Archives for posts with tag: writing

My good friend and publisher Joakim Norling has just posted the below on social media:

Timglaset Editions to cease publishing. After long deliberation I have decided to put Timglaset to rest. The press has been under a lot of pressure since the recession in 2022-23. Manufacturing and shipping costs have risen sharply and sales of the books have unfortunately taken a dive. For a press which has always worked with tight margins and relied on unpaid work and financial support from my own pockets this development has been disturbing. About a month ago it all came to a point where continuing with the press, in its present form, became impossible, when my webshop platform announced its intention to raise prices with 110%. I simply cannot pay the new fee, which means that Timglaset will be without an online selling platform April 1st. So what will happen now? Timglaset will stop publishing new books. I will establish a simple new website with a list of available books, which will allow those who still have an interest to order from the backlist. Up until April 1st the current webshop will be active and there will be a 30% discount on all orders. Just apply the coupon code GOODBYE at checkout. Sincerely, Joakim Norling, publisher.
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and as I wrote Joakim via email:
It’s been clear over the last year or so that things with shifting and changing at Timglaset — the level of news, of posts, of general gossip, and promotion had shifted — but I remained hopeful that the inevitable wouldn’t happen. I completely understand and respect Joakim’s decision to close Timglaset down in its current form; the realities of small and independent publishing is incredibly difficult — and I know that this decision could not have been easy. The support that Joakim and Timglaset has offered me over the years and through many publications has been invaluable; my writing has become weirder and stronger, more confident and clearer-minded, due to his influence, his publishing support, and his friendship. I wish the best for Joakim and for his publishing; there are few presses in the world with the high quality backlist and mandate that he has created. I’m happy to have been a small part of his press. Thank you Joakim for the hours, the conversations, the tireless efforts, the financial investment — for the optimism and willingness to invest where others feared to tread; for being proprietor of one of the world’s most courageous presses. Thank you for publishing me, for inviting and hosting me in Malmö, for meeting me in London, and for so so much more…and thank you for extending that same generosity to so many other authors.

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You should read the PDF of Joakim Norling’s June 2023 statement on Timglaset’s mandate, which I published as a chapbook through No Press.

Timglaset Editions published 5 titles of mine over the years:

SILENCE: LECTURES AND WRITINGS and 150 (for Andy) (both of which remain available for order, use the code GOODBYE for 30% off) and On Syntax (which is out of print but is available as a free PDF), ABC: An Abecedarium (which is available as a free PDF) and isostatisk landhöjning.

My involvement with Timglaset extended beyond simply being published by them: I also contributed a contextualizing essay to Joe Devlin’s Marginalia Drawings, an image to Timglaset magazine #4, and back cover blurbs for Danni Storm’s Herbarium, Andrew Brezna’s Automatic Souls, Catherine Vidler’s Lost Sonnets, and Joakim kindly translated my work as Snälla, inte mer poesi. I also proofread Fernando Aguiar’s Poems without Words, and Amanda Earl’s Judith: Women making visual poetry.

Timglaset has published some astonishingly fabulous books over the years, including, but hardly limited to, Kate Siklosi’s Leavings, Gary Barwin’s Quantum Typography, Sacha Archer’s cellsea and Mother’s Milk, Fernando Aguiar’s Poems without Words, Hartmut Abendschein’s Asemic Walks, and Amanda Earl’s edited volume Judith: Women making visual poetry … and so many more.

2024, as a writer and an arts-administrator, felt like a between year—a year that will lead to new conversations, new growth, and new phases—a year that foreshadows more than it holds itself.

As Banff Centre’s Director of Literary Arts, I developed a slate of in-person and digital residencies which found homes across Banff Centre campus while renovations on Vinci Hall continue. Literary Arts residencies—all of which were scholarshipped at 100% of tuition and 50% of room/board—enabled international writers to work with exceptional faculty: January’s “Winter Writers” residency with Casey Plett and Waubgeshig Rice (and Alana Wilcox from Coach House Books); February’s “Late Winter” Online residency with Fawn Parker and Annick MacAskill; April’s “Form and Constraint” residency with Ian Williams and Daniel Levin Becker (and John Yao from Black Square Editions); June’s “Memoir” residency with Kyo McLear and Elamin Abdelmahmoud (and Jen Sook Fong Lee from ECW Press); August’s “Summer Writers” residency with Sina Queyras and A.E. Stallings (and Danielle Dutton from Dorothy, a Publishing Project); September’s “Early Career Writers of Fiction” residency with Kazim Ali and Kim Fu (and Norm Nehmetallah from Invisible Books); and November’s “Literary Journalism” residency with Charlie Foran and Ayelet Tsabari (and Micah Toub from The Globe and Mail).

