Saturday, February 6, 2010

COFFEE WITH THE POETS FEATURES ELLEN ANDREWS

Wednesday, February 10, at 10:30 a.m. Netwest member, Ellen Andrews, who lives in Robbinsville, NC, will read her poetry at Coffee with the Poets.
Ellen's poetry reflects the things that fill her day with delight and awe. I am not surprised she is a gifted writer. She is also an excellent photographer.
Daylillies by Ellen Andrews
I look forward to hearing Ellen's poetry on Wednesday at Coffee with the Poets at Phillips and Lloyd Books on the square in Hayesville, NC.
Her reading will be followed by open mic. Everyone is invited to participate or come and listen to others read. It is always a day of fun.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

REDROOM.COM

For those of you interested in having a presence online, with access to hundreds of visitors, go to redroom.com, "Where the Writers Are," and register, either as a member or an author. (This is explained on the site.) Or if you don't wish to become a member (it's free) you can browse the contents. Redroom will occasionally give topics for its members/authors to blog about. Last time it was "my favorite poem." Here is my entry. It was selected as one of the top entries that the editors liked.

Two weeks ago, redroom.com asked its members to blog on the topic of "my favorite poem." How could I choose? One poem from all the ones I love? Then I took a look at our Aero garden and knew. Verde, que te quiero verde!
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GIVING MYSELF OVER TO GREEN

Poets are fickle creatures. We fall in love over and over again.We can never remain faithful to only one poet. I began to understand this the day I forsook Wordsworth in my college Spanish class. My poetic guide. My first love. How could I?

What was I doing in a Spanish class anyway? Hadn’t my father instructed me to take either French or German, the latter being his grandmother’s native tongue?

He would have found it silly, the way my infatuation began, with a 75 rpm record bought during my senior year in high school. The Music of Spain. I listened at night after lights out to “Granada” and “Malaguena.” The hair on the nape of my neck trembled. The dark outside my windows beckoned.

And so, on the first day of classes in a small woman’s college in Georgia, I sat down to learn Spanish from a short rotund woman who demanded we call her La Senora, although she had never married. I read the classics of Spanish literature, moving inexorably toward the 20th century where in the anthology’s last section, I found Romance Sonambula and, and in the burst of a verde viento, the English Romantic poets became as dust to me. I fell in love with Federico Garcia Lorca. In Spanish. No matter how many translations of his work I’ve read over the years, the original Spanish has never lost its seductiveness, whether I read it silently or, better, aloud.

Verde que te quiero verde.

Verde viento. Verdes ramas.

El barco sobre la mar

y el caballo en la montaña.

Con la sombra en la cintura

ella sueña en su baranda,

verde carne, pelo verde,

con ojos de fría plata.

Verde que te quiero verde.

Not that I agreed with La Senora that everything sounded better in Spanish. Shakespeare? Wordsworth? Keats? No, I already knew that the language of poets is beautiful, no matter what it is. Hungarian, Romanian, Polish, French, English....Cherokee.

Garcia Lorca’s poetry spun me around, gave me a new way of experiencing language, my own language, which was now infused with the cante jondo of Andalusia.

Even now, years later, I recite those lines as a kind of mantra, Verde, que te quiero verde... and I still love the feel of them in my mouth. I love the deep song of them in my viscera. I have dreamed of trying to save Lorca in the olive grove, with only my child’s fingers pointed like guns at his assassins.

Verde, que te quiero verde.

Not even these lines can stop bullets. Hurricanes. Earthquakes. I know that.

But they live on in our daily lives, these words we love. They wait patiently for us. I had to reach middle age before Garcia Lorca’s duende found its way into my own poems.

Gone

Long before I could read Lorca

I wanted to give myself over to green

as he had and be lost like a sleepwalker

in it. I wanted to hide in the honeysuckle

and never come home if it meant I must stay

by the telephone, waiting for someone

to call with the doctor’s pronouncement,

my mother then turning to us saying

over and over again in my memory, Gone.

