Acclaimed poets Julie Morrissy (author of Where, the Mile End) and Cathy Linh Che (author of Split) read for Stonecutter's Emerging Voices slot (curated by editor Katie Raissian) at the 11th Annual Irish Arts Center's PoetryFest, curated by Nick Laird.
Showing posts with label Stonecutter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stonecutter. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 5, 2019
Monday, May 21, 2018
Stonecutter at the Irish American Historical Society, May 22

Restless Souls: A Conversation with Dan Sheehan on his latest Novel
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
Doors 6.30PM ~ Panel Discussion 7PM
Please join Success in the City, the young professionals group of the AIHS, for a conversation with Dan Sheehan and special guests Belinda McKeon, Katie Raissian and Tracy O'Neill.
Dan Sheehan is an Irish fiction writer, journalist, and editor. His writing has appeared in The Irish Times, GQ, The Los Angeles Review of Books, Guernica, TriQuarterly, Words Without Borders, Electric Literature, and Literary Hub, among others. He lives in New York, where he is the Book Marks editor at Literary Hub and a contributing editor at Guernica Magazine, and was a recipient of the 2016 Center for Fiction Emerging Writers Fellowship. His debut novel, Restless Souls, will be available to purchase on the night.
Belinda McKeon is the acclaimed author of two novels, Solace and Tender. Solace won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize and was named the 2011 Irish Book of the Year. She lives in New York and teaches at Rutgers University.
Katie Raissian is a literary fiction and nonfiction editor at Grove Atlantic. She is also editor and publisher of Stonecutter, a print magazine of art and literature which focuses on publishing international writers and artists alongside US-based ones.
Tracy O'Neill is the author of The Hopeful, one of Electric Literature's Best Novels of 2015. The same year, she was named a National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree, long-listed for the Flaherty-Dunnan Prize, and was a Narrative Under 30 finalist.
The panel discussion wiill be followed by a book signing and reception.
AIHS & SITC Members: Free
Non Members: $10 / $15 at the door
Dan Sheehan is an Irish fiction writer, journalist, and editor. His writing has appeared in The Irish Times, GQ, The Los Angeles Review of Books, Guernica, TriQuarterly, Words Without Borders, Electric Literature, and Literary Hub, among others. He lives in New York, where he is the Book Marks editor at Literary Hub and a contributing editor at Guernica Magazine, and was a recipient of the 2016 Center for Fiction Emerging Writers Fellowship. His debut novel, Restless Souls, will be available to purchase on the night.
Belinda McKeon is the acclaimed author of two novels, Solace and Tender. Solace won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize and was named the 2011 Irish Book of the Year. She lives in New York and teaches at Rutgers University.
Katie Raissian is a literary fiction and nonfiction editor at Grove Atlantic. She is also editor and publisher of Stonecutter, a print magazine of art and literature which focuses on publishing international writers and artists alongside US-based ones.
Tracy O'Neill is the author of The Hopeful, one of Electric Literature's Best Novels of 2015. The same year, she was named a National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree, long-listed for the Flaherty-Dunnan Prize, and was a Narrative Under 30 finalist.
The panel discussion wiill be followed by a book signing and reception.
AIHS & SITC Members: Free
Non Members: $10 / $15 at the door
Sunday, October 29, 2017
11/4, 2PM Stonecutter presents "Emerging Voices, with Sally Wen Mao and Tara Bergin" at the Irish Arts Center
On Saturday, November 4, at 2PM, STONECUTTER returns to the Irish Arts Center's 9th annual PoetryFest to present a reading from award-winning and amazingly talented poets Sally Wen Mao, author of MAD HONEY SYMPOSIUM, and Tara Bergin, author of THIS IS YARROW and THE TRAGIC DEATH OF ELEANOR MARX.
The event will be introduced by our editor Katie Raissian and admission is FREE. Come join us! You can reserve your seats here.
The event will be introduced by our editor Katie Raissian and admission is FREE. Come join us! You can reserve your seats here.
