Poet Catherine Carter and Storyteller Kanute Rarey are the featured readers at Poets and Writers Reading Poems and Stories Thursday, April 17, at 7 p.m. in the Keith House on the J.C. Campbell Folk School campus in Brasstown, NC. Formerly known as The Literary Hour, the program is sponsored by the North Carolina Writers’ Network-West and is free and open to everyone.
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Kanute Rarey |
A prize-winning poet, Carter is a prolific writer. She has authored four full-length poetry collections, “Larvae of the Nearest Stars,” “The Swamp Monster at Home,” and “The Memory of Gills,” and the soon to be published “By Stone and Needle,” and has two chapbooks, “Marks of the Witch” and “Good Morning, Unseen.” Her poems have appeared in numerous literary journals.
Rarey needs no introduction in this area. A well-known and popular storyteller, he developed the “Reminiscing, Storytelling and Capturing Personal History,” program for residents in area care centers, senior centers and retirement communities. It combines discussion and storytelling to remind listeners of the present and the past and help them find joy in the moment.
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Catherine Carter |
In addition to her own poetry, Carter and co-editor and co-translator Brian Gastle produced the first full-length verse translation into modern English of John Gower’s 33,000-line Middle English poem “The Lover’s Confession.” She is a professor at Western Carolina University, where she teaches English and creative writing.
“On a good day, I can re-queen a hive of honeybees and roll a whitewater kayak, and on less-good days, I collect stings, rock-rash, and multiple contusions,” she said about two of her extracurricular interests.
Rarey, in addition to storytelling, helps with the annual Georgia Mountain Storytelling Festival in Hiawassee which just finished its 11th season this month. He also started a storytelling group, Mountain Area Storytellers. His passion for storytelling began with a workshop led by national storyteller, Elizabeth Ellis, at the Campbell School. “Elizabeth opened the door to that canary cage and the bird flew out,” he said.
Poets and Writers Reading Poems and Stories is offered every third Thursday of the month through October and brings local writers to the campus to share their work with the community. The public as well as students and faculty of the school are welcome to attend the readings.