Author: Michelle Richmond

Michelle Richmond is the New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling author of The Marriage Pact, Golden State, The Year of Fog, No One You Know, Dream of the Blue Room, Hum, and The Girl in the Fall-Away Dress. Her books have been published in 30 languages. A native of Alabama, she makes her home in Northern California and Paris.
Fiction Attic launches with Albanian story collection

Fiction Attic launches with Albanian story collection

I’m excited to announce the launch of Fiction Attic Press, which will distribute fiction of exceptional literary merit via the ebook format. The press’s first publication is a collection of short stories in translation by the writers whose work launched the magazine Fiction Attic nearly a decade ago.

Winter in Tirane: The Stories of Jiri Kajane, is now available for Kindle, Nook, and all ebook formats.

About the book: Winter in Tirane brings together for the first time twelve interconnected and enigmatic tales of bittersweet love, absurd politics, and comic hijinks, set against the final days of the Albanian empire. The stories chronicle an unnamed narrator–the Deputy Minister of Slogans–and his young friend Leni as they attempt to navigate their way through a landscape of shifting political alliances and complex personal affairs.

About Fiction Attic:

During its three-year run, Fiction Attic featured the work of Steve Almond, Stephen Elliott, Gloria Frym, Katia Noyes, Vanessa Hua, Michelle Tea, Kevin Phelan, Bill U’Ren, and Anita Garner, among others, as well as interviews with such literary luminaries as Kate Braverman and fiction in translation by the celebrated Italian writer Mario Rigoni Stern (translated by Elizabeth Harris).

Fiction Attic’s final issue, #20, devoted entirely to flash fiction, was published in 2004. In the winter of that year, the magazine’s editor, designer, and sole reader had a baby. A rather long silence followed.

In the ensuing years, online literary journals have exploded, and the world of online publishing has become far more vibrant and diverse than anyone might have imagined nearly a decade ago, when Fiction Attic first began accepting submissions.

The goal of Fiction Attic, as always, is to be relevant, interesting, and utterly unique. We refer you to the meaning of attic, which explains pretty much everything:

attic salt (phrase): a poignant, delicate wit, peculiar to the Athenians
attic (noun): a story or room directly below the roof of a building
attic (adj) : characterized by purity, simplicity, and elegant wit

Short Stories for Kindle

Short Stories for Kindle

The Girl in the Fall-Away DressThe Girl in the Fall-Away Dress, winner of the Associated Writing Programs Award for Short Fiction, is now available for Kindle. Sample or purchase the book here.

The stories in Michelle Richmond’s first collection spin artfully off the life of a single character…smart and adept…” The New York Times

“This collection of brief sketches alternating with longer fictions has a novel’s heft, as characters who are just names in one story emerge to take center stage in another. These women’s lives are shaped by fate and by place, forces hauntingly evoked by this talented young writer.” ~The Boston Globe

“Richmond’s writing is perceptive and heartfelt, her subjects at once edgy and familiar. This is a winning debut.” Publishers Weekly

This weekend in Carmel

This weekend in Carmel

I’m heading to Carmel, CA, this weekend for the Carmel Authors & Ideas Festival, where I’ll be giving a talk entitled Straddling the Literary Divide: A Southern Writer in the Wild West, as well as conducting a breakout session on inspiration, or the art of finding one’s story. Looking forward to a beautiful dinner on the beach and a room with a view!

The line-up of 35 speakers and authors includes Condoleezza Rice, Roy Blount, Jr, David Brooks, Eric Schlosser (Fast Food Nation), Michael Krasny, Tobias Wolff, Kemble Scott, Jane Ganahl, yours truly, and many others.

Tickets are available here. At $550, they’re not cheap, but if you have a mind to patronize the arts and would like to spend a weekend hanging out in a fairly intimate setting with some interesting people, this event might be just your cup of tea.

Scout, Atticus, Boo…
and You

Scout, Atticus, Boo…
and You

Join me at the San Francisco Public Library on Tuesday, Sept. 28, for a celebration of To Kill a Mockingbird. The evening will begin with a screening of the short documentary Scott, Atticus, and Boo: A Celebration of 50 Years of To Kill a Mockingbird, by Mary McDonagh Murphy. Then Andrew Sean Greer, Jewelle Gomez, and I will sit down for a panel moderated by Oscar Villalon to talk about the book. I’ll talk about my visit down to Monroeville a few months ago, when I watched the annual local production of To Kill a Mockingbird on the courthouse lawn that inspired the town’s most revered resident, Harper Lee.

This event is also in commemoration of the American Libraries Association’s annual Banned Books Week. Event details here.

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