Friday, March 11, 2011

STILL CELEBRATING ECHOES ACROSS THE BLUE RIDGE

A note to authors who contributed their writing to ECHOES ACROSS THE BLUE RIDGE  from your editor, Nancy Simpson
ECHOES ACROSS THE BLUE RIDGE, Stories, Essays and Poems by Writers Living in and Inspired by the Southern Appalachian Mountains is almost one year old.  Thanks to Glenda Beall and her market team, the first printing quickly sold out.  The anthology was reviewed by Scott Owens and Helen Losse. It is now in its second printing and still selling. 
Today the anthology will be presented to members of the Appalachian Studies Association meeting at the University of Eastern Kentucky. Rosemary Royston, NCWN West Program Coordinator, a graduate of the Spalding University MFA Writing Program, was invited to read her scholarly essay, “Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, Echoes of Emerson.”
I’ve had the good fortune to read a copy of Royston’s essay. I must tell you, Rosemary Royston celebrates poetry in the anthology, focuses on four specific poets, and compares specific poems to Ralph Waldo Emerson’s essay published in 1846,  “Transcendentalism.” 
Two poems by Glenda Barrett are celebrated and discussed: “Echoes” which inspired the anthology title, and “When the Sap Rises.”  Eileen Lampe’s poem “Dancer” is said to be “written in the vein of Dylan Thomas.” “I Hear the River Call My Name”  by Mary Ricketson and “ Progress” by Brenda Kay Ledford are celebrated and favorably discussed in Royston’s essay. 
Fellow authors, today around four o’clock, if your ears begin to burn, it may be because scholars are talking about our anthology. Get your copy out and read along.
Rosemary Royston lives in northeast Georgia. Her poetry has been published in The Comstock Review, Main Street Rag, Mom Writer’s Literary Magazine, Public Republic, and Dark Sky Magazine. Her chapbook was a finalist in the 2009 Jessie Bryce Niles chapbook contest, and she was the 2004 recipient of first and third place in poetry, Porter Fleming Literary Awards. Her poem-- Igneous or "Of Fire" won the 2010 Literal Latte Food Verse Contest. Rosemary Royston holds an MFA in Writing from Spalding University.  She is Vice President for Planning and Assessment and Chief of Staff at Young Harris College. She teaches creative writing at Institute for Continuing Learning and  will teach in 2011  at John C. Campbell Folk School and in the Writing Program at YHC.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Blue Ridge Writers' Conference - Blue Ridge, Georgia

MARK THIS DATE ON YOUR CALENDAR NOW! April 1 and 2
You don't want to miss the Blue Ridge Writers Conference in its fourteenth year.
The Blue Ridge Writers’ Conference is back for its 14th year, featuring literary agent Sally McMillan as keynote and speakers Robert Brewer, editor of Writers’ Market, Scott Owens, editor of Wild Goose Poetry Review, Jennifer Jabaley, 2010 Georgia Author of the Year in the YA category, and Hope Clark, editor of Funds for Writers website.

April 1 and 2, 2011. Please note a location change – this year the conference will be at the Blue Ridge Mountains Arts Association in downtown Blue Ridge, Georgia.
For more information call 706-632-2144.
If you haven't attended this conference in the past, April 1 is the Friday night reception. Saturday, April 2, is the all day conference with workshops, etc. If you want to learn about publishing, this conference should be on your list of events for 2011.

Writers' Night Out and Janice Moore

WRITERS’ NIGHT OUT FEATURES JANICE MOORE, MARCH 18
--Karen Paul Holmes

Come, be part of Writers’ Night Out. This month, award-winning poet and Young Harris College associate professor of English, Janice Townley Moore, will read her poetry. The March 18 event at Green To Bean Coffee House in Hiawassee begins at 7 p.m. Those who’d like to share their own poetry or fiction can participate in the Open Microphone portion of the program, which follows the featured reader.

A native of Atlanta, Janice Townley Moore has lived in Hayesville, North Carolina, for many years. Her poems have appeared in such journals as The Georgia Review, Prairie Schooner, Shenandoah, Connecticut Review, Southern Poetry Review, The Journal of the American Medical Association, and numerous others. Among the anthologies that include her poetry are The Bedford Introduction to Literature, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, and The Southern Poetry Anthology: Contemporary Appalachia. In 2009 she won first place in poetry in the Press 53 Open Awards, an international contest. Last year she won first place in the Georgia Poetry Society competition.

Moore serves as the facilitator of a poetry critique group, meeting monthly at Tri-County Community College and sponsored by the North Carolina Writers’ Network.

Writers’ Night Out, usually on the second Friday of the month at 7 p.m., has been changed to the third Fridays in March and April. Beginning on May 13, Writers’ Night Out will resume its normal schedule on the second Friday of each month. Green To Bean Coffee House is located at 538 Bell Creek Road in Hiawassee, next to the Humane Society Thrift Shop and across from McDonald’s. Come early to get a seat: The February event had standing-room only. The evening is free and open to the public. Light snacks and refreshments, including coffees from freshly roasted beans, are available for purchase. Those interested in reading at the Open Mic may sign up at the event. Each writer will have three minutes to read.

For more information, please contact Karen Holmes at (404) 316-8466 or kpaulholmes@gmail.com, or call Green To Bean at (706) 896-4524.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

NCWN-West to be Represented at Appalachian Studies Association Conference

-Rosemary Royston

Greetings! I'm pleased to say that the NCWN-West will have a presence at the Appalachian Studies Association Conference which is being held at Eastern Kentucky University (March 11-13, 2011). Your program director (myself) will be presenting a paper entitled, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, Echoes of Emerson. My paper examines the poetry of the following included in our anthology: Glenda Barrett, Mary Ricketson, Eileen Lampe, and Brenda Kay Ledford. The works of these poets echo the Transcendentalist, Ralph Waldo Emerson -- especially in regard to his 1846 essay, "Nature." In short, these poets and Emerson see nature as not a separate entity, but as part of the self. Nature heals, nature informs, and nature is to be revered, not destroyed. If you would like to read my paper, shoot me an email at rosemary28rr@gmail.com and I will send you a copy. I will be taking copies of the anthology with me.

