209.

bread loaf writers conference

Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference

The same day as my second child Hazel’s birth (May 24th!), I received word in the mail that I was selected as a contributor in non-fiction to the 2015 Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference at Middlebury College in Vermont. This is a big deal for me as an “emerging” writer and also a challenge: it is expensive to attend this conference.

209.

Before Hazel came, my partner Kristin and I decided that I would take a full 8 weeks of unpaid parental leave from my job. We planned for it, but we knew it would be close financially. Now the opportunity to attend Bread Loaf has come along. I may not get this chance again since it is hard to get accepted into the conference. I consider myself very lucky but also know that I put in the work to make it this far.

The total amount to attend the 10-day conference (costs for travel, room, board, and tuition) is $3,500. It is steep, yes, but not unthinkable and I am halfway there with a couple of weeks to go. The conference runs from August 12 to August 22. We have time to do this!

What I would get at Bread Loaf is access to editors and literary agents – one-on-one – plus workshops, readings, and networking with established writers. If I’m going to advance as a writer myself, I need to take this opportunity. When I look at the bios of many of the writers I admire, Bread Loaf is almost always listed prominently.

Here is my plea: help me attend this conference! This is not rewards based crowd funding, but everyone that contributes will get something in the mail from me.

I have set the funding deadline for July 1st when payment and a manuscript is due. Anything helps, even just a dollar and a shout out on social media. Here is the link again: http://www.gofundme.com/tracetobreadloaf

216.

This entry was posted in biographical, Durham, Pioneers Press, Quitter, tennessee. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

new writing subscription

New writing subscription

I am hoping to take advantage of a new model of patronage and encourage subscriptions to my writing.

For $12 per year – Based on a unique writing prompt that you send me each month, you receive a 100 word written piece emailed to you. You also get access to a private blog for supporters.

For $27 per year – You get 100 words written to you each month, in the mail, based on a prompt that you send me each month. You also get a copy of Quitter #9 (two months after starting your subscription) and access to a private blog for supporters.

For $60 per year – You get 200 words written to you each month, in the mail, based on a prompt that you send me each month. You also get a copy of Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying (two months after starting your subscription) and access to a private blog for supporters.

For $120 per year – This is the big one, the support level that means you believe in the potential of my writing and are willing to really get behind it. You receive every zine I release as soon as it is finished, 400 words written to you each month, in the mail, based on a prompt that you send me each month. You also get copies of Lasterday #1 through #4, Quitters Good Luck Not Dying through #9 (two months after starting your subscription) and access to a private blog for supporters PLUS access to audio recordings of each reading I do (at bookstores, info-shops, house shows, sitting in my family room talking to myself). If there is another project I take on, you get access to it. This is a subscription to my creative kinetic energy.

From my new Patreon page:

For the past ten years, I have written a zine named Quitter, a quarter page, self-published and mostly self-distributed work of creative non-fiction. Each issue is based on several “memoir vignettes” that expand around a theme. The current issue (Quitter #9) consists of two stories about breaking up. The first is about the divorce of my parents and the second about a severed land deed.

I am currently working on a memoir, Carrying Capacity. Carrying Capacity is a book of essays about ancestral lore, recovery from depression and substance abuse, and the disintegration of generational memory in the absence of physical evidence. What I intend to say with this book is that all of our personal histories are largely mythologies built more upon omission than anything else.

I was awarded a 2015 Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Award in Literature from the Durham Arts Council. This financial award will be used for a reading tour of North Carolina. In December of 2014 I received my Certificate in Documentary Arts in Non-fiction Writing from the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, a culmination of three years of work.

I write about personal mythology, the histories we create from our own background that are true to us but maybe not to others, and I want to share this with as many people as I can.

Praise for Trace’s writing:

“The new issue of Quitter [#9] is a quiet, deep-moving river of personal history, ideas, and true things told in a way that feels right and grounded. Trace’s best work yet shows him moving through time–boyhood to youth, pre-memory to adulthood. We find ourselves in horse pastures and wintery fields, anarchist farms and downtown coffeehouses. Outstandingly well-written, all of it. As his work continues to get better each issue, we stand solid in our belief that Trace Ramsey is a major talent destined to write things that last.”

“Trace Ramsey’s new zine series, Lasterday, is a graceful, deliberate, engaging piece of American storytelling. Over the course of these four minis, Trace writes about cabin life and depressive episodes, the lying inherent in stories and lost things that are not truly lost. Beautifully written and presented (each zine folds out into a poster), these tiny documents are something you’ll keep in your stacks forever. Recommended for fans of Joan Didion, Juliet Escoria, Harper Lee, and Thomas Wolfe.”

