Browsing the archives for the Farrago folk tag.
    • Farrago's Wainscot was a quarterly journal of the literary weird in fiction, poetry, and experimental wordforms. Issues 1 through 12 ran from January 2007 to October 2009.


      issues: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6   7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12

      issn: 1941-2908

    • Behind the Wainscot was an exhibition of short forms and textual experiments in the "literary weird" mode. A companion 'zine to Farrago's Wainscot, its sixteen issues appeared irregularly from 2007 to 2009.


      issues: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6   7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16

      issn: 1941-2916

The Day After Earth Day: Darin Bradley, Noise, and the Beginning of the End

Literature

Darin Bradley is all over this page, so I’m going to stop identifying him every time I have to mention him. If you don’t know him by now, you haven’t been paying attention (and judging by our traffic numbers, you haven’t!).

And I’m going to start responding to the things he says over on Suvudu, where he has begun a new blog series about the Pox Eclipse in all its myriad forms.

This first post is just a hello, so we’ll see what happens next. I’m not above a little recreational trolling …

No Comments

CoyoteCon

Literature

Drollerie Press has announced a new 31-day digital author conference called CoyoteCon. Farrago-founder and novelist Darin Bradley will be a part of a chatroom discussion with Lucy Snyder on May 14 about “The Book Deal and Publishing Process.” Drop by.
coyotecon

1 Comment

Due Congratulations

news

Congratulations to Bruce Boston and Lee Ballentine, whose story “Wasp Light” (Farrago’s Wainscot, Issue 10), was honorably mentioned in Ellen Datlow’s Best Horror of the Year. Additional congratulations to Bruce, whose poem, “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Vulture” (Farrago’s Wainscot, Issue 11), was also honorably mentioned.

Comments Off

The Notable Emmaeus Holt

Literature, news

Congratulations to Forrest Aguirre, whose short story, “The Non-Epistemological Universe of Emmaeus Holt,” (first published in Farrago’s Wainscot, Issue 11) is listed as one of The storySouth Million Writers Award
Notable Stories of 2009
.

No Comments

Heartland - Buy it!

Literature, Music

heartlandFarrago and F.M.I. contributor Mark Teppo may have qualms about self promotion, or maybe he’s just too busy creating quality posts and fiction to bother.

Whichever it is, all F.M.I. readers are required to buy his latest novel, Heartland. If you don’t, you’re forbidden from reading our site any more. In fact, you’re banned from the Internet. Yes, we have that power.

The author has kindly provided a suggested soundtrack to the book, for those of you like me who require a constant influx of stimulus through every functional stimulus-gathering apparatus.

Update: You can also read Teppo’s thoughts on faith and its role in Heartland on John Scalzi’s The Big Idea, posted moments after I posted this.

No Comments

New Vienna – A photographic history of the Western Riots

Literature

Former Behind the Wainscot editor Jonathan Wood has some notes on the photographic artifacts of New Vienna. Visit The Daily Cabal to read them.

I’m not sure why, but I think we’ll be seeing more from Jonathan Wood’s research into New Vienna in the near future. Call it a hunch …

1 Comment

Wide Array Presents: Literature, An Evening of

Literature, Music

It was a fine evening a couple of weeks ago, occurring as it did in an inconvenient time of year for those caught in more traditional types of jobs and families. Readings from Upstart Crows and Upstart Crows II were interspersed with Farrago-friendly music.

The delay was great, but the video is in HD, so enjoy a few highlights. Sadly, the video does not include JD Reid’s reading of his “Exeunt, to Screaming,” which contains a reference to Michael Dudikoff and is thus the pinnacle of Western literature.

Continue Reading »

No Comments

Rich Horton reviews Farrago’s Wainscot, ‘09

Literature, news

Rich Horton positively reviews the ‘09 year at Farrago’s Wainscot.

As ever, we appreciate his thoughts.

No Comments

The avalanche has already started; it’s not too late for the pebbles to buy.

Literature

Andrew Sullivan’s blog today pointed readers to yet another blogger’s summary of the PhilPapers surveys, in which hundreds of professional and semi-pro philosophers responded to a number of basic metaphysical questions.

Among them was the question of free will, and the vast majority believe that the universe is either deterministic in a way that is compatible with free will or that free will does not exist at all. Leaving aside my own libertarian leanings (both metaphysical and political), it is clear that the people have spoken.

And since the universe functions in this way, and since Amazon added an important new item this weekend, you have no choice but to choose to pre-order Farrago-founder Darin Bradley’s novel Noise.

Immediately. The universe demands it.

No Comments

This Christmas, Rima Abunasser brings the gift of dread.

Music

Guest blogging again at Jeff Vandermeer’s place, Rima Abunasser takes a look at the malignant sexuality and imperialistic drives behind some popular holiday music.

She also offers at least one acceptable alternative. In that spirit, see the good and the worst of holiday music after the cut …

Continue Reading »

No Comments