Chad Simpson's Blog, page 3

August 13, 2012

Tell Everyone I Said Hi: The Book Trailer


Janey put together a book trailer for my story collection, and I think she did an amazing job. Here are the blurbs--which I'm incredibly grateful for--she excerpts from, in full:


“Chad Simpson writes with a piercing tenderness and sadness about loss and helplessness and the impossible decisions that we face every day, and the complexity of the compromises we offer the world, and ourselves, in response."—Jim Shepard


"Chad Simpson’s Tell Everyone I Said Hi is my kind of book. James Wright once beautifully asked, Where is the sea that once solved the whole/loneliness of the Midwest? The line kept bubbling up in my mind as I read these unpretentious and deeply moving stories. We’re in the Midwest—Chad Simpson’s Midwest—a place of broken hearts and missed opportunities, flooded basements and faulty wiring. The real stuff, it’s all here."—Peter Orner, author of Love and Shame and Love


"Chad Simpson is clever, compassionate, and refreshingly nuanced in his perceptions of the world, and his stories enchant with both style and substance. Tell Everyone I Said Hi returns again and again to fractured families, to orphans and widows, the strange and the estranged, and each story offers new insight into loneliness and love. Each story is a delight."—Justin Torres, author, We the Animals

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Published on August 13, 2012 08:39

July 12, 2012

A Quick Update

I like this website of mine. I do. Jane designed it, and I have to say: I think it looks pretty dope.


That said, I don't post things to the blog here nearly as often as I should. I have, however, been posting things at several other places. As I said above, it's not that I'm just not into this website of mine; it's just that I haven't had much to say that's worthy of an honest-to-goodness blog entry.


I haven't posted the cover for Tell Everyone I Said Hi to this blog yet, so I should do that. Here it is:



I haven't posted the blurbs I've received yet either, but I'll save that for another day.


In the meantime, I post occasional things over at my Facebook page. It's an author page, so I can't interact with people much, but if you 'like' it, then when I post something or other over that way, it'll show up in your feed.


I also tweet things every now and then. Most of the time, I'm trying to be funny; it doesn't always work out so well. Occasionally, I post some of the Instagram photos I've been taking.


And lastly: I now have a tumblr. To be honest, I'm not quite sure what I'm doing with this thing yet, but I've been updating it fairly regularly. And I like the people I've been interacting with over there. If you're on tumblr or know of any blogs I should follow on there, holla.


For those of you who've made it this far through the post, here's some news I haven't posted anywhere else: I've been working on a lot of revisions lately, mostly on new stories and essays. And I've lined up a few new pubs, at Five Chapters, Wigleaf, Fiction Southeast, and a new online magazine that hasn't yet published an issue, Better. I'm pretty excited about all of them--and about the new stuff I've been finishing up and submitting. And: I'm feeling pretty lucky.

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Published on July 12, 2012 14:12

May 12, 2012

For Out of the Heart Proceed


A couple months ago, not long after Jensen Beach and I read at the book-release party for Eugene Cross's Fires of Our Choosing in Chicago at AWP, Alexander Chee directed a comment toward Eugene on twitter that said something like, "Only you would be kind enough to share the stage at the release party of your debut collection."


Before I attended the event, which was the first time I'd met Jensen in person, I would have guessed that Alex was right: Nobody is quite so kind and generous as Eugene. After the event, after I got to spend some time with Jensen, though, I realized that he, too, is one of the nicest guys around.


And then a few weeks back he emailed a small crew of writers who have their debut story collections coming out this year--Ted Sanders (Graywolf), Eugene (Dzanc), and me (U of Iowa Press)--to ask if we'd read a little bit at his own book-release party. Though the odds were against it, I guess Alex ended up being wrong.


If you're in the Champaign this Saturday, May 19th, we'll be drinking and celebrating Jensen's book of stories, which arrived at my house in the mail earlier this week courtesy of Dark Sky Books. I haven't yet dug into the thing, but I can't wait to. I've read a number of the stories already the past few years, and I'm excited to read them one after the next to see how they work with and against each another.


Full details about what's going down this Saturday can be found on my Events page. And Jensen has a Facebook page for the event that can be found here. I hope to see a couple of you there.

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Published on May 12, 2012 13:33

Wigleaf


Several years ago, Scott Garson contacted me and asked if I'd be the inaugural selecting editor for Wigleaf's Top 50 (Very) Short Fictions. The idea: He'd worked to cull two hundred stories written in fewer than 1000 words published online during the previous year, and he wanted me narrow the list even further. I gladly agreed, and spent the next couple months reading through the stories very slowly, finding something to admire in pretty much every one of them. Eventually, I chose fifty--actually, I think I chose fifty-five--and wrote an introductory essay, and it all went live.


Since then, Scott has aimed much higher, and has landed some awesome writers to serve as selecting editor. There was Darlin Neal, and Lily Hoang, and Brian Evenson. I've had some stories make the long list, and my story "Let x" cracked the Top 50. This year, Dan Chaon, probably my favorite short story writer, served as the selecting editor, and he had a pretty amazing list of two hundred stories to choose from. Really. The two hundred stories on that list I had in my hands were great, but it seems the quality of (very) short fictions published online keeps getting better and better each year.


