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.
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Bob Grove, author of several books and Netwest member from Clay County, will perform his annual reading of Dickens' A Christmas Carol on Wednesday, December 10 at 7:00 p.m. This takes place at the John C. Campbell Folk School which will be decorated for Christmas. Bob dresses in period costume. Put this date on your calendar and plan to stay for the Folk School dance teams that perform after the reading.
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Representatives for Netwest do a great job
The goal of the NC Writers Network West is to have at least
one representative in each county of our region which includes nine counties
south and west of Asheville. That person is given free membership in NCWN as long
as they hold an event in their county – an open mic, critique, Writers Night
Out, or some kind of gathering for writers and poets that is open to the
public.
Janice Moore and I (Glenda Beall) are reps for Clay County.
Janice facilitates the monthly poetry critique group. I facilitate Coffee with
the Poets and Writers which meets once each month on Wednesday morning. We have
featured readers and open mic followed by a social time.
![]() |
| LUCY COLE GRATTON |
![]() |
| KAREN HOLMES |
Karen Holmes and Rosemary Royston are reps for the
Georgia counties that border North Carolina. Writers Night Out, a monthly reading, has been a successful venture for several years hosted by Karen Holmes.
Lucy Cole Gratton
and Mary Ricketson are
representatives for Cherokee County. Lucy does an excellent job of hosting
monthly readings at the John C. Campbell
Folk School. The monthly Netwest prose critique group is also held in
Cherokee County at the Tri-County Community College.
![]() |
| NEWT SMITH |
In Jackson County, Newt
Smith and Kathryn Byer share the
rep duties
and hold Coffee with a Poet each month at City Lights Book Store.
![]() |
| PATRICIA VESTAL |
Henderson County representatives, Lana Hendershott and Patricia
Vestal, hold a monthly open mic night that has become very popular with
writers there. Having two reps work together and share the responsibility of
the event eliminates pressure to always be present. Of course our members are
usually happy to be the emcee if the representatives cannot attend. Staci Lynn Bell has
volunteered to help with hosting Coffee with the Poets and Writers. She does a
great job.
It is not difficult to begin an open mic or other event for
writers in your area. Find a coffee shop, restaurant, book store, or any place
that will open their doors to the group for an hour. Send out word to all the
writers in your area either by contacting NCWN or other writers you know in
your county. Post a few flyers at the local library or other writerly places in
the area.
![]() |
| LANA HENDERSHOTT |
Those of us who have been doing this for many years will be
very happy to help you get the event off the ground and going strong. An NCWN
or Netwest sponsored group has the advantage of being a non-profit and that
often eliminates having to pay for a venue.
If a group meets in a coffee house or restaurant, they should
all purchase something to eat or drink. That is the courteous thing to do and
builds a good relationship with the owner of the shop. Also, tipping the
waitress goes a long way in making your group welcome at the restaurant.
We sit and write alone but we need community. We need to be
with like-minded people to talk about our craft, to discuss our work and learn
from each other. An open mic event might be the first time a budding writer gets
up enough nerve to read his/her work out loud to an audience.
There are rules for open mic events and for critique groups
that will ensure success. The representative in charge sets these rules and
makes them known to anyone who participates. A time limit or word limit has to
be set to give all those who sign up an opportunity to read.
A good critique group adheres to certain rules to keep
writers from becoming defensive or from being too critical and losing members.
We have a set of rules for critique that has worked for twenty years and has
enabled local poets to help each other and become published.
Our representatives have done a great job for years. We need
more people who will take a lead in their counties and promote the literary
arts with an event for poets or writers or both.
We invite our representatives to leave a comment here and
tell us what you do and why your events are successful.
![]() |
| KATHRYN BYER |
Email www.gcbmountaingirl@gmail.com if you are interested in becoming a rep
in a mountain county that doesn't presently have one. We will be happy to help you get
started.
