Friday, 31 May 2013

FABER ANTH, O'CONNOR S'LIST & FLASH MOB NTERVIEW

I'm having a ball in Cáceres, Spain - a gorgeous heritage city, lovely people, very interesting Irish Studies papers on language and literature. With hot sun and tasty red wine. Heaven :)

A few newsy bits:

The Guardian mentioned Rozz Lewis's Faber anthology review today here.

And I am interviewed by Christopher Allen here in connection with my judging of this year's Flash Mob. Please enter!!

And, in good news, the shortlist for the 2013 Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award has been announced and it consists of six titles.Thrilled to see David Constantine there.

1) Tea at the Midland and other stories – David Constantine – Comma Press, UK
2) Siege 13 – Tamas Dobozy – Milkweed Editions, USA/ Thomas Allen, Canada
3) Black Vodka – Deborah Levy – & Other Stories, UK
4) Black Dahlia & White Rose – Joyce Carol Oates – Harpercollins, USA
5) We’re Flying - Peter Stamm – Granta, UK/ Other Press LLC
6) Battleborn - Claire Vaye Watkins – Granta UK/Riverhead Books USA 


The winning book will be announced in the first week of July and the author will come to Cork to read and receive their award at the culmination of the Cork International Short Story Festival in September www.corkshortstory.net

Monday, 27 May 2013

PIC REPORT: ITALIANS WALKING, FABER READINGS & FLY BIRTHDAY

I had a very busy literary weekend of events. Firstly a walking tour with the Italo-Irish Literary Exchange, which took in Trinity College and Lincoln Place. Then I scooted off to the Faber Social at the Dublin Writers' Festival where I was reading. After that, the Stinging Fly's 15th birthday bash in The Clarence. And yesterday to the Botanic Gardens for a reading from the Italo section of the exchange. All of it was exhilirating and fun.

I am packing for my trip to the AEDEI conference in Spain, as I head off tomorrow, so my report on the weekend consists of pics as I am too busy to write anything. Hi to everyone I met this weekend and big congrats to Kevin Barry who did a mighty job of the Faber launch. Kudos, Kevin. Or, as my daughter Juno calls you, 'Heaven' :)

Catherine Dunne and Federica Sgaggio
Tour guide Pat Liddy and Jack Gilligan, IWC chair, at TCD
Anthony Glavin at TCD
Original front door of Finn's Hotel where Nora Barnacle worked in 1904, the year she met JJ
Sweny's Chemist, Lincoln Place - features in Ulysses - lemon soap? I bought some - yum!
In the window of Sweny's, a bust in a book of Joyce
Mia Gallagher in Sweny's

PJ Murphy, volunteer at Sweny's, a Joyce pilgrimage stop-off
Kevin Barry, Faber anthology launch, Smock Alley
Paul Murray
Little John Nee
Eimear Ryan at the Faber launch
Me reading 'Joyride to Jupiter' at the Faber launch
The wonderful Michael Harding
Pat McCabe
Writers Helena Mulkerns, Sara Mullen and Patrick Chapman at the Fly birthday
Dave Lordan reading at the Fly birthday

The fabulous Larry Beau at the Fly birthday
The Italian Writers reading at the Botanic Gardens

Thursday, 23 May 2013

LYDIA DAVIS WINS MAN BOOKER INTL PRIZE

Lydia Davis - photo: The Guardian
I am delighted that Lydia Davis has won the Man Booker International Prize. This is a welcome shot in the arm to those of use who love/write/value short-short stories and flash fiction. Lydia read at both Cúirt in Galway and the Cork Short Story Festival last year and she divided opinion among writer friends of mine. I thought she was fab and bought her collected, a hefty volume of very short prose works. I highly recommend it.

