not buried by the passage of time.

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Only After the Soiree

Laura E. Davis  ·  May 23rd, 2012

Kristina Marie Darling’s is a shadow box collection of antiques, each holding other worlds and histories.

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The Other Nabokov

Matthew Aquilone  ·  May 22nd, 2012

In The Unreal Life of Sergey Nabokov, Paul Russell imagines the life of the not-famous Nabokov and delivers a novel that lives outside the legacy. …more

Walkabout

Anisse Gross  ·  May 21st, 2012

Walkabout, NYRB, James Vance MarshallJames Vance Marshall’s 1959 book Walkabout tells a unique story of two stranded children who are rescued from the Australian outback by another young boy on a wilderness quest. …more

Saturday History Lesson: The Unrequited Yeats

Michelle Dean  ·  May 19th, 2012

Certain writers cast shadows of incredible length and darkness, and Yeats is one of them. His poetry has a way of crowding out the sun. As a teenager I fell for that poem of his that begins, “When you are old and grey and full of sleep,” and reminds its object that “one man loved the pilgrim soul in you.” It was the most romantic thing I’d ever read; how anyone could refuse this man was a mystery to me. …more

Why Did You Leave Me Open Like That?

Virginia Konchan  ·  May 18th, 2012

Emily Kendal Frey’s compact, laconic poems from her first collection, The Grief Performance, outwit, outlast, and, eponymously, outperform not only death, but failure, ennui, and despair.

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The Game of Art and Ideas

Catherine Tung  ·  May 17th, 2012

Joseph Masheck’s lively new essay collection Texts on (Texts on) Art traces artistic influences from unexpected corners. …more

Eyes Open to the Shifting Sky

T Fleischmann  ·  May 16th, 2012

In this collection, Fisher focuses on the tensions of bringing a child into a world of war— of living your regular, daily experience while knowing that others die by violence, both down the street and across oceans.

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Pehlwani, or “Pinholes of Light”

David Wescott  ·  May 15th, 2012

Tania James’s new short story collection, Aerogrammes, is infused with family discord, ethnic discrimination, and psychological trauma wrought from multicultural families in America and England. …more

Tintin in Vietnam

Erik Wennermark  ·  May 15th, 2012

Some years ago—never mind how long precisely—having once again boozed through last call and beyond, upon my wobbly return home I would drunkenly sink into a hot bath and read Adventures of Tintin comics. …more

Bemused Bystanders

Alicia Kennedy  ·  May 14th, 2012

The first English translation of Daniel Sada, Almost Never is a bright introduction of this Spanish star who brings humor and unmatched style to the ordinary. …more

My Mouse Field Was a Triumph

Leah Umansky  ·  May 12th, 2012

Tanning’s poetry is as unique as the artwork she’s produced over the years. It’s real and vibrant, even at the end of her life. This last book of poems is a simple treat – an embrace.

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The Rumpus Interview With Julianna Baggott

Roxane Gay  ·  May 11th, 2012

Julianna Baggott’s Pure is about a post-apocalyptic world where the responsibility for changing and saving civilization lies with children.

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Why Should Anything Be Inappropriate?

Melissa Ginsburg  ·  May 11th, 2012

At her best Lehmann exhibits a depth of sympathy and uncertainty paired with keen observation.

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The World Cracks Open

Malcolm Forbes  ·  May 10th, 2012

Bill Clegg’s new book, Ninety Days: A Memoir of Recovery, follows the recovering crack addict as he tries – and sometimes fails – to stay sober. …more

The Trouble With Prince Charming or He Who Trespassed Against Us

Roxane Gay  ·  May 9th, 2012

We all know the common fairy tale. There’s a man and a woman—rarely, if ever, do we see stories about a woman and a woman or a man and a man—who must overcome some obstacle to reach happily ever after. …more

Snow Moves Like an Ancient Herd

Ellen Miller-Mack  ·  May 9th, 2012

Voices of the Rainbow: Contemporary Poetry by Native Americans is a reissue of an anthology first published in 1975. Sacred Clowns won’t jump off the pages, but you will be reminded whose land you may be parked on—if you arrived after Columbus, that is.

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The Rumpus Interview with Damion Searls

Bezalel Stern  ·  May 9th, 2012

To say that Amsterdam Stories is a pleasure to read is a vast understatement. This pearl of a book, containing all of the Dutch author Nescio’s greatest stories, evoked in me a joy I seldom receive: the jolt of clarity and wistful understanding that comes from reading a truly remarkable prose stylist. …more

The Fourth Dimension

Melissa Queen  ·  May 8th, 2012

Catherine Chung’s first novel, Forgotten Country, is a captivating flux of family history and cultural folklore that examines identity, immigration, and familial obligations in the face of loss. …more

Unknown Unknowns

Ed Winstead  ·  May 7th, 2012

Set in South Africa, Patrick Flanery’s debut novel Absolution weaves together four stories about the guilt that we all share, and the absolution that we are all seeking. …more

The Rumpus Interview with Tupelo Hassman

Nancy Smith  ·  May 7th, 2012

Girlchild, Tupelo Hassman’s stunning debut novel, follows Rory Dawn Hendrix through a rough childhood in the Calle.

