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Sweet Connections: Sandra Gail Lambert

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Sandra Lambert
Title of Piece published in Sweet: The Beginning and the End
Issue: 6.1

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Find her:
Twitter
Instagram
Facebook

Sandra resides in Gainesville, Florida. You can find out more about her at
www.sandragaillambert.com.

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

The publication of A Certain Loneliness: A Memoir from the University of Nebraska Press/2018

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

These days I’m book touring with my recently published memoir—Miami Book Fair, Southern Festival of Books, Decatur Book Festival, and a variety of bookstores.

Who is your favorite author?

Recently, I wrote an article for LitHub on feminist science fiction of the 70s and 80s, so my mind is currently full of the brilliant work of writers such as Joanna Russ, Elizabeth A. Lynn, Octavia Butler, and Vonda McIntyre.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

Harriet McBryde Johnson’s Too Late to Die Young was essential to having a solid sense of myself as a writer.

What inspires you to write?

It makes me feel good. Even when I’m in a despair of  “I’m no good and never will be” torment, it feels good.

What is your favorite sweet?

My poet friend, Aliesa, makes a perfect key lime tart.

I don’t know if it’s as perfect as Aliesa’s, but Taste of Home says this recipe is the best.

Thank you, Sandra, for taking the time to reconnect with us. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Sweet Connections: Lesley Wheeler

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

 Name: Lesley Wheeler
Title of Piece published in Sweet:  “Feeling Good
Issue:  10.1

Find her: Wheeler tea with honey in Lexington

Twitter
Instagram

One might usually find Lesley “in some corner of Lexington, Virginia, trying to get some reading or writing done”.  Check out more on her website https://lesleywheeler.org/.

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

In January I had a poem featured on Poetry Daily, and in February an essay—that felt like a rare conjunction! I also gave a craft talk and a reading as Visiting Faculty at the very first residency of the brand-new Randolph MFA program. Director Gary Dop is doing terrific work there and I was honored to be a small part of it.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I hope “Feeling Good” will be part of a poetry collection with the working title Turning Fifty in the Confederacy, which is probably self-explanatory. In addition to figuring out the transitions of middle age, I’ve been thinking hard about where I live. Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson haunt my campus and my small town.

Who is your favorite author?

Emily Dickinson!

What is your favorite sweet?

The sweet she craves most often, sadly, is Giapo’s chocolate-hazelnut sorbet in Auckland, New Zealand, but she is willing to consider substitutes.

Thank you, Lesley, for taking the time to reconnect with us.  We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Sweet Advisory Board

Sweet: A Literary Confection is honored and excited to announce the addition of an Advisory Board to our establishment. The past year has brought tremendous growth to Sweet and the experience and knowledge of these fine writers will help guide us through all the new adventures we are undertaking. It was with great care and deliberation that these individuals were hand-selected for their past contributions to Sweet and their current investment to their craft, in order to help shape our future direction.

Please join us in welcoming, Nin Andrews, Sandra Gail Lambert, Lee Martin, Dinty W. Moore, and January O’Neil. You can read more about the Advisory Board on their page.

2018 Pushcart Nominations

Sweet is proud to announce this year’s Pushcart Prize nominations. Congratulations and good luck to the following authors:

CREATIVE NONFICTION

Lee Ann Roripaugh, “Notes on the Shame Spiral

Emily Brisse, “To Be Held

Caitlin Scarano, “Did You Hear the One About the Man Who Killed the World’s Tallest Tree?

POETRY

Amy Strauss Friedman, “Biopsy

Peter Grandbois, “To sing and begin again

Carolyn Willilams-Noren, “My Daughter and Her Best Friend Made Blue Jay Masks at Camp

Sweet Connections: Meghan O’Dea

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Meghan O’Dea
Title of Piece published in SweetDownstream in Highland Park
Issue:  10.2

Meghan O'DeaFind her:

Twitter
Instagram

Since we saw her last, Meghan moved across the country to Portland, Oregon from Tennessee. “I had only two weeks to plan the whole leap. It was wild, but now I’m settling in and love the Pacific Northwest. All the grey and the mist and the proximity to this cold, wild ocean really feeds me in a way I would never have expected.”.  Find out more about Meghan on her website www.meghanodea.com.

 
What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

All kinds of things. I’ve earned some dream bylines with Yoga Journal, Bustle, Eater, and Chowhound. I also broke into travel writing, which is a dream come true. I’ve had the chance to travel to Mexico, Arizona, Ohio, the Willamette Valley, and Jamaica on assignments. I still can’t believe it.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

The reason I moved to Portland so suddenly was to start a new chapter in my career. I get to write about camping all day for a company called The Dyrt. After years of covering the good, bad, and ugly as a journalist and news editor, it’s really nice to spend my day steeped in a pastime that makes people happy and more in touch with themselves and the world around them.

Who is your favorite author?

