Monday, December 12, 2011

Writing as Art, Editing & Discovery

Quotations Coffee Café will team up with Wayne Drumheller, local writer, photographer and editor, to offer a workshop called Writing as Art, Editing & Discovery. Place: Quotations Coffee Cafe in Brevard, NC, on Tuesday, December 13, from 2:30-4:00PM (conference room).

Free coffee or tea for those that attend. Bring your laptop or best ideas for workshop.

During the workshops, Wayne will be demonstrating how he designed, edited and produced his two soft cover books: Portraits in Courage and Commitment and Appalachian Sunrise: A Photographer's Notebook.

Also, Wayne is holding a contest to collect unpublished works for his soon to be produced All Time Best Squirrel Tales from Transylvania County. Interested writers and illustrators need to send an email to mystory@comporium.net for more details and awards offered.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Saturday, December 10, 2011

COFFEE WITH THE POETS IN HAYESVILLE

Coffee with the Poets is held at Cafe Touche in Hayesville, NC on the second Wednesday of each month. The entire program is Open Mike on December 14. Mary Mike Keller will be hosting.
 Bring a couple of poems or a short piece of prose. Depending on time, you might read more than once.

Be there by 10:30 a.m. to get a good seat. If you have one, bring a folding chair, just in case. The atmosphere is casual and friendly. Readers are guaranteed a welcoming audience. Liz's coffee is the best in town and the muffins are soooo good.

We will not have Coffee with the Poets in Hayesville in January. We will resume in February featuring Bob Grove.

This is a NCWN West writing event.

Friday, December 9, 2011

How One Woman Became a Best Selling Author

The Wall Street Journal article, How I Became A Best-Selling Writer , tells the story of one woman's rise to the top by self-publishing her novel as an e-book. She sold the book online for 99 cents.
Now she hopes the book will be picked up by a publisher and sold in print. Librarians want the book, but she has no book in print.
I found this an interesting comment on today's world of publishing. You might like it.
Come back here and tell us what you think, Okay?

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

POET AND PUBLISHER FEATURED AT WRITERS’ NIGHT DEC. 9

Writers’ Night Out brings you Robert S. King reading his poetry at Mountain Perk Coffee House in Hiawassee. The free event takes place on Friday, December 9, beginning at 7 p.m. and also includes an open microphone for those who’d like to read their own poetry or prose.

King lives near McCaysville, Georgia. His poems have appeared in hundreds of magazines, including California Quarterly, Chariton Review, Hollins Critic, Kenyon Review, Lullwater Review, Main Street Rag, Midwest Quarterly, Negative Capability, Southern Poetry Review, Spoon River Poetry Review, Visions International, and Writers' Forum. He has published three poetry chapbooks (When Stars Fall Down as Snow, Garland Press 1976; Dream of the Electric Eel, Wolfsong Publications 1982; and The Traveller’s Tale, Whistle Press 1998). His full-length collections are The Hunted River and The Gravedigger’s Roots, both from Shared Roads Press, 2009. He is director of FutureCycle Press, www.futurecycle.org.

Writers’ Night Out takes place on the second Friday of each month and is open to the public. The event draws approximately 30 people from four counties. Mountain Perk Coffee House is located at 1390 Highway 76 East in Chatuge Harbor Plaza across from Towns County High School. Food, gourmet coffees and other refreshments are available for purchase. Each open microphone reader can sign up at the door and has two-and-a-half minutes to read.

For more information, please contact Karen Holmes at (404) 316-8466 or kpaulholmes@gmail.com, or call Mountain Perk at (706) 896-0504.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Have you visited Bill Everett's site?

Thanksgiving seems to get lost in the greed we see on Black Friday. Our most precious days are ruined by the commercialism our country seems to need.


William Everett is a writer and poet and a member of Netwest. I recommend his post on Thanksgiving.
Click here.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

“When words are all that you have” | Mountain Xpress | Asheville, NC

This article in the  Mountain Xpress, Asheville, NC does a great job of reporting on Silas House's talk at the Fall Conference last weekend. Please click on the link below and read more.


