New âCitric Acidâ quarterly journal gives O.C. some literary tart
For naysayers, Orange Countyâs literary scene is as barren as the citrus orchards that once dominated its landscape but have long since been bulldozed to make way for suburban blandness. O.C. supposedly traded its tart to be trite.
But thatâs never held true for Andrew Tonkovich, a recently retired UC Irvine English lecturer and author whoâs made a mission of appraising the paper trail left behind by the countyâs roster of writers while looking forward to the future first drafts of its ongoing legacy.
Along with Lisa Alvarez, his wife, Tonkovich co-edited âOrange County: A Literary Field Guideâ five years ago. The sweeping anthology with selections from more than 60 writers, past and present, proved groundbreaking and rattled the reputation that preceded its namesake.
Following up on that effort, Tonkovich is now readying the launch of âCitric Acid,â a new online literary journal debuting this weekend. Its inauguration is a highly curated assemblage of the countyâs contemporary scribes ready to kick off the publicationâs mission one quarterly issue at a time.
âIâd like it to be a cultural clearinghouse that introduces the best of Orange County,â Tonkovich said. âItâs very much a DIY project that explores multiple genres, but I like to keep the adjective âliteraryâ in there to distinguish us from more journalistic sources. âLiteraryâ is an affectation, but itâs a helpful word. It attracts a certain variety of readers.â
Before âCitric Acid,â Tonkovich taught English at UC Irvine for nearly a quarter-century. Beyond the classroom, he also hosted âBibliocracyâ on KPFK-LA 90.7 FM for many years, served as a longtime contributor to OC Weekly and continues on as editor of the âSanta Monica Review.â
Tonkovich retired from the university last year and hung up the proverbial tweed jacket with elbow patches. Around the same time that âOrange County: A Literary Field Guideâ published, Tonkovich began considering the idea of a likeminded journal as his next venture.
But then, union activism with the University Council - American Federation of Teachers, publishing a book of his own, a health scare and, finally, the onset of the coronavirus pandemic sidelined his ambition until it could be postponed no longer.
âThe remarkable confluence of the terrible pandemic with my own retirement got me thinking that itâs now or never,â Tonkovich said. âItâs a metaphor, in some ways, of both embracing an opportunity and making the most of a crisis.â
For him, the first task came in soliciting the advice of fellow travelers. He consulted with colleagues from the Los Angeles Review of Books, a site that pledged to make âCitric Acidâ one of their channels.
âThat would put us in a pretty impressive lineup of their affiliated literary friends,â Tonkovich said.
He also drew inspiration from former Los Angeles Times book critic David Ulinâs âAir/Light,â an online literary journal published by USCâs English Department.
Of course, Tonkovich sought guidance from the folks who know O.C. best by writing about it, including LibroMobile owner and author Sarah Rafael Garcia. Sheâs enlisted as an advisory board member and contributor.
ââCitric Acidâ is more than just literary solidarity,â Garcia said. âIt challenges the social construct of what it means to be from and live in Orange County as an activist, writer and critic of the regionâs politics and stereotypes, as well.â
Tonkovich didnât have to stray far from his Modjeska Canyon quarters to find a managing editor for âCitric Acid.â Jamie Campbell, a fiction writer whose work has appeared in the Sonora, Santa Monica, Los Angeles and Angel City reviews, is up for the task.
The premiere issue ready to greet readers features an array of contributions from O.C. writers, far and wide. Natalie J. Graham, the countyâs poet laureate, offers a scintillating sermon of unwinding from the grind in nature. Mary Camarillo, author of âThe Lockhart Women,â contributes another poem that flips the script on the countyâs founders and pioneers.
Elaine Lewinnek and Thuy Vo Dang provide a guide to their forthcoming âA Peopleâs Guide to Orange County,â authored with Los Angeles Times columnist Gustavo Arellano.
âJoel Robinson is going to be covering the natural world,â Tonkovich added. âThatâs his beat. Heâs barefoot! He walks around with his straw hat and does tours.â
In addition to conceptualizing and curating âCitric Acid,â Tonkovich also counts himself among its first contributors with a short story about his late comparative literature professor and noted anti-war activist Dr. Peter Carr. The Aliso Creek resident helped found the antinuclear Orange County Alliance for Survival before dying of a heart attack in 1981.
âHe should be considered one of the seminal artists of Orange County,â Tonkovich said. âHe was so busy being an activist and a teacher that the art and the writing just got lost.â
Beyond Tonkovichâs own story about becoming the caretaker of his mentorâs activist and artistic effects, âCitric Acidâ is also poised to become a virtual gallery of Carrâs art, including a sketch drawing of the San Onofre Nuclear Power Plant and the cautionary words, âNuclear radiation isnât good for fishes or other ocean-going creatures.â
There are no immediate plans to take âCitric Acidâ to the printers outside of a possible annual roundup of standout stories. But its inaugural issue hopes to leave an indelible imprint on the county all the same as a new station for navel gazing through dissident art, nonfiction, memoir, poetry, short stories, reviews and insightful analysis.
âThe future is unwritten,â Tonkovich said. âThe resources are limited but the imagination is robust.â
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