Dan:

For a long time, especially after BeeHive stopped publication, New River has 
been the premiere digital literary art journal.
Now, the new design is indeed excellent. I will definitely spend time here.

Best,
Joel


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dan Waber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <WRYTING-L@LISTSERV.WVU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, February 21, 2007 12:47 PM
Subject: New River Journal's new issue


New River Journal ( http://www.cddc.vt.edu/journals/newriver/ ), the
first online journal devoted exclusively to digital writing and art,
is pleased to announce the release of its premier issue for 2007.
After a period of dormancy, New River Journal has been redesigned and
reborn, complete with exciting new works by some of today's leading
digital authors.

New River Journal was founded by Virginia Tech English Professor Ed
Falco in 1996, with the assistance of Len Hatfield, a computer guru
then on the Virginia Tech faculty. The online publication has
consistently tested the boundaries and rules of writing in a digital
age. This new issue marks the first time the journal has been managed
and edited by students participating in the MFA Creative Writing
Program in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences. Managing
editors for the inaugural launch are two graduate students, Laura
Dulaney and Bryon Sabol.

The managing editors, with the help of Brent Jesiek of Virginia
Tech's Center for Digital Discourse and Culture, redesigned the New
River Journal's website to provide a user friendly interface and
easier access to the journal's archive. Beginning with this issue,
the Journal plans to post new issues twice a year, in December and
May.

The current issue includes works by David Herrstrom, Jason Nelson,
and Dan Waber.

David Herrstrom's "The Nicodemus Glyph" is a heady investigation of
the ancient author and teacher, Nicodemus. Herrstrom has constructed
the Glyph to taunt the reader's desire for more definite knowledge of
Nicodemus, while simultaneously signaling that we can never fully
know a historical person or circumstance.

Jason Nelson's work tests the boundary between "game-like" interfaces
and serious poetry. "Poetry Cube" not only allows readers to
reorganize Nelson's words, but it also allows them to enter their own
poetry and, with the click of a button, shuffle the lines into an
array of possibilities. "Between Treacherous Objects" takes a form
reminiscent of a video game flight simulator. Using the mouse,
readers fly through the space of images and poetry, choosing to stop
where they desire.

Dan Waber's "Writing Through Time" examines and challenges the
limitations and constructs of space and time as they traditionally
apply to the written words. Words appear and disappear on the "page,"
creating a layered fabric of text and meaning that can be further
manipulated by the reader.

The Virginia Tech MFA Creative Writing Program was established in
2005. New River Journal's managing editors Dulaney and Sabol are
members of the program's first class. The New River Journal is
currently hosted by the Center for Digital Discourse and Culture.

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