Alex Kudera's Blog, page 135

April 1, 2013

Clemson Literary Festival 2013

University City's own Pulitzer Prize winner, Jennifer Egan, leads the charge into Death Valley for Clemson University's Sixth Annual Literary Festival.
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Published on April 01, 2013 11:31

free copies of Fight for Your Long Day

Over at The Next Best Book Club, you can win a free copy of Fight for Your Long Day . This giveaway will run through April 8, and then the book discussion at goodreads will occur during the last two weeks of May.
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Published on April 01, 2013 07:33

March 31, 2013

An Interview with Nancy Peacock

Novelist Nancy Peacock was kind enough to respond to e-mailed questions related to her memoir on work and the writing life, A Broom of One's Own: Words on Writing, Housecleaning & Life. I'll post the first couple now and then the others in a future blog:

AK: Barbara Ehrenreich’s Nickle and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America is one of the most famous contemporary works about how difficult it can be for women to survive in America. It’s nonfiction of course, but I’m wondering if you have any favorite, or even inspiring, books from the genre (fiction or nonfiction not only about struggling in the “greatest country on earth” but also struggling from a woman’s perspective)?
NP: I read Ehrenreich's book as about the working class, and not just about women's survival. But in answer to your question - sort of - one of my favorite books of all times is A Piece of Cakeby Cupcake Brown. Her story is about one woman's survival from homelessness to becoming a lawyer. It's a great read. I don't think this answer is really to the point of your question (I'm having trouble thinking of books specific to that) but it's a chance to plug Cupcake Brown's book. Really - read it. So many of the memoirs I've read had to do with dysfunctional families and sexual abuse rather than with society as a whole.
AK: Is Virginia Woolf’s classic, A Room of One’s Own important to you? Are there other classics with similar themes that you see as influences?
NP: I certainly played off of the title A Room of One's Own - A Broom of One's Own. I think that women have more trouble finding time, quiet, physical space, and psychic space for writing, but I think we all need it. In my own life I have, as I've grown older, found it easier to get this for myself, probably because I recognize the importance of it more now than I did when I was younger, and because I am more willing to take it without apology.
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Published on March 31, 2013 07:53

March 13, 2013

March 10, 2013

Book Reviews for Fight for Your Long Day

Neworld Review
“The Scholar/Pauper Fights the Good Fight” by Joseph A. Domino at Neworld Review (January 2013)

Philadelphia Inquirer
“Should College Teaching Be a Full-Time Job?” by Joseph N. DiStefano for the Philadelphia Inquirer (January 30, 2011)

The Southeast Review
“Review: Fight For Your Long Day” by Charles Dodd White, The Southeast Review (January 7, 2011)

Caustic Cover Critic
“Rummaging Around in the Atticus” at Caustic Cover Critic (April 11, 2012)

When Falls The Coliseum
“Book to ponder: Fight for Your Long Day by Alex Kudera” by Michael Leone at When Falls the Coliseum (Jan. 8, 2012)

Small Press Reviews
“Fight for Your Long Day” by Marc Schuster at Small Press Reviews (June 10, 2011)

Inside Higher Ed
“An Adjunct’s Novel” by Scott Jaschik at Inside Higher Ed (September 21, 2010)

This Blog Will Change Your Life
“This Book Will Change Your Life—Fight for Your Long Day by Alex Kudera” by Ben Tanzer at This Blog Will Change Your Life (February 13, 2011)

Contemporary Literary Horizon
"A Debut Novel: Fight for Your Long Day by Alex Kudera” by Don Riggs at Contemporary Literary Horizon (December 23, 2010)

Academe
“A Novel Departure” by Isaac Sweeney, Academe Magazine (January-February 2011)

Karen the Small Press Librarian
“Guest Review: Alex Kudera reviewed by Joel Thomas” by Joel Thomas at Karen the Small Press Librarian (March 14, 2011)

Author Exposure
“Book Review: Fight for Your Long Day by Alex Kudera” by Shawn Edwards at Author Exposure (March 14, 2011)

Midwest Book Review
“Fiction Shelf: Fight for Your Long Day” by Small Press Bookwatch, Midwest Book Review (December 2010)

Shelfari
“Fight for Your Long Day – A Novel” by Fran Lewis at Shelfari (November 16, 2010)

