Members:
I would appreciate your help in updating your bio information for the NCWN-West blog. I would prefer members create a full bio in a word document. The member should then save the document as a file called Bio for (add name).
Whenever there is a change to the member's bio, that person should update the bio information in the word document, and send it to me with a request that the bio be updated. This will enable the admin to cut and paste the new document over the old bio.
I have a couple of members that are already using this format, and it works very well. However, if the member cannot create their bio in this manner, than admin will surely help them.
Thank you for your assistance!
Joan Ellen Gage,
Admin for the NCWN-West Blog
Writers and poets in the far western mountain area of North Carolina and bordering counties of South Carolina, Georgia and Tennessee post announcements, original work and articles on the craft of writing.
Saturday, January 7, 2017
New format for updating your bio information for the NCWN-West blog
Labels:
bio information,
NCWN-West blog
Saturday, December 31, 2016
Amazon has a good deal for you on two of Tom Davis' books.
The R-complex and Helloooo
Vietnam 364 Days and a Wakeup, books by Tom Davis, NCWN-West member, are showcased in a recent Amazon E-Blast.
The books are FREE if you participate in the Kindle
Unlimited and/or the Kindle Owners' Lending Library:
NOTE Amazon Prime members who own a Kindle can choose one
book from each month with no due dates.
Helloooo Vietnam: 364Days and a Wake-up Kindle Edition
This eBook is the second chapter of the Tom Davis' memoir: The Most Fun I Ever Had with My Clothes On:
A March from Private to Colonel. In his memoir the author relates his
experiences during the thirty-one years spent in the US Army, rising through
the ranks from private to full colonel. Twenty of those years he served with US
Army Special Forces (Green Berets). This book chronicles his time in three
combat zones: Vietnam, Bosnia, and Iraq/Turkey. Included are his experiences
commanding Special Forces Operational A Detachments which specialized in
Underwater Operations, High Altitude Low Opening Parachuting, Mountaineering,
and Small Atomic Demolitions Munitions as well as two Special Forces Battalions
and a Joint Special Operations Task Force. Each chapter covers his duties and
responsibilities at the Army Installation where he served. Sometimes funny.
Sometimes sad. Always interesting.
What could happen when members of an Atlanta car theft ring,
in the process of stealing her car, kill the pregnant wife of an ex Special
Forces demolition expert?
John Crown believed that his Special Forces training and missions existed now
only as distant memories. But when his pregnant wife is killed in an “accident”
at the hands of cold-blooded, professional car thieves and racketeers,
something else dies too: John’s new life as a husband, soon-to-be father, and
successful software engineer in Atlanta, Georgia. To track down his wife’s
unknown murderers, John sets a series of ingenious–and deadly–traps for
unwitting, criminal prey. John fast becomes the underworld’s worst nightmare: a
Special Forces-trained vigilante who obeys no law except the one that will
bring him peace–the law of revenge. What he doesn’t know is that some of his prey
welcomes the challenge, anxious and willing to play his deadly game–to win.
The R-complex is a fast-paced action adventure novel packed with organized crime, drug cartels, terrorist groups, revenge killings, brutal murders, improvised demolitions, a man who proves to be the ultimate killing machine, a female assassin, and a Special Forces A Team infiltrating Colombia, South America, to bring two villains to justice.
The R-complex is a fast-paced action adventure novel packed with organized crime, drug cartels, terrorist groups, revenge killings, brutal murders, improvised demolitions, a man who proves to be the ultimate killing machine, a female assassin, and a Special Forces A Team infiltrating Colombia, South America, to bring two villains to justice.
Friday, December 30, 2016
Two Excellent Poets for A Day for Writers
A Day for Writers, May 6, 2017
We are delighted that the first woman Poet Laureate of North Carolina, Kathryn Stripling Byer, widely published and highly praised member of NCWN-West, will teach a two-hour workshop at A Day for Writers, Saturday, May 6, 2017.
