Literary journal revived
Elia Powers
This was more than a school project.
There were no grades or extra credit assignments; only the
fulfillment of artistic expression.
Davi Loren had the inspiration. Her students, both past and
present, helped execute the plan.
After more than five months of planning, fundraising and creative
brainstorming, Orange Coast College welcomed back its own literary
journal last week with an on-campus celebration.
The publication, Orange Coast Review, had ceased operations in the
early 1990s due to budget cutbacks. Throughout her tenure as an
English professor, Loren said she had recognized the need for a
literary journal.
“Seeing high-quality work produced by other students is
inspiring,” Loren said. “It’s good for students who need to get
published.”
Loren knows that firsthand. While a graduate student in UC
Irvine’s Master of Fine Arts in English program, she wrote, edited
and selected submissions for the campus publication Faultline.
Students in her creative writing classes at OCC already were
producing an in-house anthology at the end of each semester, so Loren
had a solid base of student work ready for publication.
“It made sense to extend the project to something for the full
campus to see,” Loren said. “Some stories were so good, they should
have been published years ago.”
There was a problem: Loren learned that to print a run of 750
color copies of the journal, she would need to raise $5,000.
She didn’t have that kind of money. So Orange Coast Review’s staff
of seven raised funds through a private capital campaign and a series
of on-campus lectures. They started applying for funds in 2001 but
didn’t receive pledges right away.
Norman Johnson, a former student of Loren’s who had taken her
creative writing class on six different occasions, said he wasn’t
surprised the process was moving slowly.
“I’m only surprised when a magazine comes back into print,” he
said. “We’re in a tough market.”
But last year, Loren said she had enough money to move the project
forward. The staff selected poetry, fiction and short-story
submissions. In total, the journal is 120 pages.
Most of the publication is filled with student entries and color
illustrations. There are also some pieces from professional artists.
“It’s not simply a campus publication,” Loren said. “We followed
the standards used by professional journals.”
Loren said she is working to get the journal on sale at the campus
bookstore. It is free for students in the fine arts department office
and costs $7 for the general public.
Johnson, now a business owner in Costa Mesa, served as one of two
fiction editors. He reviewed more than 25 submissions and wrote one
of his own, a piece entitled “Neighborly” that leads off the
publication.
Orange Coast College photography student Courtenay Nearburg served
as the art editor, appropriating a number of student paintings and
photographs.
“I wanted to have the experience of working on a professional
publication,” Nearburg said. “I looked for things that were
interesting and edgy.”
Loren said she is hoping to make Orange Coast Review an annual
publication that comes out in the spring. She said incorporating more
digital media art and advertisements into the next edition is a
priority.
Johnson said he is hoping this experience will help open doors.
“Once you get involved in this type of publication, you get to
know others who are doing it,” he said.
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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