Labels:
NCWN representatives,
Netwest Reps,
Open mic,
poetry,
readings
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Laurence Holden wins Honorable Mention for his poem
To read more visit here. Whole Terrain Journal: "Trust the Process: a conversation with artist & poet Laurence Holden" Whole Terrain Journal, a nationally acclaimed journal of reflective environmental practice, features an interview with Laurence Holden on their blog November 25, 2014: |
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Maren Mitchell's poem in Town Creek Poetry
Visit Town Creek Poetry and read a poem by Netwest member, Maren O. Mitchell.
Maren is a well-published poet and author of Beat Chronic Pain, An Insider's Guide.
Kudos to Maren.
Click on the title of the poem and take time to read all the poets in the new issue of Town Creek Poetry, an online journal, edited by William Wright.
Maren is a well-published poet and author of Beat Chronic Pain, An Insider's Guide.
Kudos to Maren.
Click on the title of the poem and take time to read all the poets in the new issue of Town Creek Poetry, an online journal, edited by William Wright.
Maren O. Mitchell, poet and author of Beat Chronic Pain, An Insider's Guide
Labels:
author,
beat chronic pain,
poet,
poetry,
Town Creek Poetry Journal
Thursday, November 20, 2014
The North Carolina Writers' Network 2014 Fall Conference
The North Carolina Writers' Network 2014 Fall Conference will be held November 21-23 at the Sheraton Charlotte Hotel, in Uptown Charlotte. If you've already registered: thank you! If not, can you really miss an opportunity like this, happening in your own backyard?
The North Carolina Writers' Network 2014 Fall Conference offers something for almost every writer, at any level of skill or experience. Your best route to getting the most out of the weekend depends on where you are right now as a writer, where you want to go as a writer, and how you want to get from here to there.
Are you a NOVICE writer? Good workshop options for newbies include Chantel Acevedo’s “All Shapes and Sizes: A Workshop on Novel Structure”; “Poetry 101” with Anthony S. Abbott; and “First Impressions in the First Few Pages” with Sarah Creech.
Are you an EMERGING writer? You may want to mix some of the craft workshops—maybe “Poetry and Time” with Julie Funderburk; “Making Their Stories Your Own” with Rebecca McClanahan; or Zelda Lockhart’s “The Mirror Exercise: Producing a Whole Short Work in Less Than an Hour”—with some of the appropriate business-of-writing workshops like Sunday’s panel discussion on “The Many Paths to Publication” with Kim Boykin, John Hartness, and Karon Luddy.
Are you an EXPERIENCED writer? You may be ready to concentrate on the “business of writing” workshops: “The Art of the Pitch” with Betsy Thorpe and Carin Siegfried; “Crafting Your Message: Beginning an Interactive Publicity Campaign” with Priscilla Goudreau-Santos; “The Many Paths to Publication” panel discussion; maybe even “Creating a Poetry Community” with Scott Owens and Jonathan K. Rice.
And if you're an AUTHOR, well, why not register for the conference just to brag? And of course to enjoy the keynote address by Allan Gurganus; Saturday's luncheon featuring North Carolina's seventh poet laureate, Joseph Bathanti; and Saturday night's annual banquet featuring the inimitable Wilton Barnhardt.
The North Carolina Writers' Network Fall Conference changes locations each year, in order to better serve the writers of this state. We won't be back in Charlotte until 2018, at the earliest. We don't want to wait that long to see you.
Register now.
The North Carolina Writers' Network 2014 Fall Conference offers something for almost every writer, at any level of skill or experience. Your best route to getting the most out of the weekend depends on where you are right now as a writer, where you want to go as a writer, and how you want to get from here to there.
Are you a NOVICE writer? Good workshop options for newbies include Chantel Acevedo’s “All Shapes and Sizes: A Workshop on Novel Structure”; “Poetry 101” with Anthony S. Abbott; and “First Impressions in the First Few Pages” with Sarah Creech.