“When words are all that you have” Mountain Xpress Asheville, NC

Monday, November 21, 2011

Writers' Conference - Chock Full of Writers in Asheville

Although I didn’t attend even one workshop at this conference, I loved being there with all the writers, poets, publishers, editors and agents. Our  Program Coordinator, Rosemary Royston, had other duties including participating in a panel. My goal was to have our Netwest table to showcase Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, to sell books and to proclaim “We are here! Writers in the mountains have a voice.”

We arrived early and grabbed a great table near the entrance to the Exhibitor Area. Directly in front of us were JC Walkup and Penny Morse with a table for Fresh, their beautiful literary magazine. JC is distributing Echoes in the Waynesville, Asheville and Canton areas. She will be glad to sell a copy or two as she says storing them is a nuisance.

Joan Howard, Netwest poet from Hiawassee, GA and writer, quilter and knitter, Barb Haynes who lives in Murphy and is a Netwest member also, rode with me to Asheville. Great travel companions and good caretakers. Little did they know I’d become ill on Saturday afternoon. I missed all the fun on Saturday evening, the open mike readings and the happy hour gathering as I slept in my room.
I can never thank Joan enough for taking the early hours she logged in at the Netwest table. Bright and early Saturday and Sunday, she welcomed writers, handed out brochures and sold books. Our Netwest members came by to pick up their Netwest stickers to attach to their name tags.
Betty Reed manned the table on Friday evening while I had dinner. Barb also filled in when needed. Others who represented Netwest at the table were Mary Ricketson, Susan Anderson, Pamela Warr, Linda Smith, and Rosemary Royston, Program Coordinator. Many thanks to them from me and Netwest members for being there to help when needed. I feel sure all these writers enjoyed the conference because each time I saw them they had big smiles on their faces.

Networking with other writers is an important part of a writing conference. One lady said to me, “Do you think it would be Okay to ask Rob Neufeld to review my book?”
She saw the Asheville Citizen-Times book columnist across the hall. I told her to go for it.
Novelists and non-fiction writers came to find agents and publishers. Poets hoped to find the best place to submit a poetry book. And everyone wanted to chat about writing with other writers.


But I imagine most were looking to learn something from the accomplished faculty that would stay with them and be the spark to push their writing up a notch.
Because I was tied pretty closely to the Netwest Table when I was at the conference, I was delighted so many folks I know dropped by. One of our first visitors was Scott Owens, poet, editor, teacher, and very nice guy. I especially enjoyed meeting Netwest members who have recently joined or even some who have been members for a long time, but I’ve not encountered before. Betty Reed and Pamela Warr are two of those members I had not met, but learned more about them and their writing. Pamela Warr designed our most recent brochure and the new Netwest logo.

Bill Ramsey was promoting the phenomenal literary event, the Blue Ridge Bookfest at Blue Ridge Community College in Henderson County NC. Just a short time ago the first bookfest was a toddler, and now it is running and jumping. Bill says the college has come on board with the volunteers and can guarantee continuity of this well-attended showcase for authors. Netwest was a supporter of the first bookfest, and we have been there to help in any way we can each year. NCWN is a sponsor, too.

Scott Douglas’s Main Street Rag exhibit seemed to always have writers gathered there. I appreciated Scott coming over to chat. He has been quite successful with his small press and publishes some of the best authors in North Carolina. He told me to check out his site to see the books by other presses that he sells. Wouldn’t it be great if Echoes were listed there?

Kevin Watson from Press 53 and Keith Flynn with the Asheville Poetry Review seemed to be popular in the exhibitor’s center. People were talking about Keith’s interesting poetry presentation. His band also played Saturday night for the banquet. I didn’t hear them from my room on the third floor, but I’m sure they were entertaining.

Our own Netwest founder, Nancy Simpson, held a poetry workshop. I heard many compliments on that session. I'm sure those poets came out of that room wanting Nancy's book, Living Above the Frost Line, which has received awards and nominations for awards this past year.
The keynote speaker, Silas House, blew us all away with his talk. But I’ll write more about that in another post.

Ed Southern held a townhall meeting and updated us on the Network. As Ed said, NCWN is not the staff. NCWN is the members. To truly feel a part of this large writers’ network in our state, I think you should attend at least one Fall Conference. I always leave feeling motivated, energized and enthusiastic about my own writing.

I look forward to the next one -- Fall 2013.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

MOUNTAIN WOMAN: Grave Stone

MOUNTAIN WOMAN: Grave Stone: Primitive gravestone from the 1830's in the Smoky Mountains Grave Stone So that the dead might always be able to...

