Thanks to everyone who attended in person and virtually, and special thanks to Joan Bauer and Kris Collins for hosting the wonderful, groundbreaking series. I’ve held both of my book launches at White Whale, so it’s always extra special to read there.
If you’re a Steelers Fan, you should check out Laurie Koozer Icano’s What Happens on Sunday. As someone who lived in Squirrel Hill for years, I also have a soft spot in my heart for Ellen Litman’s collection The Last Chicken in America.
Special thanks to Elden Lord Sal Pane for letting me know about this list. His debut novel Last Call in the City of Bridges is a perfect time capsule of the city circa 2008, and it’s of course so much more–a generational marker, a meditation on technology and connection.
And of course, thanks to Tessa from the East Liberty branch for including me. I wrote parts of EDOS at the Carnegie Library in Oakland, and I conducted research for my second novel there.
It is very, very hard for me to believe, but my debut collection is now two years old. Celebrate with me?
The book cover, which is a three-dimensional blueprint of a house.The author reading in front of a small crowd inside White Whale Books in Pittsburgh.The book on a shelf at the Carnegie Library, Allegheny Branch in Pittsburgh’s North Side.Blurbs and reviews: “[Yune] has a playful imagination, which he exhibits to fabulist effect in these stories that showcase his original takes on Korean immigrant assimilation. This is a sly, entertaining debut.” ―Publishers Weekly
“In his latest, the Mary McCarthy Prize winning collection of 18 short-stories, Impossible Children (Sarabande Books), novelist Robert Yune clearly gets [‘showing’], using place and well-rendered, self-aware characters to great effect, making for some of the most compelling reading I’ve done in a while.” ―Pittsburgh Quarterly
“Touching upon diverse genres including science fiction, the fairy tale, and the Gothic tale, the interconnected short stories comprising Impossible Children are impressively and deftly crafted literary gems.” ―Midwest Book Review
“Robert Yune’s magnificent and richly assured debut, Impossible Children, takes us across the United States, from New Jersey to Michigan to Alaska, portraying the lives of the itinerant, the wanderers, and the lost. Like Stuart Dybek’s Coasts of Chicago or Edward P. Jones’s Lost in the City, the stories―through a fully realized community―embody and evoke generations, history, and the history of war and migration. Many of the stories focus on the experience of Korean Americans, though one of the many striking aspects of this book is that it never stays within the borders of a single culture or community, but rather continuously expands across landscapes that are at once familiar and yet difficult to categorize in simple terms. This is a collection that is both precise―in language, in imagery and tone, revealing key moments in a life―and vast in geography, events, and the heart.” ―Paul Yoon, judge, April 2017
According to Encyclopedia Brittanica, a hairstreak butterfly is “any of a group of insects in the gossamer-winged butterfly family, Lycaenidae (order Lepidoptera), that are distinguished by hairlike markings on the underside of the wings.”
Congratulations to the finalists and their presses! It was truly an honor to judge this year’s fiction entries alongside Natanya Ann Pulley and Irene Yoon. For more info about the winner, tune into the virtual awards ceremony, which will be hosted by The Center for Fiction on June 23, 2021 at 7pm ET.
Special thanks to Cedric Rudolph and Janette Schafer for the Pushcart nomination! The Redefining Masculinity anthology is such a great project. I’m proud to be part of it and can’t wait until it’s out in the world.
I’m proud to announce that I’m a fiction judge for the CLMP’s Firecracker Awards, which “are given annually to celebrate books and magazines that make a significant contribution to our literary culture and the publishers that strive to introduce important voices to readers far and wide.”
I’m proud that one of my first publications was in the Canadian art journal Papirmass. When my novel was published, Kirsten helped share the news. Nearly a decade after my stories first appeared in Papirmass, my debut collection got published, and Bec and Kirsten were among the first to congratulate me and help spread the word.
Aside from being run by lovely people, Papirmass was one of the first art journals/subscription services to make art affordable and accessible, and they’ve supported so many up-and-coming artists and writers. Sadly, they’re closing down after 13 years. If you’re interested in buying a print (or packages of postcards, quote cards, or coloring cards), they’re having a limited-time archive sale. You can check it out here.
Interested in the research process, especially how to research an entire culture or nation? Want to hear some anecdotes about history, food, and the first time Koreans heard a piano? My research notes for Impossible Children are up today!