In the meantime, happy writing!

A MESSAGE FROM NC POET AND WRITING INSTRUCTOR NANCY SIMPSON

Hello Fellow Writers and Students of Poetry Writing,

It’s becoming one of my busiest teaching years for me after all.  Choose a class, or at least please pass the info on to others who may be interested.
Thank you, Nancy Simpson




(1) Write Poems Your Reader Can "See"

at John C. Campbell Folk School. This probably will be my last week long poetry class at the folk school. It is intense for sure.  If you can afford to give yourself a week for writing and organizing your poetry, this is the class most likely to change your writing life.


Instructor: Nancy Simpson
Tuition: $546.00 (half price for local students)
Pre register now.  (828)837-2775 or 1-800 FOLK-SCH

(Class description)

Write Poems Your Reader Can "See"

Time to stop asking your reader to play a guessing game. Learn to put your poem on the page so that the reader gets the picture and says, "Yes, I see." Instruction covers how to encapsulate truth, emotion, and music in poems. Learn the two rules of poetry that cannot be omitted - not even in writing free-verse. Share your work and get helpful feedback; we'll also discuss publication. All levels welcome.

(Nancy Simpson with former student Monica Henson)


Note: This class only. TO MY FORMER POETRY STUDENTS,  I’m OFFERING YOU AN OPPORTUNITY TO WORK WITH MY GUIDENCE DURING THE WEEK ASSEMBLING YOUR POETRY MANUSCRIPT.

(2)        POETRY WRITING WORKSHOP 
Beginning May 9th, 2011.

INSTITUTE FOR CONTINUING LEARNING AT YOUNG HARRIS COLLEGE

(Description) Workshop method
The focus will be on your poems. If you are a practicing poet and want to share your writing with other poets and get constructive comments, sign up. Each week you will bring copies of one of your poems to be read and discussed.  There will be instruction as we discuss your writing but no lecture. We will talk about the publication process. A  list of markets will be given. Poetry Writing Workshop will meet at Young Harris College, Institute for Continuing Learning   1:00-3:00 four weeks, for two hours each meeting.  May 9, May 16, May 23, June 6  (no class on Memorial Day.) Fee. $13.00


(3) A FREE POETRY WRITING WORKSHOP

 You are Invited to the second annual Blue Ridge Bookfest featuring forty authors.  When is the event? Friday May 20 and Saturday June 21 , 2011.

POETRY WRITING WORKSHOP WILL BE TAUGHT BY POET NANCY SIMPSON
 at 1:00 - 3:00 Friday May 20,  2011.
Other workshops and events will be held also.
Where is it held  in East Flat Rock near Hendersonville, NC just off I-26 on the campus of our hosts, Blue Ridge Community College. The space is abundant as is the parking. Map-It on website.   www.BlueRidgeBookfest.org WS(see
More info on classes taught by Nancy Simpson in fall, 2011 will be announced. One to one coaching will be available. Stay tuned.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Coffee with the Poets and Estelle Rice

Coffee with the Poets

--Glenda Beall

As spring begins, so does our new season for Coffee with the Poets at Phillips and Lloyd Bookstore on the square in historical Hayesville, NC. Come and enjoy a couple of hours with writers and poets, eat some goodies and have coffee or tea, and read your own original poem at open mic.

Members of Netwest will want to come and hear our dear friend and long time member, Estelle Rice, read her poetry. Estelle has been home-bound for a long time with an ailing husband, so we don't have the opportunity to hear her beautiful work very often. Hope to see you all there on Wednesday.

Estelle Darrow Rice, writer and poet from Marble, NC is the featured reader at Coffee with the Poets at Phillips and Lloyd Books in Hayesville, NC Wednesday, March 9, 10:30 AM. Rice is the author of a book of spiritual poetry, Quiet Times, available at Phillips and Lloyd books and from the author. The book is in its second printing.

The anthologies, Lights in the Mountains and Echoes across the Blue Ridge included work by Estelle Rice. Her short stories have been published in a number of magazines and journals. She says she writes light and often humorous fiction, but her poems contain more serious insight and meditations on life.

The public is welcome to this reading and there is no charge except for coffee and delicacies from Crumpett’s Dessertery offered at each gathering. Anyone who wants to bring an original poem is invited to sign up and read during the open microphone period.

The purpose of this event is to support poets and writers, to give them a forum to express themselves in verse, and to provide a pleasant and comfortable place to meet and share with others. It is also for anyone who enjoys poetry and wants to come and listen.

Coffee with the Poets is sponsored by NC Writers Network West. www.netwestwriters.blogspot.com.

Contact Glenda Beall, glendabeall@msn.com for more information.

Writers' Night Out

NEW DATES FOR WRITERS’ NIGHT OUT: March 18 and April 15--Karen Holmes

March 1, 2011 – Writers’ Night Out is becoming the place to be on a Friday night in Hiawassee! In February, 31 people filled Green To Bean Coffee House for fun, literature and music. Normally on the second Friday of the month, Writers’ Night Out will take place on the third Fridays in March and April at 7 p.m.
On March 18, the program features Janice Townley Moore, award-winning poet and Young Harris College professor. The April 15 event features prose writer, Ron Salzer of Hayesville, NC. Beginning on May 13, Writers’ Night Out will resume on the second Friday of each month.

Those who’d like to share their own poetry or fiction can participate in the Open Microphone portion of the program, which follows the featured writer’s presentation. Those interested in reading at the Open Mic may sign up at the event. Each writer will have three minutes to read.