Such a word I would never repeat

to the oaks that held sway round my favorite pasture,

or blackberry bushes I dreamed would stay

unscythed by road crews sent forth to claim

right of way. Verde, que te quiero verde,

I’d gladly have cried if I could,

but where are such beautiful words

when we need them? And what if that’s all

this poem means now I’m middle-aged: words

as a way to want green back again

and myself in the throes of it,

even though I’ve learned enough about Lorca

at last to be quite sure that no verde

anywhere spending its June on this earth

could have outstayed for one blessed

second what waits at the end

of the line, always some bloodless voice

trying hard to sound human across so much

distance, its words still escaping me.

(from The Store of Joys, NC Museum of Art)

W.H. Auden said that art is a way of breaking bread with the dead. Each time a poet begins to write, or to read a poem, she takes the bread of those gone before and places it in her mouth. She does this over and over again. With one poet. Another, and yet another, living or dead. She loves the taste of the bread they share. So many poets. So many poems. By the end of her life she will contain, like Whitman, multitudes, and will never again try to answer the question, “What is your favorite poem?”

Monday, January 25, 2010

Jeff Biggers - Reckoning at Eagle Creek:The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland

Jeff Biggers awed his audience at the Blue Ridge Bookfest in Flat Rock last year. We learn now he has a new book Reckoning at Eagle Creek: The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland. If you are in Asheville be sure to put the following dates on your calendar. When Biggers performs his work, you sit on the edge of your chair caught up in his passion for the subject.

Coal Free Future events in Asheville:


Tuesday, Feb. 2nd, 7pm, Malaprops:

Jeff Biggers performs excerpts from Reckoning at Eagle Creek: The Secret Legacy of Coal in the Heartland

http://www.malaprops.com/NASApp/store/IndexJsp;jsessionid=bacyse99yw3Lp6toSKOys?s=storeevents&eventId=433405

Website: http://www.jeffbiggers.com/

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jeff-Biggers-Reckoning-at-Eagle-Creek/277990564288

Friday, Feb. 5th, 8pm, Asheville Community Theatre:

Asheville Premiere of "Welcome to the Saudi Arabia of Coal"


Coal Free Future Project

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=247728060735&ref=mf

Website: http://www.coalfreefuture.org/

JENNIFER MCGAHA

Read an excellent non-fiction piece by Netwest member, Jennifer McGaha here.
Jennifer also has work in the upcoming anthology, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, edited by Nancy Simpson.

WRITING FOR CHILDREN - a Promotional Give-Away Class

John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, N.C. has offered two free seats to the class WRITING FOR CHILDREN, to be taught by author and instructor Faye Gibbons. A $25.00 registration fee is required. One of the promotional give away classes has already been assigned. There is one left. If you want it call now 1 800 Folk Sch.

Class Description:

Writing for Children
Writing
February 7-13, 2010
Instructor: Faye Gibbons
Tuition: $527.00
Wonderful stories surround us. Tap into them! Discover techniques for using real-life experiences to create children's fiction. Write each day and share positive feedback. The instructor will offer comments and suggestions on at least one assignment and one final story for each student. All levels

If you are interested in more writing classes at John C. Campbell Folk School, click below.

Friday, January 22, 2010

LEDFORD PUBLISHED IN COUNTRY EXTRA

Jerry Taylor of Young Harris, Georiga plays a 1935 Imperial organ, the first of his collection of antique reed organs.
Brenda Kay Ledford's article, "The Organ Loft," was published in the January, 2010 issue of COUNTRY EXTRA. The feature is about Jerry Taylor, official historian of Towns County, Georgia and his unique collection of over 30 antique reed organs. To order a copy of this magazine, go to: www.//country-magazine.com.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Writers on the Radio with Joan Hetzler, host of Writers Show on WAWL Chattanooga

Recently I interviewed Joan Hetzler who produces and hosts the Writers Show on WAWL in Chattanooga, TN. I was on Joan's show a couple of years ago discussing Netwest, and she invited me to come back and talk about my poetry book, Now Might AsWell Be Then, but we had to cancel due to the rock slide between Murphy NC and Cleveland TN. I hope I can go later because I found Joan extremely professional and I enjoyed the entire experience. The following is my interview with Joan.





