CLMP recommends “These Are the Fables” by Amelia Gray
Vol. 13, No. 3
EDITOR’S NOTE
If I’m the first person to tell you about Amelia Gray, we obviously don’t have any Facebook friends in common. More than a few CLMP members have published her: Tin House, Guernica, DIAGRAM, American Short Fiction, to name some. And Flavorwire just named her one of The Top 10 Best Millennial Authors You Probably Haven’t Read (Yet). So, let’s do something about that.I first encountered Amelia Gray accidentally at a reading, maybe four years ago. She got on stage with a handful of note cards and said she was going to read some “threats.” And then she proceeded to scare the crap out of me. With each card, a promissory note of a very awkward and/or terrifying thing that would happen (to who? me!? gulp). And, once she pronounced the threat, she crumpled it up and chucked it at the audience. I bring this up to warn you: Amelia gets up in your face.
Her stories aren’t the type you read and then forget when and where you read them. You’ll remember. You’ll remember because it’s like rubber cement, or some other addictively-bad smelling thing, that you can’t get away from and have to roll-peel off your skin for days. Take “These Are the Fables,” for example. Believe you me, the burnt sugar smell of the blazing Dunkin’ Donuts is going to need more than a shower to ditch.
In the glow of the glazed and sprinkled flames, is a couple too-old-to-be-forgiven-for-this-type–of-behavior plotting their next moves through Texas. They learn they’re with child. We learn what we think is a lot about how to read this couple. From the get, you’ll think Amelia is generous with the details. She lures you in with information, you think you have it all down, and then you realize those surface information nuggets are just a distraction and all the while something else has been happening. There isn’t a lot of action or a big cast, and yet, each encounter, every action, like any great short story, is just so—well—pregnant. So in this trail of smoke through Texas towns avoided and considered, here’s a story about closed doors, physical contact, willful ignorance, the search for meaning, obsessive love, the inertia of the day to day, and, ultimately, what to share. And, while the images of the couple can at times be endearing, each time you read this story, you’ll say to yourself, Jesus H. Christ there is just something menacing about this picture.
Steph Opitz
Former Programs Director
Council of Literary Magazines Presses
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These Are the Fables
by Amelia Gray
Recommended by CLMP
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WE WERE IN THE PARKING LOT OF A DUNKIN’ DONUTS IN BEAUMONT, TX when I told Kyle that I was pregnant. I figured I’d rather be out under God as I announced the reason for all my illness and misery.I said to him, Well shit. Guess we’re having a baby.
“Lemme see,” Kyle said. I handed him the test and he squinted at it for a second before tossing it into a bush. A stranger set his coffee on the roof of his car and clapped. Kyle flipped him the double deuce. “People these days,” Kyle said.
I said that my mama will be happy.
“Here’s the thing,” he said. “Your mama’s dead. And you’re forty years old. And I have a warrant out for my arrest. And I am addicted to getting tattoos. And our air conditioner’s broke. And you are drunk every day. And all I ever want to do is fight and go swimming. And I am addicted to Keno. And you are just covered in hair. And I’ve never done a load of laundry in my life. And you are still technically married to my drug dealer. And I refuse to eat beets. And you can’t sleep unless you’re sleeping on the floor. And I am addicted to heroin. And honest to God, you got big tits but you make a real shitty muse. And we are in Beaumont, Texas.”
I said, These are minor setbacks on the road to glory.
“And,” Kyle added, “the Dunkin’ Donuts is on fire.”
I'm Brian McGreevy, author/producer of the gothic horror novel/series HEMLOCK GROVE. AMA : IAmA
Happening now: Brian McGreevy, author of Hemlock Grove, on Reddit. Ask him anything!
The cutest parody of Hemlock Grove ever?
On Thursday, April 18, at 7 p.m., Brian McGreevy, the author of Hemlock Grove (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2012) –– Netflix will release its original series inspired by the book that night at midnight, and cast members Bill Skarsgard and Landon Liboiron will be present to join the conversation –– and Caveman, whose new album is Caveman (Fat Possum Records, April 2) will perform (acoustic) and discuss their work with host Katherine Lanpher.
Admission is free, and no tickets are required. For full details, click here.
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Poetry Month is Lorca Month! #LorcaNYC
lorcanyc:
LORCA IN NY: A CELEBRATION
April 5-July 21, 2013Lorca in New York: A Celebration is the largest-ever festival in North America celebrating the work of acclaimed Spanish poet and playwright Federico García Lorca. With more than two dozen events throughout Manhattan, it focuses on the brief but…
Happy birthday to Flannery O’Connor - born March 25th, 1925.
In celebration, a previously unreleased photograph and a new book:
via www.FindFlannery.com:
“In May 1958 Flannery O’Connor and her mother were given a pilgrimage to Lourdes. From there they went to Rome and were granted an audience with Pope Pius XII [Eugenio Pacelli], the last Roman Pontiff of the Catholic Church before the reforms of Vatican II and Pope John 23rd. Pius XII, who would die soon after the photograph, was the grandest of the last two centuries.”
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Just one month until Eli Roth’s Hemlock Grove is out on Netflix! Check out this new, creepy trailer, and bide your time with the book by Brian McGreevy, in stores now!
It’s enough to give one the shivers.
Hemlock Grove premieres on Netflix on April 19. Plenty of time to read the book first!
Who loves you? FSG’s Book Keeping and Ben Schrank (author of Love Is a Canoe) love you!
Inside Ben Schrank’s novel, Love Is a Canoe, lurks a self-help guide, Marriage Is a Canoe, which for good or ill steers the fate of the book’s love-crossed characters. Here are valentines for the bookish, the cynical, the lovers of a good promo. Happy Valentine’s Day from Book Keeping!


