From the mind of Megan Arkenberg

Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts

January 1, 2016

New Year's, Again

Posted by Megan Arkenberg with 20 comments
It's that day when we sum up the last 365 rotations of our planet's axis and make promises about what we're going to do for the next 366 such rotations. Frankly, the thought of doing either of those things makes my mouth go dry and my stomach do unpleasant little somersaults. So let's see if I can sum up the last week and project to next Tuesday.

I've reread The Lord of the Rings or The Silmarillion every Christmas since about 2004. This year, I skipped the Tolkein and wound up re-reading David Bajo's The 351 Books of Irma Arcuri. It's a queer novel, all senses, and I have to point out the weird erasure in which none of its reviewers mention that the heroine is bisexual (although one, in a telling overstatement, refers to her "omnisexual"). In any case, I recommend it. If it isn't exactly speculative fiction, it has a distinctively speculative bent: "You are the only other one I have ever met," Irma writes to the protagonist, "who so deeply and compulsively sees anything and automatically begins seeking alternatives."

I also read Nathan Ballingrud's North American Lake Monsters, a Christmas gift from my sister, in one sitting. It's an intense trip. I've loved "Wild Acre" since I first read it in a Year's Best anthology, and it works beautifully in the first act of this collection.

So much for Christmas. The rest of my week off was dedicated to chapter revisions, syllabus writing, and reading for my dissertation prospectus. I haven't made progress on short fiction since October.

Other thoughts for the end of the year: In 2015, I published seven short stories, two of which have made it onto end-of-the-year reading listsI also had the opportunity to edit nonfiction for a special issue of Nightmare, which was a learning experience in the best sense of that phrase. Finally, Mirror Dance is still going strong, now at a new URL (and with a new e-mail address when we reopen to submissions on January 15).

I'm hitting the ground running in 2016: "Palingenesis," a nearly un-classifiable blend of Weird fiction, philology, and nineteenth-century science, is the cover story for Shimmer #29. I'll have more to say about it on Tuesday, when it goes live on the website.

Until then: stay strange, beautiful people.

January 25, 2015

2014 Fiction?

Posted by Megan Arkenberg with 5 comments
So, as I have alluded more than once, 2014 was a terrible year for me reading-wise. I've put out a plea on Twitter:


Have any recommendations? Please share them there or here!

June 1, 2012

Mirror Dance Summer 2012

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"Passages: Stories of Gateways and Guardians"  is now online! This issue has gods and fairies, heroes and monsters, ghosts and vampires, temples and mysterious forests and icy fog-shrouded mountaintops. (It also has a few mysterious formatting issues, which I am trying desperately to sort out, and incredible original art by Shirl Sazynski, which should more than make up for the formatting.) Happy reading!


Also, in honor of this issue's theme, have a look at these fascinating entrances that are clearly gateways to Narnia.

January 29, 2010

Who let me on the opinion train?

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This post called "Four Lies from the Mouth of God" "A beautifully written, truly awful story about the price women (and children) can pay for the political actions of men. Powerful reading, but I plan never to read it again."

My feelings are two.

1) Thank God someone appreciates the awfulness! I feared some things had lost their power to disgust.

2) Women paying for the actions of men? I thought this story was, if anything, about a man paying for the actions of a woman, children paying for the actions of that man, children paying for the actions of that woman, and finally the woman paying for her own actions. God save me from making a statement on gender--I am most horrendously unqualified.

January 17, 2010

Story for Haiti - Panthanatos

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In order to raise money for relief efforts in Haiti, Crossed Genres has come up with a brilliantly simple idea: have authors post free fiction online, and have readers show their appreciation by donating to any number of fine charities. Some suggestions, and a list of other participating authors, appear here.

When it comes to unpublished fiction, I unfortunately don't have any open at the moment (aside from a trunk story or two, and trust me, you do not want to read those). Please enjoy "Panthanatos," posted on my website. This story previously appeared in the 2008 anthology Ruins Metropolis.

January 2, 2010

The darling buds of January

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More stories appearing in January:

- "Firstborn", at the Lorelei Signal

- "Fugitive 135711400", in 10Flash

- "Four Lies from the Mouth of God", in Strange Horizons

- "Song at a Cottage Door", in the January issue of Cabinet des Fees

Stay tuned!

October 15, 2009

First Issue of Lacuna Published Today!

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Photobucket


Visit the first issue of Lacuna: A Journal of Historical Fiction, and don't forget to check out our first issue review contest!