Quitter #7 is a hard and devastating piece of personal American history. Through abuse and poverty, blood and snow, we see Quitter author Trace Ramsey giving us something true and painful and beautifully-told. A Pioneers Press favorite, we look forward to future work from Ramsey, a great and powerful new voice in American writing. We can’t vouch enough for this. Buy this zine. It’s well worth your time. One of the best zines of the year, hands down.”

Quitter #8 is a quiet, elegant look at passing storms and coming sadness. In a lean and beautifully-written voice akin to Willa Cather (but all his own), Trace Ramsey shows us a tangled kind of life–deep-burrowed hurt, love and belief in (and need for) good creatures, a tinge of wildness in city blocks. A zine about depression and children and childhood and dreams, the eighth issue of Quitter (though brief) is one of the most substantial pieces of literary work in the Pioneers Press catalog.”

This entry was posted in biographical, Pioneers Press, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

Trace Ramsey

ella fountain pratt emerging artists award

Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Award

I found out last month that I was awarded an Ella Fountain Pratt Emerging Artists Award in Literature. The award consists of a cash grant for a specific project that is meant to boost and advance the artist’s career. I wrote my grant to fund a reading tour of North Carolina. I will read from previously published material as well as from a work-in-progress memoir called Carrying Capacity.

Trace RamseySo far I have five readings scheduled:

Wilmington, NC – Old Books on Front St.
February 28th, 4:00 pm

Durham, NC – The Regulator Bookshop
March 5th, 7:00 pm

Greensboro, NC – Scuppernong Books
March 6th, 7:00 pm

Carrboro, NC – Internationalist Books
with Emma Anitclimax
March 26th, 7:00 pm

Raleigh, NC – So and So Books
April 10th, 7:00 pm

Comments are closed.

out now good luck not dying book and buttons

Out now! Good Luck Not Dying book and buttons

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying started shipping on Tuesday. You can buy the book as well as buttons over at Pioneers Press.

Praise for Quitter:

“Truthful and devastating, Trace Ramsey’s Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is a burning coal and a lighthouse, a haunted past and an open door. This brutal, elegant little book will shake your floorboards and rafters until the whole place comes crashing down.” –Do-It-Yourself Guide to Fighting the Big Motherfuckin’ Sad author Adam Gnade on Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying

“This is the sort of zine, the sort of writing that smacks you in the face. These stories will hollow you out. I’d compare Trace’s style a bit to Flannery O’Connor’s, in that neither one of them romanticizes anything, softens anything, and their takes on life are completely unsentimental.” -Rust Belt Jessie on Quitter #7

“It’s been awhile since I have read such a well-written zine. Reading Quitter #7 was a real breath of fresh air. I appreciate most zines, but I find myself reading them once then storing them away. Not this one, though. As soon as I finished it I wanted to start it again. So good. Do yourself a favor, pick up a copy of Quitter today.” -Dakota Floyd on Quitter #7

“This is a good-looking zine, a class act.” -Lily Pepper on Quitter #7

“The subject matter is intimate and stark. With precision word-smithing, Trace ventures into parts of the emotional landscape we normally avoid, and engages us by tapping the common well of humanity with an unflinching examination of his personal experience. Inspirational.” –Zine World on Quitter #4

This entry was posted in biographical, books, Pioneers Press, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

Assembly and stapling of Birds Birds Birds.

tennessee has her own zine

Tennessee has her own zine

Tennessee put together her own zine that will be available through Pioneers Press and also via mail order directly from Ten. Send me a message or leave a comment to get our address. We are all excited about the release of Birds Birds Birds!

Assembly and stapling of Birds Birds Birds.

Zinester.

Finished product. #birdsbirdsbirds

Tennessee was inspired after receiving another kid’s zine, Liam’s Big Diamond.

120. Catching up on the news.

 

Share

About Trace

Trace lives in Durham, NC with their partner Kristin. They were joined by baby Tennessee Lynn in April 2012 and baby Hazel in May 2015.
Trace is not a talker. Trace also thinks it is a little weird to talk about himself in the third person.

This entry was posted in biographical, books, Pioneers Press, Quitter, tennessee. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

pioneers press re releases quitter good luck not dying

Pioneers Press re-releases Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is experiencing a re-birth through the publisher and distributor Pioneers Press. Pioneers will also publish my first full length book next year, which I am very excited about.

