>Saturday, May 9, 2015 / 1:30 p.m. > PORTLAND, OR
M. Allen Cunningham reads from Date of Disappearance in
a lineup of fellow short fiction writers Stevan Allred, RJ Samuel, and
Evan Morgan WIlliams in celebration of National Short Story Month.
Another Read Through
3932 N Mississippi Ave
Portland, Oregon 97227
http://www.anotherreadthrough.com/event/short-story-local-authors-panel/
Monday, May 04, 2015
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
M. Allen Cunningham Presents Partisans at Powell's Books, April 6th
Monday April 6, 2015 / 7:30 p.m.
Powell's Books on Hawthorne
3723 SE Hawthorne Blvd
Portland, OR 972014
A riveting meditation on war, art, ambition, perception, and subversion, Partisans is a lost work by the mysterious writer G.P. Leed, edited according to Leed's designs as indicated in manuscripts discovered after his disappearance. One half of Partisans concerns a war in an unspecified past, the other half centers on Leed himself as he struggles to survive in an unspecified future.
Cunningham's presentation will include audio-visual elements in addition to his reading from the book. Learn more about Partisans.
Here's an audio teaser:
Monday, March 23, 2015
Audio Excerpt: A Reading from M. Allen Cunningham's Partisans: A Lost Work by Geoffrey Peerson Leed
Will you join me at Powell's Books on Hawthorne, Monday April 6th (7:30 p.m.) to hear more? Details for this and other upcoming events HERE.
Friday, March 06, 2015
Special Pre-Order Offer Ends March 8, 2015
Only three days left to get 50% off an additional title when you pre-order Partisans!
"Always, everything we see challenges us to understand.
The extent to which we take up the challenge by our own wits and
without resorting to prior interpretations is the extent
to which we escape oppression." —G.P. Leed
The extent to which we take up the challenge by our own wits and
without resorting to prior interpretations is the extent
to which we escape oppression." —G.P. Leed
To use your 50% discount on your second Atelier26 book, enter that book's Promo Code into the box at the checkout:
- For Elizabeth Rosner's Gravity : enter GRAVITY
- For Harriet Scott Chessman's The Beauty of Ordinary Things : enter TBOOT
- For M. Allen Cunningham's The Honorable Obscurity Handbook : enter HONORABLE
- For M. Allen Cunningham's Date of Disappearance : enter DATE
- For Cunningham's The Flickering Page : enter FLICKERING
Discount limited to one copy of a single title per customer. Offer only applies when pre-ordering Partisans.
Offer expires Sunday March 8, 2015.
Offer expires Sunday March 8, 2015.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
PRE-ORDER PARTISANS NOW
and get 50% off another Atelier26 title! (details below)
"Always, everything we see challenges us to understand.
The extent to which we take up the challenge by our own wits and
without resorting to prior interpretations is the extent
to which we escape oppression." —G.P. Leed
The extent to which we take up the challenge by our own wits and
without resorting to prior interpretations is the extent
to which we escape oppression." —G.P. Leed
To use your 50% discount on your second Atelier26 book, enter that book's Promo Code into the box at the checkout:
- For Elizabeth Rosner's Gravity : enter GRAVITY
- For Harriet Scott Chessman's The Beauty of Ordinary Things : enter TBOOT
- For M. Allen Cunningham's The Honorable Obscurity Handbook : enter HONORABLE
- For M. Allen Cunningham's Date of Disappearance : enter DATE
- For Cunningham's The Flickering Page : enter FLICKERING
Discount limited to one copy of a single title per customer. Offer only applies when pre-ordering Partisans.
Offer expires Sunday March 8, 2015.
Offer expires Sunday March 8, 2015.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Pre-Order Partisans Now
Partisans is now available for pre-order from Atelier26 Books!
Copies ship in late-February / early March.
Place your order HERE
Q: What is Partisans about?
A: War, Art, Ambition, Perception, Subversion.
Q: You can't be any more specific?
