The Byron Herbert Reece Lecture Series presents:
a reading by poet
Kevin Young
author of The Book of Hours.
Thursday, April 3
Q&A at 3:00 p.m.
Reading at 6:00 p.m.
Wilson Lecture Hall
Goolsby Bldg.
Young Harris College
Born in 1970, Kevin Young is widely regarded as one of the leading poets of his generation, one who finds meaning and inspiration in African American music, particularly the blues, and in the bittersweet history of Black America. Lucille Clifton said of Young, “[His] gift of storytelling and understanding of the music inherent in the oral tradition of language re-creates for us an inner history which is compelling and authentic and American." His many books of poetry include Ardency: A Chronicle of the Amistad Rebels (Knopf, 2011); Dear Darkness (Knopf, 2008); For the Confederate Dead (2007); and Book of Hours (2014). Black Maria: Poems Produced and Directed by Kevin Young is a "film noir in verse," a playful homage to the language and imagery of Hollywood detective films.
Learn more about Kevin here.
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.
Friday, March 28, 2014
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Mary Ricketson's March 'Woman to Woman' Column
Cherokee County NCWN/NetWest Representative Mary Ricketson writes a monthly column for the local newspaper, the Cherokee Scout. She has graciously shared her March column with us:
"March is women’s history month. We are amazing people. I am inspired by literally every woman I meet. Every one of us has something to offer the world in some dimension. All of us are unique, no one like us in the whole universe. But unless we are famous, our stories get lost in the shuffle.
One way to inspire girls and women is to tell stories of accomplished women. Famous women like the pilot Amelia Earhart and astronaut Sally Ride inspire all of us. We should keep telling the stories of famous women and their accomplishments. But we should tell our local stories too. Women in our families and those next door, and in the next county leave footprints every day for the rest of us to follow. Each of us leaves footprints. We are known for our courage, self-sacrifice, accomplishments and sometimes for our cooking. We are known for our brains, our smile, our guts, and our stubbornness.
I remember a story of my mother. I was a little girl, and my sister was a toddler. We were walking in the park on a sunny afternoon, and there was a duck pond. This duck pond was very special and inviting, and the sun shined on the deepest spot. Somehow my mother got distracted, looked away, and did not see my sister walk into the pond. She wanted to pet the ducks. Now, my sister didn’t know how to swim but my mother did not either. Quickly my mother turned around to see her youngest daughter sinking in the water. Mother, armed only with adrenaline, rushed right in that pond, grabbed her precious child, and got back to shore before either of them drowned. My sister does not walk into duck ponds anymore, but she does walk daily into difficult projects with single minded determination. And she learned how to swim.
This story gets told over and over, for the memory, for the laughs, for the courage, and for any other reason that comes to mind. Most of our stories are not pilots, astronauts, politicians, or anyone famous. Our stories are about women in our lives, salt of the earth women, women who keep life going anyway we can.
Let’s tell the history of women, our women, and keep ourselves inspired. Let’s tell our stories to girls and also to boys. Let’s tell stories of women with a spirit of respect and admiration. We are not courageous all the time, and we are not perfect. We are ordinary women, and special and wonderful and unique, every one of us. Keep our stories alive."
Thank you, Mary. We also hope that women everywhere will be inspired.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Poet and Writer, Dana Wildsmith teaches at Writers Circle in April
Workshop at Writers Circle around the Table in Hayesville, NC
CHANGING FACT TO FICTION,
OR: CHANGING I TO US
All we have to work with when we set out down fiction's road is the stuff of our lives, but that's enough. Every one of us has a couple of horror-story-worthy relatives, and we've all lived through years of high drama in our lives. The material is there, for sure, but the rub lies in figuring out how to use that material when memoir is not our aim. In this class, we'll talk about ways to use those three crazy uncles of yours to flesh out one strong character for a story or novel, how to conduct and make use of interviews, and a little about scene-writing. This will be a class for all levels of fiction writers.