From the Man Booker people:

"I was recently denied a writing prize because they said I was lazy." runs one of Lydia Davis's two-sentence short stories. Well not any more. Davis has just been awarded the fifth Man Booker International Prize at an award ceremony at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Her inventive, carefully-crafted and hard to categorise works saw off the challenge from nine other contenders from around the world. The judges - Professor Sir Christopher Ricks, Elif Batuman, Aminatta Forna, Yiyun Li and Tim Parks - recognised that crafting spare, philosophical and original works, however short, is not for the lazy at all but takes time, skill and effort.

The Prize, worth £60,000, is awarded for an achievement in fiction on the world stage and Davis's achievements are writ large despite often using startlingly few words (some of her longer stories only stretch to two or three pages). Her work has the brevity and precision of poetry. Sir Christopher Ricks, chairman of the judges, said her "writings fling their lithe arms wide to embrace many a kind. Just how to categorise them? They have been called stories but could equally be miniatures, anecdotes, essays, jokes, parables, fables, texts, aphorisms or even apophthegms, prayers or simply observations." Davis then is not like any other writer and she follows, and contrasts with, the previous winners of the prize -  Ismail Kadaré, Chinua Achebe, Alice Munro and Philip Roth.

Read more about the Man Booker International winner announcement here

Monday, 20 May 2013

FLASH MOB 2013

Image courtesy of fellow judge Marcus Speh
I am one of the judges for the 2013 Flash Mob, open for entries NOW!

FLASH MOB 2013 is a hybrid blog carnival and competition celebrating International Flash Fiction Day. To enter the mob, post a previously unpublished work of flash fiction (300 words or fewer, not including title) to your own blog sometime between now and June 10 (closing date of contest).

Then send the following (1-4 below)  to flashmobjune22@gmail.com
1. the link to the story
2. the story text in the body of your email without your name attached at the top
3. a brief bio
4. a picture of yourself looking mean or cool or funny or arty–nothing boring, no nudity.

Sunday, 19 May 2013

FABER ANTHOLOGY REVIEW

 
Rozz Lewis reviews the Faber anthology of Irish stories, Town and Country (ed. Kevin Barry) here ahead of next Saturday's launch. I'm very appreciative of her kind comments about my story 'Joyride to Jupiter.'

The launch at the Faber Social at the Dublin Writers' Festival on Saturday the 25th at 6pm, in Smock Alley, is going to be a lot of fun. Admission €10. I would love to see you there!

Saturday, 18 May 2013

STINGING FLY - FLASH SHOWCASE UPDATE

Update re. flash showcase in The Stinging Fly: Submissions for the showcase (stories up to 500 words, only one story to be submitted per writer) will be accepted by e-mail only and on one day only: Saturday June 22nd, which is international flash fiction day. The Fly will give further instructions on how to make your submission closer to the time. Keep up to date here.

Friday, 17 May 2013

WRITERS & TIME INTERVIEW

Niamh Boyce, who will soon be world famous with her début novel, The Herbalist, interviews me today about managing time as a writer. Read it here.

Thursday, 16 May 2013

Penguin Ireland Short Story Competition


Penguin Ireland Short Story Competition Penguin Ireland in partnership with the RTE Guide magazine have announced their annual short story competition.

Rules: All entries for the 2013 RTE Guide/Penguin Ireland Short Story Competition should be original, unpublished and previously not broadcast short stories in English of 2,000 words or less. Manuscripts must be typed and cannot be returned. Entrants’ name and contact details (address, phone and/or email) should be on a separate page. The closing date is 6pm on Wednesday July 5th. Entries are welcome from anywhere in the world.

Send your entries to : RTE Guide/Penguin Ireland Short Story Competition, PO Box 1480, RTE, Donnybrook, Dublin 4 or you can email rteguide@rte.ie

Wednesday, 15 May 2013

ITALO-IRISH LITERARY EXCHANGE


Delighted to be heading off to Italy next year in very fine company indeed. From the Irish Writers' Centre:
Writers for Italo-Irish Literary Exchange announced!    