Banff Centre‘s Literary Arts department has some amazing plans for 2025 with residencies focused on Environmental Journalism, Horror Writing, Science Fiction, Literary Journalism / Creative Non-fiction, Comics and Graphic Novels, Early Career Writers of YA and Children’s Books, and several open topic poetry/prose residencies … all responding to the needs of international writers. Lots of great news on the Banff Centre website. Literary Arts will not only be increasing the number of residencies offered, but also the number of spaces available for writers—all while maintaining scholarship levels and the mentor/writer ratio.

In 2024, in celebration of what would have been bpNichol’s 80th birthday, Coach House Books published Some Lines of Poetry from the Notebooks of bpNichol which I edited with my old friend Gregory Betts. Gregory and I have collaborated a lot over the years, and this project took several years and was an incredibly pleasure to work on. Nichol’s notebooks and ideas around poetry continue to thrill me. I encourage you to pick up a copy.

2024 is my final year as the Town of Banff’s Poet Laureate. It has been a real pleasure to host events, workshops and readings in our small mountain town for the last few years. I know that Heather Jean Jordan will be an exceptional Poet Laureate for 2025-2026.

I received the Chancellor’s Alumni Award from University of Roehampton … which is a frought recognition for sure as it comes just a few short years after Roehampton eradicated their Creative Writing department, laying off all my peers and abandoning an exceptional centre for UK-based creative writing. Another victim of massive cuts to post-secondary education in that country.

This year I spoke to students at Ontario College of Art and Design and Concordia University, hosted bookbinding workshops at the Banff Public Library, and performed at Banff’s Legion Hall and Toronto’s Supermarket. I exhibited my visual poetry as part of Con Creta & Son Ora (Paper View Books, Leiria, Portugal), the Banff Centre Staff Summer Showcase (Project Space, Glyde Hall, Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, Banff, AB), Exposition littéraire autour de Mallarmé (Centre for Book Arts, New York, USA), and A Collection of Modified Bookmarks (Bower Ashton Library, UWE Bristol, Bristol, UK and Portico Library, Manchester, UK). I was also a juror for the 2024 RBC Bronwen Wallace Award.

It was a thrill to attend the 2024 London Small Publishers Fair, the 2024 SpokenWeb Symposium at the University of Calgary, and the AWP Conference in Kansas City … and to host Naomi Klein onstage at Banff Centre’s Jenny Belzberg Theatre in front of over 500 audience members.

I published in The Typescript, Westword, Synapse, The Rocky Mountain OutlookAlberta Views, ToCall, Petrichor, and The Ampersand Review; and in the anthologies Extrins and Coup de Dés (Collection) Books and Ideas After Mallarmé.

There were also 8 different small press editions of my work published in 2024: Il Pleut (Edinburgh: Oo Press), Titelløs (fra Kern) (Copenhagen: Addenda), Seven Squares (Lieria: Paper View books), In memory of Bob Cobbing (Edinburgh: Essence Press), Il Pleut (London: Intergraphia), the 2nd edition of Future Poems (London: Poem Atlas) and two chapbooks from my own No Press: Information in Memoriam Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt and Nature or Habit.

I continue to place free PDFs of all of my work online—help yourself.

Through No Press I published 14 different editions of poetry and prose – including 5 issues of The Minute Review – with contributions by 50 different international, national and local emerging and established writers. Each edition was meant to help spread the word of risk-taking international writing. Thank you for trusting me with your work. 

Oh, and here’s my “Most Engaging Books of 2024” list, highlighting some of the finest books I’ve read this year.

None of this would have been possible without my incredible partner, Kristen, and our amazing kid Maddie (and our angry cat Alice and now our all-over-everything puppy Lou). My parents and mother-in-law are also steady voices of support and love; thank you.

In so many ways I only excel because of the strength and support of my community of friends and colleagues, especially Gary Barwin, Gregory & Lisa Betts, Christian Bok, Kit Dobson & Aubrey Hanson, Helen Hajnoczky, Nasser Hussain & Kaley Kramer, Aaron Tucker & Julia Polyck-O’Neill, rob mclennan, Astra Papachristodoulou, and so many others. Thank you.

Here’s to 2025.

