Happy Holidays!

"The essential work of interpretation is best found in a culture’s quieter spaces," Teju Cole says. "We need reports in fiction, nonfiction, and photography that are engagé without being ephemeral and are steeped in a proper thoughtfulness. Small magazines are among the guarantors of these habits of liberty." This work at A Public Space wouldn't have been possible without your support.

Thank you to everyone—writers, readers, supporters, mentors, friends—who has been a part of A Public Space this past year. Please join us for another year of art and argument, fact and fiction, by contributing to our annual fundraising campaign, or giving a subscription to all the writers, readers, travelers, and dreamers on your list this holiday season.

1878: Eadweard Muybridge photographs the racehorse Sallie Gardener at a gallop. John Haskell’s essay “The Persistence of Muybridge” appears in APS 12: “I believed I could find, somewhere in his armor of control, a crack, and in that crack I could find his desire, and by giving him that desire, I could make him happy.”

1886: Arthur Rimbaud writes Illuminations. John Ashbery’s translation appears in APS 13.

1887: Walt Whitman’s poems are the subject of a Contemporary Humor column in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Omaha Girl: “Why, they are not even rhymed.” Eastern Man: “Nevertheless they are marvels, considering that they were written in a place where the poet had to stop between every word to fight mosquitoes.” Therese Stanton imagines the poet’s swarming tormentors in APS 14.

1903: Marcel Proust and Jean Gabriel-Louis Pringué attend a party hosted by MMe Deiulaffoy (“the only woman in France then authorized to wear male attire”). Jeffrey Lependorf translates Pringué’s Trente ans de dîners en ville, the socialite’s memoir about the people and parties that Proust fictionalizes for In Search of Lost Time in APS 12.

1909: The Grand Concourse in the Bronx is completed. One hundred years later, Katie Holten walks the four and a half mile boulevard with a forester, selecting one hundred trees for her Tree Museum. Robert Sullivan reports on the project, public art in the city, and chance connections in APS 13.

1932: Eva Zeisel, living in Berlin and, according to her grandmother, inebriated on amusements, decides to visit Moscow to “see what was beyond the mountain.” Accused of plotting to assassinate Stalin, she is arrested in 1936 and held for sixteen months. Shortly before her 105th birthday, her Prison Memoir is published in APS 14.

1957: Photographer W. Eugene Smith moves into 821 Sixth Avenue in New York City and begins recording life in the building, a late-night haunt of jazz musicians. APS contributor Sam Stephenson spends a decade researching Smith’s archives for The Jazz Loft Project, and A Public Space collaborates with him and director Chris McElroen on Chaos Manor, a multimedia theater installation based on the book, in September 2011.

1976: John Gardner reviews Charles Newman in the Washington Post, calling him “one of the most interesting, intelligent, and, I suspect, secretly optimistic prophets of doom now writing fiction.” A Public Space partners with the Brooklyn Philharmonic to present a concert inspired by his novella “The Five-Thousandth Baritone” (APS 11) in January 2011.

1979: Jane Byrne is elected mayor of Chicago. APS 14 contributor (and Chicago native) Peter Orner’s novel Love and Shame and Love, “an hommage to my family’s obsessions, which were divorce, falling out of love and politics,” is published in November 2011: “Remember Jane Byrne? Fighting Jane, Mike Royko called her. Mayor Bossy. She ran against the Democratic machine and squashed it, the whole goddamned machine.”

1994: Tom Drury introduces the Darling family and Grouse County, Iowa, in The End of Vandalism and is hailed as one of the most original writers in America. The Darlings return in “Joan Comes Home” in APS 12.

1994: Dorthe Nors reads Kirsten Ekman. “Few writers possess the ability to truly change the lives of their readers, even if we’d love to do so. But Ekman changed me and, more than that, she opened the box that became my writing. Most writers have their own literary midwives.... It’s a beautiful thought: a young person must first encounter the literature to release the talent.” Dorthe’s stories appear in APS 12 and APS 14.

1999: APS 8 contributor Danielle Evans calls her parents in tears, “having exhausted my willingness to pretend that I wanted to do something practical with my life, and told them I wanted to be a writer when I grew up, and who essentially said, Well then I guess you better stop crying and write something.” She receives the 2011 PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for her debut collection of stories, Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self.

2005: APS debut author Jesmyn Ward’s hometown of DeLisle, Mississippi, is hit by Hurricane Katrina. It becomes the central event in her novel Salvage the Bones, which receives the 2011 National Book Award.

