Thursday, July 30, 2009

A Poem


Big Sur

I drive along the freeway,
cars like inch worms creep.
I visualize a moment
far removed from traffic jams.

High above the scene,
we picniced on cheese and wine.
The wind swept up the cliff
and kissed my face with droplets
from the great Pacific which crashed
on rocks one hundred feet below.

Wind tossed our words up to the gulls
who shrieked them back at us.
The day was dazzling in its brilliance.
Our love, not young, refreshed, renewed.
We dreamed, made promises.
That perfect day - a perfect place,
away from all the world.
--- Glenda Council Beall

Friday, July 24, 2009

2009 Best of the Net

First of all, I extend my sympathy to Glenda Beall and her family upon the loss of her beloved husband, Barry. We all loved Barry and appreciate very much all the work he did for North Carolina Writers Network-West. Barry took photos of our writers' events and was always faithful. We will all miss him very much. Glenda and her family are in our thoughts and prayers.

Barry always supported the writers of this region. I think he would be glad to heard I was nominated as 2009 "Best of the Net" for my poem, "Crepe Roses," that was published on THE DEAD MULE SCHOOL OF SOUTHERN LITERATURE website (April, 2009). You may visit the blog at: http://www.deadmule.com/blog

Thursday, July 23, 2009

N.C. Writers Network West Has Lost One of our Strongest Supporters.






N.C. Writers Network West Has Lost One of our Strongest Supporters. Barry Beall of Hayesville died July 21, 2009. Barry was not a writer, but he gave his support to our members. He was always supporting Glenda Beall, our Program Coordinator in her job. He went to get copies and delivered copies and set up for workshops. He set up for the annual picnic and took our pictures and came to hear us read. Barry Beall will be missed.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

NOW MIGHT AS WELL BE THEN by Glenda Council Beall



Finishing Line Press recently announced the publication date for Glenda Beall's new poetry collection titled NOW MIGHT AS WELL BE THEN.
Click Here to order your copy.

(Cover by Mike Keller)

$12.00 plus $1.00 mailing fee if ordered before October 16, 2009






Posted by Nancy Simpson

I know these poems well, and I feel the excitement in the air knowing her book, NOW MIGHT AS WELL BE THEN, will soon be in my hands. All of us who know Glenda as our NC Writers Network Program Coordinator, are placing our orders now. It is a bitter sweet time for Glenda, as she is caring for her life mate and husband Barry Beall, the subject of a number of her poems, who is seriously ill.

"I asked for an early release of the book for Barry," Glenda wrote to me, "and I wonder if he will ever see the finished book."

NOW MIGHT AS WELL BE THEN by Glenda Council Beall

Finishing Line Press is taking pre-orders for Now Might As Well Be Then, poetry chapbook by Glenda Council Beall, Program Coordinator for Netwest since 2007.


It is the second book on the page of new releases coming out in October.


This book is dedicated to her husband, Barry Beall, who was an unofficial member of Netwest as he made many of the photos at writing events, for articles, and of members that are used in publicity today.


Like William Wordsworth, Glenda Beall was raised knowing well the "yoke of earth," how the fields, pastures and woodlands yield both beauty and terror. Her evocations of being a daughter in the deep South, growing up on a farm, riding her mare, witnessing death and tragedy, as well as joy and fruitfulness, ring absolutely true. She gives us love poems from a mature woman's perspective, too, and poems that celebrate the vistas and culture of the mountains where she now lives. Every poem pulses with detail that brings life back to us in all its varied detail and music. The "yoke of earth" is also the poet's yoke, and she bears it gladly. --- Kathryn Striping Byer, NC Poet Laureate

Monday, July 6, 2009

Netwest Mountain Writers and Poets: Our Own Jayne Jaudon Ferrer Shares Her Survival Tale, Hazards of Youth Growing Up in the 1950s on MSNBC





Netwest Mountain Writers and Poets: Our Own Jayne Jaudon Ferrer Shares Her Survival Tale, Hazards of Youth Growing Up in the 1950s on MSNBC