Her poetry, prose, and fiction have appeared widely, including Hudson Review, Poetry, The Atlantic, Georgia Review, Shenandoah, and Southern Poetry Review. Often anthologized, her work has also been featured online, where she maintains the blogs "Here, Where I Am," and "The Mountain Woman."
Her body of work was discussed along with that of Charles Wright, Robert Morgan, Fred Chappell, Jeff Daniel Marion, and Jim Wayne Miller in Six Poets from the Mountain South, by John Lang, published by LSU Press. Her first book of poetry, The Girl in the Midst of the Harvest, was published in the AWP Award Series in 1986, followed by the Lamont (now Laughlin) prize-winning Wildwood Flower, from LSU Press. Her subsequent collections have been published in the LSU Press Poetry Series, receiving various awards, including the Hanes Poetry Award from the Fellowship of Southern Writers, the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Poetry Award, and the Roanoke-Chowan Award. She served for five years as North Carolina's first woman poet laureate. She lives in the mountains of western North Carolina with her husband and three dogs.
Catherine Carter, poet and teacher at Western Carolina University, will be a presenter at the conference giving us two of the finest poets in the region.
Kathryn Stripling Byer |
Her poetry, prose, and fiction have appeared widely, including Hudson Review, Poetry, The Atlantic, Georgia Review, Shenandoah, and Southern Poetry Review. Often anthologized, her work has also been featured online, where she maintains the blogs "Here, Where I Am," and "The Mountain Woman."
Her body of work was discussed along with that of Charles Wright, Robert Morgan, Fred Chappell, Jeff Daniel Marion, and Jim Wayne Miller in Six Poets from the Mountain South, by John Lang, published by LSU Press. Her first book of poetry, The Girl in the Midst of the Harvest, was published in the AWP Award Series in 1986, followed by the Lamont (now Laughlin) prize-winning Wildwood Flower, from LSU Press. Her subsequent collections have been published in the LSU Press Poetry Series, receiving various awards, including the Hanes Poetry Award from the Fellowship of Southern Writers, the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Poetry Award, and the Roanoke-Chowan Award. She served for five years as North Carolina's first woman poet laureate. She lives in the mountains of western North Carolina with her husband and three dogs.
Catherine Carter |
Catherine Carter, poet and teacher at Western Carolina University, will be a presenter at the conference giving us two of the finest poets in the region.
“Catherine Carter’s unique poems are a joy to read and hear aloud, and they yield more and more subtle satisfactions the longer you live with them,” said Elizabeth Addison, head of the WCU English department. “It’s been an honor to share her department.”
A resident of Cullowhee, Carter coordinates the English education program at WCU. Her work has appeared in Poetry, North Carolina Literary Review, Tar River, Main Street Rag and Cider Press Review, among others.
She had work in the Best American Poetry 2009 anthology, and has twice been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her first book, “The Memory of Gills,” won the 2007 Roanoke-Chowan Award.
“The Swamp Monster at Home is a most valuable collection of poems. Catherine Carter treats the sometimes scary materials she addresses with poise and wit, humor and frankness. Her self-possession is not armor plate; she is as vulnerable as you and I, as the deer that come to drink at the darkest river. She speaks with the kind of grace that is gained only after facing daunting difficulties with resolute courage. I admire everything about this book. Everything.”—Fred Chappell
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Poet Maren O. Mitchell has work published in Pedestal Magazine Issue #79 with an audio link
Poet Maren O. Mitchell has had her poem "Camouflage Addict", published in issue #79 of Pedestal Magazine, an webzine of poetry, fiction, non-fiction and interviews. The poem is published with an audio link. You can access the poem here.
Mitchell has taught poetry at Blue Ridge Community
College, Flat Rock, NC, and catalogued at the Carl Sandburg Home National
Historic Site. In 2012 she received 1st Place Award for Excellence in Poetry
from the Georgia Poetry Society. For over twenty years, across five
southeastern states, she has taught origami, the Japanese art of paper folding.
A native of North Carolina, in her childhood Mitchell lived in Bordeaux, France, and Kaiserslautern, Germany. After moving throughout the southeast U.S., she now lives with her husband in Young Harris, Georgia, on the edge of the national forest.