Saturday, July 2, 2016
STONECUTTER in JUXTAPOZ
"Packed full of carefully curated writers and artists, the latest issue features everything from poems and short stories to photography, collage, and miniature paintings."
Our friends at JUXTAPOZ select some of their favorite highlights from Issue 5. See the full feature here: http://www.juxtapoz.com/news/books/stonecutter-issue-5/
Sunday, June 12, 2016
Friday, June 3, 2016
Issue 5 Launch, Friday June 17th at 61 Local in Brooklyn
Please join us to celebrate the launch of Issue 5 of Stonecutter at 61 Local in Brooklyn on Friday, June 17, from 7:30PM onwards. There will be booze! There will be issues! And there will be amazing readings from:
Elisa Wouk Almino ☆ Stefani Barber ☆ Chris Cheney ☆ Ted Dodson ☆ Mark Ford ☆ Renee Gladman ☆ Oli Hazzard ☆ Ali Power ☆ Samantha Zighelboim ☆ Sarah Wang
All are welcome! RSVP to the FB event page here.
Elisa Wouk Almino ☆ Stefani Barber ☆ Chris Cheney ☆ Ted Dodson ☆ Mark Ford ☆ Renee Gladman ☆ Oli Hazzard ☆ Ali Power ☆ Samantha Zighelboim ☆ Sarah Wang
All are welcome! RSVP to the FB event page here.
Labels: 61 Local, Ali Power, Brooklyn, Chris Cheney, Elisa Wouk Almino, Mark Ford, Oli Hazzard, Renee Gladman, Samantha Zighelboim, Sarah Wang, Stefani Barber, Stonecutter, Stonecutter Launch Party, Ted Dodson
Friday, May 27, 2016
Sally Rooney's essay from Issue 5 of STONECUTTER featured on LIT HUB

You can now read Dublin-based writer Sally Rooney's brilliant essay "America Imagines Itself: Ideology and the Box Office Superhero" (forthcoming in Issue 5 of STONECUTTER) in full here on LIT HUB.
Friday, May 20, 2016
STONECUTTER featured in BROKELYN
The good people at BROKELYN include STONECUTTER on their list of "10 Brooklyn Literary Magazines That Will Publish Your Work" with this awesome write up:
"STONECUTTER is nearing the launch of their fifth issue of their beautiful print magazine. They are young but active, compiling biannual editions of fiction, nonfiction, drama, interviews, translations and visual art. If you’d like to get your hands on a printed copy, you can order it online, or at Book Culture, Greenlight Bookstore, McNally Jackson, and St. Mark’s Bookshop."
Thanks, guys!
Read the full list here.
"STONECUTTER is nearing the launch of their fifth issue of their beautiful print magazine. They are young but active, compiling biannual editions of fiction, nonfiction, drama, interviews, translations and visual art. If you’d like to get your hands on a printed copy, you can order it online, or at Book Culture, Greenlight Bookstore, McNally Jackson, and St. Mark’s Bookshop."
Thanks, guys!
Read the full list here.
Thursday, December 31, 2015
STONECUTTER's Katie Raissian's Best Poetry Collection of 2015 for LITERARY HUB
Lit Hub's Adam Fitzgerald asked our publisher Katie Raissian to select her favorite collection of 2015. She chose LIGHTING THE SHADOW by Rachel Eliza Griffiths:
Lauded by Pulitzer Prize winner Tracy K. Smith as 'rare and revelatory' and by National Book Award winner Terrance Hayes as 'a book of spellbinding radiance,' Lighting the Shadow journeys us across vast landscapes of memory and forgetting, of violent histories and myth, of racist brutalities past and present. Drawing on myriad influences—from Kahlo to Jarrell, Darwish to Rukeyser, Brautigan to Clifton—Griffiths expertly examines American and world history through a dually personal and literary lens, exploring what it means to be woman, body, voice, victim, witness... These are live-wire poems that burn and lament, that speak to history’s numerousness, its silences and its voids, and transform those silences into song.
Read the full article here.