Writers’ Night Out takes place at Green To Bean Coffee House at 538 Bell Creek Road in Hiawassee, next to the Humane Society Thrift Shop and across from McDonald’s. Come early to get a seat: The February event had standing-room only. The evening is free and open to the public. Light snacks and refreshments, including coffees from freshly roasted beans, are available for purchase.

For more information, please contact Karen Holmes at (404) 316-8466 or kpaulholmes@gmail.com, or call Green To Bean at (706) 896-4524.

# # #

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Contest from Poetry Council of North Carolina

The annual Poetry Council of North Carolina contest is now open through May 31, 2011, for adult and student poets with a North Carolina connection. Rules for the 2011 competition are posted at http://www.poetrycouncilofnc.wordpress.com/.

Adult and student poets, as age appropriate, may enter the following categories: 1) Oscar Arnold Young Contest for a Book of Poetry;
2) Charles Shull Traditional Poetry;
3) James Larkin Pearson for Free Verse;
4) Ellen T. Johnson-Hale Light Verse;
5) Performance Poem to be judged during a live performance on Poetry Day, October 1st , at Catawba College;
6) Charlotte Young for Elementary School Students;
7) Carol Bessent Hayman for Middle School Students; and
8) Sam Ragan North Carolina Connection for High School Students; and Gladys Owings Hughes Family Heritage Contest for Free Verse. Questions about the contest and PCNC may be e-mailed to edcockrell@hotmail.com, or call Ed Cockrell, president of PCNC, at 919.967.5834.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Writers Night Out Reminder

For the Hiawassee/Blairsville/Hayesville area: A reminder that our next Writers' Night Out will NOT be the second Friday in March, but will be the THIRD Friday, March 18. Featured reader is Janice Moore, award-winning poet and a professor at Young Harris College.

We had standing room only in February, so plan to arrive early to get your seats and drinks before we start. We will have more chairs due to our great turnout last month!

April's event will also be the third Friday, April 15, featuring Ron Salzer. In May, we'll be back to our usual second Friday -- May 13 with Robert Kimsey.

Thanks for your enthusiasm and support. This is becoming the "happening" place to be on Friday night in the mountains.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Writing Advice from Stephen King

--Rosemary Royston, Program Coordinator

A Netwest member recently loaned me her copy of Stephen King’s On Writing. Even though I’m not a fiction writer, I’m always ready to learn, and I’m also a huge Stephen King fan. In a nutshell, the book blew me away. It is a “memoir” of the craft of writing, and King makes no bones about how he feels about anything. Not only does the reader learn about King’s life as a child and what shaped him as a writer, but she also learns specifics on what makes a good sentence, good dialogue, and a strong character. The advice in this book is simply excellent, and because of King’s tone, I found myself laughing quite a bit. He is brutal, honest, and wastes no words (in fact, he detests adverbs). One tidbit I found most interesting, not being a fiction writer, is that King is not a fan of “plot.” In fact, he warns writers against having a plot from the beginning and instead encourages them to have a situation, and then let the characters take the situation to its next level. For me, this was quite surprising, as I had the idea that most fiction writers thought of a plot first, and then shaped the characters around it. Not so, at least for King. Whether you are a poet, memoirist, or fiction writer, you will learn invaluable advice from this book. Borrow it, beg for it, check it out of your local library. You will not regret it.

Friday, February 18, 2011

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Guidelines for submitting articles and photos for CLAY COUNTY PROGRESS "Sesquicentennial Souvenir Edition:

Use word document program.

E-mail: publisher@claycountyprogress.com

If you submit a photo, note at top of the article: "Photo attached." Also identify the photo with a cutline.

Include your name at the top of the article.

If the article has been published before, include the title of the publication in italics at the end of the story.

Length of article: 500 to 1,000 words.

Do not submit fictional stories. Articles should reflect on the county's history anytime throughtout the 15 decades.

A page will be devoted to poems about Clay County depending upon the number received.

Note in the subject line: 150th anniversary edition.

Photos should be sent in jpegs.

Stories will cover the following subjects: medical history, business community, railroad and transportation, agriculture, faith community, education/athletics, family life, government, organizations and service clubs, culture of Clay County such as the Peacock Playhouse and the John C. Campbell Folk School.

The Clay County Progress Sesquicentennial Sovenir Edition will be printed in August, 2011.

For more information, contact Becky Long, publisher, CLAY COUNTY PROGRESS at: 828-389-8431,

Monday, February 14, 2011

Mark Your Calendar Now

Quick Update-- Mark your calendar for NCWN's Spring Conference, Saturday, April 30, at UNC Greensboro. The fall 2011 conference date has not yet been set, but will be held in the Asheville area. As Program Coordinator, I plan on attending both events, and will put out a call for anyone who'd like to travel together to do so. Happy spring and may your pens fly across the page!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Submissions for Anthology of Love (in all its shapes and sizes)

(Photo by Catherine Beyler)

Jacar Press is calling for submissions for its poetry anthology on LOVE. What a large focus! Surely Netwest members can help Richard Krawiec out by submitting some poems. Go to the Jacar site, http://jacarpress.com/submit.html, to find out more about the submissions guideline.

At this very moment I love looking out
my window and seeing sunlight
on winterized rhododendron leaves.
Snow melting on brown grass,
weary winter trees readying themselves
for the bustin' out, the bursting forth,
the flourishing, the glorious full
in your face SPRING!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Meet Janice Moore, teacher and poet


by Paula Canup

The area in which we live is blessed, not only with natural beauty, but with a wealth of literary, musical, and artistic talent. Music has always been a part of these mountains. Now writers and artists come here to find inspiration and solitude for their work.

