Posted by: sonorareview | May 6, 2009

55/56 Ordering Instructions

sr55_COVER_ForBlogHello Everyone,

The preorders for the latest Sonora Review issue, featuring an expansive in-addition-to-the-awesome-fiction/non-/poetry-lineup Wallace tribute section, including the uncollected Wallace story, Solomon Silverfish, essays and reflections from Sven Birkerts, Michael Sheehan interviewing Tom Bissell, Charles Bock, Marshall Boswell, Greg Carlisle, Jonathan Franzen, Dave Eggers, Ken Kalfus, Glenn Kenny, Lee Martin, Michael Martone, Rick Moody interviewing Michael Pietsch, and art and prose from Karen Green, will have shipped by this Friday, May 15th. We’ve had a wonderful response, and while issues are still for sale they’re no longer available through paypal: just follow the check mailing instructions below and you should be able to get your hands on this truly remarkable issue, which also includes new work by Aimee Bender, fantastic short-short contest winners, and interviews with Marilynne Robinson, Junot Diaz, Ron Hansen and Ben Marcus. If you’ve ordered an issue in the last week, don’t worry, we’ll get them out super soon!

 

 

The issue’s DOUBLE FANTASTIC complete content (as if the tribute wasn’t enough), work that makes up our Sonora 55/56 pages, includes:

cover art by Matt Furie

&
fiction from Etgar Keret, Kellie Wells, John Holliday, Ryan Call, Jarod Rosello, Sharma Shields, Wendy Rawlings, Katherine Lien Chariott, Michael Conn and David Lombardino
&
non-fiction from Sean Lovelace, Elizabeth Bennett, Riley Hanick, Henry Ronan-Daniell, Jennifer Schaller and Luis Alberto Urrea
&
poetry from Eliot Khalil Wilson, Yi-Fen Chou, Peter Jay Shippy, Tamiko Beyer, Dan Pinkerton, Martin Moran, Ryo Yamaguchi, dawn lonsinger, Keith Montesano, Laynie Brown, Joshua Butts, Clinton Frakes, Cralan Kelder, G.C. Waldrep, Cynthia Arrieu-King, Tim Peterson and Gregory Lawless
&
reviews of James Wood, Marilynne Robinson, Eça de Queirós and David Ohle.

If you’d like to order the issue now you may send a check, payable to “Sonora Review,” with an accompanying note with your address, to
Sonora Review
55/56 Order
Department of English
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721
Include your email address so we can send you a note when we get the order.

Any questions? You can hit us up at sonora@email.arizona.edu. We should be responding in a timely fashion; don’t get upset if it takes a few days! Thanks so much for the interest.

Sonora Review

Posted by: sonorareview | November 21, 2008

55/56 is going to blow your mind

wheelchair_assassinsNow that we’ve got some rock-solid (or paper-solid) copies of 54 in our hands, it’s time to continue the hype machine for 55/56. We’re not giving away the full lineup yet (I know, I sound like some Coachella or Lalapalooza promotional manager) but believe me when I say it’ll be the biggest Sonora issue you’ve seen in a long, long time. Not just physically, of course, but conceptually as well. In addition to a tribute section to David Foster Wallace, we’ll have some fantastic short stories, poems and essays to round out the double issue.

We’ve got the fabulous co-EIC Michael Sheehan to thank for the bulk of the tribute content, as he’s been working tirelessly to get in touch with important and insightful writers about the influence and scope of David Foster Wallace’s work. The table of contents, which is going to be both mind-bogglingly deep (you’ll have to see it to believe it) and respectfully emotional, has all the earmarks of an important and seminal issue of Sonora (not to be hyperbolic or anything.) I couldn’t be more thrilled with his tireless efforts to make this the best Sonora issue ever.

Brannon Larson

Editor-at-Large

Posted by: sonorareview | November 18, 2008

Issue 54 Has Arrived!

n8400138_31207908_21612Exciting/Amazing/Incredible News: Issue 54 is finally here! What’s in issue 54?! How about stories from Richard Katrovas, Pinckney Benedict, Gary Finke, Michael Martone and Jill Stukenberg; poetry by Boyer Rickel, Megan Gannon, Thomas Hawks and Sawako Nakayasu; interviews with Jim Shepard and Joshua Ferris; and the winners of our 2008 Short Short Fiction Contest!