“Just north of Reno and just south of nowhere is a town full of trailers …more

If You Walk In the Darkness

Barbara Berman  ·  May 5th, 2012

In restoring the words of Jesus to their rightful poetry, and making an excellent case for this necessity, Barnstone brings their music, passion, ethics and intellectual rigor into a more complete view.

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The Bitterness of Clove

Lois Bassen  ·  May 4th, 2012

Her new collection’s… perspectives are varied but unified by intense focus, much like the eyes of bees. Hive is a word that recurs, and the nervous energy of the poems gives the reader a non-alcoholic buzz.

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The Room We All Desire Though No One Dares Enter

Thomas Larson  ·  May 3rd, 2012

Zona, Geoff Dyer’s extended meditation on Andrei Tarkovsky’s film Stalker, meanders through this complex film about avoiding a confrontation with our soul. …more

Exiled in the Far North of Longing

Joey Connelly  ·  May 2nd, 2012

Howell surprises by not trying to surprise at all…. Once a reader takes these poems on their terms, the poems become really intricate and beautiful.

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The Rumpus Interview with Jonah Lehrer

M. Rebekah Otto  ·  May 2nd, 2012

If you listened to Radiolab or read the New Yorker in the last three years, you’ve probably encountered the science journalist Jonah Lehrer. …more

The 1960s Revamped and Re-imagined

Gina Rodriguez  ·  May 1st, 2012

Terry Bisson’s new novel, Any Day Now, a blend of coming-of-age tropes and alternate history, sweeps us through the turbulent ’60s and imagines a 1968 that both RFK and MLK survived. …more

The Internet is the Machine

Kate Petersen  ·  April 30th, 2012

Elizabeth Ellen’s Fast Machine compiles 94 of the author’s rhythmic, sprawling stories. …more

A Brilliant Button Without Any Cloth

Lisa Wells  ·  April 28th, 2012

The promised west in The Oregon Trail IS The Oregon Trail is an amalgam of bootstrap romance, wilderness bordered by suburban sprawl, death, and the ferocity of natural processes.

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THE WEEK IN GREED #5: The Willy Loman Vote

Steve Almond  ·  April 27th, 2012

A few weeks ago I was in an airport and I did that dumb thing I so often do in airports, which is to retrieve a stray section of USA Today out of a fancy airport trashcan. …more

THE RUMPUS BLOG

Are You My Mother?

NPR shares a six-page excerpt from Are You My Mother?, Alison Bechdel’s latest graphic memoir. Here’s a conversation between Bechdel and the Paris Review.

“There’s so much she hasn’t told me, and so many big obligatory questions that I didn’t touch on in this book. Like, what has it been like for my mother to live with the pain of her husband’s suicide? I can’t ask her that. I can’t even raise that question in the book, because that’s too painful. So in a way the book is constructed around these big gaping absences.”

6 hours ago (0)

“I Was There”

William Dereseiwicz’s luminous response to Kurt Vonnegut’s oeuvre recently printed by the Library of America, is a critique as much as it is hero-worship.

Dereseiwicz confronts Vonnegut’s novels from his earliest to his last, focusing on Vonnegut’s zenith in moral seriousness and the long, personal road to Slaughterhouse-Five. Vonnegut played around with his essential question, the elegantly put “What are people for?”, in his early work, though he then lacked the artistic and rhetorical strength of the novels to come. …more

1 day ago (0)

Lydia Melby: The Last Book I Loved, The Cat’s Table

For years when I was young I would crouch beneath the dinner table to watch my parents drink after-dinner coffee and wine with an ever-changing group of scientists—a tall man from Colombia whose mustache is even more impressive than my father’s, a shy Chinese man who twice brought me folded paper fans, a thin young woman from India with acetic hair who rarely speaks, but whose murmured jokes can pitch the group into laughter. …more

1 day ago (0)

Risky Moves

Granta interviews Tania James whose collection Aerogrammes and Other Stories is out this month. James discusses writing from a child’s perspective, scriptology, and the short form.

“Certainly novels can and should take risks but maybe I feel more freedom in the short story form because if it fails halfway in, I don’t feel an urge to toss myself out the window.”

1 day ago (0)

Have you always wanted to write for The Rumpus?

No? Why not?

We’d like to know the last book you loved and why. Send us a writeup of the last book you truly loved — a little bit book review and a lot about why you loved it — along with a short bio. We’ll publish our favorites in The Rumpus blog. No length requirements, but please refrain from reviewing books written by people you know.

Email to: Marie AT therumpus.net

2 days ago (5)

Adam Levin Interview

KCRW talks with Adam Levin about his latest collection of short stories, Hot Pink, behaviorism, the Marx brothers, strange sentences, and his affinity for big drama without sappiness.

(Via Electric Literature)

3 days ago (0)

Emily St. John Mandel Interview

Episode 70 of Brad Listi’s Other People podcast features Emily St. John Mandel.