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Who was there? Coffee with the Poets filled the room

Wednesday was Coffee with the Poets day in Hayesville, NC at Cafe Touche.

Mary Mike Keller, one of the Writers Circle faculty, along with a long time friend, Glenda Barrett, each read their original work for a packed house.

This event is sponsored by Netwest and has been running since 2007. Over the years we enjoyed local poets and writers as well as guests who traveled many miles to read here.

I am excited that two of my students, Nadine Justice and Barb Gabriel read at open mic and their work was evidently appreciated by the warm applause each received.

We gave a door prize yesterday - a copy of The Best of Poetry Hickory, an anthology of poets who read in 2011 at Poetry Hickory held at Taste Full Beans Coffeehouse in Hickory, NC. This event is led by Scott Owens, poet and NCWN rep for that area.

The winner of the book was none other than Nancy Simpson, mentor to many of us and teacher of poetry.

Robert S. King, FutureCycle Press, and Dot James, journalist, writer and poet

Mary Mike Keller reading her poetry and a spooky essay

Glenda Barrett, poetry book, When the Sap Rises, Finishing Line press


Nancy Simpson visits with Carolyn Johnson and Joan Howardl


Sunday, November 6, 2011

NC Writers Network Fall Conference - COMING SOON TO ASHEVILLE. Register Now.


"Spread the word, pack your bags, books and poems and come join us." 

POETRY WRITING WORKSHOP

Poetry Writing Here and Now with
Instructor: Nancy Simpson 

(Description)

Poets of today have many choices and much freedom, but it is a misconception to think that as practicing poets we can write with a total abandon of rules. Yes, Free Verse breaks with traditional forms and rhyme is shunned. This workshop will cover and promote a list of specific guidelines that – although not rules – can greatly advance your poetry and make it more publishable. Where to break the line, and how to make your poems sing with sound, will be discussed. We will also talk about how to connect with the reader on a sensory level, on an emotional level, and on an intellectual level. We’ll consider specific free verse forms, especially the lyric poem, and we’ll write one in this workshop.



Nancy Simpson is the author of three poetry collections: Across Water, Night Student, and most recently, Living Above the Frost Line: New and Selected Poems, published in 2010 by Carolina Wren Press. She is also the editor of the recently published anthology Echoes Across the Blue Ridge. Her poems have appeared in the Georgia Review, Prairie Schooner, and other literary magazines, as well as in several anthologies. She holds an MFA from Warren Wilson College and is a recipient of an NC Arts Council fellowship. She is one of the co-founders of North Carolina Writers’ Network – West, the Network chapter for writers in the westernmost counties of the state. 
"A number of our Netwest writers have registered or are planning to register. Please leave a comment if you are planning to attend the conference. We hope to see you there, talk, catch up."

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Miami Singer & Hayesville Writer Perfom November 11

A special treat is in store at Writers’ Night Out in Hiawassee this month when classically trained singer Felicia Kurtz and published writer Glenda Beall share their talents with the audience. It’s all at Mountain Perk Coffee House on Friday, November 11. The free event begins at 7 p.m. and also includes an open microphone for those who’d like to read their own poetry or prose.

Kurtz studied voice at the University of Michigan School of Music. Her singing experience ranges from opera to musical theater, including both cabaret and jazz venues. She has performed leading roles in over twenty opera and musical productions in the United States and abroad. Kurtz teaches voice at the New World School of the Arts in Miami and is also a facilitator at the University of Miami Frost School of Music Young Musician’s Camp.

Beall’s writing has appeared in numerous literary magazines, anthologies, online magazines and newspapers. Her poetry book, Now Might As Well Be Then, was published in 2009. A family history, Profiles and Pedigrees: Thomas Charles Council and His Descendants, was published in 1998. Beall runs Writers Circle, a program of writing classes held at her studio in Hayesville, NC. Besides teaching herself, she invites guest teachers for classes in poetry, family history writing, publishing, fiction and non-fiction. She also teaches at John C. Campbell Folk School.

Writers’ Night Out takes place on the second Friday of each month and is open to the public. The event draws approximately 30 people from four counties. Mountain Perk Coffee House is located at 1390 Highway 76 East in Chatuge Harbor Plaza across from Towns County High School. Food, gourmet coffees and other refreshments are available for purchase. Each open microphone reader can sign up at the door and has two minutes to read.