Bio:
Dana Wildsmith's environmental memoir, Back to Abnormal: Surviving With An Old Farm in the New South, was Finalist for Georgia Author of the Year. She is the author of five collections of poetry, including most recently, Christmas in Bethlehem. Wildsmith has served as Artist-in-Residence for Grand Canyon National Park, as Writer-in-Residence for the Island Institute in Sitka, Alaska, and she is a Fellow of the Hambidge Center for Creative Arts and Sciences.
April 12, Saturday, 1 - 4 p.m. 2014:
Glenda Beall - nightwriter0302@yahoo.com
Fee: $45
Workshop at Writers Circle around the Table in Hayesville, NC
CHANGING FACT TO FICTION,
OR: CHANGING I TO US
All we have to work with when we set out down fiction's road is the stuff of our lives, but that's enough. Every one of us has a couple of horror-story-worthy relatives, and we've all lived through years of high drama in our lives. The material is there, for sure, but the rub lies in figuring out how to use that material when memoir is not our aim. In this class, we'll talk about ways to use those three crazy uncles of yours to flesh out one strong character for a story or novel, how to conduct and make use of interviews, and a little about scene-writing. This will be a class for all levels of fiction writers.
Bio:
Dana Wildsmith's environmental memoir, Back to Abnormal: Surviving With An Old Farm in the New South, was Finalist for Georgia Author of the Year. She is the author of five collections of poetry, including most recently, Christmas in Bethlehem. Wildsmith has served as Artist-in-Residence for Grand Canyon National Park, as Writer-in-Residence for the Island Institute in Sitka, Alaska, and she is a Fellow of the Hambidge Center for Creative Arts and Sciences.
April 12, Saturday, 1 - 4 p.m. 2014:
Glenda Beall - nightwriter0302@yahoo.com
Fee: $45
Friday, March 21, 2014
Sharpen Your Pencils for the 2014 Silver Arts
Every spring, thousands of people participate in the North Carolina Senior Games. SilverArts is a major component of the traditional athletic competition of the Games, uniting athletes and artists in a program that recognizes the similarities of both endeavors: discipline, dedication, and pride in one's accomplishments.
SilverArts, "a celebration of the creative expression of seniors in North Carolina" provides a stage for the creative talents of the visual, heritage, literary, and performing artists. It's held locally between February 1 and June 15.
The literary category for SilverArts is divided into these sub-categories: Essays, Life Experiences (autobiographical), Poems, Short Stories (fiction).
Qualifiers in each category are invited to participate each fall in the Senior Games State Finals held in Raleigh. Every two years, the State Finals winners qualify to represent North Carolina at the National Senior Games and 2014 is the National Qualifying event in North Carolina.
Each county or region facilitates a SilverArts competition in conjunction with the Senior Games. Because the dates vary, it's best to contact your county or region here, for complete information.
So sharpen those pencils and get ready! Click here for complete guidelines for the literary arts category. And here for an informative booklet, including information on how to become a qualifier.
For a complete list of categories available in your county or region, click here.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
"Singing It Forward" With Kathryn Stripling Byer at the Lanier Library Poetry Festival
Where: 72 Chestnut Street, Tryon, North Carolina 28782
When: April 26, 2014
April in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains is a beautiful month, one might even say pure poetry. So please join Kathryn Stripling Byer and other celebrated poets, including Joseph Bathanti, at the Lanier Library on April 26, 2014, for a day of inspiration, education and a sociable gathering of creative minds.
The Lanier Library in Tryon, North Carolina will be hosting a new literary festival celebrating one of the most beloved and advanced forms of literature in the history of the written word: POETRY.
They have invited some of the country’s most respected poets to lead a variety of writing workshops; to discuss poetry’s importance in our lives; to offer publication advice; and to give free public readings of their work and autograph their books.
A highlight of the day is a catered luncheon with honored guest Mark Doty. Doty has published eight collections of his poetry, including Fire to Fire, which won the coveted National Book Award in Poetry in 2008. The festival concludes with a public reception at the Lanier Library to announce the winners of the sixth annual Sidney Lanier Poetry Competition (open to poets in North and South Carolina and Georgia).
This year’s judge of the competition is current North Carolina Poet Laureate Joseph Bathanti, who will speak at the reception. In addition, the prize recipients will read their winning poems. Hors d’oeuvres and wine will be served.