MONDAY, JULY 6, 2009
Hey! I'm on MSNBC!
Some weeks back, I got word that a reporter was looking for input from people who grew up in the 40s and 50s and lived to tell about it. You know, back in those BAD old days, before any of us knew the dangers of suntans, red meat, bicycles, cigarettes, hairspray, hard candy, and such. By all rights, we Boomers should be dead, according to today's health and safety standards. But I feel pretty good myself; how about you? I frankly think my childhood was a lot more fun than what kids today experience, so I wrote the reporter and shared some of my thoughts on that. Lo and behold, he used my comments! Who'da thought it? As it turns out, he didn't do much reporting (doesn't even use a byline; what writer lets that opportunity fall by the wayside?!); he just printed some of the responses he got. But, hey, I'll take my fifteen seconds of fame from whencever they come.

Mostly, I thought it would be fun to use this as a prompt for YOUR memories of "dangerous" living during your childhood days. I've heard my big sister talk about foot x-rays (that was before my time) and I loved my mother's tales of driving the family car to school when she was nine. (Nine?!) One of my own favorite activities--which is totally banned these days--was walking barefoot around town in the summer; it felt sooooo good to go from that hot sidewalk on Main Street onto the cool linoleum of Ben Franklin's Five and Dime or the smooth hardwood floors of my Daddy's Western Auto.

I'm as cautious as the next person, but I think sometimes we get carried away with all these rules and regulations, and I have to say, I think the motivation for all the hoopla is more often about profit than public safety. Several years back I read Myrna Blyth's fascinating book, Spin Sisters, which shares in great detail how the media--women's magazines, in particular--thrive on alarmist stories targeted at "power moms"--those of us who are 25-54 with at least one child at home. Blyth should know; she was editor of Ladies' Home Journal for years, and helped give birth to one of my favorite magazines, More. She readily confesses that she was as guilty as the rest in making us moms second guess our belief that our homes and families are safe. Blyth's need to come clean (or, perhaps, just her need to sell a book, but that's okay) resulted in a mesmerizing examination of how media preys on our insecurities and need for approval. If you haven't read Spin Sisters, go find a copy. It's well worth buying, and certainly deserving of a trip to the library.

In the meantime, I invite you to confess all the horrors your mother may have unwittingly exposed you to in your youth, and the appalling risks you may have taken. Roller skating with no kneepads? For shame! B-B guns? The very idea! Truly, it's a wonder any of us survived to have children of our own.

Here's the MSNBC article. Hope it brings back some happy memories; scroll down seven paragraphs and one ad: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31670024/from/ET/ .


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31670024/from/ET/

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Nagging Questions can be answered by Yvonne Perry's blog

Do you know when to use an en dash and when to use an em dash? What is an en dash? What is an em dash?
Interesting information on the subject at this site.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Cherokee County Poetry and Essay Contest

Dalton Mallonee, Cliff Owl, and Amanda Gaddis - Essay contest winners.
Kelly Noel Waldorf and Hannah Larson. Poetry contest winners.
Serving as judge of essays for the Cherokee County Poetry and Essay Contest held each year for high school students in Cherokee County, North Carolina was and is always an honor. I read and re-read the work of these students and found it difficult to choose only three winners.
Cliff Owl III, in the white shirt in the photo, was my choice for first place. His personal essay, Walking the Line of the Reservation, expresses deep insight into his feelings of guilt, stygma, and his reconciliation of these feelings as he graduates from Murphy High School. With a small enrollment of people from his father's Cherokee Indian heritage Cliff often felt he should be at Cherokee High School on the Qualla Boundary, home of the Eastern Band of Cherokee where his relatives live and his family once lived. I was not surprised when Cliff said he was going to college at Stamford University.His writing showed a surprising maturity for such a young man.
Second and third place essay winners responded to an assignment in class and both wrote entirely different views on the subject of a Learning Experience.
First place Poetry winner was Hannah Larsen. This was her second time to win this contest in her four years of high school
Judging the Poetry contest was Jayne Jaudon Ferrer, our Netwest Rep in South Carolina.
Our congratulations to all the winners. This contest is sponsored each year by the local community, and the Cherokee Scout Newspaper.
Paul Donovan, a long time supporter of writers in his community, organizes the contest which awards monetary prizes. Netwest donates an award each year.

