Tuesday, 23 November 2021

Pushcart Prize Nomination


Among the very few perks of being a small press publisher is that I get to make Pushcart nominations from the books I publish. This year, I'm pleased to nominate Robyn Groth's "The Magnificent Marjorie Nuhn" from Passion for Beauty: Marjorie Nuhn, Water Colorist.

Friday, 12 November 2021

An Interview with Gary Kelley


Gary Kelley is an artist and illustrator who has recently published his first graphic novel, The Moon of the Snow-Blind (Ice Cube Press) about the event known as the 1857 Spirit Lake massacre. Kelley will be the featured reader at the Final Thursday Reading Series on November 18 (**one week early due to Thanksgiving) at the Hearst Center for the Arts. The in-person event starts off with a creative writing open mic at 7:00. Gary Kelley takes the stage at 7:30. The 7:30 featured reading will also be live Zoomcast. Click HERE to register for the live Zoomcast.

This interview was conducted by Alexus Williams.

Alexus Williams: What inspired you to write this graphic novel? How did you decide to turn this story into a graphic novel rather than a conventional novel?
Gary Kelley: I grew up with that story and mostly in Algona, Iowa. So I grew up hearing about the story of Spirit Lake and Iowa history. Then there’s my uncle who taught me how to draw and was an art student in Minneapolis. He also had a lot of books on his shelves, and that’s where I found Abby Gardner’s autobiography. I also lived close enough to the Iowa great lakes and, the older I got, the more time I got to spend with family or buddies there. I always loved to get into the history, and I had been around all that stuff since I was a kid. Another thing, the same band of Dakotas as Inkpaduta, actually confronted some settlers in the town I grew up in, in Algona. That gave me even more interest in a story like that. Also, I am addicted to Native American history and Native American culture…that’s why I put that quote about there being two sides to every story in the beginning of the novel, we don’t always get their side of the story.

AW: Could you talk a bit about the title of the book? Does “snow-blind” refer to a person or people? Or is there more to it than that?

GK: The title came because I was so into Indian history, especially the Plains Indians. I read a couple of books on this story, and they’re usually titled The Spirit Lake Massacre, totally demeaning the Dakotas, but I wanted to show that there are two sides to every story. So, when I was doing some research on the Sioux Indians, I found they had their own titles or descriptions for every month. When I started going through the Sioux Indians and saw that the month of March is the “moon of the snow-blind” (moon of the = month of the, and snow-blind = March, so the title means “month of March”). I just thought that title was a little more interesting than "Spirit Lake Massacre." I wanted to remind people that they had culture too, so I didn’t want mine to have the same title. However, I did think it was important to have “spirit lake” in the “o” in the title on the book’s cover though.

AW: Having read the graphic novel, I noticed that everything is in black and white, is there a reason why you chose to have the story printed as such? If you did not have a choice in the matter (due to publishing costs), would you have chosen to print in color? Do you think color impacts the story?
GK: I definitely thought about that, but I haven’t been asked that before. First of all, I like to draw. I like to draw in black and white, composing in darks and light that black and white will give you. Number two, it would have cost the publisher a lot more money to print 175 of the 180 pages with a lot of colors or full colors. I didn’t think the colors in a story like that meant a lot to justify having them printed in color. I worked on that story off and on and worked on it for a lot of years. A lot of things are intriguing in black and white too—more clean and linear. I would guess that if that were a full color book, it would have to cost another 10 or 15 dollars. I’ve got another one (book) in the works with the same publisher right now, and I keep thinking, “well it would be fun to introduce color into part of the story…” Also, black and white composition, to me—whether it’s that book, or one of the ones in the works now—what really gets me into those stories and telling them visually is that I love to be able to read and see how the images match up and how they embrace the words or prepare you for the words on the next page.

AW: Do you see yourself creating more graphic novels that tell historical narratives? Do you plan on focusing on Iowa history if you do?

