More thanks to our supporters!

I’d like to thank another group of Faraway supporters for making donations to our continued efforts to publish new authors.  Karen Greenbaum-Maya, Suvi Mahonen, and Luke Waldrip, all of whom have work appearing in the latest issue of Faraway, each made much-needed donations.

Suvi Mahonen had this to say: “As I’ve said before, it’s great that journals such as yours exists. Thank you once again for accepting our story for publication.”

We also received this comment from contributor and donor Vic Fortezza, who just received his copies of the print edition of the journal: “Beautiful. I’m proud to have been a part of the issue.”

If you would like to make a donation, simply click the button below:

Click here to lend your support to: Marathon For the Arts! and make a donation at www.pledgie.com !

And be sure to come back tomorrow, when we will be publishing the third chapter of K. C. Wilson’s novella, Doing the Dead – 1983.

The Route by K. C. Wilson Reviewed

After K. C. Wilson submitted his novella, Doing the Dead – 1983, for publication in Faraway, he sent me a signed copy of his novel The Route.  I was blown away by both pieces of writing.  Throughout December, Faraway will be serializing Wilson’s Doing the Dead – 1983, but as a preview of Wilson’s talent, read my review of The Route below:
 
          In The Route, author K. C. Wilson brings 1980s North Florida alive as he follows would-be writer Peter Foster on an unending quest to see his screenplay turned into a movie.  Foster, divorced and long estranged from his children, is a failure in the eyes of the world.  But as Wilson weaves a delicate tapestry of friendship, music, comedy, and tragedy, Foster is developed into a lovable, memorable character.
          As Wilson explains, “the ‘route’ presents a series of distractions from [Foster’s] long range plans. . .”  These distractions range from the mundane to the tragicomic: begging a place to sleep each night from his friends, wrestling with his conscience over snagging money no one will miss, wrestling with a deranged neighbor over a gun.  But as he travels the route, Foster learns valuable lessons about his life, his friends, and his children.
          What is perhaps most interesting about Peter Foster is that he is based on a real person, Bruce Kerr.  Wilson described him as “Scheherazade, telling stories to stay alive one more day, only in his case, it was to keep living in my house.  Through him I came to see into the microcosm of the neighborhood.  Behind every door was another world, complete unto itself.  He would enter those worlds and pass through them in a slow walk and bring their stories back to me.”  And this is essentially The Route, a Floridian Arabian Nights in which Foster plays a part in all 1,001 stories.
          Many of the tales are inconsequential or even embarrassing for Foster.  But at times they are transcendental, and can leave the reader on the brink of tears.  And through the lowly Peter Foster, author K. C. Wilson skillfully reveals truths about time, disappointment, success, failure, and even love.
Wilson’s writing is superb.  The Route is humorous but bittersweet, vulgar but sublime.  The writing is simultaneously reminiscent of the works of Kerouac, Vonnegut, and, to this reviewer, the films of Wes Anderson.  Wilson paints a world in which there are many non sequiturs (a fish falling from the sky) but within that world, everything seems to make sense.
 
          The Route is available from Amazon.  Faraway is also proud to publish K. C. Wilson’s newest original novella, Doing the Dead – 1983.

Non-fiction Piece in Pens on Fire

File this under self-promotion.  A non-fiction article I wrote for the very first issue of Faraway, “My Breakthrough,” is now appearing at the online literary journal Pens on Fire.  The article is about a mental leap forward that I made last year, when my writing output increased a few hundred-fold.  My secret?  You’ll have to read the article!  This is also a great site for monthly poetry and short stories from young, up-and-coming writers.

For a long time, I have known that I wanted to write. In high school I had ideas for stories that I talked about endlessly, but I never wrote a word. After graduation, I bought books on how to write books, but I never wrote a word. And in college, a few sentences occurred to me that I simply could not let escape, so I scribbled them down and put them away, but nothing ever came of them.

But last year, for some reason, I opened up a new document on my laptop computer, and I began to write. I wrote ten pages in a single sitting, and not just ten pages, but ten good pages. In a week I had written fifty pages, and I sent these out to my friends, and by the time they had read them, I had already written another fifty. I wrote almost two hundred pages of my first idea for a novel, The Altar of All, in less than two months, where in the previous five years I had written nothing. Reaching an impasse in that story, I got the idea for a second book, Sail, and in the last two months of the year, I wrote two hundred pages of that story as well . . . And in between writing these two major stories, I wrote a hundred pages of short stories.

I have since been asking myself about this remarkable output. How did I break through the writer’s block that had kept me from writing before, and suddenly produce enough to fill a book?

Read more.

What’s in the new Faraway?

Ten short stories!  Thirteen poems!  Over thireen works of art! 

