Author: Steve Himmer
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An Interview With Tyrone Jaeger
For decades, Americans’ relationship with truth — or even simply, fact — has grown increasingly elastic. Philosophical theses about the nature of perspective, hyper-specialization in the professions creating an emotional distance between us and the very goods and services that compose a typical life, the polarizing aesthetics of 21st century journalism — all have eroded…
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An Interview with John Freeman
Photo: Deborah TreismanJohn Freeman’s writing and criticism have appeared in many publications across the world. He served as Editor-in-Chief at Granta and was president of the National Book Critics Circle. His most recent project is Freeman’s, a themed biannual literary anthology-meets-journal. The second issue, Freeman’s: Family, is available now. Freeman’s main aim is bringing in…
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An Interview with Richard Hawley
The Three Lives of Jonathan Force (Fomite Press, February 2016) is a big novel, one that tells the story of one man’s life from beginning to end, a project that took you decades to complete. Over the years, you’ve published portions as single short stories and a volume of linked stories. You considered publishing Jonathan’s…
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An Interview with C.D. Albin
Like the characters in Hard Toward Home (Press 53, May 2016), his debut short fiction collection, C. D. Albin lives in the Ozarks, a place that can have an almost mystical hold on the hearts of its people, despite the hardships that life there can bring. Albin tells the stories of people who know this…
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An Interview with Grant Faulkner
It was recently announced that two stories from Grant Faulkner’s Fissures (Press 53), his collection of one hundred 100-word stories, were chosen by Stuart Dybek and Series Editor Tara L. Masih for inclusion in the forthcoming Best Small Fictions 2016 (Queen’s Ferry Press). Last year I reviewed Fissures for Necessary Fiction, noting that the collection…
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Bookmarked Authors Interview
This spring, Ig Publishing will release the first four titles in their “Bookmarked” series. In these books, authors are invited to write about a book that influenced their work and lives. In this first wave, Curtis Smith writes about Slaughterhouse-Five, Kirby Gann takes on A Separate Peace, Paula Bomer writes about The Man Who Loved…
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Of Diverse Literature and Stereotypical Narratives
A Conversation between Two Authors Diversity in fiction is receiving some publicity these days, and writers of color are maybe not as ignored as they were a few decades ago. Yet there is a lot of work to be done before South Asian women writers telling stories from diaspora become mainstream. Issues like dual identity,…
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Unshakable: An Interview with Derek Palacio
Art credit: Grace LawrieDerek Palacio is determined and capable — the type of person who has about twenty projects going at any given time, and can juggle them all while sipping coffee and answering questions with a warm smile on his face. At the time of this interview, in late-August 2013, he had just returned…
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Fit Into Me: Book One, Fragment Twenty-three
Alone for the first time on New Year’s Day, the tea house woman watches the DVD delivery boy on his bicycle bump away down her cobblestone street until she can no longer see the outline of his shoulders, warm with tenderness for all shoulders and shoulder muscles, her favorite part of the body to watch…
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Fit Into Me: Book One, Fragment Twenty-two
That night, her Portuguese lover shows up with a bouquet of white lilies, wearing a navy blue suit, and she is transported back to her wedding day. Her cheating husband, nearly a stranger by the end, had been such a hopeful bridegroom, boutonniere pinned over his heart. Even then, Sam’s hair was turning silvery. He…
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Fit Into Me: Book One, Fragment Twenty-one
Years ago, during her husband’s funeral, the tea house woman felt freed from her marriage. She didn’t know it, but Sam had ordered doves to be released into the air, and it was a lovely, holy gesture, but when the clapping of their wings erupted all at once around them the tea house woman started…
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Fit Into Me: Book One, Fragment Twenty
Sitting alone in Vic’s Tavern, the tea house woman orders a drink, whiskey, one rock, recalling her mother’s valiant but futile fight against the intrusion of every new neighborhood bar and coffee shop that opened in Fenwick proper. It had been her mother’s desire to restore their family tea house to its former glory by…