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Editor | Diane Williams |
---|---|
Frequency | Annual |
Founder | Diane Williams |
Founded | 2000 |
Company | Noon, Inc. |
Country | United States |
Based in | New York City |
Language | English |
Website | noonannual |
ISSN | 1526-8055 |
NOON is a literary annual magazine founded in 2000 by American author Diane Williams. NOON Inc. launched its 24th edition in March 2023. NOON publishes fiction and occasional essays. It is archived at The Lilly Library along with the personal literary archive of founding editor Diane Williams. The Lilly is the principal rare books, manuscripts, and special collections repository of Indiana University.
NOON has published stories by Tao Lin, Garielle Lutz, Dawn Raffel, Sam Lipsyte, Ottessa Moshfegh, Roxane Gay, Dylan Nice, Anya Yurchyshyn, Rhoads Stevens, Annie DeWitt, Karl Roloff, and R.O. Kwon, and regularly publishes Christine Schutt, Deb Olin Unferth, Clancy Martin, Lydia Davis, Rebecca Curtis, Brandon Hobson, Kathryn Scanlan, Greg Mulcahy, Vi Khi Nao, Kim Chinquee, Souvankham Thammavongsa, Susan Laier, Rob Walsh, Ashton Politanoff, Lucie Elven, Kayla Blatchley, Nathan Dragon, Tetman Callis, Robert Tindall, and others. [1] The journal has published original drawings by Raymond Pettibon and regularly publishes drawings by Augusta Gross and photographs by Bill Hayward, as well as translations by Lydia Davis.
Several NOON contributors have published debut, critically acclaimed short story collections in 2020: Souvankham Thammavongsa, with How To Pronounce Knife (Little, Brown and Company); [2] Kathryn Scanlan, with The Dominant Animal (MCD/FSG, 2020); [3] and Mary South, with You Will Never Be Forgotten (FSG Originals). [4]
NOON stories have won numerous awards and prizes, including:
For The New Yorker in October 2021, Merve Emre wrote, “NOON publishes the most interesting short-story writers working in English.”
In January 2016, Rachel Syme of The New York Times described the magazine as "a beautiful annual that remains staunchly avant-garde in its commitment to work that is oblique, enigmatic and impossible to ignore. . .stories that leave a flashbulb's glow behind the eyes even as they resist sense." [5]
In 2007, Deb Olin Unferth told Bookslut that NOON founder and editor Diane Williams "inspires excellence and demands discipline. More than an editor, she is an editor-artist." [6]
In the May/June 2014 issue of Poets & Writers, Travis Kurowski wrote, "NOON contains prose chiseled to its barest, most arresting essence--a concision attributed by most to Williams's high demands as an editor."
In the Los Angeles Times on March 19, 2013, David Ulin wrote, "The new issue of Noon landed last week, and as usual, it’s a compendium of unlikely pleasures: short prose and illustrations that challenge us to think about meaning and narrative. The brainchild of fiction writer Diane Williams, who edits it, Noon has been around since 2000, publishing a single issue annually; it is elegantly designed and curated, a journal that wears its intentions on its sleeve....These are oblique stories, stories that exist in the interior, getting at the things we know but do not know we know." [7]
The Times Literary Supplement reviewed NOON in its Learned Journals section on October 30, 2009. Alison Kelly wrote, "[T]he best stories in NOON are, indeed, stunning, in the sense that they leave one conscious of powerful meanings not yet fully absorbed. ... [T]he journal has proved its staying power and achieved a respected position. . . NOON has intellectual weight. Over the years it has investigated, and pushed the boundaries of, the means and processes of communication. ... Williams's editorial vision ensures the intelligence and integrity of the journal as a whole."
Kevin Sampsell described the magazine as a "beautifully-produced literary journal that features the strongest offbeat writing from a select group of literary stylists." [8]
In The New York Sun, Benjamin Lytal called NOON "One of American fiction's finest and most focused journals." [9]
Library Journal wrote that "NOON sets itself apart from the crowded field of literary journals with the quality of its submissions, its clean, easy-to-read design, and eye-catching cover. This independent, not-for-profit annual features essays, fiction, interviews, art, and translation that are as diverse as its contributors, who are both published and previously unpublished and come from international backgrounds. The editors of NOON adeptly select innovative, original, and highly readable work." [10]
Christopher Frizzelle, editor of The Stranger, wrote "Noon, another literary journal that belongs on the list of literary journals that don't suck. The downside to Noon is that it only comes out once a year. The upshots are that Noon has a serif font, crisp photos, and excellent writing, or at least writing by writers I love." [11]
Time Out New York said "Even if it shares some authors with mainstream publishers, Noon still shimmers with courage, strangeness and unknown voices" and that editor Diane Williams "has a penchant for devout stylists and squirm-inducing topics." [12]
The magazine has been described as a "beautifully-produced literary journal that features the strongest offbeat writing from a select group of literary stylists." [8]
Room is a Canadian quarterly literary journal that features the work of emerging and established women and genderqueer writers and artists. Launched in Vancouver in 1975 by the West Coast Feminist Literary Magazine Society, or the Growing Room Collective, the journal has published an estimated 3,000 women, serving as an important launching pad for emerging writers. Room publishes short fiction, creative non-fiction, poetry, art, feature interviews, and features that promote dialogue between readers, writers and the collective, including "Roommate" and "The Back Room". Collective members are regular participants in literary and arts festivals in Greater Vancouver and Toronto.
Denis Hale Johnson was an American novelist, short-story writer, and poet. He is perhaps best known for his debut short story collection, Jesus' Son (1992). His most successful novel, Tree of Smoke (2007), won the National Book Award for Fiction. Johnson was twice shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Altogether, Johnson was the author of nine novels, one novella, two books of short stories, three collections of poetry, two collections of plays, and one book of reportage. His final work, a book of short stories titled The Largesse of the Sea Maiden, was published posthumously in 2018.
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Diane Williams is an American author, primarily of short stories. She lives in New York City and is the founder and editor of the literary annual NOON. She is the author of eleven books, including How High? — That High, for which she was interviewed by Merve Emre in The New Yorker. Her book The Collected Stories of Diane Williams was published by Soho Press in 2018.
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