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Category Archives: Editorial Staff

Being a Fiction First Reader at The Antioch Review: An Interview with Katy Bowman

06 Friday Dec 2013

Posted by Grace Curtis in Editorial Staff, Fiction, Interview, Uncategorized

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Fiction, First Readers, Katy Bowman, Short Story, The Antioch Review

Every short story writer wants to know how to get a story published. So, we’re going to tell you. Well, at least we’re going to tell you how to get someone to take a closer look at your story at The Antioch Review. On average, nine readers cull through the approximately 3,000 per year fiction submissions looking for the thirty or so that will ultimately end up on the pages of The Antioch Review. These readers do a close reading of the submitted stories, find the ones they like, and send them on to editor, Robert Fogarty, who makes the final decision. The Antioch Review is grateful for all its first readers and thought you might like an inside look at how just one of them, Katy Bowman, approaches this important task.

Antioch Review:  How long have you been reading for The Antioch Review and what is that process like for you?

Katy Bowman--a fiction first reader at The Antioch Review

Katy Bowman–a fiction first reader at The Antioch Review

Katy Bowman: I have been reading for The Antioch Review for about three years. I pick up twenty-five stories each month. I have two small children, so between caring for them, and working on my own writing, twenty-five per month is plenty. I begin by triaging the stories right away based on an initial quick read. If the story is not working at all, I set it aside. If the story seems to be working and is engaging, I set it in another pile. After I finish triaging, I sit down and give the engaging stories a more in-depth read.

When I first started reading for The Antioch Review, I was hesitant about rejecting something that was well written but was just not working for me. There are stories where the writing might be clean and precise with a clearly developed plot line, but they just don’t grab me as a reader. It’s difficult to reject stories, especially being a writer myself. I know how much time and care goes into each story, and I have a lot of respect for the writers who submit to us. It is no easy feat to get a story to the point where you are ready to send it out to perfect strangers. Continue reading →

The Antioch Review at Seventy- “Going Forward”

25 Monday Nov 2013

Posted by Grace Curtis in Editorial Staff, Editorials, Uncategorized

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Anniversary Issue, Robert Fogarty, The Antioch Review

by Robert S. Fogarty, Editor, the Antioch Review

In the Fall of 2011, The Antioch Review celebrated its seventieth anniversary as one of the oldest, continuously publishing literary magazines in America. Following is the Preface written by editor, Robert Fogarty, for the double-sized celebratory issue.

Preface

“Going forward” is a relatively new and apparently convenient way to in­dicate a progression in time from the present. The term suggests a con­tinuing and progressive movement rather than, as “in the future” can sometimes mean, some specific future date. Like many such expres­sions, it means enough to be useful while also being suitably vague.      — What is.com

Antioch Review editor, Robert Fogarty

Antioch Review editor, Robert Fogarty

Every year a new buzzword pops up, almost magically, in newspapers, in magazines, in corporate reports, in speeches, in advertisements, and eventually in casual conversation. A few years ago after reviewing a book for the Times Literary Supplement I noticed that the author had generously sprinkled the manuscript with the word iconic, as the author saw “iconic” figures on every corner, in every building, and in every event as he examined the gentrification process in New York’s East Harlem.

“Iconic” is, alas, still around (its first usage in English dates back to 1652, according to the OED), but a new generation of writers seem to have fallen in love with the word—whether this is because they grew up in an image-besotted culture or because they like the sound of it (like “awesome” of the recent past in vernacular speech) or be­cause they lost a whole batch of words growing up and are linguisti­cally crippled. Just recently the phrase “going forward” has emerged with boring frequency from people who ought to know better, such as Obama’s foreign policy advisor Samantha Power, a Pulitzer Prize winner and former Harvard professor. There is even a news analysis program called “Leaning Forward.” “Looking forward” has its origins in “corporate speak” and one source goes so far as to suggest that the Securities and Exchange Commission is responsible for it. This all reminds one of the spate of works that came out in wake of the pub­lication of the enormously popular utopian novel/tract Looking Back­ward in 1888. In quick succession there were look-alikes that tried to capture the audience (if not the spirit) of Bellamy’s classic. There was: Looking Forward, Looking Beyond, Looking Within, Looking Ahead, Looking Further and, of course, Looking Further Backward. Continue reading →

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