Jun. 6th, 2005

ocvictor: (Default)
My mood is lightening. Earlier, it was steam scalding the air around me. My desk at work was volcanic, seismic quakes sent the natives skittering. But the first drops of rain have kissed my forehead and heat, eventually, subsides.
ocvictor: (Default)
Call for Submissions

“The November Third Club,” http://www.november3rdclub.com/, an online literary journal seeking to “up the ante” of literary political writing, is seeking poetry, fiction and creative nonfiction that resonates with a political message and rises above the mere rhetoric and rant.

The emphasis will be on political literature, will be unabashedly left-wing in nature, and will be looking at literature written from a liberal, green, anarchist or libertarian perspective. Biases up front.

The November Third Club is edited by Victor D. Infante, fiction editor; Richard Beban & Ray McNiece, poetry editors; Carlye Archibeque, nonfiction editor and Sam Hamill, contributing editor. We are also currently seeking fiction and nonfiction editors, so if you’re interested, drop us a line at nov3rdsubmissions@yahoo.com, and put “editor query” in the subject line.

Some of the ideas we are interested in exploring from a literary perspective include reclaiming church and state, electoral fraud and reform, race and identity, censorship, individual liberty and of course, “The War on Terror,” but we’re open to new ideas, particularly innovative ones. Don’t just rehash tired old knee-jerk anti-Bush propaganda and give us your commentary on Associated Press news stories. We want something that pushes the envelope of political writing. We’re open to styles and genre, we just want the writing to be good and the message to resonate.

Politics have permeated through literature as long as people have been writing. For a rough idea of what we like and are looking for, consider the work of such writers as George Orwell, Phillip K. Dick, Hunter S. Thompson, Norman Mailer, Tony Hoagland, Wanda Coleman, Barbara Kingsolver, Sherman Alexie, Philip Levine, Marge Piercy, Studs Terkel, Jonathan Swift, Thomas Paine, Ralph Ellison, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Aldous Huxley, Amiri Baraka, John Steinbeck, Charles Simic and Adrienne Rich, to give a small sampling. Seriously, we’re open. But don’t just imitate these greats, give us something new and unique.

The simple idea is that no amount of facts and statistics makes a political message real to most people, but stories and symbolism can.

Guidelines for submissions:

*Previously published material is fine, as long as the original publisher is acknowledged and the author retains the copyright. All copyright reverts to the author upon publication. Please acknowledge The November Third Club if material it published first is reprinted elsewhere.

*Unsolicited submissions will only be accepted via e-mail. Our e-mail address is nov3rdsubmissions@yahoo.com.

*Please note whether the submission is poetry, fiction or creative nonfiction in the subject line of the e-mail. Unmarked submissions may be deleted unread.

*Please submit no more than three to five poems, or ten pages of prose.

*Please put your name and e-mail address in the body of the e-mail. Please also include a short bio, no more than 200 words, in the body of the e-mail.

*The submissions themselves can be either in the body of the e-mail or in an attached Word file. No other formats will be considered.

*The deadline for the first quarterly issue is August 1st.

*We cannot pay anyone for their work as of this time.

*We think it should go without saying, but please, please, please proofread your work before sending it to us. Our staff is still small, and has better things to do than to fix your typos.

Thanks very much for your time and interest, and we look forward to seeing what emerges.

Sincerely,

The November Third Club
ocvictor: (Default)
So, like, five people tagged me for the "name five songs you're digging right now" meme. So here's ten songs, and then I'll tag five people, and it'll all be good.

1.)"Northbound 35" by Jeff Foucalt.

How can I not love a man who can write lyrics like this:

We fought all night and then we danced
In your kitchen
You were as much in my hands
As water or darkness or nothing
Can ever be held

Mustang horses, champagne glasses
Anything frail anything wild
It’s the price of living motion
What's beautiful is broken
And grace is just the measure of a fall


2.) "Search and Destroy" by Iggy Pop and the Stooges.

Seriously. How can this not be on my perrenial list? he raw defiance, the bitter skepticism? Honey gotta help me please/Somebody gotta save my soul/Baby, detonate for me. Perfect.

3.) "Pavlov's Bells" by Aimee Mann.

Really, the divine Ms. Mann is always good, but I've been returning to this song a lot lately. I get the guitar/lyrical hook stuck in my throat.

4.) "Ready, Steady, Go" by Generation X.

Yes, Wammo, Billy Idol's first band. But when Billy sings I'm still in love with the Beatles/I was in love with the Stones, no satisfaction/I was in love with Bobby Dylan/Because I'm in love with Rock'n'Roll, well, I get a little misty eyed with self-recognition.

5.) "Drop the Laundry" by the Mutaytor.

Because really, how can I not? There are songs you can dance to, and then there are songs you can dance to.

6.) "Two Halves" by Pamela Means.

The angriest song I've ever seen nearly destroy an acoustic guitar, and every lick of it is beautiful.

7.) "Lawyers, Guns and Money" by Warren Zevon.

Because.

8.) "Sugar and Stress" by the English Beat.

Summer is here, and you can tell by the resurgence of reggae. But I've always preffered my reggae with ska, and the English Beat were among my favorites. Besides, this could be my bloody theme song.

9.) "Tear My Stillhouse Down" by Gillian Welch.

Sure, the Waylon Jenning's version is the classic, but I dare anyone to match Ms. Welch's for soul.

10.) "Alameda" by Eliott Smith.

how you maintain all them in a constant state of suspense
for your own protection over their affection
nobody broke your heart
you broke your own because you can't finish what you start


Yeah. That.

And hmmmm. Who to tag? Who to tag?

[livejournal.com profile] orthoepy
[livejournal.com profile] pinata
[livejournal.com profile] inkog_neato
[livejournal.com profile] el3mo
[livejournal.com profile] holli

Profile

ocvictor: (Default)
Victor David Infante

April 2017

S M T W T F S
      1
2 345678
91011 12131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 27th, 2025 12:26 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios