ForeWord First’s Spring Title Winner Announced
Debut fiction competition to showcase the best Print-On-Demand, self-published, and small press titles announces Spring Title Winner.
Traverse City, MI, August 02, 2012 --(PR.com)-- The Agriculture Hall of Fame, the debut novel by Andrew Malan Milward, is ForeWord Firsts’ Spring 2012 Title winner. Winner of the Juniper Prize for Fiction, Milward's collection of short stories haunts you in a way you don't expect. He explores the less visible aspects of the midwestern experience, specifically in Kansas—where its agrarian past comes into conflict with the harsh present reality of drugs, fundamentalism, and corporatism.
Congratulations to Mr. Milward for his ForeWord Firsts Spring 2012 Title win. A ForeWord review follows:
The ten stories in Andrew Malan Milward’s The Agriculture Hall of Fame are set in Kansas, “the center of the center of America.” And they are all, in their own unique ways, wild, hopeful, and devastating.
From “Quail Haven, 1989”: “Our father is a stark mosaic of his past: his maimed seven-year-old feet, dappled by a friend’s errant buckshot; the 8-to-5 creases framing his adulterous eyes; the broken-down All-State throwing arm, forever aching; his red swollen knuckles and Vietnam brain.” So much is communicated in so little—appropriate for a story that barely makes three pages but packs in a gut punch or two along the way.
“The title story unfurls from end to beginning. It’s a tender piece that allows readers, by the end, to fit all the pieces together themselves, a gritty puzzle of loss and love and the natural order of things. “From above, it all seemed so small and ordered: the way the land neatly divided into parallel tracts, the doll-sized simplicity of houses and buildings that looked like they’d never been disturbed, the sinuous roads, twisting but never desultory—always leading somewhere.”
In “The Antichrist Chronicles,” a lake disappears in a “town where everyone knew each other, but no one wanted to admit it.” It’s a place where “everybody’s crazy with looking for something.” Tom, the story’s narrator, is bowed under the weight of his poet-turned-Star-Trek-obsessed father and meth-and-anarchy-obsessed best friend, Juby. He is a boy stunned too young by the loss of important women in his life.
Milward makes elements in his fiction work—from the natural to the structural. In “The Cure for Cancer,” a relationship between a brother and sister deepens even as the sister is dying and snow blankets the world. At no point does this story become sentimental, trite, or predictable. And from “Two Back, 1973”: “Before he let it kill him, the barn saved his life.”
A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, Milward is a visiting writer at the University of Southern Mississippi. The Agriculture Hall of Fame won the Juniper Prize for Fiction from the University of Massachusetts Press.
S. Hope Mills
May 31, 2012
Now Accepting Summer Titles
ForeWord Firsts is currently accepting Summer 2012 Releases. Self-publishers and small and university presses representing authors are eligible to submit debut fiction titles published between July–September of this year. Books must arrive by October 10, and winners will be announced October 30.
Congratulations to Mr. Milward for his ForeWord Firsts Spring 2012 Title win. A ForeWord review follows:
The ten stories in Andrew Malan Milward’s The Agriculture Hall of Fame are set in Kansas, “the center of the center of America.” And they are all, in their own unique ways, wild, hopeful, and devastating.
From “Quail Haven, 1989”: “Our father is a stark mosaic of his past: his maimed seven-year-old feet, dappled by a friend’s errant buckshot; the 8-to-5 creases framing his adulterous eyes; the broken-down All-State throwing arm, forever aching; his red swollen knuckles and Vietnam brain.” So much is communicated in so little—appropriate for a story that barely makes three pages but packs in a gut punch or two along the way.
“The title story unfurls from end to beginning. It’s a tender piece that allows readers, by the end, to fit all the pieces together themselves, a gritty puzzle of loss and love and the natural order of things. “From above, it all seemed so small and ordered: the way the land neatly divided into parallel tracts, the doll-sized simplicity of houses and buildings that looked like they’d never been disturbed, the sinuous roads, twisting but never desultory—always leading somewhere.”
In “The Antichrist Chronicles,” a lake disappears in a “town where everyone knew each other, but no one wanted to admit it.” It’s a place where “everybody’s crazy with looking for something.” Tom, the story’s narrator, is bowed under the weight of his poet-turned-Star-Trek-obsessed father and meth-and-anarchy-obsessed best friend, Juby. He is a boy stunned too young by the loss of important women in his life.
Milward makes elements in his fiction work—from the natural to the structural. In “The Cure for Cancer,” a relationship between a brother and sister deepens even as the sister is dying and snow blankets the world. At no point does this story become sentimental, trite, or predictable. And from “Two Back, 1973”: “Before he let it kill him, the barn saved his life.”
A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, Milward is a visiting writer at the University of Southern Mississippi. The Agriculture Hall of Fame won the Juniper Prize for Fiction from the University of Massachusetts Press.
S. Hope Mills
May 31, 2012
Now Accepting Summer Titles
ForeWord Firsts is currently accepting Summer 2012 Releases. Self-publishers and small and university presses representing authors are eligible to submit debut fiction titles published between July–September of this year. Books must arrive by October 10, and winners will be announced October 30.
Contact
ForeWord Reviews
Kimber Bilby
231-933-3699
www.forewordreviews.com
Contact
Kimber Bilby
231-933-3699
www.forewordreviews.com
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