Janice Moore is one of those writers who moved here from Atlanta many years ago. She is now a full-time English professor at Young Harris College. In her spare time, she writes poems inspired by family, childhood, and life in the mountains. Her work has appeared in such prestigious publications as The Georgia Review, Shenandoah, and The Prairie Schooner. Her poetry chapbook, Teaching the Robins, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2005.

Janice began writing poetry as an English major in college. Friends and fellow writers offered support for her work. She also attended workshops at the Callanwolde Fine Arts Center in Atlanta where guest poets offered helpful advice.

Her greatest challenge as a writer is finding time to write! Her job at YHC keeps her busy, but she often finds inspiration for a poem in the classroom.

What is Janice’s best advice for aspiring writers? “Do not get discouraged by rejection slips!” Every writer experiences them. She says that writers should just keep sending and sending to various publications, and eventually they will find one that will publish their work.

Today, Janice finds encouragement as a member of the North Carolina Writers Network west, better known as Netwest. This group sponsors monthly critique groups for both poetry and prose. Janice finds that the critique group, which she facilitates, motivates her to have at least one new poem ready each month to share with the group.

Recently, Janice’s poetry was included in a Netwest anthology, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, Stories, Essays and Poems by Writers Living in and Inspired by the Southern Appalachian Mountains, edited by Nancy Simpson and published by Winding Path Publishing.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

CONGRATULATIONS TO NANCY SIMPSON

LIVING ABOVE THE FROST LINE New and Selected Poems by Nancy Simpson has been nominated for a 2010 Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Poetry Award.


LIVING ABOVE THE FROST LINE New and Selected Poems by Nancy Simpson has been nominated for The Weatherford Poetry Award 2010.

A Big Thank You to Our Echoes Distributors


Lana Hendershott
I want to thank some members of Netwest who have been exemplary volunteers the past year. Our representatives in each county acted as distributors and marketers for Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, the anthology we published in 2010. They called on bookshops and gift shops throughout western North Carolina, South Carolina and North Georgia. They manned tables and signed books at festivals. We could not have already sold nearly 1000 books without the hard work and diligent record-keeping of these people. Each Representative originally received 100 books delivered to their homes.
Nancy Purcell from Brevard, NC sold out of her first shipment quickly and requested more books. She and the others also found each contributor in their county and gave them a promised free book. We sent out a list of people who donated money to Netwest for the printing of the book. Each of them received a free book.

Lana Hendershott is our Netwest Rep in Henderson County. She has done a remarkable job keeping book stores stocked and selling to members and others who wanted a copy of Echoes. If you live in Henderson County contact Lana if you know of any place that would like to carry Echoes Across the Blue Ridge.

Nancy Purcell
JC Walkup of Haywood County did a terrific job of selling Echoes. She brought copies to meetings of Mountain Writers, she sold books at the Farmers Market, and she keeps Blue Ridge Books in Waynesville supplied. She has also sold books in Asheville and filled orders for Malaprop’s.

These three Netwest members held readings in libraries, put articles in newspapers and did all they could possibly do to get our book out there. And they were successful. We can't thank them enough for giving of their time and making the extra effort required to make Echoes Across the Blue Ridge a big seller this past year.
JC Walkup from Canton, NC

Monday, February 7, 2011

The Power of Memorization


--Rosemary Royston

As your Program Coordinator, I challenge you this month to do some memorization. Like diagramming sentences, I believe memorization is becoming a lost art….(am I the only one who actually enjoyed diagramming sentences?). However, keeping our brains active throughout our entire lives is healthy, and I’m prompted to share this challenge with you in light of our upcoming poetry month (April). Wouldn’t it be wonderful to “testify” to the power of poetry by quoting a poem to your family and friends? I can still quote from memory the first poem that ever moved me – “Nothing Gold Can Stay” by Robert Frost (you may read it here: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/19977). Frost’s poem was in the novel The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, and it was a very appropriate poem for the subject matter of the book – young men whose golden youth slipped away too fast and too violently.

If you recall your own days of primary and elementary school, there were other great pieces of literature or history that you likely memorized. Ms. Burton of Elbert County Elementary School (Georgia) made our entire fourth grade class memorize and recite Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. I can still recall the scent of the ink and the dampness of the paper from the mimeograph machine (where all the ink was purple, not black). I was overwhelmed and fearful of learning such a long and important speech, but the skills I gained from memorizing and then reciting to my classroom peers are skills I still use today. I’ve also found that when I get a line to a poem it helps for me to let it simmer. While I always carry a journal to jot things down, sometimes I force myself to memorize and hold onto the poem before doing so. I once wrote a poem in my head driving from Atlanta to Blairsville. I memorized it before putting it down on paper, and it’s one of my best poems.

So give your mind a workout. Memorize a poem or your favorite section of a prose piece. Share it with someone you care about. A good place to begin: Shakespeare’s sonnets. There’s a reason poems were written in rhyme…they were easier to memorize. Pick a sonnet (or write your own) for your Valentine and recite it – definitely a unique and touching gift!

Friday, February 4, 2011

GATHERING OF POETS IN WINSTON-SALEM


On April 9, Press 53 and Jacar Press (in Durham) are sponsoring a day-long gathering of poets, featuring workshops with Fred Chappell, Val Nieman, Alex Grant, among others, and a faculty reading in the afternoon, including Isabel Zuber. I will also be doing a workshop. This sounds like a lot of fun, so please visit http://www.press53.com/GatheringofPoets2011.html to view the schedule and sign up to participate in this collaborative effort for the cause of poetry in our state!

Read About What You Missed at AWP

If, like me, you did not make it to the AWP Conference in Washington D. C. this weekend, you might enjoy this site where a writer is sharing her experience there on her blog.
She is writing about the sessions she attends each day and I found her posts very interesting. Today she found that creative non-fiction is still a mystery to most writers.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Meet Glenda Beall



--by Paula Canup

Glenda Beall cannot remember a time when she didn’t love to write. “As a child, I loved getting school supplies so I could write on my fresh new paper,” she says. She began her writing career with stories about horses.

