Enter One Story Raffle & Win an Apple iPad for only $10

Wishing you had an iPad? Get a chance to win one for just $10.

To celebrate our 8th year publishing debut and emerging writers we’re giving an iPad away at our Debutante Ball on May 21, 2010. But you don’t need to be at the ball to purchase tickets—you can take a chance on our web site, and we’ll enter you in the drawing.

If you win, you’ll receive Apple’s new revolutionary iPad (16GB Wi-Fi). Even better, your iPad will come loaded with issues of One Story—all 9 stories from the debut authors we’re celebrating on May 21st (writers who published their first fiction with One Story): Sam Allingham, Ramona Ausubel, Nell Casey, Amelia Kahaney, Cheston Knapp, Grant Munroe,  Patrick Ryan, Patrick Somerville, Cote Smith and Arlaina Tibensky.

You’ll also get a year’s subscription to Tales2Go, an app that delivers streaming audio books and stories for children to your mobile device, on-demand. With a library of over 1,000 titles, Tales2Go brings story time to you and makes traveling with young ones easier than ever.

The winner of this raffle will be pulled at the end of our Debutante Ball on May 21, 2010 by comedian John Hodgman. We’ll post the information on our web site, and will call or email the winner that night.

To purchase a ticket—for just $10—click here.

Helen Ellis Shows How A Luddite Reads One Story

A friend of Hannah Tinti’s, Helen Ellis, is a self-proclaimed Luddite with a new book and a new website, Helen Ellis Writes. In a charming video series, “Diary of a Luddite,” Helen keeps us informed about the difference between Luddite and Green, what a magazine looks like, and how to teach your cat to answer the phone. The short videos are just kind of delightful in their simplicity and humor. This week she has a segment about One Story, and tells us about Hannah’s first 6-floor walk-up apartment in the East Village. It’s hilarious, and a good reminder of the pleasure of getting One Story in the mail. I particularly like the moment when she whips out a hunting knife to open the envelope. As Helen tells us, “I like to read it in the tub.” Watch below, and check out Helen’s new book, The Turning, about a girl’s strange and frightening transformation.

Thanks for the shout-out, Helen! You can see our latest story, “Stiltsville”, featured via the link below.

Helen Ellis on One Story

Issue #134: Stiltsville

One Story has a rule: we don’t like to publish novel excerpts. Nearly always, when I read novel excerpts in other magazines, I walk away feeling unsatisfied. But every once in a while, a chapter from a novel crosses my desk that works as a stand alone short story. We did it once before, with Calvin Baker’s “Dominion.” And now we’re doing it again, with Issue #134, Susanna Daniel’s “Stiltsville.” I was reading an advance copy of the book, and fell in love with these characters, Dennis and Frances. Set in the aftermath of Hurricane Andrew, “Stiltsville” follows two marriages–that of Dennis and Frances, as they clean up from the storm, and that of their newlywed daughter. The dialogue, the pacing, and the tenderness between this married couple is so authentic and true. And every time I get to the end, I find myself choking up.

But it’s the setting of Florida, and especially the place that is Stiltsville, that literally elevates this story to magic. Stiltsville is an area located on Biscayne Bay, with houses built on stilts over the water. Only 7 of these houses are left–the rest of them have been washed away. You can see more pictures and find out more about Stiltsville in Susanna’s Q&A with us. And if you want to find out what happens to Dennis and Frances, you can pre-order your copy of Stiltsville, the novel or visit Susanna’s website. Her book will be published by Harper Collins on August 3, 2010. A perfect read for the end of summer!

AWP 2010: we came, we saw, we sold 5-packs.

One Story Table at AWP Denver

The AWP Conference is always an adventure. Each year One Story flies off to a different state in the U.S. to spread the good news about short stories. This year was no different. Our publisher, Maribeth Batcha, along with Webmaster Devin Emke, Managing Editor Tanya Rey, Associate Editor Marie-Helene Bertino and Contributing Editors Pei-Ling Lue and Elliott Holt all boarded the same flight from New York to Denver, Colorado. Jokes were made that if their plane should go down, the brains of One Story would go with it, and the carrying of the torch would rest heavily on my lonely shoulders. I joined the group on Thursday and headed directly to the bookfair, where our fearless gals had set up some beautiful rotating racks of issues, along with our new very professional-looking sign (which was just to the left of this shot–we forgot to take a picture). No more valentines or duck ponds–although I will admit to missing the air hockey table from AWP Atlanta.

