Saturday, April 17, 2010

MAY CALENDAR FROM OSONDU BOOKSELLERS IN WAYNESVILLE

Saturday, May 1st@ 6:00 pm

It is a Zombie Crawl. Join children’s librarian Carol Dennis and author Eric Brown for a night of the living dead.


Tuesday, May 4th

@10:00 Book Babies

Thursday May 6th

Meet the author

7:00 pm Ann Herendeen, author of Pride/Prejudice and Phyllida and the Brotherhood both published by Harper Collins.

Friday, May 7th

@ 7:00pm Art after Dark

Saturday, May 8th

@ 6:30 Music


Tuesday, May 11

@10:00 Book Babies


@ 6:00 pm Mountain Writers

New members welcome


Thursday, May 13th

@ 1:30 pm afternoon book club


Saturday, May 15th

@ 11:00, it is a Teddy Bear Picnic with our very own Allison Best-Teague. Bring your favorite teddy bear and come and hear about bears. We may even have a bear expert to talk with us.


@1:00 pm meet the author

David Madden with his novel Abducted by Circumstance will read and sign books.


@ 6:30: Music with Jonathan Martin


Monday, May 17th @ 6:30

Nonfiction book club new members are always welcome


Tuesday, May 18th @

10:00 Book Babies


Thursday, May 20th

@ 6:30 Book Club, Spirit Seekers


Saturday, May 22

@6:30 pm Music with Chris Minick


Sunday, May 23

@ 3:00 pm Meet the poet Scott Owens reading from his new collection called Paternity. Books will be available for sale.


Tuesday, May 25th

@ 10:00 Book Babies


@6:30 All Gender All Genre Book Club

New members are always welcome


Saturday, May 29th

@ 6:30, Music with Lorraine Conard


Sunday, April 11, 2010

CONGRATULATIONS TO THOSE WHO RESPONDED...

...to our invitation to blog about your favorite Appalachian book. All of you will be receiving prizes, so if I don't have your mailing address readily available, I may be contacting you for it. We were especially glad to be introduced to Lamb In His Bosom, and thank Gary Garden for sending us this piece. The essays on Fred Chappell's Ancestors and Others (Penny Morse),and Lewis Green's The Silence of Snakes (Bill Everett) were stand-outs as well. And although Melissa is not a Netwest member, her piece on Fair and Tender Ladies was a lovely personal testimonial. She deserves to be rewarded! Carole Thompson's piece on Glenda Barrett honors one of our own best mountain poets. So, thank you to Gary, Bill, Carole, Melissa, and Penny.
We may try another blog prompt in early summer. In the meantime, keep reading and loving what you read.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

LEAH MAINES OF FINISHING LINE PRESS

Often we take for granted things we should put on the “I’m so grateful for” list. When I submitted my poetry chapbook manuscript to Finishing Line Press for the second year in a row, my only concern was having the press accept my book for publication. My mind did not take me further than the day an envelope would arrive in my box with my acceptance letter.

Now, a year later, I have to say I’m so grateful to have had the opportunity to work with Leah Maines as my editor for Now Might As Well Be Then. From day one, the entire experience went as smoothly as anyone could expect. Having no clue as to how the publishing world works, I did not know what to expect. Kevin Maines never failed to respond to any question I had and made sure I sent everything Leah would need for editing.

I had sent the wrong copy of a poem, and at the last minute, Leah exchanged it, without complaint, for the correct poem. In fact, she did everything I asked for my book. I am proud of the finished product. My family and my friends tell me they think the book is lovely. Some of my friends, Glenda Barrett, Janice Moore, Mary Ricketson, and Brenda Kay Ledford also had poetry chapbooks published by Finishing Line Press.

The information sent to me by Finishing Line Press helped me with promoting my book, and Leah has helped in other ways on Facebook.

Recently, I asked Leah if she would take time from her busy schedule and answer a few questions for me. Even though she had been ill for a week, she responded. Below is my interview with Leah Maines, Sr. Editor of Finishing Line Press.


GB: How long have you been writing and why did you start in the first place?

Leah: I started writing in college. I'm not sure why I started writing. I was working on the Licking River Review as their business manager. I loved reading the submissions. I started writing.


GB: Who or what inspired you to write?

