The O. Henry Prize Stories 2015

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The O. Henry Prize Stories 2015 Page 41

by Laura Furman


  —

  Elizabeth Strout was born in Portland, Maine, and is the author of four books of fiction. Amy and Isabelle won the Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize and also the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction. It was also shortlisted for the Orange Prize in England and the PEN/Faulkner Award. She is also the author of Abide with Me and Olive Kitteridge, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 2009, and most recently The Burgess Boys, nominated for the Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction. She lives in New York City.

  Emma Törzs, “Word of Mouth”

  Here is the order in which some of the elements of this story came together, over about a year of writing it on and off.

  1. I had a job, finally, at a new restaurant called—well, it wasn’t called the Whole Hog, but aside from that, the first paragraph of the story is completely true. I waitressed three months at a barbecue restaurant doomed for failure, and many strange things happened to me there, none of which made it into this story. I took the setting only, how beautiful it was and how absurd.

  2. I was (am) fascinated by the idea of the “missing girl.” But what had happened to mine? Answering this question was one of the main thematic challenges in the story and I went back and forth a lot. In one draft she was eaten by a mountain lion.

  3. My friend told me about a landlady he’d had, whose situation I stole for Miranda nearly in its entirety. The real Miranda was a pianist and woke my friend playing concertos on the piano in the living room, and in fact it was this detail that most impressed me, and that I most wanted to use in a story, but the piano ended up a clumsy metaphor for God-knows-what and was cut.

  4. The grandmother appeared only in the final draft. I knew the narrator had “run” from something, and through much of the writing I was hoping I could get away with being mysteriously vague about what exactly she’d run from. But more often than not, vagueness is just an amateur attempt at creating tension, and in order to finish the story I knew I had to decide what exactly had happened to my narrator. Enter Grandma.

  —

  Emma Törzs was born in Massachusetts in 1987 and received her MFA from the University of Montana, Missoula. Her stories have appeared in journals such as Ploughshares, The Cincinnati Review, Narrative, and Salt Hill. She teaches and waits (tables) in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

  Vauhini Vara, “I, Buffalo”

  When I first moved to San Francisco after college, more than ten years ago, I was captivated by the city’s beauty. I liked to take long walks and, on one of these walks, came across the bison paddock in Golden Gate Park. Bison! In the middle of a city! What? I tried, back then, to write a story about a girl who takes walks around San Francisco; I sent her to the bison paddock, among other favorite places of mine. The problem was that nothing much happened in the story. Years later, in graduate school, I was working on a new story about a woman, Sheila, whose life is falling apart. Sheila happened to live in San Francisco, and when I thought about how she might fill her days, after having lost her job, I remembered the earlier protagonist’s trip to the bison paddock and thought it was exactly the sort of thing Sheila would do. I didn’t realize until later that the experience would end up at the emotional center of “I, Buffalo.”

  —

  Vauhini Vara was born in Regina, Saskatchewan, in Canada, and was raised mostly in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, and in suburbs of Oklahoma City and Seattle. She is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and has been at the MacDowell Colony and Yaddo. Her short stories have been published in ZYZZYVA, Glimmer Train, and elsewhere. She writes for the website of The New Yorker and was a reporter at The Wall Street Journal for nearly a decade. Her journalism has been anthologized in Dogfight at the Pentagon, a collection of page 1 features from the Journal. She lives in Colorado.

  Publications Submitted

  Stories published in American and Canadian magazines are eligible for consideration for inclusion in The O. Henry Prize Stories. Stories must be written originally in the English language. No translations are considered. Sections of novels are not considered. Editors are asked not to nominate individual stories. Stories may not be submitted by agents or writers.

  Editors are invited to submit online fiction for consideration, but such submissions must be sent to the address on the next page in the form of a legible hard copy. The publication’s contact information and the date of the story’s publication must accompany the submissions.

  Because of production deadlines for the 2016 collection, it is essential that stories reach the series editor by July 1, 2015. If a finished magazine is unavailable before the deadline, magazine editors are welcome to submit scheduled stories in proof or manuscript. Publications received after July 1, 2015, will automatically be considered for The O. Henry Prize Stories 2017.

  Please see our website, www.​ohenryprizestories.​com, for more information about submission to The O. Henry Prize Stories.

  The address for submission is:

  Laura Furman, Series Editor, The O. Henry Prize Stories

  The University of Texas at Austin

  English Department, B5000

  1 University Station

  Austin, TX 78712

  The information listed on the following pages was up-to-date when The O. Henry Prize Stories 2015 went to press. Inclusion in this listing does not constitute endorsement or recommendation by The O. Henry Prize Stories or Anchor Books.

