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Literary Magazine Editors Introducing Emerging Writers at The New York Public Library The Council of Literary Magazines and Presses [clmp] and The New York Public Library present Periodically Speaking, a reading series providing a major venue for emerging writers to present their work while emphasizing the diversity of America’s literary magazines and the magazine collections of The New York Public Library. Each event presents writers from three influential literary magazines - one fiction writer, one poet, one nonfiction writer - introduced by their editors Program II American Short Fiction Founded in 1991, American Short Fiction was published until 1998 by
the University of Texas. During its initial run, ASF was a two-time finalist
for the National Magazine Award in Fiction. Acquired by Badgerdog Literary Publishing,
ASF resumed publication in 2006. Four times a year, the magazine's editors aim
to discover and publish new fiction in which transformations of language, narrative,
and character occur swiftly, deftly, and unexpectedly. Writers in ASF include
Joy Williams, Benjamin Percy, Vendela Vida, and Jess Row. Since its relaunch,
stories have been anthologized in Best Nonrequired Reading, New Stories
from the Southwest, and included in the Best American Short Stories
list of "100 Other Distinguished Stories."
The New York Quarterly AGNI In 2001 PEN America awarded AGNI founding editor Askold Melnyczuk
its lifetime achievement award for magazine editing, saying, "Among readers
around the world, AGNI is known for publishing important new writers early in
their careers.... AGNI has become one of America's, and the world's, most significant
literary journals" and "a beacon of international literary culture." Housed
at Boston University and edited since 2002 by essayist and literary critic Sven
Birkerts, AGNI publishes two 240-page issues annually.
This series is made possible in part by support from the New York State Council
for the Arts, a state agency; Friends of [clmp], a diverse group of individuals
committed to supporting independent literary publishing, and The New York Public
Library. |