GK: If I was going into Native American history outside of Spirit Lake, I don’t know what I would do. The one I just finished, that’s at the publisher now, has nothing to do with Iowa or Indians or that history. It’s a story I heard on NPR, I heard it the night before Thanksgiving six or eight years ago, and I never forgot it. It was about two famous musicians (Robert Johnson, a blues master from the 30s, and Pablo Casals, a famous cello master from Spain), what really sparked me is that they had these really famous albums recorded the same week in history. I remember NPR talking about how the two musicians never knew each other. I thought it was a terrific idea because those two guys were classic musicians with no connections, but they had these great albums recorded at the same time. I saw this really great biography on Pablo Casals about what he had to deal with in Europe –with Hitler and Mussolini and how that affected him because Hitler hated him. Casals had to be careful to avoid a lot of things that were happening then…and I thought, “jeez, that was really interesting.” The book is titled, Bach and Blues. They (Johnson and Casals) had such dramatic life stories, and each one was so famous in their music and their careers. They had no idea who each other were, but they both recorded their most famous albums the same week in history (third week of November 1936). It’s at the publisher now, and I hope it’ll be out in May. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Symphony will be doing a concert on that story in May and will have a cello and guitar on the stage. Also, Robert Johnson had to deal with racism down south in the 1930s. It was terrible growing up there and building a career. And Pablo Casals was in Europe, and he hated the Nazis and their culture and Hitler. All of this really made me think this would be a fun story to tell and a good concert–I think it’s only going to be 64 pages rather than almost 200 pages like Moon of the Snow-Blind.

AW: Did you think Moon of the Snow-Blind was going to be as long a story as it turned out to be?
GK: It’s the length it is because of the way I like to tell stories visually and how they match up or support the words on the pages–or how the words support the pictures. I try to make each page interesting to look at, from a point-of-view of each picture and doing my homework, doing my research. Or I find a story like that where I can use a lot of interesting visuals. It lets me go back to how my career started– as an illustrator. So, when I do my book, I can do 180 pages of that, which is really fun.



Thursday, 11 November 2021

Maribeth Boelts Zoomcast

 If you didn't get a chance to see Maribeth Boelts's Final Thursday Reading Series presentation, the Zoomcast is now available for streaming.



Sunday, 17 October 2021

An Interview with Maribeth Boelts

Maribeth Boelts,
 author of more than 40 children’s books including Kaia and the Bees and A Bike Like Sergio’s, will be the featured reader at the Final Thursday Reading Series on October 28 where she will read from several of her publications. One of her most recent stories stems from a memory of her son, Will, while the characters were created out of her grandson’s want for a story with a stickbug and a beetle—and so the Stickbug and Beetle story in The Purple Puffy Coat begins. 

The event takes place in the Mae Latta room in the Hearst Center for the Arts. A creative writing open mic starts at 7:00 p.m. (sign up to read your best five minutes of original work), and Boelts's featured reading will begin at 7:30 p.m. The featured reading will be Zoomcast live at 7:30 Central time. You can register for that HERE. 

The following interview with Maribeth Boelts, detailing her work in children's literature and her approach to writing, was conducted by Alexus Williams.

Alexus Williams: You have mentioned that you got involved in writing children’s stories after having your own kids, and now grandkids, but did you ever feel a calling towards children’s stories prior to that? If so, how did starting your own family change your feelings/motivation, if at all, for writing children’s stories?
Maribeth Boelts: I knew I wanted to be a writer when I was in second grade, and I lived for the creative writing blocks of time with zero instruction we were given in grade school. During high school, I wrote a little series of stories for children, and showed it to the old Catholic nun I had as an English teacher. She was enthusiastic, and that encouraged me. Once I graduated from college, and was teaching, I was constantly coming up with little stories and poems for the children I taught, and began to submit things to publishers here and there. My passion grew as we started having children, and we read countless stacks of picture books to them. That's when I quit my teaching job, and started exploring writing for children as a career. The motivation has always been there, really. I love children, and I've always been so curious about the stories that keep them turning the page or requesting multiple readings.


