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, May 15, 2016
Saturday, May 14, 2016
Prose writer Bob Grove to read at Coffee With the Poets and Writers, at the Moss Memorial Library, Wednesday, May 18, 2016, at 10:00 AM
This month, Coffee With the Poets and Writers welcomes Bob Grove. Bob is very entertaining, and will read some of his prose on Wednesday, May 18th, 2016, at 10:00 AM.
Coffee With the Poets and Writers meets every third Wednesday at 10:00 AM, at the Moss Memorial Library, at 26 Anderson Street, Hayesville, NC. The reading will be followed by open mic and the public is invited to attend.
North Carolina Writers' Network-West sponsors Coffee with the Poets and Writers. Please be sure to attend and to bring a friend! Coffee and cookies will be provided. For more information, please call Glenda Beall at: 828-389-4441, or the Moss Memorial Library at: 828-389-3734.
Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Bob Grove now lives
in the mountains of North Carolina. He earned his Bachelor of Arts at
Kent State University and his Master of Science at Florida Atlantic
University. His diversified curriculum enabled him to teach courses
in English, journalism, creative writing, physics, chemistry, biology
and psychology.
Bob has been an ABC-TV public affairs
director, an on-air personality, and the founder and publisher of
Monitoring Times magazine. A prose critique facilitator for
the North Carolina Writers’ Network and an officer with the
Ridgeline Literary Alliance, he has published seventeen books and
hundreds of articles in sixteen national magazines.
Now retired after 35 years as founder
of Grove Enterprises, an international supplier of radio
communications equipment, Bob has more time to write. Most recently,
he has published a mystery novella (Secrets of Magnolia Manor),
his memoir (Misadventures of an Only Child), a collection of
children’s stories (Adventures of Kaylie and Jimmy) and has written several flash fiction stories as well as some forgettable
poetry. He has been awarded gold, silver and bronze medals in the
Silver Arts literature competition.
Bob’s public readings are popular as
a performance art form, typified by his annual December reading, in
costume and dialect, of Dickens’s A Christmas Carol at the
John C. Campbell Folk School.
His collected writings on technical
topics (Antenna Basics, Antenna Anthology and Ask
Bob) are now available, as is his informative overview of deviant
mental behavior (Abnormal Psychology) which he uses as a
teaching text in continuing education classes.
All Bob’s publications are available
on Amazon Kindle, and you are welcome to visit him at bobgrove.org.
Friday, May 13, 2016
The Literary Hour to be held on Wednesday, May 18, 2016, at John C. Campbell Folk School, in Brasstown, NC, features poets Gene Hirsch and Maren O. Mitchell
Gene Hirsch is a physician who, for many years, has taught human values in patient care, and in dying people, to medical students and doctors. His major interests are people in health and sickness, and poetry. Hirsch initiated the writing program at John C. Campbell Folk School in1992 and, with Nancy Simpson, co-founded NC Writers’ Network West, and he has been active in both. Hirsch conducts workshops for interested poets twice a year, as well as Glenda Beall’s Writers Circle. Gene’s poetry has appeared in medical and non-medical journals such as: Pharos (Medical Honor Society), Journal of the American Medical Assn., Hiram Poetry Review, Human Quest, and the Pittsburgh Post Gazette. Anthologies include: Atahita Journal, Blood & Bone (poems by physicians), Behavioral Medicine, Crossing Limits (Afro-American and Jewish Poets), Tyranny of the Normal, and Echoes across the Blue Ridge. He has edited five volumes of Freeing Jonah (poetry from J.C. Campbell Folk School and the surrounding community) and two books. Two more books will appear this spring.
Maren O. 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. Although a native of North Carolina, Mitchell lived in Bordeaux, France, and Kaiserslautern, Germany, as a child.. After moving throughout the southeast U.S., she now lives with her husband in Young Harris, Georgia, on the edge of the national forest.
Mitchell’s poems have appeared in Iodine Poetry Journal, The Lake (UK), Appalachian Heritage, The South Carolina Review, Hotel Amerika, Southern Humanities Review, Town Creek Poetry, Pirene’s Fountain, Wild Goose Poetry Review, Skive (AU), The Journal of Kentucky Studies, Appalachian Journal, The Arts Journal, The Southern Poetry Anthologies, V: Georgia & VII: North Carolina, Sunrise from Blue Thunder, and elsewhere. Work is forthcoming in Hotel Amerika, The World Is Charged: Poetic Engagements with Gerard Manley Hopkins, The Crafty Poet II, Chiron Review, Poetry East, and Tar River Poetry.
Her nonfiction book is Beat Chronic Pain, An Insider’s Guide (Line of Sight Press, 2012) www.lineofsightpress.com, available on Amazon.
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