July 17, 2009

Heroic Fantasy Quarterly

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I should have checked this magazine out around sixteen days ago, when the first issue came out, but reading for Mirror Dance and Lacuna has kept me busy. Fortunately, I found a small break this morning, and discovered that I actually do enjoy unapologetic Sword & Sorcery when it's done intelligently.

I particularly recommend James Lecky's story "The Black Flowers of Sevan" and Elizabeth Barrette's poem "Ansel's Army."

May 31, 2009

Mirror Dance Summer Issue

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"Reflections: Villains and Antiheroes," the Summer 2009 issue of Mirror Dance, will be online tomorrow (June 1).

Lacuna: A Journal of Historical Fiction also opens to submissions tomorrow.

May 17, 2009

Paradox Closes Its Doors

Posted by Megan Arkenberg with 6 comments
Paradox was one of the few print magazines I found consistantly awesome enough to subscribe to. I'm very sad to see it go.

With the closing of the Willows earlier this year, I suddenly find myself very low on historical/pseudohistorical reading material. I don't know about the rest of you, but Lacuna can't open to submissions soon enough!

April 27, 2009

Thoughtcrime Experiments

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Congratulations are in order for my sister, Therese Arkenberg, and the other authors and artists whose work appears in the online anthology Thoughtcrime Experiments. Check it out--it's well worth a read.

April 26, 2009

Where in the world...?

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For those who have been wondering where I've been the last week or so, I've been reading Sarah Monette's brilliant Corambis two or three times and haven't really been interested in anything else. :-) I hope to blog on it at some point in the future, when I am suitably articulate.

If you're wondering if you should buy it, the answer is a whooping heck yes (provided, of course, that you've read the other three books in the series. If you haven't, read them first). They are easily my favorite fantasy novels, and they may become yours, too.

March 28, 2009

Palimpsest

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This post is spoiler-free.

I've just finished reading Palimpsest by Catherynne Valente, and I honestly can't say just now what I think of it.

Did I enjoy it? Yes, immensely. The word "imaginative" fails to convey the richness of the city Valente has created. The utter strangeness of the creatures and events in Palimpsest makes the author's ability to make them real and concrete in the mind of the reader all the more impressive--and necessary. The four protagonists were interesting--much more so towards the end of the book than at the beginning--but nothing compared to the citizens (I hesitate to say "people") of Palimpsest themselves. The hints of a soon-to-be-revealed violent past behind the city kept me engaged when the plot lagged.

That said, I am a prose reader rather than a story reader--it's not the what that interests me, but the how. Valente has been frequently and deservedly praised for her rich prose. However, there are places where richness becomes unintelligable, or simply silly. An example from page nine:
She balanced one hand--many-ringed--on her hip and jerked her head in the manner of a fox snuffling the air for roasting things.


"Balanced," "snuffling," and "many-ringed" can all be argued, but why on earth would a fox--a wild animal--be interested in cooked meat? This kind of slip is rare, and becomes rarer as the novel progresses, but when the prose is generally so effortless, it's all the more obvious when the author is trying too hard.

So what do I think of Palimpsest? I'm glad I read it, but it won't get a rereading from me. The protagonists, interesting as they were, didn't feel real enough for me to truly invest myself emotionally in their story (I hesitate to say "struggle"), and I don't feel as though there was any deep meaning to dig for the second time through. To be fair, I am also simultaneously rereading The Fountainhead and The Picture of Dorian Gray, so my literary expectations are high. I'd certainly recommend giving Palimpsest a try--at the very least, you'll have a new way of looking at honey bees.

March 11, 2009

Oldie but Goodie

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"A Reader's Manifesto" appeared about eight years ago in The Atlantic, but it's a) taken me this long to discover it and b) still true. I most emphatically agree with the closing statements about blaming the reader for faults of the writer. Reading should not be about trying to translate florid and inaccurate prose into English!

March 1, 2009

Mirror Dance Anniversary Issue

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The Spring 2009 issue of Mirror Dance marks our one year anniversary! Come and check it out--I promise you won't be disappointed!

February 9, 2009

Poetry II

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I've finished revising two more poems, and one of my older works, "The Sorcerer's Daughter," has been accepted for publication in Every Day Poets.

It has taken me this long to check out the Winter 2009 issue of Goblin Fruit. There are, as usual, a number of brillinat poems in this issue. My personal favorites are "Zeus Love Poem" by Maura MacDonald and J. C. Runolfson's unsettling "O.D.".

January 22, 2009

Beneath Ceaseless Skies Podcast

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Vote here for your favorite Beneath Ceaseless Skies story to be released as audio fiction in a future issue!

January 13, 2009

No "Year's Best Fantasy and Horror 2008"

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