my little red book: update

A. and I were looking online for an audio kid book to read last night. Over winter break we worked ourselves through Stephenie Meyer‘s Twilight series. Last month we finished her young adult novel, The Host. Of course, as they came out, we read, or rather, listened to Jim Dale‘s reading of the Harry Potter series. So, now what to read? Half of what makes an audio book good is the actors or authors who read it. But then, A. and I got distracted.

A. noticed my little read book was number 25 on Amazon.com‘s bestseller list and number 12 on its hot new releases. Wow! As I mentioned in a previous post, I am one of the many, many contributes from around the world whose first period story apears in this collection. I say wow because it’s an anthology of creative non-fiction on first period stories. Wow! Here’s a review from The New York Times by Abigail Zuger, MD:

The book’s great beauty is that these themes are left unexplored. No one draws a moral (see, everyone thinks she’s different!), or offers up the poet’s lament that all life’s landmarks spell a step to death. The reader is left alone to absorb it all in privacy.

Another review:

I started reading MLRB last night and could not put it down!

And another:

And while the stories themselves are compelling, I think it is that openness that is the book’s greatest strength. Because it invites and encourages women and girls to share their stories with each other, and most especially celebrates talk between mothers and daughters. It has the potential to open up a dialogue that might have seemed a bit uncomfortable or even daunting, and to ease the way into even more difficult conversations that will need to come later.

And one more:

The engaging and humorous anecdotes effortlessly connect the reader and authors on a very personal level; more importantly, the theme of the book creates a strong message that transcends age, culture, ethnicity, religion, or any background.

awp 2009 - chicago

Now that I’ve had a chance to recover from my first ever AWP, I thought I’d post a few photos. I presented in “‘Memory of Wounds': Memoirists Tell Truth, Lies, and Memory” with Joy Castro (The Truth Book), Karen McElmurry (The Motel of Stars), Kelly Gray Carlisle (former managing editor of Prairie Schooner), Lucy Ferriss, and Carrie Anne Tocci. We had a great turn out. Here’s a few:

Besides my panel, I heard Jeanne Leiby (of The Southern Review) and Jocelyn Bartkevicius (of The Florida Review) share their wisdom in creative nonfiction, both in writing and as publishers. Also in nonfiction, Carrie Pomeroy explained her process in writing an essay about her mother. Robin Becker (my favorite of her books is All-American Girl), Katharine Haake, and others discussed creative writing pedagogy. And, I heard many, many more excellent writers, teachers, and editors speak, read, and advise. A great time all around.

Of course, I also took advantage of Chicago’s beautiful waterfront walk, museums, buildings, Michigan Avenue, and other pleasures. A few more concluding images:

my little red book

Yippee! My Little Red Book is here, the anthology of first period stories edited by Rachel Kauder-Nalebuff. It’s super cute-hard back, all red, with itty-bitty pink undies on the cover and spine. Oh wait, here it is:

I submitted my story “A Puddle, 1991″ a couple years ago and I’m so excited to see it in print. Though, I will admit, reading the little essay about my first period is astounding as the actual event itself. I’m in good company in My Little Red Book. Other contributes include fab feminists like Jennifer Baumgardner (Grassroots, Manifesta, Look Both Ways, as a small side note, I’ve read all 3 of these books. Grassroots is a particularly good read) and Gloria Steinem (*Gloria Steinem*) and poet Maxine Kumin, among others. Moreover, reading my story along side others makes me feel, well, among friends, a little giggly, and happy to see such a collection in print. What a gift. Here’s a snippet from a book review on feminocracy:

My favorite thing about My Little Red Book is that it succeeds in showing the wide range of experiences that women have the first time they menstruate, and calls attention to the fact that those experiences tend to be frustrating more often than celebratory. I finished the book realizing the extent to which girls are not just ashamed of menstruation, but completely ignorant about the process….

My Little Red Book is an ambitiious project. I only wish it existed before my menarche. Lucky all you young girls to have it now.

web exclusive

Yippee! My short story “Paper Planes” is the first web exclusive in American Short Fiction. I’m super excited and so thrilled the editor of ASF, Stacey Swann, accepted my piece. Last summer I wrote five of these short stories, in a sort of fugue, one right after another, all of which stretching beyond the normal constraints of the real world. Though I left a couple of them in a drawer, the three I revised have all found homes. One couldn’t be more happy with such a bewitching bunch. Here’s the ASF newsletter:

We are thrilled to announce our first Web exclusive is up online. “Paper Planes,” by Laura Madeline Wiseman, is a story of death, dislocation, and cheese curls. This story was much loved among our staff of readers; we’re excited to share it with you.

This was the short story I had tucked and ready in a folder to read at my no name last month, but, alas a late afternoon snow storm put city buses an hour behind schedule and though I did attempt to make it by car, the roads were slippery, snow filled, and scary. Luckily, I’ll be reading on March 27th, so I hope to see you there.

The new ASF spring 2009 issue contains the likes of Joyce Carol Oates, Paul Yoon, Smith Henderson, Rachel B. Glaser, Amelia Gray, and Joe Wenderoth, among others. I must say, I’m a bit of a fan of Joyce Carol Oates. I first read her story “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” in a fiction class I took at Iowa State. Of all the short stories we read, this one stuck with me-the coiling phone cord, the pull to darkness, weird lines like, “Yes, I’m your lover. You don’t know what that is but you will.” Later when I lived in Tucson, it was a bit unnerving to learn the short story was based on murders there. Another chilling text is We Were the Mulvaneys. On the more classic side of things, I taught The Best American Essays of the Century, which she edited, in a composition class. I wonder what book of hers I should read next….

Eating Her Wedding Dress: A Collection of Clothing Poems

Thought I’d pass the word along news of this soon to be released clothing anthology (June 12, 2009) that accepted an imaginary friend poem of mine.

Eating Her Wedding Dress: A Collection of Clothing Poems
Edited by Vasiliki Katsarou, Ruth O’Toole, and Ellen Foos, 160 pages
Available June 12, 2009
Ragged Sky Press
ISBN 978-1-933974-06-4

EATING HER WEDDING DRESS: A COLLECTION OF CLOTHING POEMS brings together one hundred celebrated and distinctive voices from across the United States, including internationally acclaimed poets such as Kim Addonizio, Margaret Atwood, Billy Collins, Elaine Equi, Jorie Graham, Maxine Kumin, Paul Muldoon, and Charles Simic, to speak about clothing as object of desire, as memento, and as metaphor for the body.