NOW APPROACHING ITS THIRD DECADE, "The Pushcart Prize is one of the grand institutions of the American literary scene, but it never fails to surprise, delight, and provoke readers. The short stories, essays, and poems are selected from literary magazines and small presses across the country, and represent the most exciting and innovative writing in America today. Over two hundred distinguished contributing editors helped pick more than sixty selections reprinted from scores of presses in "Pushcart Prize XXIX. An index to the series and lists of hundreds of outstanding presses and authors are also included. The most honored literary series in America, "The Pushcart Prize has been selected several times as a notable book of the year by the "New York Times. Pushcart Press and "The Pushcart Prize were named among "the most influential in the development of the American book business over the past I25 years" by "Publishers Weekly.Publisher's Weekly (Monday , January 03, 2005):
Henderson is right on the mark when he writes in his introduction that it has been a "vintage year" for this annual celebration of small magazines and presses-institutions that are anything but diminutive in their commitment to the art of the written word. From China to Greece, from India to Italy, this year's collection offers original, pithy commentary on everything from globalization and terrorism to relationships and family values in short works of fiction, nonfiction and poetry. In Deb Olin Unferth's "Juan the Cell Phone Salesman," a mother sets her daughter up with a man who turns out to be a rather unsavory character. In Jack Herlihy's "The Core," a young boy faces and embraces death along with his funeral-obsessed father. Russell Working's "The Irish Martyr" and Elizabeth Kadetsky's "The Poison that Purifies You" both grapple with issues of terrorism, the latter detailing the story of a man living in Delhi who is kidnapped by Kashmiri rebels in an eerily nonchalant manner. Chockfull of short works that make big statements and suit just about any mood, this 29th anniversary edition proves once again that size doesn't matter. (Jan.) Forecast: The Pushcart Prize's ability to pick winners was recently corroborated again when Edward P. Jones's The Known World won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Jones's first published fiction was the lead entry in Pushcart Prize XVIII. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Booklist (Wednesday, December 15, 2004):
Admirers of this annual compendium of fiction, poetry, and essays published in small-press venues can rave about its high literary quality, its rich spectrum of voices and subjects, and the importance of noncorporate publishing. But one must also say that it is a whole lot of fun to immerse oneself in these big, buzzing, and roiling volumes: you never know what you are going to find. Here are humor and pathos, danger and revelation. This blockbuster edition includes Andrei Codrescu's address to a meeting of the American Geographer's Association, an arch and evocative poem titled "Geographers at Mardi Gras." An arresting essay by Patricia Monaghan titled "Physics and Grief" is also included, as are such shattering short stories as Yiyun Li's tale about eunuchs and a young man who resembles the great dictator and Tom Bissell's intense drama about an American missionary in Russia. Among 62 winners, rookies stand beside such veterans as Wendell Berry, Mary Gordon, Kay Ryan, and William T. Vollman, constituting a stirring and, by virtue of their creativity and eloquent outspokenness, hopeful gathering.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2004, American Library Association.)
First published 2004.