Pets with MAR: Lucy

Lucy_2

Lucy_edited

Allow us to introduce Lucy, our latest Pets with MAR representative! Lucy is owned by Jackie Cummins, one of MAR‘s assistant editors and a current MFA candidate at Bowling Green State University. After you soak in the cuteness that is Lucy, read Jackie’s story, “Gretel’s Revenge,” which was recently published by Gingerbread House Literary Magazine.

Want to include your pet in this special Pets with MAR blog series? Simply send your photo, along with your pet’s name and any other relevant details, to lauwalt@bgsu.edu with “Pets with MAR” in the subject line.

5 Things You Didn’t Know About Winter Wheat 2014

wheat

5. Ready to register online? Put away your wallet. Good news — no fee is required when you register online for Winter Wheat workshops! We encourage attendees to register for sessions online ASAP to help us with some logistics and session planning, but there’s no need to dig out your credit card. We do have a suggested donation of $50, which can be paid either online or on-site at the conference — and truly, every last donated dollar makes a huge difference to Mid-American Review — but there’s also no pressure. Donations are incredibly appreciated (and help keep this conference running), but right now we hope you’ll register purely to plan and sign up for sessions.

4. Got ten bucks? Take 20 minutes of an editor’s time. This year, for the first time ever at Winter Wheat, Mid-American Review editors will offer private 20-minute manuscript consultations for a $10 donation. This $10 for 20 opportunity provides personal and specific feedback on manuscripts and allows time for questions. Consultations will be scheduled individually with each writer to suit the writers’ and editors’ festival schedules. Spaces are limited, so sign up soon! Manuscripts of up to 10 pages (any genre) should be submitted to mar@bgsu.edu. Put “Winter Wheat Manuscript Consultation” in the subject line.

3. We’re 8 sessions short of a Crayola 64-count box of crayons. That’s right — Winter Wheat is bigger and better than ever this year with a mind-boggling 56 workshop sessions held over two days. Head on over to the sessions listing page to start combing through all that literary goodness so you can plan your time at Winter Wheat. In the meantime, here’s just a taste of some of the workshops that will be offered:

Selfie Revolt: How Millennials Can Rewrite the Coming-of-Age Story
Websites for Writers: Launch Your Website in a Weekend
Bitches Be Crazy: Portraying Madness in the Short Story
Blurred Lines: What Hybrid Texts & New Media Can Teach Us About Genre
Poetry and Nightmare
We Regret To Inform You: Dealing with Literary Rejection
The Sentence: Acoustics, Syntax, and Style

2. Did someone say Anne Valente? Marcus Wicker? Allison Joseph? Sharona Muir? They’ll all be reading at Winter Wheat. (View the full schedule of keynote readings here.) And don’t forget to check the workshop sessions page for more literary luminaries — like Matt Bell — who will be in attendance and leading workshops.

1. Off-site after-party! We’re shaking things up this year and hosting our post-conference event off-site at Grumpy’s in downtown Bowling Green. From 5:30-9:00pm, join us for some food, an open mic, a cash bar, and more. Who knows…as the night goes on, we might even pull out karaoke machine. (Important: Please be sure to to register for the off-site event if you plan to come!) We hope you’ll join us Saturday night to kick back and raise a glass to a successful Winter Wheat.

Winter Wheat: The Mid-American Review Festival of Writing, will be held Nov. 13-15 on the campus of Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio. Find conference details here, view sessions here, and register here. Join the Winter Wheat Facebook event page here.

–Laura Maylene Walter, Fiction Editor

Photo: Malcolm Carlaw

Pets with MAR: Pandora

Welcome to our new and oh-so-serious blog series: Pets with MAR. That’s right, we’re sharing photos of pets posing with an issue of Mid-American Review. You can get in on the fun, too – simply snap a photo of your pet with a MAR issue and send it to us. Whether your pet is a dog, cat, horse, guinea pig, rabbit, hamster, goldfish, lizard, parrot, hedgehog, or something else, we want to see it enjoying the fine writing in MAR.

For our inaugural pet, we have Pandora. Her owner, Laura Madeline Wiseman, contributed a creative nonfiction piece, “From Russia with Love Melancholia,” to our Spring 2014 issue. Read Laura’s contributor interview after you bask in the glory of Pandora’s fine literary taste:

 

Pandora

Want to include your pet in this special Pets with MAR blog series? Simply send your photo, along with your pet’s name and any other relevant details, to lauwalt@bgsu.edu, with “Pets with MAR” in the subject line.

