New Poetry & Columns Rumpus Original Fiction: "Pulmonary" by Avra Margariti “If my employer is bothered that the lungs are always missing from the folded organs I deliver every Monday, he has not complained.” Rumpus Original Essay: from Sex With a Brain Injury by Annie Liontas “It starts with a big bang. It comes from the sky: a meteor, a falling object, a box. It comes out of nowhere, a car, a baseball, an opponent’s fist...” |
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GIFT RUMPUS subscriptions this holiday season! |
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Interviews & Reviews Rebecca Rubenstein interviews Kelsey Norris about House Gone Quiet “As soon as I start writing something, I’m immediately thinking of the reader that’s going to encounter it.” Cyn Grace Sylvie reviews Ben Fama's If I Close My Eyes “Fama’s brightest illuminations are those that capture the haunting echoes of our contemporary shared experience...” Alina Stefanescu interviews Maggie Smith about You Could Make This Place Beautiful “Sometimes life refuses us plot. Almost all the time.” |
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What To Read When: The Rumpus's Most Anticipated Books of (Early) 2024 The Rumpus bids farewell to 2023 with this extensive list of our Most Anticipated Books of (Early) 2024, with titles by Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Tommy Orange, Hala Alyan, Susan Muaddi Darraj, Danez Smith, Brandi Wells, Sarah Ruiz-Grossman, Laura Chow Reeve, Jessie Ren Marshall, and more! |
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Next up in our Indie x Indie POETRY BOOK CLUB: Paper Banners by Jane Miller x Copper Canyon Press |
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For our September 2023 - August 2024 selections (and possibly beyond!), we’ll focus on great new poetry collections AND hear from the indie publishers behind the books with our new Indie x Indie Poetry Book Club format! Join by midnight Jan. 15, to receive our February Poetry Book Club pick Paper Banners by Jane Miller and join our subsciber-only conversation with author Jane Miller. As a subscriber, we'll send you a copy of this book the first week of October and you'll also be invited to an exclusive online video discussion with the book's author + the author's editor + a Rumpus Editor and fellow book club members. Subscribers are encouraged to join in the chat with their questions before and during the conversations. These will take place on the Rumpus' Crowdcast channel and will remain available to subscribers for 1 month after they take place. About November's Poetry Book Club selection: A herald of desire, suffering, mortality, and the mission of poetry itself, Jane Miller’s Paper Banners “say[s] the cosmos / isn’t hostile. / Yet strangles a dove / with one hand.” Against this angst, Miller steps outside of history to contemplate voices of love, aging, and artmaking. Many poems are addressed to family members, friends, and young poets, or pay homage to familiar figures taken by time or tragedy, including Virginia Woolf, Osip Mandelstam, and the Song Dynasty poet Li Qingzhao. In clear, short lines, these poems harken to ancient banderoles, or pennants, which announced rallying cries on the lances of knights and mottoes on the flags of ships. Here, Miller’s Paper Banners is made of images of the American Southwest and scrutinizes its political and physical landscape. Like skywriting streamed in white smoke, this collection bears its message on the wind, its words addressed to anyone. As Miller catalogues the intimate experiences that make up a life—friendships, loves, dreams, our human connection to the environment—Paper Banners becomes a hope that “what will survive of us is love.” About December's featured indie press: Copper Canyon Press publishes extraordinary poetry from around the world to engage the imaginations and intellects of readers. Since 1972, the Press has published poetry exclusively and has established an international reputation for its commitment to authors, editorial acumen, and dedication to the poetry audience. Copper Canyon Press publishes new collections of poetry by both revered and emerging American poets, translations of classical and contemporary work from many of the world’s cultures, re-issues of out-of-print poetry classics, anthologies, and prose books about poetry. |
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Interested in advertising in The Rumpus e-newsletter or on therumpus.net? Contact Monica at [email protected]. |
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Letters in the Mail (from authors!) |
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Letters in the Mail from authors is a Rumpus subscription in which you receive an actual, postmarked letter from one of our favorite writers in your IRL mailbox twice a month. All letters are non-promotional, include a creative prompt, and have a return mailing address in case you'd like to write the author back! Up next, author letters from . . .
January 1: Claudia Acevedo-Quiñones is a writer from Puerto Rico whose poems and short fiction have appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, wildness, Ambit Magazine, Radar Poetry, and other publications. Her chapbook, Bedroom Pop, was published by dancing girl press in 2021. Her full-length debut, The Hurricane Book, was published by Rose Metal Press in October 2023. Claudia lives in Brooklyn, New York. Subscribe by Dec. 31! January 15: Julia Fine is the author of The Upstairs House, winner of the Chicago Review of Books Award for Fiction, and What Should Be Wild, which was shortlisted for the Bram Stoker Award for Superior First Novel. Her third novel, Maddalena and the Dark, came out with Flatiron last June. She teaches writing in Chicago, where she lives with her family. Subscribe by Jan. 14! |
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Reader Support Keeps The Rumpus Going! |
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Founded in 2009 in San Francisco, CA and now based in Asheville, NC with readers and editors all over the US and abroad, The Rumpusis one of the longest-running independent online literary and culture magazines. Our mostly volunteer-run magazine strives to be a platform for risk-taking voices and writing that might not find a home elsewhere. We lift up new voices alongside those of more established writers readers already know and love. Often, we are an emerging writer's first notable publication, which is something we’re really proud of. We believe that literature builds community—and if reading The Rumpus makes you feel more connected, please show your support! Our Membership and subscription programs along with tax-deductible donations made to The Rumpus through our fiscal sponsor, Fractured Atlas, help keep us going and brings us closer to sustainability. |
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