-
Circle back: The joy of rejoining a Springfield friend and attempting a little art
This is the front cover to The Teeth of the Souls, sequel to Morkan’s Quarry and forthcoming from Moon City Press in March 2015. The front cover art comes from a photographer I have long watched and admired, Springfield, Missouri’s Jeffrey Sweet. The cover is a detail from a really spectacular photograph Jeff took one…
-
Maybe the next thing, a novel about the last living heir to Springfield’s Albino Farm, starts like this
THE LEGEND OF THE ALBINO FARM 1 On the northern border of Springfield, Missouri, there once was a great house surrounded by emerald woods, lake, and meadow, a home place and farm that, to the lasting sorrow of its owners and heirs, acquired a nonsensical legend marring all memory of its glory days. The estate became…
-
Curiosity’s Cats: Writers on Research coming April 15, 2014 from Minnesota Historical Society Press
Curiosity’s Cats: Writers on Research Edited by Bruce Joshua Miller “Each morning I would strike out for this temple of learning in the crisp autumn air . . . with a sense of purpose and the conviction that this was where I belonged.”—Marilyn Stasio from Your Research—or Your Life Inspired partly by Richard…
-
Your No One is My Everyone: Some Thoughts on Publishing and the Sage Advice of Businessmen
YOUR NO ONE IS MY EVERYONE Thoughts on the scale of regional publishing and the sage advice of businessmen Originally published on University Press of Mississippi’s blog as part of University Press Week 2013 The first time I fully realized the value of what I do for a living, I was stricken with the stomach…
-
Book Festivals: Why authors should spend the money to travel to book festivals
Book festivals are a tradition I’m thinking a lot about lately. By the end of the year I will have taken Some Kinds of Love: Stories to three of them—the Arkansas Literary Festival in Little Rock, The Southern Festival of Books in Nashville, and the Louisiana Book Festival in Baton Rouge. To the nearly unknown…
-
Being away from what you write: what does distance do to fiction’s sense of place?
In Dr. Brooks Blevins’s class in Ozarks Literature and History, the first question a student asked struck at the heart of what I am wondering at now. A longing for the Ozarks, being away from the Ozarks, living in the Deep South, how does this separation affect my writing? Last week, I had two reasons…
-
Where does Ozarks Literature begin?
I’m humbled, really quite floored in that tomorrow at 11 a.m. I will stand in Strong Hall on the campus of Missouri State University in Springfield before students in a university course entitled Ozarks Literature and History, and taught by Dr. Brooks Blevins. Thirty students have just finished reading my novel, Morkan’s Quarry. While not…
-
The fastest (and maybe the funnest) six minutes of writing life: being on the radio
Karen Brown interviews Steve Yates on Mississippi Edition, MPB Think Radio Time perception is an extraordinary thing. My wife is always tickled to recall to me that when microwaves first came into offices and homes, people waiting on snacks and lunches eagerly watched the digital timers winding down, and many starving seekers would bounce on their…
-
The family of the bookstore–Lemuria Books and Some Kinds of Love: Stories
Steve Yates reads the Green Tomato Marquesa’s Night of a Thousand and One Triumphs at Lemuria Books from Steven B Yates on Vimeo. I have often thought about family, that embracing, nurturing metaphor, when I travel to visit the many Mississippi independent bookstores I serve for University Press of Mississippi. You can learn about this…
