Kyle Minor's Blog, page 5
April 8, 2013
Mission Creek Music Festival, etc.
Worldwide hero Kristen Radtke sent this picture from my Mission Creek Music Festival reading at the Clinton Street Social Club in Iowa City last Friday night, which was sponsored by Jim Beam, believe it or not. Maybe the free-flowing whiskey had something to do with the warm reception from a sweet-natured crowd I’d happily take with me to every reading in every city in the country if I could.
I also won the fun times lottery when the poet Henry Finch invited me to join the Fig Wellingtons, a collective of writer-musicians hailing from New York, Iowa City, Mumbai, and all points in-between. The lineup the evening this picture was taken: (clockwise from lower left) Kyle Minor (guitar & vocals), Devika Rege (drums & percussion), Ben Shattuck (banjo), Henry Finch (upright bass & vocals), Henry Finch (upright bass & vocals), Thessaly La Force (viola), Daniel Cesca (guitar & vocals), Wells Tower (guitar & vocals), Anna Noyes (guitar, spoons, & vocals), and Kiley McLaughlin (mandolin).
You can only see the side of my face in the lower left-hand corner of this photograph, but if you’re like me, you’d rather see all those other handsome faces, anyway. I left feeling fondly toward everyone, and wanting to make more music.


March 20, 2013
Best American Nonrequired Reading 2013
Some welcome news today: My story “Seven Stories About Kenel of Koulev-Ville” was selected for Best American Nonrequired Reading 2013, edited by Dave Eggers. The anthology will be published this October, by Harcourt Houghton Mifflin.


February 15, 2013
Praying Drunk: The Book Cover
It was difficult to choose from among ten or so beautiful cover designs by Kristen Radtke and Kirby Gann, so I let the publisher decide. I’m happy with the choice. In a couple of months, Advanced Reader’s Copies will be mailed to book reviewers and booksellers, and the book will be available everywhere you might buy books in February 2014.


January 2, 2013
New Story in the Iowa Review
The new issue of The Iowa Review is out today, and it includes a new story of mine, titled ”Seven Stories about Kenel of Koulèv-Ville ,” a story about catastrophe, power, friendship, love, and human kindness. You can find a copy on the newsstand of most independent bookstores, Barnes & Noble stores, and Books-A-Millions. You can also receive a copy directly from the magazine by clicking the link above. Other contributors include Molly Patterson, Thisbe Nissen, Cole Swensen, and D.A. Powell.
October 6, 2012
Advice to My Younger Self
Perhaps I haven’t attained the stature to give advice to other writers, but here is what I would say to a younger version of myself, if I could:
1. Swing for the fences every time.
2. If there is a thing you want to get paid to do, but no one would think of paying you to do it, do it for free, and place it wherever it will reach the most eyeballs.
3. Don’t waste your time doing things for money which won’t get you closer to the things you really want to do, unless you need the money to live.
4. If you’re a prose writer, study poetry as much as you study prose.
5. Be humble enough to do things that you ought to be “past,” if they will help you get better. Stature comes from your work, ultimately, not your institutional position.
6. Write in other genres.
7. Do things that carry with them a high probability of failure. Keep failing at them until you’re not failing at them anymore.
8. Give yourself over to your teachers while they are your teachers, but be your own man or woman once you’ve learned what you can.
9. Don’t go to too many literary parties.
10. When people try to hurt you with words, don’t shut down the writing operation, even for a day. Put the hurtful words aside for a few days, then use them as fuel or material, going forward.
11. Don’t be too beholden to any exterior voice.
12. Know all the rules, push them as far as you can, but also: If you push it as far in the opposite direction as you can, there’s power there, too.
13. If your work receives a tepidly respectful reaction, it’s not there yet. If it makes some people soar in their hearts and others very angry, you’re probably onto something.
14. The academy is a good shelter, but it’s not your ultimate audience or validator. Let it hold you only loosely.
15. Have two things going all the time, because when the inevitable procrastination begins, you can use it to work on the other thing, and go back and forth without losing all that time.
16. Being drunk doesn’t help your writing in the long term. Neither does being neglectful of people you love. Be decent if you can.
17. If you do well, people will become jealous. Let them be, and be nice to them if you can.
18. Sometimes you will become jealous of others. Try to let it go, and extend yourself with extraordinary niceness, if you can.
19. Keep the books you really care about close to your work desk, so you can remember what the real stuff is.
20. Make some writing friends and love and serve them as much as you can.
21. Be nice to people who are still trying to figure out how to do it for the first time.
22. Avoid Internet articles about literary politics. Also: Avoid Internet discussions about literary politics.
23. If people spend a lot of energy attacking you, stop dealing with them altogether. Focus on your work, not on other people.
24. Focus on your work, not on other people.
25. Focus on your work, not on other people.
26. Focus on your work, not on other people.
27. Facebook is fun, though, for interacting with smart people who are interested in the same things you are interested in. Allow yourself such pleasures, in moderation.


