Brent Hendricks

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Brent Hendricks Publications

A Long Day at the End of the World

A chilling memoir of the Tri-State Crematory incident

New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux/FSG Originals (March 2013)

In February 2002, hundreds of abandoned and decayed bodies were discovered at the Tri-State Crematory in rural Georgia, making it the largest mass desecration in modern American history. The perpetrator—a well-respected family man and a former hometown football star—had managed to conceal the horror for five years.

Among the bodies found at the Tri-State Crematory was that of Brent Hendricks’s father. To quell the psychic disturbance surrounding the desecration, Hendricks embarked on a pilgrimage to the crematory site in Georgia. In A Long Day at the End of the World, he reveals his very complicated relationship with the South as he tries to reconcile his love-hate feelings for the culture with his own personal and familial history there, and his fascination with the disturbed landscape. In achingly beautiful prose, Hendricks explores his fraught relationship with his father—not just the grief that surrounded his death but the uncanniness of his resurrection.

It’s a story that’s so heart-wrenching, so unbelievable, and so sensational that it would be easy to tell it without delving deep. But Hendricks’s inquiry is unrelenting, and he probes the extremely difficult questions about the love between a parent and a child, about the way human beings treat each other—in life and in death—and about the sanctity of the body. It’s the perfect storm for a true Southern Gothic tale.

Thaumatrope

Poetry. At once a debut collection of poetry and a gripping literary game, THAUMATROPE fascinates like a supermarket tabloid and like a dazzling gem. These fifty-two poems are laid out as a shuffled deck of cards, with each suit and number tracing a different mood, tone, lyric problem and narrative or characterological thread.

Thumbing through the random order, the reader must build her own conceptual house of cards, plotting connections and alliances between the Jokers, junkies and other mundane and mystical protagonists who haunt the royal parks and seedy bars, lofty towers and run-down clinics of this dense and various book. With illustrations by collageuse Lisa Hargon-Smith.

Fairy Tale Review, The Blue Issue

This title presents an annual journal devoted to fairy tales, contemporary and historical.Each issue of “Fairy Tale Review” contains poetry, fiction, and essays that either address the abiding influence of fairy tales on contemporary literature and culture, or are themselves contemporary fairy tales in prose or verse. It is, according to editor Kate Bernheimer, “a venue for all writers working with the aesthetics and motifs of fairy tales.””Fairy Tale Review’s” first two issues (“The Blue Issue, 2005”, and “The Green Issue, 2006”) contain contributions from nationally recognized authors such as Brent Hendricks, Donna Tartt, Francine Prose, Lydia Millet, Marina Warner, Jack Zipes, Aimee Bender, and Rikki Ducornet.

Stories from the first two issues have been noted or chosen for republication in “Best New American Writers 2006” and “Best American Short Stories 2005”. Seven stories and seven poems in all have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize.The third volume, “The Violet Issue”, contains work by Kim Addonizio, Don Mee Choi, Lucy Corin, Tracy Daugherty, Espido Freire, Toshiya Kamei, Sarah Hannah, Lily Hoang, Anna Maria Hong, Kim Hyesoon, Jeffrey Levine, Lisa Olstein, David Petruzelli, Natania Rosenfeld, Aurelie Sheehan, Richard Siken, Kieran Suckling, Lee Upton, and Julie Marie Wade.

Essays

My Alternative Pop Song

The Force of What’s Possible: Accessibility & the Avant-Garde, (Lily Hoang and Joshua Marie Wilkinson, eds.) (Nightboat Books 2015)

Brent Hendricks