Mandel discusses the genesis of her new novel, The Lola Quartet (which was our April Rumpus Book Club selection), dual-citizenship, multi-genre books, and more.

4 days ago (0)

A Few Words from Maurice Sendak

“I had a cartoon in my high school newspaper magazine. Terrible, terrible shit.”

A sneak preview of The Comics Journal’s interview with Maurice Sendak.

4 days ago (0)

Book Review Love

Jen Vafidis’ Rumpus review of Threats won “Best Anointing” over at Electric Literature’s May Critical Hit Awards.

1 week ago (0)

Horn! Reviews

HORN! REVIEWS: <br />Leaving the Atocha StationHORN! REVIEWS:
Leaving the Atocha Station

Another fantastic Rumpus Comic book review by Kevin Thomas.

1 week ago (0)

Voices from the Arab Spring

Now That We Have Tasted Hope archives the “most important” primary source documents of the Arab Spring. Published by McSweeney’s and Byliner, and edited by Rumpus contributor Daniel Gumbiner, the book derives its title from Khaled Mattawa’s poem by the same name.

“From the harrowing accounts of tortured protesters to the hollow appeals of crumbling regimes and the triumphant songs of revolutionaries, these documents catalog the events of the Arab Spring in all its complexity and drama.”

1 week ago (0)

Late Night Library

The second episode of Late Night Conversation features Rumpus essays editor Roxane Gay.

Listen in as Gay talks with guest host Karen Munro about emerging writers, publicizing her debut novel, and online journals.

1 week ago (0)

RIP Mike McGrady, Literary Hoax Mastermind

Award-winning Newsday reporter Mike McGrady passed away on Sunday at 78. He was best known as the architect of a literary hoax, the 1969 collaborative novel, Naked Came the Stranger, which spent many weeks on the New York Times best-seller list.

“As one of Newsday’s truly outstanding literary talents, you are hereby officially invited to become the co-author of a best-selling novel… There will be an unremitting emphasis on sex. Also, true excellence in writing will be quickly blue-penciled into oblivion.”

1 week ago (0)

Michael Robbins Interview

Vol. 1 Brooklyn converses with Michael Robbins about his recently released poetry collection, Alien vs. Predator. Other topics of discussion include his hatred of Mississippi, Dadaism, suberversion in music, Occupy, and the police.

“The stuff that interests me is dangerous, and it’s not always designed to suggest the proper ameliorations, you know. Art is contradiction. It’s not something that’s going to conform to our nice, liberal values.”

1 week ago (0)

Mike Doughty Interview

The Outlet talks with Mike Doughty about this new memoir The Book of Drugs, medication, luck, Soul Coughing, and more.

“I don’t think active pain is necessarily useful. I don’t know what it’d be like if I was drawing from a [laughs] happy childhood, but I don’t feel like a false self. The first time I’d started taking drugs for depression – I didn’t know I was bipolar yet; this was before I’d gotten sober – my sexuality shut down.”

1 week ago (0)

Nor Cal Book Awards

The 31st Annual Northern California Book Awards will honor our own Paul Madonna with a Special Recognition Award for Everything Is Its Own Reward, An All Over Coffee Collection

The free ceremony will include readings by the award-winning authors, followed by a book signing and reception. June 10, 1:00-2:30 pm at San Francisco Main Library (100 Larkin Street). More info can be found here.

2 weeks ago (0)

Ye Olde Fart Jokes

Meanwhile in England, a troupe of 24 modern day pilgrims re-enacted Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, walking the 1637 pilgrimage route and raising money for the National Literacy Trust.

The group stopped at the landmarks mentioned in the tale and each pilgrim told their assigned character’s story with full audience participation, anachronistic twists, and sock puppeteering; the bawdiest of which were audio-recorded. When all was said and done, the group had raised more than double their intended fund-raising goal, bringing in £10,500. Here taketh the makere of this blogpost his leve.

2 weeks ago (0)

Pulitizer Do-Over

NYT Magazine asked writers and critics which novels deserved this year’s “lost” Pultizer Prize. DFW’s The Pale King was a repeat hypothetical winner.

The Pale King, my favorite work of fiction from 2011, isn’t David Foster Wallace’s greatest novel; perhaps it isn’t even fully ‘his,’ given that it was edited and published after his death. But his name belongs in the canon.”

2 weeks ago (0)

Tiny Beautiful Things

Library Journal interviews Cheryl Strayed about Tiny Beautiful Things, her forthcoming collection of Dear Sugar columns. Strayed reveals the best and worst advice she’s ever received. The best? From her mother: “Zap them back with super love.”

2 weeks ago (0)

“Super Sad True Habits”

At Tin House, Rumpus contributor Courtney Maum introduces us to the writing habits of “highly effective writers.” Part-one features many people we love, including Rumpus essays editor Roxane Gay and columnist Steve Almond.

2 weeks ago (0)

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The Blurb

THE BLURB #21: This Is Your Brain—on Books, on Screens

THE BLURB #21: This Is Your Brain—on Books, on Screens

After just five hundred years of movable type and the Enlightenment it begat, we are blinded by how brief our dwelling in the kingdom of print turned out to be.

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