On Wednesday, June 12, 2019, at 7:00 PM, John C.
Campbell Folk School (JCCFS) and NC Writers' Network-West (NCWN-West) will
sponsor The Literary Hour. At this event, NCWN-West members will read at the
Keith House on the JCCFS campus, in Brasstown, NC. This event is now held in the community room. The Literary Hour is held on
the third Thursday of the month unless otherwise indicated. This reading is
free of charge and open to the public. This month's featured readers will be
Richard Cary, Maren O. Mitchell, and Ryvers Stewart.
Richard Montfort Cary began writing poetry in high
school and continues to this day. He graduated from Carnegie Mellon University
in 1964 with a BFA in Theatre Arts. He spent six years in regional theatres,
before moving year-round to Nantucket Island MA, as a designer & builder of
custom homes. In 1985, he founded Actors Theatre of Nantucket and served as
Artistic Director for twenty years. Richard and his wife Cheryl moved from
Asheville NC to Hayesville NC in 2017.
Cary’s claim to fame is that his Great Aunt, Olive Dame
Campbell, founded The John C. Campbell Folk School. Cary is currently editing
over 60 years of his poetry for a collection.
Maren O. Mitchell,
a North Carolina native, lived in Bordeaux, France, in her childhood, and in Kaiserslautern,
Germany. She now lives with her husband
on the edge of a national forest in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Georgia.
Mitchell has taught poetry at Blue Ridge Community College,
Flat Rock, NC, and catalogued at the Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site.
For over thirty years, across five southeastern states, she has taught origami,
the Japanese art of paper folding.
Mitchell’s poems appear in The Cortland Review, The
MacGuffin, POEM, The Comstock Review, Tar River Poetry, Poetry East, Hotel Amerika, Appalachian
Heritage, The South Carolina Review,
Southern Humanities Review, Appalachian Journal and elsewhere. Work
is forthcoming in POEM, Slant, The
Comstock Review, Poetry East and Chiron
Review. Two poems, “X Is a Kiss on Paper” and “T,
Totally Balanced,” have been nominated for Pushcart Prizes. In 2012 she
received 1st Place Award for Excellence in Poetry from the Georgia
Poetry Society. Her nonfiction book, Beat Chronic Pain, An Insider’s Guide,
(Line of Sight Press, 2012), www.lineofsightpress.com is on Amazon.
Ryvers Stewart has been writing poetry since middle
school, but it was in high school she truly fell in love with it (and acting). She
is in the graduating class of 2019 at Tri-County Community College with an
Associates in Arts degree, she plans on graduating 2020 with an Associates in
Fine Arts.
On the weekends Stewart can be found playing D&D and Pathfinder.
She is currently working on her first poetry book.
For more information on this event please contact Mary
Ricketson at maryricketson311@hotmail.com.
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