Leah: The first few poems I wrote in college were really terrible. However, I had a friend who saw some glimmer of talent in them in spite of the "O, how I love thee" in one stanza. He told me I should keep writing, and he handed me a copy of Poetry. I turned to the poem "Splitting Wood" by Billy Collins. That single poem changed my writing life and got me forever hooked on poetry. My friend's kindness led me to the poem. He didn't tell me to forget poetry; he just gently led me down the right path.

GB: What would you say is the hardest thing about writing?

Leah: One must keep writing. Sometimes the writer loses his or her voice. This is what we call "writers block" and it can become difficult to find it once you have lost it. Life tends to get in the way once one falls into that trap. I've found that keeping a journal helps, and not putting high expectations on the craft.


GB: What do you enjoy most about writing?

Leah: The release. Just the letting go of the words. My poems tend to come to me early in the morning. They wake me from my sleep and won't allow me to go back to bed until I put pen to paper. It's the release of the words that gives me some peace and satisfaction. I don't care if anyone ever reads them now. There was a time in my life when I had to prove something--when publication meant everything to me. It doesn't matter to me anymore about my own work. I'm happy to help other people get published now. I get the same satisfaction.


GB: What advice would you give a struggling new writer or poet?

Leah: Keep submitting, and don't allow rejection letters to get you down. Everyone gets rejection letters -- everyone. Just keep at it and keep writing. And keep reading good contemporary poets. Learn from the best, and then find your own voice. Then write and keep writing. You will find publication if you don't give up.

Leah Maines served as the Northern Kentucky University Poet-in-Residence in 2000, funded in part by the National Endowment for Humanities and the Kentucky Humanities Council. She served in the position with poet Joseph Enzweiler. Leah’s book Looking to the East with Western Eyes (Finishing Line Press, 1998)was a Cincinnati/Tri-State regional Bestseller. Another book, Beyond the River (Kentucky Writers Coalition Press, 2002)was the winner of the Kentucky Writers’ Coalition Chapbook Competition.

GB: Thank you, Leah, for giving us your time and answering questions for www.netwestwriters.blogspot.com

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

NCWN West Monthly Prose Workshop Will Meet Again May 11th With New Leader

(photo Peg Russell and Richard Argo
NCWN West Prose Group)




Dear Fellow members,

This is a message for writers who meet in the NCWN West monthly prose group at Tri County Community College. The group will not meet this month (tomorrow night) but will meet for sure May 11, 2010, 7:00 with your new workshop leader Peg Russell of Murphy. Peg Russell is a long time Netwest member and has been active in this monthly prose writing workshop for years. She has agreed to be the workshop leader since Richard Argo is now unable to do so. We will try to get more information if you need it. Your comments are welcome. Questions too.

If you have specific interests in joining this prose writing group, you need only to be a member of NCWN and live within the Netwest area. There is no extra fee. For about seventeen years now they have been saying, "Netwest members within driving distance are welcome" and also, "Observers are welcome."


A well-kept secret? Learn about the Learning Center!

Do you know about The Learning Center!? Click here to learn about the Jackie Ward Foundation and the Learning Center.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

NAITONAL POETRY MONTH: A POEM A DAY

I INVITE YOU TO VISIT MY BLOG, HERE, WHERE I AM, TO READ A POEM A DAY DURING NATIONAL POETRY MONTH. TODAY'S POEM IS "NAMING THE CONSTELLATIONS," BY JOHN YORK. FEATURED POETS THUS FAR HAVE BEEN TESS KINCAID, FELICIA MITCHELL, & GLENIS REDMOND. UPCOMING POETS ARE DORIS DAVENPORT (N. GEORGIA AFFILACHIAN POET), JULIA NUNNALLY DUNCAN (AN APPALACHIAN BORN AND BRED WRITER), LISA PARKER (ANOTHER APPALACHIAN NATIVE POET), AND MANY OTHERS.
HOPE YOU'LL STOP BY. KB

Sunday, April 4, 2010

COME CELEBRATE NATIONAL POETRY MONTH

6:30 April 6, 2010 EVENING OF ART AND POETRY
AT Hayesville High School Lecture Hall

sponsored by the Clay County Arts Council with a
poetry reading by the contest judge Glenda Beall.

Open to the public.



POETRY WRITING WORKSHOP

Nancy Simpson will teach a four week poetry writing workshop at
Young Harris College Continued Education
April 16, through Mar 7, 2010. 3:15-5:15. The fee is
$13.00 plus ICL membership fee.

This is a poetry writing workshop with no lecture but plenty
of instruction as we discuss your poems.


Click on This Term to read class description.