Faraway, Volume 2, Issue 3

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The new issue of Faraway is online, featuring dozens of pieces by many new authors.  Click on the titles below to read the individual stories or poems, or click here to view the issue as a whole.

On the Other Promontory by Davide Trame

Winter Passage For Billy Collins by Michael K. Gause

Dwindling Times and Burden by Gary Beck

A Work in Progress by Benjamin Nardolilli with artwork by Travis Jeffords

Paramecium by S.P. Flannery

Her Shunted Complexion by Ray Succre with photo by James Berkshire

Beyond Organic Groceries by Elizabeth Kate Switaj

“Behold I Am Oblivion” by Terence Kuch

Titian on His Journey Home by Davide Trame

The Book Review by David Kentner

A Family Matter by Josh Mitchell with photos by Atina Thorning

Manic is the Dark Night by Michael K. Johnson

Dwellings by Luigi Monteferrante

The Whole History of Art by William Doreski

Can I Get a Witness by Eric McKinley

Betty With the Peacock by Willow Healy

Fading Flurries by Sean Wiebe

? by Jeff Hendrickson

RedYellowRed by Katie Rutherford

Conceptual Conflict by Felino Soriano

Spirit Faces by William Doreski

Roy Flint, Circa 1988 by Jen Conley

Venge by S.P. Flannery

Smack! by James Berkshire

The Silent Signs by Olga Zilberbourg with artwork by Gay Degani

Some Dark Blue by Beth Mathison

Coming to America by Shane Ryan Bailey with L.A. Harvest by James Berkshire

Let the Dead Bury Their Dead by Mark Konkel
New Grass by Michael K. Gause

 

 

 

 

Something to look at

The latest issue of Faraway is now available. thanks and congratulations to all the writers and artists.

These things always seem to take longer than anticipated. A word on the process: Our pet chimp Dimba solicits short stories, poems, and artwork from his cage at the company fortress in Montclair, California.  Accepted pieces are then shipped through a series of tubes to his brother’s underground log cabin in Montpelier, Vermont. His brother uses scotch tape and elbow grease in his spare time to assemble the faraway2various and sundry pieces into something marginally acceptable for mass digestion. Sometimes an ocean liner is hired to ship material to the chimp’s cousin, who lives in a big wooden shoe in Norway and has more and better digital skills.

The first two issues of this publication were profoundly and embarrassingly amateur hour (still, my favorite bit out of everything we’ve done is the first poem from the first issue). With Vol 1, Issue 3 we started working thematically with varying levels of success. E.g., Vol. 1 Iss. 3 featured birds and trees…um…for no particular reason. Volume 2 Issue 1 was broken up by the 4 seasons and had a cool cover. Volume 2 Issue 2 had a victorian theme, complete with fake ads that i think turned out pretty good.

Since Vol. 2 Iss. 2 took a bit of effort we tried to do something simpler with this one: i had always liked the title of the Nine Inch Nails song “The Line Begins to Blur”. what if we used kind of a Mondrian / straight lines theme that gradually became more blurred, curved, etc? It had a certain kind of symbolism and resemblance to daily experiences. Easy!

4 months later the current issue is on your screen.  I think we basically executed this concept, with Sean Wiebe’s last lines of the first half “…a new thought that has been slow in coming” leading to Jeff’s two explosive centerpieces and subsequently more abstract, natural images. This one might have been labored to death, but see what you think.

So, for next time, how about some suggestions for themes? Also- the next batch should plan on submitting their bios in 6 words or less.

Also, for best viewing: download and save, then view as “Two-up Continuous”.

An Interview with K. C. Wilson, Part 1

            Recently, writer K. C. Wilson, whose novella Doing the Dead – 1983 is being published this month by Faraway, took some time to answer some questions about his work, his writing process, and his experience in publishing.  Part 1 of the interview is below.  (Click here to read a review of Wilson’s novel The Route, and here to read about the upcoming publication of Doing the Dead – 1983.)  Doing the Dead – 1983 is now on sale!  Click below to buy it now.

 
Support independent publishing: buy this book on Lulu.


