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Peter Grandbois
Peter Grandbois is the Barnes and Noble “Discover Great New Writers” and Borders’ “Original Voices” author of The Gravedigger, The Arsenic Lobster: A Hybrid Memoir, and Nahoonkara. He teaches at Denison University in Ohio and can be reached at www.brothersgrandbois.com.
What projects are you currently working on?
I find that I work best when I have multiple projects at various stages of development. The reason is simple. Having things to work on drives away the terror and despair that seem so much a part of the writing life to me. And working on a new project you are
» Continue reading An Interview With Peter Grandbois by David Hoenigman…
Doug Rice
Doug Rice’s newest work is Between Appear and Disappear, a hybrid text of photographs, poetry, fiction, memoir and philosophy being published by Jaded Ibis Productions (February 2012). Dream Memoirs of a Fabulist, another hybrid text of memoir, gender theory, aphorisms and photographs, is being published by Copilot Press (July 2011). His first novel, Blood of Mugwump: A Tiresian Tale of Incest, was published by Fiction Collective 2 and was selected as runner-up for the FC2 First Novel Award, judged by Kathy Acker. He has also published two collections of short fictions A Good Cuntboy is Hard to Find
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Larry Smith
Born in the industrial Ohio Valley in the 1940′s, Larry Smith has worked as a steel mill laborer, a high school teacher, a college professor, and a writer.
A graduate of Mingo Central High School, Muskingum College, and Kent State University, he is the author of eight books of poetry, a book of memoirs, four books of fiction, two literary biographies, a life biography, and two books of translations from the Chinese. He recently completed a photo history of his hometown with high school classmate Guy Mason. He is the director of the Firelands Writing Center and
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Roxanne Carter
Roxanne Carter lives in a log cabin in the Rocky Mountains. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Tarpaulin Sky, Sidebrow, Caketrain, elimae, Peacock Review, and La Petite Zine. Her novel, Glamorous Freak: How I Taught My Dress to Act, will be published by Jaded Ibis Press in the fall of 2011. Se can be found at www.persephassa.com
What book are you currently reading?
Today I am reading a book about Madame Blavatsky. I thought it would be a biography but it is more like a history of the occult in America. The author obviously doesn’t like
» Continue reading An Interview With Roxanne Carter by David Hoenigman…
Peter Cassidy
Peter Cassidy wrote this charming children’s book in honor of his toddler daughter, Emily Clair Cassidy. “She is so adventurous and not shy. I thought that she and Cole had a lot in common.” Originally from Timmins, Ontario, where his story is set, he now teaches pre-kindergarten for the American Embassy Housing Compound in Tokyo.
Please check out this radio interview about the book and its background.
Buy the book from Amazon:A Mole Named Cole and a Whole Lot of Hole
What projects are you currently working on?
I have just finished writing the sequel to Cole
» Continue reading An Interview With Peter Cassidy by David Hoenigman…
Ken Wohlrob is the author of Songs of Vagabonds, Misfits, and Sinners, a new collection of short stories, and The Love Book, both published by Bully Press. He was the co-founder and editor of Bully Magazine for six years. His work has also appeared in Opium, The New York Press, Six Sentences, and Go Metric. You can show him some love at www.kenwohlrob.com.
What projects are you currently working on?
I am still hip-deep in the multimedia project centered around my new short story collection, Songs of Vagabonds, Misfits, and Sinners. Each of the stories are set in New York
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J. A. Tyler is the author of ten books including the recently released INCONCEIVABLE WILSON (Scrambler Books, 2009) and the forthcoming A MAN OF GLASS & ALL THE WAYS WE HAVE FAILED (Fugue State Press, 2011). He is also founding editor of Mud Luscious Press. For more, visit: www.mudlusciouspress.com.
What projects are you currently working on?
I just finished a new prose-poetry book / collection called Variations of a Brother War and am now starting into a new piece that I refer to as Kill Yourself, though that may or may not be the final title. It is a book
» Continue reading An Interview With J.A. Tyler by David Hoenigman…
Janice Lee
Janice Lee is a writer, artist, editor, and curator. She is interested in the relationships between metaphors of consciousness and theoretical neuroscience, and experimental narrative. Her work can be found in Big Toe Review, Zafusy, antennae, sidebrow, Action, Yes, Joyland, Luvina, Everyday Genius, and Black Warrior Review. She is the author of KEROTAKIS (Dog Horn Press, 2010), a multidisciplinary exploration of cyborgs, brains, and the stakes of consciousness, and Daughter (Jaded Ibis, Forthcoming). She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from CalArts and currently lives in Los Angeles where she is a co-curator for the feminist reading series
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John Dermot Woods
John Dermot Woods lives with his family in Brooklyn, NY. His debut novel is The Complete Collection of people, places & things. His stories and comics have appeared in many journals, including The Indiana Review, Hobart, American Letters & Commentary, Salt Hill, No Colony, and 3rd Bed. The image-text novel he wrote with J.A. Tyler, No One Told Me I Would Disappear, is forthcoming from Jaded Ibis Press. He edits the arts quarterly Action,Yes, and organizes the online reading series Apostrophe Cast.
What projects are you currently working on?
As always, too many. I’m always chipping
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Review by David F. Hoenigman
Lost Poet: Four Plays by Jesse Glass (BlazeVOX 2010) showcases the playwright’s wide range of style and diversity of subject matter, while allowing readers to enjoy the dark humor and sense of bitterly ironic fate that infuses each work despite the 13 years that separate the earliest piece from the most recent. Glass’ plays offer a meaty abundance of themes, images and language that will bewilder, enlighten and exhilarate enthusiasts of experimental literature and avant-garde theatre. The writing is fearless and wide-open. It invites multiple levels of interpretation, while it stares straight back at you
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