Titles of winning essays are:
First Place :Walking the Line of the Reservation
Second Place :A Powerful Learning Experience
Third Place :A Learning Experience






Thursday, July 2, 2009

Corporate Sponsor of Netwest

Netwest is indeed appreciative of the annual donation from United Community Bank, Inc. UCBI supports the arts and other community events, and we are delighted they recognize the advantages of our writing group to the public. Mary Taylor, Administrative Assistant to Jimmy Tallent, founder and CEO, says she has noticed we support them as well. If you have a branch of United Community Bank in your town, you will find the folks who work there to be among the friendliest anywhere. I always come out of their doors with a smile on my face.







Many thanks, Mary, to you and United Community Bank, Inc.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

MOTIF Anthology


Publisher Seeks Submissions for 2010 MOTIF Anthology

MOTIF is an anthology series published annually by MotesBooks of Louisville, Ky. Volume 1: Writing By Ear featured 116 writers, including Patty Griffin, Silas House, Buddy & Julie Miller, Maurice Manning, Evie Shockley, Neela Vaswani, Frank X Walker and Pamela Duncan.

Each volume in the MOTIF series focuses on a theme – for Volume 2 the theme is CHANCE.

Submissions may be poems, short stories, song lyrics, short memoirs, essays, letters, creative nonfiction, or other forms. Combinations of forms are acceptable up to the limits described: Prose must be under 3,000 words. Send no more than three poems/lyrics. All genres will be considered as long as “chance” is referenced or illuminated in the works. Submissions may address the theme either directly or indirectly, but “chance” should figure significantly and artfully in the piece. The definition or concept of “chance” can be interpreted in any way the writer sees fit, but could include ideas related to chaos, serendipity, mistake, the occasion for wonder, kismet, accident, fate, destiny, cause and effect, encounters, and/or predestination.

Each contributor whose work is accepted will receive one (1) complimentary copy of the book upon publication as payment. Contributors will also receive an ongoing contributor's discount for unlimited purchases of additional copies to use or resell. Marketing outlets include Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, and the publisher's website, MotesBooks.com. Special marketing strategies will also be utilized, including one or more public readings with selected contributors by invitation of the editor or publisher.

Submit by email only. Send manuscript (Arial 12 pt., single-spaced) as a .doc or .rtf file (MS Word) to MOTIF@MotesBooks.com.
IMPORTANT: Use "MOTIF Anthology" as the subject line (email containing blank subject lines will automatically be deleted; other subject lines may inadvertently be tagged as spam). Include all author contact information (including phone, snail mail, and e-mail address) with each submission.
Include a 50-60 word biographical note to appear in Contributor's section of the anthology in case of acceptance.
Do not send previously published or simultaneously submitted material.
Submission period closes September 1, 2009.

Acceptances will be notified by end of 2009. Publication slated for early 2010. Editor is Marianne Worthington.

For clarifications, visit www.MotesBooks.com or email MOTIF@MotesBooks.com.

What else are we up to? See our growing fiction, non-fiction & poetry catalog:
http://www.motesbooks.com/

Friday, June 26, 2009

Poet W.S. Merwin, Today With Bill Moyer






Pulitzer Winner W.S. Merwin Interviewed on PBS’s Bill Moyers Journal, Friday, June 26



Dear Friend,


This Friday, June 26, the Bill Moyers Journal will feature poet W.S. Merwin and his Pulitzer prize-winning book, The Shadow of Sirius.

For information on the broadcast in your area: Check Time and Stations.

With this second Pulitzer, Copper Canyon poet W.S. Merwin has established himself as one of the most influential poets of our time. In this candid interview with Bill Moyers, Merwin shares his unique perspective on a lifetime of literary achievements, reads poems from his new book, and fields questions ranging from poetic inspiration to political engagement.

I hope you enjoy the show and welcome your thoughts and reactions to the broadcast. We also encourage you to forward this email to friends and post a comment on our Facebook page.