A: How could I possibly be?
Q: Who was G.P. Leed?
A: A writer who worked in the Northwest Territory like me. A compatriot of anyone espoused to the humane imagination, the powers and possibilities of consciousness as opposed to mass perceptions or the dilutions and mediations of systems and 'high' technologies.
Q: Is Partisans a political book?
A: Ask the reader.
Q: Is Partisans an allegory?
A: No. Though many things are.
Q: Is it speculative fiction?
A: What other kind is there?
Q: How did you come to edit and publish G.P. Leed's lost manuscript?
A: Some questions cannot be answered.
Q: Will its publication put you in danger?
A: Probably. But that's true of every book. Art is the result of having been in danger.
Q: You're quoting someone, aren't you?
A: Yes. Of course everything is a quote in its way.
Q: Is Partisans a quote? What of?
A: Oh, Don Quixote and many other things. It's not for me to say but for the reader to perceive.
Q: Where is the Acknowledgements page?
A: Leed never included one. Why should I? Refer to answer above.
Q: Was G.P. Leed for real?
A: Was Jules Renard or Cervantes, or Janos Lavin?
Q: What are your hopes for Partisans?
A: They're no different than Leed's were, and those are plain to see on every page.
Q: Read the book, you're saying.
A: Leed himself writes, "Dare the reader to understand!"
Q: But would you really call most readers daring?
A: They'd better be.
Q: Who are the most daring among them?
A: Those who go first, naturally.
M. ALLEN CUNNINGHAM is the author of the novels The Green Age of Asher Witherow (a #1 Indie Next Pick) and Lost Son (about the life and work of Rainer Maria Rilke), the illustrated limited-edition short story collection Date of Disappearance, and two volumes of nonfiction, The Honorable Obscurity Handbook and The Flickering Page: The Reading Experience in Digital Times. He lives and works in the Northwest Territory.
Thursday, December 04, 2014
Rainer Maria #Rilke, b. 12/4/1875 & raised as a girl. Here's his birth depicted in my novel about him. http://t.co/0bNG0lvzML pic.twitter.com/Wv4IlS5vaY
— M. Allen Cunningham (@M_A_Cunningham) December 4, 2014
Saturday, November 29, 2014
For #IndiesFirst Day: Why it's imperative for writers to buy at the indies. @ABAbook @indiebound @NWBookLovers pic.twitter.com/wZRkbKtsKY
— M. Allen Cunningham (@M_A_Cunningham) November 29, 2014
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
New at Tin House: GHOST CODA
My essay "Ghost Coda: A Rilke Pilgrimage, or: On Being Glad No One Knows You" can now be read on the Tin House blog.
I first started working on this piece more than seven years ago, shortly after the appearance of Lost Son, my big novel about Rilke. In that time the essay has stretched into a meditation on the nature of artistic legacy, our changing attitudes toward artists of earlier times, the question of honorable obscurity, the power of certain inspirational zones and places, and the mysterious circuitry of inspiration across the generations. (How's that for a summary one cannot tweet?)
Here's the opening:
Spring, 2005
I stand in the doorway of the Bibliothèque Nationale reading room, the soaring sanctum before me, above me the ceiling a grandeur of opaque glass wreathed with names of great cities: Alexandria, Athens, London, Babylon, Jerusalem, Byzantium, Peking. I’m here in search of Rainer Maria Rilke. Strapped for cash, unschooled, twenty-seven years old and devoid of curricula vitae save years of ardent reading, I’ve already spent an absurd, obsessive half-decade writing a novel about him. It’s grown to more than one-hundred-fifty-thousand words. I hope to complete it in Paris.

