Author: Heavy Feather
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“Needing It, Getting It, Not Being Satisfied by It, Trying to Learn to Live Without It”: An Interview with Brad Sucks by Jason Teal
Brad Sucks is a musician from Ottawa, Ontario. His back catalog boasts two full-length albums, I Don’t Know What I’m Doing (2003) and Out of It (2008), and he is hard at work mixing a third, Guess Who’s a Mess. Brad is noted not only for his catchy hooks, but also for his employment of open-source music…
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“I Can Barely Interrupt a Telemarketer”: An Interview with Chelsea Martin by Kim Stoll
Chelsea Martin “studied” art and writing at California College of the Arts (though she holds no degree because she owes $300 in tuition). Both her first book, Everything Was Fine Until Whatever, and her second, The Really Funny Thing about Apathy, continue to be huge sources of stress, particularly when someone asks her what her…
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“If I Were to Write a Book About Tibet”: An Interview with Dinty W. Moore by Nathan Floom
Dinty W. Moore is a professor and director of creative writing at Ohio University and is regularly invited to speak and teach in the U.S. and Europe. In addition to publishing fiction and nonfiction, he has published two books on the art and craft of writing. He has been published in Harper’s, the New York Times Magazine, Arts…
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“The Internet Is Where It’s At”: An Interview with Carson Mell by Joe Martin
Carson Mell is a writer/filmmaker based in Los Angeles, California. His work embraces many mediums, from music videos to Sundance-screened short films, to his two novels Saguaro and The Blue Bourbon Orchestra. With an original voice oozing both cool and humorous, Mell’s work has brought to life unique characters such as a contemplative inter-dimensional traveler, an introspective writer with hotel…
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Review: Jason Carnahan on God’s Autobio, stories by Rolli
If God’s Autobio, by Rolli, is to be described as any singular thing, it is easily a thesis on voice. A tremendous list of characters inhabits the stories, from the pompous banal to the British Almighty, each an immediate identity which is less introduced and more splashed upon the page in a gleeful display of certainty. Characters…
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Review: Matthew C. Mackey on Hotel Utopia, prose poetry by Robert Miltner
I started the trip early in the morning. I was on my way to Chicago to see an old friend of mine. I hadn’t seen her since she left last August. I’m accustomed to travel and the solitude, but not quite the emptiness of time that rests between activities. So, when the Megabus lurched forward,…
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Alissa Nutting Looks Back on 2011
Looking back on 2011, here are some things I particularly enjoyed during the year: Poetry Heart First Into the Forest, Stacy Gnall (Alice James Books) Wrenching yet beautiful, at times even sweet in the most glorious, painful sense. Imagine watching, in hi-def slow motion, a future race of twelve foot tall albino supermodels engaged in…