The Irish Writers' Centre is delighted to announce the seven writers who will travel to Italy in May 2014 thanks to a unique alliance between the Irish Writers' Centre, the Italian Institute of Culture in Dublin and the Verona-based arts organisation ònoma. They are:    
  
Nuala Ní Chonchúir
Mia Gallagher
Afric McGlinchey
Sean Hardie
Liz McManus
Noel Monahan 
William Wall  
       
The exchange will feature a daily series of workshops, recreational tours, publishing seminars and literary talks focusing on the challenges facing both emerging and established writers. Congratulations to all!  
    
On 25th May 2013, five Italian writers arrive in Dublin to participate in an exciting programme of literary and cultural events including readings, day trips, panel discussions and musical soirées, before travelling on to Listowel. Acclaimed Italian author Dacia Maraini along with Gaja Cenciarelli, Ida Ferrari, Luigi Grimaldi and Federica Sgaggio will read their work at a free public event at 12 noon on Sunday May 26th at the stunning Botanic Gardens. ALL WELCOME.
    
On Sunday May 26th at 7PM - also a public event but this time at the Irish Writers' Centre - musician Seán Tyrrell is performing. Hailed as "one of the country's major folk voices" (Irish Music Magazine), "rooted in the heartfelt tradition of honesty" (Hotpress), and "the genuine article" (Billboard US), legendary singer/songwriter Seán Tyrrell will perform at the Irish Writers' Centre on Sunday evening, May 26th, at 7.00 p.m. as part of the Italo/Irish Literature Exchange festival. Don't miss this chance to hear what has been described as a"luminously distinctive voice" (Irish Examiner) and "astonishingly accomplished musicianship" (Hotpress). Tickets at €5.00 are likewise going for a song!

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

SALT WANTS NOVELS

UK based publisher Salt is actively seeking novel submissions directly from authors. See here for details.

Monday, 13 May 2013

I'M WITH FRANCIS SCOTT ON THIS ONE

F. Scott Fitzgerald
 F. Scott Fitzgerald’s didn't like to discuss the book he was working on. In a 1940 letter to his daughter Scottie, he said: 'I think it’s a pretty good rule not to tell what a thing is about until it’s finished. If you do you always seem to lose some of it. It never quite belongs to you so much again.' I agree wholeheartedly with this; I can't abide it when people ask me about what I am working on. I just don't want to say.

Read more of Fitzgerald’s thoughts on writing here.

I am fizzing waiting for Baz Luhrmann's movie of The Great Gatsby. I can't wait. I've loved Fitzgerald's work since I was a kid and I am certainly not averse to a screenful of Leo DiCaprio.

I re-read The Great Gatsby last year to gear up for the film coming out. I was in Croatia while reading it so West Egg in the book is now tied in my mind with a hot, strawberry scented Zagreb. It is an exquisite novel; such a great story of obsession, delivered in sentence after gorgeous sentence:

'They were careless people, Tom and Daisy; they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.’ 

Oh, yeah! Bring it on!

Saturday, 11 May 2013

Q and A about The Stinging Fly

Shane Breslin, of the Irish Writing Blog, Q&As me about my guest editorship at The Stinging Fly magazine here.

Friday, 10 May 2013

THE FABER ANTHOLOGY LANDS

Town & Country, the new Faber anthology of Irish Short Stories, edited by Kevin Barry
Look what arrived this morning - oh, the excitement!! I think I will abandon the NIP today in favour of reading this. The titles of the stories alone have me zinging: 'Godīgums' by Keith Ridgway (it means 'straightforwardness/integrity' in Latvian); 'The Second-Best Bar in Cadiz' (Andrew Meehan); 'Brimstone Butterfly' (Des Hogan); 'Saturday, Boring' (Lisa McInerney).

Kevin Barry's introduction to the anthology is suitably brilliant and interesting. A flavour:

'...at any given moment, it seems, there are ten thousand maniacs battering their laptops with caffeinated fingers, and stories are scrawled onto the backs of beer mats, or pricked out in blood on the pale skin of the page.'