 

Part 1

 

About the Author

 

K. C. Wilson is fifty-five, and has been married six years.   He has a five year old daughter and lives in North Florida in the beach town where he grew up.  He lived at various times as an adult in California, Hawaii, Louisiana and Georgia, but eventually settled with his family in Florida.  He graduated from FIU in Miami in 1976, and studied poetry under James W. Hall, before he became a famous novelist.

            Wilson’s publication history is varied.  He wrote an article on hydrogen energy in 1978 for a local business journal.  He was very forward thinking then and more idealistic than now.  He also wrote a magazine article about historic preservation, some book and entertainment reviews in another local magazine, then in 1989, his first fiction story appeared in Cavalier under a pseudonym.  According to Wilson, it was trash.  “Funny, but nothing I could show my mom.  It’s not like I wasn’t also sending out what I considered my ‘good stuff.’  I had a couple of novels and some better stories going around, but nothing else hit.  At that point, though, I was convinced I’d turned the corner.”

            Wilson has a story due to appear this year in the December issue of Delivered.  He also is an editor for the journal Conclave.

 

The Route and Doing the Dead

Describe for our readers what The Route is about, and your process for writing that novel.

 

The Route is about a man who is a failure in the eyes of the world and in the eyes of his family but in the eyes of his friends he is heroic.  I wrote that novel because I knew a man who was immensely gifted and tragically flawed.  He was a great friend to me and I admired his determination, especially when he knew it was futile.  I loved him.  And I knew his story would never be told unless I told it.

 

A man passes among us through the neighborhood, wearing old clothes with a dignified, oddly aristocratic bearing.  Who is he?  Why is he homeless?  Why is he sleeping on my floor?  To answer these questions, I started writing from his point of view.  He supplied the anecdotes, the string of eccentric characters, the theme.  I was just a scribe.

 

In the rewriting process I used a cassette recorder.  I’d read a chapter out loud and play it back and edit it until it sounded mellifluous to me.  That process really helped me smooth out the flow.

 

Describe Doing the Dead, and your process for writing it.

 

Doing the Dead came out in one sitting, in a flood, actually, the rough draft did, on a long car ride to a Grateful Dead show in Virginia.  My intent was to write about the Dead concerts in Hampton and Morgantown, but I had to get all this preliminary stuff off my chest before I could even begin to think about the shows.  It started out as a journal entry and just kept going and going.  Eventually, I did write about the Dead shows, but that was all Part 2, and had very little to do with Part 1.

 

Over the years it’s been edited and polished but essentially, the story’s the same as it was.  I call it fiction because I changed the names.  It’s a slice of my life that turned kind of golden brown around the edges over time.

 

I’ve noticed that many of the same names, if not necessarily the same characters, appear in both The Route and Doing the Dead.  Can you explain how the two works are connected?

 

Doing the Dead – 1983 is part of a collection of related stories called Best Man Complex.  I grouped these stories together because there is a running theme throughout that links them.  Certain characters in some of the stories also appear in The Route.  Certain characters also appear in my other novels, Goat Island and A Decent Marker.  By linking these stories and novels through certain characters I’ve drawn a larger picture on a larger canvas than I could have if they were all unrelated.  A lot of it is William Faulkner’s influence that caused me to model my fictional little North Florida town of Shadville Beach after Yoknapatawpha County.  I peopled it with some familiar characters who show different sides of themselves in different stories.  I like to think they all fit into the big picture without conflict.

 

The Route and Doing the Dead both take place in Florida, quite different from typical modern settings like Los Angeles or New York City.  Can you describe Florida as a setting, how it differs from other places, and why it has been important for you to make that the setting of your work?

 

John D. McDonald provided all Floridians with the definitive fading memory of Florida as it was in forties, fifties and sixties.  Every Florida writer wants to pick up a piece of his legacy and carry it a step or two onward.  In the eighties and nineties, South Florida was the hottest new literary landscape in the world.  It seemed like every other crime novel was set in the Keys or Miami.  Charles Willeford, James W. Hall, Carl Hiassen, Elmore Leonard and later, lots of others, were all over the lower half of the state, redefining the Florida crime novel.  It was rich territory.  But North Florida remained the hinterland.  Nobody had a clue what went on up there and if they did, they didn’t care.  I figured the region was mine for the taking.

