Thursday, March 18, 2010

Ellipsis Press profiled at Hayden's Ferry Review


Hayden's Ferry Review profiles several small presses, including Ellipsis, here:
http://haydensferryreview.blogspot.com/search/label/Small%20Press%20Month

HFR: What advice do you have for emerging writers looking to be published by a small press? What is it about a work that makes you want to publish it?

Ellipsis Press: One person's gutsy transgression is another's mere novelty. What we're looking for is structural or stylistic innovation which also has an intellectual and emotional payoff. This pleasure should be fairly immediately apparent, i.e. not overly delayed or latent (though we can be teased). We will often jump randomly to pages and read whole paragraphs; if your work has a consistency of purpose and language, we'll read more...

Monday, March 15, 2010

Harp & Altar #7 is now live!

From Fra Keeler by Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi
‘It’s on the edge of a canyon,’ the realtor said, raising his eyebrows when I offered to buy the home without having looked at it first.

‘Fine,’ I said, though I wasn’t sure exactly what the realtor meant. Then I didn’t say anything for a long time because I was thinking of Fra Keeler’s death. And it seemed the realtor wanted to repeat what he had just said, his eyebrows even more tense. ‘Some things aren’t worth looking into,’ I said, and the realtor’s eyebrows slackened a bit. Then I asked, ‘Where are the papers?’ ‘Here they are,’ he said. ‘I’d like to sign them,’ I said, and he pushed them across the table with his middle finger. What an ugly finger, I remember thinking while I signed the papers, and then I got up and I left.

We are said to die of one thing on paper, but it is entirely of something different that we die, I thought as I left the realtor’s office. And it is dangerous to take the discrepancy between the two for granted, what one actually dies of and what one is said to have died of on paper; there is hardly ever a correspondence. And I’m thinking now that some people’s deaths need to be thoroughly investigated. I’m more than certain that I thought this then too, as I left the realtor’s office, but the thought wasn’t as highly illuminated in my head. I’m thinking now, it isn’t every day one comes across a death that is especially timely and magnificent, for example Fra Keeler’s death. And then, one really has to wonder, one has to begin to think, to retrace the mental footsteps of the deceased person, e.g. Fra Keeler, since the chance that such a timely death would remain unexplained on paper is that much more significant.



Harp & Altar #7 is now available — with fantastic poetry and fiction by Cynthia Arrieu-King, Ana Božičević, Matthew Klane, Michael O’Brien, Alejandra Pizarnik translated by Jason Stumpf, Brett Price, Jared White, Edmond Caldwell, Susan Daitch, Luca Dipierro, Craig Foltz, A.D. Jameson, Matthew Kirkpatrick, and Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi. Also: Farrah Field on Julia Cohen; Patrick Morrissey on Joshua Harmon and Rob Schlegel; Michael Newton’s gallery reviews; and art by Brandon Downing.

The Harp & Altar Anthology

The Harp & Altar Anthology

Announcing the publication of
The Harp & Altar Anthology

ISBN 978-0-9637536-4-9

Poetry & Fiction | 336 pages | $17
Edited by Keith Newton and Eugene Lim

The Harp & Altar Anthology ($17 + shipping):
Pubdate: June 1, 2010.
Pre-Order today! Book ships upon publication.