Steve Himmer
“Fight for Your Long Day” by Steve Himmer on his blog (October 9, 2010)

Freedom from Things
“Book Review: Fight for Your Long Day by Alex Kudera” by Nick Mazzuca at Freedom from Things (December 25, 2010)

Lumpen Professoriat
“Fight for Your Long Day” by LumpenProf at LumpenProfessoriat (September 21, 2010)

Radical Teacher
“Fight for Your Long Day” by Jennifer Gaboury at Radical Teacher (Spring, 2012)

Foreward Magazine
“Fight for Your Long Day” in ForeWord Magazine

You're a Real Live Animal That Lives in My House
“Fight for Your Long Day” at You’re a Real Live Animal That Lives in my House Blog (March 22, 2012)

The New Dork Review of Books
“Fight for Your Long Day: Adjunct Hell” by Greg Zimmerman at The New Dork Review of Books (August 1, 2011)

The Next Best Book Blog
“Review: Fight for Your Long Day” by Lori Hettler at TNBBC’s The Next Best Book Blog (July 23, 2011)
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Published on March 10, 2013 09:16

Interviews

Foreward Reviews
“One of a Kind: A ForeWord Interview with Alex Kudera” Atticus Books Online, May-June 2011

Psychology Today
“Darkly Funny Debut Novel Exposes Adjunct Abuse” by Susan K. Perry, Ph.D., Creating in Flow (January 7, 2012)

Clemson University
“English lecturer’s book explores the plight of the adjunct professor” by Angela Nixon, Clemson University media relations (October 11, 2011)

The Chronicle of Higher Education
“An Award-Winning Author on Adjuncts” by Isaac Sweeney, The Chronicle of Higher Education (June 1, 2011)

When Falls the Coliseum
“The Life of an Adjunct: An Interview with Novelist Alex Kudera” by Robert Anthony Watts, When Falls the Coliseum (November 1, 2010)

We Who Are About to Die
“We who are about to breed: Alex Kudera” by Patrick Wensink, We Who Are About to Die (September 27, 2011)

Smarts and Culture
“How One Author Finds an Audience: Part 1″ by Maryann Devine, smArts and Culture (October 27, 2010)

“How One Author Finds an Audience: Part 2″ by Maryann Devine, smArts and Culture (October 26, 2010)

Atticus Books
“Interview with Alex Kudera, Part 2 of 2′” by Dan Cafaro at Atticus Books Online (August 2, 2010)

“Interview with the Author of ‘Fight for Your Long Day, Part 1′” by Dan Cafaro at Atticus Books Online (July 22, 2010)

The New Dork Review of Books
“The Blogger/Novelist Relationship, with Alex Kudera (Part 2)” by Greg Zimmerman, The New Dork Review of Books (August 8, 2011)

“The Blogger/Novelist Relationship, with Alex Kudera (Part 1)” by Greg Zimmerman, The New Dork Review of Books (August 4, 2011)
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Published on March 10, 2013 09:15

March 8, 2013

which is it?

If I could only figure out if we're in austerity or growth, boom years or lean times. . .

. . . regardless, the birds are chirping outside at 7 a.m.

What are they saying?

"Hey, Teach, quit yapping and grade some more papers, why don't you?"

In a world where even the poor and on the go are no longer reaching past the dollar menu for the supersized fries, it's hard to believe business is as booming as the latest jobs figures suggest.

Did I mention that a gallon of milk is $3.97 at Wal-Mart in South Carolina?

A gallon of gas, we'll talk about another day.
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Published on March 08, 2013 04:53

March 7, 2013

feed the fire

The Huffington Post recognizes that Atticus Books is a publisher intent on lighting the lamp of literature.

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Published on March 07, 2013 13:16

March 6, 2013

american hunger

Is it possible we live in a broken country where children go hungry, and there is no political will to fight this or merely a state in which the two major "sides" have no ability, interest, or need to do so?

Of course, the DJIA has continued to improve upon its record close of yesterday, and in national newspapers we're joking about the "snowquester," so it's possible everything will be fine.

Or, near fine, at the very least. I suppose we should note that James Joyce's children also lived in poverty. Quite often, I think.

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Published on March 06, 2013 07:59