  Alimentum

  PO Box 210028

  Nashville, TN 37221

  Paulette Licitra, editor

  [email protected]

  alimentumjournal.​com

  as of 2014, online with continuous publication of new material

  Amoskeag

  School of Arts and Sciences

  Southern New Hampshire University

  2500 North River Road

  Manchester, NH 03106

  Benjamin Nugent, editor

  [email protected]

  amoskeagjournal.​com [website is no longer active]

  annual

  Bellevue Literary Review

  NYU Langone

  Department of Medicine

  550 First Avenue, OBV-A612

  New York, NY 10016

  Danielle Ofri, editor

  [email protected]

  BLReview.​org

  semiannual

  Border Crossing

  Lake Superior State University

  650 West Easterday Avenue

  Sault Ste. Marie, MI 49783

  Julie Brooks Barbour, Mary McMyne, Jillena Rose, editors

  [email protected]

  lssu.​edu/​bc

  annual

  China Grove

  Lucius Lampton, editor

  [email protected]

  chinagrovepress.​com

  semiannual

  CutBank

  University of Montana

  English Department, LA 133

  Missoula, MT 59812

  Allison Linville, editor

  [email protected]

  cutbankonline.​org

  semiannual

  Dappled Things

  Meredith McCann, editor

  [email protected]

  dappledthings.​org

  quarterly

  Eleven Eleven

  California College of the Arts

  1111 Eighth Street

  San Francisco, CA 94107

  Hugh Behm-Steinberg, editor

  elevenelevenjournal.​com

  semiannual

  Fairy Tale Review

  Department of English

  Modern Languages Building

  University of Arizona

  Tucson, AZ 85721

  Kate Bernheimer, editor

  fairytalereview.​com

  annual

  Fiction River

  WMG Publishing

  PO Box 269

  Lincoln City, OR 97367

  Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Dean Wesley Smith, editors

  ficti
onriver.​com

  semimonthly

  Fourteen Hills

  Department of Creative Writing

  San Francisco State University

  1600 Holloway Avenue

  San Francisco, CA 94132

  Heather June Gibbons, editor

  14hills.​net

  semiannual

  Free State Review

  3637 Black Rock Road

  Upperco, MD 21155

  Hal Burdett, J. Wesley Clark, Barrett Warner, Raphaela Cassandra, editors

  [email protected]

  freestatereview.​com

  semiannual

  Grain Magazine

  PO Box 67

  Saskatoon, SK S7K 3K1

  Canada

  [email protected]

  grainmagazine.​ca/​about

  quarterly

  Harper’s Magazine

  666 Broadway, 11th Floor

  New York, NY 10012

  Ellen Rosenbush, editor

  [email protected]

  harpers.​org

  monthly

  Image

  3307 Third Avenue West

  Seattle, WA 98119

  Gregory Wolfe, editor

  [email protected]

  imagejournal.​org

  quarterly

  Little Patuxent Review

  PO Box 6084

  Columbia, MD 21045

  Steven Leyva, editor

  [email protected]

  little​patuxent​review.​org

  semiannual

  Lumina (print)/Lux (multimedia edition)

  Sarah Lawrence College

  1 Mead Way

  Bronxville, NY 10704

  Jessica Denzer, editor

  [email protected]

  luminajournal.​com

  annual

  MĀNOA

  Department of English

  University of Hawai’i

  1733 Donaghho Road

  Honolulu, HI 96822

  Frank Stewart, editor

  [email protected]

  manoajournal.​hawaii.​edu

  semiannual

  Mid-American Review

  Department of English, BGSU

  Bowling Green OH 43403

  Abigail Cloud, editor

  casit.​bgsu.​edu/​midamericanreview

  semiannual

  Midwestern Gothic

  Midwestern Gothic/MG Press

  PO Box 3447

  Ann Arbor, MI 48106

  Jeff Pfaller, Robert James Russell, editors

  [email protected]

  midwestgothic.​com

  quarterly

  Mississippi Review

  118 College Drive #5144

  Hattiesburg, MS 39406-0001

  Andrew Malan Milward, editor

  [email protected]

  usm.​edu/​mississippi-​review/​index.​html

  semiannual

  New Ohio Review

  English Department 360 Ellis Hall

  Ohio University

  Athens, OH 45701

  Jill Allyn Rosser, editor

  [email protected]

  ohio.​edu/​nor

  semiannual

  Oxford American

  PO Box 3235

  Little Rock, AR 72203-3235

  Roger D. Hodge, editor

  [email protected]

  oxfordamerican.​org

  quarterly

  Poets and Artists

  GOSS183

  604 Vale Street

  Bloomington, IL 61701

  Didi Menendez, editor

  [email protected]

