FC2 Announces the Winners of the Doctorow and Sukenick Prizes

Fiction Collective Two is pleased to announce Tricia Bauer has won the first annual FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize for her novel Father Flashes. The prize includes publication by FC2 and $15,000. Special mention goes to Melanie Rae Thon for her manuscript The Voice of the River. The judge was Carole Maso.

Fiction Collective Two is also pleased to announce Sara Greenslit has won this year’s FC2 Ronald Sukenick/American Book Review Innovative Fiction Contest for her novel As If a Bird Flew by Me. The prize includes publication by FC2 and $1000. Special mention goes to Kathleen M. McLaughlin for her manuscript Burn and to Erin M. Kautza for her manuscript Expiration Dates of Various Creatures. The judge was Susan Steinberg.

Spring Titles from FC2

More at http://www.fc2.org

Brian Conn
The Fixed Stars
Thirty-Seven Emblems for the Perilous Season

Juxtaposing barbarity and whimsy, Brian Conn’s The Fixed Stars has the tenor of a contemporary fable with nearly the same dream-like logic.

At its heart is the John’s Day celebration and the interactions of a small community afflicted by a mysterious plague. Citizens—the infected and healthy alike—are routinely quarantined and then reintegrated into society in rituals marked by a haunting brutality. In a culture that has retreated from urbanism into the pastoral, a woman who nurtures spiders and a man who spins hemp exist alongside the mass acceptance of sexual proliferation. Conn delivers a compelling portrait of a calamitous era, one tormented by pestilence, disease, violence, senseless ritual, and post-late-capitalism. An unflinching look at a world impossible to situate in time, The Fixed Stars is mythic and darkly magical.

“Brian Conn’s wonderfully perilous crossbreeding of SF and innovative prose reads like what might result if Dhalgren and A Canticle for Leibowitz engaged in salacious acts with The Tibetan Book of the Dead. The Fixed Stars is a funny, absurd, and beatifically strange book, one in which you simultaneously have the feeling that not one word is out of place and that everything that language brings to us opens onto a void. The Fixed Stars is the future of the future, and it is a truly outstanding debut.
–Brian Evenson

“With bits of machinery culled from post-apocalyptic science fiction, gothic horror, and ancient myth and ritual, Brian Conn has built a beguiling puzzle box of a novel. The Fixed Stars is a thorny, disjunctive fable that unfolds like a night-blooming flower. This is strange, intoxicating stuff.”
–Jedediah Berry

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Lynn K. Kilpatrick
In the House

In Lynn K. Kilpatrick’s In the House, anything can happen. A collection of shorts—lists, character sketches, directions, scripts, and instructions—In the House reveals the often conspicuous, yet frequently overlooked, dangers of relationships gone awry.

In a home suffused with fragility, or in a kitchen surrounded by knives, Kilpatrick’s men and women navigate around one another’s eccentricities with caution, highlighting the unspoken desires and veiled needs of domestic routine. In these stories those desires collide, illuminating the dangers that lurk pantries, a basements, the Miss America pageant, dioramas, or in the mind of the one you love.

“With astonishing agility Lynn Kilpatrick slits the fragile skin of identity to expose a thousand marvelously dangerous possibilities. You might be the child who disappears or the girl who becomes Miss America. Either way, your life is precarious, held in place by your own tenuous illusions and the wild confabulations of the woman on the other side of the glass, your bold, inventive neighbor.”
—Melanie Rae Thon

“In the House is a dazzlingly smart and deeply funny excavation of what goes on behind closed doors. Lynn Kilpatrick’s characters are at once bizarre and entirely recognizable and the stories she tells about them are tender and sharp and full of heart. This is a book that is brave enough to say what most of us won’t and wise enough to remind us why that kind of bravery matters.”
—Cheryl Strayed

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Rob Stephenson
Passes Through

In language that is frank and uncompromising, Rob Stephenson’s debut novel Passes Through moves forward in a rare and daring manner.

Part-journal, part-meditation on aesthetics, part-dreamscape, Passes Through investigates experience, identity, beauty, and sexuality, while complicating such distinctions as writing versus revision and imagination versus observation. It is a narrative of and about language, a narrative of and about narrative.

Stephenson throws to the wayside all of the traditional elements of fiction and in doing so composes a musical composition of obsessive consciousness and selfhood’s slippage. This haunting novel baffles and confounds on its way toward a stunning yet inevitable finale.

“Welcome to the barbwire collection (the limbo between prose and poetry). Stephenson’s Passes Through is the most exciting book I’ve read in some time. It has something to do with his pitch-perfect mastery of the underlying logic of association and his observational eye that sweeps through sex, art, death, and obsession—an obsession that may be love or that may be the desire to kill, or both. Here’s a book that succeeds through pure writing to do what only the best fiction does.”
—Samuel R. Delany, author of Dark Reflections and Through the Valley of the Nest of Spiders

“In this narrative of pure negativity, to “pass through” is to encounter the compulsive hater that may lurk in all of us. He is compellingly stalked via an accumulation of tiny precise phrases or gestures bespeaking the odd use of heartlessness, the protagonist’s and the culture’s, brilliantly juxtaposed in a stylistically and narratively intriguing work.”
—Gail Scott, author of Main Brides, Heroine, and My Paris

Brian Kiteley’s The River Gods on NPR’s All Things Considered

Listen to the review.

