Friday, June 22, 2012

Announcing the Launch of an Online Companion: Tampa Review Online


The Founding Editors of TROn

top right (left to right): Shane Hinton, Gregg Wilhelm, Resa Alboher, Jose Carmona, Derry Smith, Cooper Levey-Baker, Kossiwa Logan, Connor R. Holmes

second row (left to right): Andi Tomassi, Catherine Duncan Moore, Bradley Woodrum, Perpetual Murray, Martin Fulmer, Andy Taylor, Kurt Stein

missing from photo: Brittany Connolly, Cheryl Isaac, Katherine Lockwood, Travis Kriger, Michael Hardcastle

Last January during the inaugural residency of the low-res MFA in Creative Writing Program at the University of Tampa, students began work to create an online partner for our long-standing literary journal, Tampa Review.  

In just a few months, they have designed the website, solicited submissions, and worked out the other logistics of running an online magazine. They set a goal to complete their editorial work within ten days from the start of their second residency and to get the first content online at the closing ceremony. And with a growing editorial staff of new students they took these challenges head-on as they worked together in committee to finalize the launch of the brand new site: Tampa Review Online, or as we’ve nicknamed it—TROn.

At the helm of this launch are co-editors Andy Taylor and Bradley Woodrum, a poet and a fiction writer, who have coordinated  the editorial contents while finessing the technical aspects of the website by developing an advanced custom WordPress template. 


What sets TROn apart from the print version of Tampa Review?

TROn Editors: We are able to offer a space for all digital artistic mediums. We publish different content, without the page limits of the printed journal. And whereas the Tampa Review publishes bi-annually, TROn endeavors to publish bi-monthly in much smaller batches. We believe the variety and timing are more in line with an internet audience.


What sets TROn apart from other online literary journals?

TROn Editors: Many online journals still adhere to a print schedule because they’ve come out of the print world. We were born into the online world, and therefore we are not locked into a rigid publishing schedule. Also, as a new publication, we have the openness of an organization that has not established a predominant voice. We aim to accept artists of all aesthetic values and levels of notoriety.

What were some of the obstacles of design, launch, & overall process?

TROn Editors
: Given our ambitious launch date, we had six months to design and build a website, define our online identity, and solicit and process submissions. We can’t speak highly enough of our editors. We had a difficult time coordinating the project while we were spread out across the US. It took many late-night emails and much group discussion, but we made it.

When does TROn launch officially?

TROn Editors: Right now!


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

SPECIAL PRE-PUBLICATION OFFER!

Pre-Order Now
LEARN THE UNTOLD STORY OF DIGITAL TYPESETTING. This book has now been published. It can be ordered at this link.

At the end of the nineteenth century, Tolbert Lanston was a man obsessed with the idea of creating a machine that would provide automated typesetting yet preserve all the nuances of excellence in typography and fine printing. This new book by Richard L. Hopkins is the first to tell the full story story of the man and the company that created and manufactured Monotypes for three-quarters of a century. 

An American Civil War veteran, Lanston has remained a poorly documented hero of the typographic revolution. His Monotype System was the very first digital concept put into daily use in typesetting plants across the globe. The Monotype was a groundbreaking precursor to the computer revolution in the typesetting industry, though it was introduced over seventy years before computerized typesetting systems were developed.  

With insight and appreciation, Hopkins presents the achievements and documents the fascinating history of one of America's milestone inventions. As the founder of Monotype University, founder of the American Typecasting Fellowship, and lifelong typecaster and letterpress printer, Richard Hopkins tells the story as no one else could, informed with authority and experience.

Order the limited edition of Tolbert Lanston and the Monotype: An Affectionate Retrospective by Richard L. Hopkins now at significant savings—a special pre-publication price of $60.00 ($75.00 after August 31, 2012). Limited to 300 copies, Tolbert Lanston and the Monotype is a sewn, hardcover book, 8 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches, printed in full color, with more than three hundred photos and illustrations, 192 pages, plus several appendices and index. This limited edition includes an original, signed, 24-page letterpress keepsake booklet, Going with Goudy to Philadelphia, composed on the Monotype and printed in several colors by the author.