Are you an EMERGING writer? You may want to mix some of the craft workshops—maybe “Poetry and Time” with Julie Funderburk; “Making Their Stories Your Own” with Rebecca McClanahan; or Zelda Lockhart’s “The Mirror Exercise: Producing a Whole Short Work in Less Than an Hour”—with some of the appropriate business-of-writing workshops like Sunday’s panel discussion on “The Many Paths to Publication” with Kim Boykin, John Hartness, and Karon Luddy.
Are you an EXPERIENCED writer? You may be ready to concentrate on the “business of writing” workshops: “The Art of the Pitch” with Betsy Thorpe and Carin Siegfried; “Crafting Your Message: Beginning an Interactive Publicity Campaign” with Priscilla Goudreau-Santos; “The Many Paths to Publication” panel discussion; maybe even “Creating a Poetry Community” with Scott Owens and Jonathan K. Rice.
And if you're an AUTHOR, well, why not register for the conference just to brag? And of course to enjoy the keynote address by Allan Gurganus; Saturday's luncheon featuring North Carolina's seventh poet laureate, Joseph Bathanti; and Saturday night's annual banquet featuring the inimitable Wilton Barnhardt.
The North Carolina Writers' Network Fall Conference changes locations each year, in order to better serve the writers of this state. We won't be back in Charlotte until 2018, at the earliest. We don't want to wait that long to see you.
Register now.
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Who are the writers you need to see read live?
http://flavorwire.com/487668/50-writers-you-need-to-see-read-live
I read an article on 50 Writers You Need to See Read Live and it made me think about all our Netwest writers. How many of us take time to work on our readings so they will entertain our audience and keep them wanting to hear more? How many of us say the work must stand on its on and we don't worry about the presentation?
I noticed in the article that almost every single person listed used humor in his/her presentation. Does that mean we can't read about serious subjects? I don't think so.
Read the original article and see what the author thinks makes a good reader.
Netwest holds open mic and featured reader events in our region. Send us the names of those
you think do a very good job of reading their work.
We can help each other by telling what we enjoy from our writers and poets when they read.
Send your thoughts to me by Email: glendabeall@msn.com
I read an article on 50 Writers You Need to See Read Live and it made me think about all our Netwest writers. How many of us take time to work on our readings so they will entertain our audience and keep them wanting to hear more? How many of us say the work must stand on its on and we don't worry about the presentation?
I noticed in the article that almost every single person listed used humor in his/her presentation. Does that mean we can't read about serious subjects? I don't think so.
Read the original article and see what the author thinks makes a good reader.
you think do a very good job of reading their work.
We can help each other by telling what we enjoy from our writers and poets when they read.
Send your thoughts to me by Email: glendabeall@msn.com
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Judy Pierce Will be Signing her New Book on November 22
Judy Pierce will be signing copies of the second book in the Tales from Farlandia series, Ozette's HeartStone, on November 22 from 1-3pm at the White Squirrel Shoppe at 2 West Main in Brevard, NC. during their 26th annual Christmas Open House. Copies of her first book, Ozette's Destiny, will also be available.
More about Judy and her books can be found on her website, or on her Amazon page.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Interview on You Tube with award-winning Netwest Poet
Brenda Kay Ledford, award-winning poet from Hayesville, NC was interviewed by Pam Roman of the Clay County Chamber of Commerce regarding her new book, Crepe Roses.
See the complete interview here.
Congratulations, Brenda Kay.
See the complete interview here.
Congratulations, Brenda Kay.
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
November 8: Last Writers' Night Out for 2014
Local favorite Bob Grove and formerly local, award-winning Eva Nell Mull Wike will entertain us with their stories.
Please Note: There's been a slight change to Writers' Night Out: We no longer have a formal dinner service. Many of us just meet in The View Grill upstairs at the Union County Community Center for dinner or drinks. Then we have our program in the Ballroom (or other room as directed by signs) at 7 p.m. For directions to the event, click here (the Holiday Inn Express on the map is now a Comfort Suites). As always, you can sign up at the door to read for 3 minutes in the open mic.
