Posts tagged ‘140 And Counting’
It’s Read an Ebook Week!
For Read an Ebook Week, 140 And Counting author M. Darusha Wehm has 50% off everything at Smashwords, except Beautiful Red, which is free (use the coupon code REW50); and asbestos boots on beatnik feet has just published three poems by Neil Ellman.
And! Upper Rubber Boot now has a Smashwords account, so we can sell PDFs. 140 And Counting and Blueshifting are both available now in PDF, and Measured Extravagance is available for the first time in any edition. Measured Extravagance will be released shortly in epub and mobi.
11 March 2012
Amadis of Gaul and other news
140 And Counting authors:
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Sue Burke has self-published her translation of the medieval Spanish novel Amadis of Gaul. It’s available in print and Kindle editions at Amazon. Burke says, “The book includes a preface by a present-day Spanish novelist, an introduction, notes to chapters, and an appendix explaining what eliminated Amadis from respectable bookshelves — it wasn’t Don Quixote.” More information here!
Read Neil Ellman‘s gorgeous poem “When the Heart Stops” at Poetry Bulawayo. |
Members of the Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia can read about the beginnings of Upper Rubber Boot, and some of editor Joanne Merriam‘s opinions about the challenges facing the book industry, in the March/April 2012 Eastword (non-members should be able to read it come May).
| Stella Pierides has haiku alongside Susan Diridoni this week in Issa’s Untidy Hut.
And, if you live in or near Nashville, make a note on your calendar for Saturday, March 24th. Peg Duthie and Joanne Merriam will be reading with Mary Alexandra Agner at the main branch of the Nashville Public Library. Details at our events page or on Facebook and Goodreads. |
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10 March 2012
Comet
140 And Counting author Julie Bloss Kelsey just won the 2011 Dwarf Stars Award for her short-short poem “Comet”!
7 March 2012
, if,
140 And Counting authors: Miriam Sagan had a haiku at the Roadrunner blog posted yesterday, and Pedestal Magazine has a review of Robert Borski‘s Blood Wallah: And Other Poems.
4 March 2012
Amazon lives in Pacific Standard Time, apparently.
Today (February 25th), in honor of the anniversary of the first US electric printing press patent (by Thomas Davenport in 1837) and as a thank you to her readers and supporters, editor Joanne Merriam‘s ebooks The Glaze from Breaking and A Multitude of Daggers are available for free!
A Multitude of Daggers is a fun fantasy novella loosely related to her short story “The Boatman” which was originally published by On Spec: The Canadian Magazine of the Fantastic in 2007.
| The Glaze from Breaking is a reprint of the 2005 Stride Books paperback edition. Reviews of the 2005 edition called her images “sharp and vivid” (Verse) and “both unusual and just right” (Shearsman), said her collection is “well worth seeking out for its elegant exploration of love and loss, recovery and redemption, eroticism and the echoes of the heart” (chicklit) and compared her writing to Boris Pasternak’s early work (“where the poet does not so much observe the natural world as fuse with it” – Shearsman again). | ![]() |
They’re free until around midnight Pacific Standard Time.
In 140 And Counting contributor news: Simon Kewin was featured in trapeze magazine on Thursday and had a short story, “Wolf Emit,” in Every Day Fiction the same day.
25 February 2012
“Coyote, Spider, Batâ€
140 And Counting authors:
Neil Ellman has a poem, “Welcome to Disaster,” in Word Riot.
Robert Laughlin has two poems in The Toucan Online, and two more in Indigo Rising Magazine.
Steven Saus has a story in Westward Weird (reviewed here by Amy Phelps).
22 February 2012
Nebulas!
140 And Counting author Ken Liu has been nominated in the Novella category for “The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary” and in the Short Story category for “The Paper Menagerie” for the 2011 Nebula Awards! The winners will be announced at SFWA‘s 47th Annual Nebula Awards Weekend, 17 – 20 May 2012.
In other URB news: Jonathan Pinnock‘s revenge fantasy “Role-Play” appeared in Every Day Fiction; Tess Almendarez Lojacono has a Book Release Party on Saturday, 25 February at 7 p.m. at the Downtown Awesome Books location (929 Liberty Ave., Pittsburgh) to celebrate her first novel, Milagros; and editor Joanne Merriam‘s short poem “Love in the Time of Alien Invasion” and long poem “Tender Aliens”—both originally published in The Magazine of Speculative Poetry in Spring 2011—have just been nominated for the 2012 Rhysling Poetry Awards in their respective categories.
1 comment 20 February 2012
I took the train to Disaster
Berit Ellingsen‘s What Girls Really Think is now part of the Pachydermini chapbook series by Turtleneck Press, and Neil Ellman‘s poem “Welcome to Disaster” is in the February 2012 issue of Word Riot and his “Indefinite Divisibility” appeared at the Rusty Nail on 13 February 2012.
Also! The anthology they have in common, 140 And Counting, is now available from iTunes in a dizzying array of countries: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. Not too shabby, what.
17 February 2012
THF haiku
The Haiku Foundation’s free Haiku app contains work by 140 And Counting contributors T.D. Ingram, Jim Kacian, Deborah P. Kolodji, John Stevenson, Alan Summers and Charles Trumbull.
13 February 2012
willows wept
140 And Counting contributors…
Elise Atchison has work in the 13th issue of Willows Wept Review.
C. E. Hyun‘s modern-day Hansel and Gretel retelling appears in Underneath the Juniper Tree‘s February issue.
Jessica Otto‘s “rain[herbicide]rainbow” appeared in Project Agent Orange Poetry Blog (“poetry to empower Agent Orange victims”) on February 1st.
Alan Summers has haiku in Area 17 and the THFhaiku app for iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch.
12 February 2012