Pioneers Press’ next published title is up for pre-sale! This book ships October 1st. Pioneers Press is proud to announce our next published title, Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying, a pocket-size book collection of Trace Ramsey’s excellent Quitter zine. What do you do when you realize the whole system is chock full of faulty wiring and institutionalized myths? Do you stay behind that desk (whether metaphorical or literal) and burrow into the security of “living in the first world” or do you throw yourself into the wilds? Sometimes it’s not so black and white, and sometimes “cutting ties” requires a privilege and skill-set we don’t have.

In this anthology of Quitter issues 1-6, we see Ramsey battling fear and freedom, history and an uncertain future. There are no hard and fast answers; nothing set in stone besides the guarantee of chaos and troubled waters ahead. Over the course of 64 pages, Trace struggles through life, winning and failing, looking for a better path but not always finding it.

A deeply honest narrative on struggling to break the binds that hold us down, Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is a devastating, thrilling read; a beautifully written examination of the frustrations and pitfalls of life in

This entry was posted in biographical, book reviews, books, Pioneers Press, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

pioneers press distro

Pioneers Press Distro

I’m really excited to say that Pioneers Press now distributes Quitter #7. They wrote a short review that makes me blush a bit every time I read it:

Quitter #7 is a hard and devastating piece of personal American history. Through abuse and poverty, blood and snow, we see Quitter author Trace Ramsey giving us something true and painful and beautifully-told. A Pioneers Press favorite, we look forward to future work from Ramsey, a great and powerful new voice in American writing. We can’t vouch enough for this. Buy this zine. It’s well worth your time. One of the best zines of the year, hands down.

Pioneers Press is also getting ready to re-release my book Good Luck Not Dying! Please support this amazing distro.

This entry was posted in biographical, book reviews, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

back from the dead quitter update

Back from the dead – Quitter update

I had planned on doing several things with Quitter this year – get #7 and #8 written, sell 100 books and get #1 through #6 formatted for iTunes. Not much of that has happened. For one thing, it is hard to get myself into the “Quitter voice”, what with aqll its unstructured sentences and heavy reliance on very distant memories. I have plenty of memories stockpiled and noted, but applying them to the voice is more difficult than you might think especially when you consider that we are only talking about a twelve page 1/4 page zine.

Without any further explanation, an excerpt from Quitter #7:

Rain

It is hard for me to describe the smell or sounds of rain. It is one of those scents that leads my brain in all sorts of leaps and skips and stops – cold mornings on the cusp of April, a light rain working to break up soil for new seeds; the quick shuffle of a city street, legs and car horns and black umbrellas singing as a mass under a stinging summer downpour; a tin roof under the pounce of a quick midnight thunderstorm, pinging and ringing and whistling, directionless, soothing. Hitting an asphalt shingle, rain has the swish and dribble of water circling a drain. On a metal garbage can lid, thick droplets are like a tire iron tapping a light post, singing up and down my ear canals, membranes vibrating like a plucked guitar string.

To me, the rain scent has it all: fallen leaves and dog hair, crushed acorns and root beer soda, unadorned armpits and fresh cut mint. There are only certain other smells with this sort of ambiguity to them – the air in a deflating bicycle tire, the blood of newly pulled tooth – and those smells contain their own piece of genetic code within us, the ability to unzip a thought at the cellular level and make our reactions seem innate. If it were not for the ability of these smells to grab us and throw us into memories, we might not stand apart from the others as conscious beings. Stuck with nothing but this exact present and the slowly unfurling future, no past at all to lean on or learn from, we would be burdened with these ten fingers and ten toes, wondering why they are able to do the things that they do.

To the ear, rain is just as complex. A rolling thunderstorm sometimes hurries me back to when I was five or six years old, barely tall enough for most everything, fingers tightening on a window sash, knuckles whitening trying to pull my eyes up to the glass. Fast outlines of trees vibrated against my retinas promptly followed by low rumbles shaking the panes, always mildly enough to leave them intact – both eyes and glass – but ambitious enough to produce a reaction among all the bones of the window. Thunder and lighting were always something I would wake up for and watch until completion, the drifting storm dissolving the time between dreams into a short series of intermissions and transmissions.

Among the other senses, I unfortunately do not frequently get involved in the memories of sight. I indulge them fully when I can, but vision can too easily betray a person. Heat waves floating from a sun baked highway are really nothing tangible, as real as wind but nothing to hold onto or brace against. But those tingling apparitions bring me back to summers working in fields of cabbage, the heat rising from between the open rows, reflecting the misery of the heat of an August mid-day. The fields are open as far as you can see, fence rows barely tucking in the edges of peripheral vision. The stretches of green, watery calories – bound for harvest, for trucks, for bags, for shelves, for plates, for bellies – sit in perfect rows, silent and still except for an occasional drop of hot summer rain running down into the outer wrapper leaves.