'A great story can take all the air out of a room.'

'A great story can make you loosen your collar.'

'It was with a sense of cackling glee that I sent this book to its publisher...The Irish story is changing and is pulsing with great, mad and rude new energies.'

Town and Country will be out 6th June. You can pre-order it here.

The Dublin launch takes place at the Faber Social at the Dublin Writers' Festival in Smock Alley Theatre (change of venue to Smock Alley because of demand!), Saturday 25th May, 6pm. Admission: €10/€8. I'll be reading at it along with fellow writers Patrick McCabe, Paul Murray, Eimear Ryan and Michael Harding. Buy your ticket here.

Thursday, 9 May 2013

ALAN McMONAGLE INTERVIEW



I'm delighted to welcome writer and friend Alan McMonagle to WWR today to celebrate the publication of his new short story collection, Psychotic Episodes, by Arlen House.

Alan is a poet, playwright and short fiction writer living in Galway. He has received awards for his work from the Professional Artists’ Retreat in Yaddo (New York), the Fundación Valparaiso (Spain), the Banff Centre for Creativity (Canada) and the Arts Council of Ireland. He has contributed stories to many journals in Ireland and North America including The Adirondack Review, The Valparaiso Fiction Review, Natural Bridge, Grain, Prairie Fire, Southword and The Stinging Fly.

Liar Liar, his first collection of stories appeared in 2008 (Wordsonthestreet) and was longlisted for the 2009 Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award. The title story from his second collection, Psychotic Episodes, (Arlen House, April 2013) was nominated for a 2011 Pushcart Prize.

Alan McMonagle at the launch of Psychotic Episodes, Cúirt 2013, Galway
Hi Alan and welcome to WWR. You said in interview, regarding short stories, ‘Stories are revelations, discoveries, confessions, little explosions. They attempt to be of reality and, at the same time, to stretch reality.’ Is the short story your natural 'home'? Or how do you see yourself as a writer?

Because I am a restless (as well as a spontaneous) writer my 'natural' home as you put it, Nuala, is wherever my energies are presently taking me. I flit anxiously and eagerly from form to form, and lengthy spells can pass before anything nudges its tentative way across the finish line. For me, it is a contradictory, mysterious, revelatory occupation - I have completed stories in one sitting and have yet to finish poems started years ago.

Essentially, in my writing I like moving from what I know (which isn't very much) and taking it towards what I don't know (which is vast). This is a highwire act. And the wire is invisible! So, sometimes I fail (fall!) and I admit this. So I start again and next time make sure I fail (fall!) better.

I know you count William Gay as a favourite writer. Tell us why that is and which other writers do you count as favourite short fiction writers and why?

William Gay achieved success at quite a late stage in his life. His writing takes my breath away. It is beautiful and stark and lyrical. He trips a switch, and fire and brimstone arrive. He has a hinterland. He knows twisted lives, he has wonderful comic timing, he writes some of the sharpest dialogue I've read. I recommend his collection I Hate To See That Evening Sun Go Down.

I also like the Russian Sergei Dovlatov. He tried for years to get out of Russia. A couple of years after he managed to get to America he discovered in a disused closet the suitcase he had taken with him. Inside the luggage holder were twelve items he had deemed important enough to take with him, and each of the dozen stories in his collection The Suitcase reveals how he came to be in possession of each item. I so enjoy his mordant humour. His matter-of-fact style. The absurdity and chaos of the world as he experienced it.

I will always have a place on my shelf for the Armenian William Saroyan. For his take on childhood. The confusion. The soon-to-be lost innocence. The human comedy of it all.

I also enjoy Isaac Singer, Raymond Carver, Flannery O'Connor, Grace Paley, Amy Hempel, Lorrie Moore, Etgar Keret, Roberto Bolaño, Carson McCullers, Katherine Anne Porter, and Bruno Schulz.