After several years of pandemic and struggle, 2023 felt like a growth year – a year to reassess, reappraise, and return to new ways of creating, thinking, and responding. 2023 is gone in just a few short weeks, here’s what I was up to this year:

As Banff Centre’s Director of Literary Arts, I developed a slate of residencies—both online (allowing participants to receive mentorship from their own home, fitting in with their schedules) and in person (it’s so great to welcome writers to Banff Centre’s campus). Literary Arts residencies—all of which had tuition 100%-scholarshipped—enabled international writers to work with exceptional faculty: January’s Winter Writers Residency with Nasser Hussain, Lisa Robertson, and guest speaker Holly Melgard (Troll Thread), March’s Graphic Novels and Visual Narratives with Matt Madden, Bishakh Som, and guest speaker Andy Brown (Conundrum Press); June’s Literary Journalism Residency with Charlotte Gill, Carol Shaben, and Michael Harris; July’s Summer Writers Residency with Stuart Ross, Canisia Lubrin, and guest speaker Leigh Nash (Assembly Press); October’s Emerging Writers Residency: Poetry with Sharanpal Ruprai, Suzanne Zelazo, and professional guest Naomi Lewis (Freehand Books) and November’s Late Fall Writers Online Residency with Moez Surani and Klara du Plessis. Banff Centre Literary Arts has some amazing plans for 2024 with faculty Waubgeshig Rice, Kyo McLear, Elamin Abdulmahmoud, Casey Plett, Sina Queyras, A.E. Stallings, Ian Williams, Charlie Foran, Ayelet Tsabari, Daniel Levin Becker, Fawn Parker, Annick MacAskill, Kazim Ali, Kim Fu, Norm Nehmetallah, John Yau, Jen Sook Fong Lee, Danielle Dutton, and more … all responding to the needs of international writers. Lots of great news on the Banff Centre website.

In 2023 Malmo, Sweden’s Timglaset Editions published my Silence: Lectures and Writings and I am thrilled with the book. Crafted over the pandemic, and featuring an afterword by Peter Jaeger, Silence responds to every page of John Cage’s book of the same title, creating a sonic landscape of breath, reflection, and pause. Timglaset’s Joakim Norling is unwavering in his support of risk-taking books and I’m honoured to have published with him again.

This year also saw the publication of the 2nd edition of Kern from California’s Punctum Books, returning that long out-of-print volume back to a readership.

In addition to being Banff’s Poet Laureate, I spoke to students via Zoom at University of Washington – Bothell, York University, and Douglas College and performed readings at Calgary’s Pages Books on Kensington, Ottawa’s Carleton Tavern, Vancouver’s Fairleigh Dickinson University, Banff’s Legion Hall, and London, England’s London Small Publishers Fair. I exhibited my visual poetry as part of This is a Poem (Central Branch, Calgary Public Library. Calgary, AB.) and “I Wish…” (Shandy Hall Gallery, Coxwold, Yorkshire, UK.)

I had work published in The Rocky Mountain Outlook, Westword, Periodicities, ctrl+alt+del, Arc, Oesa, Petrichor, The Penetang Review, The Stony Thursday Book, and Right Click Save and in the anthologies Poème Objkt Sbjkt, Report from the Smith Society Vol. 1, Interpoem: A Visual Anthology, and, in translation, in Nouvelles de l’Alberta: Anthologie de textes littéraires / Alberta Shorts : An Anthology of Literary Texts.

There were also 8 different small press editions of my work published in 2023: Ontario Hydro and a 2nd edition of Tattered Sails (both from above/ground press), 🙂 (Anstruther Press), Future Poems (Poem Atlas), as well as UMNV, Chinook Arch, Network, and Ossification (all from my own No Press).

Los Angeles’ SEEN STUDIOS created an incredible Riso-printed edition of my full colour visual poetry as the 4th issue of LAY_OUT where every page on every copy of the book is completely unique; a randomized explosion of technicolour typography.

I continue to place free PDFs of all of my work online—help yourself.

Through No Press I published 17 different editions of poetry and prose – including 3 issues of  The Minute Review – with contributions by 47 different international, national and local emerging and established writers. Each edition was meant to help spread the word of risk-taking international writing. Thank you for trusting me with your work. Paper & Thread: 25 years of housepress and No Press celebrated a quarter-century of my small press publishing a print-on-demand edition of reflection by authors around the world.

None of this would have been possible without my incredible partner, Kristen, and our amazing kid Maddie (who has just published a monograph with UBLibraries on Julie Johnstone’s Essence Press). My parents and mother-in-law have also been a steady voice of support and love; thank you.

In so many ways I only excel because of the strength and support of my community of friends and colleagues, especially Gary Barwin, Greg and Lisa Betts, Christian Bok, Kit Dobson, Helen Hajnoczky, Aubrey Hanson, Nasser Hussain, Kaley Kramer, rob mclennan, Astra Papachristodoulou, and so many others. Thank you.

Here’s to 2024.