Now she writes poems, essays, and fiction inspired by family and neighbors. Her writing often revolves around themes of deep pain, loss, and injustice. In 2009, Finishing Line Press published her first poetry chapbook, entitled Now Might as Well Be Then. She has had personal essays, memoirs, and a short story published in various magazines. In addition, she writes newspaper articles and especially enjoys writing about unique people.

Glenda also maintains three different blogs online. Her many projects keep her busy, writing several hours each day. “The most difficult thing about being a writer,” she says, “is having the self-discipline to complete a project – to go back day after day and work on the same thing. Writing is fun, but rewriting is often not so much fun.” Another difficult aspect of being a writer is having to market her work – the business end of writing. Many excellent writers are never published because they don’t want to go the trouble of submitting their work.

Glenda is an active member of North Carolina Writers Network – west (Netwest). She helps with publicity for the organization and sometimes does articles about other writers in the group. Her best advice for aspiring writers is to get involved in such groups and participate in as many conferences and workshops as possible. Writers can learn a great deal from networking with other writers.

One of Glenda’s greatest accomplishments as a writer is teaching others to write. She holds classes in her home studio. Glenda especially loves encouraging older people to discover their writing ability. She believes all of us are continually changing throughout life, and we should never be afraid of new challenges. It’s never too late to make dreams come true!

Glenda contributed to Netwest’s latest anthology, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, Stories, Essays and Poems by Writers Living in and Inspired by the Southern Appalachian Mountains, edited by Nancy Simpson and published by Winding Path Publishing The book is available at local bookstores and on-line at www.ncwriters.org and at www.amazon.com.

Asheville Poet to Read in Hiawassee



This month, Writers’ Night Out features poet Tracey Schmidt in an evening of literary and musical entertainment. The event takes place at Green to Bean Coffee House in Hiawassee on Friday, February 11 at 7:00 p.m. Those who’d like to share their own poetry or fiction can participate in the Open Microphone portion of the program which follows Schmidt’s reading. Music will be provided by hammered dulcimer player Mary Sparks.

Schmidt’s first book of poetry, I Have Fallen in Love with the World, has just been released. She has taught creativity at Julia Cameron’s (author of The Artist's Way) Taos Creativity Camp and continues to teach in the Asheville area, where she now lives. Schmidt attended college in Atlanta, studying literature and photography. At the age of 19, she moved to Japan to live in a Buddhist monastery. Her spiritual practices there awakened a desire to return to the U.S. in search of a tradition that was as authentic and indigenous here as Buddhism has been in Japan. Her photography exhibit, The Awakening of Turtle Island: Portraits of Native Americans was the result. It opened in Atlanta for the Olympics and has toured over 16 museums in the southeast, including the Cherokee Museum of the American Indian. It will begin a national tour in 2012.

Writers’ Night Out takes place the second Friday evening of each month. Green to Bean Coffee House is located at 538 Bell Creek Road in Hiawassee, next to the Humane Society Thrift Shop and across from McDonald’s. Come early to get a seat: The event has been well attended by enthusiastic audiences. The evening is free and open to the public. Light snacks and refreshments, including coffees from freshly roasted beans, are available for purchase.

Those interested in reading at the Open Mic may sign up at the event. Each writer will have three minutes to read. For more information, please contact Karen Holmes at (404) 316-8466 or kpaulholmes@gmail.com, or call Green to Bean at 706-896-4524.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Poetry Contest from Carolina Wren Press

2011 Poetry Book Contest

Carolina Wren's next poetry book contest will take submissions with a deadline of 2/15/2011. The final judge for this contest will be Lee Ann Brown and we anticipate results in September 2011. The new postmark deadline is February 15, 2011. This will give you time to visit our booth at AWP and pick up something special from us (hint hint!).

Download full guidelines.

Blue Ridge Writers' Conference in its fourteenth year

Blue Ridge Writers' Conference will be held in Blue Ridge, Georgia just south of the Western NC line on April 1 and 2 .

Go to their beautiful website to see the schedule of presenters and to complete an application.
http://www.blueridgewritersconference.com/

Some Netwest members will be signing books at the Friday evening Reception which is a special Meet and Greet event for writers to meet the presenters.

Carol Crawford, one of the leaders of Netwest years ago, leads this conference each year and brings in outstanding speakers. This year Hope Clark of Funds for Writers will be on hand to personally give us some of the advice she doles out in her newsletter and on her blog. Scott Owens, poet from Hickory, will speak about online journals and talk from his experience as an editor.
For other presenters, visit the website.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Meet Maren Mitchell


Thanks goes to Paula Canup, who intereviewed several writers in NCWN-West and has provided transcripts. Featured today is Maren Mitchell.

Maren O. Mitchell started writing poems when she was eighteen-years-old. Friends and family encouraged her to keep writing. She eventually taught poetry at Blue Ridge Community College in Flat Rock, NC. Her poems have appeared in such publications as the Red Clay Reader, The Arts Journal, Appalachian Journal, and Journal of Kentucky Studies, and Southern Humanities Review.

A native of North Carolina, Maren has lived in France, Germany, and throughout the southeastern United States. She has worked as a proofreader, served as the house manager of a group home in Brevard, NC, and cataloged at the Carl Sandburg National Historic Site in Flat Rock, NC. She now resides in Young Harris, GA, with her husband and two cats.

Maren does not limit herself to poetry. She has a non-fiction manuscript, children’s stories, and essays she hopes to publish in the future. She has other interests besides writing. For the past twenty years, she has taught origami, the Japanese art of paper-folding.

