TROY JAMES WEAVER is the author of Visions (Broken River, 2015), Witchita Stories (Future Tense, 2015), Marigold (King Shot, 2016), Temporal (Disorder Press, 2018), and Selected Stories (Apocalypse Party, 2020). He lives in Wichita, Kansas, with his wife and dogs.
Keith Rosson on the Uncanny Fiction of “Folk Songs for Trauma Surgeons”
Keith Rosson is equally at home writing about the trials and tribulations found in everyday life as he is the bizarre and uncanny. His characters range from a once-beloved painter fallen on hard times to the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse on a team-building retreat; one of the things that makes his work so compelling is that he finds the same empathy for both. I spoke with Rosson on the occasion of the release of his new collection, Folk Songs for Trauma Surgeons, about his distinctive approach to fiction.
Morning Bites: Jah Wobble, Jeff VanderMeer Interviewed, Kathryn Smith, Twitter and Literature, and More
In our morning reading: the music of Jah Wobble, interviews with Jeff VanderMeer and Kathryn Smith, and more.
Afternoon Bites: Robert Coover, Rachel Aggs’s Recommendations, Matthew Gavin Frank’s Playlist, and More
In our afternoon reading: exploring the work of Robert Coover, musical recommendations from Rachel Aggs, and more.
Sontag on Heartbreak
Sontag on Heartbreak
by Lee Felice Pinkas
My first heartbreak, at age fifteen, sent me to songs. To schlocky inspirational books whose platitudes I held close, repeated like mantras. Later, revisiting the knots of a complicated relationship in my late twenties, I found Susan Sontag’s journals.
“I always fell for the bullies,” Sontag admits. “Their rejection of me showed their superior qualities, their good taste.”
I found her book in Berlin, Germany. I had followed a guy named Jonah there the summer after our breakup. I was not proud of myself, leaning on pretexts to save myself from the truth that I had crossed the Atlantic to pursue the ghost of a relationship.
Morning Bites: Lawrence Ferlinghetti Remembered, Madeleine Watts Interviewed, Lauren Oyler on Autofiction, and More
In our morning reading: a tribute to Lawrence Ferlinghetti, an interview with Lauren Oyler, and more.
Afternoon Bites: Matthew Salesses, British Fantasy Awards, Gil Adamson, Damon Locks’s Latest, and More
In our afternoon reading: an interview with Matthew Salesses, new music from Damon Locks, and more.
Jeff Jackson on Julian Calendar’s Visceral, Conceptual Rock Sound
Jeff Jackson is the author of Destroy All Monsters, a heady yet visceral take on rock music, violence, and the nature of communities. Jeff Jackson also plays music in Julian Calendar, a postpunk band whose music could also be described as heady yet visceral. Since 2017, the group has released 5 records, including 4 EPs in the Crimson Static series.As an admirer of Jackson’s work in both spheres, I reached out to him about discussing the evolution of his foray into music, and how it’s affected his writing.