It arrived today, in bulky boxes, and in a short while it should be rolling across the country to our subscribers. In the meantime, you can start a subscription by sending 14 bucks for one year (2 issues), 26 bucks for two years (4 issues), or just 8 bucks for this issue, to Sonora Review/ Subscriptions/ Department of English/ University of Arizona/ Tucson, AZ 85721. We know, you’re thinking, “What a drag, they can’t just take electronic subscriptions? Why no paypal account? Are they in the dark ages?” The truth is, we’re a student run lit mag–oldest in the country if we don’t say so ourselves–without many of the technological resources that most larger, well-funded lit mags have. We still, though, run a pretty damn good magazine if we say so ourselves, and this issue is a testament to the hard work and sweat of our former EICs, Amy Knight and PR Griffis, in addition to their section editors and fabulous readers.

Posted by: sonorareview | November 18, 2008

Can I drive the truck that pulls the bandwagon?

Jose Caruci / AFP / Getty

Jose Caruci / AFP / Getty

It would be a shame not to acknowledge the proximity, and namesake likeness, between Roberto Bolaño’s 2666 and our magazine’s hometown of Tucson, Arizona. The novel, just published FSG, is set in the fictional Mexican town of Saint Teresa, in the state of Sonora (get it? Sonora Review?), which borders our humble little state. Throughout the novel, writers and professors are flying into Tucson before driving down to investigate either a boxing match, a slew of murders, or the mysterious life of a forgotten German author. Nogales, a border town ninety minutes from South Tucson, is a short drive from Saint Teresa, which is itself a city based on Juárez, Mexico, where hundreds of murders have taken place in the past decade. It’s impossible, when reading the book while sitting in Tucson, not to feel the actual heat and filth that Bolaño describes emanating from the Sonoran desert. The book condemns the entire world, while also revelling in its mystery, but living in the same desert he describes makes it hard not to feel extra-condemned. Which I’m okay with: Bolaño writes beautifully, and powerfully, and the frightening passages of his book–the frightening third of the book–genuinely terrifies me, a borderland desert dweller. For being a writer from Chile who later moved to Mexico, Bolaño certainly understood his surroundings, esp. the desert sunsets, which he describes as being impossible until they happen in front of you.

Posted by: sonorareview | November 2, 2008

Whiting Award for Manuel!

Not to be outdone by his fellow first-year Assistant Professor Ander Monson, whose Solipsism essay is in the latest Best New American Essays volume, Manuel Muñoz, our first-year Assistant Professor in fiction, was just awarded a Whiting Writers’ Award at a ceremony in New York City. The award, which carries a $50,000 (!) prize, has been given annually for the past 23 years to promising writers early in their careers. Manuel’s latest book, The Faith Healer of Olive Avenue, is a wonderful collection of some shattering short stories. We at Sonora Review are super thrilled about the award, which serves to prove just how outstanding our teachers are. He runs a pretty sweet workshop, too.

This semester has been exhausting for some of the Sonora staff, but we’re still reading submissions for the journal, trying to get our online submission system up and running. Also, we’re thinking about posting some mean online content, short stories and poems and even essays, in the coming months. We’ll keep everyone posted.

Posted by: sonorareview | October 17, 2008

MORE Congrats

So, this is quite the exciting week: We’d like to congratulate Michelle Morano for her essay, entitled The Funmachine, which appeared in Sonora Review Issue 51. Why the congrats? Because it was listed as a Notable Essay in 2007 in the Best American Essays 2008, the same piece of readable foldable connected pages which contains Ander Monson’s essay, Solipsism.

A few experts from the essay:

“1976 is a little expendable income in families like ours, here in upstate New York and all over the country. Nearly every home has a television now, eight-track tapes have been replaced by cassettes, and music technology is the wave of the future. That’s what two deliverymen assure us as they carry the Baldwin FunMachine through our front door one Friday evening: ‘This here is the wave of the future.’

“1976 happens in C or D or E, F, G, A, B. Or if you’re angry or sad it’s a minor chord, holding the ominous sound until someone finally tells you to knock it off. Each chord seems like a miracle, like three notes in perfect harmony. As if dissonance really could become a thing of the past.”

Interested in learning more about the FunMachine? Watch this tutorial.

Do you live in the South Jersey area? Here’s your chance to own a FunMachine!

