Friday, May 8, 2015

NEW RELEASE: Last Tent City Blues, by Walter Beck


Introducing Drafty Attic Press's newest author Walter Beck in this his seventh published volume, Last Tent City Blues, based on the nine years he spent employed as a camp counselor, balancing his devotion to the Boy Scouts of America with his LGBT identity.  Beck, a poet, queer gonzo journalist, performance artist, and digital radio co-host at The Rainbow Asylum, lives in Avon, Indiana, where he dedicates his time to spreading random weirdness wherever he goes, believing that freaking people out will bring about a worldwide cultural conscious awareness.

Read what others are saying about Beck's work:

Walter Beck's poetry is not for the weak-spined, New Age generation, who look for light at the end of every dark tunnel and believe that fairness can be doled out through the power of positive thinking. But they should read it. It should be force-fed down their throats between their helpings of Wiccan poetry and spiritual healing books, like broccoli.
–The Pen Prostitute

Part Hunter S. Thompson, part rock and rolla in Amish country and all around literary revolutionary. Indiana: be proud. We need him.
–James Schwartz




[SOLD OUT!]



Monday, September 12, 2011

NEW RELEASE: Five Kinds of Fences, by Toby Bielawski


We at Drafty Attic Press are pleased to announce the release of Toby Bielawski's new chapbook, Five Kinds of Fences.  Thanks to everyone who submitted to the New Word Order contest and to our gracious sponsors for the opportunity to release this quality work of literature.  Read what other authors are saying about the book:


Toby Bielawski’s poems survey the landscapes of earth and sky and the inner landscapes of the mind with a clear-eyed curiosity. Whether contemplating five kinds of fences or the terrors and consolations of the stars,  whether sorting and weighing the scrap metal of the past or celebrating the molten metal of sexuality, she is committed to learning “how the taproot lives.” She regards the surreal terrain of insomnia with quiet humor and brings a sense of grateful wonder to the “cabin” of “safe space” inside the poet's mind. The poems in this debut collection range widely, but Toby Bielawski’s compass needle seeks and finds “true north.”

Chana Bloch,
author of Blood Honey

Her poems brim with a reverent buoyancy for nature, with the affirmation of the true, often splintered self, and with the hidden meaning behind everyday things in the palm of one's hands.

Deema Shehabi,
author of Thirteen Departures From The Moon


[SOLD OUT!]



Sunday, July 24, 2011

New Word Order CONTEST WINNER


Our contest judge, Darla Crist, has officially chosen Toby Bielawski's Five Kinds of Fences as the New Word Order Publishing Project winner!  Here's what Crist had to say about the book:

Meaningful poetry manages to be simultaneously universal and deeply personal, and this difficult goal is certainly accomplished in Five Kinds of Fences.  This is a highly imaginative collection of poems, perhaps best described in “A Crown of Safe Spaces,” where the poet writes, “It’s as if I’m in a cabin in my head, with one glass wall/Looking out over a setting that changes whenever my pen/Decides to shift mood or meaning…”   And indeed, there are reality shifts in these poems, where the audience is asked to reconsider what constitutes a fence, or what would happen if letters were landscapes.  Careful attention to form, language, and metaphor directs the work in this collection, even if “Truth is terrain that cannot be steered.”  But truth can be found in “Scrap,” where the speaker is sorting her father’s belongings in the basement:  “All of this (interstate rebar, toilet-tank float ball)/All of this (fittings, fan blades, copper spike)/Was for all the things you would have fixed/In your depression-era dreams./Now, with nicked hands I sort and deal --/Called all around/It's just a penny a pound for steel.”  And truth can be found in “Rectification of Names”: “Resilience is bread broken and shared,/Jealousy the meat and the wine/And patience a stone herm/Listing towards the spine’s left side. /Souls are a thick mystery, mine and/Yours the same, just your mystery/Is a few inches more strange.” Here’s to truth, and here’s to mystery, two key elements in life, as well as in Five Kinds of Fences.

Here are our runners up:

A World Called Little Jimmy, by Christine Ong Muslim

Postcards from the Less than Important West, by Brent Schaeffer

Randonnées, by Adrienne Drobnes

We want to thank all 36 people who submitted chapbooks-- your interest has inspired us to look into a reprise of the contest in the future!  Additionally, thanks to our contest sponsors:


Great People ($5+)

Jamie Lushbaugh
Chris Dolle


Awesome People ($10+)

Taylor Lampton
Brad Walrod


Great Honored Benefactors ($25+)

Tom Carbaugh
Linda Boan
Travis Durbin
Haley Salitros

We couldn't have done it without you.  The books will be headed to the printers soon-- stay tuned!

Friday, July 15, 2011

Saturday, July 2, 2011

New Word Order CLOSED


The New Word Order project is now officially CLOSED.  We received 36 submissions, and the Drafty Attic team is now busily at work plowing through them, getting ready to send a handful to our judge, Darla Crist, to find one winner.  Thanks everyone for participating!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Fiddler Crab Review

We've just gotten Miller's New England Haiku Dictionary reviewed over at Fiddler Crab Review!  Check it out!


In other news, we're up to 13 submissions for the New Word Order contest.  Keep 'em coming all month long.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Marketing and Solicitation Intern Kaiulani Anderson-Liggett

As we're preparing for our second printing of Miller's New England Haiku Dictionary, our chapbook contest, and a new work from poet Britt Burgeson of Notre Dame, let me introduce to you the newest member of the Drafty Attic team, Kaiulani Anderson-Liggett:

KAIULANI ANDERSON-LIGGETT (Terre Haute, IN) is currently a Senior at Indiana State University pursuing a BS in English. She works at Double Oak Farm in Columbus, Indiana selling yummy organic and local produce to the city. In her spare time she interns for Drafty Attic Press creating press, and friendships with the company and others out there. Her interest includes knitting, reading, cats (a certain one-eyed kitty in particular), red-velvet cake, and wandering around aimlessly.

She'll be our new marketing and solicitation intern, spreading the word about the cheap-as-hell chapbooks we can put out and finding the newest upcoming poets to publish.