Lauded by Pulitzer Prize winner Tracy K. Smith as 'rare and revelatory' and by National Book Award winner Terrance Hayes as 'a book of spellbinding radiance,' Lighting the Shadow journeys us across vast landscapes of memory and forgetting, of violent histories and myth, of racist brutalities past and present. Drawing on myriad influences—from Kahlo to Jarrell, Darwish to Rukeyser, Brautigan to Clifton—Griffiths expertly examines American and world history through a dually personal and literary lens, exploring what it means to be woman, body, voice, victim, witness... These are live-wire poems that burn and lament, that speak to history’s numerousness, its silences and its voids, and transform those silences into song.
Read the full article here.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Issue Four of STONECUTTER in THE REVIEW REVIEW
"Stonecutter reminds us that we don’t have to allocate so much time to reading in order to find something gripping, sumptuous, or idiosyncratic...The unifying theme that I saw recurring through each piece was this sense of stillness, an exploration of defining an introspective silence. And with autumn just around the corner, we need to recognize more periods of silence and how we can fill them....what speaks to me about Stonecutter is its call to redefine silence in our lives. Every piece finds a way to make each quiet moment seem like it’s bursting....With each work finding a new way of reaching a calmness and clarity, Stonecutter achieves a full rating easily."
Thanks to Monique Briones and The Review Review for this incredible and insightful write-up of Issue 4!
Thanks to Monique Briones and The Review Review for this incredible and insightful write-up of Issue 4!
Friday, October 16, 2015
Join STONECUTTER at the Irish Arts Center for the 7th Annual PoetryFest!
Saturday, November 7 at 2pm
Stonecutter presents Emerging Voices
with readings from
Lucy Ives, Elaine Feeney, Connie Roberts, & Wendy Xu

Irish Arts Center (IAC): 553 West 51 Street, New York, NY 10019
See the full list of events at: http://www.irishartscenter.org/literature/poetryfest_2015.html
Friday, July 24, 2015
STONECUTTER at the NYC Poetry Festival on Governor's Island this weekend!
Visit our table this weekend 7/25-26
at the New York City Poetry Festival on Governor's Island!
Thursday, July 24, 2014
DAZED AND CONFUSED names STONECUTTER one of their TOP TEN MAGS!
The good folks at UK powerhouse DAZED have named STONECUTTER one of the "top ten mags set to keep you in the know." Read the full list here
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Maria Takolander's "Three Sisters" featured in ELECTRIC LITERATURE'S RECOMMENDED READING
We're big fans of Electric Literature and their fantastic publication, Recommended Reading, which is devoted to promoting short fiction. So you can only imagine how thrilled we were when RR editor-in-chief Halimah Marcus approached SC editor and publisher Katie Raissian about guest editing for them. The issue, #111, published today, features the incredible story "Three Sisters" by Maria Takolander. Originally published in Australia by Text Publishing, the story first appeared in the US in Issue Four of Stonecutter. We are so delighted that Recommended Reading love it as much as we do! Read the story here.
Issue No. 111
Katie Raissian
Publisher and Editor-in-Chief, Stonecutter
Issue No. 111
EDITOR’S NOTE
A singular piece of contemporary fiction, Maria Takolander’s stunning Chekhov-inspired story, “Three Sisters” is the perfect introduction to an incredible new international writer.
Taken from Takolander’s sensational debut collection, The Double (Text, 2013), and published for the first time in the USA in issue four of Stonecutter, “Three Sisters” brings us into the decaying, swampy environs of an unnamed rural Australian roadhouse. There reside immigrant sisters Oksana, Svetlana, and Tatiana, who silently yet steadily eke out their days amidst the marshlands. The tedium of their daily lives is barely interrupted by the characters who invade their surroundings—an obese, clownish truck driver, and an old, fragile, foreigner; Lear and his fool.