 

Pete Dexter and Clifford Irving both wrote novels set in North Florida but neither of them were locals.  Harry Crews, a Florida writer from Gainesville, wrote a novel set in Jacksonville, but surely, he wasn’t going to be the last one.

 

I had a story that defined North Florida in the early eighties, a tale of counterculture misfits running hard and fast toward epic tragedy.  It was a story, again, based on real events, a story that fell in my lap that I couldn’t ignore if I wanted to, a story no one would write if I didn’t.  I may have overestimated my ability to make the story work.  At the time I blamed it on the publishing world’s lack of interest in North Florida.  Goat Island turned out to not be my breakthrough novel, but I wasn’t about to relinquish my claim on North Florida.  It was only a matter of time and rewrites.

 

The Route came along between rewrites.  I had a unique friend, Bruce Kerr, a character who was the king of procrastination.  Bruce was like 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.  I had attempted to write about him before, but when I started trying to see through his eyes and to write from his perspective, I knew I was onto something.  It freed me from my own voice, which was a victim of too many other voices.  In the ethereal egoic realms of my “voice,” stentorian echoes of Faulkner and Nabokov wrestled for supremacy with the jocular flourishes of Henry Miller, the clipped cadences of James M. Cain and the lurid Southern nastiness of Erskine Caldwell.  I was all over the place, voice-wise. My voice changed with every book I read.  And I didn’t really feel particularly obligated to be consistent.  I wanted to keep my options open.  And so, I made about every mistake there was to make, some of them chronically.  But then I found a different voice, the voice of a narrator who was definitely not me, and I was able to settle into it.  From the very beginning, the tone of voice in The Route felt right to me.

 

 

Be sure to come back December 19 and 26 for parts 2 and 3 of the interview.  And visit tomorrow for the first chapter of Wilson’s 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.

Have you downloaded the new Faraway yet?

If not, what are you waiting for?!  This issue contains work by over thirty contributors from all around the world.  The content and the layout are the best Faraway has seen in its two year publication history.  Download it now by right-clicking the image, and clicking “Save Target As” (2.85 megabytes).  And don’t forget to click the comments form below, and let us know what you think!

 

I’ve also updated the Marathon page with an account of today’s run.

3 Days Till NaNoWriMo

With just a few days till the start of National Novel Writing Month, I’m really started to get excited.  I feel as if I’m about to begin a race.  I received an email today from Chris Baty, Program Directory for NaNoWriMo, that includes a funny, inspirational timeline for the month of November:

Here’s the plan:
Today: Make a tax-deductible donation to help us pay for National Novel Writing Month. So far, we’ve received donations from 3.4% of our participants, putting us 6.6% away from our goal. Chip in! Even $10 makes a big difference, and pays huge dividends in halos and noveling karma. We’re a nonprofit, and we’ve spent hundreds of thousands of dollars readying this swashbuckling adventure for 110,000 adults and 15,000 kids and teens around the world. We need your support!

Tomorrow: Make sure you’ve set your time zone correctly (it’s under User Settings). Some word-count features appear and disappear at midnight on November 1 and November 30, so dialing those in now will save you stress later. Join a local region, and find out when and where the first novel-writing get-togethers (called “write-ins”) for your city or town will be held. Tune in to WrimoRadio, NaNoWriMo’s podcast, and learn how you can be on the November 3 episode.

October 31: Get the first pep talk email. You’ll receive about three of these a week—one from me and two from our panel of esteemed celebrity pep talkers—throughout November. Note: If you donate $50 or more today, you will receive six years of pep talks from me in a beautiful 80-page PDF, constituting about as much week-by-week NaNoWriMo advice and encouragement as any human being can handle without falling over. 