AW: Looking at the books you have written, you have certainly covered a wide variety of topics, settings, and characters. With that being said, where do you draw your inspiration from for these stories? Do you find your stories come from a place of necessity? (i.e. trying to explain certain concepts to your grandkids (or your kids when they were younger).
MB: For me, most of my stories begin with an "ache" of some sort-- a remembering of a childhood experience or emotion, that I sense has a universal thread in it. For example, a want that is out of reach. Or a common fear that requires some courage. Or a feeling of security and love that must have words wrapped around it. Or a friendship that asks for a selfless act. I try to be careful about teaching anything overtly, as children can sniff out a "good for you" book a mile away, but I do really like to get some discussion going with my books. 

AW: What is the writing process like for you? Also, when do you begin to consider what kind of illustrations should be included in the books?
MB: I try to write at least something every day, but when I have an idea that seems to hold some promise, I will let it simmer for a while. I tend to write a first draft quickly and with as little self-consciousness or inner critic as possible. Just write fast and get the bare bones story down. If it appears that it has enough substance to continue, I will begin to flesh it out. This is my favorite stage of writing... with the pressure of the first draft under my belt, and the luxury of having something concrete to work with as I continue. 
        In terms of illustration, I leave that in the hands of the editors and art department at the publishers. While I imagine what the illustrations could look like, and I "see" the story in my head as it unfolds, I have little to do with the illustration of my stories. The illustrator has the freedom to interpret my text just as I had the freedom to create it. 


AW: Have you considered writing other literature, like young adult literature? If so, what kind of literature crosses your mind? If not, could you explain why you would rather focus on children’s literature?
MB: I'm most intrigued by children's books, and though I do have a middle grade novel and will write more of those in the future, I haven't explored young adult literature beyond reading it. I find childhood infinitely interesting, and it remains a good challenge to write for this audience. 


AW: Looking back at when you first started writing children’s stories, what is one thing you would tell your younger self?
MB: Expect to be surprised by the stories that "catch" and the stories that go unnoticed, and keep writing.























Wednesday, 13 October 2021

Zoomcast of Hoing & Hileman

 If you didn't get to attend last month's FTRS reading with Dave Hoing & Roger Hileman (and musical guests), you can now watch the Zoomcast.



Sunday, 26 September 2021

An Interview with Dave Hoing & Roger Hileman


Dave Hoing and Roger Hileman will be the featured readers at the Final Thursday Reading Series on Sept. 30 where they will read from their novel about the jazz scene in a fictionalized 1940s Waterloo, In the Blood. They will also be performing music with some guest musicians. 

The creative writing open mic starts at 7:00 p.m. at the Hearst Center for the Arts. Hoing and Hileman take the stage at 7:30. The 7:30 featured reading will also be live Zoomcast. Click HERE to register for the live Zoomcast.

As with their co-written novels, Hoing and Hileman's responses here are written collaboratively. 

This interview was conducted by Alexus Williams.

Starting off, how would you describe this novel and what led you to write it? 
Dave Hoing and Roger Hileman: First of all, here’s a variation of the blurb on the back, which explains what In the Blood is about:
    Nineteen-year-old K.C. Brown dreams of playing jazz with the best, and where she’s from, the best is a band called the Bluenotes. A prodigy on sax and piano, K.C. defies the wishes of her family by pursuing a career in music. If their disapproval isn’t enough, the year is 1948, the band is comprised of middle-aged black men, and K.C. is a white girl living in a racially divided city in Iowa. To succeed, she and the band must overcome resistance from both sides of the color barrier, and accept that ambition often comes with loss. 
    We are both hugely influenced by music. All of our novels have had music in them, but we hadn’t yet written one specifically about music. That was the motivation for In the Blood. We especially liked one of the secondary characters from our first novel Hammon Falls, a man called Lewis Ross. Our original plan was to write an entire novel about him before and after the events of Hammon Falls. That evolved over time, and the story became more about his son Freddie, although some of Lewis’s backstory still made it into In the Blood. Hammon Falls depicted a nightclub called the New Orleans (AKA Narlins), which was a venue for black performers. That gave us a ready-made setting.