Probably Karrie Higgins. The things she does with language, incorporating artifacts and other documents into her essays, with intermedia, with disability and mental health and the taboo and geography…it’s all just really incredible and like nothing else anyone is doing.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

That answer totally depends on the day I’m asked. My favorite poem of all time might be “The Horse Latitudes” by Susan Firer. I read it when I was maybe 15 and I never forgot the imagery of women with wings made of all sorts of things, even toast, and this marvelous feminine diversity. Really everything from that collection of hers, The Laugh We Make When We Fall has stuck with me since my teens. Years after my first readings and re-readings, I’m still trying to process Sara Majka’s Cities I’ve Never Lived In, which is this incredible blend of fiction and nonfiction that explores our sense of home and memory and self and the nature of space and place. I also just discovered the wonderful Genevieve Hudson by happenstance at a reading at Powell’s recently. She just released the funny, sad, beautiful, grotesque Pretend We Live Here, a collection of stories that are all kinds of embodied queer Southern gothic goodness.

What inspires you to write?

Writing is kind of like breathing— something I have to do just to keep existing, even if no one ever sees it. But for the stuff I put out there in the world, I always keep in mind that being a human can be lonely and a writer more so. I write to make connections between people and ideas and words and moments, between ways of being and the places we inhabit. I write to understand the things that make me feel lonely, which ironically are often what you think would eliminate loneliness, like family and home and love. I want my work to communicate about and build community around different forms of resilience.

What is your favorite sweet?

My grandmother made this bizarre dessert called Hopscotch that I just love. It’s one of those midcentury confections where you combine a bunch of seemingly random stuff from the grocery store, and the recipe probably came off the back of a pack of a Nestle Toll House package in 1962 or something. It involves butterscotch, chow mein noodles, marshmallows, and peanut butter. I like it because it’s a little savory as well as sweet, it’s got a nice crunch, and eating a square always blasts me back to Western New York in the 1990s, with the smell of boxwood and birch bark and the musty basement at my grandfather’s house. It’s probably my favorite place on earth, so being able to eat something that makes me feel like I’m there at the time when that place was the happiest, that makes me smile.

I grew up with those, too, but they were called Haystacks.  We found a recipe online that calls them Hopscotch Haystacks, so I’m guessing different locations must have adapted the name. 

 Thank you, Meghan, for taking the time to reconnect with us.  We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Sweet Connections: Paul Crenshaw

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Paul Crenshaw
Title of Piece published in SweetHighwire
Issue:  8.3

Crenshaw_PaulFind him:
Twitter

You can find this four time Best American Essayist in Lawrence, Kansas, which was the location for many of science fiction writer, James Gunn’s novels, including The Immortals (1964).

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

I have two collections of essays coming out in 2019: This One Will Hurt You, runner-up in the Gournay Prize, will be published by The Ohio State University Press.

And This We’ll Defend, a collection of essays on my time in the military, will be out later in 2019 from University of North Carolina Press.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I’m working on revising a memoir about growing up next to an old tuberculosis sanatorium that was converted to a home for the developmentally disabled in the early 70s. Most of the buildings are boarded up and sealed off. I lived in a rented house on the grounds for a few years. It’s a strange place.

Also working on a new collection of pop culture essays.

Who is your favorite author?

Right now I’m re-reading John McPhee—he’s certainly close.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

I just finished Sebastian Junger’s The Perfect Storm.

What is your favorite sweet?

This is the best candy bar in the world, ever:

Hazelnut Five Star Bars

Crenshaw hazelnut-five-star-bar_2

Thank you, Paul, for taking the time to reconnect with us.  We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Where the Money Goes: All the Feels

At AWP17 in Washington, DC, Sweet announced its first ever Flash Nonfiction contest. It has always been important that we keep submissions for the Sweet Lit Mag fee free, but that doesn’t allow this small nonprofit to accomplish some of the bigger things we have been talking about doing for years. Hosting our first contest was a way to keep no cost submission, but still generate funding for our other projects.  And you, our amazing readers and writers, answered that calling.  Not only were we able to give the winner, Lisa Laughlin, a cash prize of $500 and 20 chapbooks of her work, we were also able to complete our first community outreach project. We want to sincerely thank all of you who entered and made this dream possible.  More projects are in the works now, thanks in part to the poetry contest (winner McKayla Conahan) and the pending 2nd annual nonfiction contest. Your continued support, whether it be a contest submission, a donation, or purchasing one of our chapbooks, it what keeps our community outreach projects alive.

Please read more from assistant editor, Casey Clague, about their experience with former assistant editor, Alison, at the MacDonald Training Center.

All The Feels

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In April and May of 2018, my colleague Alison Missler and I were privileged to conduct poetry workshops at the MacDonald Training Center in Tampa, Florida as part of Sweet’s new community outreach initiative. The clients at the center all have some degree of developmental disability and the center provides them with educational, vocational, and residential training. The center had a bustling arts program; each time we visited for our workshops, classic pop songs boomed from the stereo while a dozen or so clients diligently drew or painted.