“The most difficult part of writing is continuing to believe that what one has to say is worth hearing. Once you have that licked, stop worrying about what others might think, it’s a lot easier and much more fun,” says Maren. She writes one to two hours every day. She benefits from the feedback she receives from critique meetings with the North Carolina Writers Network – west (Netwest), Shallow Enders in GA, and one-on-one with individual writers. Her advice to aspiring writers is to “just write – at great length and in detail about all you know, wish to learn, and can imagine.”

Maren recently contributed to Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, Stories, Essays and Poems by Writers Living in and Inspired by the Southern Appalachian Mountains, edited by Nancy Simpson and published by Winding Path Publishing. The book is available at local bookstores and on-line at http://www.ncwriters.organd at www.amazon.com.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

THE COMMON CUP TV PROGRAM

Brenda Kay Ledford will appear on the program, "The Common Cup," over Windstream Communications' channel 4 cable television.

The program will feature Brenda for two weeks: Monday, January 31--Friday, February 11, 2011. The show airs three times each day on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at: 9:30 a.m., 4:00 p.m., and 7:30 p.m.

Jim Geer is the host of "The Common Cup." He interviewed Brenda about her book, SIMPLICITY, that she co-authored with her mother, Blanche L. Ledford.

Windstream Communications is a local cable TV station that covers northern Georgia and western North Carolina. It also provides Internet and telephone service. For information, go to: www.windstream.com

Brenda and Blanche's book, SIMPLICITY, is available at the Book Nook, Blairsville, GA; Cherokee County Museum, Murphy, NC; and Phillips & Lloyd Book Shop, Hayesville, NC; or online: http://catawbapublishing.com/bookstore/book/179.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Coffee with the Poets, Hayesville NC




Coffee with the Poets meets the second Wednesday of each month at Phillips and Lloyd bookstore on the square in Hayesville, NC. This event, sponsored by NCWN West, features a local poet and opens the floor to anyone in the community who wants to read an original poem. Begun in 2007, Coffee with the Poets is popular with those who write poetry and those who come to listen and enjoy coffee, tea and delicacies from Crumpett’s Dessertery.

Featured on Wednesday, February 9 at 1:00 p.m., will be Linda Smith, poet and writer from Hayesville. Her poetry is inspired by the mountains that surround this area. Her inspiration also comes from memories of the past. Linda has published poems, essays and fiction in various anthologies such as Lights in the Mountains, Mountain Time, Sand, Sea and Sail, the Freeing Jonah series, and in Night Whispers and Looking Back. Her work also appears in the new anthology Echoes Across the Blue Ridge. Linda Smith is the new publicity chair for Netwest.

Coffee with the Poets provides a comfortable and casual atmosphere for meeting writers and poets and sharing news and information about literary events in Clay, Cherokee, Towns, Union and surrounding counties. Come and join us at Phillips and Lloyd books.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Poets Meet for Lunch

The best  cure for cabin fever in the dead of winter is to meet for lunch with fellow poets. That is what some NC Writers Network Poets did today. They met at the Copper Door in Hayesville, NC, shared a delicious meal and shared some of their recent publications.

Rosemary Royston, NCWN West Program Coordinator (below)






















Janice Townley Moore Leader of the Monthly Poetry
Critique Group, Nancy Simpson co founder of Netwest,
and Linda M. Smith Publicity Chairperson. (below)
Glenda Beall former Program Coordinator and 
Echoes Across the Blue Ridge Marketing Manager
(below)


Carole Thompson NCWN West Georgia Representative
(below)


Peg Russell monthly Prose Group leader and Linda M. Smith scheduling readers 

for Poets and Writers Reading Poems and Stories, at John C. Campbell Folk School
(below)


The poets passed around copies of their most recent poetry publications.
(below)


Maren Mitchell shared her recent publication in Southern Humanities Review.
(below)


Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Randall Jarrell Poery Competition Open!

2005 JARRELL WINNER TO JUDGE 2011 JARRELL CONTEST

Poet and editor Dan Albergotti, the winner of the 2005 Randall Jarrell Poetry Competition, will judge this year’s Randall Jarrell Poetry Competition.

Submissions for this year’s Jarrell contest are now open, until the March 1 deadline. The winner will be announced in May.

A graduate of the MFA program at UNC Greensboro and former poetry editor of The Greensboro Review, Albergotti currently teaches creative writing and literature courses and edits the online journal Waccamaw (www.waccamawjournal.com) at Coastal Carolina University in Conway, South Carolina. He is the author of The Boatloads (BOA Editions, 2008), selected by Edward Hirsch as the winner of the 2007 A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize. His poems have appeared in The Cincinnati Review, Shenandoah, The Southern Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and Pushcart Prize XXXIII: Best of the Small Presses.

The Randall Jarrell Poetry Competition honors the work and legacy of the poet and critic Randall Jarrell, who taught at what is now UNCG for nearly eighteen years. The contest accepts one-poem submissions. The winner receives $200, publication in The Crucible literary journal, and an invitation to read his or her poetry at UNCG’s Founders Day activities.

The competition is sponsored by the North Carolina Writers’ Network and administered by Terry L. Kennedy and the graduate program in creative writing at UNCG, and is open to any writer who is a legal resident of North Carolina or a member of the NCWN. Questions may be directed to Kennedy at tlkenned@uncg.edu. Full guidelines are below.

Randall Jarrell Poetry Competition
Postmark deadline: March 1 (annual)

Eligibility and Guidelines
• The competition is open to any writer who is a legal resident of NC
or a member of the North Carolina Writers’ Network.
• Submissions should be one poem only (40-line limit).
• Poem must be typed (single-spaced) and stapled in the left-hand corner.
• Names should not appear on the poem but on a separate cover sheet along with address, phone number, and poem title.
• Poem will not be returned. Include a self-addressed stamped envelope for a list of winners.
• An entry fee must accompany the poem. Multiple submissions are accepted, one poem per entry fee: $10 for NCWN members, $15 for nonmembers. You may pay member entry fee if you join the NCWN with your submission. Checks should be made payable to the North Carolina Writers’ Network.

