LIVE this Thursday, June 22-Paris Lit Up! Featuring Nancy Stohlman on writing, rejection, staying curious, and The Rapture

The PLU Open Mic has been welcoming performers every Thursday since 2012, and takes place at the historic Culture Rapide bar, in the 20th arrondissement of Paris.

Sign-up opens at 8pm, we aim to start for 8.30/9pm.
We welcome all languages, all levels of experience and all artistic genres: from beginners to legends, poetry to performance art.

Culture Rapide, 103 Rue Julien Lacroix, 75020, PARIS.

FYI
The line 11 will be closed after 10pm on Thursdays until September 2023. The PLU weekly Open Mic Night at 8:30pm at Culture Rapide will continue! Take bus 47 to Republique or line 2 to Nation.

See you soon!

Facebook: Click here

Instagram:  Click here

Paris Lit Up Interviews Nancy Stohlman

Who are you and who do you write for?

Hey friends! I’m Nancy Stohlman, writer, flash fiction aficionado, performer, professor, community organizer and sometimes pirate. I’m a huge fan of the surreal and the absurd, and for many years I’ve been writing at the intersection between flash fiction and the novel. After the Rapture, my new flash novel, is the culmination of that curiosity. 

I was a featured guest at Paris Lit Up in 2018 (you might remember I read carnival-themed stories accompanied by Nick Busheff on a toy piano!), so I am thrilled to be returning.

When did you first know you wanted to be a writer?

I have a very distinct memory: I was 10 years old, sitting in the bleachers at my brother’s soccer game when I told my mother I was going to be an author when I grew up. I used the word author. After my first few years of voracious reading, I had just realized that someone must have the job of writing all these books! I knew it had to be me.

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

Honestly, I love Bukowski’s advice: if it doesn’t come bursting out of you in spite of everything… don’t do it. Like any relationship, the creative relationship will break your heart wide open, and it will fill you in ways you couldn’t be filled otherwise, but only if you surrender. Surrender to the stories (poems, plays, etc.) that want to be written. Surrender to your own unique process, which may look very different from other people’s journeys. Step into the arena with the muse but bring your long-term vision: you are embarking on a life-long relationship that will inevitably go up and down and all around but will absolutely transform you.

How do you react to criticism of your work?

When I was a younger writer, I used to eat banana splits every time I got a rejection, which was my fun way to “anti” celebrate the harsh reality of putting yourself out there. But actual nuanced criticism? It depends. It’s so important to be in the right frame of mind, receiving it from someone you trust or who at least understands what you are trying to do with your work (as opposed to what THEY would do). Not all criticism is equal or even valid. It’s easy to get into people-pleasing mode when it comes to feedback, so there is a very discerning dance that must occur. I try to pay attention to two specific reactions: the instant yes and the instant no. The instant yes is when a piece of feedback really “hits” and you feel the yes. The instant no is the one that triggers you. Both of those tend to hold heat for me and deserve a space of further contemplation.

A lot of young writers think critique should be painful; they let me know they can ”handle it” or just give it to me and then they brace themselves like a linebacker. I think critique can also be gentle and inspirational and enlivening. It can be like your best friend telling you an important truth. It can be like a brainstorming session that leaves you excited. So I attempt to put critique, both the giving and receiving, in that frame of mind.

And when it’s not, I recommend banana splits.

What do you miss most about the pre-pandemic world?

The innocence. The price of eggs. Hugs without hesitation. How the word “pandemic” used to sound like science fiction. Writing satire that would never come true. That moment when we all went silent and played balcony concerts for each other.

How has your work developed over the last 12 months?

I spent a good deal of 2022 working closely with Mason Jar Press to polish After the Rapture (which, by the way, I wrote pre-pandemic). Which meant I had to practice what I preach (see: critiques above) and learn about myself and my work through the eyes of others I trust. It’s a gift, really.

I also declared 2021 to be The Year of the Student, meaning I was going to actively say yes to opportunities to be a student again. That went over so well that it continued through 2022, and now for the first time in 15 years I am meeting regularly with a writing group again.

In general, I notice my writing is becoming less absurd and comical and more surreal and abstract, playing in a gamut that reaches from Pop Lit all the way to abstract expressionism. My heart has always wanted to get more experimental, so this is an exciting time for me. You can see the beginnings of that shift happening already in After the Rapture, especially the ending.

What does the future look like to you? 

In my dream scenario I’m living close to the ocean, speaking Spanish, writing my best work ever, in crazy love, and having many adventures—including my group writing retreats in France, Colorado, Iceland, and Costa Rica. I might even shave my head (again). I’m going to have a big birthday this year (gulp!), so it feels like I’m about to start a new phase of my life, the phase where I might finally have all my shit together while I’m still young enough to enjoy it.

What importance has other people’s art had for you and your creative process?

