While I was in Boston for AWP (recap hopefully coming soon), I got some more good news about my novel BELIEVERS: the first foreign rights were sold — in Poland.
Very happy about this!
While I was in Boston for AWP (recap hopefully coming soon), I got some more good news about my novel BELIEVERS: the first foreign rights were sold — in Poland.
Very happy about this!
I’m very happy to have a story in the newly released anthology 24 Bar Blues: Two Dozen Tales of Bars, Booze, and the Blues.
My story is actually an excerpt from my novel Believers. It’s the second chapter, which introduces one of the main characters.
Here’s how the story, called “Lonely Man Sitting at Bar,” starts:
“It’s one of those bars where there are only two kinds of music on the jukebox: country and western. The best of Waylon, Willie, Merle, Johnny, George, Hank. Men—and it’s always men in bars like this, no Patsy or Loretta or Dolly allowed—identifiable without a surname, the true gods, who have been to the clichéd and well-traveled edge and found their way back. And don’t even think of making the suggestion of possibly maybe broadening some musical horizons with a token smattering of, say, classic rock or a tasteful soul compilation: That’s not what this place—technically The Wishing Well but known to its dedicated regulars solely by the truncated The Well—is about. Here, there’s nothing but reliable songs of lament and loss (and of course drinking) that fit right in with the clientele’s collective state of mind. And that suits him fine tonight. That’s why he chose The Well. Tonight he’s up for plenty of authentic lamenting and losing. And drinking. So why not have the appropriate soundtrack?”
Published by Press 53, the anthology was edited by Andrew Scott (thanks Andrew!) and includes work by many fine writers, including Robert Boswell, Roxane Gay, Chad Simpson, Karen Brown, Kyle Minor, Holly Goddard Jones, and many others.
I have a new story, “The Memory Thief,” in the latest issue of Atticus Review.
This one is a bit of a departure for me. It begins like this:
“Then Duncan decided it was time to steal Sara’s memories.”
Well, it happened: my novel Believers recently sold and will be published by Algonquin Books.
Here’s the announcement from Publishers Lunch:
“Andrew Roe’s BELIEVERS, about a troubled family whose comatose daughter may or may not be performing miracles, and the transformative power of hope on the visitors who line up to see her, to Andra Miller at Algonquin, in a pre-empt, by Michelle Brower at Folio Literary Management.”
After years of hard work, it all came together pretty quickly. Throughout the entire process, I was so impressed with my agent, Michelle Brower, who’s been very patient and very supportive over the years.
And I’ve heard such wonderful things about Algonquin and look forward to working with Andra Miller, who edits Tayari Jones and Caroline Leavitt, among others.
Right now it’s looking like the earliest pub date would be fall 2014.
I’m thrilled beyond words. Just kind of soaking it all in and feeling very, very lucky.
That’s the cheery title of a new story of mine over at fwriction.
I also got to pick a song to accompany the story. My choice was Camper Van Beethoven’s version of “O Death.” I used to joke that it would make a great children’s song.
This is another of my more autobiographical parenting stories, and it’s a kind of companion piece to my story “Stalling,” which was published in SmokeLong Quarterly a while back. In fact, there’s a specific reference to “Stalling” in “How to Talk to Children About Death.”
Getting intertextual in my old age, I guess…