Sincerely,

Joseph Bednarik
Copper Canyon Press
poetry@coppercanyonpress.org


Special Offer: Purchasing a copy of The Shadow of Sirius—or any of our W.S. Merwin books listed below—directly from Copper Canyon Press is an effective way to support our mission.

Order any W.S. Merwin books by June 30 and receive free shipping. Simply type “Moyers” in the “coupon code” section of our secure checkout… and while you’re there, please make a tax deductible donation. Your support—as a reader and a donor—is vital to the future of Copper Canyon Press, a non-profit publisher that invests every dollar into publishing and promoting poetry.

To read poems, reviews, and descriptions of W.S. Merwin books published by Copper Canyon Press, click on the titles below:



The Shadow of Sirius, winner of the 2009 Pulitzer Prize
Hardback, $22

Migration: New and Selected Poems, winner of the National Book Award
Paperback, $24

Present Company, winner of the Bobbit Poetry Prize from the Library of Congress
Paperback, $16

The Book of Fables (short prose pieces)
Paperback, $20

The First Four Books of Poems (complete text of Merwin’s first four books)
Paperback, $16

The Second Four Books of Poems (complete text of Merwin’s second four books)
Paperback, $18

Flower & Hand: Poems 1977-1983 (complete text of three Merwin volumes)
Paperback, $15




Notice: Copper Canyon Press loves poetry readers, and we occasionally send out email messages like this one to inform them about special events. If you know someone who would like to receive this email, please forward this message to them or send their address to poetry@coppercanyonpress.org and we’ll be happy to send it along. If you would like to not receive future email announcements, please send an email to poetry@coppercanyonpress.org with “Remove” in the subject line.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

MICHAEL BEADLE - NEW POETRY CD


Netwest member, Michael Beadle, has a new CD called "Kaboom." His poetry collection, An Invented Hour, came out in 2004, followed by Friends We Haven't Met, in 2008.
Visit him and read his poetry. We find his poems to be fun, entertaining and interesting.

What You Long For by Anne Clinard Barnhill

A friend of Netwest is Anne Barnhill who will be reading at Malaprop's in Asheville NC on June 24, 7 PM and at Mountain Lore Books in Hendersonville on June 27 at 1:00 PM. Anne is a member of NCWN but doesn't live in Netwest territory.

What You Long For, by Anne Clinard
Barnhill, is a rich collection that
will make you laugh-out-loud in some places and
cry in others. Filled with humor and tenderness,
Barnhill has written an enormously
entertaining group of stories.
Whether she is describing country women
telling one another stories in “The Quilting
Bee,” or introducing a little boy in love
with his best friend’s beer-drinking
mother in “Kings and Damsels,”
Anne Barnhill creates unforgettable characters
who feel like people you have encountered
in your own life. She describes the interior
life of women, in particular, with honesty
and wonderfully real details from
ordinary life. Simultaneously erotic and down-toearth,
What You Long For, is bound to become a Southern classic.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Curiosity Shop Bookstore hosts a child author


The Curiosity Shop Bookstore
46 Valley River Ave - Murphy proudly welcomes 9-year-old author, Ansley Carol Burnette this Saturday, June 20th, signing her book, Frisco Finds a Forever Family, a hardcover children's book about a dog who lives in a shelter but hopes for a family to love.
Ansley donates the proceeds to private, no-kill animal rescue shelters including Castaway Critters Pet Rescue, where she volunteers in Blairsville.

Ansley will be in Murphy from 11am-1pm Saturday.

***********************

ANDREWS -- DON'T FORGET - tomorrow (Thursday, June 18th) marks the start of the Kids' Summer Reading Club. Meet at our Andrews store at 10am. Grades 4 & 5 and Grades 6, 7 & 8 will all meet for the kick-off.

Don't miss Andrews Cruise Night Saturday evening. Stop by the West End Plaza and listen to the sounds of The Junaluska Jam Band, featuring our own manager, Connie McCabe.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Workshop on blogging a success

Glenda Beall, Netwest Program Coordinator, held another successful workshop for members on Saturday, June 13 at the Moss Library in Hayesville. This workshop focused on methods to improve your blog site and how to post and comment on blogs. Like many of Glenda’s workshops in the past, it was offered free to Netwest members.


