Archivio mensile:Agosto 2011

Cricket Online Review: new issue

Cricket Online Review, Volume 7, Number 1, is up:

featuring work from John M. Bennett, Joel Chace, Howie Good, Raymond Farr, Francis Raven, Travis Macdonald and Stephen Dorneman, among others.

See also Erg ’s website to view innovative chapbooks from Bennett, Macdonald and others.

superfosfato di accordo

   
degenerazione dei potentati specchio.
informiamo gli ioni, gli agnellini della cottura, del momento. acquerugiola, caffè per il suffragio universale. una battuta d’arresto nel caspio. ma in fondo gli afidi hanno fiducia. hanno la droga.
beh, che capacità distruttiva. o rapacità. intanto passa e il trend ricapitola. facilitano, ricapitolano. le cose che più si notano. i seni, la filantropia. ci sono dei quadrati di 1 millimetro di lato che possono essere barrati discordando.
    

semipostal substratosphere meetinghouse

  
brakeman paginate audaciously hhorrective girlies. toxins ht108 improve excrescent lesion toiletry. chippendale iconographic flamenco battleship is falstaffian, preconscious. needn’t any typography maori legionary purgatorial dogcatcher.
candlestick heads drip on lohengrin. weekly.
the centennial fuchsia zenith provides sailfish porridge. enough indigo, enough periphrasis, enough urticated anaerobic folklore.
   

g-

since it is possible to leave google+ without leaving gmail &tc, i preferred to keep my fb account, and i quit some other oppressive or boring “social nothing” (=social duties in being a gallant smart 1 instead of a poor unplugged 0). (i –often– love to be an anonymous 0).

in google+ i foresee the umpteenth example of my messy future. i don’t need more internet. i feel i’m already trapped. (i don’t need ‘another’ gossamer). (am starting being mad at ‘this’ web. seems like a do-it-yourself jail. “we give you the cage walls for free, you do the work & trap yourself & bring yr friends into”)…

Otoliths, issue #22

Issue twenty-two of Otoliths has gone live

As always, it presents the broad church of creativity the journal is renowned for, with new work from John Martone, Elisa Gabbert & Kathleen Rooney, Richard Kostelanetz, Philip Byron Oakes, Karen Neuberg, dan raphael, Márton Koppány, Martin Burke, Stephen Nelson, John M. Bennett, Morgan Harlow, Sheila E. Murphy, Anny Ballardini, Raymond Farr, Ray Scanlon, Marco Giovenale, Ryan Scott,Tom Beckett (interviewing Kirsten Kaschock), Kirsten Kaschock, Erica Eller, Jim Meirose, Howie Good, Enola Mirao, Jean Vengua (onDion Farquhar’s Feet First), Walter Ruhlmann, Jill Jones, David James Miller, Michael Caylo-Baradi, Catherine Vidler, Jillian Mukavetz, Zachary Scott Hamilton, Jill Chan, Glenn R. Frantz, Felino Soriano, Iain Britton, Mark Cobley, bruno neiva, Brenda Mann Hammack, Toby Fitch, Tony Rickaby, Grzegorz Wróblewski, Lisa Samuels, Kevin Opstedal, Gustave Morin, Rich Murphy, Laura Wetherington, Jeff Harrison, J. D. Nelson, Charles Freeland, Rosaire Appel, Ann Vickery, Isaac Linder, Bobbi Lurie, Sam Langer, Rose Hunter, Spencer Selby, Jason Lester, Michael Brandonisio, Bob Heman, Keith Higginbotham, Connor Stratman, & Marcia Arrieta.

Issue twenty-two Date of Publication August 1, 2011.
Individual pieces Copyright © 2011 by their respective creators

Editor: Mark Young

All images in Otoliths can be enlarged by clicking on them.

Sarah Mangold’s new chapbook

Textile Series #3: An Antenna Called the Body by Sarah Mangold
“Shall we set forth?” asks Sarah Man­gold in the first poem of tex­tile series chap­book #3. And set forth you shall, in this 26-page chap­book. Mangold’s quirky lyrics seek out the per­pet­ual residues/records of the body, the sound inside the mouth, the image on the eye. Don’t be with­out this beau­ti­ful chap­book, sewn with a smat­ter­ing of tex­tile rem­nants. Get your copy for only $8.

What’s next?

Currently in production, Lucky, a new chapbook by Mairéad Byrne featuring illustrations by Abigail Lingford! In August/September, we have chapbooks by Rachel DuPlessis, rob mclennan and Jimmy Lo! We will also have an open reading period this fall so keep your antenna tuned to the textile series!

About the Textile Series 
A project of little red leaves, the textile series takes the hand out of “hand-sewn chapbooks.” It’s real work in the age of mechanical reproduction. It’s the little sewing machine that could. It’s ironed and folded and sewn and pulled and the threads stick out. All textile series chapbooks are 5.5″ by 4.25″ with fabric covers scavenged from old curtains, bedsheets and other textile remnants. We  consider it a micro-revolution. A call to action against staples, tape and glue. Coming at you em-dashed, a little wrinkled, and needlessly obscure.