Maren O.
Mitchell’s poems have appeared in Tar
River Poetry, The Pedestal Magazine,
Poetry East, The Crafty Poet II: A Portable Workshop, The World Is Charged: Poetic
Engagements with Gerard Manley Hopkins, Chiron
Review, Hotel Amerika, Iodine Poetry Journal, The Lake (UK), Appalachian Heritage, The
South Carolina Review, Southern
Humanities Review, Skive (AUS), The Classical Outlook, Town Creek Poetry, Appalachian Journal, Pirene’s Fountain, Wild Goose Poetry Review
and elsewhere. Her work is included in Negative
Capability Press Anthology of Georgia Poetry, The Southern Poetry Anthologies, V: Georgia & VII: North Carolina and Sunrise from Blue Thunder.
Mitchell's
poems are forthcoming in The Lake, Poem,
Chiron Review and Appalachian
Heritage. Her nonfiction book is Beat
Chronic Pain, An Insider’s Guide
(Line of Sight Press, 2012) www.lineofsightpress.com
and is available on Amazon.
A native of North Carolina, in her childhood Mitchell lived in Bordeaux, France, and Kaiserslautern, Germany. After moving throughout the southeast U.S., she now lives with her husband in Young Harris, Georgia, on the edge of the national forest.
Labels:
Maren O. Mitchell,
Pedestal webzine,
poetry,
writing
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
SAVE THIS DATE IN MAY 2017
A Day for Writers, one day conference sponsored by the North Carolina Writers' Network-West and the Jackson County Public Library.
When: Saturday, May 6, 2017, 9:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Where: Jackson County Public Library, 310 Keener St. Sylva, NC 28779
Presenters include: Terry Kay, novelist and short story writer, Catherine Carter, Poet, Tara Lynne Groth, freelance writer and journalist, Deanna Klingel, author of YA and children's books, Glenda C. Beall, poet, writer and teacher, and Gary Carden, playwright, storyteller and author.
We held such an event in 2014 that was highly praised and well-attended. The Jackson County Public Library with the meeting space in the beautiful old Courthouse, is a perfect place, centrally located for those who live in the NCWN-West Region.
Watch this site for a list of more presenters.
Saturday, December 17, 2016
Writers--what we are doing now
With everyone thinking about Christmas and shopping, we writers often put our wordsmithing on the back burner. In my area, we stop most of our writing events until spring warms us up. Coffee with the Poets and Writers in Hayesville, NC starts anew March 16, Moss Memorial Library at 10:30 a.m.
Writers Night Out is cancelled until spring also. Karen Holmes, who does such a great job with this event, will notify us when that popular gathering for writers will begin in 2017.
The NCWN-West Poetry Critique group continues to meet each month. See the events page on this site to see how to contact Janice Moore, facilitator for the group which meets at Tri-County College in Murphy, NC.
The Prose Critique group that meets at TCCC has gone on hiatus until spring.
A DAY FOR WRITERS
The big news for our region is, A Day for Writers, the conference on Saturday, May 6, 2017 at the Jackson County Public Library in Sylva, NC. Several presenters are on board, but you will hear more after Christmas. Mark the date on your calendar now.
Writers Night Out is cancelled until spring also. Karen Holmes, who does such a great job with this event, will notify us when that popular gathering for writers will begin in 2017.
The NCWN-West Poetry Critique group continues to meet each month. See the events page on this site to see how to contact Janice Moore, facilitator for the group which meets at Tri-County College in Murphy, NC.
The Prose Critique group that meets at TCCC has gone on hiatus until spring.
A DAY FOR WRITERS
The big news for our region is, A Day for Writers, the conference on Saturday, May 6, 2017 at the Jackson County Public Library in Sylva, NC. Several presenters are on board, but you will hear more after Christmas. Mark the date on your calendar now.
Friday, November 11, 2016
Brenda Kay Ledford Received Paul Green Award
Brenda Kay Ledford received the Paul Green Multimedia Award from North Carolina Society of Historians for her blog: Blue Ridge Poet.