Collecting the ground-breaking poetry and fiction from the first six issues of the online journal Harp & Altar. With writing by Roberta Allen • Stephanie Anderson • Jason Bacasa • Andrea Baker • Jessica Baran • Jessica Baron • Shane Book • Donald Breckenridge • Michael Carlson • Joshua Cohen • Julia Cohen • Adam Clay • Lynn Crawford • Oisín Curran • Claire Donato • Farrah Field • Corey Frost • David Goldstein • Andrew Grace • Kate Greenstreet • Sarah Gridley • Emily Gropp • Evelyn Hampton • Jennifer Hayashida • Stefania Heim • Lily Hoang • Joanna Howard • Dan Hoy • Thomas Kane • Steve Katz • Karla Kelsey • Joanna Klink • Jennifer Kronovet • Norman Lock • Jill Magi • Justin Marks • Peter Markus • Eugene Marten • Stephen-Paul Martin • Zachary Mason • Miranda Mellis • Sara Michas-Martin • Patrick Morrissey • Ryan Murphy • Eileen Myles • Bryson Newhart • Linnea Ogden • Cameron Paterson • Johannah Rodgers • Joanna Ruocco • Elizabeth Sanger • Rob Schlegel • Zachary Schomburg • Kate Schreyer • Andrei Sen-Senkov • Brandon Shimoda • Peter Jay Shippy • Joanna Sondheim • Mathias Svalina • Bronwen Tate • G.C. Waldrep • Derek White • Jared White • Joshua Marie Wilkinson • Paul Winner • David Wirthlin • Michael Zeiss • Leni Zumas


Thursday, February 4, 2010

SHADOWPLAY reviewed by Dawn Raffel in The Brooklyn Rail

This is a cerebral work, and Lock is a heady writer, yet he evokes a deeply sensual world in which the smell of cinnamon all but sings in the breeze and the sea beckons like a lover... Shadowplay is informed by so many stories... that I initially feared I’d need to haul out my old Bullfinch’s Mythology and a dozen other reference works. But I didn’t. The novel stands on its own and does its tricky work unaided, like the afterlife of a dream. I suspect Lock is less interested in the reader catching everything than in catching the reader. He does.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Joanna Ruocco featured on Apostrophe Cast

Joanna Ruocco featured at Apostrophe Cast. Hear the author read from THE MOTHERING COVEN at http://www.apostrophecast.com/index.html.

In The Mothering Coven, Joanna Ruocco builds us a vacation cottage in a mad village inhabited by brilliant kooks such as Mrs. Borage, who mixes metaphysics with the chores, and ace reporter, Duncan Michaels, whose articles are never read. When it is time for you to leave this place, we think you will find the characters following you. Please enjoy Joanna Ruocco.

http://www.apostrophecast.com/index.html

Friday, January 15, 2010

mlp's {first year} anthology

Ellipsis Press authors Joanna Ruocco, Norman Lock, and Eugene Lim have writing in the anthology [First Year] out from MLP, a collection of their initial run of excellent chapbooks:

But it from MLP: http://www.aboutjatyler.com/books/mlp-anthology-1

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

THE COLLAGIST podcasts Norman Lock reading from SHADOWPLAY


A big thanks to Matt Bell for THE COLLAGIST and its most recent podcast, featuring Norman Lock reading from his SHADOWPLAY. An excerpt from Norman Lock’s new novel Shadowplay also appeared in the October 2009 issue of The Collagist.

Podcast here: http://thecollagist.com/wordpress/?p=479


Friday, December 11, 2009

Little Burn Films' 60 Writers / 60 Places

Little Burn Films' 60 Writers / 60 Places will screen today at noon at Pratt University and tomorrow 12/10 6:30PM at PPOW Gallery.

Ellipsis Press authors Eugene Marten & Eugene Lim, along with several contributors to our upcoming Harp & Altar anthology--Eileen Myles, Joanna Howard, and Leni Zumas--will be featured.

See trailers and more info here:
http://www.littleburnfilms.com/60Writers60Places.html

PPOW Gallery is at 511 W 25th St, Rm 301 :: New York, NY 10001 :: 212.647.1044

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Two upcoming readings

This Friday 12/11 @ 7PM Eugene Marten reads with Erich Hintze and musician Phillip Stearns as part of the Littoral series at Issue Project Room. Marten's new book FIREWORK due out soon from Tyrant Books.
http://issueprojectroom.org/2009/11/04/littoral-with-phillip-stearns/

On Monday 12/14 @ 8PM Eugene Lim reads with Justin Sirois at The Poetry Project.
http://poetryproject.org/program-calendar/eugene-lim-justin-sirois.html

Buy Eugene Marten's WASTE and Eugene Lim's FOG & CAR from Ellipsis Press:
http://www.ellipsispress.com/