Tonight’s rain is one of those hot rains, the type that does nothing to lower the humidity or remove the stickiness from arms and foreheads. “A warm front”, the radio whispers as the wind picks up, a warm front moving into an already miserably warm climate. I currently live in a place where the first showers of a mid-summer front evaporate lazily from dark back roads, rising only occasionally as a vehicle parts the sick misty clouds. The next shower brings more of the same, saturating the air to the point of choking. If you have spent time in the South you know about this air. It is the kind of air that curls the covers of paperback books and makes envelopes stick together.

In this weather there is no choice but to sit six inches from a box fan, crank it to the fastest and highest settings, sit still and wait it out. There is no relief, no counter to this air thick with the grease and the swamp and the drench of another day in the Piedmont. Sweat – condensing on eyebrows, lip tops and knee pits – is not optional; it is a prerequisite for this course in human temperament. How you handle this details how you handle other personal tortures like hemorrhoids, ingrown nails and expired license plates. Our bodies are constant chain reactions of glop, responding to stimuli and adjusting internal temperature to fit the demands of any current surroundings. Cold? Get a blanket. Hot? Take off your pants.

The senses you own are your broken and rusty weapons in the war on distorted memories; how powerful or sharp or loaded with ammunition can they be if the past becomes so hazy that you forget how you wielded them or don’t even care? Everything you see or taste or smell is a trick on your future memory. It will never come back in its full context, its undiluted reason. Was I really there? Did I really say that? It sounds familiar, but…

We are at the mercy of our imperfect biological and chemical functions. We do not know, truly, where we stand in the past. It is somehow vacant and arbitrary and misaligned. It is a distortion no matter how much you think it is the truth. It is only the truth now, really, in this present when all the correct gases fill the lungs, all the correct fluids irrigate the eyes. This is it; the truth as it is in the now, the next, the now, the markings on the rain gauge.

We are not like dogs, relying on all of our senses for identification. We humans need clocks and compasses, measuring tapes and thermometers, bi-focal glasses and star charts. Our instincts and innate habits are no longer there for us to lean on in a pinch. They have been bred out of us by too much time in moving vehicles, too much time spent in inebriated states, too much time contemplating broken hearts.

The heart, it breaks. We feel it, but we know, scientifically, every emotion is simply an expression of the chemical mills of the brain and the guts. But we also know that any out of the ordinary input into those brains and guts can and will be processed into some staggering physical troubles. You get sick, you don’t eat, you don’t sleep, you dwell on the possibilities and wish you could rewind every moment in order to find out what it was that made the error get as far as your current reality. You stumble in from the rain, crumpling clothing here and there between the walls, soaked from the eyelids to the toenails, defeated from it.

Your heart, it breaks.

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

quitter 6 two stories available now

Quitter #6 – “Two Stories” available now

It has been a few years since I did something under the Quitter name, but those wild hairs just come out of nowhere sometimes and get me to put something together. The text for Quitter #6 has been sitting in a document on my computer for a long time just waiting for me to do all of thirty minutes of formatting and another thirty of printing. It is procrastination at its finest and simplest. The shorter the amount of time it takes for me to do something, the longer it will take to happen. Just ask Kristin about the piles of books, cameras and bullshit on my side of the bed.

So yeah, Quitter #6 is ready to go. As usual, the cost is $2 or whatever. An additional 80 cents covers the postage and PayPal fees. Here is a taste –

I distinctly remember second grade. It was somewhat of a turning point in my life, as much of a turning point as you can get when half your life is measured in years instead of decades.  That year I got my first and only pair of cowboy boots, a sharp toed brown and gold stitched outfit with heels and zero traction.  That year I also shoplifted a candy bar from a nearby gas station, smoked my first few puffs of a cigarette and, most importantly, got into my first real fist fight with someone who wasn’t my brother.




This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

new quitter book review and news

New Quitter book review and news

The Quitter book received a new review in the latest issue of Zine World (#27).

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying: Compendium of the first five issues of Quitter zine, in a nice hand-sewn hardback, with dust jacket and stickers. Trace’s essays wander appealingly and wittily around, as he searches for something real in our cosmetic world. Issue #2 is the standout: Trace flies over the Midwest, musing over cultural impermanence. I liked this greatly, but however nice the book and stickers are, $19 is more than I would have paid for it.

Making books is not what I’m looking to do with my Spring and Summer.  It is more of a Winter project, a project that I failed with horribly this year.  I am behind on books – way behind.  If you ordered a book recently, you will get it within the next few weeks.

