looks pretty great, I'll try to look into this
KS
On 24/10/2007, Joshua Kotin <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> The autumn double issue of Chicago Review (53:2/3) is available for
> purchase via ---
>
> http://humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/review/
>
> Use code GROSSMAN for 10% off subscriptions and individual issues.
>
> The issue ---
>
> POEMS
>
> Book V of Ronald Johnson's Radi os (entitled "The Book of Adam");
> "Rising, Falling, Hovering," the second half of C.D. Wright's long
> poem surrounding the Iraq war (the first half was published in CR
> 51:3); as well as work by Larissa Szporluk, William Fuller, Sarah
> Gridley, Roberto Harrison, Mark Tardi, John Peck, Erín Moure, Oana
> Avasilichioaei, and Elisa Sampedrín.
>
> FICTION
>
> Five short stories by Peter Markus and Jedediah Berry's "Minus, His
> Heart."
>
> ESSAYS
>
> Georges Perec's "For a Realist Literature" (translated and introduced
> by Rob Halpern) and Allen Grossman's essay on communicative
> difficulty and Hart Crane's "The Broken Tower."
>
> The issue also includes "Numbers Trouble," an essay by Juliana Spahr
> and Stephanie Young on gender and contemporary poetry, plus a
> response by Jennifer Ashton.
>
> REVIEWS
>
> Robert P. Baird on Eliot Weinberger's An Elemental Thing
> Michael Robbins on Frederick Seidel's Ooga-Booga
> Catherine Wagner on Harryette Mullen's Recyclopedia
> Chris Woods on Zak Smith's Gravity's Rainbow Illustrated
> Diana George on Hermann Ungar's Boys & Murderers
> Spencer Dew on Gabriel Pomerand's Saint Ghetto of the Loans
> David J. Alworth on Daniel Kane's Don't Ever Get Famous
> P. Genesius Durica on Laird Hunt's The Exquisite
> Joshua Baldwin on Kevin Connolly's Drift
>
> ...and the next chapter of Kent Johnson's critical novella, on J.H.
> Prynne's To Pollen
>
> [http://humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/review/ features a few of these
> reviews as free pdfs]
>
>
> IN ADDITION . . .
>
> A long response by John Wilkinson to Peter Riley's letter in CR 53:1,
> postcards of Ronald Johnson's concrete poem Balloons for Moonless
> Nights, and a note on gender representation in literary magazines.
>
> + + + +
>
> Please visit CR at --- and subscribe --- at http://
> humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/review/
>
> + + + +
>
> Also this week: CR is having an open house.
>
> Please visit Lillie House this Friday evening at 7:30 to celebrate
> the launch of Chicago Review 53:2/3.
>
> Contributors Roberto Harrison and Kent Johnson --- all the way from
> Milwaukee and Freeport, respectively --- will read.
>
> There will also be drink and good cheer --- and copies of the new
> issue . . .
>
> Lillie House is located at 5801 South Kenwood Ave / 60637, just east
> of the University of Chicago quad in Hyde Park.
>
> + + + +
>
> Next week: material from earlier issues that link with this one will
> be posted online (the first half of C.D. Wright's "Rising, Falling,
> Hovering," part one of Kent Johnson's critical novella on British
> poetry, and John Wilkinson's review of Simon Jarvis and Peter Riley's
> response).
>
> + + + +
>
>
> | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
>
> Chicago Review
> 5801 South Kenwood Avenue
> Chicago Illinois 60637
>
> http://humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/review/
>
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