Subscription/Back Issue Deal

We’re happy to introduce a discounted subscription price for submitters. If you submit a manuscript, you can get a one-year subscription to The Journal for $11.00.

A discounted price of $6.00 is also available for back issues.

Go to Submishmash to order, or mail a check made out to The Journal to

The Journal
The Ohio State University
Department of English
164 W. 17th Avenue
Columbus, OH 43210

The Journal on Writers Talk

Tory and Alex will be discussing the upcoming issue of The Journal and the changing landscape of publishing on Writers Talk.

Broadcast times:
Monday, July 11, 7 pm., WCRS Radio, 98.3 & 102.1 FM
Wednesday, July 13, 8:00 p.m. WCBE Radio, Central Ohio’s NPR station, 90.5 FM
or
Check out previous episodes of Writers Talk here.

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Review of The Great Night by Chris Adrian

It is a necessity of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream that the human characters stumbling through the play’s ethereal events be interchangeable. Their compatibility serves the comedic as well as thematic aims of the drama, calling attention to the flippancy of attraction while also challenging the very notion of true love. Chris Adrian’s newest novel, The Great Night, begins on a comparable note of character similitude, his three human protagonists all heading toward the same party “at nearly the same time” via the same San Francisco park, each of them severely “brokenhearted.” Subsequently, the three mortals find themselves entangled in the same supernatural catastrophe, a calamity rooted in the grief of Queen Titania, a fairy goddess suffering the recent loss of both a mortal boy she’d come to love and her husband Oberon. The immediate consequence of her grief is the freeing of Puck, who in Adrian’s telling is a mischievous spirit ravenous for mayhem.

So begins Chris Adrian’s impressively re-imagined version of Shakespeare’s original comedy, and so begin his attempts to bring these two worlds together, to twist the storylines into a tightly-woven, evocative braid. Yet, as Adrian’s novel is no drama, it does something Shakespeare’s play does not, which is to quickly move toward the particular and specific. Adrian devotes the majority of his three-hundred-plus pages to demonstrating exactly how the human protagonists (Molly, Will, and Henry) are distinct people suffering distinct pains. That character development takes the form of lengthy sections of flashback, all intended to lead the reader up to the current moment of crisis while subtly revealing the ways in which Molly, Will, and Henry are tangentially connected. The individual histories move forward beautifully and effortlessly, coloring characters in a way that drama can’t and only novels can, and at the same time providing a welcomed, weighty counterbalance to the novel’s sometimes comic nature. These characters suffer not only in the fairy world, but in the human world as well, and so the stakes are as emotionally tangible as they are poignant.

If there is a downside to Adrian’s approach it is felt in the dramatic present of the story, the actual Great Night, where those significant pasts remain submerged beneath the drunken stupor of fairy liquor and magic. Molly comes closest in allowing her anguish to influence or affect the events of that strange evening, but on the whole she, Will, and Henry bump into one another without understanding or revelation. They are the pawns of the fairy world and despite the lengths Adrian goes to in depicting their troublesome back stories, their pains prove trivial in the face of the supernatural crisis at hand. Like Shakespeare’s transposable depictions, Adrian’s structure comes at the cost of character authenticity. The playwright’s comedy depends on the exploitation of Lysander and Demetrius, caricatures of human desire, and so they are doomed to blank distinction as Athenian men. Similarly, the present-tense sections of The Great Night, in order to strike a humorous tone, belie and debase the complexity of its human protagonists. Adrian seems to undo his own gorgeous work, the drama-in-progress diminishing the characters he spent so much time giving full form to.

What The Great Night truly seems to be, rather than a re-envisioned Shakespearean play, is a beautiful, ghostly meditation on grief and loss. And this is why Adrian’s finest work is found with Titania, the goddess whose pain is the most gripping amongst the players. What Adrian accomplishes with this demanding, majestic fairy queen is to reaffirm a bit of pride in the power and force of human love. Titania’s own flashbacks (to the hospital when her child was sick, to the moments when she and Oberon fought over the boy, to the boy’s tragic, mortal end) first appeared as a masterfully crafted, stand-alone story, called “A Tiny Feast,” in The New Yorker and highlighted the best of this novel. The scenes in and of themselves are intentionally familiar in their sentimental circumstance, which affords Adrian the opportunity for character nuance and allows him to make a complex, intimate woman out of a distant, removed mythical figure. Titania is, of course, humbled by her loss, but Adrian’s careful attention to the flavor of Titania’s naïve agony renders this recognizable situation new and fascinating. An audience can disregard the fall of the mighty and instead empathize and commune with a bereaved deity.

And that is conceivably Adrian’s ultimate aim: to explore the liminal space between grief and salvation, the shadows between loss and redemption. The world of Buena Vista Park on this night is a mixture of the tangible and the airy. It is a passing landscape that will go with the moon and fade with the hours. It is a place both humans and fairies must venture into and out of, and Adrian is in full control of that reality. Perhaps it is his background as a fellow in pediatric hematology-oncology or perhaps it is his previous experience in writing about hospitals and doomed youth (A Better Angel, The Children’s Hospital), but regardless of how, Chris Adrian understands better than most the notion that all love is precious, and mortal or immortal, one always suffers the cost.

Chris Adrian. The Great Night. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Hardcover, 309 pp., $26.00.

Welcome to The Journal

We are excited to launch our brand-new website in conjunction with the publication of issue 35.1, due out later this summer. With this redesign, we hope to further showcase the excellent poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction published in our pages. In addition, we will launch our first exclusively online issue in October, augmenting our publication schedule, which will now include two online issues in the fall and spring, and two print issues in the winter and summer. As a part of out redesign, we invite you to take a sneak peak at select content from our upcoming Spring/Summer Issue.

Even as we take these new steps, we remain committed to the rich history of our publication. We are grateful for the continued support of our readers and contributors as we begin to move forward into an exciting new era in the publication of The Journal.

Tory and Alex, The Editors

The Journal’s Annual Short Story Contest (Deadline June 1st)

The Journal, the literary magazine of The Ohio State University, would like to announce the sixth annual Journal Short Story Contest.

This year’s judge is Lee K. Abbott, author of the short story collections Dreams of Distant Lives, Strangers in Paradise, Love is the Crooked Thing, The Heart Never Fits Its Wanting, and Living After Midnight. His latest collection of stories, All Things, All at Once, was published by Norton in Spring 2006.

The Journal Short Story Contest offers $1000 and publication of the winning story in The Journal. All styles, subject matter, and forms are welcome. Simultaneous submissions are accepted provided immediate notice is given if work is accepted elsewhere. Please submit only previously unpublished fiction up to 7500 words. All manuscripts will be considered for publication.

Deadline for postmark of manuscripts is now June 1st.
A reading fee of $10 must accompany each manuscript (please make checks payable to The Journal).
Manuscripts should be submitted anonymously with the title of the work and all contact information listed on a separate cover letter. Please be sure to also list your title on the manuscript itself. Manuscripts will not be returned. Please number pages and double-space all entries.
Notification will be in late October.

Send previously unpublished story along with reading fee to:
Short Story Contest
The Journal
Department of English
The Ohio State University
164 West 17th Avenue
Columbus, OH 43210

OR

Go to thejournal.submishmash.com and click the link for The Journal Short Story Contest.