So I am again looking into getting the book printed in softcover, either through a self-publishing avenue or by a publisher wanting to run with it.  All options are open, but I simply can’t keep up with a hand made book…

If anyone out there knows of a publisher, is a publisher or just wants to help out, let me know.

I will continue to offer the paperback version as well as individual issues, but I am taking the hardcover version off the shelf.

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to New Quitter book review and news

  1. Kristin says:

    Try being a quitter of perfectionism and start recognizing your awesomeness, babes.

  2. Tanis says:

    I have a couple of extras if you need them but I will need to have them replaced!!!!!!!!! Can I help you do anything with the books?

a very quitter new year

A very Quitter new year

Since the June 2008 release of my book Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying, I failed to reach my goal of one-hundred books sold by the end of the year.  I sold a little over sixty, which isn’t bad for a six month effort.  I know it doesn’t sound like much, but sixty hand-made hardcover books represents about two-hundred-plus hours of work.  Design, prototyping, printing, cutting, gluing, etc. paid me about $4.00 an hour to do.  Add in the cost for materials, and I almost broke even for the year.  Almost.

So, for 2009 a few things are changing.  For one, the price of the hardcover is going up to $18.  I am not looking to get rich with this effort (it is working so far, right?) but the process should at least cover the associated costs.  In addition, I will also start printing a softcover version for around $8, give or take, that I can start shipping really soon.  The softcover will also be full color and individually numbered just like the hardcover.  Both versions should be available through The Abundance Foundation pretty soon.  In the meantime, check out the Quitter page to order.  If you live in Chatham County North Carolina, I’ll take payment in Plenties at the old hardcover price of $15 (1 and 1/2 Plenties), paperback at $5 (1/2 Plenty)!

If that were not enough, the ideas for Quitter #6 are rattling around in my head, on scraps of paper thrown all over the heres and theres of my life or sitting alone somewhere, talking to themselves and waiting for me to go pick them up.  I’ll get on that shortly…

And finally, I hope to commit issues one through five to audio in the very near future.  Look out!

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to A very Quitter new year

  1. lynn says:

    happy birthday trace!

Quitter #4

new quitter 4 review

New Quitter #4 review

From Zine World #26

quitter #4: Every once in awhile you read a zine written in beautiful prose. It’s great, you don’t have to commit to read beautiful and complex descriptions for a whole book; instead you get a brain massage for just a few moments while waiting for the bus. My favorite story was on the author’s experience living out in nature for three months studying birds: “Early on in the study I passed the time chewing on birch twigs and inventing commentaries, developing arguments against the domestication of humans, and settling philosophical disputes between pebbles and sticks, using a slow flowing creek as the adjudicator.” Other stories discuss an unnamed health condition and a treatise on fish sticks; “plastic wrapped… fully reduced from sentient parts of an underwater ecosystem into full color anthropomorphic cartoon representations of happy fish enjoying a full plate of their own ‘fingers.’” Trace [$1.50 everywhere, or trade 20XS :15] –ailecia

Quitter #4

This entry was posted in Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

quitter book review by gianni simone

Quitter book review by Gianni Simone

Gianni Simone, a mail artist residing in Japan, writes zine reviews for Xerography Debt as well as their own blog Gloomy Sundays.  Gianni recently reviewed my Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying book.

He (Trace) has been putting out his zine Quitter since 2005. After publishing five issues, he has decided to collect the whole lot into a 40-page hand-made book and he was kind enough to send me copy #35 (I know because each copy is numbered). The object itself is a little jewel, with a great color cover and color and b/w illustrations throughout. And then there’s the writing, of course. Put it simply, I believe that the best writing is the kind that 1) manages to be engaging regardless of the subject; 2) makes me think; and most of all 3) makes me feel like I want to take highlighter and pen and cover the pages with comments and orange marks. Quitter managed to do all these things.

Trace writes what he calls creative non fiction, and through the years has developed the ability to put common words together in original combinations. He manages to be sophisticated in a natural, unassuming way. At the same time, he anchors his rants with stories taken from his memories. Sometimes he will write something like ‘I was born with an extra pair of ribs’ and the reader (or at least a dumb reader, such as myself) will search for hidden meanings until he realizes that is the plain truth. Apart from the autobiographical notes, the common theme that returns in all the five issues is Trace’s decision to ‘quit’ the kind of world that humankind has turned into a huge pile of garbage. Quitting a job he hates and translates into ‘someone else’s hopes and mortgage and car payments;’ quitting unconscious consumption; temporarily quitting the civilized world in order to live for three months in ‘solitary confinement’ in a forest and study the breeding habits of a small songbird… What he will not quit is fighting to ‘preserve the history of (…) an idea that would often be considered irrelevant by the dominant culture,’ and writing ‘for an audience that is resilient in its opposition of being taken for granted.’ What can you ask more from a zine?

