Archive for December, 2008

Weekly Book Recommendation: December 31, 2008

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

As I pondered my approach to the last book recommendation of the year, I looked over my bookshelf and through the several boxes of books that sit in my bedroom because I didn’t have a shelf to put them on (our house is small and already fits seven people).  Many of the books there would have worked, but I wasn’t struck by them so much as I was struck by the books that were missing.  Then I remembered when I had gotten rid of them, and I couldn’t help but feel a little sad and a little happy at the same time.

I was thinking of my collection of Studs Terkel books–selections of paperback editions that had been highlighted and underlined here and there, but that for the most part, were surprisingly clean copies for college editions.  It isn’t that I didn’t use these books as much as my other texts, but that I chose to use notecards instead of in-copy marks because I wanted to share the books with friends and family. 

As most activist readers know, Studs Terkel passed away in 2008.  The world won’t be quite the same with this loss, but I have no doubt that his work will live on for many, many years to come.  Terkel had a way of getting to the heart of things as he interviewed average, everyday Americans and transcribed their words into his books. 

In 2006, my family and I made a difficult decision.  After living on less than minimum wage for a year and having to use credit to purchase food and pay our electric bill (which was often as much as our rent in a substandard home), after health problems that unqualified health professionals couldn’t help, after seeing our kids attend schools where the staff was absolutely unequipped to meet their educational needs, we decided to sell pretty much everything and move in search of a better life.  Among the things we sold was my collection of more than 3,000 books–my Studs Terkel collection included.  It was the kind of thing he would have written about, and I believe he would have approved.

So as we face 2009, I recommend heading to the official Studs Terkel web site, looking over his books, and picking one to read.  Hard Times seems particularly appropriate for the current state of America.  Let this be a time for remembering, and through remembering, let this be a time for looking forward.

Happy New Year,
L.

Ed Bennett on Old Year/New Year

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

Ed Bennett wrote:

Not since the Nixon Administration have I felt this utter lack of ability to change the world around me.  I have never doubted in democracy but sometimes this government “of, by and for” the people can be co-opted.  I lost friends in the devastation of 9/11/01 and since that time we’ve fallen into two wars, a lack of respect globally, trashing the Geneva Convention and government-sanctioned torture.  In the rest of the world that’s going to hell in a hand basket, we cast a blind eye.  Domestically, we ignored oversight, created monstrously convoulted and toxic financial vehicles allowing our Government and private sector financial institutions to stand like Sampson between the pillars of the pagan temple.  In the ensuing chaos, incompetent management asks for a bailout because if they fail they take us all down with them.  2008 was the year of the financial hostage.

2009 will be a bittersweet year.  We’ll probably spend all of it and a good part of the next picking up the pieces of our international and domestic excess.  In other words, “we the people” need to clean up the mess.  The difference between next year and this is that there is no more feeling of hopelessness.  Yes, the problems are staggering and we are but a collection of Davids faced with the aftermath of Goliath’s ruin.  I expect to work in 2009–work painfully hard.  After 8 years of looking at a succession of political train wrecks from a mountaintop, we’ll all need to go into the valley to dig out the debris.  Fortunately, I feel that the new leadership has a shovel in hand and is ready to work as well.

Ed Bennett is a Telecommunications Engineer living in Las Vegas.  Originally from New York City, his work has appeared in the Manhattan Quarterly, the Patterson Literary Review, New Verse News, the Externalist, VIIMMAG — Las Vegas Poetry and Culture and the spring 2009 edition of Philadelphia Poets.

Thomas Sullivan on Old Year/New Year

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

Thomas Sullivan wrote:

2009 is bringing us more than a new President and a new party in power.  It’s ushering in the end of an outdated way of people interacting.  Everywhere you look the Archie Bunker types spouting divisive old ideologies are being shown the door — on November 4th the ignorance industry announced massive layoffs.  Those who benefit most from divisive economics and tell us that the unregulated private market solves everything are being disproven by the reality of our economy.  Hatemongers who fear the decline of white, Christian America are being quieted by the fact that white, Christian guys screwed the economy up and are now begging for help from a mixed-race president (George Wallace eat your heart out).  The guys shouting “Obama’s a terrorist” at McCain rallies are being laughed at as modern-day extras on Deliverance II: Journey Down the River of Debt.

Simply, 2008 will go down as the year that race-hate, militarism, and division stopped working as a marketing strategy in America.  We are joining a world that already understands the power of the common good and the danger of unbridled self-interest.  Start flashing your devil horns like a pimply teenager at a rock concert, cuz it’s time for the peaceful and caring to rock!!!!!!

Old Year/New Year: Dan Coshnear

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Dan Coshnear responded to our call for reflections on the turning of the year:

In 1972 I handed out flyers for McGovern with my mother.  I knew the issues fairly well for a nine year old –Viet Nam, taxes, pro choice vs. pro life.  One candidate was stirring racial fear and hatred and the other, in my mind, had a view toward basic fairness, righting the ship.  And that year, with my mother I watched on TV as the states turned colors – the color of a Nixon landslide.  I haven’t quite recovered.  My grievance with this country goes so deep that even today, even with all the hope inspired by the election of an African American to the highest office, I feel a revulsion to the American flag.  There is that for which it stands, and that for which it has so often – through my whole lifetime – been used.  Yes, politics is corrupted by money and special interests and we’re all corrupted by the corporate sponsored media; but there were so many flags on cars and lawns as the bombs dropped over Fallujah, it sickened me.  I’m not over it.

