Pleased to have a new story about life in a very odd small town in @leanmag.bsky.social the magazine for “non-protagonist-centered fiction”
Posts by LEAN magazine
We are officially LEANing into spring over here with issue #11!
Matt Leibel's "Town" describes a sort of place that's bigger and smaller than the sum of its parts.
Meanwhile Selen Ozturk's story "Aurora" is all about the push-and-pull between a story and its writer.
www.lean-mag.com
In the spirit of practicing what I preach here's a non-protagonist-centered short story about Vikings, Christianity and what happens when the present meets the past.
clereviewofbooks.com/if-the-vikin...
In the spirit of practicing what I preach here's a non-protagonist-centered short story about Vikings, Christianity and what happens when the present meets the past.
clereviewofbooks.com/if-the-vikin...
Here's an essay I wrote calling on lit mags to use their about pages to tell us about the kind of writing they publish.
litmagnews.substack.com/p/what-are-o...
Here's an essay I wrote calling on lit mags to use their about pages to tell us about the kind of writing they publish.
litmagnews.substack.com/p/what-are-o...
don't you want to "burn this place down" lol - but in all seriousness the important thing is the viability of creativity and its independence from the creative industries
Check out my short story “Economy of Language” in @leanmag.bsky.social! This one was arduous to write, by which I mean that I had a great time. Very excited that it found a home in a magazine I admire so much
www.lean-mag.com/economyoflan...
LEAN magazine is here for the holidays with Issue #10
Sophie Drukman-Feldstein's "Economy of Language" depicts a world of exhaustible speech - you better watch what you say
Meanwhile Owen Yingling's "Mene Mene" is a story of uncertain resurrection
www.lean-mag.com
LEAN Magazine is open for business! Please send along your work.
LEAN has mostly focused on fiction but we're very interested in memoir, especially the kind that evokes the contexts and conditions of life, sidelining the individual for the sake of conveying useful information
Another translation published! Check out my translation of Diego Lama’s story “The Silent City” in LEAN.
A big thanks to Semyon Khokhlov for featuring us!
I wonder how you can tell they didn't want to engage...because the exchange is awkward? I've lived in the Midwest, too, and you can talk to people, and sure there can be some awkwardness in any convo with a stranger but that's par for the course and often clears quickly
but isn't that a reason for talking to people and explaining? this is just a way of keeping walls up
LEAN magazine is back at it with issue #9!
Diego Lama's "The Silent City," translated by Rose Facchini, portrays a besieged city expanding toward the infinite.
Stephen Mortland's amazing story "Three Sofias" is all about promiscuous acts of attention.
www.lean-mag.com
LEAN magazine is back at it with issue #9!
Diego Lama's "The Silent City," translated by Rose Facchini, portrays a besieged city expanding toward the infinite.
Stephen Mortland's amazing story "Three Sofias" is all about promiscuous acts of attention.
www.lean-mag.com
thanks for the interest but I'm out of those copies...I'm planning on doing another print run sometime in the next month or so
The new LEAN Magazine - Issue 8 - is here!
Featuring Jon Conley's story of a hot day at the beach where the people aren't quite right.
And a story by Jon Doughboy that stirs up a heteroglossic stew on a very clear night in Idaho.
www.lean-mag.com
The new LEAN Magazine - Issue 8 - is here!
Featuring Jon Conley's story of a hot day at the beach where the people aren't quite right.
And a story by Jon Doughboy that stirs up a heteroglossic stew on a very clear night in Idaho.
www.lean-mag.com
Very excited to share this essay about the great German author Alexander Kluge whose unusual work is all about common human feelings and "happy endings that don't lie."
www.full-stop.net/2025/03/06/f...
Thanks so much to @fullstopmag.bsky.social and @kailanthropy.bsky.social for editing!
Very excited to share this essay about the great German author Alexander Kluge whose unusual work is all about common human feelings and "happy endings that don't lie."
www.full-stop.net/2025/03/06/f...
"It's really not so easy to find sentences that explain who you are. But maybe it's not so important, either."
---Jenny Erpenbeck
There's nothing essential about narrative modes and that's especially true when it comes to their relation to protagonism.
3rd person can be used to center an individual just as 1st person can be used to sideline them.
The deciding factor is often how much narrative attention a character receives, how present they are in the text, how much space they literally take up.
There's nothing essential about narrative modes and that's especially true when it comes to their relation to protagonism.
3rd person can be used to center an individual just as 1st person can be used to sideline them.
Self-centered protagonism is a problem that demands formal solutions.
It's not enough for a character to be "self-aware" or even to look out beyond themselves because such looking can easily turn into self-affirmation.
Anyway, it's a really great work out recently from
@spurleditions.bsky.social in a new translation by Dana Lupo
The narrative does not present this primarily as a problem for the hero but rather as a problem for other people, and that's precisely because this novel does not subscribe to the modern dogma of protagonist supremacy
The utopian novel The Known Southern Land (1676) is the kind of early work that can help us understand the blind spots of the modern novel's insistence on the supremacy of the protagonist...
Anyway, it's a really great work out recently from
@spurleditions.bsky.social in a new translation by Dana Lupo