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Quitter book review by Gianni Simone

  1. Pingback: Books and Magazines Blog » Archive » Quitter book review by Gianni Simone

quitter book ready to go

Quitter book ready to go!

I am happy to finally announce that – after seven months of writing and rewriting, working with Josh on the illustrations, Nathaniel on the cover, and going back and forth on using a formal publisher Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying by Trace Ramsey (that’s me) is now available for purchase. The book is 78 pages with over a dozen color illustrations. It is hand stitched, hardcover, numbered and made by hand by the author.

Considering the time, materials and general effort it takes to make one of these books, I decided on a price of $14 (updated in January 2009 to $20).

That might sound expensive for such a small book, but in a quick search of Amazon I could not find a 78 page hardcover for less than $20. Plus it is made by hand. That has to count for something.

I will pretty much make the books as I receive orders. PayPal seems to work well for most folks, but if you live near me or see me all the time and want to pay cash just let me know. Each book will get some goodies with it including buttons and/or stickers, maybe a book mark.

Thanks for keeping up with this project! I hope you support it if you can…

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

bookbinding quitter book prototype

Bookbinding – Quitter book prototype

The first two attempts at making a hardcover book were miserable and complete failures. For the first attempt, I used some really simple looking instructions from DadCanDo.com. The instructions were so simple that when I followed the steps and completed the book I ended up with a sticky, bent, unattractive pile of cardboard and paper. Even after having dried for a day and half, the cloth that I used for the cover had dark stains from the glue that I used. Unattractive and shoddy looking –

The corners didn’t stick together the way they should and were coming apart a day later –

And the front pages were wrinkled and generally gross –

The second attempt didn’t yield any better results. After sleeping on it, getting some more supplies and watching some YouTube videos on bookbinding, I finally made a decent hardcover book.

I printed the book in four sections of eight pages. In the lingo of bookbinding these are called the signatures. It took me awhile to figure out that the software I am using (Adobe InDesign CS3) does not make this process easy unless you are a commercial printer. In order for me to print a book on my home printer I have to use a series of programs each requiring some of the same steps. Just figuring out those steps took several hours of searching the Internet, posting on forums and sending emails.

For this hardcover I used construction paper instead of the first few attempts using cloth. Much better results –

I have a few more minor problems to fix, but this stands as the prototype for making the Quitter hardcover book.

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Bookbinding – Quitter book prototype

  1. April says:

    Woah! Great Job trace! I was going to suggest just ripping a cover off of someone else’s book…

  2. mike says:

    Looks great! Exciting!

  3. Ali says:

    The orange copy with the construction paper looks great!

    …yet another thing you do that makes me dream of how to spend my time off!

quitter diy or die

Quitter – DIY or Die

Due to budget issues, the Quitter book project kind of stalled out in the last few months. I cannot afford to publish the book as originally planned. I will instead take an entirely different route. This new route will require more time on my end. The end product will be much nicer and will not cost me anywhere near as much to produce. Hopefully.

In a weird daydream, I decided it would be nice if I knew how to bind books. That led to a quick search of the Internets and loads of free advice and detailed how-tos on not only book binding, but hardcover DIY book production out of scrap materials. Perfect… I have ready access to all types of trash cardboard as well as bags of fabric, paper, glue and tools. If the materials are cheap enough (or free) and it doesn’t take too long to assemble, I can offer the book for a lower cost.

The only problem is that the book will not have a handy bar code and probably won’t have an ISBN number, so you won’t see it on Amazon any time soon. The good thing is that more and more small book stores will sell these types of non-barcoded books and more and more DIY distributors will also carry them. many actually prefer it if the book doesn’t scan.

All that said, I still have not finished the re-write of Quitter #5. It is close, but something is still missing. End of this month? We’ll see…

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Quitter – DIY or Die

  1. April says:

    I know a place that can print barcodes!

another quitter update

Another Quitter update

Quitter: Good Luck Not Dying is still moving slowly ahead. Josh has a few more illustrations left, and I have begun the process of choosing where they will end up in the text. I didn’t think it would be that hard, but I am finding the process a bit taxing. The biggest problem is figuring out if I should go full page on the illustrations or weave them into the text. And then where would they make the most sense and how does it change the flow of the words.

