Showing posts with label prose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prose. Show all posts

Monday, October 14, 2019

The Literary Hour Readings, This Thursday, October 17, 2019, at JCC Folk School, Brasstown, NC, featuring, Glenda Council Beall, James F. I. Davis, and Mary Michelle Brodine Keller


On Thursday, October 17, 2019, at 7:00 PM, John C. Campbell Folk School and NC Writers' Network-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 Glenda Council Beall, James F. I. Davis, and Mary Michelle Brodine Keller.


Glenda Council Beall moved from southwest Georgia to Hayesville, North Carolina in 1995; it has been home ever since. Her poetry, essays and short stories have been published online, in magazines and in literary journals. Beall’s poetry chapbook, Now Might as Well be Then, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2009. She co-authored a collection of stories, poems and articles in 2018, Paws, Claws, Hooves, Feathers and Fins, Family Pets and God’s Other Creatures.
One of her hobbies is genealogy. In 1998 she compiled stories about her grandfather and his ten children and the hardback book, Profiles and Pedigrees, The Descendants of Thomas Charles Council (1858 – 1911).

Beall teaches writing in her studio, Writers Circle around the Table, the Institute of Continuing Learning, and Tri-County Community College. She serves as program coordinator for the North Carolina Writers’ Network-West.


James F. I.  Davis grew up on a family farm, got a degree in Economics from Cornell University, an MBA in International Business from The American University, and spent three years in the US Army, leaving as a Captain. Davis was an international banker for most of his working years, lived in Europe and Latin America, and traveled to more than 50 countries during his career. 

Several hundred of Davis’ articles have been published, mostly about finance, economics and the effects of government policies on people's standard of living. Recently he has been writing mostly humorous stories about interesting people and/or unique situations he encountered while traveling the world for business and pleasure. He hopes to turn these stories into an entertaining novel. His first literary attempt garnered second place in a national short story contest.


Mary Michelle Brodine Keller, or Mary Mike as she is often called by her friends, writes poetry, essays, and short fiction. She draws her subject matter from things she sees or experiences, putting meaning to them. She is also a visual artist, painting in oil, watercolors and pastels.  She likes to think of her poetry as painting with words. 

Her poems have been published in The Mountain Lynx, and in anthologies: Freeing Jonah III and IV, Lights in the Mountains, Echos Across the Blueridge, Stories, Essays and Poems by Writers Living in and Inspired by the Southern Appalachian Mountains and various other publications. She calls herself a reader, reading to others in a variety of settings, and finding that more satisfying than publication, as it is a shared experience.


For more information regarding this event, contact Mary Ricketson at: maryricketson311@hotmail.com.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Meet our Writers' Night Out Headliners: Linda Jones & Alan Cone

October 11, 7 pm
Blairsville, GA

Open Mic follows the reading

Join us for Linda's intelligent, heartfelt poetry; and Alan's smart, quirky prose. (Read his bio below for a sample). 


Linda Grayson Jones is an Associate Professor of Biology and Dean of Math and Science at Young Harris College. She has read and written poetry since childhood and recalls reading The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes to her third-grade classmates. With a B.S. in Biology from Stetson University, an M.A. in Biology and a Ph.D. in Pathology from Vanderbilt University, Linda's career path was primarily in academic biomedical research, but in 2009 she returned to her first love—teaching. She remains a reader and writer of poetry and is a member of the North Carolina Writers’ Network. She credits North Carolina poet Nancy Simpson (1938-2018) for encouraging her to use Grayson Jones as her published poet’s name.

 Alan Cone is the author of many short stories and a novel, The History of the Decline and Fall of Roland Arnheiter. He explains that he “comes to North Georgia by way of Texas, on our nation’s frontier, where a man writes with both fists or perishes.” Alan's work is anchored always in a common man’s self-effacing humility. His penchant for dry humor and sarcasm is reflected in his artist’s statement: “With acuity and wisdom, with perceptiveness and whimsy, I usher audiences through an odyssey of freshman-level erudition and beyond. My quietly courageous abasement of the writer’s dais will leave you challenged, thoughtful, hungry for less.”  He also admits that he does not actually smoke a pipe.