Drawing on Chekhov’s fire-ravaged and eventually abandoned town, the world of Takolander’s story has also been transformed by some unknown force—by nature or economic failure, diaspora or disinterest. We are never told exactly what. Nonetheless, we fully enter it, navigated by an omniscient voice—something of a tour guide to this fable-like realm—who, in sweeping panoramas, commands that we “look” and “see” everything, lest it dissolve or remain forever invisible. And so, we visit the town’s decaying museum and its abandoned playground, consider its sprawling mangroves and roving gangs of mosquitoes, and bear witness to an otherwise forgotten place.
When we finally cross the threshold of the roadhouse and meet the sisters, they are quite unlike Chekhov’s vocal women. Takolander’s creations are taciturn, mythic creatures; weathered statues amidst total ruin. And though the sisters are “spoken for” by the story’s narrator, and “spoken at” by the two male figures in the tale, they are still formidable presences—business people, the last vestiges of an area that nature and poverty have otherwise vanquished.
Takolander’s stories astonish. They show ordinary lives, the marginalized, our sisters, whose histories have been forgotten or remain untold: the men with their bloody steaks, the phantom on the swing, the shadows of birds with their pickaxe heads. To see and feel and recognize these characters and their silences, to be brought into a strange, nameless place and, having peered at the world from both within and beyond the frame, to come away from it with knowledge and understanding—this is the remarkable gift that a Takolander story gives to us.
Katie Raissian
Publisher and Editor-in-Chief, Stonecutter
Friday, June 20, 2014
STONECUTTER featured in POETS & WRITERS
Thanks to the good folks at Poets & Writers and to Travis Kurowski for including Stonecutter in their Literary MagNet column in the July/August issue of P&W. A fantastic roundup of some journals with a focus on international work in translation, including Osiris, Literary Review, Two Lines, and Hayden's Ferry Review. Honored to be among them. Read the article here.
Saturday, May 24, 2014
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
NATHANIEL TARN READS FOR STONECUTTER, Thursday May 9th
Please join Stonecutter Journal for our first ever solo reading, featuring the incredible and esteemed writer Nathaniel Tarn. The event will be held in the upstairs mezzanine at 61 Local in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, on Thursday, May 9th from 7:30PM onwards. Admission is free and open to the public.
Nathaniel Tarn is a poet, translator, editor, critic/essayist and anthropologist. He has some thirty-five publications in these disciplines—the latest of which are SELECTED POEMS :1950-2000 (Wesleyan); SCANDALS IN THE HOUSE OF BIRDS: PRIESTS AND SHAMANS ON LAKE ATITLAN, GUATEMALA (Marsilio); INS AND OUTS OF THE FOREST RIVERS (New Directions). Research Travel in all continents and in all the Fifty States has informed his work from the beginning. He lives Northwest of Santa Fe, New Mexico, with amateur interests in watching Birds and Plants, the Running of a diminutive garden and a spartan bird restaurant (also a hummer feeder), Manifold Infantile Collecting, American Folk Art, Opera, Aviation history, XIXth century Romanticism and Marxism.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Stonecutter at the Shurka Bazaar this Sunday, April 14!
We're extremely excited to be participating in this weekend’s Shurka Bazaar, on Madison Avenue (between 23rd and 26th streets). Between 12 and 5PM, the entire area will be transformed into a traditional Persian Bazaar; with vendors selling textiles, food, crafts and lots more. We will be there with our current and back issues, as well as posters and totes. Stop by and see us!
Monday, February 18, 2013
HIGHER ARC NODS TO STONECUTTER
Thanks to Mieke Chew of the incredible HIGHER ARC magazine for this recent piece on STONECUTTER:

Stonecutter: A Journal of Art and Literature
Stonecutter is first off the rank for our new series of ‘Nods’ (rather than ‘Salutes’) for magazines that are alive and kicking!