Accepted: “War Stories” by Lesley Nneka Arimah

war stories

In our “Accepted” column, Mid-American Review editors discuss why they selected stories, poems, or essays for publication. In this post, Fiction Editor Laura Maylene Walter discusses a story that appears in our Spring 2014 issue.

Genre: Short fiction
Title: “War Stories”
Author: Lesley Nneka Arimah
MAR issue: Spring 2014
First line: “This time, my mother and I were fighting about what I had done at school to prove with no question that Anita Okechukwu was not wearing a bra.”

“War Stories” opens with an immediately compelling conflict: the narrator, twelve-year-old Nwando, has exposed her classmate Anita not only for her lack of a bra, but also for the pretenses that allowed her to become the dictatorial leader of the school’s exclusive Girl Club. Thanks to her actions, Nwando finds herself an unwitting hero and the head of a new “girl army” regime. As Nwando experiences the rise and fall of her own power at school, she listens at home as her father covers new ground in his wartime memories and reveals more than he perhaps intended.

Along with many other Mid-American Review fiction readers, I was immediately engaged by the story’s premise and read on with increasing interest as Nwando’s struggles at home and school escalated. The story illustrates adolescent tension in fresh and surprising ways, and author Lesley Nneka Arimah masterfully blends Nwando’s schoolyard conflict with her father’s recollections of his time in the war.

The language in “War Stories” is also infused with a reflective quality that expands Nwando’s story into more universal territory. For example, when Anita experiences her fall from social graces after the bra incident, Nwando considers the broader consequences for her classmate: “What I hadn’t expected were the boys who ran behind her during recess and lifted up her skirt, as though my actions had given them permission, as though because they had seen her bare breast, they were entitled to the rest. It was a boyish expectation most would not outgrow even after they became men.”

The storytelling is also lively and takes surprising turns. Take, for instance, the scene that occurs after Nwando is punished for punching her classmate: “During dinner, which I wasn’t permitted to share with my parents, I sat on a stool in the kitchen, soothing the shrapnel sting on my behind with daydreams of how upset my real parents would be when they discovered these temporary guardians had used me ill. I tried very hard not to think about the little girl and her nose, how it crackled beneath my fist.” The vivid language and storytelling gain momentum throughout the story as Nwando’s father begins sharing his wartime experiences.

“War Stories” is more than a gripping, beautifully told story about a young girl navigating the poisonous social structure at school and a haunted father at home – it’s also about the power of the many kinds of stories we tell.

What MAR editors said about “War Stories”:

“…strong and engaging…an example of well-managed realism. Touching without being sentimental and a light touch with humor. A quirk without being crazy.”

“This story offers a lot in these nine pages about the pain this family has experienced with loss. It may not follow a traditional path, but I enjoyed the details of this family connecting. The emotion feels authentic, the details engage, and the flaws of people trying to be leaders to those around them – moving.”

Laura Maylene Walter, Fiction Editor

Photo: legOfrenis

“Unicorn Hunters” by Kara Krewer

Unicorn Pony

It’s time, friends. When lines line “shimmering rainbow mane” and “shining technicolor pony” appear on the blog, you know what’s coming. Pure magic. Today, we post our final winning entry in the My Little Pony Writing Contest:”Unicorn Hunters” by Kara Krewer.

Unicorn Hunters

More messages this morning:

We are looking for a third
we are looking to complete our
mystical unicorn triad…

But I have no horn,

no spiral, wound-healing magic.

But you are a pretty little filly
we like your shimmering rainbow mane
how the twilight sparkles in your horsefeathers

But I do not pony up
I do not canter

for all the boys and girls.
Yes, I like oats and sugar cubes both,
but I am ambivalent about virgins.

We would let you run along the beach
at sunset and we could sell your pictures
to those companies that make folders

But I swear I do not see it—
I look in the mirror and see no magic,
only the earthbound.

But it’s our dream to share our love
with another woman

Listen: no part of me flutters
for you and I’ve got no saddle, no room for a rider.
I am a singular short beast,

one shining technicolor pony
hiking the crystal path,

and even if I had some harmony to bring
it would not be for you.

 

Kara Krewer
Kara Krewer

 

Kara Krewer grew up on an southwest Georgia.
She is currently an MFA candidate in poetry at
Purdue University, where she is editor-in-chief
of the
 Sycamore Review. Her work has most
recently appeared in
The Georgia Review.

 

 

 

Don’t let the magic fizzle — check out our other esteemed My Little Pony Writing Contest winners:

“Friendship is Magic” by Marci Rae Johnson
“My Little Pony’s Easter Message” by Debbra Palmer
“Paco” by Winona Leon

Pony Photo: Lisa Brewster