The roundness of this room suggests a vast egg enclosing the world’s knowledge. I want to swim forth through the bluish light, amid the desks and along the curving walls shelved four stories high with books, but the clerk at the entry explains that I cannot come in. I lack the proper license: the coveted carte de bibliothèque. Malte, the main character in Rilke’s single novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge (1910), cherishes the card permitting him entrance to this room — not only for the learning the card allows him, but because the card puts an honorable seal on his otherwise dissolute life. A young scion of erstwhile aristocrats in Denmark, Malte has fled the land of his ancestry to fin de siècle Paris where he will live as a poet — or die a nobody, as his notebooks’ agitated first words suggest: “So, people do come here to live. I would have sooner thought that this is where one dies.” Malte’s health is failing him. Destitute, squalidly housed in the Latin Quarter, he fears he’s becoming indistinguishable from his neighbors: the sick, the desperate, the mad. His library card saves him, temporarily at least, from the spiritual degradation shown in those impoverished “husks of humanity” who ambulate the grim cobbled warrens around his apartment. “It is possible that one day it may occur to them to come as far as my room,” writes Malte while sitting in the hush of this salle de reference.
Wound up and out of sorts, I breach the shrine and install myself in a chair before a librarian’s desk, babbling. Gatekeepers make me nervous. And now I’m much too aware, in my tongue-tied foreignness, in my pullover and backpack and scuffed sneakers, that I cut the figure of a failed pretender, a would-be tourist-cum-scholar. Worse, I give the impression, despite myself, of knowing my own charade, knowing I cannot claim legitimate candidacy for the access I seek. The library wardens — officious, serious, and thoroughly French in their skeptical decorum — reduce me with every sidelong glance. They won’t grant a card to just anybody. As my stuttering interview concludes, I’m instructed to return with passport and proof official of my status as an author; e.g., a published book. I will thereafter be informed of materials in the library relevant to my research.
Rattled, I exit the marbled lobby, cross the cobbled courtyard to the ravine-like rue de Richelieu, and start back toward my cramped studio apartment on the Left Bank. As I walk I pocket my clammy hands and replay the interview. Did I call myself un écrivain or romancier? Which was more correct considering my motive? I know I said recherche — that was a kind of lie. But how can I explain that I’ve got nothing to research, at least not in the manner they mean? How explain that I simply wish to sit and work in that reading room, that the spirit of the room itself is what I’m after?
(continue reading on the Tin House site)
I first started working on this piece more than seven years ago, shortly after the appearance of Lost Son, my big novel about Rilke. In that time the essay has stretched into a meditation on the nature of artistic legacy, our changing attitudes toward artists of earlier times, the question of honorable obscurity, the power of certain inspirational zones and places, and the mysterious circuitry of inspiration across the generations. (How's that for a summary one cannot tweet?)
Here's the opening:
Spring, 2005
I stand in the doorway of the Bibliothèque Nationale reading room, the soaring sanctum before me, above me the ceiling a grandeur of opaque glass wreathed with names of great cities: Alexandria, Athens, London, Babylon, Jerusalem, Byzantium, Peking. I’m here in search of Rainer Maria Rilke. Strapped for cash, unschooled, twenty-seven years old and devoid of curricula vitae save years of ardent reading, I’ve already spent an absurd, obsessive half-decade writing a novel about him. It’s grown to more than one-hundred-fifty-thousand words. I hope to complete it in Paris.

The roundness of this room suggests a vast egg enclosing the world’s knowledge. I want to swim forth through the bluish light, amid the desks and along the curving walls shelved four stories high with books, but the clerk at the entry explains that I cannot come in. I lack the proper license: the coveted carte de bibliothèque. Malte, the main character in Rilke’s single novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge (1910), cherishes the card permitting him entrance to this room — not only for the learning the card allows him, but because the card puts an honorable seal on his otherwise dissolute life. A young scion of erstwhile aristocrats in Denmark, Malte has fled the land of his ancestry to fin de siècle Paris where he will live as a poet — or die a nobody, as his notebooks’ agitated first words suggest: “So, people do come here to live. I would have sooner thought that this is where one dies.” Malte’s health is failing him. Destitute, squalidly housed in the Latin Quarter, he fears he’s becoming indistinguishable from his neighbors: the sick, the desperate, the mad. His library card saves him, temporarily at least, from the spiritual degradation shown in those impoverished “husks of humanity” who ambulate the grim cobbled warrens around his apartment. “It is possible that one day it may occur to them to come as far as my room,” writes Malte while sitting in the hush of this salle de reference.