I met Stonecutter’s editors at the Brooklyn Book Festival in July 2012, and fell for them, so to speak, straight away. I was first introduced to Stonecutter, when Will (HA Associate Editor) bought a copy online. He’d found Stonecutter via the writer Eliot Weinberger, who is a contributor (his daughter Anna Della Subin is an associate editor). I’d been a reader and admirer of Weinberger’s work for a while, and had had a great time when I’d met him at the Melbourne Writer’s Festival in 2011. (Note: his most recent book of essays, Oranges and Peanuts for Sale, is recommended strongly. If you’re interested, he’s also the author of the hilarious and witty slams of Republican nightmares: George Bush Jnr and Mitt Romney, which went viral on the London Review of Books website. But enough about Eliot.)
Stonecutter was founded in 2011 by editor-in-chief Katie Raissian; associate editors Ava Lehrer and Anna Della Subin; art editor Zara Katz and advisory editor Kate Abbey-Lambertz. An honourable mention must also go to Katie’s very charming and talented husband, artist Christopher Russell, who is responsible for the incredible contributor portraits in each issue (below) and these amazing posters. The publication is beautifully printed and very thoughtfully edited, featuring impressive contributions with a very special attention paid to poetry and translation. Editor Katie also writes notes to customers who buy Stonecutter online, a very nice touch, which sums up well Stonecutter’s intimate and warm approach to independent publishing.
To give you a direct taste of what I’m talking about, I quote the first paragraph of Katie’s ‘Letter from the Editor’ from Issue One,
It is now available at Readings St Kilda; Readings Carlton; The Hill of Content; and Paperback Books. Stock is selling fast so get in quick (or buy online here if you want a note from Katie – who wouldn’t?)
~ Mieke Chew




http://www.higherarc.com/blog/
HIGHER ARC NODS TO STONECUTTER
by mieke

Stonecutter: A Journal of Art and Literature
Stonecutter is first off the rank for our new series of ‘Nods’ (rather than ‘Salutes’) for magazines that are alive and kicking!
I met Stonecutter’s editors at the Brooklyn Book Festival in July 2012, and fell for them, so to speak, straight away. I was first introduced to Stonecutter, when Will (HA Associate Editor) bought a copy online. He’d found Stonecutter via the writer Eliot Weinberger, who is a contributor (his daughter Anna Della Subin is an associate editor). I’d been a reader and admirer of Weinberger’s work for a while, and had had a great time when I’d met him at the Melbourne Writer’s Festival in 2011. (Note: his most recent book of essays, Oranges and Peanuts for Sale, is recommended strongly. If you’re interested, he’s also the author of the hilarious and witty slams of Republican nightmares: George Bush Jnr and Mitt Romney, which went viral on the London Review of Books website. But enough about Eliot.)
Stonecutter was founded in 2011 by editor-in-chief Katie Raissian; associate editors Ava Lehrer and Anna Della Subin; art editor Zara Katz and advisory editor Kate Abbey-Lambertz. An honourable mention must also go to Katie’s very charming and talented husband, artist Christopher Russell, who is responsible for the incredible contributor portraits in each issue (below) and these amazing posters. The publication is beautifully printed and very thoughtfully edited, featuring impressive contributions with a very special attention paid to poetry and translation. Editor Katie also writes notes to customers who buy Stonecutter online, a very nice touch, which sums up well Stonecutter’s intimate and warm approach to independent publishing.
To give you a direct taste of what I’m talking about, I quote the first paragraph of Katie’s ‘Letter from the Editor’ from Issue One,
A traveller on a road in 8th century China found a poem carved into a stone. Meditating on his discovery, he found many poems to speak to the mountain. A millennia of voices and experience flooded to him. The stone and word combined. The poet realized his work: his landscape held the key to his poetry. A sharing of humanity in stone.’Stonecutter, now in it’s third issue, has already published the likes of Christopher Middleton, John Asbury, Sarah Holland-Batt, LK Holt, Tankred Dorst, Stuart Krimko and Lucy Ives.
It is now available at Readings St Kilda; Readings Carlton; The Hill of Content; and Paperback Books. Stock is selling fast so get in quick (or buy online here if you want a note from Katie – who wouldn’t?)
~ Mieke Chew





http://www.higherarc.com/blog/
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