2006: After working on the Focus: Japan portfolio in APS 1, Motoyuki Shibata decides to start a magazine of his own in Tokyo. Monkey Business debuts in 2007, and Monkey Business: New Writing from Japan, a special English-language edition, is published in April 2011.

2011: Teju Cole goes walking in the city. “Epigraphs of the Eye,” a photo essay about sites of troubled memory, appears in APS 14.


Read more in

Issue 15
Teju Cole at BAM
Leslie Jamison & Matthea Harvey
APS15 Launch Party
Paige Lipari
Graywolf & APS at KGB
Matthea Harvey
Celebrating Eva Zeisel
Paradise Lost
Joshua Beckman
John Ashbery
Roland Kelts
Eva Zeisel Exhibition
Happy Holidays!
Zoe Strauss: Ten Years
Teju Cole in Goa
Night-Song at the Invisible Dog
John Wray & Milo Rau
Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts
Helen Schulman
Jim Shepard at KGB Bar
Katie Holten at Salina Art Center
Prize News
KERSTIN EKMAN — GO, READ! by Dorthe Nors
Authors & Editors: Peter Orner
Counterfeits Launch Party
Eva Zeisel's Prison Memoir
Favorite Poems
On Unsettling the Predictable:
Reading Jesmyn Ward's Salvage the Bones
Shady Characters
Announcing APS 14
Murakami and the Nobel? by Roland Kelts
Issue 14
Murakami Madness!
APS14 Launch Party
Shady Characters
Chaos Manor: A Multimedia Theater Installation
Excavating a Life, Part II
Following Eugene Smith to Japan
Excavating a Life
Evoking Gene Smith's Jazz Loft
Yiyun Li at NY Society Library
Jesmyn Ward
Kelly Link
Anne Carson at Poets House
APS at the Brooklyn Book Fest
Chaos Manor
Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts
The Brooklyn Indie Party
Helen Schulman Reading
Japanese Literature After Fukushima
Japanese Literature Today
Stet?
APS 13: Robert Sullivan
Playing House by Leslie Jamison
CLMP Magathon
CLMP's Lit Mag Marathon Weekend
Issue 13
Bushwick Open Pages 2011
ANNOUNCING APS 13
Stet?
On Minoru Ozawa
On Haruki Murakami by John Wray
On Hiromi Kawakami by Rebecca Brown
Distance and Disaster by Roland Kelts
Look, Here's America: A conversation on the collision of cultures with Motoyuki Shibata
Introducing Monkey Business
Japanese Storytelling
Monkey Business
Asian Fiction in Translation
Roland Kelts in the UK
Lair & Refuge
Yiyun Li, Translator
An Evening with Julian Gough
2-UP "Draw A Fox" Party
I Like Your Glasses
Dorthe Nors: A Master of Conjunction by Fiona Maazel
The Music of Charles Newman
Announcing APS 12
Stet?
Issue 12
I Wanted Both by Francis Spufford
Stet?
Samantha Hunt
Good Idea: BTL at BAM
Jane Bowles Tribute
Help: BTL at BAM
Zoe Strauss Lecture
Behind the Book
Re|Visioning Brooklyn
Convos on Practice
Melissa Pritchard
Timothy Donnelly
Monsters: A Celebration
What the Spell?!
Convos on Practice
Problem: BTL at BAM
Yiyun Li Reading
Julian Gough Launch
Live Giants #8: Mary Ruefle
Reality Is a Bananaskin on Which We Must Step by Julian Gough
Announcing Issue 11
Brooklyn Indie Party
Brooklyn Book Festival
Tom Grimes @ Half King
Printers' Ball: Print <3 Digital
Dorothea Lasky
Where Stories Live
ParkLit: Jazz Loft Project
That Reminds Me: Sneak Peek
That Reminds Me
Lit Mag Fair
Mary-Beth Hughes
Etc. Yoni Wolf Listens to Poetry
A Q&A with Scott Rosenberg
Ander Monson
Etc. What would Henry James say to Toni Morrison by Austin Ratner
Issue 11
Etc. On Irrelevance: Part IV by Tom Drury
Etc. On Irrelevance: Part III by Amy Leach
Etc. On Irrelevance: Part II by Tim O'Sullivan
Maile Chapman
Etc. On Irrelevance: Part I by Mary-Beth Hughes
Etc. Stet?
Poetry Moon Jar, Century Unclear by Ed Roberson
Etc. An Irrelevant Writer: Shen Congwen by Yiyun Li
Announcing Issue 10