They certainly know where I live, and they will take care that the concierge does not stop them. But here, my dears, here I am safe from you. One must have a special card in order to get into this room. In this card I have the advantage of you … I am among these books, and then taken away from you as though I had died, and sit and read a poet.Discontent to stand in the doorway, I decide I must get a card of my own. Fumbling through the necessary questions in my quasi French, I’m referred to one attendant after another. Finally, at the Accueil, an English-speaking clerk directs me across the library’s palatial foyer to the enclosed area marked “Orientation des Lecteurs.” Bureaucracy-phobes acquire nightmares here.
Wound up and out of sorts, I breach the shrine and install myself in a chair before a librarian’s desk, babbling. Gatekeepers make me nervous. And now I’m much too aware, in my tongue-tied foreignness, in my pullover and backpack and scuffed sneakers, that I cut the figure of a failed pretender, a would-be tourist-cum-scholar. Worse, I give the impression, despite myself, of knowing my own charade, knowing I cannot claim legitimate candidacy for the access I seek. The library wardens — officious, serious, and thoroughly French in their skeptical decorum — reduce me with every sidelong glance. They won’t grant a card to just anybody. As my stuttering interview concludes, I’m instructed to return with passport and proof official of my status as an author; e.g., a published book. I will thereafter be informed of materials in the library relevant to my research.
Rattled, I exit the marbled lobby, cross the cobbled courtyard to the ravine-like rue de Richelieu, and start back toward my cramped studio apartment on the Left Bank. As I walk I pocket my clammy hands and replay the interview. Did I call myself un écrivain or romancier? Which was more correct considering my motive? I know I said recherche — that was a kind of lie. But how can I explain that I’ve got nothing to research, at least not in the manner they mean? How explain that I simply wish to sit and work in that reading room, that the spirit of the room itself is what I’m after?
(continue reading on the Tin House site)
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
The ingenious Nathan Shields is at work on a new design project for Atelier26. Analog tools go far. @Draw4Us #GPLeed pic.twitter.com/47zKKJngEh
— M. Allen Cunningham (@M_A_Cunningham) November 19, 2014
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Technology & Ideology: Ch.2 of The Flickering Page, my treatise on e-reading. Art by Nathan Shields http://t.co/Bhm2QEYDyQ pic.twitter.com/ZgTMtMbRtx
— M. Allen Cunningham (@M_A_Cunningham)
Wednesday, November 05, 2014
Exciting news from Atelier26 Books!
ATELIER26 BOOKS
TO PUBLISH DEBUT
BY PORTLAND
WRITER MARGARET MALONE
Atelier26 Books is proud to announce acquisition of the brilliant short
story collection People Like You, the
debut title by Portland writer Margaret Malone, for publication in
late 2015 or early 2016.
Margaret
Malone is the recipient of fellowships from the Oregon Arts Commission and
Literary
Arts, two Regional Arts &
Culture Council Project Grants, and residencies at The Sitka Center and Soapstone.
Her writing has appeared in The
Missouri Review, Oregon Humanities Magazine, Coal City Review, Swink, Nailed, latimes.com, and elsewhere,
including recently the Forest Avenue Press
anthology The Night, and the Rain, and
the River. A Dangerous Writers
alumnus, Malone has a degree in Philosophy from Humboldt State University and has taught creative writing as a
visiting artist at Pacific Northwest
College of Art. She lives with her husband filmmaker Brian Padian and two children in Portland, where she co-hosts the artist and literary gathering SHARE.