I had two stories on the long list this year, and one of them, "Moussaoui Remembers Fire," made the Top 50. Kathy Fish chose to publish this story last December when she was serving as Writer-in-Residence over at Necessary Fiction, and I can't thank her enough for including my story among the many fine pieces she published that month. Thanks, too, to Steve Himmer. And to Scott Garson and Ravi Mangla, for taking the time to sift through all those fictions looking for their favorites.

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Published on May 12, 2012 12:49

February 28, 2012

Fires of Our Choosing


I'm not actually registered to attend AWP this year, but I am going to be in town. The reason: My bestie, Eugene Cross, is celebrating the release of his debut collection, Fires of Our Choosing.


You can find full details about the book release party on my events page. Or the event's Facebook page.


I'll also be hitting up the bookfair on Saturday, where I'll touch a lot of books and magazines and spend a lot of money and hopefully run in to a few of you.

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Published on February 28, 2012 07:26

February 4, 2012

Tell Everyone I Said Hi


Janey took the above photo somewhere off I-80 west of Iowa City at the end of December. We'd spent the night in Iowa City mostly so we could shop at Prairie Lights and eat some good food before the new year began and I had to go back to school.


About a week later, I received a phone call from the University of Iowa Press letting me know I'd won the 2012 John Simmons Short Fiction Award, juried by Jim Shepard*, for my story collection, Tell Everyone I Said Hi.


I've spent most of the past month ecstatic, wanting badly to share the news, and yesterday it finally became official. You can read the press release here, and you should, since it also contains some info on Marie-Helene Bertino and her 2012 Iowa Short Fiction Award-winning collection Safe as Houses.


I quit Facebook about a year and a half ago, but Janey's starated an author page for me, hoping people will 'Like' it. Which is always the case, it seems. You make the thing and hope somebody out there finds it and spends some time with it, that they find that time they spent worthwhile.


*Jim Shepard! Whose stories I love. Whose novel Project X is one of my favorite little books.

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Published on February 04, 2012 11:23

January 15, 2012

Unswept


I spend a lot of my time preparing to teach classes. This usually involves reading either "professional" stuff or early drafts of student fiction and nonfiction. Whatever I'm reading, I tend to go at it heavily with a pencil, altering sentences, asking questions in the margins, jotting down talking points at the end of the thing. It's kind of become a way of being for me, this communicating with other texts while holding a pencil in my hand.


I decided a while ago that I wanted to make texts that arose wholly out of the words and images and questions I left behind on other people's work, but I kept putting it off for some reason. Finally, last year, I began jotting my notes down before I returned the story to the student or the book to the shelf. I sort of liked what they were doing. I titled a folder in my computer "Feedback" and began depositing texts there. I sent around queries to a couple of online magazines to see if they'd be interested in something like a monthly column where I could publish a couple of these pieces, but no one bit. HTMLGIANT, however, liked the idea, and decided to publish one of the examples I sent. You can read it--and a slightly different explanation of what I'm getting up to with this project--here.


After that piece came out, I was contacted by an editor, Nicholas Liu, who told me about the inaugural issue of a magazine he was in the process of putting together: Unswept. From the journal's website: "It owes its name and mission to the genre of mosaic called the asarotos oikos, or unswept floor. Its overriding interest is in the already-given—not just the canon, but what was published last month, or yesterday, or which has been consigned to the ash heap of literary history—and what writers do with it."


He asked me to send him some pieces, and he liked them, and I'm so glad, because the journal looks really beautiful, and that first issue has quite a lineup. You can read my stuff here. But I suggest you start at the beginning.


Photo courtesy of Jane. It's the home her ancestors built and lived in for several generations, not too far from here.

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Published on January 15, 2012 06:34

December 24, 2011

OZP & TW

The good kids over at Origami Zoo Press conducted a little e-interview with me earlier this week, and the thing just went live. There's a link in the interview to a pretty excellent five-minute documentary about a man who sells piano parts. Everybody should watch it. There's also a very brief discussion of Clams Casino, whose music I've been writing and feeling things to lately.


Speaking of feeling things...I believe I posted a video of Tom Waits' "Christmas Card from a Hooker in Minneapolis" last year, but I'mma post it again, because it slays me. Happy holidays, everybody.


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Published on December 24, 2011 06:21

December 7, 2011

Anne Carson


I'm putting this up here so I remember to watch it when I have an extra minute. Anne Carson is one of my absolute favorites.


Thanks to Matt Bell for making me aware of it.

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Published on December 07, 2011 16:20

December 4, 2011

Necessary Fiction


I've enjoyed for a while the various projects the writers in resdience over at Necessary Fiction have come up with, and I was thrilled when Kathy Fish, December's Writer-in-Residence, asked me to send something her way.


I submitted an old story that was supposed to be published a long time ago but never saw print because the magazine kind of disappeared. It's called "Moussaoui Remembers Fire," and you can read it here. A pretty lengthy author's note follows the story, so I'll hold off on saying anything else for now, other than this:


I adore Kathy's stories, and I'm humbled she thought to ask me to contribute. Plus: I'm glad this story is finally making its way into the world. It seems Kathy's put together a pretty aweome line-up for the holidays, so keep checking in over there. I know I will be.


 As (almost) always: The above photo appears courtesy of Jane.

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Published on December 04, 2011 13:18