  poetsandartists.​com

  published 6–8 times a year

  Prairie Schooner

  123 Andrews Hall

  University of Nebraska–Lincoln

  Lincoln, NE 68588-0334

  Kwame Dawes, editor

  [email protected]

  prairieschooner.​unl.​edu

  quarterly

  Printers Row

  Chicago Tribune

  435 North Michigan Avenue

  Chicago, IL 60611

  Jennifer Day, editor

  [email protected]

  chicagotribune.​com/​printersrow

  weekly

  PRISM international

  Creative Writing Program

  University of British Columbia

  Buchanan E462

  1866 Main Mall

  Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1

  Canada

  Nicole Boyce, editor

  [email protected]

  prismmagazine.​ca

  quarterly

  Raritan

  31 Mine Street

  New Brunswick, NJ 08901

  Jackson Lears, editor

  [email protected]

  raritanquarterly.​rutgers.​edu

  quarterly

  Redivider

  Department of Writing, Literature and Publishing

  Emerson College

  120 Boylston Street

  Boston, MA 02116

  Pamela Painter, editor

  [email protected]

  redividerjournal.​org

  semiannual

  Red Rock Review

  English Department, J2A

  College of Southern Nevada

  3200 East Cheyenne Avenue

  North Las Vegas, NV 89030

  Todd Moffett, editor

  [email protected]

  sites.​csn.​edu/​english/​redrockreview/​index.​htm

  semiannual

  Relief

  Brad Fruhauff, editor

  [email protected]

  reliefjournal.​com

  Salamander

  Suffolk University

  English Department

  8 Ashburton Place

  Boston, MA 02108

  Jennifer Barber, editor

  salamandermag.​org

  semiannual

  Salmagundi Magazine

  Skidmore College

  Attn: Salmagundi Journal

  815 North Broadway

  Saratoga Springs, NY 12866

  Robert Boyers, editor

  [email protected]

  skidmore.​edu/​salmagundi

  quarterly

  Scribendi

  c/o UNM Honors College

  MSC06 3890

  1 University of New Mexico

  Albuquerque, NM 87131

  Jordan Burk, editor

  [email protected]

  scribendi.​unm.​edu

  annual

  Sheepshead Review

  UW–Green Bay

  Attn: Sheepshead Review

  2420 Nicolet Drive

  Green Bay, WI 54311-7001

  Roberto Rodriguez, editor

  [email protected]

  blog.​uwgb.​edu/​sheepsheadreview

  Slice

  Beth Blachman, editor

  [email protected]

  slicemagazine.​org

  semiannual

  Southern Humanities Review

  Department of English

  Auburn University

  9088 Haley Center

  Auburn, AL 36849-5202

  Chantel Acevedo, editor

  [email protected]

  southernhumanitiesreview.​com

  quarterly

  Southern Indiana Review

  Orr Center, #2009

  University of Southern Indiana

  8600 University Boulevard

  Evansville, IN 47712

  Ron Mitchell, editor

  usi.​edu/​sir

  semiannual

  Sou’wester

  Department of English

  Box 1438

  Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

  Edwardsville, IL 62026-1438

  souwester.​org

  semiannual

  Southwest Review

  Southern Metho
dist University

  PO Box 750374

  6404 Robert Hyer Lane, Room 307

  Dallas, TX 75275-0374

  Willard Spiegelman, editor

  [email protected]

  smu.​edu/​southwestreview

  quarterly

  Subtropics

  Department of English

  University of Florida

  PO Box 112075

  4008 Turlington Hall

  Gainesville, FL 32611-2075

  David Leavitt, editor

  [email protected]

  english.​ufl.​edu/​subtropics

  triannual

  The American Literary Review

  PO Box 311307

  University of North Texas

  Denton, TX 76203-1307

  Bonnie Friedman, editor

  [email protected]

  americanliteraryreview.​com

  semiannual

  The American Reader

  Uzoamaka Maduka, editor

  [email protected]

  theamericanreader.​com

  semimonthly

  The Antioch Review

  PO Box 148

  Yellow Springs, OH 45387

  Robert S. Fogarty, editor

  [email protected]

  review.​antiochcollege.​org/​antioch_review

  quarterly

  The Asian American Literary

  Review

  Lawrence-Minh Bùi Davis and Gerald Maa, editors

  [email protected]

  aalrmag.​org

  semiannual

  The Briar Cliff Review

  3303 Rebecca Street

  Sioux City, IA 51104-2100

  Tricia Currans-Sheehan, editor

  [email protected]

  bcreview.​org

  annual

 

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