Rolling out the Table of Contents

After three weeks of happily receiving submissions, ideas, gorgeous sentences and pretty pictures, we are now pulling together the table of contents for Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology. Here’s a partial list, to which will we add in the next week:

Denise Grollmus on Speak in Tongues
Dave Giffels on the Browns
Susan Grimm on Slovaks and time passing
Rebecca Meiser on DIY music in Collinwood
Alissa Nutting on working man bars
Douglass Max Utter on Randall Tiedman
Kristin Ohlson on tending the bar in the Flats
Laura Putre on Boddie Records
Michael Ruhlman on fixing up a house
Dave Lucas on fiery furnaces
Huda Al-Marashi on Little Iraq
Ted Sikora and Cleveland comics
Kevin Hoffman on Strange Love
Erin O’Brien on Slavic Village
Chris Wise on hard core
Claire McMillan on thrifting
Erick Trickey on Harvey Pekar
James Russell on the history of Rust Belt Chic
Mansfield Frazier on Hough Vineyards
Jacquie Marino on Italians and Shame
Elizabeth Weinstein on Jane Scott
Afi Scruggs on South Euclid

Bob Perkoski on Cleveland views
Sean Decatur on downtown to east side bus rides
Julia Christensen, cover
Eric Anderson on rust and rats
Stephanie Gautum on Leaving and Returning Home
Joslyn Grostic on defending her hometown 

Lee Chilcote on Detroit-Shoreway
Joe Baur on boomeranging  

Philip Metres on 13 ways of Cleve-ing 


Anthology Update III

Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology planning continues. This much we know: we will self-publish a print book, a (longer) ebook and run contributor content on this site. We aim to announce the table of contents at the beginning of July.

Some of the folks we’ve been talking were name-checked here and here. With them we have batting around ideas about Jane Scott, vinyl records, losing teams, tuba players, vineyards, Harvey Pekar, shame and moving away, moving back and staying put.

Here are a few more writers and artists who have shown up in our inbox:

Douglas Max Utter
Erick Trickey
Philip Metres
Laura Putre
Kevin Hoffman 
Ted Sikora

So much smarts, so much arts. But there’s room for your voice, too. Don’t be shy. Email us at rustbelt anthology@gmail.com with your submission or pitch. Tell your friends. Like us.

 

 

 

More Contributors!

Last week we told you about some of the people we’re talking to about writing for  Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology. Nothing has been accepted or rejected yet: we’re still in the process of talking, sifting, talking, reading and hearing from more folks (we’re still accepting submissions, yes! Until June 30).

But  the support and interest has been phenomenal, and we wanted to give a shout out to a few more of the fine, smart, stylish writers with whom we’ve been talking:

Dave Lucas
Elizabeth Weinstein
Rebecca Meiser
Mansfield Frazier
Julia Christensen
Pete Beatty 

And more!

We’re overwhelmed (and a bit slow to email back–sorry!), and happy, and excited. And we want to hear from you, too.

 

Contributors! Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology

Only six days after we announced this project, we are lining  up an impressive list of  contributors. We thought we’d pull back the curtain to show you some of the folks we have been talking to thus far, to whet your appetite:

Michael Ruhlman
David Giffels
Kirstin Ohlson
Justin Glanville and Julia Kuo
Alissa Nutting
Mark Tebeau
Denise Grollmus
James Russell
Jacqueline Marino

And many more!

More on what these folks will be writing, and who else will be contributing, as the weeks progress. 

Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology

The term “rust belt chic” began as a phrase for a concept that had no name, to describe geographically unique and interesting places. Now the term is being used  by the national media and others to define a certain cool or a new aesthetic.

This book will define Rust Belt Chic by documenting what the term means to those of us who live or have lived in Cleveland. The book will to be neither pollyanna nor despairing: our aim is descriptive. Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology will be 100% Cleveland produced, and we plan to publish it by Labor Day, in both print and e-book form.

The book will be edited by Richey Piiparinen and Anne Trubek. Unfortunately, we cannot pay contributors, but we will work hard to make your writing shine. We hope the book will be gobbled up  by Clevelanders and editors, urban planners and creative-types across the country and overseas. We will consider previously published material.

Interested in contributing? We’re looking for non-fiction pitches (profiles, think-pieces, personal essays, etc.) or completed pieces of 500-2000 words. We’re also interested in hearing from graphic artists with a story to tell, business owners and  civically-minded folks  who would like to participate. We aim to make selections by June 30.

Topics could include the following:

–Journey, the importance of pilgrimage
–Attachment to place
–Importance of heritage, particularly ethnic background
–Food, drink and  identity
–Aesthetics of wear and ruin
–The value of blue collar culture
–Authentic landscapes

Send pitches, submissions, questions, comments, offers to help or subvent to:

rustbeltanthology@gmail.com

Thanks!

Anne Trubek and Richey Piiparinen