Let’s give a catnip-filled welcome to Salami Sandwich, a kitty belonging to Ernie and Keats Czyzniejewski. Here’s Salami with issue 35.1!
Super secret insider info: Salami lives in the same household as MAR history — two former editor-in-chiefs, Mike Czyzniejewski (author, most recently, of I Will Love You For the Rest of My Life: Breakup Stories) and Karen Craigo, MAR‘s nonfiction editor. (Check out her blog!) In the next issue of MAR (35.2), Karen and Mike participate in a special MAR editor roundtable discussion to celebrate the journal’s 35th anniversary. Don’t miss it!
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 mar@bgsu.edu.
Nina Boutsikaris is a nonfiction MFA candidate at the University of Arizona, where she is the nonfiction editor of Sonora Review. Her recent work appears or is forthcoming in The Los Angeles Review, Puerto del Sol, Hobart, Brevity, Booth, Phoebe, Spartan and elsewhere. Her short nonfiction piece, “What Doo-Wop Does” was a finalist in MAR’s 2014 Fineline competition and appears in issue 35.1. First line: “I loved that summer because of the Slovaks, eight sinewy dancers who came to live at a defunct farm up the road from my family’s house.”
Quick! Summarize “What Doo-Wop Does” in 10 words or fewer.
July brings heat, dancers and endings. I take it in.
What can you share about this piece prior to its MAR publication?
This piece came out of one specific memory, one brief moment in deep summer when I caught my mother spying on my father. They were not divorced yet, but I think they were separated at the time on some kind of trial period. Or at least, she hadn’t moved out, but they were sleeping in separate beds and the boundaries of our family unit had begun to blur. I was on high alert to the changes. In a way, I have always sort of thought of my mother as this strong force of energy and will who had to leave my father because she was the one who needed a new life. But this memory pokes holes in my whole fantasy about both her and my father. I tried over explaining this, writing it in a more expository way, but in the end the version that made the most sense was mostly imagistic and fleeting, especially as told through the eyes of a child.
What was the worst/best feedback you received on this piece?
Someone told me I had to include more back-story about my parents’ relationship, but I think you get everything you need to know in this vignette. Sometimes less is more…right? Right??
You’re at a family reunion and some long-lost relative asks about your writing. What do you say?
I’m obsessed with loneliness, intimacy and power, whatever those things mean. I don’t know how else to talk about this but to tell it through things I witness or experience, things that really happened—meaning they both actually happened and deeply happened.
What do you consider your biggest writing-related success?
The opportunity to teach creative writing is probably the greatest writing gift I’ve ever received. Teaching has forced me to become a more eloquent and thoughtful editor and reader not just of others’ work but of my own as well. Every day I’m challenged to be an ambassador to the genre and that has to be one of the best ways to learn what awesome things are happening with nonfiction, what’s happening today and what’s happened in the past and why.
Do you have another favorite piece of writing in this MAR issue? If so, name it and tell us why.
I adore Allison Adair’s “Letter to my Niece, in Silverton Colorado.” In this very short piece Adair makes gorgeous leaps of association with images and poetry that are so beautiful and tragic and wise. She is able to take us on a deep and cosmic journey in just a page. She writes, “I’m trying to say that the waves used to roll in, and then back out.” And I know exactly what she’s trying to say.
Thanks for the interview, Nina!
Laura Maylene Walter, Fiction Editor
MAR is back from a busy and fruitful AWP in Minneapolis. We celebrated the journal’s 35th anniversary, hosted a party in an art gallery complete with a cake and a keg, gave away lots of hotdish recipe cards and MAR issues at the booth, and best of all, connected with some of our wonderful readers, contributors, and former editors. Here are a few snapshots of our time in Minneapolis:
First stop in Minneapolis: the giant spoon and cherry! (Okay, not really.)Editors extraordinaire (Managing Editor Sasha Khalifeh and Editor-in-Chief Abigail Cloud) at the booth!Assistant Fiction Editor Lydia Munnell and Assistant Poetry Editor Jenelle Clausen at the MAR booth.It’s party time! MAR celebrated its 35th anniversary by throwing a cake- and beer-filled party at Gallery 13.Cake! (We’re willing to overlook the missing “n” in our name. Parties are not for proofreading.)More MAR party goodness.MAR editors live it up!Here’s just one shot of a MAR contributor (Cynthia Marie Hoffman) reading at the party.From all of us at MAR, thanks for a fantastic AWP!
photos from Laura Maylene Walter and Chelsea Kerwin
MAR is headed to AWP in Minneapolis, and you know what that means: bookfair swag. This year, in honor of Minnesota’s fondness for the hotdish (casserole), we’ve compiled hotdish recipe cards from various authors. You can pick up a card or two, or you could really commit to the hotdish goodness by picking up one of our hotdish books. It all happens at booth #1728.
But wait, there’s more! We’ll also have reclaimed-sweater potholders, art prints from GJ Gillespie, subscription deals, and free back issues.
So stop by table #1728 at the AWP bookfair this week. Say hello. Find some hotdish inspiration. And maybe, if you’re feeling saucy, you could wish MAR a happy 35th birthday while you’re at it.
As a finalist in the 2014 Fineline Competition for prose poems, short shorts, and everything in between, Bryce Emley’s piece, “Diving Deep (My Father as Octopus)” appears in MAR 35.1. He’s here today to discuss science as artistic inspiration, bizarre birthmarks, and his rather unorthodox reaction to his MAR acceptance.
Bryce Emley is a freelance writer and MFA student at NC State. His work can be found in Best American Experimental Writing 2015, The Normal School, Prairie Schooner, Your Impossible Voice, etc., and he serves on staff for Raleigh Review and BULL: Men’s Fiction.
Quick! Summarize your piece in 10 words or fewer.
dad = octopus
What can you share about this piece prior to its MAR publication?
This piece started when I read a science article I was finding pretty challenging but also vaguely intriguing, though I didn’t really know why. I stuffed the magazine into a drawer with the foggy impression that one day I would turn the article into a poem—a process which took an absurd amount of re-reading, thinking/talking to myself about, and revising (which is still going on, actually).
What was your reaction upon receiving your MAR acceptance?
I think I pumped my fist and humped the air a few times. It was less weird than it sounds.
You’re at a family reunion and some long-lost relative asks about your writing. What do you say?
I’m working on it.
Tell us one strange thing about yourself that does not involvewriting.
There’s a birthmark on my left foot that looks from one angle like an angel carrying a basket, from another like a bad-ass bearded guy on a Harley.
Do you have another favorite piece of writing in this MAR issue? If so, name it and tell us why.
Jennifer K. Sweeny’s “Parenthetical at 35.” It’s so weird and so lovely and so logical in equal parts.
Can you show us a photo of you holding your MAR contributor’s copy?
Thanks for the interview, Bryce!
Laura Maylene Walter, Fiction Editor