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Pushcart Nominations!

We are honored to announce our Pushcart nominations for 2009. The Pushcart Prize anthology is a thick volume produced every year with literary work selected from the best literary journals and small presses.

Poetry

“Magnificat” by Rachel Bunting, Issue 3.1

Short Story

“The Life and Times of a Modern-Day Humpty Dumpty” by J. Brisbin, Issue 3.1
“Tree” by Naphtali Fields, Issue 3.2

Creative Nonfiction

“A Place at the Table” by Nancy J. Nordenson, Issue 3.1
“The Woman of Sikongo: A Lament” by Jill Noel Kandel, Issue 3.1
“Reconciliation” by Inez Holger, Issue 3.2

64 Questions Review

Almost a year ago, David Holper had a collection of poems published in a chapbook titled 64 Questions.  Shortly thereafter, some of his work was published in issue 3.1 of Relief.  Over the last two months, David has also joined the list of occasional bloggers that write for our website.

Recently, The-Chimaera.com wrote a review of 64 Questions that we thought you should check out.  You can read it by clicking here.

David’s Bio:
David Holper has worked as taxi driver, fisherman, dishwasher, bus driver, soldier, house painter, bike mechanic, bike courier, and teacher. With all that useful experience and a couple of degrees, he has published a book of poetry called 64 Questions (March Street Press), as well numerous other poems in literary journals including Relief. He lives in Eureka, California, which is far enough from the madness of civilization that he can get some writing done. Another thing that helps is that his three children continually ask him to make up stories, and he is learning the art of doing that well for them.

Review of The Body of This: Stories

About a month ago, Robin Merrill wrote into Relief‘s Editor-in-Chief asking to write a review of Relief published author Andrew McNabb’s new book, The Body of This: Stories.   The e-mail was passed to me and I was more than happy to put Robin on the schedule.  So I present to you Robin’s review:

An Important New Voice

By Robin Merrill

A man gives up a million dollar lottery ticket so his girlfriend will eat a bag of potato chips.  A thirty-three year old lawyer quits his practice to work at Home Depot, where he can be truly subservient.   A young girl dreams of marrying Christ.  A woman contemplates the birth of her albino child.  A family man dreams of licking a homeless woman’s teeth to achieve rapture.

Andrew McNabb’s debut collection of short stories is a triumph.  Twenty-eight stories in only 164 pages, some are more like vignettes than stories.  McNabb does not waste words.  His stories are tight and potent.  Don’t expect plot driven narratives; instead, each story paints a portrait of a character (or two), most of whom seem inexplicably familiar.  Have I met them somewhere before?  Or do I recognize myself in McNabb’s honest depictions?

I would be remiss if I did not call attention to McNabb’s peculiar ability to write a love story.  How can a writer today tell a love story that is fresh and authentic without falling into the sticky traps of romance and sentimentalism?  McNabb achieves this with realism.  The collection is worth reading for one piece alone: “Their Bodies, Their Selves.”  An elderly man falls while using the restroom and his elderly wife, upon finding him injured and embarrassed, undresses in front of him for the first time.  Tender.  Human.  Perhaps the most exquisite love story I’ve read.

This is a corporeal collection.  I fear a “Christian” label might summon expectations of cartoonish characters and Little House on the Prairie plots. Instead, a reader finds blatant realism, with sex and flatulence and nudity, and yes, even cursing, but it is never gratuitous, just graciously honest.  McNabb fuses the spiritual and the physical in such a perfect union, one wonders how there was ever a divide.

This is not a collection of stories about being Christian, but instead an exploration of what it means to be human in a beautiful, haunted world. McNabb’s faith and spiritual self-awareness is intrinsically woven throughout the book’s pages.  No story is told “because of faith” or “in service of faith.”  The faith is just there.  It is just part of the human experience, which makes The Body of This all the more authentic.  I expect to be affected by these stories for some time.  Andrew McNabb is an important writer.

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