For more information, please contact Karen Holmes at (404) 316-8466 or kpaulholmes@gmail.com, or call Mountain Perk at (706) 896-0504.

MOUNTAIN WOMAN: El Dia de los Muertos, or, in our culture, All Sou...

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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

MOUNTAIN WOMAN: ALL HALLOWS

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Pirene's Fountain Poetry Journal and Scott Owens

Scott Owens who is not a member of Netwest, but is a representative for NCWN, is the subject of an interesting article in Pirene's Fountain. Read it here and learn more about Scott and his poetry.
Scott Owens will be in Hayesville and Hiawassee, GA in May of next year to do a workship at Writers Circle and to read at Writers' Night Out.

December will mark the fourth anniversary of the Netwest Writers blogsite

With some of our members announcing the anniversary of their blog site, I decided to go back and see if I could find the first post I made on the Netwest Writers site.

I had gone to the Fall Conference in November, 2007 in Winston-Salem. There I heard about setting up a free blog instead of a website. Netwest didn't have funds to pay an ongoing service for a website.  I came home and for a few weeks I practiced on setting up the blog hoping I'd not embarrass our members with my amateurish efforts. My hope was that our mountain writers would use this blog to further their opportunities to reach outside the far western part of the state to have their voices heard.
When Nicki Leone set up a new website for NCWN she gave Netwest the chance to be a part of that site. Anyone who goes to http://www.ncwriters.org/ will see where they can click on the Netwest blog.  The following is the first post I made that went out to the public.
Wednesday, December 5, 2007

NCWN announced the new Executive Director

On Saturday at the NCWN Fall Writing and Publishing Conference in Winston-Salem, Ed Southern was introduced as the new Executive Director for NCWN, and he will take office on January 1, 2008. Ed is highly qualified to lead the writers’ network. He presently works with John F. Blair, publisher, as vice president of sales and marketing. He has served on the Board of Trustees of the NCWN since July 2005.

Some of you may know that I “announced” his position prematurely. My mistake. But, even though I haven’t talked with Ed, I feel that he is an excellent choice. We will hear more from him after he takes office. He graduated from Wake Forest University with a Bachelor of Arts, politics, (cum laude) in 1994.

In conversations with Cynthia Barnett, present Executive Director, I learned the network had no particular marketing or public relations personnel. I feel that Ed Southern with his marketing background will increase the visibility of the network and then everyone, not only writers, will know what NCWN can do for them, and he will see that NCWN reaches out to writers and those who need writers anywhere in the state. I look forward to meeting him and making him aware of our NCWN West writers here in the mountains.

Posted by Glenda Council Beall at 6:22 PM

Labels: Cynthia Barnett, Ed Southern, John F. Blair

2 comments:

The Resident Curmudgeon said...

Glenda: Keep up the good work. I am enjoying your postings.



Saturday, December 8, 2007 8:58:00 PM EST

Kay said...

Hi Glenda,

Your blog is great! Your group may enjoy going to this Blogger site, it is extremely helpful!

http://www.problogger.net/archives/2005/12/30/tens-tips-for-writing-a-blog-post/

I liked his ten tips for writing a blog...his whole site is excellent. Kay Lake



Sunday, December 9, 2007 1:53:00 PM EST

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Pine Mountain Sand & Gravel submission deadline

Pauletta Hansel




Folks, this is a literary magazine, not a construction site, though I guess we could call writing "construction", couldn't we. Pauletta Hansel, a fine mountain poet with a new book out from Wind Publications, is editor.  She asked me to help spread the word.  I hope some members will submit work.


SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Volume 15: The Mountains Have Come Closer
In 1980, Jim Wayne Miller’s “The Mountains Have Come Closer,” gave voice to one of Appalachian poetry’s lasting personas, “The Brier,” who pondered and preached and opined, much as Jim did, on the tension inherent in being of and from Appalachia in the late twentieth century. As we mark the 15th anniversary of his passing, we invite you to ponder and preach and offer your literary opinion on the ways in which the mountains have come closer, even as, perhaps, we have moved farther, or further, away. Possible permutations might include reflections on ancestry, migration, mountaintop removal, images of Appalachia in pop culture… You also might take this as an opportunity to read or re-read any of Jim Wayne’s books. But we aren't asking for new Brier poems. We ask only for your own exploration of Jim Wayne’s resonating metaphor: maybe, like the Brier, you'll find something you didn't even know you had lost. (Southern Appalachian Writers' Cooperative ------Visit the SAWC Web Site  www.sawc.us)

What to send:
Send a cover letter with your name, address, phone, email address, a short bio (50 words or less), and a list of the titles submitted. Poets, please limit submissions to 5 poems or 10 pages. Prose writers, limit submissions to 5,000 words. Artists, send any 2D art, including black and white drawings, photos, comics, etc., that can be scaled effectively to a digest-sized page. Series formats are welcome. Submissions will not be returned.

Where to send it:
Send electronic submissions to: pmsg.journal@gmail.com
We prefer electronic submissions, but please only send your work pasted directly into the email message or as a Word or PDF attachment. No funky formats, please.

Send regular submissions (include SASE for reply) to:
Pine Mountain Sand & Gravel
c/o Pauletta Hansel
1266 Avon Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45229

Deadline: November 1, 2011

Monday, October 24, 2011

PAUL GREEN AWARD

Brenda Kay Ledford and Blanche L. Ledford received the 2011 Paul Green Award from North Carolina Society of Historians for their book, SIMPLICITY. The Award's Ceremony was held on Saturday, October 22, 2011, at the Hilton Garden Inn located in Mooresville, NC.

This is the fifth time Brenda Kay Ledford has received the Paul Green Award for her work. She won it for her poetry books: PATCHWORK MEMORIES, SHEWBIRD MOUNTAIN, SACRED FIRE, and for collecting oral history on Velma Beam Moore. www.brendakayledford.com and http://blueridgepoet.blogspot.com.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

City Lights Coffee with the Poet, October 20th

City Lights Bookstore's ColorFest Artist is Terry Michelsen. Hear her read her poetry at 10:30 a.m., Thursday, October 20th when she'll be featured at our monthly Coffee with the Poet. See her (along with many other visual artists, throughout downtown Sylva) demonstrate her pastel technique on Saturday, Oct. 22nd, 2011, the third annual ColorFest.

The monthly event gathers every third Thursday and is co-sponsored by NetWest.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

NCWN-W PICNIC

North Carolina Writers' Network-West held an annual picnic and celebrated their 20th anniversary on Sunday afternoon, October 16, at the Clay County Recreational Park on the banks of beautiful Lake Chatuge in Hayesville, North Carolina. It was indeed a splendid fall day.

Scott Owens signs a copy of his poetry book. He was the featured poet this year at the picnic. Everyone enjoyed his outstanding poetry reading.


Rosemary Royston, program coordinator for NCWN-W, did a great job organizing the picnic. She also introduced the writers who read their work.


Susan Anderson looked super wearing her lovely scarf to the picnic. She shared her excellent poem with those who attended the picnic.


Shirley Uphouse read a heart-warming story about a dog.


Paul Donovan listens to the poetry readings at the picnic.


Nancy Simpson purchased a copy of Scott Owens's poetry book.


Maren Mitchell and her husband attended the picnic. She shared her wonderful work with us.


Linda Smith dressed in fall colors read a great poem at the picnic.


Karen Paul Holmes looked lovely wearing her hat to the picnic. She shared a poem about being in the moment when she attended college.


Judy and Bob Grove. He read a humorous story about his high school teacher.


Janice Moore, English professor at Young Harris College, read an image-filled poem about snow.


Carole Thompson and her husband, Norm. She read a beautiful poem about fall.


Brenda Kay Ledford read her poem, "Art Quilting," at the NCWN-W picnic. She wrote the poem after taking Scott Owens's workshop at the Writers' Circle on October 15.

Dedication of Bay Leaves now online

The Poetry Council of North Carolina dedicated its annual anthology Bay Leaves to Nancy Simpson, co-founder of NCWN West and editor of Echoes Across the Blue Ridge. Read the dedication on the site of the Poetry Council.
http://poetrycouncilofnc.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/bay-leaves-2011-p_1_15.pdf

Congratulations, Nancy, for an honor well-deserved.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Coffee with the Poets October Photos

On October 12th, Coffee with the Poets at Cafe Touche in Hayesville featured Carole Richard Thompson. She offered a selection of poems filled with humor, insight and beauty. At open mic we heard several newcomers, Dot James and Ralph Wethli, along with regular readers. A sizeable group of fifteen thoroughly enjoyed the morning.