October 4, 2012
First Two Blurbs for Praying Drunk
The second (generous, happy-making) blurb came in today for Praying Drunk, which will be published in 2014 by Sarabande. Daniel Handler wrote it. He’s the author of several books I admire, including Adverbs and The Basic Eight. He’s also wrote A Series of Unfortunate Events, under the pen name Lemony Snicket.
“Praying Drunk gets the whole thing down: the cosmic muck and the local glory, the big questions and the tiny lives, the bullies and the saviors, the screaming at the sky and the lights by the side of the road late at night on a long drive. I finished this book with my heart pounding and grateful, my coffee cold and my smile wide and crying like a baby.”
- Daniel Handler
George Singleton wrote the first. He’s the author of several story collections I admire, including The Half-Mammals of Dixie and Stray Decorum and These People Are Us. His is so good and generous I want to read it over and over again:
“When the characters residing in Kyle Minor’s engrossing and lively Praying Drunk find a toehold on the good life, I hope that it’s autobiographical. When the characters find themselves enveloped in desperate situations, irreversible circumstances, and despair, I pray that it’s solely out of the writer’s imagination. These fine stories–up there with the best works of Padgett Powell, Donald Barthelme, and Robert Coover–never straddle a milquetoast fence: they’re extreme in humor, extreme in sorrowfulness, and 100% individually-wrapped masterpieces. I am haunted and mesmerized by this collection.”
- George Singleton, author of Stray Decorum


August 23, 2012
First Blurb for Praying Drunk
The first blurb came in today for Praying Drunk, which will be published in 2014 by Sarabande. George Singleton wrote it. He’s the author of several story collections I admire, including The Half-Mammals of Dixie and Stray Decorum and These People Are Us. The blurb is so good and generous I want to read it over and over again:
“When the characters residing in Kyle Minor’s engrossing and lively Praying Drunk find a toehold on the good life, I hope that it’s autobiographical. When the characters find themselves enveloped in desperate situations, irreversible circumstances, and despair, I pray that it’s solely out of the writer’s imagination. These fine stories–up there with the best works of Padgett Powell, Donald Barthelme, and Robert Coover–never straddle a milquetoast fence: they’re extreme in humor, extreme in sorrowfulness, and 100% individually-wrapped masterpieces. I am haunted and mesmerized by this collection.”
- George Singleton, author of Stray Decorum


August 20, 2012
Temporary Hiatus from Facebook
I’ve temporarily suspended my Facebook page. I wanted a break from the chatter. I’ll be back in a few weeks. Some reading recommendations, in the meantime :
Fobbit, by David Abrams
The Empty Glass, by J.I. Baker
Full Body Burden, by Kristen Iversen
The Story of a Shipwrecked Sailor, by Gabriel Garcia-Marquez
Hemingway’s Boat, by Paul Hendrickson
American Salvage, by Bonnie Jo Campbell
Timebends, by Arthur Miller
Carpenter’s Gothic, by William Gaddis


August 7, 2012
Good News
Sarabande Books has acquired my second collection of short stories, titled Praying Drunk, for publication in 2014. The stories in the book originally appeared in Gulf Coast, The Iowa Review, Ninth Letter, Forty Stories: New Voices from Harper Perennial, and other magazines and anthologies.
Sarabande is known for making some of the most beautifully-designed books in American publishing (I pasted a few representative covers in the space below), and for publishing some of America’s most interesting writers, including Laura Kasischke, Ander Monson, Caitlin Horrocks, Paul Yoon, Edith Pearlman, Lee Martin, Mark Jarman, Brock Clarke, and Lydia Davis. In recent years, Sarabande authors have won National Book Critics Circle Awards, Guggenheim Fellowships, and the PEN/Malamud Award. I’m happy to keep such good company.


August 4, 2012
National Book Critics Circle & Salon.com
I became a member of the National Book Critics Circle this week. The NBCC was founded in April 1974 at the Algonquin Hotel in New York City, by John Leonard, Nona Balakian, and Ivan Sandrof, in the hope of extending the goings-on of the Algonquin round table to a national conversation. They sponsor readings, forums on criticism, and the annual National Book Critics Circle Awards.
I’m also going to be doing some reviews for Salon.com. Here’s the first one.

