“The mind: a great weapon and an even greater weakness.” – Jace Beleren I. “Illusions of Grandeur” It’s 7 A.M. on a Saturday in October 2012. I'm twenty-eight-years-old and yelling “Idiot,” “Fucking terrible,” and “What were you thinking?” into my steering wheel. I’m driving home from Time Warp Comics, where I’ve just lost a Magic tournament. And not just lost, but lost lost: eighteenth out of twenty-five at the midnight release for the newest set, Return to Ravnica. My opponents? Mostly … [Read more...] about Things American: Control Magic
NOTEBOOK FEATURE
If You Lived Here: An Interview with Jennine Capó Crucet
The second interview in the "If You Lived Here" blog series is with Jennine Capó Crucet, author of the short fiction collection How to Leave Hialeah, which won the Iowa Short Fiction Award. How to Leave Hialeah is a beautiful and detailed map of the crowded beaches and neighborhoods of Miami as seen through the lives of the people who call them home. Her new novel, Magic City Relic, is forthcoming for St. Martin's Press in 2015. MM: I thought one of the important themes in the book was … [Read more...] about If You Lived Here: An Interview with Jennine Capó Crucet
Inside the Issue: Kellie Wells reads from “A Unified Theory of Human Behavior”
The young heroine of Kellie Wells' "A Unified Theory of Human Behavior," the opening story in Issue 56 of American Short Fiction, observes the world around her with an affecting mixture of sorrow and humor. "Kellie Wells," writes the wonderful Matt Bell, "will break your heart with a sentence, with a story, with the irrepressible smile at her wit that lights across your face even as on the page sadness swells and grief abounds." The story chronicles a young girl's tangled efforts to make sense … [Read more...] about Inside the Issue: Kellie Wells reads from “A Unified Theory of Human Behavior”
Along for the Ride: At the Waffle House with Mary Miller
The table at which I wait for Mary Miller in a Waffle House off US-183 in Austin is disappointingly well-kept. It’s my first experience with a Waffle House, so I expected and hoped for a table with spilled sugar crystals, the surface sticky with syrup. That the table has been recently wiped clean is briefly, marginally disappointing, and I feel slightly robbed of the desired authenticity. What I believe is the authentic Waffle House experience is how Mary Miller depicts it in the first few pages … [Read more...] about Along for the Ride: At the Waffle House with Mary Miller
Things American: Authentic Desire & the Root of Sexuality in HBO’s “Girls”
What if I said I do not believe in desire? As the holidays wind down, and with them the inundation of images of midnight smooches on New Year’s Eve and nuclear families unwrapping presents by the tree, I am always left with that seasonal-depression-idea that I’ve somehow failed to live up to the status quo—those unreachable expectations. And then I pause and think, “Wait, why do I care? That’s not even what I want.” I’m thrown by how much those desires feel, momentarily, like my … [Read more...] about Things American: Authentic Desire & the Root of Sexuality in HBO’s “Girls”
ASF’s Holiday Gift/Get/Just Go Buy It Guide
'Tis the season: to ask for books and buy books with abandon. So, we've asked our ASF staff to share what books they're gifting to their friends and family, what books they want to be gifted, and what short story collections they think you should just go ahead and get for yourself. Andrew Bales Give: With Maggie Nelson's Bluets, Wave Books has perfected the stocking stuffer. At 99 pages, it's an unassuming book—a faintly cosmic blue cover with a white square on the … [Read more...] about ASF’s Holiday Gift/Get/Just Go Buy It Guide