Other people’s art is why I get up in the morning: Those I’ve met and those I haven’t. And I enjoy engaging with all mediums of art as writing inspiration. I can watch an orchestra performance and puzzle out the sticky ending to a story. I can spend time alone at a museum and find characters in paint strokes. I can wander a strange city and find words in unfamiliar architecture. I adore graffiti. Honestly, I feel lucky to be an artistic person because I am/we are oriented to see beauty–not just the “beautiful” beauty, but the sacrilegious, the tragic, the sordid. Maybe we need a better word than “beauty” to speak about these profound experiences of engaging with the world.

Have you looked at different ways of expressing yourself or taken on a new medium?

Always. I consider myself an amateur in many artistic arenas, and over the years I’ve gotten to be: a lounge singer, an actress, a fashion model, a photographer, an activist; I’ve written and performed an avant-garde operetta, designed and produced short films, music videos, book trailers. I’ve written a few songs. I’m learning how to make Cajun food. Honestly every time I cross something off my list, I add five more things.

KEEP READING ON THE PARIS LIT UP WEBSITE

Nancy Stohlman featuring at SpokenWord Paris, June 19th! Monday’s Theme: RAPTURE

SpokenWord Paris is one pole of a nomadic tribe of people who love poetry, writing and song. A home for creatives and lost anglophones. We do an open mic night called SpokenWord every Monday at the Cave Cafe, Paris.

Sign up at 8pm, poetry begins at 8.45pm underground in the cave. Hope to see you there! 

Cave Café. 134 rue Marcadet, 75018. Métro Lamrack Caulaincourt (line 12)

For more information: Click Here

Nancy Stohlman is the author of six books including After the Rapture (2023), Madam Velvet’s Cabaret of Oddities (2018), The Vixen Scream and Other Bible Stories (2014), The Monster Opera (2013), Searching for Suzi: a flash novel (2009), and Going Short: An Invitation to Flash Fiction (2020), winner of the 2021 Reader Views Gold Award and re-released in 2022 as an audiobook. Her work has been anthologized widely, appearing in the Norton anthology New Micro: Exceptionally Short Fiction and The Best Small Fictions 2019, as well as adapted for both stage and screen. She teaches at the University of Colorado Boulder and holds workshops and retreats around the world. Find out more at http://www.nancystohlman.com

I LOVE YOUR… uh… BOOK!: Jonathan Bluebird Montgomery on Nancy Stohlman’s “After the Rapture”

You have NEVER read a review until you've read a review from Jonathan Montgomery: it's avant garde and funny--totally fulfills my Andy Warhol Factory days fantasy... THANK YOU JONNY!
OH...and the second printing is in, so I have books again!
Hit me up xo

By Jonathan Montgomery

“Yeah, I was writing this at a party. And yeah I was liberally sipping a tall bourbon & Dr. Pepper while I was. And yeah Nancy was right there next to me pretty much the whole time. 

And yeah okay yeah yeah it’s taken me like two months to actually finish writing this. Cuz ya know things.

Is this what the publishing team at Mason Jar Press envisioned when they sent me an advanced copy of Nancy’s new flash novella After the Rapture months ago? I can’t say I’ve ever really understood the minds of professional publishers, but if they are expecting me to convince anyone to buy a copy of this book cuz of my record of punctual and objective tastemaking then they will probably be disappointed. 

This is the Boulder Poetry Scene after all. All we do is talk about how great our friends’ writing is, and that’s the way we like it. And Nancy is my good friend. And her writing is real great. 

Anyway, it was late February and we were at Rob Geisen’s “Under the Moose” reading, the erratically scheduled, invite-only, deeep underground lit happening we’ve been doing for like 1.3 decades. This time was at Rob’s daughter’s place in Denver where he was dog/house sitting, and Kona Morris was there visiting from LA, and Krystal Summers was there, and Leah Rogin-Roper and her husband Roper were there too…”

Continue reading

OMAHA: Thursday, March 30 at The Bookworm: Nancy Stohlman will sign “After the Rapture”

See you there!! xoxo

The Bookworm in Omaha

What: Nancy Stohlman will sign After the Rapture

When: Thursday, March 30th at 6:00 p.m.

Where: The Bookworm, 2501 So. 90th St., Ste. 111

About:

In a world just slant from our own, the people are waiting for the Rapture. But what they get is not at all what they thought it would be. Whether they’re pilgrimaging to the Very First Kentucky Fried Chicken, living in life-sized Barbie houses, taking the Marriott staff hostage, trading Candy Corn on Wall Street or draining Loch Ness to “find out the goddamn truth once and for all,” there is a familiar sort of desperation in this post-Rapture existence. In moments you will laugh at the absurdity of their world, and in other moments the darkness will feel all too familiar…

Nancy Stohlman is the author of six books including Going Short: An Invitation to Flash Fiction, winner of the 2021 Reader Views Gold Award. Her fiction includes After the RaptureMadam Velvet’s Cabaret of OdditiesThe Vixen Scream and Other Bible StoriesThe Monster Opera, and Searching for Suzi: a flash novel. Her work has been anthologized widely, appearing in the Norton anthology New Micro: Exceptionally Short Fiction and The Best Small Fictions 2019, as well as adapted for both stage and screen. She teaches at the University of Colorado Boulder and around the world.

The Bookworm Home Page

Facebook Event Page