What story do you love? (You know the one that begs to be re-read over and over.)

Impossible to confine it to one.

Bullet in the Brain by Tobias Wolff. Six pages. An entire life packed into six pages. A brilliant set-up. An inconceivable continuation. A mesmerising final image. And, of course, it's about language and usage, how life can defeat a man, even a man so initially enthusiastic about the possibilities of existence.

In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson is Buried by Amy Hempel. This story proves that humour and tragedy co-exist...

Araby from Dubliners. For the language. For the concision. For the discovery the boy makes at the exotic market that gives the story its name. A painful discovery, something you would not necessarily wish upon one so young, but a valid discovery nevertheless.

Others stories I regularly return to include The Gospel According To Mark by Jorge Luis Borges; Symbols and Signs by Vladimir Nabokov; When We Were Nearly Young by Mavis Gallant; Emergency by Denis Johnson; The Colonel Says I Love You by Sergei Dovlatov; Last Night by James Salter (I think you would love this story, Nuala).

I know it and I do love it; I love its slant view. Salter is a genius.
You write long and short fiction, as well as poetry. Do you find a crossover of themes between them all? Or does each stand alone for you?

Well, a poem is a poem; a story is a story; and until it lands on the stage a piece of drama conveys purely through dialogue (spoken and unspoken). That said, because my stories contain a lot of dialogue I often finish a story and am asking myself can it be adapted. (I have adapted two recent stories into radio plays, for example.) Also, I try to be brief and I suppose this is partly how the poems arrive. Cutting lines I find more enjoyable than accumulating paragraphs (which is why my longer fiction is currently resting in an offshore drawer!) Ultimately, it is story I am attracted to, and how story arrives will usually influence its final shape - be it short  fiction, poem,  or piece of drama. Naturally, thematic considerations overlap, and more intriguingly perhaps, also the elements - narrative, dialogue, imagery, tone, structure and so on.

Humour is important to you as a writer. Are you drawn to funny work as a reader?

I try to use humour to bring something unfunny into relief. I don't always succeed, but when I do, it is very satisfying. Woody Allen says comedy equals tragedy plus time. I think humour and tragedy run together, co-exist. Beckett (again) was probably the writer most attuned to this. To paraphrase his own words, 'nothing matters, so everything matters.' Also, I think it was Chekhov who said happy people write unhappy stories and unhappy people write happy stories. Of course somehow blending these polar elements - the humorous and the tragic - is the ideal. Lorrie Moore is great at this. Her stories read: Joke, Joke, Joke, Joke, Joke, then comes the punch in the soul.

You have travelled a lot in South America and Europe. Do these travels influence your  writing?

Travels influence my reading. The Uruguayan Eduardo Galeano. The Chileno Roberto Bolaño. The Russian Sergei Dovlatov. The brilliant Pole Ryszard Kapuscinski. Next up for me is the Bulgarian Aleko Konstantinov and the Albanian Luan Starova.

Travelling hasn't influence my writing yet because I come with a delay mechanism! However, someone close to me has thrown down the gauntlet and suggested I put together a collection set completely outside Ireland. Knowing myself, I'll probably begin at the airport...

You hold an MA in Writing from NUI Galway. Do you think it is a useful experience and/or qualification?

The course is great for focus and discipline. A dream come true if you like to flit from one form to another. You can experiment. It's great for making like-minded friends. You will quickly feel part of a community. The qualification will provide you with credentials for future earning (teaching, editing, proofreading, and so forth) - because  if there is one definite in life it is that you are not going to make money from the writing that is part of your soul. 

What is your writing process – morning or night; longhand or laptop? Are you a notebook user?