Posted by: sonorareview | October 16, 2008

Congratulations and Opinions

A number of items worth mentioning on this fabulously crisp day in the Sunny Old Pueblo:

Marilynne Robinson, the Iowa Writer’s Workshop professor and Pulitzer-prize winning author, has just been nominated for the National Book Award for her latest tale from the town of Gilead, Home. Marilynne sat down to speak with us, a few weeks ago, about a number of intriguing ideas. Previously we’d promised to post a couple pictures from the event, but seeing as our photographers (I’m looking at you, Josh and Mike) must have had the caffeine-induced shakes we didn’t want to put any of them up. Really, they’re not that great, although we’ve forgiven Mike and Josh by now.

Additionally, Ander Monson, the faculty advisor for Sonora Review and the newest member of the University of Arizona’s Creative Writing faculty, has an intriguingly strange and compelling essay in the latest installment of Houghton Mifflin’s Best New American Essays, available for purchase from your local bookstore (or Amazon).

The essay, entitled “Solipsism” and residing between pages 155 and 162, is an example of why we at Sonora find Ander so damn intriguing. Give it a read: you shan’t regret it.

Until soon,

Brannon Larson, Editor-at-Large

Posted by: sonorareview | September 22, 2008

Overwhelmingly Awesome

On Friday night, Marilynne Robinson read from her latest novel, “Home.” Needless to say, she was wonderful, composed, and thoughtful, and genuinely seemed to enjoy her time in the warm Old Pueblo.

On Saturday, she delivered a tremendously subtle and complex lecture on the poetry of Wallace Stevens, and how he, in conjunction with contemporaries like William James and Sigmund Freud (perhaps you’ve heard of them?!), were all concerned with similar metaphysical problems. She was witty and engaging, and so much smarter than most of us in the room (although I should only speak for myself, there were times when her mind blazed ahead) that by the end, I was exhausted. In a transcendent way, of course. She then was kind enough to sit down and speak with a few of us, about liberal theology and the Middle West and the modern political state (hint: she’s a member of the Obama congregation) and the role of art in an ever-expanding universe and the redemptive quality of aesthetics. Needless to say, we recorded it, seeing as none of us could type that quickly.

We should have some pictures, from the interview, on the site later this week. Also, perhaps, an excerpt or two from the illuminating discussion, which will run in its entirety in the next issue of Sonora.

Until then, I’m hoping my mind absorbs at least 10% of Marilynne Robinson’s wonderful ideas. I’ll be a better person because of it.

Brannon Clark Larson

Posted by: sonorareview | September 19, 2008

Marilynne Robinson

Marilynne Robinson will be reading from her newest novel, Home, tonight (Friday 9/19 @ 8:00pm) and presenting a lecture on Wallace Stevens tomorrow (Saturday 9/20 @ 1:00pm) at the University of Arizona’s Poetry Center. Info: http://poetrycenter.arizona.edu/events/fallreadings_08.shtml

Sonora Review Issue 55 will contain both a review of Home and the text of a conversation-style interview with Robinson, to be conducted by Editor-at-Large Brannon Larson following the lecture. The interview is open to the public and all are welcome.

“That odd capacity for destitution, as if by nature we ought to have so much more than nature gives us. As if we are shockingly unclothed when we lack the complacencies of ordinary life. In destitution, even of feeling or purpose, a human being is more hauntingly human and vulnerable to kindnesses because there is the sense that things should be otherwise, and then the thought of what is wanting and what alleviation would be, and how the soul could be put at ease, restored. At home. But the soul finds its own home if it ever has a home at all.”