November 1: At midnight, local time, start writing your book. You need to log 1667 words per day to stay on par. The site will be very slow for the first few days of the event, but with patience you can update your soaring word count in the box at the top of our site or on the “Edit Novel Info” page of your profile. Watch your stats graph fill. Send a link to your author profile to your friends so they can follow your progress. Revel in the majesty of your unfolding story. It’s November 1! You are an unstoppable novel-writing machine!

November 2: Stop writing. Wonder if you should start over. Keep going. Feel better.

November 3: The first November episode of WrimoRadio goes up on the site, beaming out overcaffeinated messages of hope from Wrimos worldwide. We’ll be podcasting every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from here until December.  

November 8: As the first full week of writing comes to a close, you will be at 11,666 words. This is more fiction than most people write in their lifetimes, and you did it in a week. Go, you! This is also Municipal Liaison Appreciation Day, a raucous international holiday that celebrates NaNoWriMo’s volunteer chapter-heads (the folks who organized the write-in you went to last week). Chocolate, flowers, and gifts of expensive electronics are appreciated.

November 13: Nothing really happens on November 13.

November 15: After the second week of writing, you will be at 25,000 words. This is the approximate length of such legendary works of fiction as Animal Farm, Death in Venice, and Gossip Girl: I Like it Like That. You’re halfway to winning! Attend a Midway Party in your town, or come to San Francisco, where the Night of Writing Dangerously Write-a-thon will set records for group noveling and candy consumption.

November 16: The second half of NaNoWriMo dawns. Writerly confidence builds. Your book comes to life, and characters start doing interesting, unexpected things. Nice. Weird.

November 22: After the third full week of writing, you stand at 35,000 words, the NaNoWriMo milestone universally recognized as The Place Where Everything Gets Much, Much Easier.

November 25: Novel validation and winning begins, and Word-Count Progress Bars turn from blue to green (over 50K) to purple (over 50k and a verified winner!). Check our FAQs for details on uploading your manuscript and winning. For the first time ever, a very limited number of 2008 Winner t-shirts will appear in the store. These will make you smile.

November 27: American Wrimos celebrate the true meaning of Thanksgiving by gathering together with friends and family, wolfing down a huge meal as quickly as possible, and then ditching those friends and family to hide in the bathroom with a laptop.

November 30: By midnight, local time, we will all be the proud owners of 50,000-word novels that we could barely imagine on October 31. Plan to attend your local NaNoWriMo Thank God It’s Over Party, where grins will abound, champagne will flow, fives will be highed, and wrists will be iced.

If you’re taking part in NaNoWriMo, let us know.  And don’t forget to download the latest issue of Faraway.

The new issue of Faraway is now online!

Click the thumbnail below to download the pdf of the newest issue.  For optimal viewing, download and save the file, then, in the Adobe Acrobat window, click view: two-up continuous.

You can also click on the miniviewer below to stream the new issue via www.Issuu.com/faraway.  NOTE: Because Issuu.com is not compatible with the latest versions of Adobe Acrobat, some material in this issue will not display properly.  We recommend that you download the issue from the link above.

This issue features stories, poems, and artwork from two dozen contributors, including Andy Mills, Suvi Mahonen and Luke Waldrip, Jeff Crouch and Diana Magallon, Jim Lyons, Jim Fuess, Michael Woodcock, Josh Mitchell, Jared Hernandez, Michael Pitassi, T.R. Healy, Ellen Perry, David Kowalczyk, William Walsh, Joseph Grant, Vic Fortezza, Gay Degani, Karen Greenbaum-Maya, Steve Cartwright, Ron Savage, and Christian Pinchbeck.

And please be sure to tell us what you think!

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.

Submitting to Faraway

Faraway is currently not accepting poetry or prose submissions for the Fall 2008 issue.  You may still submit artwork for the Fall issue, or submit your poetry or prose for consideration in the Winter issue.

To submit to Faraway, please send an email to farawayjournal@gmail.com, and attach either a word processor file (Times New Roman, 12 point font), or a .jpeg image file. There are no length requirements, and we are tolerant of all styles and genres. However, correct grammar and spelling are absolutely necessary.  Faraway cannot pay writers at the moment, but it is free to submit.