Confessions of a Small Press Racketeer
Confessions of a small press racketeer is equal parts literary memoir, reckless tirade, and unsolicited advice for the aspiring writer. Drawn largely from Stuart Ross's notorious "Hunkamooga" column in Word: Toronto's Literary Calendar, it's a roller-coaster journey into the mind of one of Canada's most committed small press activists.
While the media focuses only on the glamorous literary lives of its few superstars, Ross tells How Writers Really Live. In these essays, he catalogues his reasons for bitterness, offers a crash course in avoiding writing, pisses off his publishers, rails against open mics, explores his floundering Jewish identity, implores young writers to stop bugging the crap out of him, and declares himself the King of Poetry.
1100410085
While the media focuses only on the glamorous literary lives of its few superstars, Ross tells How Writers Really Live. In these essays, he catalogues his reasons for bitterness, offers a crash course in avoiding writing, pisses off his publishers, rails against open mics, explores his floundering Jewish identity, implores young writers to stop bugging the crap out of him, and declares himself the King of Poetry.
Confessions of a Small Press Racketeer
Confessions of a small press racketeer is equal parts literary memoir, reckless tirade, and unsolicited advice for the aspiring writer. Drawn largely from Stuart Ross's notorious "Hunkamooga" column in Word: Toronto's Literary Calendar, it's a roller-coaster journey into the mind of one of Canada's most committed small press activists.
While the media focuses only on the glamorous literary lives of its few superstars, Ross tells How Writers Really Live. In these essays, he catalogues his reasons for bitterness, offers a crash course in avoiding writing, pisses off his publishers, rails against open mics, explores his floundering Jewish identity, implores young writers to stop bugging the crap out of him, and declares himself the King of Poetry.
While the media focuses only on the glamorous literary lives of its few superstars, Ross tells How Writers Really Live. In these essays, he catalogues his reasons for bitterness, offers a crash course in avoiding writing, pisses off his publishers, rails against open mics, explores his floundering Jewish identity, implores young writers to stop bugging the crap out of him, and declares himself the King of Poetry.
14.0
In Stock
5
1
Confessions of a Small Press Racketeer
127Confessions of a Small Press Racketeer
127
14.0
In Stock
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781895636659 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Anvil Press |
Publication date: | 03/01/2005 |
Pages: | 127 |
Product dimensions: | 6.02(w) x 7.99(h) x 0.31(d) |
About the Author
From the B&N Reads Blog