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Nancy Purcell's poem accepted for Anthology
Kudos to Nancy Purcell,
former Transylvania County Representative for Netwest. Her poem, Hard Frost was
accepted for inclusion in the anthology, Life is a Roller Coaster from Kind of
a Hurricane Press. http://www.kindofahurricanepress.com/
Nancy’s prose has been
published in various print media, and she teaches Creative Writing at Brevard College in their Creekside program
for adults. She also facilitates a writing group made up of her students.
A Southern fiction writer, Nancy has learned to tap
into readers’ emotions and keep them riveted right up to the final
sentence. As a student of relationships, she explores family dynamics that
include romance, old age, deceit, even murder. She is also a prose judge
for the Carl Sandburg Home Writer-in-Residence program at Flat Rock, NorthCarolina.
Congratulations, Nancy.
We look forward to seeing more of your poetry. Visit Nancy online here.
Labels:
anthology,
Brevard NC,
Kind of a hurricane press,
Nancy Purcell,
poetry
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Paul Schofield, novelist, reads at Coffee with the Poets and Writers
Coffee
with the Poets and Writers meets the second Wednesday of each month. Murphy
resident, Paul Schofield, novelist, is featured November 12 at
10:30 a.m. at Blue Mountain Coffee and Grill on the corner of Hwy 141 and
Hwy 64 in Cherokee County, NC. This event is sponsored by the North Carolina
Writers’ Network-West (Netwest), and the community is welcome. Visitors are
invited to participate at open mic by signing up to read a short prose piece or
a couple of poems.
Paul’s vocation is
architecture, but he is also a writer. He has written The Trophy Saga, an
action-packed, pure science-fiction trilogy, in the classic style. The Saga
features time-travel, chase and battle scenes, fusion powered star-ships, a
computer-controlled society, tender moments and scary episodes. Exciting and
refreshing to read, the Saga is free of explicit sex, profanity, graphic
violence and paranormal themes.
Born and raised in Montana,
immersion in the natural world around him was inevitable. As he grew up he
learned the complexities of language, and the joy of humor, by the daily
exchange of witty puns with his father. An avid reader, Paul’s favorite genre
was science fiction.
His interest in the
night skies sparked a love for amateur astronomy. Coming of age during the time
of Star Trek, Star Wars, and Babylon V, his love of science fiction grew, and
his desire to craft and share his own stories was ignited.
When he became chilled
to the bone in Montana, he moved to Florida, where he became quite well
done…seasoned. Now he and his wife Ellen live in western North Carolina with
their highly intelligent cats, contentedly fulfilling their role as “halfbacks.”
Learn more about Paul Schofield and his books at his website, http://www.paulmschofield.com/
For more
information about Coffee with the Poets and Writers, call 828-389-4441. Visit
the NCWN West website, www.ncwriters-west.org
Friday, October 24, 2014
Randolph P. Shaffner, Netwest member has a new book
“A fascinating, well-researched and long overdue biography of the Virginia
Military Institute’s most unheralded founder and underappreciated champion of
educational reform.”
̶ Dr. Bradford A. Wineman, Marine
Corps University
Read more about Randolph Shaffner on his website.
"This is a fascinating and extremely readable book, deeply researched but
never pedantic. It presents a thorough and persuasive defense of Col. Preston’s
unique role in the founding and preservation of V.M.I. and paints a vivid and
often surprising picture not only of this one eccentric, determined
reformer—schoolmate of Edgar Allan Poe and brother-in-law of Stonewall Jackson—and his family, but also of Virginia society before, during, and after
the Civil War."
̶ J J. B. McAfee, Richmond,
Virginia
"This biography from McFarland Publishing has the type of massive
bibliography and expansive scholarly documentation seen in quality original
works. I can't say I am familiar with this particular fellow (Civil War readers
encounter a lot of Prestons), but, as the title indicates, he was a key figure
in the institutional development of VMI. Preston and Stonewall Jackson both
married Junkin sisters, and the professor would also serve on Jackson's staff
during the war."
