Writers Respond: An Interview with Christopher Higgs

Molly Gaudry

Christopher HiggsChristopher Higgs curates Bright Stupid Confetti. He is the humble author of an amazing chapbook titled Colorless Green Ideas Sleep Furiously (Publishing Genius, 2009), and other of his belletristic prose exists in past/present/future editions of many esteemed literary organs, including, but not limited to:AGNIConduitPost RoadQuarterly WestSalt HillNo Colony, and Action Yes.  Currently, he is pursuing a doctorate in literature and critical theory at Florida State University, where his primary research involves theorizing a rhizomatic approach to understanding transnational and transhistorical avant-garde / experimental literature.  The Complete Works of Marvin K. Mooney (Sator Press, 2010) is his first novel. 

Writers Respond: An Interview with Andrew Zornoza

Molly Gaudry

Andrew Zornoza is the author of the photo-prose novel, Where I Stay. Born in Houston, Texas, his fiction and essays have appeared in magazines such as Gastronomica, Sleepingfish, Confrontation, Porcupine Literary Arts, CapGun, and Matter Magazine, among others. He has taught at The New School University, Gotham Writers' Workshop, and the ASA Institute.

Writers Respond: An Interview with Blake Butler

Molly Gaudry

Blake Butler needs no introduction, which means all I need to say here is that the following interview was conducted using Google Docs between August 10, 2009 and October 18, 2009.

Writers Respond: A Conversation with Amelia Gray

Molly Gaudry

1.
The Featherproof Tour

Writers Respond: An Interview with Joshua Michael Stewart

Molly Gaudry

Joshua Michael Stewart, poet and editor of Big Toe Review (Where Prose Poems Go To Do Naughty Things), is the author of the chapbooks Ordinary Mysteries (White Heron Press, 2004) and Vintage Gray (Pudding House Press, 2007), as well as a full-length collection, Son of a Minor Key, which is forthcoming from BlazeVOX Books in 2010.

An Interview with Edward Mullany

Gabe Durham

I. Introduction

Writers Respond: An Interview with Darrin Doyle

Molly Gaudry

Darrin Doyle and I crossed paths, very briefly, while he was finishing his PhD at the University of Cincinnati. An undergraduate at the time, I was granted permission to enroll in the graduate fiction workshop to see if graduate school was something I’d like. It is because of fellow students like Darrin that I decided to pursue a master’s degree.

Writers Respond: Lydia Millet on My Happy Life

Molly Gaudry

Lydia Millet, winner of the PEN-USA Award for Fiction, is the author of the novels Omnivores; George Bush, Dark Prince of Love; Everyone's Pretty; Oh Pure and Radiant Heart;

Scorch Atlas Does Not Bode Well for Us

in
Gene Kwak

Certain books cast light on our future selves: think 1984, Brave New World, Infinite Jest even, and usually in doing so, forewarn us of what dire circumstances we could be muddling our way into. Often times these tomes are moralistic in nature: stray too far this way and look at what could be in store.

"Little Mother" from Toasted Cheese

in
Amber Cook

Youth can have its advantages. Take the body, for example. At twenty, it can endure a night that lasts from seven p.m. until sunrise and still survive an eight hour work day before unconsciousness hits; usually in the shower ten minutes after a microwave dinner and a Simpson's repeat. Responsibilities are few.

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