Raymond Federman

All of us at FC2 are remembering Raymond Federman, one of the masters of innovative fiction and richest hearts of our press, who changed tense on the morning of 6 October after a long battle with cancer.

This from Ted Pelton: “Ray had been in hospice in recent weeks, and although I had been working on his final novel with Starcherone, Shhh: a novel of childhood, I hadn’t heard from him since August. When I wrote him last month, his daughter Simone wrote back that he was too weak to do emails. Anyone who knew Ray would know that when he was too weak to write, he wouldn’t last long. I know nothing yet about any memorials or services, but send this merely to note the passing of a powerful, funny, and supremely dedicated artist, humanitarian, and friend. He loved life, and we will miss him.”

FC2 Awarded $25,000 Grant

FC2 is pleased to announce that it has been awarded a $25,000 grant from the The Jarvis & Constance Doctorow Family Foundation.

Two contests from FC2

FC2 is pleased to announce:

The FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize
$15,000 & publication by FC2

The Ronald Sukenick Innovative Fiction Prize
$1,000 & publication by FC2

For more information: http://fc2.org

FC2 Author News

Stephen Graham Jones’ The Long Trial of Nolan Dugatti is a finalist for the Shirley Jackson Award and Magdalena Zurawski’s The Bruise won Best Lesbian Debut Fiction at the Lambda Awards. Congratulations to both authors!

The FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize, the Collective Spirit, & Our 35th Year

At a moment when most large commercial publishers are scrambling simply to stay afloat amid the global economic collapse in order to produce more novels, collections, and novellas that want to be films when they grow up, I’m delighted to announce the advent of The FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize. The award will include $15,000 and publication of the winning manuscript by FC2.

U.S. writers in English with at least three books of fiction published are eligible. Submissions may include a collection of short stories, one or more novellas, or a novel. There is no length requirement. Works that have previously appeared in magazines or anthologies may be included. Translations and previously published novels and collections are not eligible. To avoid conflict of interest, former or current students or close friends of the final judge are ineligible, as are employees of and authors published by FC2.

Selection criteria will be consistent with FC2’s mission to bring forth fiction considered by America’s mainstream publishers too challenging, innovative, or heterodox for the commercial milieu. FC2 remains committed to work of high quality and exceptional ambition whose style, subject matter, and/or form push the limits of American publishing and help reshape our literary culture.

Finalists for The FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize will be chosen by the FC2 Board of Directors: Kate Bernheimer, R. M. Berry, Noy Holland, Brenda Mills, Lance Olsen (Chair), Matt Roberson, Susan Steinberg, and Lidia Yuknavitch. Carole Maso, I’m thrilled to report, has agreed to serve as judge and pen a foreword to the winning manuscript.

Contest entries, which will be read blind, and which must be accompanied by a $25 reading fee, will be accepted between 15 August and 1 November. The winner will be announced 1 May 2010. For contest updates, entry instructions, and so on, please visit our newly revamped website (now replete, by the way, with blog, podcasts, upcoming events, links, and more) at fc2.org.

FC2 continues to endorse the contest ethics code set out by the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses. To that end, FC2 is committed to: 1) conducting our contests as ethically as possible and to addressing any unethical behavior on the part of our readers, judges, or editors; 2) providing clear and specific contest guidelines—defining conflict of interest for all parties involved; and 3) making the mechanics of our selection process transparent and available to the public.

The FC2 Catherine Doctorow Innovative Fiction Prize, designed to identify and welcome into the Collective mid-career authors finding it increasingly difficult to locate publishers for their literary experiments, will take its place beside FC2’s Ronald Sukenick American Book Review Innovative Fiction Prize (now in its third year), designed to identify and welcome into the Collective early-career authors searching for an outlet for their ground-breaking work. This year’s judge for the latter will be Susan Steinberg, and our reading period will be the same as that for the Doctorow: 15 August through 1 November. (Again, for further information please visit our website.)

Please help FC2 get the word out about these contests by blog, Facebook, email, and word of mouth, and please urge authors of innovative fiction whom you know to submit their fiction.

Please join me as well in offering profound thanks to the benefactors behind both contests, none of whom is interested in fanfare. Through their generosity and dedication to fictions that most assuredly don’t want to be films when they grow up, and through the monumental effort (usually performed on a volunteer basis) on the part of our Board of Directors, contest judges, editorial pool, contest manuscript screeners, FC2’s layout arm at the Illinois State University, its production, distribution, and PR arm at the University of Alabama Press, its business offices at the University of Houston-Victoria, its coordination center at the University of Utah, and assistance from private contributors on and off our Board of Advisors, FC2 continues to embrace the collective spirit and literary activism that has made it one of America’s oldest independent presses run by authors for authors devoted to ever-shifting investigations into the innovative, and that has carried it successfully now into its surprising 35th year.

—Lance Olsen
Chair, FC2 Board of Directors

New FC2 website launches

FC2 is happy to announce our newly designed website: www.fc2.org.  Please drop by and have a look around!

Kate Bernheimer’s The Girl in the Castle named one of the Best Books of 2008

Kate Bernheimer, author of two FC2 novels (The Complete Tales of Ketzia Gold and The Complete Tales of Merry Gold) and member of FC2’s Board of Directors has just had her first children’s book, The Girl in The Castle inside The Museum (Random House) named as one of the “Best Books of 2008″ by Publishers Weekly.

http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6610357.html