Quitter #4 recently received a review from Zine World

Quitter #4: Everything about this is impressive. The writing is stellar, and the packaging very polished. Trace (Quitter) gives us four vignettes on varied topics, woven into a common, flowing theme. The subject matter is intimate and stark. With precision word-smithing, Trace ventures into parts of the emotional landscape we normally avoid, and engages us by tapping the common well of humanity with an unflinching examination of his personal experience. Inspirational. Trace, cricketbread.com [$1.50 worldwide 20XS :25] –Jack

I went back and looked at Quitter #5 to see if the month long lapse since I looked at it made any difference. The ending stood out as needing some work, and I would like some opinions…

Snow Plows

During a snow storm, the plows mostly come at night. In the sturdy, hoary months of childhood in Western New York, I would lay awake listening as the distant scraping of the plow brushed its steel blades over the roughly poured asphalt. In the dry air, the low hum could be heard for miles, the flashing orange roof lights of the plow radiating off the lumbering snowflakes, themselves moving unpredictably towards any available surface, wrestling the winds vacillating directions.

First the plow would pass to the south of our house, down the thin Barville Road, then up North Byron Road and finally across our unmarked, no shoulder road. As the sound grew closer I would pull my face up to the window, watching the coming lights reflect off every available inch of ground, the thick cover of flurries yielding very little until the massive vehicle was right in front of my eyes.A wave of snow and rock passed over the giant chisel, a chorus of grinding metal and boiled oil, a short echo off the aluminum siding. The sound and lights faded quickly as the driver made way through the expansive grid of rurality, on and on towards the gawking of other children unable to sleep.

In grade school and high school, hearing the plow at night could bring early news of a snow day. More often than not, if the plow was required then it was a particularly heavy storm. School buses were known for driving through just about anything, so there was no need for them to follow the plow in a shallow snow.

As a kid, there is really nothing like waking up to a new, deep snow. The kitchen on a potential snow day takes on a transcendent quality, a vision of potential for all that are present. Coffee brewed and eggs sizzling, cereal pouring and spoons clanking, the radio playing at a louder volume than usual. The room’s state of mind like a puppy expectantly wagging its tail in the silence of an empty house, anxious for the humans to come back. Then finally, the radio voice would begin reading the listing of closings. “Byron-Bergen, Caledonia-Mumford, Le Roy, Pavilion, Pembroke…”

As a young adult, hearing the snow plow took on a different meaning. It meant that the roads were indeed clear for everyone to go to work. Work was canceled only in extreme circumstances, and I never saw that happen before moving to the virtually snow-free South. I followed the clean routes of the snow plow to work on many occasions, a half hour drive through the salted gray and brown of a cold winter. I wondered then – as I do more often now – is this the rest of my life; is this really necessary? Is it worth dying on an icy road just to get to a horrible job? What is it that we truly value?

If there could ever be a time when acorns or walnuts have more worth than gold or silver, when a handful of fresh basil inspires more than any movie screen, when the crunch of a just-picked green pepper incites more pleasure than any amusement park ride, this must be the time. If this is it, I ask only to open up our pretentious imaginations, bring the blood and sweat into the arms and faces of those controlling all the debt, all the shiny credit card machines and all the grocery store shelves of this paved-over dump, make the “movers and shakers” into forgotten paperweights. Afterwards, among the rotting cans of baby formula and pork-and-beans, the stale crackers and moldy bread, we’ll be freed from the grinding ambitionless void of labor and rent, steel toed promises and unforgiving authority.

We demand a simpler life, a new and unspoiled horizon, the nutrition of friendship and family. We are not requesting for this, begging in the face of blankness and cheap suits. No requests; this is clearly a demand, an insistence backed up with all the strained voices and dirt caked sinew that we have left. They will give us what we want or we will take it. We will burn the snowplows and tear up the roads, ready to simply enjoy a heavy snow for its own sake.

We are made for more than this…

This entry was posted in biographical. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to Another Quitter update

  1. stew says:

    Hey Trace! Very vivid imagery. It brought me back to my Western Michigan childhood.

    My best feedback will be mostly regarding mechanics.

    Here are a few things I found:

    wrestling the winds vacillating directions.

    change winds to wind’s

    a chorus of grinding metal and boiled oil

    I don’t know why you’d be hearing boiling oil. This seemed weird to me.

    Work was canceled only in extreme circumstances, and I never saw that happen before moving to the virtually snow-free South.

