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Get (almost) All My Books — Even the Out of Print Ones — at Book Moon Books

Now there's a link at Book Moon Books so that if you've got a US mailing address, you can get almost all of my books, including Belly Songs. What you do is, click the button to order Martha Moody, then write in "Belly Songs" or "Venus of Chalk" or "Spider in a Tree." Then, you'll get the book and the money goes to me. It works that way because these small and micro press books aren't on the distributor's website, but Gavin from Book Moon came to my stairs and fetched the books, so I know they are there. (Fat Girl Dances With Rocks isn't available because it's out of print and I don't have copies.)

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Martha Moody in the Kenyon Review

I have a new short piece up at the Kenyon Review about reading from Martha Moody and having it embraced now by the wonderful Book Moon Books.

 

"I was reading from Martha Moody in Vermont at the Institute for Social Ecology in 1995 the time that Grace Paley blew me a kiss and told the audience that my work was clearly about changing the world."  (Confidential to blog readers: We were actually reading together at that event.) 

 

 

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Converation with Elizabeth McCracken at Marth Moody 25th anniversary virtual book launch

Susan Stinson and Elizabeth McCracken. Screenshot by Pamela Millam. 

The launch for the twenty-fiftn anniversary edition of my "highly imaginative Western," Martha Moody, was a conversation with the great Elizabeth McCracken at Book Moon Books. It was virtual and recorded, so some day I may be able to post it. Full of launch and good company in the midst of a pandemic, it was one of the best things that has ever happened to me as a writer.

 

I met Elizabeth McCracken more than twenty-five years ago before Martha Moody was published.  I used an excerpt as my work sample in an application to the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center. I didn't get in, but Elizabeth wrote me a beautiful letter in praise of the excerpt, which was enclosed in the envelope with the rejection. We eventually started a correspondence, and it has been such gift to get to read her work and witness her literary adventures over the years.  Talking with her about Martha Moody was SO MUCH FUN.  The audience was full of writers and others dear to me.  We sang happy birthday to my dad, who turned 92 the next day!  People got passionate in the chat about punctuation marks.  So good. 

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