Glenda: I know you host the Writers Show on WAWL in Chattanooga. You are a writer, yourself. Why did you decide to pursue a radio show for writers? What was your purpose?

Joan: There are a lot of programs that offer published and well know writers the chance to promote their books. However, I didn't know of one that promoted the "craft" of writing and also gave unpublished authors that chance to air their work. The purpose of the show is to encourge and promote writing as well as readers.

Glenda: How do you plan your shows as to what writers, what kind of writing and how many writers you have on one show?

Joan: I try to have a variety of topics. For example, I've had playwrights with actors read their works, a tv producer talk about writing for broadcast news and air a sample story, poets, and storytellers. Right now we are limited in the number of guests but in a few months, WAWL is moving to a new studio where I hope to have several authors discuss writing in a roundtable set up.

Glenda: You tape your show yourself. You edit the show and, it seems, you do everything for the show including the interviews. How did you learn all this and how does this show help your own writing?

Joan: Originally, I had a producer who did all that. Due to staff cutbacks and tight deadlines, I found it helpful for me to learn to record and edit. If the show helps my writing, it's to keep my work condensed and just the essentials because both readers and listeners have limited time. Today, there are so many other forms of entertainment that pulls for a reader or listener's attention, that I'm aware the content needs to be interesting and fast paced.

Glenda: Thank you so much, Joan. I feel sure our readers will enjoy learning about you and your show.

Joan Hetzler was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and attended Chattanooga High School and The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga before moving to Atlanta to work for several years as a secretary. In her late twenties, she completed her undergraduate degree at Agnes Scott College and Emory University with a major in Philosophy. While working as a technical writer documenting computer software, she attended Georgia State University to compete a masters degree in applied philosophy with a focus on artificial intelligence.


Just before completing her M.A. degree, she developed severe allergies to chemicals in her work environment and moved back to Northwest Georgia. She lived in a log cabin on her mother's farm where she raised chickens, did organic farming, and took an active role in setting up an environmental group and establishing a community wide recycling program.


From North Georgia, she moved to St. Simons Island, where she lived for ten years until returning to Chattanooga. While on St. Simons, she wrote and published poetry chapbooks, established a poetry writing group, wrote newspaper articles, and a memoir about many of her experiences. Her poetry has also been published in the Savannah Literary Journal. Her writing has won awards in humor, nonfiction, playwriting and mystery at the Southeastern Writers Conference.


Since returning to Chattanooga, Ms. Hetzler has served on the Board of Directors of the Chattanooga Writers Guild. Her drama skits have been peformed in a local church. Selections from her memoir have been published at Southernscribe.com and other publications. She hosts The Writers Show, a local radio progam for writers which airs the first Sunday of each month at 1 pm. To find out more about the program, visit http://sites.google.com/site/thewritersshow/

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Leave a Written Legacy, Write Your Family Stories will be taught by Glenda Beall


This writing class is for you if you have wanted to write about your family but have not had the time to do it. This class is for you if you have a story to tell but have not known how to begin.
Maybe you have already started, but your writing folder is full of unorganized papers.

Give yourself a week to focus only on writing. Leave your chores behind. Spend a week studying with Glenda Beall at John C. Campbell Folk School. Glenda Beall will give you direction. Class begins on Sunday, February 21 and ends on Friday evening February 27, 2010.

CLASS DESCRIPTION:

Recover old memories using family photos and keepsakes. Write stories and personal essays about your unique life experiences for your children and grandchildren, and then fine-tune your work by sharing with classmates in a safe, comfortable atmosphere. Beginners to intermediate writers--join us to get your start or for motivation and ideas to organize your work.


Or call 1-800 FOLK SCH, (828) 837-2775 Local Residents may get half price.
Ask when you call.