For the next three days we met loyal subscribers, talked others into giving the magazine a try, and hosted One Story authors Robin Black, Patrick Somerville, Allison Amend, Michael Blumenthal, Lauren Groff, Irina Reyn, Laura Van den Berg, Jerry Gabriel, and Steve Almond (you can read his hilarious round-up of AWP over at The Rumpus) who sold their new books at our table. But most of all, we sold 5 packs. One Story 5-packs are the brain-child of our managing editor, Tanya Rey, to gather 5 themed issues of One Story and tie them together with a belly-band, stamped with an image to represent the theme. We had 5 Love Stories, 5 Travel Stories, 5 Humor Stories, 5 Experimental Stories, and 5 Stories from writers at AWP. I have to admit, these 5-packs were beautiful, but I had no idea that they would sell like ice-cream in July. Passersby would gravitate to them like they were being pulled in by a tractor-beam. We soon realized that people would rather spend $5 on a pre-selected themed 5-pack then $1 for a single story they would have to choose themselves. Amazing. Quickly, we sold out, and spent the rest of the fair jerry-rigging more. By Saturday, we had sold every single issue of the magazine that we brought. Next year, I’m thinking: only 5-packs. Or maybe we will move on to 6 packs. Or 10 packs.

Hannah pulls out a bottle of Maker's Mark, to the delight of Cheston Knapp

Another highlight was a wine & whiskey toast that we held at our table for Cheston Knapp, author of the current issue, “A Minor Momentousness in the History of Love.” This was Cheston’s very first publication, and we all raised glasses and celebrated the launch of his writing career. Unlike last year, we were not challenged to a dance-off, but we danced, just the same, led by One Story author Tom Grattan, who I’m sure would have led us to victory. But what is best about AWP is putting faces to names–meeting the writers we’ve published in these pages and subscribers and donors who have kept us going for the past eight years. Thanks to everyone who stopped by our booth. We’ll see you next year, in D.C.!

Thank you, NEA!

One Story is a non-profit, 501-(c)(3)  organization, and a good deal of our time is spent applying for grants, in order to continue publishing this extraordinary magazine. This year, we were lucky enough to receive a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. With the support we received, we were able to create our very first direct mail marketing campaign, which has had a wonderful response, and given us many more subscribers. It also allowed us to spotlight our debut authors, with our “introducing new writers” program. For each debut author–someone who has published their first fiction with us–we have mailed their issue in a special envelope and also hosted a reading or event in their hometown to help launch their writing careers. To hear an interview with me and NEA’s Adam Kampe about One Story, you can visit NEA’s website.  And if you’d like to join the NEA in supporting One Story, you can go to our donation page, or consider becoming a sponsor for our 2010 benefit on May 21st. We greatly appreciate everyone’s support, from our subscribers and benefactors to organizations like the NEA, who value the work we do, supporting emerging writers and keeping the short story alive and well. Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!

Rock & Roll Will Save Your Life by Steve Almond

One Story author (issue #31, “King of the Empty Kegs”) Steve Almond’s new book, Rock and Roll Will Save Your Life, has just been released by Random House. Book page calls it: “The nonfiction equivalent of Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity, a knowing and exhilarating look at how one man dove headfirst into rock music and emerged on the other side intact.”

And Rocker Aimee Mann says: “”For some of us, music is true religion, and Catholic to boot. Steve Almond comes off as devout —and divided—as any altar boy. His strange and funny book should be required reading for all of us fans and musicians who belong to the Church of Rock and Roll.”

Stop by Steve’s website to see where he’ll be touring, how to buy the book, or listen to the soundtrack!

Or get a taste by clicking below to watch Steve digress on the magic of Toto’s “Africa.”

Marie-Helene Bertino in American Short Fiction

Congrats to One Story Associate Editor, Marie-Helene Bertino, on her recent publication in American Short Fiction! Marie’s story, “Carry Me Home, Sisters of Saint Joseph,” is featured in their current issue. We were lucky enough to get a sneak peek at AWP. Now it’s your chance to check out this great magazine, support short stories, and give props to an extremely talented writer/editor. Get your copy today!