Registration deadline is April 15. For a registration form and full details: www.lanierlib.org/poetryfestival2014
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
NetWest Writers Conference
The NC Writers' Network-West is pleased to announce the NetWest Writers Conference on May 10, 2014 at the historic Jackson County Courthouse Library Complex in Sylva, NC. For more details, please click here or on the Conference tab on our sites.
Monday, March 10, 2014
To Do: A Social Media Spring Clean
In doing a cleaning out of my inbox, I finally made a category for posts from this blog, Catherine - Caffeinated, which is always informative - and humorous. Here's today's post, with some good advice about an author's online presence. Enjoy! Ellen
URL: http://wp.me/pK3Dz-3vG
URL: http://wp.me/pK3Dz-3vG
Saturday, March 8, 2014
Special Presentation of POEMSCAPES on April 11
Carol Pearce Bjorlie will read, play the cello, and collaborate with photographer, Ruthie Rosauer at the Hendersonville, NC library on Friday, April 11, at 2:00 pm.
Carol and Ruthie have developed, POEMSCAPES, a landscape slide show/reading/performance event.
For more information, please contact Carol at: bjorlie.carol@yahoo.com.
Carol and Ruthie have developed, POEMSCAPES, a landscape slide show/reading/performance event.
For more information, please contact Carol at: bjorlie.carol@yahoo.com.
Friday, March 7, 2014
Author of Southern Fried Lies, Susan Snowden, on Fiction
Meet Susan Snowden, author and editor who will be a
presenter at the Netwest Writers Conference on May 10 in Sylva, NC.
An Atlanta
native, Susan Snowden moved to the mountains of western NC in 1995 to have more
time to write. Since then her work—fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry—has
been published in more than forty literary journals and anthologies. She has received
seventeen honors and awards for her writing, including a gold medal in 2013 for
her first novel, Southern Fried Lies
(IPPY Award; Best Fiction, Southeast Region).
Susan has taught writing at
Georgia State University in Atlanta, and at Blue Ridge Community in Flat Rock,
NC. She’s also worked as a freelance book editor since 1985, editing fiction
and nonfiction for publishers and authors. (www.SnowdenEditorial.com).
The conference
will be a one day event at the beautiful public library of Jackson County. This
building is the former majestic courthouse sitting on a hill that can be seen
for miles around the picturesque little town of Sylva. Recently renovated, it is now the Jackson County public library and event center.
Registration information for the conference will soon be available at www.netwestwriters-west.org
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Google+
This is a call for assistance to our Google+ savvy members. I've been trying to get up to speed so that we can have a workshop - trouble is, I'm kind of slow. So if any of you can help out, please let me know.
Also, I've set up a page for NetWest, and I hope that you will check it out and add us to your circles.
Also, I've set up a page for NetWest, and I hope that you will check it out and add us to your circles.
Monday, March 3, 2014
March Coffee With the Poets and Writers Features Deanna Klingel
On Wednesday, March 12, Coffee with the Poets and Writers features author Deanna Klingel, who lives in Sapphire Valley, NC. The literary event takes place the second Wednesday of each month at 10:30 am at Blue Mountain Coffee and Grill located at 30 Hwy 141 in Cherokee County, NC.
The public is invited to come and enjoy the author of five novels including Cracks in the Ice and the young adult series, Avery's Battlefield and Avery's Crossroads, based on a fourteen year old boy who lives during the Civil War era. Deanna will read from her new book to be released in March, Rock and a Hard Place, a Lithuanian Love Story, based on real people living today and she will talk about the truth in fiction.
The NC Writers' Network West sponsors this gathering of writers and poets and welcomes those attending to participate in open mic and to stay after to have lunch together.
Writers’ Night Out In New Location, March 15
Writers’ Night Out starts its fourth year by featuring two local writers: poet Mary Ricketson and novelist Paul M. Schofield. The event takes place on Saturday, March 15 in its new location, the Union County Community Center at Butternut Creek Golf Course in Blairsville, GA. A social hour starts at 6 p.m. with the reading at 7 p.m. and open microphone following. Writers’ Night is free (food available for purchase) and open to the public. Writers can sign up at the door to read poetry or prose for three minutes in the open microphone.