Two of three four poets in our workshop were very accomplished painters. Gleen was known for his vivid colors and liveliness of the human and non-human figures he painted. Shannon’s work typically focused on the cosmic; her paintings usually featured marbled planets amidst wispy constellations in the dark void of sky. Sarah was a prolific poet already. Each day we saw her, she let us read from one of her many journals, filled front to back with poems and song lyrics.

On the first day, we worked on a collaborative color poem. We chose the color red and then all worked together to come up with words and phrases we associated with the color red. After the workshop, Alison and I compiled them all together on a poster-sized sheet and gave a copy of each to the clients at the next session. For our second trip, we did an ekphrastic. The ekphrastic form is a poem in response to a work of art, which was very appropriate for the MacDonald clients, since there was so much great art of their peers’ to choose from. For the third session, we did acrostic poems, the old favorite where the poet chooses a word or phrase that corresponds to each letter of their name. This seemed to be their favorite workshop because it got them to think of their best qualities, which made for a really positive note to end on. All around, the workshops were a joy and privilege to be part of.

On behalf of Sweet, we would like to thank you, Casey and Alison, for all your hard work and dedication to this project!

Sweet Connections: Joel Long

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

 Name: Joel Long
Title of Piece published in Sweet:  Late Life Winter
Issue:  10.3

Joel LongFind him:

 Instagram

Joel says you can usually find him on the shores of the Great Salt Lake and if it’s with these cute puppies, we would be too!

 

 

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

Aside from getting my daughter married in France, I had some poems and photos appear in Terrain.org.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I’m constantly working on new poems and essays.  I have a several manuscripts that I am revising and shopping, but now, I want to turn toward a prose manuscript as well.

Who is your favorite author?

Oh, such a difficult question.  In a pinch, I always return to Virginia Woolf or Annie Dillard.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

I love Rilke’s “Ninth Duino Elegy.”

What inspires you to write?

The mystery, terror and beauty of the everyday.

What is your favorite sweet?

Pistachio gelato in Florence, Italy, Gelateria La Carraia.

Joel Long Sweet

Oh my, that looks heavenly!

Thank you, Joel, for taking the time to reconnect with us.  We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Sweet Connections: Joey Chin

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Joey Chin
Title of Piece published in SweetFor the Love of Loss (and Vice Versa)
Issue:  9.3
 

joey-chin.jpgFind her:

Instagram

Joey is currently based in Wakefield, UK as an artist-in-residence. Sounds like a tough gig, Joey! You can find out more about Joey on her website www.joeychin.com .

 
What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

Last year, two of my poems were featured in an anthology, Inheritance (Math Paper Press, 2017) which was launched at the Singapore Writers Festival.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I am currently an artist-in-residence in The Art House Wakefield, working on a conceptual project that involves donated books, with dedications written on its cover. This project will explore acts of reading, giving, and give-away.

Who is your favorite author?

I don’t have a favourite, although I must have read all the books written by Ha Jin, Julian Barnes, and Hanif Kureshi.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

I find myself returning to the anthology, Language for a New Century, edited by Tina Chang, Ravi Shankar and Natalie Handal, for its depth of contemporary poetry from Asia and the Middle-East, and also their diaspora. There are also thoughtful essays interspersed throughout the book written by the editors as an introduction to each section. Each essay is well-crafted, lyrical and sensitive.

What inspires you to write?

The books and poetry, that I read, and the art I encounter.

What is your favorite sweet?

My partner, Romanos is Greek, and has introduced me to a wonderful sweet, kataifi (καταϊφι). It is a pastry-sort of dessert packed with nuts, full of sugary-buttery goodness. I liked it so much that many years ago, I packed it back with me from Athens, onboard a flight home to Singapore. Of course, it was a terrible idea, as the syrup leaked out, ruining my books, clothing and souvenirs.

Oooh, it’s like the Asian bird’s nest meets baklava!  That sounds amazing.

Thank you, Joey, for taking the time to reconnect with us.  We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Sweet Connections: Emily Brisse

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Emily Brisse
Title of Piece published in SweetTo Be Held
Issue:  10.3

BrissePhoto1Find her:

Instagram

Emily is currently a teacher at Breck School in Minneapolis, MN. You can find out more about Emily on www.landingoncloudywater.blogspot.com, even though she claims the posts are few and far between. We firmly believe in quality over quantity, Emily, so you’re still amazing in our book.

 
What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

Emily was a finalist in December Magazine’s Kurt Johnson Prose Award contest.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I’m working on a novel, set in the early 1990s, that examines one young woman’s experience with harassment in the workplace.

Who is your favorite author?

Louise Erdrich

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

Impossible to answer, but I’m currently reading Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life, and it is keeping me up way past my bedtime.

What inspires you to write?

Many, many things; if I’m feeling stuck, though, going outside and writing by hand helps the words start moving again.

What is your favorite sweet?

Sebastian Joe’s raspberry chocolate chip ice cream.

We love local favorites, especially when it’s ice cream!

Thank you, Emily, for taking the time to reconnect with us.  We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

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