I tend to write in the morning and in the evening. I am not productive during afternoons. I like to start longhand. If it's 'firm' I will get to the laptop. I have a beautiful collection of notebooks from everywhere that I am terrified to spoil with clumsy scrawl. A writing friend of mine writes on whatever it is she has to hand - beer mat, napkin, loaf wrapper blowing in the wind. She impales these loose jottings on a spike file and every weekend she 'clears out' what she has accumulated, decides what is useful. This is a good system, I think.

What advice would you offer beginning writers?

You must persevere. Writing is a minority sport. It is a game you lose almost all the time. Read as widely as you can. Find your tuning forks. And re-read these.
If you have been spoonfed the principles of good writing do not be afraid to stray from them - especially if this is where your energies are taking you. If you are getting something out of what you have written, there is a good chance someone else will. Writing is an act of faith. And so, ultimately, it is its own reward. Remember, every day is the first day.

Readers, you can read more about Alan and his upcoming readings, events etc. at his website here and you can buy Psychotic Episodes online or in person at Kennys and other good book shops.

Tuesday, 7 May 2013

GUEST FICTION EDITOR - STINGING FLY

I am thrilled to be able to announce that I will be guest fiction editor for the spring 2014 issue of super lit mag The Stinging Fly. I am particularly interested in receiving flash fiction/short-shorts up to 500 words. Stories to be submitted in June. More details in this link.

Friday, 3 May 2013

THE BOAT DREAM



I dreamt last night that I was the skipper of a boat (this was my job). I had no training but I was doing OK, sailing along, with a full load of passengers. Until I went over a small waterfall and wondered, as the boat fell, if we would sink. We didn't. Then I was sailing around trying to find a pier or jetty, but it had been replaced by a dump, so I couldn't dock. The passengers were annoyed and I felt terrible. It was made clear to me that I would shortly be fired.

I dream vividly, every night, usually such nonsensical stuff that it can't have been inspired by anything real, anything I have seen or heard. So, mostly I would see my dreams as being unanalysable. But this one - The Boat - well, it strikes me that this is me writing my NIP (Novel #3).

I am in charge of a boat/novel but I don't feel like I'm in charge. The boat/plot regularly takes unexpected nosedives but it recovers. The passengers/characters are disgruntled; I am not doing right by them. I am two thirds of the way into the journey, so I am now searching for a dock/ending. Luckily, the only person who can fire me is me, so that part won't be happening, but, I guess, the threat of it is always there. Because even when the novel is finished, who is to say it will float at all?

In less unsettling news I signed the contract for Novel #2 yesterday and it will be out spring 2014. Title TBC as neither I nor my editor at New Island are particulalry attached to Highland. Watch this space :)

And, now, I must get back to my little boat and hope that all goes well on today's sail.

Thursday, 2 May 2013

NFFD CALL FOR SUBS - ANTHOLOGY

National Flash-Fiction Day are looking for stories up to 500 words by May 17th for this year's anthology:

This year we are looking for stories which take their place in the larger web of art. So we are looking for pieces which have been inspired by another work - a book, story, poem, painting, photograph, piece of music, or anything else artistic. It can be a direct relationship, or a loose one, an homage or a tangential glance which sparks the muse. We don't mind the connection, we just want to see how other works of art feed into your writing.

Guidelines:

Word count: 500 word maximum.

Deadline: Midnight GMT on Friday 17th May 2013.

Location: Submissions are welcome world-wide, with no restriction.

Submissions: Please paste your stories into the body of an email and send to nffdanthology@gmail.com. Maximum of 2 stories per writer, and please send them in the same email.

Small Print: No simultaneous submisions or previously published work, please. However, work previously posted on your own blog or website is fine.
We will not consider any work which is any way offensive or discriminatory.

There will be a fast turn-around on this anthology, in order to get it out in time for the Day, so you should hear back promptly, but if you have any queries or questions, please contact us through our general email address, rather than the anthology one.

This year's anthology will be edited by Calum Kerr and Holly Howitt. The two editors will read all the submissions and draw up their 'wish list' before wrangling endlessly over which ones make the final cut.