Send submissions, indicating name of competition, to:

Terry Kennedy
MFA Writing Program
3302 MHRA Building
UNC Greensboro
Greensboro, NC 27402-6170

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Save the Date - Brevard Writers Group

Save the Date-Brevard Writers Group,
Tuesday, January 4th,
3:00-5:00 PM, First Presbyterian Church


Remember, we agreed to talk about query letters at this meeting after we have had our readings and reviews, bring one to share if you have it. Also bring rejection letters to share if you have one. I will have some guidelines for query letters.

Join us.

Wayne Drumheller, writer, photographer, storyteller
NCWN-Western North Carolina Board Representative
260 Frank's Cove Road
Brevard, NC 28712
Phone 704-287-9806 cell
Phone 828-877-5133
Email mystory@citcom.net

Monday, January 3, 2011

MOTHER AND DAUGHTER GIVE BOOK SIGNING



Brenda Kay Ledford and Blanche L. Ledford will sign copies of their book, SIMPLICITY, at Mountain Regional Library in Young Harris, GA on Saturday, January 15; 11:00 AM—2:00 PM.

Step back to a simpler time with this mother and daughter. Meet the folks they loved, capture the beauty of Appalachia, feel the old-time ways. Experience planting by the signs, storytelling on the front porch, possum hunting, wearing sinful red shoes, shindigs, and mountain politics.

Their work has appeared in Lights in the Mountains, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, Southern Mist, and other publications.

Brenda is listed with A Directory of American Poets and Fiction Writers. She received the Paul Green Award from North Carolina Society of Historians for her three poetry chapbooks.

SIMPLICITY was released by Catawba Publishing Company of Charlotte, NC in December. For more information, go to: http://catawbapublishing.com/bookstore/book/179.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

You Show Up -- Inspiration Provided!

Sing and Paint with Words, JC Campbell Folk School
Jan 30 – Feb 5 ($546/ask for half price!)


Our very own talented Karen Paul Holmes is teaching the class Sing and Paint with Words. This class will inspire your writing through music and other arts. You’ll hear music that ranges from Beethoven to Elvis, you will view paintings by Monet or Finster, and read literary masters or contemporary writers - all to generate ideas for poems, fiction, or essays. You'll receive editing tips and one-on-one critiques to make your work stronger and more readable. This class is open to anyone who needs inspiration and help perfecting the art of writing.

Karen Paul Holmes, an award-winning writer, has work published in business magazines, literary journals, and anthologies. Her enthusiasm for teaching has given her top ratings for her writing workshops at international conferences. She also taught poetry to students through the Georgia Poetry Society's "Poets in the Schools" program. Karen is a writing coach, poet, freelance writer, and the editor of the North Carolina Writers' Network's Netwest News.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Want to Nominate a 2010 Poetry or Fiction Book For an Award?

To all of you who value southern poetry and fiction please consider nominating books you have read and want to honor that were published in 2010. 

Readers can nominate a book by listing a book store that is a member of Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance  (SIBA) such as City Lights Bookstore in Sylva.

Poetry was dropped from awards last year,  but this year the general public can nominate.  If you care about poetry, please take the time to nominate your favorite poetry book of 2010.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

CONTEST DEADLINES - GET YOUR SUBMISSIONS IN SOON

BYRON HERBERT REECE SOCIETY POETRY CONTEST

Deadline: June 4, 2011

Open to poets from North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, and West Virginia

The Byron Herbert Reece Society is having its first-ever poetry contest. The Byron Herbert Reece Society exists to preserve, perpetuate, and promote Appalachian writer Byron Herbert Reece. Guidelines on website.


ROSE POST CREATIVE NONFICTION COMPETITION

Postmark Deadline: January 5, 2011

Submissions accepted November 15-January 5

The Rose Post Creative Nonfiction Competition encourages the creation of lasting nonfiction work that is outside the realm of conventional journalism and has relevance to North Carolinians. Submit an original and previously unpublished manuscript of no more than 2,000 words, typed (12-point font) and double-spaced. Full contest guidelines: http://www.ncwriters.org/


THOMAS WOLFE FICTION PRIZE

Postmark Deadline: January 30, 2011

Submissions accepted December 1 - January 30

Submit an unpublished fiction story of 12 pages or less, double-spaced. Full contest guidelines: www.ncwn.org

Saturday, December 18, 2010

SIMPLICTY

Blanche L. Ledford and Brenda Kay Ledford have published a new book. SIMPLICITY is a collection of prose and poetry about Clay County, NC. Step back to a simpler time with this mother and daughter. Meet the folks they loved, capture the beauty of Appalachia, feel the old-time ways. Experience planting by the signs, storytelling on the porch, possum hunting, wearing sinful red shoes to a mountain church, shindigs, and mountain politics.

The book is available at Phillips & Lloyd Book Shop on Main Street in Hayesville, NC; The Book Nook in Blairsville, GA; or you may order online at: www.catawbapublishing.com for only $16.00 per copy.

This beautiful book would make a wonderful gift for Christmas.

MOTHER AND DAUGHTER CO-AUTHOR BOOK




Award-winning writers, Blanche L. Ledford and Brenda Kay Ledford, have collaborated a collection of prose and poetry about the culture of Clay County, North Carolina.

This book coincides with the sesquicentennial celebration of Clay County in 2011. The county was established in 186l.

At 89, Blanche writes with knowledge about growing up in Clay County during the Great Depression. She recalls planting her vegetable garden by the signs, and wearing sinful red shoes to a mountain church. Her stories about the Blue Ridge Mountains will bring back memories of by-gone days.

