Words To Go For

For those of you craving a little Swedish poetry in your lives, here’s a recommendation from Malvernite Taylor Jacob Pate. (NB. Taylor is also editor-in-chief of smoking glue gun, so you know he has impeccable taste in all things literary!)

You Go the WordsYou Go the Words by Gunnar Björling, translated by Fredrik Hertzberg
(Poetry, Action Books)

This collection of poems explores the power of the absence of words through hypnotic rhythms and lyrical minimalism. Although much of his lexicon is comprised of seemingly insignificant words like like-the-that-it-you-if-as-and, Björling’s emotional territory is immense and cuts to the heart and shimmers erotically. Large amounts of white space and disjunctive syntax come together to form a work in ten parts that, thanks to Fredrik Hertzberg’s supple and nimble translations, can be consumed in an afternoon or savored for days on end.

Recommended: Buffam & Bat

The captivating Mr. Tyler Gobble (host of the soon-to-return Everything is Bigger) has a couple of sterling summer reading recommendations for you today:

The IrrationalistThe Irrationalist by Suzanne Buffam
(Canarium Books, Poetry)

Let me say it simply: This is one hell of an enjoyable book. Not always cheery or blossomed with dance hall fervor, sure, but charmingly witty and playfully insightful, absolutely. You might have seen me pacing around the store, smiling and shaking my head YES, and odds are I was holding this book. Here, you can have it now. Enjoy.

Bat City 10Bat City Review, Volume 10
(Literary Magazine)

This here new issue of Bat City Review showcases exactly why I love journals: under one pretty cover, a whole mess of goodness, stories and poetry and art fresh into the world. Particularly, I dig Mykola Zhuravel’s art and Joe Hall’s poems, but really, friend, you can’t go wrong by picking up this assorted awesomeness.

The Best of Texas

We had a winning weekend here at Malvern Books. Or, more precisely, we had a weekend of winners—the winners of the Texas Association of Authors’ third annual Book Awards Contest stopped by on Saturday and Sunday to read from their victorious works and answer questions from curious audience members. 

On Saturday afternoon, general fiction winner Myra Hargrave McIlvain (below left) read from Stein House, the story of early settlers in Matagorda Bay, Texas during the American Civil War and Reconstruction periods. Multi-cultural fiction winner Jedah Mayberry (below right) read from The Unheralded King of Preston Plains Middle, an intriguing and thoughtful coming of age novel.

Myra McIlvain and Jedah Mayberry

Civil War historical fiction winner Robert Stevens (below left) read from Master Robert, a suspenseful account of plantation life during the War. And poetry winner R. Flowers Rivera (below right) read from Troubling Accents, an honest and accomplished collection that deserves to be widely read. 

Robert Stevens and R. Flowers Rivera

Check out the footage of Saturday’s readers below—and for a glimpse of Sunday’s equally impressive award-winners, be sure to take a look at these videos (via the Texas Association of Authors’ YouTube channel), in which the authors ponder the question, “Why do I write?” You can also visit us on Facebook for more photos from Saturday’s event. Congratulations to all these deserving winners, and thanks to y’all for sharing your wonderful work with us.

New In Store: Merwin & More

Nothing makes us happier here at Malvern than frantically tearing open carefully unpacking a shipment of lovely new books—and these recent arrivals from Copper Canyon Press certainly produced an immoderate amount of booksellers’ glee. Copper Canyon have been publishing poetry since 1972, and their titles include renowned and emerging American poets, poetry in translation, anthologies, and re-issues of classic collections. Let’s take a look at the cream of the Copper now gracing our shelves…

New Books 1

The Moon before Morning by W.S. Merwin ($24; hardback)—a stunning new collection from our seventeenth Poet Laureate. Lyrical, elegant, and transcendent, the poems in this volume suggest that, at the age of eighty-six, two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Merwin is writing some of the best poetry of his life.

Upgraded to Serious by Heather McHugh ($22; hardback)—McHugh’s eighth collection was honored as a “Book of the Year” by Publishers Weekly. These poems are frank and funny, full of fast-paced banter and linguistic acrobatics.

Radio Crackling, Radio Gone by Lisa Olstein ($15; paperback)—winner of Copper Canyon’s 2005 Hayden Carruth Award for New Emerging Poets, Radio Crackling creates a dreamscape filled with paradox and uncertainty, and guides the reader through this eerie world with remarkable intelligence and energy.

New In 2

Human Dark with Sugar by Brenda Shaughnessy ($15; paperback)—winner of the James Laughlin Award for the best second book of poems by an American poet (no sophomore slump here!), Human Dark with Sugar shuns sentimentality in favor of forthright, sexy, self-aware verse that somehow feels both playfully improvisational and assiduously controlled.

Crow with No Mouth by Ikkyū ($14; paperback)—Fifteenth-century Zen master Ikkyū Sojun only lasted nine days as headmaster of the great temple at Kyoto… and when he quit he invited his fellow monks to look for him in the sake parlors of the Pleasure Quarters. His short poems are as bawdy and robust as you’d expect from an iconoclastic ex-monk who despised authority and revered erotic love.

The Monster Loves His Labyrinth by Charles Simić ($14; paperback)—a collection of the 2007 U.S. Poet Laureate’s notebook entries, this book offers a fascinating glimpse into the preoccupations of one of our most acclaimed poets. These epigrams and vignettes offer moments of stunning beauty interspersed with biting humor.

Lauren Becker Book Launch

If I Would Leave Myself BehindLast Thursday we were delighted to get out ye olde blue stacking chairs for a celebratory event: the launch of Lauren Becker’s debut short story collection, If I Would Leave Myself BehindIf you like your fiction fearless, funny, and profound, then this is the book for you. And you don’t have to take our word for it—Malvern favorite Joshua Mohr, author of the brilliant Fight Song, says Lauren “knows how to mix that perfect cocktail—equal parts pathos and elegant insight, with just a splash of humor.”

Lauren was joined on our stage by two top blokes: Malvernite Tyler Gobble (below center), who admirably took on the roles of both MC and reader, and Josh Denslow (below right), who plays drums in the electro-pop band Borrisokane when he’s not writing awesome fiction. You can watch all three of them in action below. And don’t forget to check out our events calendar for upcoming excitements—we’ve got a lively summer ahead of us!

Lauren, Tyler, Josh

Borderlands Takes Off

BorderlandsIf you haven’t picked up a copy of the latest Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review, you’re missing out—and you really should come to Malvern Books at once and rectify this shameful situation! Issue #40 is beautifully produced and chock-full of awesome poetry, reviews, essays and photography. Highlights include new work from Laurie Ann Guerrerowinner of the 2012 Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize and author of the collection A Tongue in the Mouth of the Dying (also reviewed in this issue), and photography from Joel Salcido, including the issue’s stunning cover photo, Atotonilco el Alto.

But you don’t have to take my word for the brilliance of Borderlands, because the lovely folks from the journal held a launch party at Malvern Books on Sunday afternoon, with music, readings, and art—and we have a ton of fantastic footage from the event to share with you! Check it out, and then come stock up on your weekend reading.