What was the process like for creating the characters and their struggles? 
DH & RH: One of the joys of writing is the chance to create characters who are not like us. Both of us are middle-aged (some would say old) white men. Our two main characters are Freddie Ross, a middle-aged black man, and K.C. Brown, a young white woman. The difference in their age, gender, and race gave us great dynamics to work with. 

Did you set the novel in a fictionalized version of Waterloo to make the story feel more “real” to readers or was there something about Waterloo that made it an appropriate setting? 
DH & RH: Part of the setting, of course, goes back to Hammon Falls, which was based on a screenplay Roger wrote about his ancestors who lived in Waterloo. We changed Waterloo to Waterton so we wouldn’t be constrained by Waterloo’s actual history where it differed from the needs of our story. Waterloo did have a flourishing jazz scene in the early and middle parts of the 20th century, so that fit in nicely. Plus, it occurred to us that when one looks into the history of any place, it becomes fascinating. We know that an Iowa setting may seem mundane to local readers, but to the larger world, Iowa might as well be the far side of the moon. To many it’s an interesting place, unknown but for its farms. (And well, there is a little bit about a farm in the novel, but not much… 😊) 


When writing this story, did you have an ideal audience in mind? 
DH & RH: If so, what were you hoping the story would do for them? The novel uses strong language, including the hated N-word, so our aim was for an adult audience, but other than that, we just wanted to write a story about a growing friendship between very different people. Of course, we also explored themes of racism, sexism, and economic disparities, while paying tribute to the power of music to transcend all that. In the Blood is a book about people, not politics. It tries not to slant too much to either the left or the right, although of course we are aware of our own biases. That said, we’re sure there’ll be plenty of stuff to offend everybody. 😉 

Is there something readers don’t know about this story that they should keep in mind when reading it? 
DH & RH:  On the surface it may appear that In the Blood is offering a solution to racism, which (if possible) was even more pronounced in 1948 than it is today. It isn’t, at least on a macro scale. We are more interested in individuals than in groups. The friendship between Freddie and K.C. won’t change the world, but it does change them. As the saying goes, the journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step... 

Lastly, what is one question that you would have liked to answer that was not asked in this interview? 
DH & RH: “How does collaboration between two authors work?” Don’t worry, we’ll be asked that at the reading, so we’ll explain it then!

Monday, 20 September 2021

Passion for Beauty Celebrates and Life and Work of Marjorie Nuhn

 


Passion for Beauty:
Marjorie Nuhn, Water Colorist

Passion for Beauty presents the art and biography of Marjorie Nuhn. Nuhn was an accomplished artist who had studied at Grant Wood's Stone City Art Colony and painted watercolors for over forty years. However, she also had undergone personal trauma as a young woman that shaped her experience. Her story is a complex one, and it is told here for the first time in print.
 
Editor Heather Skeens, who also serves as director for the Hearst Center for the Arts, which holds the largest single collection of Nuhn’s work, says of the collection that “The writings that follow tell a complicated story with its beginning in the traditional midwestern community of Cedar Falls, a community that, perhaps urged along by the university it houses and a cast of progressive civic leaders, embraced literature and the arts. This embrace provided support for Marjorie throughout her life. And yet, she struggled against the societal norms of the time.”
 
This collection features the previously unpublished biography written by Marjorie Nuhn's brother, Ferner Nuhn, as well as essays by Robyn Groth and Barbara Lounsberry that provide context for the life and work of Marjorie Nuhn. Also included in the collection is a selection of 19 full-color plates reproducing some of Marjorie Nuhn's most significant watercolors as well as a list of her extant works.
 
Final Thursday Press is an award-winning literary press that focuses on work by Cedar Valley writers. Recent publications include Winsome/Bend of the Sun by Grant Tracey and Circumference by Anne Myles. Support for this publication was provided by the Cedar Falls Community Foundation’s Saul and Joan Diamond Arts & History Fund.

