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Titles 2019-Present

Paper Concert: A Conversation in the Round, Amy Wright

$16.95

Nautilus Awards, Gold Winner for "Lyric Prose"

In her opening, Amy Wright explains: “This essay anchors a central thread of dialogue over a dizzying divide. It weaves a decades-plus-worth of questions and answers from a range of discussions I’ve had with artists, activists, scientists, philosophers, physicians, priests, musicians, and other representatives of the human population. Some of them are famous, some will be, some should be—but all of them refract the light of the unknowable mystery of the self.”

Folding together conversations from a vast web of thinkers like Dorothy Allison, Rae Armantrout, Gerald Stern, Lia Purpura, Raven Jackson, Wendy Walters, Kimiko Hahn, Philanese Slaughter, and many, many more, Paper Concert depicts every individual as a collective in dire need of preservation. If this book is a paper concert, it is a symphony. Just pull up a chair and listen.

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Additional Info

Amy Wright has previously authored two poetry books, one collaboration, and six chapbooks. Her essays have won contests sponsored by London Magazine and Quarterly West. She has also received two Peter Taylor Fellowships to The Kenyon Review Writer’s Workshop, an Individual Artist Grant from the Tennessee Arts Commission, and a fellowship to Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Her essays appear in Brevity, Fourth Genre, Georgia Review, Kenyon Review, Ninth Letter, and elsewhere. 

PRAISE FOR PAPER CONCERT:

"Paper Concert is an invitation to slow down and consider complicated questions for which there are no absolute answers."
—"18 Books from Small Presses You'll Love," Buzzfeed

"Like a jazz artist, Wright works in an old tradition, but remakes it in a way wholly hers. She weaves together snippets and riffs from fifty-three other writers and makers to create something new....Ultimately, Paper Concert’s generosity of spirit makes me want to be a better person, to help other people more, to stop being so self-centered."
—"How the Light Gets In: An Interview with Amy Wright" by Joni Tevis, Fourth Genre, online

"In the book’s introduction, Wright—an English professor at Austin Peay State University—depicts a spider crafting a vast web as a metaphor for her writing process: '[A]n essayist in miniature, the spider had spun a line as tenuous as the one that starts the fabric of an idea.'. . . Like the skillful spider, Wright’s feat of web-spinning is courageous and bold. Her trust in each glistening thread before her challenges the reader, also, to trust where each one might lead into infinite connections."
—“A Symphony of Listeners,” Chapter 16

"What Wright has done is invent a new form of essay writing, one that highlights subjects ranging from art, nature, sex, and science. She puts the scientists, artists, and filmmakers she interviews in the spotlight."
Clarksville Online

"I agree with Stephen Corey, the former editor of The Georgia Review, who spotted the genius of this work early and published large sections of it, that the greatest strength of Paper Concert lies in its 'multi-voiced explorations' because 'we want to but cannot hold them all easily in the mind.' The questions are provocative and the answers prickly, funny, thoughtful, and wise by turns, and taken together, they tease us out of thought."
The Humble Essayist, online

“A delightful, insightful, and nourishing book. I listened in on old friends and learned about many artists and thinkers I’d never heard of but who I will run out and learn more about. Like the ambitious, miracle-making spider that opens this book, Amy Wright spins a web that connects an array of fields and fields of thought. Touching on art, philosophy, race, class, poetry, ecology, and more, this is a good guide for the present disasters, leading us back along the strong lines of Wright’s web to what is most beautiful and inspiring in the human endeavor.” 
—Eleni Sikelianos, author of What I Knew and Make Yourself Happy  

“Amy Wright’s inventive composition is a playful and profound interrogation of creativity, freedom and art. Bravo for Paper Concert!” 
—Amy Fusselman, author of Idiophone  

“When I had the opportunity to consider and publish a substantial portion of Amy Wright’s Paper Concert in The Georgia Review, I was momentarily baffled but then quickly astonished by her sui generis undertaking. The book’s multi-voiced explorations are its greatest strength: because we want to but cannot easily hold them all in mind, Paper Concert is a performance we must, and will, return to again and again.” 
—Stephen Corey, author of Startled at the Big Sound: Essays Personal, Literary, and Cultural 

Paper Concert absorbed me, filled out my blood, set me to harmonizing with the music it started in my mind’s ear. Amy Wright has created a new thing in these pages. Her chapters are as tensile as the spider silk she calls back to as a recurring image, and as tenacious in their gleam. This work feels especially important to me now, given the times we are living in. But what I like best about this manuscript is the feeling it gives me of not over-determining the path it’s on. I get the sense of co-discovery alongside Wright’s narrator, as though we’re walking through a dark woods together, making for a dimly-felt lightening of the way at a clearing just ahead.” 
—Joni Tevis, Author of The World Is On Fire  

“Part fragmented interview, part brilliant, compassionate, and downright urgent act of recording, Amy Wright’s Paper Concert  collects the music of cottonwoods, of giant extinct dragonflies, of freedom and feeling and fear, and— rather than pin them down, immobilized, into some curiosity cabinet—sets them into some kind of new air, radiant with some kind of new shine.  Braiding meditations on race, identity, intimacy, sexuality, and bodies both physical and spiritual, human and animal, Paper Concert is an exhilarating testament to the heart that drives the observant eye, the synergetic nature of art-making, and the need to contextualize our own obsessions via the articulations of myriad art and artists.  This book is not only wonderfully written, but also wonderfully ‘listened,’ and it stands, as Wright herself may say, as the momentary and memorable filling of ‘our own bottomless wells of desire.’  Indeed, it may be a sort of ‘survival manual’ for our times.”  
—Matthew Gavin Frank, author of Flight of the Diamond Smugglers