Unhinging and Unspooling: Allegra Hyde Interviews Lisa Locascio
While finishing my term as prose editor for Hayden’s Ferry Review, I had the chance to work on our literary darling: the “Chaos Issue.” Gathering material for this issue granted the opportunity to engage with writers exploring the far-reaches of form and content, among them Lisa Locasio. Though her contribution to the issue, “Lab,” runs fewer than two pages, it presents readers with a starkly uncomfortable, yet eerily engrossing situation, the jarring honesty of which is hard to shake. Locascio and I spoke over Skype in March.
-Allegra Hyde
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Contributor Spotlight: Lisa Locascio
I’m big on divination, and recently took up tarot again after about fifteen years of frustrated distance. I went to an occult bookstore in North Hollywood called The Green Man, which I figured was a good omen since I was raised on Swamp Thing, who during the Alan Moore run in fact encounters a congress of Green Men, sentient versions of the leafy faces that appear on medieval buildings all over Europe that undoubtedly influenced Tolkien’s ents, as well as the set of miniature Green Man plaques my father purchased on a 2007 family trip to England and hung up at our summer house.
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Contributor Spotlight: Mary Cisper
Squinting like Star-Eyed Grass
It was a store, I was looking for a gift. Upon picking up the object and asking how it was done, a dismissive shrug. Which lead to an importunate puppy feeling. What’s weird: vulnerable and vulture are probably from the same root, vellere, “to pluck, to tear”. I still wonder how the hummingbird was painted on the inside of the narrow-necked flask. (Reader, I bought it anyway.)
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Contributor Spotlight: Lindsey Alexander
Terms of Agreement
Often I find myself creating problems instead of poems.
Though Tweetable, that is no epiphany on my end. I am wise to my own ways, especially in terms of avoidance.
A favorite teacher of mine deplores and defames the poem that ends in epiphany, and I, too, am suspicious of that kind of closure.
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A Mini-Q&A with Matthew Kilbane
HAPPY JUNE! KICKING US OFF IS MATTHEW KILBANE'S POEM "IN THE MANNER OF THE CHURCH." YOU CAN READ IT OVER AT THE DOCK.
HFR: "In the Manner of the Church” is obviously a narrative poem, and yet the lyricism hiding behind the narrative is what we enjoyed most about this piece. The dual assonance in lines like “hours of arduous practice” and “Seated center in the front row I froze though” imitate the action of "climbing chromatics”. Even the formatting of the line-breaks and indentation makes a reader half-swoon through the language. Was it your intention, given the subject matter, to make the poem as much about the sound as possible?
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Subscription Drive EXTENDED: Subscribe Today for T-shirts or Coasters
Happy news! We are extending our subscription drive sales to May 23rd. Subscribe or resubscribe between now and Saturday to receive a free set of letterpress coasters or a free HFR T-shirt. Your choice!
In your order, please leave a comment requesting either coasters or a T-shirt. If you'd like a T-shirt, let us know what size you'd prefer (S/M/L/XL). T-shirts are unisex Gildan: Ultra Cotton.
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Behind the Masthead: Dana Diehl
Editor-in-chief, Dana Diehl, will be leaving Hayden's Ferry Review this summer, but before she goes, interns Shelby Heinrich and Sarah Stansbury caught up with her for a conversation concerning the Bachelor, how HFR has affected her writing, and Galapagos tortoises.
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FREE T-shirts for 5 Lucky Subscribers
Don’t forget to subscribe or resubscribe today through Wednesday for a chance to win a free Hayden’s Ferry Review T-shirt with your new Issue 56!
Add a note to your order detailing your preferred shirt size (S/M/L/XL). T-shirts are green, unisex, and feature the HFR logo and a prickly pear cactus.
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