I keep meaning to get caught up on my recent doings, and failing. Those plans of mice and men!
I went to Indy Saturday for Proof: A Midwest Literary Festival, This post is not about that.
Time has been spent on getting the apartment sorted out. And in blog posts. Those will be upcoming. Right now, I have an area organized for work. Do not ask about what else needs to be done.
CC came over last night. However, we made a stop at her storage bins - they were broken into, and a pit stop turned into a hunt for what was taken. She started crying on the way home. She is not in good shape. This morning she was to call early, and I was to get her to finish off what was not done last night. No call.
I have a meeting at noon. Before then, I want to do my laundry.
What follows is what was to have been my original post on my recent doings and readings.
Voting centers arrive in Delaware County (Ball State Daily News)
It has been 20 years, according to Delaware County Clerk Rick Spangler, since Delaware County initially moved to change its voting procedures from a precinct voting format to voting centers. Through a long and complicated process, representatives from both parties and individuals from the League of Women Voters (LWV) have been pushing their voting center plan steadily forward to make voting easier and more accessible for Delaware County residents. That plan passed a vote on Sept. 8, 2025.
Ball State is home to the Voting System Technical Oversight Program (VSTOP), which performs randomized audits on voting machines, post-election audits to ensure ballots are tabulated correctly and an assortment of other tasks that keep elections running smoothly around the state.
VSTOP election systems audit specialist Matt Housley said, “The number one reason that we hear counties switch [to vote centers] is they want convenience for their voters.”
Voting centers streamline the voting process, allowing voters to cast their ballots without needing to go to a specific location. Instead, new locations have been chosen all over Delaware County to best suit voters’ needs.
Following the Call to Create: Artist Aimee Maychack Comes to Minnetrista
Aimee describes the past 30 years of their life as being in the “helping profession.” First, a chemical dependency counselor, then in fire service after 9/11. They also served “as an educator, grant writer, civilian paramedic in the Air Force, captain, and most recently, a flight paramedic.”
If we look at Aimee’s work history, the trajectory of their life did not seem to say next would be “artist.” But that, to me, is one of the most beautiful things about their story. It happened in reverse of what many artists experience.
Young artists throw themselves into this profession, get burned out and hungry for more money, or find that without the prompting and structure of school, art is not as fun or viable. Some end up going into the very fields Aimee left. All of this is okay to discover about yourself as you figure out what is important in your life.
As Aimee writes on their blog: “Being an artist is not a get-rich-quick scheme or really a good plan towards a sustainable living. Making art, whether it’s a physical thing or a performance, is an obsessive passion. A passion, a gift, a pursuit to share the artist’s magic with the world.”
Call It What It Is (Sheila Kennedy)
Calling this administration and its supporters fascists is neither an exaggeration nor an inappropriate epithet. It is a word–a label– that accurately describes both Trump and a significant percentage of his MAGA supporters. The rest of us need to acknowledge that, and the fact that most of those supporters are irretrievably lost to the American Idea.
It is up to the rest of us–to the majority of sane Americans– to reject the fascist project and save the Republic. The situation really is that dire.
‘I’m going to write about all of it’: author Chris Kraus on success, drugs and I Love Dick (The Guardian)
Kraus prefers the term “nonfiction novels” to “autofiction” because her books are as much about other people as they are about her, and she describes her approach as “reporting on experience”. “The fabulation of an entirely invented world of a novel is completely beyond me,” she says, “but transcribing and reporting to be accurate, that’s something I can do.” She changes names and details, but “I don’t invent anything. It’s more a matter of mixing, it’s a composition.” For decades, she has kept a detailed daily diary. “Just the act of writing anchors you in time and gives a reality to things that have happened that would otherwise be completely vaporous and elusive,” she says.
In her novels, Kraus uses herself as a case study, digging so deeply into her own, singular story that she uncovers truths that feel closer to universal, if not for everyone then at least for other “weird girls”. To construct them, she supplements diaries with boxes of photographs, interview recordings and – in the case of her latest book – court transcripts. The Four Spent the Day Together is split into three parts: the first describes Kraus’s upbringing in blue-collar small-town Connecticut; the second covers the slow, traumatic breakup of her second marriage; and the third describes Kraus’s journalistic investigation into a brutal murder that took place close to her former summer house in Minnesota, in a working-class community ravaged by meth.
Song for Friday? Saturday?
I got a rejection:
Thank you for sending us "Agnes." Although we must decline your submission at this time, we appreciated the chance to consider it.
We hope you are well and wish you and your work all the best.
Sincerely,
-Pangyrus Literary Magazine
15 Small Press Books You Don’t Want to Miss This Fall (Electric Literature) by Wendy J. Fox has a list of books I wish I could buy.
Let us hope, order means good things forthcoming.
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