Carole Thompson, poet and writer with her ever-loving Norm


Part of the group at Coffee with the Poets on Wednesday 10/12/11
Text and photo by Maren Mitchell who hosted this month's reading

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

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Sunday, October 9, 2011

Netwest Celebrates 20 Years!

On Sunday, October 16, 2011, 2 pm, NC Writers Network-West or Netwest will celebrate its 20th anniversary! All members and anyone interested in learning more about Netwest are invited. The picnic will be in Hayesville, NC, at the Clay County Park (pavilion by the water). The featured reader/speaker is NC poet, Scott Owens. All those attending should bring a covered dish, chair, and drink (plates, napkins, and silverware will be provided). The meal will be followed by brief remarks from Program Coordinator Rosemary Royston, a reading from Scott Owens, and then open mike. Readings for the open mike session should consist of ONE PAGE of prose or two short poems per person. Time limit is 2.5 minutes. In order to accommodate as many readers as possible, please time your piece before reading. Please join us -- and encourage anyone you know that may be interested in Netwest to attend, also.

Award Winning Poet at Writers' Night Out


Scott Owens of Hickory, NC, will be the featured reader on October 14 at Mountain Perk Coffee House in Hiawassee. The free event begins at 7 p.m. and also includes an open microphone for those who’d like to share their own poetry or prose.

Owens is the recipient of awards from the Academy of American Poets and the Pushcart Prize Anthology. He has authored eight collections of poetry and over 900 poems published in journals including Georgia Review, North American Review, Chattahoochee Review, Southern Poetry Review, and Poetry East among others. He is the founder of Poetry Hickory, editor of Wild Goose Poetry Review and 234, and vice president of the Poetry Council of NC. Born and raised in Greenwood, SC, Owens teaches at Catawba Valley Community College in Hickory, NC.

Each open microphone reader has two minutes and can sign up at the door to read. The evening also includes music provided by a local musician.

Writers’ Night Out takes place on the second Friday of each month and is open to the public. The event draws approximately 30 people from four counties. Mountain Perk Coffee House is located at 1390 Highway 76 East in Chatuge Harbor Plaza across from Towns County High School. Food, gourmet coffees and other refreshments are available for purchase.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Photo from Indian Summer Festival

Joan Howard, right, sent this photo taken at the Indian Summer Festival in Suches recently. You can tell the weather was cold and windy. See a brochure on the ground.
Others in photo are Glenda Beall standing left behind Robert S. King.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

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THE ANTHOLOGY, ECHOES ACROSS THE BLUE RIDGE FLEW OFF THE BOOK TABLE INTO HANDS OF READERS at the Indian Summer Festival in SUCHES, GEORGIA, According to a Report From NCWN West Georgia Representative Carole Richard Thompson.

Hello, Everyone:  Thanks to each of you for your great help this weekend at the Festival in Suches.  Norm and I could not have done it without you.  It may not be a record, but we did sell 9 Echoes on Saturday, which was like a sunny blizzard, if you can understand what that means, and on Sunday, which was a little warmer, but still windy, we actually sold 5 more, totalling 14, which adds up to $196 at our Festival Reduction Price of $14.  I just sent the money off to Newt Smith with a little note.  I told him if I won the Lotto, I'd buy a very sturdy tent for Netwest to use at Festivals, because just being there can be so much fun. 
     Despite the cold and wind, Norm and I got the biggest kick out of looking at people and their kids and dogs going by, tents turning over, especially when, on Sunday, the nice guy selling lemonade caught the brunt of a mini tornado and his umbrella, stuck in the ground to add ambiance, pulled out of the ground and flew over to my tent, the steel pole side-glancing my head.  This, after just hearing on TV that one should be very careful to protect one's head, as studies have now shown that it might be a factor in onset of Alzheimer's somewhere along the line.  He had just brought me over lemonade that morning to show his appreciation to me for bandaging up his finger, which was cut somehow Saturday when his tent blew over the first time.  I had, also, along with several other people, set about picking up several dozens of his scattered lemons. 
    One of our poets, Judy Burch, was there with her husband, serving up lots of delicious barbeque to the hungry crowd.  Judy said it was a bit colder and windier than usual, but, some years it was just perfect.  Judy's farm was just over the hill, so she should know.They do have perfect fried pies, hot off the fire, and undescribably delicious funnel cakes. (Well, Robert and Norm minded the store and let Maren and me walk around some.  Maren found a basket that we both wanted, but that will have to wait til another day and another Indian Summer Festival in Suches.