Glenda is very knowledgeable on blogging and does a terrific job of managing our own Netwest Writers blog and has two terrific blogs of her own - The way I see it & Writing life stories.


Featured guest Tipper Pressley was on hand to offer her wealth of knowledge and insight on how to become a more successful blogger. Tipper has a very interesting blog focusing on Appalachian culture - Blind Pig and the Acorn. She is an excellent teacher and is also available for one-on-one sessions about blogging. You can contact her via her blog for more information.

The workshop was interactive with everyone sharing their knowledge. Topics included how to lay out your blog to grab your reader’s attention the minute they visit your blog, installing the latest gadgets from Google, ways to get news about you and your blog with Google Alerts, adding pictures and moving them around, the right way to use links, and how to build traffic for your blog through interaction and comments. The workshop was attended by Nancy Simpson, Carole Thompson, Pat Workman and Sam Hoffer.

Here are some interesting links related to blogging:


Sunday, June 14, 2009

Echoes Across the Blue Ridge

Submissions for the cover art for the Netwest anthology, Echoes across the Blue Ridge, Poems, Stories and Essays by writers living in and inspired by the southern Appalachians, have been most impressive. We will continue to accept photos, 8x10 please, until July 4.

We accept submissions only from the Netwest area. Be sure contact information is on each submission. We hope to have a selection made by August 1.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

POETS AND WRITERS READING POEMS AND STORIES

Brenda Kay Ledford, poet of Hayesville, NC








Richard Argo , writer of essays and science fiction




Netwest members, Brenda Kay Ledford and Richard Argo will read on the fourth Thursday of June, the 25th, at John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, NC. The readings will be held in the Keith House at 7:00 pm.

Brenda Kay Ledford, a native of Clay County, North Carolina, will delight all with her poetry drawn from life in these mountains. Her writing has appeared in OUR STATE, CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE SOUL, CAPPERS, JOURNAL OF KENTUCKY STUDIES, and other journals. She received the Paul Green Award from North Carolina Society of Historians for her poetry books, PATCHWORK MEMORIES and SHEW BIRD MOUNTAIN. Finishing Line Press published her third book, SACRED FIRE. Brenda Kay is a member of North Carolina Writers Network, North Carolina Poetry Society, Byron Herbert Reece Society, Georgia Poetry Society and listed with A DIRECTORY OF AMERICAN POETS AND FICTION WRITERS.

Richard Argo of Murphy, North Carolina is a writer of both fiction and nonfiction. His work has appeared in CAROLINA COUNTRY and LIGHTS IN THE MOUNTAINS. It is not uncommon to find bicycling as the subject of Richard’s work. He brings interest to everyday things in his musings. Richard is the facilitator of the Netwest Prose Group and is a member of long standing in the North Carolina Writers Network.
These readings are open to the community and to the students at the Folk School.

UPDATES THAT MAKE YOUR WEBLOG MORE EFFICIENT FOR YOUR USE

Please notice some of the new gadgets used on the sidebar of this blog.
You can now subscribe to this blog by email. You might not get to visit every day, but you can have the latest post e-mailed to you.
From that e-mail you can easily click on Netwest Writers to leave a comment or see what is new on the sidebar.

Links are listed on the sidebar to make it easier for the reader to find some of the most important recent posts such as guidelines for the Netwest Contest with the environmental theme. More of these will be used in the future.