    I read the above as though before you moved to the South you’d never heard of work being canceled only in extreme circumstances, which is the exact opposite of your meaning. Maybe just delete before moving to the virtually snow-free South

    If this is it, I ask only to open up our pretentious imaginations, bring the blood and sweat into the arms and faces of those controlling all the debt, all the shiny credit card machines and all the grocery store shelves of this paved-over dump, make the “movers and shakers” into forgotten paperweights

    “pretentious imaginations” is an odd turn of phrase. I’m assuming you’re going for a meaning something like “ambitious”, but the primary meaning of pretentious might be too strong in your readers’ minds to let that secondary meaning through. And then they’ll think you’re saying our imaginations are snobby. :-)

    Also in the above italicized sentence, you set up a series of verbs (to open up, bring). But then you stray and use “all the shiny…” with no verb. Lastly you need an and before “make the “movers and shakers”

    It’s really just a long, awkward sentence, though. Maybe you can break it up a bit.

    steel toed
    Hyphenate

    We are not requesting for this,

    Delete “for”

    They will give us what we want or we will take it.

    I’d change to “, or else we will take it.” (at least put the comma in there.

    OK, I have to run to dinner. Take care!

    Jenny

  2. stew says:

    Whoa. That was long.

  3. Trace says:

    Jenny:

    I took out some of the lines before you commented. However, “pretentious imaginations” is what I had in mind. We are not getting anywhere with our snotty dreams of big houses and fast cars; lets bring it back to the dirt.

    The rest is the “Quitter voice”. I don’t usually use “and” after the last comma in a list. Long awkward sentences are part of the experience. I try to setup a lot and deliver a little. The reader is my writer in their own mind. Here is your image, here are your words…When you go to sleep thinking of the two, what stays with you at the breakfast table?

quitter book update

Quitter book update

The Quitter book is moving along, mostly as planned.

I have been spending a lot of time learning how to use Adobe InDesign CS3. I have been figuring out how to do the Quitter book layout on my own, but I’m finding that I might need to call in some outside help on this. I understand how it all works; it just isn’t working the way it is supposed to. I’m used to the old PageMaker platform that I have used since 1997. CS3 is really different in good and bad ways.

The good news is that Nathaniel sent me the final watercolor book cover. I am working with it in Photoshop in order to get all the publishers requirements met. The cover is amazing, but I won’t give away the details. It is exactly what I was looking for even though I provided no guidance. The first idea is usually the best idea…

The inside illustrations are a few weeks away from being finished and scanned. This pretty much means that the completed layout is about five weeks from completion. This assumes that I actually finish writing everything that needs to be written in that time frame. I read the guts of Quitter #5 aloud to Kristin a few nights ago. Traditionally this means one last edit before printing. Traditionally…

I’m getting close, and I can’t wait to actually hold the book in my hands.

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.

quitter the book

Quitter – The Book

The subtitle of this blog is “Thoughts on a local diet and other things in Wilmington, NC…” I have the local diet thing down, but in the past week or so I have become engaged in some “other things”. This other thing is something I am very excited about even though its completion and implementation is fairly far away. I have decided to put my other project, Quitter, into book form.

It seemed like a logical way to conclude the first five issues of the Quitter story, five fairly different pieces of writing. I have no idea if the demand is out there for this obscure personal zine, but I am confident that I can break out of the zine world and into a larger audience. These are stories about me and my experiences; will they resonate beyond those that know me? I think I can say yes at this point, three years on…

I meet people, randomly, who have read the series but have no connection to me personally. I have learned that people pass on their copies to friends and family, and this gives me the inspiration to put Quitter out there with some sparkle to it (read: glossy cover and ISBN number).

Cricket Bread reaches around the world instantly. It has grown more than I ever thought and it is just getting started. The emails I get from readers are inspiring. Folks are getting something out of my experiences, and they are enjoying coming along with me as I discover my foodshed. If I was just talking to myself, I wouldn’t need all *this*. But folks also like somethings to be tangible, which is the draw of printed material. This is why Quitter is not available electronically. That is not the format it needs.

Quitter has never made any money. Any zine writer will tell you that hundreds of dollars go in and a fraction of that comes back. It is an art, not a paycheck. I expect to price the book with a minimal return just so that it can be affordable. Hopefully, as the publication date gets closer, you all won’t mind me making a couple pitches for the book.

Until then, back to local eating…

This entry was posted in biographical, Quitter. Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Quitter – The Book

  1. April says:

    I think a compilation is surely needed and I can’t wait!

  2. Mike says:

    Yes! This is exciting news! Will the book include Quitters beyond #5?………………………..!

  3. Trace says:

    One through five. Five will only be in the book and will be longer than the rest.

Shopping Basket