Over thirty contributors: Andy Mills, Dan Moreau, Diana Magallon, Jeff Crouch, David Kowalczyk, Val Murah, Katie Rutherford, T.R. Healy, William Walsh, Ellen Perry, Suvi Mahonen, Luke Waldrip, Vic Fortezza, Michael Woodcock, Karen Greenbaum-Maya, Janet Thorning, Jim Fuess, Jim Lyons, Christian Pinchbeck, Michael Pitassi, Colin James, Joseph Goosey, Daniel Sawyer, Josh Mitchell, Jared Hernandez, Joseph Grant, Ron Savage, Gay Degani, Steve Cartwright, Scott Sawyer, and Jeff Hendrickson!

Click below to download your copy!

Thanks to David Kentner . . .

. . . we’ve reached our goal for collection $300 this year!  David made out his donation to “the cause.”  What is the cause?  What does Faraway mean?  For the answers to those questions, I refer you to the first thing Faraway ever published, a statement of purpose penned by none other than yours truly, in our first issue way back in April, 2007.

            It seems only appropriate, being that none of us know anything about publishing, have ever been published, or have ever earnestly submitted something for consideration for publication, to start out the first issue of this journal with a statement of purpose. What business do we have putting together a journal? What are our qualifications? Probably none. But an anecdote might illustrate what we hope to achieve.

            I was speaking with a woman from a local writer’s club when she asked me, “Are you a writer?”

            “Well, an aspiring writer,” I humbly replied.

            “Don’t say that,” she said, shaking her finger. “Have you ever written anything? Then you are a writer. The act of touching pen to paper, or fingers to keys, makes you a writer.”

            You have to be a writer to be published, but you do not have to be published to be a writer, was essentially what she told me. In order to be a writer, you have to be able to refer to yourselves as such, to proudly claim that passion and occupation as your own, even if you cannot claim the outward attributes of a writer–being published, getting paid for your work, being recognized as a writer.

            And it was heartening, for aspiring writers too easily become frustrated by these false qualifications and unreachable standards, when all they really need to do is write.  Faraway is a means for aspiring writers to make themselves into actual writers; the difference is one of effort. The same goes for artists in other mediums: paintings, photos, poems and odes.

            We want to give young writers the chance to have their work seen by others, without the rigorous and pretentious guidelines that scare them away from submitting to known journals. We want writers to develop and evolve, to feed off of each other and become better, and to be recognized for improving. We want to establish a community of support for those pursuing authorship as a pastime or a career. Finally, we want to create a means by which we can make ourselves immortal.

            This last may seem absurd, but it gets to the other point of this journal’s title. When trying to think of a title for this endeavor, I for some reason picked up the Epic of Gilgamesh, which I had first read a few years ago. The epic was written around five thousand years ago, and is one of the earliest surviving examples of human literature. It is an odd tale in many respects, but the central plot is one that people still wrestle with: the search for immortality. Gilgamesh, a king in Sumeria, on witnessing the death of his close friend, sets out on a journey to find eternal life. His quest takes him to the heavenly realm where the immortal being Utnapishtim, known as the Faraway, resides. Gilgamesh is terrified at the thought of death and asks Utnapishtim what he might do to avoid his friend’s fate.

            Utnapishtim offers him several opportunities, but Gilgamesh, as a human with faults, fails in these endeavors, and is forced to return to the world of the living. Coming to his own kingdom, he stops and looks up in awe at the walls of the city that he rules. He realizes that eternal life in the sense of inhabiting a bodily form forever is impossible. But immortality in the sense of making a lasting impact, of leaving a mark, requires only dedication and passion. For Gilgamesh, immortality was achieved by building great cities. For us, immortality may be achieved through art.  As the Epic of Gilgamesh proves, the art survives for millennia, though Gilgamesh himself has been gone for over five thousand years.

            So we invite you to read what we have written, we who love to write and read, to watch us as we grow, and to become writers yourselves. And we will try not to take ourselves too seriously in the process.

 

 

So now, almost two years later, here we are.  We may not have reached a million readers or published a thousand authors, but every author I’ve come across in my work for Faraway has been enthusiastic about our cause.  I’ve had many writers thank me profusely for giving them the chance to be published, when the journals we organized Faraway against would not even accept their submissions.  And I’ve had many people like David Kentner donate money generously, because they believe that arts are important to civilization, and that everybody should be able to participate in the community of arts, not just the elite few who make it into McSweeney’s or wherever else, while thousands of others are turned away.

If any of this resonates with you, then Faraway is for you.

Commissioned Work: An Experiment

Attention all artists: For the next issue of Faraway, I would like to try something a little different.  I would like to commission artwork specifically made to accompany certain stories.  If you would like to take part, send an email to FarawayJournal@gmail.com.  In return, I will send you a story or poem, which will hopefully inspire your muses to paint, draw, sketch, digitally animate, photograph, etc., something of pertinence to the story.  In the winter issue of Faraway, your artwork will appear side by side with the writing that inspired it.  This will be a great way to get published and put your skills to the test!