The Barcelona Review |
|
Greetings
all. In this issue of TBR we have a
nicely diverse line up: one of Spains leading, contemporary writers, Javier Marías, has a recently released collection of stories
in English translation (When I Was Mortal, Harvill Press, U.K.) and were
happy to offer a selection from the book. For those of you who would like to know
whats happening in the literature of Spain today, this serves as a good intro. We
also have two short fiction pieces from Ireland, which I discovered on a recent trip to
that country: one by Ian Wild,
one of this years winners of Irelands Fish Short Story Prize; and the other by
a prisoner, known as Gotzy, in
Dublins Mountjoy Prison, which I found in a collection edited by Marsha Hunt called The
Junk Yard. New writers this issue are Greg Chandler and Alice Mullen from the U.S., both of whom impressed us with
their submissions. Irelands Fish Short Story Prize, by the way, is open to
English-language writers everywhere; it offers £1,000 to the overall winner and the
selection of winners (18 this year) make up the print collection. For submission
guidelines and entry fees,click here. In Issue 13 we published an essay by Barbara Lefcowitz - "Grooves, Camouflage, and The Conspiracy of Whiteness" - one of a series of triads in which the author juxtaposes three seemingly disparate objects or ideas and tries to work out their interconnections. We had much favorable response and so it is with pleasure this issue that we publish another of her triads. The winner of our Nabokov Quiz last issue is John Dennis Larken from Charlottesville, Virginia, where he is an undergraduate student at The University of Virginia (major undecided, but probably not English, as "literature is just a hobby"). John chose The Garland Companion to Vladimir Nabokov as his free book of choice. We had three correct entries out of the many received, our book winner being picked by draw. The other two winners are Kelvin Lu, an economics major at The University of Chicago where he studies poetry on the side; and Luc Mortier, a translator from Gent, Belgium. Many thanks to all of the Nabokophiles who participated. Answers to the quiz can be found by clicking here. This issue we offer a Beckett Quiz to mark the 10th anniversary of his death, Dec. 22nd. As always, the winner will receive a free book of choice. Be sure to check out our Book Reviews and browse our Back Issues where all of our past content is available. May we suggest another top writer from Spain if you missed her from Issue 12 - Nuria Amat ("Summer House"); and from Issue 2, one of Spains most interesting performance poets, Rodrigo García ("Spanish Butcher"). Our next issue will be out around the first of January. Be sure to e-m@il us if youd like to be notified when new issues are available. Cheers, Jill Adams, editor
Note: The Barcelona Review tries to give credit, normally in the title of a picture (put mouse over image) to any original photo that we manipulate if we know the original source. |
CONTENTS The Woman Who Swallowed Book Reviews The
Junk Yard, Voices From |
español - català - français - book
reviews -back issues - submission info -
BR info - links