NCSH held their Diamond Jubilee Celebration and Award Luncheon November 5, 2016 at the Stone Center in North Wilkesboro, NC.
For information: www.ncsocietyofhistorians.org
http://blueridgepoet.blogspot.com
NCSH held their Diamond Jubilee Celebration and Award Luncheon November 5, 2016 at the Stone Center in North Wilkesboro, NC.
For information: www.ncsocietyofhistorians.org
http://blueridgepoet.blogspot.com
Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Newton Smith featured at Coffee with the Poets and Writers in Hayesville, NC
Coffee with the Poets and Writers meets Wednesday, November 16, 10:30 a.m. at the Moss Memorial Library in Hayesville, NC.
This month Dr. Newton Smith retired professor at Western Carolina
University will share his experience of walking El Camino de Santiago, the 500
mile pilgrimage in Europe. Smith wrote a poem a day reflecting on the physical
body, nature, and the spiritual as he traversed the Way.
His book is Camino Poems—Reflectionson on the Way. "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,” Smith
said.
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 has taught poetry to a wide range
of writers, from second grade to retirees as well as undergraduates and
graduate students. 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 eview, Rivendale, Main Street Rag, Pisgah Review, and Jonah.
Bring a couple of original poems or a short prose piece for open
mic which is a special part of the event. You will find a receptive audience. Join
the group for lunch at Angelo’s on the square.
Sunday, November 6, 2016
Reading at the John C. Campbell Folk School November 16 - Beall and Bell
Glenda Council Beall and Staci Lynn Bell will read their work at the John C. Campbell Folk School on Wednesday evening, November 16 at 7:00 p.m. in the Keith House Library. No admission charge and the public is invited.
Glenda Council Beall |
Glenda Beall has been writing for as long as she can remember. She wrote stories about horses when she was a child. She began writing poetry in high school after a teacher suggested she submit one of her poems to a magazine.
In 1996, after moving to Hayesville, NC, she became a student of Nancy Simpson, poet, at the John C. Campbell Folk School. Since that time she has published many poems in numerous journals and reviews, both traditional and online. Her poems have also been published in a number of anthologies.
She is a multi-genre writer and has published nonfiction and fiction in Reunion Magazine, Breath and Shadow, Living with Loss and in several online journals. Some links to her published work can be found on a page of her blog: www.profilesandpedigrees.blogger.com
Glenda Beall is owner of Writers Circle around the Table, where she invites outstanding poets and writers to teach at her studio. She teaches memoir writing for senior adults at Tri-County Community College in Murphy, NC and at Writers Circle.
She served as Program Coordinator for North Carolina Writers' Network West in 2007 - 2009 and serves as a Clay County Representative for the organization now. She is also volunteer Coordinator of the Representatives of NCWN West.
Staci Lynn Bell with Echo |
Staci Lynn Bell is a Chicago native who attended the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She relocated to South Florida, gaining popularity as a 25 year radio and television personality. Bell’s poetry and prose have been published in Wild Goose Poetry, Wolf Warriors Anthology,and 234 Journal. Her poem "Crayon Cardinals" was recently published in The Old Mountain Press "Yin Yang"anthology. She lives with the loves of her life, her two dogs, in Hayesville, NC.
Bell's poem, "Escape" has been published in Old Mountain Press Anthology, Wish You Were Here. Her poem, "Unanswered Prayers" has been accepted for publication in the fall edition of Kakalak 2016 and will go to press soon. Additionally, Bell's poem, "Time," won a bronze medal and her short story, "Cheyenne" won a silver medal in the North Carolina Cherokee and Clay County Silver Arts 2016.
Bell's poem, "Escape" has been published in Old Mountain Press Anthology, Wish You Were Here. Her poem, "Unanswered Prayers" has been accepted for publication in the fall edition of Kakalak 2016 and will go to press soon. Additionally, Bell's poem, "Time," won a bronze medal and her short story, "Cheyenne" won a silver medal in the North Carolina Cherokee and Clay County Silver Arts 2016.
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