I am delighted to post about Newton Smith's new poetry book, Camino Poems. Newt has served as our trustworthy NCWN-West Treasurer since 2009. You might not know him, but he is always there behind the scenes taking care of our finances. I am delighted to learn more of Newt's history in his bio for this book.
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Poetry has been an essential part of Newton Smith’s life for
more than fifty years. Wanting to write poems was what motivated him to leave
Georgia Tech and major in English at UNC Chapel Hill. After a three-year tour
in the Army as a Russian linguist, he returned to UNC for his Ph.D.
In graduate
school he was one of the founding editors along with Russell Banks and William
Matthews of Lillabulero Magazine and Lillabulero Press, then one of the
significant publications of the small press movement. His dissertation was The Origin of the Black Mountain Poets,
one of the earliest studies of that movement.
He began teaching at WesternCarolina University with a focus on creative writing, contemporary poetry, modern
fiction and American literature. He has taught poetry to a wide range of
writers, from second grade to retirees as well as undergraduates and graduate
students. His academic publications focused on the Black Mountain poets, Robert
Frost, William Carlos Williams, Robert Morgan, Fred Chappell, Jim Wayne Miller,
William Matthews, Russell Banks, Ron Rash and others.
He has published widely
in literary magazines beginning in the 1970’s, including Southern Poetry Review, Carolina Quarterly, Ann Arbor Review and
others. His most recent poetry publications are in the Asheville Poetry Review, Rivendale,
Main Street Rag, Pisgah Review, and Jonah.
Since
retiring Newt Smith has had time to devote to travel, gardening, Buddhist studies,
mindfulness practices, and hiking in nature, especially in the Smoky
Mountains. During his 2014 pilgrimage on the Camino de Santiago he wrote a
poem everyday reflecting on the physical body, nature, and the spiritual as he
walked along the Way.
Newt said about the pilgrimage, "Because it was autumn, many days I gleaned blackberries, grapes, apples, figs, peaches and other fruit and chestnuts along the way. It meant that my attention was focused on the abundance of this earth instead of on my narrow self and its minor concerns. My attention often fell on butterflies, snails, ant hills and the abundance of rocks."
Kathryn Stripling Byer says of Camino Poems, "What are these lines from "Bowing to the Sun" but prayer itself? "The day began with smells...the deep aroma of turned earth,/and then the allure of blackberries....Soon I want to taste everything:/rosehips, flowers, thistle,/even the pebbles at my feet." The blessing of absolute attention carries this pilgrim through every step of his journey, each poem inviting us to walk with him in faith and love."
"Part of the Camino traverses the part of Spain called the Meseta, high plains area dominated by vast fields of wheat. Here emptiness and silence became an opening, a recognition that we are held in a space that extends beyond all we can imagine. The expansiveness and abundance of this life were frequent subjects of these poems as they were for earlier pilgrims who walked from churches to cathedrals to Santiago and beyond to Finisterre," Newt recalled.
Ledigos toTerradillos de los Templarios
Here on the Meseta
the land stretches
in every direction
beyond the horizon.
Objects are swallowed up
in this vista.
What is most apparent
is space
and how it persists....
This flower
this stone
this hand that writes
all are held
in this emptiness.
Event date:
Friday, November 4, 2016 - 6:30pm
Event address:
3 East Jackson St.
Sylva, NC 28779
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