From Home © Marilynne Robinson

Posted by: sonorareview | September 18, 2008

A Sweaty Smile

Soon after Infinite Jest came out, when I was still in high school, I spotted a hardcover copy of the massive tome on my father’s bookshelf. My father had talked about the big writers of his generation—about Gaddis and, of course, Pynchon—but he hadn’t, as yet, told me about anyone younger. I can actually remember asking him about Infinite Jest (asking what the book was about and if he’d read it and how much he’d liked it), and he told me he bought it because it was remaindered and looked interesting and he thought, one day, he might start it. He told me he’d done just that, started it, and that it was funny as all hell. He told me I should read it, so I tried. I got hundreds of pages in—I was only fifteen or sixteen at the time, but pretty nerdy—and then, terrified that I was stuck in the middle of this wonderful dark sea of more than one thousand pages, shut the book. I came back to it, but only after reading Broom of the System and some of his non-fiction. Still, though, I couldn’t get through it. It frightened me.
It was strange, for me, to see a book set in Tucson—I hadn’t read Barbara Kingsolver at the time, and, at be honest, I wasn’t sure if there was anything worth writing about in Southern Arizona. I was wrong, of course: the scene on ‘A’ mountain, with shadows and wheelchairs and assassin conspiracies, feels wholly appropriate for this strange, strange city. If  there were more French-Canadians in town I might begint to worry.
During my freshman year of college, here at the U of A, Wallace came to read. I knew, by then, that he’d gone to the U of A for an MFA (something I didn’t really understand back then). I convinced my dad to go with me to the large auditorium in the Modern Languages building. My father had told me stories, about seeing John Hawkes and William Gass at one reading back in the ’70s, and this was the first time I’d be seeing someone large and famous. I was anxious and certain that there wouldn’t be any seats unless we got there super early. Of course, the place was full of people, but  it was nowhere near capacity. I thought, how in the heck couldn’t there be more people in love with this guy? He’s hilarious and brilliant and capable of writing breathtakingly sad sentences, so why wasn’t it standing room only?
He started his reading with a bandanna wrapped around his forehead; at the time, I’d only ever seen gang members wear bandannas. I’d forgotten about their practical application, though, which was to catch all the sweat that comes pouring off a person when they’re in the middle of exerting intense amounts of energy. Five minutes into the reading, he was already using his shirt sleeves to supplement the cloth of the bandanna. He was reading, I believe, a portion of a story about an African boy in a remote village, and at the beginning of the reading he’d mentioned that there were a couple words in the story he didn’t know how to pronounce. Everyone laughed, and my dad just rolled his eyes and leaned over to me to say, “He doesn’t even know the words. What a show-off, using things he can’t even say.” I thought this was right, primarily because my father’s ideas, especially about literature, were like scripture to me. I thought Wallace was cocky and arrogant because my father thought he was cocky and arrogant. I laughed throughout the reading, self-conscious enough not to enjoy it too thoroughly in front of my father, who laughed every now and again. After the reading, I was too embarrassed to show my enthusiasm for Wallace, so I didn’t join the long line for autographs. He smiled a lot during the reading, and laughed at some of his own jokes, and seemed to be enjoying himself. He didn’t take any questions. He pushed his hair behind his ears a lot.
In the years since that reading, my love for David Foster Wallace’s work has only intensified. I still, of course, could talk about him with my father, defending Wallace while I was in college, once I was confident enough and had taken enough literature courses to hide behind. I couldn’t convince him, though. I couldn’t explain to him why it was so important that I’d found a writer I could love, someone who spoke about isolation and information overload and the frustration of being able to think constantly. Last year, when Wallace’s piece about Roger Federer was published, my dad called it a big jumbled mess. We argued in a friendly manner, but, in the end, neither of us had changed our minds. I still loved Wallace, and my dad was still skeptical. His literary opinions were no longer scripture, and in looking back I’m certain that my love for Wallace was the first instance of my personal taste bubbling to the surface.
Today, I think Wallace’s embarrassment about not being able to pronounce words from that story represents a little about why I enjoy him so much. For him, it seemed to be about getting everything down on paper—pushing out, quickly, before they left, all your ideas and images and thought experiments and storylines and character traits. It wasn’t about pronunciation; it was about the text, the act of writing, the purging, and the terrible formation of coherent thoughts on the page. To hell with speaking; just keep typing.
That is, of course, reductionism at its worst, but I’m just trying to make a point. It’s the massive amount of work David Foster Wallace left behind that will help generations deal with their world. I have no doubt that Wallace is one of the few writers from our era who will be read hundreds of years from now, because the intelligence and wit and heart inside each of his stories and essays and novels is enough to shame us all into being more alert, more aware and, ultimately, better people.
When I was accepted to the University of Arizona MFA program, the first thing I thought was, no joke, “Wow. I can say I went to the same program as David Foster Wallace.” I feel proud to be working on the same literary journal for which he was fiction editor, and I feel proud to be from a city so important to Infinite Jest.
We, at Sonora Review, give our deepest sympathies and thoughts to his friends and family. He was, unquestionably, the only writer we’ve ever had who can write about tennis and pornography and David Lynch and lobsters with equal compassion and intellect.

September 17, 2008
Brannon Larson
Sonora Review Editor-at-Large

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