Issue 10
Etc. Sam Stephenson & the Jazz Loft Project
Michael Thomas
Benjamin Anastas
NYRB Classics
Etc. Merde Alors! Gary Amdahl on Dialogue
A Q&A with Emily Cook
Greenlight Bookstore
Focus Cairo 2010: After Kefaya by Brian T. Edwards
Issue 9
What to Read Next: Announcing Issue 9
Ralph Ellison
Writing Hell
Anna Deavere Smith
Etc. After the Wreck: Naomi J. Williams on Historical Fictions and Fictional Histories
Etc. "Minor Aspirations and Mock Debate"
Rebecca Wolff
Yiyun Li
Jonathan Lethem
Etc. Source Material:
Sara Majka Considers Booking a Room
Joshua Beckman
Poetry Powers of Recuperation by Adrienne Rich
Poetry Trans-Neptunian Object by Suzanne Buffam
Poetry The Blackberries by Francis Ponge
Fiction The Mupandawana Dancing Champion by Petina Gappah
Fiction Li Ling by Atsushi Nakajima
Etc. Mary Mattingly Sets Sail
Description of Issue 8
Announcing Issue 8
Issue 8
Etc. Alone in Abu Tor : Eric Orner spends Passover in Jerusalem
Sail On, My Little Honey Bee
Austin Ratner at BookCourt
Essay Variations on the Right to Remain Silent : Anne Carson contemplates translation
Saadat Hasan Manto
Focus Barren by Saadat Hasan Manto
Issue 7 Is...
Etc. Zoe Strauss Documents Inauguration Day
Fiction Double Happiness by Mary-Beth Hughes
Poetry It Is Daylight by Arda Collins
Essay Sail On, My Little Honey Bee by Amy Leach
Fiction Are You Ready? by John Haskell
IYSSSS A Valentine to Darwin by Jillian Weise
IYSSSS Lincoln in His Grave by Peter Orner
Poetry Outnumbered at 0 by Mary Jo Bang
Issue 7
Etc. Writing Home : Keith Lee Morris Checks in from Sandpoint
Etc. You Can't Say That! : Keith Lee Morris on Homecoming and Banishment
Fiction Debt by Sana Krasikov
Fiction Politics Is a Craft by Peter Orner
Fiction Politics Is a Craft: Part Two : Peter Orner on Harold Washington by Peter Orner
Fiction Testimony by Keith Lee Morris
Fiction The Cold, Cold Water by Gary Amdahl
Issue 6
And Elsewhere
Poetry Bridge Passed by Pierre Martory
Poetry Coyote by Tom Yuill
Essay From the Hills of Fauquier County by Peyton Marshall
Dirty Politics, Designer Kisses, and More
Fiction Cattle Haul by Jesmyn Ward
IYSSSS Off the Page and onto the Sidewalk by Roland Kelts
Poetry I Don't Burn by Kevin Young
IYSSSS At-Talifoon by Zoe Ferraris
IYSSSS Shark Means Knife by Ian Chillag
Fiction The Rat Ship by Ernst Weiss
Essay Secessionville by Samantha Hunt
Issue 5
Essay Morphology of the Hit by Leslie Jamison
Fiction The Old Man by James Lasdun
IYSSSS The Revenge of the Angry Black Artist by Jervey Tervalon
Essay Who's Your Daddy? by Michael Thomas
One-Year Subscription
Issue 4
Issue 3
Issue 2
Issue 1
Two-Year Subscription
Blank Book
Good Books
T-Shirt
IYSSSS Letter from Buenos Aires by Jillian Weise
Poetry The Clearing by Greta Wrolstad
Focus An Interview with Bill Manhire
IYSSSS Gene Smith's Sink by Sam Stephenson
Fiction The Month Girls by Martha Cooley
Poetry The Last DJ Spinoza by Eugene Ostashevsky
Fiction Quiet Men by Leslie Jamison
Focus Battlegrounds Real and Fictional by Daniel Alarcón
IYSSSS STOP. by Ander Monson
Fiction The Dead Fish Museum by Charles D'Ambrosio
Focus To Burn the City by Julio Durán
Fiction Cartagena by Nam Le
Fiction Origin Story by Kelly Link
Focus The Complicity of Silence by Santiago Roncagliolo
Poetry Notes on the Earth Seen from Space by Laurie Sheck
IYSSSS Everything Is Illuminated : My Love Affair with CSI by Delia Falconer
Focus The Macedonian Officer by Andrey Platonov
Focus Look, Here's America Part 2 : An Interview with Haruki Murakami by Roland Kelts
Monkey Business
Tote Bag
Poetry [ ] by Matthea Harvey