Thursday, December 1, 2011

HOLIDAY SALE!

For one week only (until December 7th) give (and/or get) all four Dorothy, a publishing project books for only $40 (w/free shipping in the US). Click here for the offer. Give the gift of FOUR SUPER BOOKS and help a small press to boot (also super).

Monday, November 28, 2011

Another great review from Publishers Weekly . . .

. . . this time for Manuela Draeger's In the Time of the Blue Ball (translated from the French by Brian Evenson): "In three short stories with a distinct Murakami vibe, hapless investigator Bobby Potemkine threads his way through his city’s meteor-shredded ruins to find out which of several women named Lili has really invented fire, what to do about an angry noodle named Auguste Diodon, and how to rescue the many baby pelicans that litter the roads." Read the entire review here.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Publisher's Weekly

Read the excellent advance review of Renee Gladman's The Ravickians in Publishers Weekly, here. A sample: "Gladman’s talent for linguistic architecture makes for a supple, tight promenade through heady ideas whose appeal rests on the implicit connection it draws between a people, their language, and the shape of communication. A novel set inside a poem . . ."

Monday, September 19, 2011

Draeger in The Collagist

Read the eponymous story from Manuela Draeger's In the Time of the Blue Ball (translated by Brian Evenson) in the new issue of The Collagist.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

NOW AVAILABLE!

Renee Gladman's beautiful The Ravickians and Manuela Draeger's magical In the Time of the Blue Ball (translated by Brian Evenson) are now available for purchase through this website! Here and here. Each book is $16 or purchase both together for $25 with free shipping!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Poetry Project Newsletter

Erik Anderson wrote a smart and thoughtful review of Event Factory in the latest Poetry Project Newsletter. You can download it here.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

The Quarterly Conversation

David Auerbach offers an insightful review of Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead, here.