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St. Louis Magazine - September, 2009
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In This Issue

Features

Web Extra: Early Hits The Public's Intellectual Best Dressed 2009 Think Again: STL Confidential Web Extra: Wine Notes Always on the Rise 15 Ways to Shop Smart in St. Louis Where'd You Go to High School?

Departments

From the Editor: On Balance STL Confidential The Buzz: Tennis, Everyone The Buzz: Battle of the Border The Buzz: Five Quick Things The Buzz: Office Space The Buzz: Ring of Fire The Buzz: Strange Folklore The Buzz: No Strings Attached First Shot: Raisin’ the Roof What It's Like...to Fly the Bunny Balloon The Buzz: Office Space Coming of Age Stylish Subtleties: Nicole Genovese Smart Shopper: For the Long Run Behind the Curtain: Theater Behind the Curtain: Film Behind the Curtain: Fine Art Behind the Scenes: Music Behind the Curtain: Poetry Behind the Curtain: Deutsch Country Days What We Talk About When We Talk About Wine Liquid Assets: Cellaring Wines Rose Revisits: Dressel’s Public House Review: In the Shadow of The Pageant… First Look: The Terrace View Kitchen Q&A: Eliott Harris Flashback: 1969 A Conversation With Judee Sauget
2009.11.21 - 2009 Beaujolais Nouveau Celebration
 Join us at our intimate French-American Bistro for a 2009 Beaujolais...
2009.11.28 - Mount Pleasant presents "Lucy Goes Cruisin" Murder Mystery Dinner Theater
Join Mount Pleasant for an evening of uproarious whodunit as only Lucy...
2009.12.03 - "GIFTED" Original Art for Holiday Giving
Skip the malls this year and make your gift giving a unique expression of...
2009.12.03 - Holiday Rooms in Bloom
The Historic Samuel Cupples House on the campus of Saint Louis University is...

Behind the Curtain: Poetry

Behind the Curtain: Poetry
Photograph by Samantha Dittmann

River Styx editor Richard Newman and the literary magazine’s reading series co-director, Adrian Matejka, are both dads, professors, and poets (Matejka’s latest, Mixology, was just released this spring by Penguin; Newman’s second collection, Domestic Fugues, appears from Steel Toe Books this fall). They also play basketball together every week and generally agree on what makes a writer shine—or not—when reading work in front of an audience. They talked to us about the tricky work of curating St. Louis’ oldest  reading series, including balancing fiction and poetry, as well as regional and national writers.

RN: It’s more complicated than just making a few phone calls and saying, “Hey, do you want to read?” When you get the little bookmark with all the names on it, it seems like it just all fell into place.

AM: River Styx is a national magazine, but it’s also firmly grounded in the community. To try to keep that balance in the presence of the readers, that’s really hard.

RN: We started working on this year’s schedule in December.

AM: Almost a year ahead.

RN: And it’s mostly us, but we’re open to feedback. Michael Nye, our managing editor, will suggest prose people, since Adrian and I tend to be poet-centric. We throw in a couple of fiction writers and think, “Eh, we’re diverse!” [Laughs.]

AM: We’re lucky that every day, Richard is seeing this work at the magazine. And I’ve had the good fortune to have lived in nine different places and to have bounced around a lot—literature’s regional. In the Northwest, they have their little group of writers they think are the best in the country that hardly anybody outside the area knows about. More than anything else, that’s what I bring to the discussion.



RN: Some writers don’t want any money. They’ve been at the River Styx podium before and want to read with us, like David Carkeet, who’s got a new novel coming out... Then there are people who are considerably more expensive, like B.H. Fairchild, who’s won major awards. So we’re splitting him with [SIU] Edwardsville.

AM: Then there’s another guy, Major Jackson, who’s coming in, and that was in tandem with Fontbonne. Some of it takes a little more wrangling. It used to be the most difficult thing about getting readings was dealing with the writers themselves, you know, who want chicken and orange juice and that kind of thing.

RN: Or no brown M&Ms.

AM: This year, we’re really proud of what we’ve got, because it’s all lined up—all that’s left is the actual showing up.

RN: But then of course you have to do their introductions. I write mine down, and Adrian talks off the top of his head. Our job is to just save the writer from having to do all the introduction stuff—so he or she can just read.  

$5 at the door, $4 for members, students, and seniors. Time: 7:30 p.m. Readings take place every third Monday at Duff’s, 392 N. Euclid, 314-533-4541; get the full schedule at riverstyx.org.