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  • Books

    Time Out Chicago / Issue 157 : Feb 28–Mar 5, 2008

    View from below

    Chicago’s publishing scene suffers some growing pains, and the city is finally taking notice.

    By Jonathan Messinger

    ILLUSTRATION: NADINE NAKANISHI

    With March coming up fast, and with it the annual Small Press Month celebrations, the perfect metaphor for small-press publishing in Chicago popped into our brain: It’s the story of Other Voices. Until the release of its final issue in November, OV was considered one of the premier literary magazines in the country, certainly in the city. It had loose ties to a university —receiving office space but no money from the University of Illinois at Chicago—and a volunteer staff ran it. In the fall the editors switched from publishing the magazine to publishing only books, a venture they’d begun in 2005. But it’s the way they’re doing it that’s most resonant: They’re now a part of Dzanc Books, a small, nonprofit publisher based in...Ann Arbor, Michigan.

    We’re not criticizing OV for joining forces with Dzanc, a respected publisher that will now take over the business side while the Chicago staff retains editorial control. But it’s telling that OV had to look outside of Chicago for institutional support. The fact is, the health of the Chicago small-press publishing scene is a matter of touch and go. In January 2006 everyone celebrated the launch of the new press, Stolen Time Publishing, when it released its first title, The Best Underground Fiction Volume One featuring John McNally, Elizabeth Crane and others. It’s now February 2008 and there’s no Volume Two. These days, stolentimepublishing.com sells laptops and online dating services, and founder Scott Miles says plans for another installment were scrapped. Last year, Punk Planet Magazine tragically folded, though its book imprint continues to operate as part of New York’s Akashic Books.

    As it stands, there isn’t much institutional support for literature in our fair city, whether we’re talking city-sponsorship or private foundations. (Full disclosure: I own a small publishing company in town called featherproof books.) One need only to look to the (far) north to see how a small-press publishing scene can thrive. The Twin Cities have numerous presses—Graywolf, Coffee House and Milkweed, to name a few—that prosper, at least in part, thanks to the city’s tradition of generous private and public funding. We don’t expect much to change here. The governor’s 2008 budget slashed the Illinois Arts Council’s funding and, truth be told, not much of that went to literature, anyhow.

    But there is one bright sign of life. The city’s cultural affairs office recently created a position in the office of tourism: director of literary arts and events. Danielle Chapman, a former staffer at the Poetry Foundation, was hired late last year and has since met with numerous publishers around the city. She declined to be interviewed for this story, saying she was still in a “fact-finding phase” and figuring out the duties of her position. But it’s easy to see Chapman occupying the same sort of space as the director of fashion arts and events, a position created in 2006 to be a liaison among various fashion professionals and help promote the industry. Though it remains to be seen what will become of the new position, it augers well that the city has recognized a need to help foster the burgeoning literary scene. We guess it speaks to the fashion of the times that literature comes a year-and-a-half after clothing.

    In the meantime, more light continues to peek over the horizon. Already in 2008 we’ve seen the launch of two literary magazines, the creative-nonfiction journal Paper & Carriages and the fiction and poetry mag The Bruiser Review. That last one is particularly interesting, as it explicitly intends to capture the current literary culture in Chicago, which is very much dominated by the explosion of reading series over the past few years. Without much publishing in town, writers have taken to the stage to find an audience. The poetry scene melds those worlds most successfully, with numerous chapbook presses thriving, and feminist publishers Switchback Books and Dancing Girl Press garnering national attention.

    With more writers in Chicago taking to the stage, we’re glad to see more editors trying to get them on the page and the sleeping giant of the City suddenly rubbing the crust from its eyes, it might just become fashionable to be in publishing.

    Follow the discussion about Small Press Month on the TOC blog here.



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    • 4139 Robert Klein Engler Tue, Mar 04, at 07:38am
      NewTown Writers is a GLBT writers group based in Chicago, Illinois. Founded in 1980 by Randy Gresham, NTW celebrated its 28th anniversary in 2008. Its current president is Robert Klein Engler. Incorporated in 1980, NewTown Writers, Inc. is an Illinois not-for-profit corporation. NewTown Writers holds fortnightly workshop-style meetings at the Chicago's Gerber/Hart Library hosted by Barry Frauman, where members share works-in-progress. With a mission of fostering GLBT literature, NewTown Writers publishes the literary anthology "Off The Rocks," edited by Mark Maroney and the e-zine "Swell," edited by Jill Craig. NewTown Writers also presents a performance series over the course of the year. Since 2001, the group has worked to present new work to a wider audience. "SoloHomo," produced by Mike Rogers with the assistance of Cookie Crumbles and Joe Steiff is now in its 6th season. It is the only venue in the U. S. consistently presenting gay, solo performance pieces to the public. "Working Stiffs, " a gay themed variety show, is in its 7th season and is on its way to becoming a feature of Pride Month in June. In 2007, NTW moved its performance series to Live Bait Theatre in Chicago. Matt Johnston is the new Artistic Director In 2008 the group plans its first production of a full legenth play. Since its founding in 1980, NewTown Writers has guided countless writers in finding their literary voices. Members include award-winning authors with many publishing credits, as well as emerging writers sharing their first effort. We invite you to learn more about NewTown Writers, its history, its mission, and its literary offerings. www.NewTownWriters.org e: newtownwriters@yahoo.com SWELLzine.com

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    • 4065 Gordon Messinger Fri, Feb 29, at 07:05pm
      Excellent article Jon. You have a talent for making the ignorant (me) understand the problem without being patronizing. Dad

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 4001 Kathie B. Thu, Feb 28, at 02:01pm
      Nice article, Jonathan!

      Flag as inappropriate






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