Ricketson, of Murphy, NC, has been writing for 20 years. She is inspired by nature and her work as a mental health counselor. Her poetry has been published in her chapbook, I Hear the River Call My Name, as well as in Lights in the Mountains, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, Freeing Jonah, Red Fox Run, Wild Goose Poetry Review, Future Cycle Press, Your Daily Poem, andJournal of Kentucky Studies. She won medals for poetry in the Cherokee County Senior Games/Silver Arts, and won first place in the 2011 Joyce Kilmer Memorial Forest 75th anniversary national poetry contest. Ricketson writes a monthly column, “Woman to Woman,” for The Cherokee Scout, is a member of the North Carolina Writers Network, and is president of Ridgeline Literary Alliance.
Schofield’s three action-packed books make up The Trophy Saga, based on ideas that are theoretically feasible. They feature time-travel, chase and battle scenes, fusion powered star-ships, a computer-controlled society, tender moments and scary episodes. Refreshing to read, they are free of explicit sex, profanity, graphic violence and paranormal themes. Schofield was born and raised in Montana and now lives in Murphy, NC with his wife Ellen.
Writers’ Night Out is sponsored by NC Writers Network-West and is now at its new location: The Union County Community Center, located 129 Union County Recreation Rd., Blairsville, Georgia 30512, off Highway 129 near the intersection of US 76, phone (706) 439-6092. Come to the upstairs banquet room, which is accessible via stairs or the elevator. Starting April 2014, Writers’ Night Out will move to the second Saturday of each month. For more information, please contact Karen Holmes at (404) 316-8466 or kpaulholmes@gmail.com.
Saturday, February 22, 2014
Ten Year Old Abigail Rose Cargo's Poem Featured on Rattle.com
Thank you to Lisa Cargo, proud mom, for sharing this information with us:
"Abigail's poem, "Firefly," is published in the 2014 Rattle Young
Poets Anthology and is featured this week on the Rattle website.
If you go to the website, rattle.com,
you can read her poem and author's note as well as hear her audio
reading of "Firefly." It will be the featured poem until next Friday, February 28.
When you visit the website, be sure to leave a
comment for Abigail. I'll print those out for her at the end of the
week as a keepsake.
Help me spread the word by
forwarding this information on to anyone else you think may be
interested. Thank you for supporting Abigail and the other young poets."
Congratulations to Abigail - we hope that you will keep writing.
Friday, February 21, 2014
Celebrate the Release of Deanna Klingel's New Book
Deanna has invited you to a literary soiree (aka book release party) Sunday afternoon 1-4 PM,
March 9, 2014, St Jude Church, 3011 US Highway 64 East, Cashiers, NC,
to celebrate the release of A Rock and a Hard Place, A Lithuanian Love
Story.
Enjoy Lithuanian food, beverage, music, book discussion, reading,
signing and meeting the couple about whom the book is written. Bring your
friends.
If you can't be there in person, you can still be part of the
party. Friday before the event go to www.BooksByDeanna. Use the tab Rock & a Hard Place to find recipes you can try at home. Sunday, the day of the event, go to Amazon.com and buy a book (available as of March 8), then send an email to deannaklingel@yahoo.com with your name and address. You will receive a signature and book mark for your book.
Monday following the event enjoy the photos of the event at Facebook page, "Books By Deanna".
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Those Who Do Not Read Books
NCWN/NetWest member Bill Ramsey (www.LifesWrite.com) sent us this observation "In
recent conversations with young adults, thirty somethings, the subject
of books came up. Perhaps I should not have been surprised when they
told me they "never read books."
While "too busy" was offered as an excuse, there is something else at work here.
Enjoying reading is difficult for those who rarely do it. They can read the words but miss the message. Do we, as writers, need to speak to this growing situation in the young adult population? If yes, how can we do so?"
Do you have any suggestions? We'd love to get your comments.
While "too busy" was offered as an excuse, there is something else at work here.
Enjoying reading is difficult for those who rarely do it. They can read the words but miss the message. Do we, as writers, need to speak to this growing situation in the young adult population? If yes, how can we do so?"
Do you have any suggestions? We'd love to get your comments.
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