Posted on

FAIRVIEW CHRONICLES release date moved

Fairview Chronicle, written by Jonathan Paul, edited by Andrew Dunn

Fairview Chronicle, written by Jonathan Paul, edited by Andrew Dunn

Exciting News about Fairview Chronicles

Fairview Chronicles, the mystical horror fantasy novel by Johnathan Paul was slated to release through Madville Publishing in Spring 2019. This release date has now been moved back to Late Fall 2019. Worry not, the reason for the move is an exciting one. A television pilot based in the same world is being produced as we speak.

A TV Pilot!

Author Johnathan Paul and production company Datalus Pictures LLC are currently in pre-production on the hour-long pilot episode of Fairview Chronicles. The book will now release alongside the feature pilot, and work alongside the television pilot as one of three pieces in the initial media launch.

Thank you for your patience. More news to come!

Posted on

Our 2019-2020 Catalog is Ready!

Madville Publishing's 2019-2020 Catalog cover

Madville Publishing's 2019-2020 Catalog coverOur fall 2019-spring 2020 catalog is finally ready to show the world. We’ve been leaking a title here and there, but now we have them all in one place. We are proud of this curated collection. There is a little bit of everything. Click HERE, or click the image at right to see the whole catalog.

Familiar Essay

Leading the way is Sam Pickering’s The World was My Garden, Too
followed closely by Bob Kunzinger’s A Third Place: Notes in Nature

Memoir

We have an adoption tale from the Himalayan Mountains that reads like fiction by Kate Saunders, Stand in the Traffic

Poetry

Our first poetry offering is A Clearing Space in the Middle of Being by Jeff Hardin
Next comes Gianna Russo’s One House Down
Then the prose poetry of Gerry LaFemina with Baby Steps in Doomsday Prepping
And we finish out the year with a Southern fantasy told in verse by JC Reilly, What Magick May Not Alter

Fiction

We’re sponsoring an anthology of stories about Running Away (we’ll post that call for submissions soon.)
and we have a short story collection by Bobby Horecka, Long Gone & Lost: True Fictions and Other Lies

Posted on

We’ll be at the North Texas Book Festival

North Texas Book Festival Info

Madville Publishing will be at the North Texas Book Festival

When is it?

The North Texas Book Festival
Saturday, April 6, 2019
7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

We will have all our books for sale, and some of our authors on hand to sign copies.
Get there early for the Chuckwagon breakfast.

Location:

Patterson-Appleton Arts Center
400 E. McKinney Street
Denton, Texas

Books we’ll be featuring:

An Englishman in Texas by Ron Kenney
A memoir about an English jockey who came to Texas in 1960. Author Ron Kenney tells about childhood during the Battle of Britain in northern England, his apprenticeship as a jockey from the age of 14, until he retired from that life after an injury in his 30s. He tells about the rich men he rode for and about his life after horses. This man is a dynamo, and we hope he will be able to join us at NTBF.

Gunshot, Peacock, Dog by Rick Campbell
Poetry by one of Florida’s best loved poets. Rick Campbell’s poetry reads like a conversation with a good friend. He brings light and thoughtful humor to mundane day-to-day existence.

No Evil is Wide by Randall Watson
Dark, literary fiction by award-winning poet and author. Randall Watson’s gift for poetic language shines through this dark story of a chaotic near future where the world has slipped into madness.

Sisypha Larvata Prodeat by Jan Cole
Multi-lingual, illustrated poetry by beloved Texas poet/musician. Jan Cole’s poetry about love, life, and friendship translated by Angela Liu and Lorrie Lo is a joy in any language. It is enhanced by the colorful and playful artwork of Mexican artist, Adelina Moya.

The Autobiography of Francis N. Stein: The Last Promethean by A. Rooney
A novel that explores what may have happened if the Frankenstein wretch had descendants. Francis is a big hearted guy who can’t seem to avoid trouble.

By the Light of a Neon Moon edited by Janet Lowery
A wild and crazy poetry anthology about dancehalls. This collection includes the work of numerous poets laureate and award winning poets from around the country.

North Texas Book Festival LogoLearn more:

Find out more on the NTBF website: https://www.ntbf.org/

Posted on

Poetry for Fall 2019

Poetry Collections by Two Award-Winning Poets in Fall 2019

Have we told you about the the outstanding poetry collections we have leading off our Fall 2019-Spring 2020 offerings?

 A Clearing Space in the Middle of Being and poet Jeff HardinA Clearing Space in the Middle of Being, by Jeff Hardin

978-1-948692-18-2 paper 16.95
978-1-948692-19-9 ebook 9.99
6×9, 72 pp.
Poetry
September 2019

If the taste of the eternal “is increasingly absent in our words,” then Jeff Hardin’s sixth collection, A Clearing Space in the Middle of Being, attempts to behold language anew, to listen in on its “preview of eternity.” Aware of ambiguities that plague our lives and given to swerves of logic and dislocations, to echoes and reverberations “too numerous to see in some totality,” his poems nonetheless speak openly to existence, to the mind’s “attempts/to console itself,” and to the “intoxication of incoherence” existence so often feels like. Here in a postmodern world, is it still possible to step boldly into certainty, into clarity, to find a sacred and shared space where “all moments blaze up with a speaking/voice”? Hardin listens intently, discovering more and more how “wanderingly vast” enchantment still might be. In the presence of so many options for understanding, he chooses to believe “a new/parable unfolding, still instructive,” pointing him toward a fellowship with others who likewise “lean toward thinking some healing is already/underway.”

Jeff Hardin is the author of five previous collections of poetry, most recently Small Revolution and No Other Kind of World. His work has been honored with the Nicholas Roerich Prize, the Donald Justice Poetry Prize, and the X. J. Kennedy Poetry Prize. His poems have appeared in The Southern Review, Hudson Review, North American Review, Gettysburg Review, Southern Poetry Review, and many others. He is a professor of English at Columbia State Community College in Tennessee. Visit his website at www.jeffhardin.weebly.com.

 


One House Down--Poetry by Gianna RussoOne House Down, by Gianna Russo

978-1-948692-20-5 paper 16.95
978-1-948692-21-2 ebook 9.99
6×9, 72 pp.
Poetry
October 2019

The candid poems in Gianna Russo’s One House Down are grounded in experiences of ambivalence and oneness, not unlike those we sometimes find in true love. Russo ruminates on the past and scrutinizes the present in her hometown of Tampa with honest affection, concern, anger and delight. She asks an essential question: How can we treasure a place whose history and values have sometimes supported injustice? And if those wrongs are still evident today—then what? With family roots in Tampa that go back over a century, Russo skillfully pursues an answer in these inventive, surprising poems.

Gianna Russo is a Tampa native and third generation Floridian. She is the author of Moonflower, winner of the Florida Book Award Bronze and Florida Publishers Association Silver awards. A Pushcart Prize nominee, she has had publications in Green Mountains Review, The Sun, Poet Lore, The MacGuffin, Tampa Review, Valparaiso, Ekphrasis, Crab Orchard Review, Florida Review, Florida Humanities Council Forum, Water Stone, Karamu, The Bloomsbury Review, and Calyx, among others.  She is founding editor of the Florida poetry chapbook publisher YellowJacket Press (www.yellowjacketpress.org). She holds an MFA in Poetry from the University of Tampa. She is Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at Saint Leo University where she directs the Sandhill Writers Retreat.