–"New Arrivals," Booknotes IV, Oct. 11, 2014, by
Drew at Civil War Books and Authors
Friday, October 17, 2014
Brenda Kay Ledford's Poetry Book Published
Brenda Kay Ledford's poetry book, CREPE ROSES, was published by Kelsay Books, Aldrich Press in October, 2014.
The following blurbs describe the book:
CREPE ROSES, by Brenda Kay Ledford, is tithed to the deep mountains of the poet's beloved western North Carolina. This stirring collection is the plat of the heart, a litany of memory that becomes palpable as the land itself. Indeed memory, along with the Adamic impulse to name every signpost-to list those names in sorrow and triumph, to wander among them, crying out, as if they are lost, though they remain underfoot-is this book's constant, thrumming trope. As the speaker attests in the poem, "Ceaseless Verse," "The poetry of the earth never ceases." Nor does the reader's pleasure with these elegant poems.
--Joseph Bathanti, former Poet Laureate of North Carolina
CREPE ROSES by Brenda Kay Ledford is a patchwork quilt of experiences and memories pieced together with the skillful words of an established poet. The multi-hued fragments give a view of the Blue Ridge where "moments tick like hours on the wrap-around porch." The ancient Appalachians come alive in her poems as a "breeze ricochets across the porch resurrecting buried dreams." A dedicated writer, her remembrances bring much to us all. Settle down and visit Chunky Gal Mountain, Winding Stairs Gap, and Shewbird Mountain where a Full Wolf Moon spills honey. A delightful read!
--C. Pleasants York, North Carolina Poetry Society President, Author of "Pleasantries, Weaver of Destiny" and "Dream Within A Dream
Brenda Kay Ledford's poetry book, CREPE ROSES, is available on www.amazon.com.
The following blurbs describe the book:
CREPE ROSES, by Brenda Kay Ledford, is tithed to the deep mountains of the poet's beloved western North Carolina. This stirring collection is the plat of the heart, a litany of memory that becomes palpable as the land itself. Indeed memory, along with the Adamic impulse to name every signpost-to list those names in sorrow and triumph, to wander among them, crying out, as if they are lost, though they remain underfoot-is this book's constant, thrumming trope. As the speaker attests in the poem, "Ceaseless Verse," "The poetry of the earth never ceases." Nor does the reader's pleasure with these elegant poems.
--Joseph Bathanti, former Poet Laureate of North Carolina
CREPE ROSES by Brenda Kay Ledford is a patchwork quilt of experiences and memories pieced together with the skillful words of an established poet. The multi-hued fragments give a view of the Blue Ridge where "moments tick like hours on the wrap-around porch." The ancient Appalachians come alive in her poems as a "breeze ricochets across the porch resurrecting buried dreams." A dedicated writer, her remembrances bring much to us all. Settle down and visit Chunky Gal Mountain, Winding Stairs Gap, and Shewbird Mountain where a Full Wolf Moon spills honey. A delightful read!
--C. Pleasants York, North Carolina Poetry Society President, Author of "Pleasantries, Weaver of Destiny" and "Dream Within A Dream
Brenda Kay Ledford's poetry book, CREPE ROSES, is available on www.amazon.com.
Saturday, October 11, 2014
Writers' Night Features 2 Young Harris College Poets
October 18: Please come hear the newest poets in town!
Chelsea and Jim both teach at Young Harris College and are award-winning poets.
Please Note: There's been a slight change to Writers' Night Out: We no longer have a formal dinner service. Many of us just meet in The View Grill upstairs at the Union County Community Center for dinner or drinks. Then we have our program in the Ballroom at 7 p.m.
Click here for James May's wonderful poem that just placed in the prestigious Rattle Poetry contest.
And read a fun Chelsea Rathburn poem here.
Monday, October 6, 2014
Keller and Gratton read at JCCFS October 16
John C. Campbell Folk School
Brasstown, N C
Mary Mike Keller and Lucy Cole Gratton
will read their poems and stories
The reading is free and open to the public.
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