Applications are accepted in all creative fields including playwriting/screenwriting, non-fiction, fiction, poetry, dance and choreography, performance, music composition and sound, film and video, visual arts, and culinary arts. Each session accommodates approximately eight artists and is specifically curated to bring together a diverse group of creative workers to maximize potential for collaboration and dialogue while in residence and beyond. The residencies run from April through October and are scheduled into six three-week sessions and one two-week family-friendly residency session for artists with children. Marble House Project in Dorset, Vermont, begins accepting applications for its residencies on January 15. Publication of the print edition of the Cold Lake Anthology 2020 will be in the Spring of 2021. Writers should submit no more than one prose piece or 3 to 5 poems. Creative nonfiction and fiction pieces should be no longer than 5,000 words in length. Produced by the Burlington Writers Workshop, the Anthology is seeking submissions of previously unpublished fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. Highlighted Calls For Submission and Deadlines The Hare, by Melanie Finn (Two Dollar Radio, January 26) The Copenhagen Trilogy: Childhood Youth Dependency, by Tove Ditlevsen, translated by Tiina Nunally (FSG, January 26)
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Let Me Tell You What I Mean, by Joan Didion (Knopf, January 26) The Swallowed Man, by Edward Carey (Riverhead Books, January 21) Red List Blue, by Lizzy Fox (Finishing Line Press, January 15) The God of Nothingness, by Mark Wunderlich (Graywolf Press, January 12) The Inland Sea, by Madeleine Watts (Catapult, January 12)
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Summerwater, by Sarah Moss (FSG, January 12)Īftershocks, by Nadia Owusu (Simon & Schuster, January 12)ĭetransition, Baby, by Torrey Peters (One World, January 12)Ī Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading and Life, by George Saunders (Random House, January 12) W-3, by Bette Howland (A Public Space Books, January 12) Life Among the Terranauts, by Caitlin Horrocks (Little Brown, January 12) Outlawed, by Anna North (Bloomsbury, January 5) Unsolaced: Along the Way to All That Is, by Gretel Ehrlich (Pantheon, January 5) Rebeccaīlack Buck, by Mateo Askaripour (HMH, January 5) If you’ve never read his words before, you can begin with any of the wonderful offerings on Literary Hub, including his recent tribute to Bob Stephenson, the wolf biologist who helped form Barry’s appreciation of indigenous environmental knowledge, which became a hallmark of Barry’s work.
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I'm endlessly sad that we’ve lost him, and endlessly grateful that he left us so much to read. I can't begin to explain the ways his words, his ways of seeing, his kindness, his curiosity, and his generosity have inspired and shaped me as a human and a writer. We lost the great Barry Lopez on Christmas day. Craft Capsules are described as “micro craft essays exploring the finer points of writing.” Some examples are Jordan Kisner on The Art of Epiphany, Chen Chen On Nightmares, and Will Harris on Racial Markers and Being Marked. Lately I’ve been enjoying reading the Craft Capsules column over on the Poets & Writers website.