Passion for Beauty: Marjorie Nuhn, Water Colorist can be purchased locally at locations including the Hearst Center for the Arts, UNI Bookstore and the Ragged Edge. It can be purchased online directly from Final Thursday Press or at amazon.com. For more information on Marjorie Nuhn, visit thehearst.org/marjorienuhn.





Tuesday, 4 May 2021

20th FTRS Season Concludes with Doug Shaw & Thomas Hockey

The 20th season ended where it began, in the Outdoor Sculpture Garden at the Hearst Center for the Arts. This event featured mathematician Doug Shaw and astronomer Thomas Hockey, and just for good measure it was simulcast on Zoom. If you didn't get to attend in person or online, you can now stream it below.

Thanks to the UNI Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President for making the 20th season possible and to the Hearst Center for being onboard for an array of outdoors and Zoomcast events this year. Looking forward to season 21, which will start at the end of August.



Sunday, 28 March 2021

Now Streaming: Ukamaka Olisakwe @ FTRS

If you didn't get to attend March's FTRS reading featuring novelist and poet Ukamaka Olisakwe, you can now stream it online. Thanks to the UNI Women's and Gender Studies program for co-sponsoring and to Rifat Siddiqui, WGS graduate student, for introducing Ukamaka Olisakwe and for helping to coordinate the book group that read Olisakwe's novel, Ogadinma: Or, Everything Will Be All Right.

In April, FTRS goes hybrid with a socially-distanced reading in the Hearst Center for the Arts outdoor sculpture garden (weather permitting) that will be Zoom simulcast. Follow FTRS on Facebook for more details.  April's featured readers are Doug Shaw and Thomas Hockey.  



Saturday, 20 March 2021

Ukamaka Olisakwe at Final Thursday Reading Series

 


March’s Final Thursday Reading Series takes place on Thursday, March 25 at 7 p.m via Zoom with a reading by Ukamaka Olisakwe from her new novel, Ogadinma: Or, Everything Will Be All Right (The Indigo Press). Also, the FTRS Open Mic returns this month. This free event will be happening via Zoom. Register at: https://uni.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_k0Y1Q1BxQLSV1nQcYzmKmA.


Ukamaka Olisakwe’s Ogadinma: Or, Everything Will Be All Right is a story of departure, loss and adaptation that has been celebrated as “a stirring, unflinching novel that further cements Olisakwe as an important feminist voice.” Olisakwe is also the author of the 2012 novel, Eyes of a Goddess. In 2014, she was named one of Africa’s most promising writers under the age of 40 by the UNESCO World Book Capital for the Africa39 project.


Prior to Olisakwe’s reading, the FTRS open mic will be back. Email jim.oloughlin@uni.edu before the event if you’d like to share your best five minutes of original creative work. Limited slots are available.


The Final Thursday Reading Series is a collaboration of Final Thursday Press, the Hearst Center for the Arts, and the University of Northern Iowa College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences with support from Sidecar Coffee Roasters and Hansen’s Farm Fresh Dairy. Funding is provided by the UNI Office of the Provost and Executive Vice-President.  This event is co-sponsored by the UNI Women’s and Gender Studies Program as part of Women’s History Month.


FTRS will be back outdoors in the Hearst Center Outdoor Sculpture Garden for a reading by Doug Shaw and Thomas Hockey.


Thursday, 28 January 2021

FTRS Kicks off 2021


FTRS returns for 2021. CLICK HERE to join the online event.

Thursday, January 28 at 7 p.m. CST via Zoom
Chelsea & Mark Wagenaar

Chelsea Wagenaar is the author of the poetry collections, The Spinning Place, winner of the 2018 Michael Waters Prize, and Mercy Spurs the Bone, winner of the 2013 Philip Levine Prize. Mark Wagenaar is author of three award-winning poetry collections, including the Saltman Prize-winning Southern Tongues Leave Us Shining. A UNI alum, he is presently at Assistant Professor of English at Valparaiso University.