 Kudos to the fine folks who live there and work hard every year to raise money for their brave little Woody Gap School, which turns out some some fine High School graduates every year.  Union County is very proud of Woody Gap School, located in Suches, elv. about 3,400 ft in a beautiful "Valley Above the Clouds."  Suches is the only town in Union County, other than Blairsville.
    Thanks for hanging in there with this long email.  I just enjoyed the whole experience so much.  Love, Carole Thompson

Monday, October 3, 2011

POETS - MARK YOUR CALENDAR FOR GEORGIA POETRY SOCIETY, Register For Lunch


Rosemary Royston, Janice Moore, Nancy Simpson

GEORGIA POETRY SOCIETY COMING TO YOUNG HARRIS COLLEGE 

FOR THEIR ANNUAL MEETING

Georgia Poetry Society will sponsor a Poetry Writing Workshop and Poetry Reading by poet Nancy Simpson at their all day annual meeting at Young Harris College October 29, 2011. Also scheduled to read that day is GPS member Janice Townley Moore. 


This event is especially important event for our poets living and writing in Georgia.

Georgia Poetry Society offers workshops, contests and opportunities to publish.

Friday, September 30, 2011

Carole Richard Thompson will Read Wednesday at Coffee with the Poets


Carole Thompson, writer and poet, Netwest Rep for GA
 Coffee with the Poets and Writers meets Wednesday, October 12, 10:30 a.m. at Café Touché in Hayesville, NC. Featured this month is poet and writer, Carole Richard Thompson.
Twenty-one years ago Carole and her husband moved to Blairsville, in the North Georgia mountains. After many years as a portrait painter, she began to study writing, and joined the North Carolina Writers' Network. She credits her love for writing to her friend and mentor, Nancy Simpson, whose classes in creative writing and poetry have been her greatest source of inspiration.

Her first short story, "A Bag of Sugar for Paula," was published in The Liquorian Magazine, and also the anthology, Christmas Presence, published by Catawba Press. Her story, "The Uniform" appeared in the anthology, Clotheslines, published by Catawba Press.

Carole's poems have been anthologized in A Sense of Place, published by Southeast Writers Association, Echoes across the Blue Ridge, published by Winding Path Publishing and Women's Places, Women's Spaces by Stone Ivy Press. Poems, "The Party's Over," and "36 Hours" were published in Wild Goose Poetry Review.

The public is invited to come and meet Carole, and read their original poems or short prose at open mike.

Café Touche, 82 Main Street, serves the best coffee in town and no one wants to leave without having a delicious muffin.

Contact Glenda Beall 828-389-4441 for information.

This event is free and is sponsored by NCWN West also known as Netwest, a chapter of the North Carolina Writers' Network.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Indian Summer Festival - Netwest book booth

Don’t miss the 34th Indian Summer Festival in Suches, in Union County, Saturday and Sunday, October 1 & 2.

This festival has been going on for over thirty years at the Woody Gap School in Suches. Crowds fill the area each year for the live music which goes on continually, the excellent food, and the handmade crafts. Suches is between Blairsville and Dahlonega, Georgia.

Netwest will have a booth this year. Carole Thompson and her husband Norm have worked very hard on this event. Echoes across the Blue Ridge will be featured as well as original books by our members.

NCWN West appreciates the opportunity to rent a booth and promote our organization, our authors and their books. Please tell your friends, your neighbors and family members to come to Suches and purchase Christmas gifts, souvenirs from the mountains, and good books for themselves.

Echoes across the Blue Ridge will be discounted for this event.