Issue #133: A Minor Momentousness in the History of Love

It always gives me great pleasure to introduce a debut writer. So, ahem! Readers, pay attention: Here comes Cheston Knapp. One Story is lucky to be publishing his first short story, and I know that there will be many more to come. And you, happy subscribers, will be able to tell your friends that you read him first. “A Minor Momentousness in the History of Love”starts in the real world–a famous tennis match that occured on July 2, 2001 between Pete Sampras and Roger Federer at Wimbledon. Cheston Knapp has taken this event, meticulously recreated it and at the same time, added his own sub-plot. A love triangle between two ball boys and a ball girl, working the game. We’re introduced to William Able, and follow him point by excruciating point as he plays an entirely different kind of match against the girl he loves. These two stories, fiction and non-fiction, cross  into a tightly woven tapestry of tragedy and loss, triumph and defeat. Take a look at the trailer Cheston Knapp created for issue #133, below, and be sure to read his Q&A with us on how he wrote the story (which includes references to Heidegger as well as a very cool self-portrait). If you like tennis, you will enjoy reading this story, and even if you know nothing about the sport (like me), you will still love it. In “A Minor Momentousness in the History of Love,” Cheston Knapp has made a fantastic debut, and served his readers an ace.

Pete Rock’s My Abandonment

One Story author Pete Rock (issue #56, “Lights”) has just released his novel, My Abandonment, in paperback. Not only does it have a cool new cover, and a 2010 American Library Association Alex Award to its credit, Pete’s publisher, Houghton Mifflin, has added a reader’s guide for bookclubs. Below is a conversation with Pete from Houghton Mifflin’s website. I’d highly recommend that you pick up a copy of this extraordinary book.

A Conversation with Peter Rock

Why did you write this book?

About five years ago, I read a short mention of a thirteen-year-old girl and her father discovered living in Forest Park, a rugged wilderness that borders downtown Portland. They had been living there for four years in a carefully camouflaged camp, ingeniously escaping detection, venturing into the city to collect his disability checks and to shop for the groceries they couldn’t grow. He had been homeschooling the girl, who tested beyond her age group. A second newspaper article described how the two had been relocated to a horse farm; the father had been given a job, and the girl was to start middle school in the fall. I thought the situation was resolved, and filed the story away; then a third brief newspaper mention described how the two had disappeared one night. I waited and waited, searched the Web, but months passed and there was no more information. The two had truly disappeared. Unable to find out more information about how they lived or what became of them, my mind began to spin out possibilities. I realized I had to tell the story myself in order to satisfy my curiosity.

So is the novel “inspired by a true story” out of necessity?

I’m a fiction writer, and had there been enough information available to write a nonfiction account, I wouldn’t have been interested in writing it. Perhaps some might hesitate at making fiction out of real people’s lives, or see it as a real imposition. I am a little uneasy about it myself but hope that my effort is a testament to my enthusiasm and respect. And wonder.

Describe some of your more physical preparations or research.

I spent a lot of time wandering through some of the more remote sections of Forest Park, imagining scenes, climbing trees. I had the coordinates for the camp where the father and daughter had lived, which had been taken apart, and also encountered many more recent camps where homeless people were living off the grid. I also spent a fair amount of time hiking in the backcountry around Sisters and the Santiam Pass area in central Oregon, through the burned-out volcanic lands where forest fires recently ran, through the snow, my mind traveling as Caroline’s.

What caused you to choose the girl, Caroline, as the narrator?

Generally speaking, I’m suspicious of child narrators—their naiveté often feels manipulative or mannered, their voices grating. So I tried to conceive of this story from several other angles, but was unsuccessful. I wished to convey the wonder and joy in what could be a sadder or more cynical story, and the only way to do that was to let Caroline tell it.

How would you respond to someone who wonders whether a forty-year-old man can write as a thirteen-year-old girl?

I’m not a writer who’s ever been able to write convincingly through narrators who share my gender and age. I think the ways in which we’re alike are far greater than small differences like these, anyway. I’ve been lonely; I’ve wanted to feel secure; I’ve wondered at nature and the fact of spinning around on this earth through the galaxy; I’ve wished that animals could communicate more easily with us; I’ve thought about where my dead friends might have gone…

How did you prepare to write in Caroline’s voice?

I spent a lot of time thinking about what she needed, what she wanted, what she knew and didn’t know, the way she had to believe her world in order to enjoy and survive in it. I spent time reading encyclopedias, as she does, and Golden Nature Guides. I read the books that informed her father’s thinking —Emerson, Thoreau, Rousseau. I read Opal Whiteley’s nature diaries.

Who is Randy?

Randy is a toy horse that Caroline’s father gave her. She’d wanted a My Pretty Pony-type doll, and what she got was an acupuncturist’s horse model— one side covered in numbers and dots, where the needles would go, and the other side flayed to reveal the horse’s bones and organs. Caroline doesn’t know what Randy is for; she just loves him and carries him with her. And Randy does exist in my life as well. One way I stayed with Caroline was to have Randy next to me every moment I was writing the book, reminding me of who I was and what was at stake. A small white horse, reassuring me.