Her daughter, Brenda Kay, is a member of North Carolina Storytelling Guild. She’s won awards telling stories at the annual Lies & Pies Jamboree held on the square in Hayesville, NC. She’s told stories at the John C. Campbell Folk School, at festivals and when she gives poetry readings throughout the Southeast.

Brenda writes about her experiences as a native of Clay County. She’s received the Paul Green Award from NC Society of Historians for her poetry chapbooks: Patchwork Memories, Shew Bird Mountain, and Sacred Fire. She also won the award for collecting oral history on Velma Beam Moore, a prominent citizen of Clay County.

This book, Simplicity, describes the culture of Clay County, NC honestly and with humor. It brings the reader back to a slower-paced period, when folks sat on the front porch swapping tales with neighbors, and savored the good sense of a simple lifestyle.

Simplicity is available at Phillips & Lloyd Book Shop on Main Street in Hayesville, NC; The Book Nook, Blairsville, GA; or you may order online at: http://www.catawbapublishing.com/ for only $16.00 per copy.

This heart-warming book would make a wonderful gift for Christmas. It’s a treasure that people may keep and read many times to experience the beauty and culture of Appalachia. There has been an overwhelming response to our book. Everyone who purchases it just loves the book and colorful cover. There’s a limited number of books. We do not plan to reprint, so get your copy while the supply lasts!

Monday, December 13, 2010

COFFEE WITH THE POETS: LAURA HOPE-GILL, DEC. 16, IN SYLVA, NC

WHAT COULD MAKE A MORE BEAUTIFUL SEASON'S GIFT THAN THE SOUL TREE, A COLLECTION OF POEMS BY LAURA HOPE-GILL AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY JOHN FLETCHER? COME MEET LAURA on DEC. 16 AT CITY LIGHTS BOOKSTORE IN SYLVA. SHE WILL READ FROM HER WORK AND SIGN HER BOOK FOR HOLIDAY GIVING.

(Published and printed in Asheville, North Carolina by Grateful Steps Publishing. )

LAURA HOPE-GILL will be at CITY LIGHTS BOOKSTORE THIS THURSDAY, DEC. 16TH, 10:30 a.m. to discuss her work. Please join us for coffee, tea, and pastries----and poetry by both Laura and attendees.

-- To say that Laura Hope-Gill and John Fletcher, Jr. have put together one of the most stunning books I've ever seen would be an understatement. Here is a collaboration that expands the definition of that word. It's a seamlessly interwoven collection of words and images that invite and inspire, in the the original meaning of that over-used term. Laura's poems show the depths of her poetic "inseeing, " as Rilke calls it, and Fletcher's photographs open up the landscape that Laura sings into being with her words. The Soul Tree speaks to the landscapes of internal and exterior reality. In this collection those two landscapes have found harmony through two artists working together in celebration of what they love.

Laura Hope-Gill is in the process of being certified as a Certified Applied Poetry Facilitator by the National Federation for Poetry Therapy, working under the mentorship of poet and psychotherapist Perie Longo. The Director of Asheville Wordfest, a free poetry festival which presents poetry as Citizen Journalism, she consciously pursues ways of revealing poetry’s relevance to every-day life and not merely an “art form” whose only use is to beautiful. The Soul Tree: Poems and Photographs of the Southern Appalachians (Grateful Steps, Asheville) is a collaboration with local photographer John Fletcher, Jr. and is an application of her vision of poetry as a conversation between inner and outer worlds. Renowned photographer John Fletcher has this to say about the beginnings of their collaboration. "After visiting my landscapes website in the spring of 2008, Laura replied with an email containing an attachment titled, 'The Soul Tree.' I was stunned after reading the poem, then I noticed that there were 35 more pages to the document. My jaw dropped a little lower each time I scrolled to the next poem…36 in all. I was speechless.Not only was her writing beautiful and poignant, but her poetry brought new life to the photographs. I was also quite overwhelmed by her choice of photos…not the pretty sunset pictures that most people like. She was inspired by the photos that were my favorites…the mysterious and more abstract images that I feel personify my experience and observations. Today I continue this pursuit by working as a staff photographer for the Asheville Citizen-Times, shooting weddings, and freelancing for regional and national clients including, USA Today, The Associated Press, MSNBC, The Washington Post, The New York Times, and the Asheville Chamber of Commerce."

Images and poems from The Soul Tree may be found at http://www.thsoultree.org/, along with ordering information and more about the two artists who have brought this lovely book into existence.

Here are two pages from the book.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

BOOKS FOR THE WRITER ON YOUR GIFT LIST

WRITERS MARKET is a necessary tool. Sooner or later every writer must sit down  and do the research necessary to get writing published in the correct place.  A lot of postage is wasted when writers send their poems, stories, and essays to the first publication they hear of or think about.  Check out Writers Market at the local library you say.  That is not always possible here in the heart of Appalachia. The local library in my town does not have Writers Market.  

I do not work for Amazon.com. They pay me nothing.  Poets and Writers pay me nothing. Some of you know I care about writers and have given my time and energy to the writing community. In my December blog, I've offered some suggestions for buying books for your loved ones.  If you have a writer on your list, you might consider buying them a dictionary or printer's ink or copy paper, or a copy of the most recent Writers Market in their genre of writing. There is the thick book that covers all and the smaller books that zero in on Poets Market for Children's Writing and Illustrators, or for Poetry or Christian Writers or Novel and Short Story.

Want to buy Writers Market for yourself or for a writer on your list?  click on blue URL below.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

THANKS TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS

Thanks to our Subscribers who have every new post on Netwest Mountain Writers and Poets delivered to their Inbox . If you want to see each new post in your Inbox, click on the link below and follow directions.

Subscribe for Free to Netwest Mountain Writers and Poets by Email