- J. Marcus Weekley
Biography----
J. Marcus Weekley (b. 1975) was born in
Chattanooga , Tennessee and grew up in Wisconsin, Georgia, Florida, Texas, Tennessee, Illinois, and Mississippi. He is the author of twelve books, ranging fromhaiku to photographs to short stories.Weekley attended the
University of Georgia , the University of Maryland,The University of Southern Mississippi (where he received a B.A. and a M.A., both in English), andTexas Tech University (where he received a Ph.D. in English). "Talking Stranger", his dissertation, a collection of prose poems1, focuses on defining and offering various types ofprose poem . Weekley classifies the prose poem as a genre between poetry and prose and claims that the term "proem" expresses the dual nature of the genre better than either "prose poem" or "flash fiction " does. The proems deal withChristianity ,homosexuality , loneliness, and everyday living by combining slang with extendedmetaphors and references to popular culture.Weekley's published books, all shamelessly self published, focus on many of the same issues as his dissertation, though their styles vary according to book. Frequently, however, Weekley adopts numerous styles such as post-modern realism,
magical realism , and the stand-up comedian's stance within the same book, to address issues ranging from divorce and theft to spiritual barrenness and faith. Weekley approaches the subjects he photographs with the same perspectives, focusing on his own as well as other imagined characters' lives.Bibliography----
"the one who looked into the mirror and...", 2007
"something about", 2007
"a tree isn't a tree", 2007
"dawn breaks", 2007 Introduction by Standford M. Forrester
"One Hour", 2007
"Look Out Below and Other Tales", 2007 Introduction by Stephen Graham Jones
"from four years", 2007 Introduction by Dr. Sarah V. Bell
"Two Portraits", 2007
"The Neighbor's Lights", 2007"Red-head: Interludes", 2007
"quilt", 2007
"gus was late for work", 2007
photographs accompany Gail Folkins's creative non-fiction essays, "Texas Dance Halls: a Two-Step Circuit [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0896726037] "
References----
1 http://etd.lib.ttu.edu/theses/available/etd-04172006-003703/unrestricted/Weekley_J.Marcus.pdf
http://www.othervoicespoetry.org/vol20/weekley/index.html
Other Publications----
"3 A.M. Magazine" [http://www.3ammagazine.com/flash_fiction/2005/may/licorice.html]
"Agenda" [http://www.agendapoetry.co.uk/documents/Broadsheet5pdf_000.pdf]
"bottle rockets" [http://www.geocities.com/bottlerockets_99/highlights1.html]
"The Clackamas Literary Review" [http://www.clackamasliteraryreview.org/works.php?workID=743]
"Double Room" [http://webdelsol.com/Double_Room/7/J_Marcus_Weekley1.htm]
"Ghoti" [http://www.ghotimag.com/weekley.htm]
"The Iowa Review" [http://www.uiowa.edu/~iareview/back_issues/35.3/35.3.html]
"Poetry International" [http://poetryinternational.sdsu.edu/Index.htm]
"Quick Fiction" [http://www.quickfiction.org/features/story.php?pk=40]
"Relief" [http://www.reliefjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=76&Itemid=1]
"Thieves Jargon" [http://www.thievesjargon.com/workview.php?work=743]
"Versal" [http://www.wordsinhere.com/versal.html]
"Wandering Army" [http://www.wanderingarmy.com/archives/103.html]Other Links----
J. Marcus Weekley photographs [http://www.flickr.com/photos/whynottryitagain2]
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