Send Your Book to decomP for Review

March 24th, 2010

What we’re looking for:

– books/chapbooks published during the current calendar year (that’d be 2010)
– fiction, nonfiction, poetry, anthologies (no genre fiction)
– press release (unnecessary, but encouraged)
– we’ll consider e-books, but only if they don’t appear in print whatsoever (that’s so our reviewers have the perk of receiving a free book for their effort)

What we’ll do:

– enter the books into our review queue so readers can see what books are in line and what each reviewer has signed up to review (check it out)
– certain reviews will be published in the monthly issue, while others will be published on the blog (it’s up to us, but will most likely be a factor of timing)

Where to send ’em:

decomP magazinE
c/o Jason Jordan
3002 Grey Wolf Cove
New Albany, IN 47150

A few things:

– please don’t contact us by e-mail about this unless you absolutely have to (just send stuff)
– do not send regular submissions to the address above (don’t do it)
– reviews won’t be guaranteed (it’s a crapshoot, in other words)
– we won’t return a book to the author/publisher, even if it remains unclaimed in our queue for a long time (the books become decomP propertY, basically)

A Review of “Spiking the Sucker Punch” by Robbie Q. Telfer

March 13th, 2010

By Jason Jordan

Robbie Q. Telfer’s Spiking the Sucker Punch, a slim, 96-page volume of poetry, is his second collection but first with Write Bloody Publishing. Armed with a clever title and fascinating cover, Telfer’s 2009 effort is a solid installment.

While “The Foam”–think The Blob–is the first poem that halfheartedly grabs my attention, it’s not until “Bear Baiting,” on page 23, that I’m truly captivated. So yes, Spiking the Sucker Punch starts weak, which I blame on subject matter and occasionally diction, but gradually improves. For instance, after “Bear Baiting,” about bear/dog fights in Elizabethan England, there’s the superb “Chicago Public Sculpture #1: The Bean”:

Twelve seagulls sit atop you
as if they collectively decided
to lay this magic reflective misshapen
egg. This is unconfirmed, though they
have definitely decided  collectively to
poop on you. This is confirmed.

This is the point at which Telfer’s humor blossoms, and what’s so gratifying about the humor is that it’s unexpected, in most cases, as a poem such as “Like Staring into a Freaky Time-Mirror” illustrates. StSP contains a wide range of topics and themes, touching on everything from the author’s discontent with aspects of Chicago (“Mental Graffiti: Another Chicago Poem”) to his high school days, poignantly evidenced in “Awkward Scars”:

I knew a kid in high school
who was cut across the stomach
by a bear while he was sleeping in a tent–
he knew this made him a badass
and he acted like one, too.

Though there’s a serious tone to portions of “Awkward Scars,” he rarely allows it to occupy the forefront for long:

See:
The roof of a bank
blew off and landed on me
in the passenger seat of a Chevy Suburban.
If I hadn’t been slouching
I would have had my skull crushed.
It was the first and last time
I’ve driven in a tornado watch.
It was also the first and last time
a fucking bank landed on my head.

Needless to say, there are other highlights (“We Are Devo”) and lowlights (“Song of the Outlaw Grizzly”), but I believe the former make the latter worth sifting through. At the very least, Telfer has a distinctive, witty voice, and Spiking the Sucker Punch is an unpredictable testament to that.

Official Robbie Q. Telfer Web Site
Official Write Bloody Publishing Web Site

Looking for a Book Reviewer

February 19th, 2010

Now that the new site is online and fully operational, we’d like to begin our search for a long-term book reviewer to join the staff. Ideally, he or she will be comfortable reviewing prose and poetry releases, and will review at least one book per month, though more are encouraged. While there’s no monetary compensation, the reviewer will receive a complimentary copy of every book they review, and everything decomP ever publishes. Also, we firmly believe that reviews should mention positive and negative qualities of the book in question. Needless to say, reviews will and should only appear in decomP. Interested? We hope so.

Here’s what we’d like embedded in an e-mail to us at decomp.magazine@gmail.com:

1. A short bio with contact info
2. A review of a book you like and a review of a book you don’t like (links are fine if they’re published somewhere; if they aren’t, embed ’em), and each should be 300-500 words
3. Why you think you’re qualified for the position and why you want it

Please apply by April 1, 2010. We hope to notify applicants by May, if not sooner, but watch the blog for the latest news.

Why Didn’t the Archives Get Redesigned Too?

February 11th, 2010

That’s a good question. The main reason I (Jason) didn’t want the 2004-2009 archives redesigned is because each issue, story, poem, review, or what have you, is representative of a point in our history, and I want readers to be able to view and read our content as it first appeared on the Web. While our earliest design isn’t online–I wish it were–the redesign marks our fourth, major update. The second design can be seen in our April 2004-September 2006 archives, like in “Miss Priscilla’s Dead.” The third design ran from October 2006December 2009. And the fourth is, of course, what we’re using now.

Two publications came to mind when I considered the archives: Hobart and Juked. Both have left previous incarnations of their site intact, though Juked‘s 1999-2004 material is offline now, and I enjoy perusing their archives, seeing what pieces looked like when they were originally published.

Oh, and meet our new section break:

He’ll be replacing the three asterisks. Who is he anyway? He’s Andrew Walker, a writer from the Louisville scene, who we haven’t been in touch with for years. The original photo was lost, so his likeness on the previous decomP logo is all that remains from our contact with him.

Justin Hamm Reads “at sixteen”

February 9th, 2010

Click here to listen to Justin Hamm read “at sixteen,” a poem we published in our August 2009 issue and nominated for last year’s Pushcart Prize.

decomP’s Nominations for storySouth’s 2010 Million Writers Award

February 6th, 2010

storySouth‘s 2010 Million Writers Award is accepting nominations until February 28, 2010. To access the rules and nominations, click here. Stories must be at least 1,000 words and have been first published online in 2009. Editors are permitted to nominate three stories. We at decomP are pleased to nominate “My Motel Week” by Jessa Marsh, “Comorbidity” by Frank Hinton, and “Barnacles” by Laura Isaacman for this year’s award. We wish our nominees luck in the selection process.

Readers can submit a nomination, too. That can be done here.

Welcome!

February 2nd, 2010

Welcome to the new site. We hope you enjoy it. Watch the blog for new content on a rolling basis.