![]() |
Photo: Sabina Poole |
With People Like You, Malone delivers an
assemblage of characters and conundrums all at once funny, unsettling, subtle,
and moving. Malone’s people exist, like most of us, in the thick of everyday
experience absent of epiphanies, and they are caught off-guard or cast adrift
by personal impulses even while wide awake to their own imperfections. They win
us over completely although we know they are bound to break our hearts with
each confused and conflicted decision they make.
“I’ve long wanted Atelier26 to be the vehicle for a
phenomenal debut,” says press founder
and publisher M. Allen Cunningham, “and in Margaret’s work you immediately
hear the brave and startling sound of a born writer. Her voice is so assured—she’s
got such a razor wit—and each of these stories is so beautifully controlled and
alive to its own truth, readers will hardly know what hit them.”
For Malone’s launch, Atelier26 plans a significant
promotional campaign to booksellers and extensive events. “We’re going to grow
our operations considerably on behalf of People
Like You,” says Cunningham. “We’re giving it everything we’ve got, and we
anticipate a passionate bookseller response. You can’t read Margaret’s work and
not want to enthuse over it to anyone who cares about great writing.”
More details about People
Like You and its exciting release are forthcoming in the months ahead. Visit
www.Atelier26Books.com
and follow the publisher’s tweets at https://twitter.com/M_A_Cunningham.
Listen to a 10-minute recording of Margaret Malone reading from the title storyon LiveWireRadio (minute 20).
More about Margaret Malone at: www.margaretmalone.com
Atelier26 Books,
an independent press founded in Portland, Oregon in 2011, specializes in
contemporary literature in fine trade editions showcasing the highest design
standards. Atelier26 books are offered for sale through the publisher’s
online storefront, and through an ever-growing roster of independent booksellingpartners around the U.S.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Paths to Publishing Workshop
I'm leading a publishing workshop in NW Portland next month, as part of Word Harvest, a rich 6-workshop lineup spanning the weekend of November 22-23. Other workshops offered focus on poetic form, generating ideas, travel writing, and short story writing. More info HERE.
Monday, June 09, 2014
Download Stories and Essays by M. Allen Cunningham
I'm continually adding stories and essays to my e-book catalog on Smashwords. Each can be downloaded in multiple formats for the price of a coffee -- or less! The current offerings (with more appearing frequently) include:
- Sight Unseen, a short story about discovering one's own blind spots
- Chimera, a short story about the human capacity for failure and faith
- The Man in the Blue Coat: A Chamber Picture in Six Acts, a whimsical, surrealist short story about the seemingly infinite distances between ourselves and others
- The Sky at Her Back, flash fiction about love, loss, and looking at one's life like a picture
- Variations on the Morning of the World, an essay about the passage of time, the experience of being lost, the construction of memory, and the mysteries of imagination
- Prose Conjuration: The Art of Reading Cormac McCarthy, an essay originally published in Poets & Writers Magazine, considering McCarthy's entire corpus and the trajectory of his career.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
It's National Short Story Month! Get Cunningham's Date of Disappearance for More Than 40% Off -- and a Bonus Book!
An offer from Atelier26 Books:
May is National Short Story Month, and Atelier26 is celebrating by offering M. Allen Cunningham's illustrated, limited-edition story collection Date of Disappearance for just $10.00 a copy through the Atelier26 Store. That's more than 40% off the cover price! (This offer lasts until May 31st.)
May is National Short Story Month, and Atelier26 is celebrating by offering M. Allen Cunningham's illustrated, limited-edition story collection Date of Disappearance for just $10.00 a copy through the Atelier26 Store. That's more than 40% off the cover price! (This offer lasts until May 31st.)
Date of Disappearance, which the Oregonian
has called "superb, well-balanced, and deeply seductive," features ten
resonant stories, each with an accompanying illustration by artist
Nathan Shields. Signed and numbered by the author, and presented in a
fine paperback with beautiful design features (French flaps, colored
end-pages, and glossy stock for each illustration), Date of Disappearance is, we like to think, a pretty special package. Take a peek in this video:
What's more, great fans of short fiction that we are, we'd like to sweeten the deal by offering up a few of our favorite short story collections alongside Cunningham's. Thus, the first five readers to order a copy of Date of Disappearance will be invited to select a bonus book from the following excellent list. We're offering one copy of each of these -- first come first served. If you're one of the first five, you'll receive an e-mail from us shortly after you place your order.