So on the subject of 2008, I have felt glimmers, wee stirrings of hope, but within me also incredible resistance to those stirrings.  And the post election cabinet selections have not been inspiring.  Who can give back seven years to the innocent men held, tortured at Guantanamo?  Who will bring Aristide back to Haiti and what sort of explanation or compensation could ever begin to ameliorate the suffering we’ve caused in the poorest country in the hemisphere?  Desmond Tutu said the first act of our new president ought to be an apology on behalf of the American people to the people of Iraq.  What a world that would be.  I want to hug it.

Old Year/New Year: Ed Zahniser

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Ed Zahniser responded to our request for reflections on the turning of the year:

I would title the Year 2008 as “The Year of the Being Reminded.”  It reminded me how important our democratic republic’s institutions are, that we do have the opportunity to elect new leaders who we think and hope will alter present policies that not only bring and have brought disaster but that promise far worse future disasters.  It reminded me how much of our tacit wealth in financial instruments and even real property is illusory as soon as there is general agreement–even unsought agreement–that we have been involved in a vast shell game.  It also reminded me that none of this can ruin my enjoyment of family, friends, the freshness of grandkids, or the great, relatively ready access we have to poems, books of poetry, and communities of poets and writers–whose values embed more deeply in the fundamentals of being human on a glorious planet.  And it reminded me that we must be more generous with the many, many people in our community, county, state, nation, and world who can’t satisfy basic human needs and don’t enjoy basic human rights.  It reminded me–through a visit to Powell’s Books in Portland, Oregon–how many good folks labor at great sacrifice for no monetary reward to keep poetry and other literary writing before a public of readers.

Ed Zahniser’s poems, stories, and interviews have been published in over 80 magazines in the United States and United Kingdom, three books, and two chapbooks.  His most recent book of poems is Mall-hopping iwth the Great I AM.  He is the poetry editor of the Good News Paper quarterly tabloid magazine and a past poetry editor of Wilderness Magazine, the Antietam Review, and Artz & Kulchur of the Mountain State.  Ed lives in Shepherdstown, West Virginia, with his wife Christine Duewel.

Johanna Wald: Award Announcement

Monday, December 29th, 2008

Johanna Wald’s essay “One Brief Shining Moment” that was published in Pilgrimage Magazine in November 2008 was awarded the “best essay” in Pilgrimage for the year.  The award announcement can be found at http://pilgrimagepress.org/award.html.  Congratulations, Johanna!

Best of the Externalist 2007-2008: Reader’s Choice Opportunity!

Friday, December 19th, 2008

We’re getting started on our first ever Best of the Externalist issue!  As I reread all the terrific work we’ve published these last two years, I’m finding out just how hard it’s going to be to decide what goes into the anthology. 

So I decided to give our readers an opportunity to nominate work.  At least three of the pieces in the anthology will be Reader’s Choices (one poem, one story, and one essay).  To nominate a piece, post your selection here or send me an email with your choice(s) at editor@theexternalist.com and be sure to put “Reader’s Choice Nomination” into the subject line.

Thanks for giving us two wonderful years of publishing!

Larina Warnock, Editor

Weekly Book Recommendation: December 17

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

There are some authors that you just know are going to make a social statement in whatever they write.  This is especially true of John Irving, so I had a tough time deciding which of his books to recommend.  A Prayer for Owen Meany?  Widow for One Year? Setting Free the Bears?  The World According to Garp?   I finally settled on The Cider House Rules because it is the most blatant social statement (and ironically, one that not many writers will risk) and also because there is additional reading material to recommend with it. 

The Cider House Rules takes a unique approach to the subject of abortion and is filled with all the strange humor and heartwrenching tragedy that makes a John Irving novel unique.  Years later, John Irving wrote My Movie Business, a memoir about the adaptation of the book into film.  The latter book is an excursion into the mind of a talented, but also very deliberate, author–a look into his thoughts about writing and about movies and most interestingly, about this very controversial subject.  Together, the books present a snapshot of one man’s perspective in two different forms.

Weekly Book Recommendation: December 7-13

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

Because we receive so few genre fiction submissions at The Externalist even though we like genre fiction, I’m starting our book recommendations with a science fiction novel I recently reread.  Isaac Asimov’s Foundation was first published as short stories (in Astounding, if I remember correctly) and was later published not as a short story collection, but as the first book in the Foundation series (a Hugo winner that beat out Lord of the Rings for best series).  While the characters change from story to story, it is a cohesive story that moves through a period of time between empires.

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Contributor Bill Teitelbaum: Publication Updates

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

Since appearing in The Externalist in June 2007, Bill Teitelbaum has published short stories and flash fiction in Glosslalia, Pacific Review, Red Wheelbarrow, and Rhino, plays in the Lousiville Review, Poems & Plays, and The Rockhurst Review, and has had one of his plays performed in Denver, Colorado as part of Bug Theatre’s New Play Festival.