Search this blog - this is a new gadget that helps you find a post from the archives. If you want to find a post in which your name appears, type in your name on the search line on the right side of the blog. Click Search.
Every post with your name will pop up. If you want to find a post in which poetry was mentioned, type in poetry and click Search. Hopefully this will help anyone searching for articles written over the past two and a half years. Please let us know if this is helpful.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Candy Maier Scholarship Fund Sponsors Kimberly Childs' Exhibit


THE “NATURE’S PATCHWORK” SHOW OF FABRIC ART OF KIMBERLY CHILDS WILL BE EXHIBITED IN A CHURCH GALLERY IN ASHEVILLE, NC

The Candy Maier Scholarship Fund for Women Writers and the First Congregational United Church of Christ team up to display "Nature's Patchwork," an exhibit featuring the fabric art of Kimberly Childs, in the church gallery June 7-30, 2009. The exhibit opens at 11:00 a.m. following morning services on Sunday June 7, 2009, in the church’s gallery hall.
The church will be open from 1-5 pm on Tuesday June 9th, Friday June 12, Friday June 19, and Friday June 26, 2009 so the public can view the artworks, speak with the artist and board members of The Candy Maier Scholarship Fund for Women Writers.
The exhibit features nine artworks within the theme of “Nature’s Patchwork”, titled, Park Scene I, Park Scene II, a 2-piece set of a different Park Scenes I & II, “Plenitessa-Kitchen Goddess”, “Feeding Koi”, “Words Words Words”, “Sweet Abundance” and “Homage To Monet”. Child’s pieces are vibrantly colored works of fabric marrying artisanal traditional quilting techniques with layers of landscape, figures and words.
Kimberly Childs is nationally known for her quilted fabric art and garments. A love of contra dancing and singing inspired her creativity with many of her artworks, but health challenges forced her to give up the dancing and singing that fed her artist’s soul. Her hands can no longer work with fabrics, and surgical damage to her vocal cords has silenced her singing voice forever. Even though she now uses a portable voice amplifier and struggles to speak above a whisper; her indomitable spirit refuses to give up or feel sorry for herself. Kimberly refuses to silence her artistic voice, and uses writing and watercolor painting as newer ways of expressing her creativity.
Kimberly wanted other women to experience the same comfort, joy and magic in writing that she and Candy Maier discovered on their artistic journeys. In 2007, she donated nine of her final fabric art pieces to The Candy Maier Scholarship Fund for Women Writers. All pieces exhibited at the church are available for sale, with proceeds benefitting The Candy Maier Scholarship Fund for Women Writers.
Candy Maier, according to her many friends, always lit up a room with her presence, sharing with everyone her zest for living. Her stories were often poignant, funny and meaningful, bringing joy to others.

After Candy’s sudden death in 2005, her writing friends created The Candy Maier Scholarship Fund for Women Writers, an IRS 501(c)3 non-profit organization, which grants scholarships to Western North Carolina women over age twenty-one for shared writing classes from private teachers, universities and other sources.

Proceeds from the sale of the “Nature’s Patchwork” artworks will provide Candy Maier writing class scholarships to other women living in Western North Carolina in continuation of Candy Maier’s legacy.

Kimberly Childs
828-299-4499
http://www.kimberlychilds.net/


The Candy Maier Scholarship Fund for Women Writers
Attn: Whitney Laura George 828-255-1847 whitneylgeorge@mindspring.com


First Congregational United Church of Christ
Attn: Gary Mitchell
20 Oak Street
Asheville, NC 28801
828- 252-8729
828-231-5856
http://uccasheville.org/

Friday, June 5, 2009

More Winners in 2009 Cherokee County Senior Games/SilverArts



In the 2009 Cherokee County Senior Games/SilverArts (SilverArts: one word, two caps), in addition to Brenda Kay Ledford and Blanche Ledford, who won the silver and bronze for their life experience entries, Jerry Hobbs won the gold medal for his short story "A Slippery Bar of Soap and the Rose Colored Bikini."

Jerry Hobbs also won the bronze for his essay, "How To Sweep Away The Silence." Peg Russell won the silver medal for her essay, "Hanging Around In North Carolina And Cherokee County."



Cherokee County Games is in its second year, and Jerry, Brenda Kay, and Blanche have won medals both years. Richard Argo won the NC state silver medal in 2008 for his poem "Ode to Rock and Roll."


Other NetWest participants in the 2009 Literary Arts included Shirley Uphouse, Richard Argo, and Mary Ricketson. Other medalists this year included Judith T. Lott and Carol McAfee, (who both also won last year), and John C. Tuffy