Happy Reading, and long live the short story!

The Beauty of Ordinary Things by Harriet Scott Chessman (Atelier26 Books)
OK, not a story collection, but many have called it a novella, and goodness, we love this book!
Disorder by Dan DeWeese (Propeller Books)
A compulsively readable volume of subtle, unconventional, often curiously moving tales reminiscent of the work of Kazuo Ishiguro, W.G. Sebald, and even, sometimes, Henry James.
Praying Drunk by Kyle Minor (Sarabande Books)
Minor breaks a great many "rules" in this astonishing
P.S. Listen to an inspiring conversation with Minor HERE.
The Afterlife by John Updike (Knopf)
Updike, OK?
Fast Lanes by Jayne Anne Phillips (Knopf)
Breathtaking, fearless, riveting -- classic Jayne Anne.
Thursday, May 08, 2014
On the Double!
And now for a brief, non-literary commentary: I really like our governor. This isn't a competition, but upon how many citizen strangers did Schwarzenegger perform successful emergency aid while in office? Like I say, not a competition, but ... take that, California!
Story courtesy of The Oregonian:
Story courtesy of The Oregonian:
Gov. John Kitzhaber performs CPR on woman lying unconscious on Portland street
The governor was driving to dinner shortly after 5 p.m. near Southwest Main and 13th Avenue when he saw “someone along the edge of the street who seemed to be attempting to resuscitate a woman” lying on the ground, Nkenge Harmon Johnson said in an email to The Oregonian.
The governor ordered his driver to stop, Harmon Johnson said, then “jumped out of the vehicle” and ran to the woman’s aid to begin giving CPR. He directed one of his state police security guards to call paramedics, who took over from Kitzhaber when they arrived.
The incident, first reported by KGW-TV, is one of several in which Kitzhaber -- a former emergency room doctor -- has administered emergency first aid.(more HERE)
Sunday, May 04, 2014
New M. Allen Cunningham Website!
Redesigned
for the first time in seven years, the new M. Allen Cunningham site is
now live at www.MAllenCunningham.com, and I happen to think it sparkles
nicely. Please take a moment to explore its offerings, which include
audio selections, glimpses of forthcoming novels, links to my shorter
writing, and more.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014
"Skulls" by M. Allen Cunningham
A reading of "Skulls," which is part of something longer. Accompanying artwork by Nathan Shields.
Sunday, April 20, 2014
M. Allen Cunningham's Partisans Shortlisted
Aqueous Books announced today the shortlist for the 2014 Flann O'Brien Award for Innovative Fiction, and among the six titles is M. Allen Cunningham's Partisans.
How to describe Partisans? Maybe like so:
On the basis of an excerpt from Partisans, Cunningham was recently awarded a 2014 residency at Yaddo.
How to describe Partisans? Maybe like so:
A lost work by the mysterious writer G.P. Leed, Partisans is a book in two alternating parts, one part being the story of a sole surviving resistance fighter (from an unspecified war in an unspecified time) as he wanders war-torn landscapes in search of a new life. The other part of Partisans derives from Leed’s own private notebooks. M. Allen Cunningham has painstakingly edited the manuscript according to Leed’s designs as indicated in papers discovered after his disappearance, and the whole work creates a unique dialectic that is hard to convey in a mere synopsis. But this miraculously surviving work is long overdue for publication.It's an honor to be included in the O'Brien Award shortlist.
On the basis of an excerpt from Partisans, Cunningham was recently awarded a 2014 residency at Yaddo.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
ISBN: 978-0-9893023-2-6
Retail Price: $12.00 on sale now for $10.00
116 pages
6"x6" trade paperback
Learn more HERE
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