• Home
    • Print
    • Online
    • Shop
    • 2026 Chapbooks
    • CutBank 103
    • I Am Montana
  • Submit
    • Contests & Winners
    • Interviews
    • Storytelling
    • Burn Pile
  • About
Menu

CutBank Literary Magazine

The Literary Journal of the University of Montana
  • Home
  • The Journal
    • Print
    • Online
  • Bookstore
    • Shop
    • 2026 Chapbooks
    • CutBank 103
    • I Am Montana
  • Submit
  • Features
    • Contests & Winners
    • Interviews
    • Storytelling
    • Burn Pile
  • About

BURN PILE: Novelists as lawnmowers; Alice Munro on Canadian coins; Morning News' book brackets

March 25, 2014

"Donald Antrim is a push-mower novelist, while Rachel Kushner is a ride-mower novelist, and Jonathan Safran Foer cuts grass with an artisanal scythe."

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: A must-read Arundhati Roy profile; taboo disclosures in fiction; getting empathic

March 19, 2014

As she works on her second novel, the follow-up to 1997's Booker Prize-winning The God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy recounts decades of political engagement in a superb New York Times profile

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Seducing Gordon Lish; the book review sausage fest; punctuating the classics

February 28, 2014

The New Yorker's Page Turner blog publishes an essay about Gordon Lish's creative writing workshop methods. The essay, from a forthcoming anthology edited by n+1's Chad Harbach and written by Carla Blumenkranz, questions the value of writing to appeal, erotically or otherwise, to a lone figure.

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Letterheads above the rest; Longform for long drives; sleepless, post-Seattle

February 25, 2014

The CutBank crew is headed to AWP this week—perhaps you'd care to drop by our table at the book fair or help us celebrate Issue No. 80? And, if you're headed to Seattle, may we recommend bringing a few episodes of the Longform podcast with you on your journey?

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: When lit mags went online; fictionalizing your neighbors; profiling a Twitter aphorist

February 18, 2014

While D.J. Taylor unpacks the complications of translating real people into somewhat-fictionalized characters, a few of his examples sent us off on Internet goose hunts. For instance: After Charles Dickens based a David Copperfield character on an acquaintance, she asked him to re-characterize her fictional counterpart—and he did.

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Pining for lost books; what to do with pain; contest and fellowship deadlines

February 12, 2014

New York Daily News reported that more than 70,000 books were not returned to the Brooklyn Public Library system in 2012. That's more than seven times the number of e-books stocked in what the Los Angeles Times called the "Nation's first bookless public library system."

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Theory and insurrection at Yale; the many lives of the Chelsea Hotel; snooping in Sontag's e-mails

February 4, 2014

As the Chelsea hotel transitions from "a wide-open playground to a sleek, exclusive fortress for big money," Peter Conrad reviews Sherill Tippins' Inside the Dream Palace and traces the storied artists' residence from its idealistic roots to its demise.

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Maps and the authors who love them, writing the "State of the Union," and Al Gore jokes

January 28, 2014

The maps that shaped the texts of Le Guin, Faulkner, and Thoreau, and the writers who crafted one-liners and speeches for Obama, Clinton, and Gore

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: The "Literary Journal as Early Website" edition, famous bookplates, and the end of pagination

January 22, 2014

What did the websites for The Paris Review, the New York Review of Books, the Kenyon Review and The Atlantic look like in the late '90s?

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: "When TV dominates your winter break" edition

January 14, 2014

Persona poems about Friday Night Lights' Tim Riggins, Maya Angelou on "Oprah Oprah Oprah," and Bill Murray's apocryphal legacy

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Interrobangs, literary obituaries, and interviewing writers

January 10, 2014

What would Joyce Carol Oates ask Joyce Carol Oates?

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: New Year's Resolutions from Montana MFAs

January 7, 2014

Teach old dogs new tricks, literally. Prize creative collaboration. And eat fewer cheeseburgers.

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: The "When Books Read You!" Edition

January 3, 2014

At The New York Times, David Streitfeld profiles a few online businesses that track e-reader data, from Amazon and Barnes & Noble down to Scribd and Oyster. One of the article's focuses? How authors might use such data to inform their writing decisions.

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Ben Lerner on vandalism and art; Slate on unacknowledged acknowledgements; so long, "E"

January 1, 2014

"The letter E was born in the late 8th century BC in Athens, Greece," writes Joshua David Stein in his obituary for the fifth letter of the alphabet. Pay your respects, writers.

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: George Saunders and Charlie Brown, John Steinbeck's two Christmases

December 25, 2013

What Christmas special is George Saunders likely watching? "I used to love those Charlie Brown specials...I think if you are writing about life in our time, one way you can tell that story is that there are a bunch of people in our country desperately trying not to be forced down into that territory of humiliation."

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: C.S. Lewis's T.S. Eliot impression, Ploughshares' memoir tips, more

December 20, 2013

"My soul is a windowless facade." In a Poetry Fundation article about C.S. Lewis' ill-fated poetry efforts, Laura Mallonee writes that Lewis and friends once tried to prank T.S. Eliot with a mock-Modernist poem.

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Marianne Moore's car names, Dorothy Parker's "Lolita," and Boswell's booze diary

December 4, 2013

Moore's suggestions for what was eventually named the Ford Edsel included the Ford Silver Sword, Hurricane Hirundo, the Resilient Bullet, the Ford Fabergé, Mongoose Civique, and Turcotinga

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: In praise of polymaths, dogfooding, and tippling with Faulkner

November 11, 2013

"The key to a toddy, according to Faulkner, is that the sugar must be dissolved into a small amount of water before the whiskey is added"

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Sontag uncut, mockingbirds & museums, and rejecting Lolita

November 8, 2013

"As brilliant an essayist as she was, talking brilliantly was almost as significant a part of her job." Mark O'Connell reviews Sontag's 1978 Rolling Stone interview, now available in full

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features

BURN PILE: Saving daylight, writing with bears, Nonrequired Reading nod

November 3, 2013

"Until West Virginia adopted daylight saving time on a statewide basis in 1963 the 35-mile run between Steubenville, Ohio, and Moundsville, W. Va., traversed seven different local time standards."

Read More
In Burn Pile, Features
← Newer Posts Older Posts →
CutBank: Where the big fish lie... CutBank 
University of Montana
English Dept, LA 133
Missoula, MT 59812
Editor-In-Chief: editor.cutbank@gmail.com
Online Managing Editor: cutbankonline@gmail.com
Reviews & Interviews Editors: cutbankreview@gmail.com
Background Photo: Evgeni Evgeniev
© 2017 on Unsplash