  • $14.00 for the public
  • $10.00 for NCWN West members

Check out the website for directions and map. http://indiansummerfestival.org/

Contact Carole Thompson, Georgia Rep for Netwest – mailto:carole4@windstream.net




Monday, September 26, 2011

Janisse Ray, Memoirist and Poet, visits City Lights Bookstore

Wednesday September 28th at 1 p.m.


Janisse Ray will be at City Lights Bookstore Wednesday, September 28th at
1 p.m. to read from two of her most recent books. Drifting into Darien: A Personal and Natural History of the Altamaha River is a memoir and as in her groundbreaking Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, Ray writes an account of her beloved river that is both social history and natural history, understanding the two as inseparable, particularly in the rural corner of Georgia that she knows best. Ray goes looking for wisdom and finds a river.

A House of Branches is her most recent poetry collection and of the book Kathryn Byer says: "These poems are about waking up, looking around at the world, and discovering how to live within it... how to gather and cherish the things of this world.

City Lights Bookstore is located at 3 E. Jackson St., Sylva, NC 28779
Call them at 828-586 9499 or visit their website: http://www.citylightsnc.com/

Thursday, September 15, 2011

September Folk School Readings

On Thursday, Sept 22 at 7 pm, John C. Campbell Folk School and N.C. Writers Network West are sponsoring a reading of poetry, 7:00 pm, Keith House. The reading is free of charge and open to the public. Poets Janice Townley Moore and Joan Howard will be reading.

Janice Moore, a member of the English Department at Young Harris College, published a chapbook Teaching the Robins with Finishing Line Press in 2005. Her poems have appeared in such journals as Shenandoah, The Georgia Review, Prairie Schooner, Southern Poetry Review, The Atlanta Review, and The Journal of the American Medical Association. An active member of the North Carolina Writers’ Network, she is the coordinator for the poetry critique group which meets at Tri-County Community College.

Joan Howard's poetry has been published in The Lyric, The Road Not Taken: The Journal of Formal Poetry, Lucid Rhythms, Victorian Violet, Our Pipe Dreams, and others. She is a former teacher, member of North Carolina Writers' Network West, has studied German and English lit, goes birding and spends time in Athens and on the beautiful waters of Lake Chatuge in Hiawassee, Georgia.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

TWO GEORGIA POETS WILL READ THEIR POEMS - DO NOT MISS THIS CHANCE TO HEAR ROBERT KIMSEY AND ROBERT S. KING



GEORGIA POETRY SOCIETY
with thanks to the Blue Ridge 
Mountains Arts Association
presents

Poetry Readings &
Workshop on Publishing
plus open mic, book raffle, 
book sales and signing




Where: Blue Ridge Mountains Arts Association, 420 West Main St., 
Blue Ridge GA 30513

When: Friday, September 16, 2011, 6:30 pm 

• No Admission Fees, 
Free Refreshments 

Please join us for a twohour poetry festival featuring:A workshop 
focusing on publishing in the electronic age. Learn the latest ways to 
publish your work.

Readings by Robert W. Kimsey and Robert S. King.  Two widely 
published poets read from their books and new poems as well.

A raffle. Your chance to win poetry books.

An open mic. Bring one or two of your own poems 
to share with the audience. Please limit poems to a maximum of 
35 lines each.

Book sales and signing. If you have published 
a book or books of poetry, please bring copies to 
sell at this event. No fees involved.

About the Featured Poets

Robert W. Kimsey is a retired Technical Writer 
Illustrator and lives in McCaysville, GA. 
His poems  have been published in various poetry 
and web columns including Kudzu, Pegasus 
the Southern Ocean Review, NewSoutherner 
and various anthologies.


Robert S. King lives near McCaysville, GA. 
He has published poems in hundreds of magazines 
and anthologies including The Kenyon Review,  
Southern Poetry Review, Main Street Rag, Midwest 
Quarterly, CaliforniaQuarterly, Chariton Review, 
Negative Capability, Slant, Sow's Ear, and many 
others.  He has also published three chapbooks 
(When Stars Fall Down asSnow, Garland  Press, 
1976; Dream of the Electric Eel, Wolfsong Publications, 
1982; and Traveller ’s Tale, Whistle Press, 1998) 
and two fulllength poetry  books 
(The Gravedigger’s Roots and The Hunted River
both from Shared  Roads Press, 2009).
Robert serves as President of the Georgia Poetry 
Society and is also Director  of FutureCycle Press.