Tin House New Voice Series and Writers Workshop
Helping Portland wordsmiths save money on New York apartments.
November 18th, 2009
Paul Mccartney: A Life Peter Ames Carlin | A McCartney bio takes superfans a step beyond the Beatles.0 comments
November 11th, 2009
Tom Krattenmaker Onward Christian Athletes | Is Christianity’s monopoly in sports evangelism fair?0 comments
November 4th, 2009
The Opposite Field | A father and son connect by way of the summer game.0 comments
October 28th, 2009
Q & A • Jon Raymond | Of hot springs, lost dogs and the Oregon Trail.0 comments
October 21st, 2009
Jonathan Lethem Chronic City | Manhattan goes meta.0 comments
October 14th, 2009
R. Gregory Nokes Massacred For Gold | Anatomy of a (120-year-old) mass murder.0 comments
September 30th, 2009
David Byrne Bicycle Diaries | A Talking Head on two wheels around the world.0 comments
September 23rd, 2009
Jen Yates Cake Wrecks | The cakes are so wrong, but the blog is so right.0 comments
August 19th, 2009
Curtis Ebbesmeyer and Eric Scigliano, Flotsametrics and the Floating World | Of junks and shipping trunks.0 comments
August 5th, 2009
The Impostor’s Daughter Laurie Sandell | A daddy’s girl gets a rude awakening. And bad credit.0 comments
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[July 4th, 2007]
Viewed from Portland, the publishing world can seem far away, sequestered in the distant East. Author friends have informed me that to be a writer you need to move to New York, where supposedly every single living American writer resides.
That said, there may be no real reason to leverage a desperate move to Park Slope, where the Jonathans Lethem, Franzen and Safran Foer all live—within six blocks of each other. Portland does still offer some genuine possibilities for the young or aspiring writer.
Absent local fanfare, Portland-based literary magazine Tin House has been putting out some of the best writing in the country for a while now. Last May, they also inaugurated a series of books—the New Voice series—devoted to finding and publishing first-time authors.
According to Executive Editor Lee Montgomery, publishing outside of New York's tail-chasing literary grind and bustle has obvious disadvantages. However, she says, "it can also be helpful not to work within a small culture [like New York's publishing world] where everyone is talking about the same authors. Sometimes, ignorance is bliss."
The imprint published eight books in its first year, and three of its newest fiction writers will be reading at Powell's this Friday, including Michele Matheson—once a child star on TV's Mr. Belvedere—who will read from Saving Angelfish, her novel about a Los Angeles junkie.
The readings will kick off Tin House's nationally renowned weeklong session of summer writers workshops, seminars and readings at Reed College's stately environs, where one can probably still get high off the residual substances left over from the previous school year (or simply drink the fabled Tin House martinis).
While writers workshops have been the source of occasional ire in the literary community, one has to admit it's nice to get a little advice sometimes, especially from authors of the caliber of T.C. Boyle, Annie Proulx, Aimee Bender, Charles Baxter and local luminary Charles D'Ambrosio—who will all be part of Tin House's workshop this year.
Does it help get you published? Well, maybe. Sometimes. Dan Raeburn credits his publication in the New Yorker to Nick Flynn's course at a previous workshop, and former participant Alex Lemon got his first book of poems published on the New Voice imprint.
Seminars and faculty readings are open to the public, and include literary agents (paradoxically) offering advice on how to find literary agents, as well as Steve Almond telling you how to write a sex scene that doesn't go flaccid.
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