Thursday, December 28, 2017

The Ashes Are Falling by William Everett

I am re-posting this blog post by William Everett. He is a member of NCWN-West and writes an interesting blog each week. He is author of fiction and nonfiction and is also, a poet. I think you will like it.


Living in one of the world’s great temperate hardwood forests, I become familiar with the trees around me. Not all, by any means, because we have such an expanse of species, but I do know those that can be transformed into the bowls, turnings, cabinetry, and sculpted artifacts that release their beauty and strength into our realm of use or beauty. Trees talk to each other, support each other in the wind, share their resources, and dance their seasons of green, gold, red, grey, and brown. Some became old friends whose signs of age raise our concern, whose loss of limb or crown distress us, or whose seedlings volunteer to fill the spaces left by those long gone.

Over the centuries, they have adapted to their environment and the slow epochal changes of ice ages and hot or humid times. They live at an evolutionary pace. But we humans have dragged them into the faster tempo of our history. As we have spread across the globe, we have brought sicknesses and parasites that have overcome their natural resistance. The chestnut blight from China reduced the mighty chestnut to struggling sprouts among the stumps that testify to their former glory. The Dutch elm disease took down those stately witnesses to our streets and parks. The wooly adelgid decimated our balsams. The hemlock adelgid is still making its way through the moist coves and stream beds of these mountains. And now the emerald ash borer has made its way to us from Michigan, where it arrived from Asia in some wooden pallets. Sometimes, given time, the trees can stimulate their own resistance, but other times we lose them entirely, except for specimens in labs and arboretums.

We identify with these trees. They inspire us with their strength. patience, and endurance. Tended well, they supply us with things of use and beauty. This winter we will have to cut down one of our friends, whom the borer is reducing to a skeleton. I share with you my lament as we watch its demise, among many others, and hope that some of it can find its way into a new life.

My ash trees are dying,
            their leaves are faces of grief,
            they are weeping bark,
            my saw is chewing them into firewood,
            they are rendered into ashes in our stove,
            I am turning their limbs into plates and bowls,
            their trunks into table legs and planks..
The emerald beetle eating out their life
            rings their trunks with burrows for its larva,
            girdling them with living death.
The borers will move on,
            the ash their only home.
They do not know
            of baseball bats and tables,
            rakes and chairs and hoes.
They eat,
            lay eggs,
            hatch,
            and leave destruction in their wake.
Why do I stand among the ashes in amazement?
Did we not bring these predators?
Is our destruction not the same?
Will there be survivors
            who will weep for me?


Thank you, Bill, for allowing us to re-post this on the NCWN-West blog. 

Learn more about Bill Everett on his site: http://williameverett.com/about-me/

In my teaching career I authored eight books and numerous articles in social ethics and religion. After over thirty years of academic work — in Germany, India, and South Africa as well as in the United States — I wanted to turn my hand to writing that was more poetic and expressive. I also wanted a more viable balance between my work with words and my work with wood, especially furniture for worship settings. For more about my woodworking, go to www.WisdomsTable.net, where you will also find galleries of artwork by my wife Sylvia, whose ancestors were the original inspiration for Red Clay, Blood River.    ----William Everett

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Catherine Carter has poems featured in Still: The Journal and Cold Mountain Review, plus a contract for a full-length poetry collection with LSU Press



Catherine Carter, a NCWN-West member, has three poems in Still: The Journal, this fall (http://www.stilljournal.net/catherine-carter-poetry2017.php), “Chickweed, Hens”, “Night Driving, Lighted Windows”, and “The Promise.” 

Cold Mountain Review will showcase  three of Carter's poems in this fall’s special issue on Extinction: “The Rapture”, “Copperheads in Heaven”, and “Crow Cosmogony.” "The Rapture" is nominated for a Pushcart Award.

LSU Press has awarded Carter a contract for her third full-length collection, Larvae of the Nearest Stars, to be published in Fall 2019.

Additionally, Carter is scheduled to be one of two featured poets at the NCPS Poetry Day at Lenoir-Rhyne in Hickory on April 21.

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Brenda Kay Ledford Receives 2017 Paul Green Multimedia Award

Brenda Kay Ledford received the Paul Green Multimedia Award from North Carolina Society of Historians for her blog, "Clay County Yore."


The seventy-sixth annual award's ceremony was held at the Stone Center in North Wilkesboro, NC on November 11, 2017.


An author, Pushcart nominee, and retired educator, Ledford has received the Paul Green Award 10 times for her books, blogs, and collecting oral history on Southern Appalachia.


For information:  www.ncsocietyofhistorians.org
                             http://claycountyyore.blogspot.com







Monday, December 18, 2017

NCWN-West member Betty Jamerson Reed has poem included in the 2017Seasonal Issue of River Poets Journal


NCWN-West's member, Betty Reed, has a poem, "Memory's Treasure, "  included in the 2017 Seasonal Issue of River Poets Journal scheduled for the end of December or early January 2018. release.

http://www.riverpoetsjournal.com/

Betty Jamerson Reed, a native of Western North Carolina, enjoys playing with words. Her poems have appeared in Lucidity Poetry Journal, Living with Grief, and Friends Journal, as well as anthologies such as Echoes across the Blue Ridge, (2010), It's All Relative: Tales from the Tree (2016), as well as in the special "Signature (2016) " and "Windows (2017)" anthologies of River Poets. Two of her poems appear in Mountain Mist (2017) She is also the author of two award-winning works of nonfiction: The Brevard Rosenwald School (2004) and School Segregation in Western North Carolina (2011).

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Lucy Cole Gratton is stepping down as Cherokee County Rep

Most of the counties in the NCWN-West Region have two representatives who hold at least one free event each month for writers. In Cherokee County Lucy Cole Gratton has served as one of the representatives. She has been an excellent volunteer for our program, first serving as Publicity Chair and then facilitator for the monthly readings at the John C. Campbell Folk School.
After four years, Lucy is stepping down and the other representative for Cherokee County, Mary Ricketson, will take over facilitating the readings. She will begin soon to schedule guests for the programs which begin in March, 2018.

If you are interested in being on the schedule, contact Mary. The event is held the third Thursday of the month at 7:00 PM. Readers must be current members of the North Carolina Writers’ Network. If you live in one of the nine counties in NC or the bordering counties of South Carolina, Georgia or Tennessee that are part of the NCWN-West region, and you are a member of NCWN, you are eligible to read at the folk school in Brasstown, NC. 

Usually two people are invited for the hour. They are welcome to bring their books for sale. If you have not published a book, don’t worry. I remember my first time reading in 1996 when I had only published a few poems.

Students from all over the United States and sometimes from foreign countries attend, as well as local people in four counties and members of NCWN-West. The readings are publicized in articles in all local newspapers with a bio and a photo. Joan Gage, administrator for our website and blog, www.netwestwriters.blogspot.com also posts articles about the reading. The Network includes these events in their emails to members. The Network wrote a nice article about Lucy on the White Cross blog.

We appreciate, so much, Lucy’s loyalty to NCWN-West and going the extra mile to be sure the audience felt a part of the performance.  As Program Coordinator, it was good to know that she had everything under control even when both readers cancelled just a couple of hours before the reading.

Lucy plans to move down to Atlanta to be near her family, and their gain is our loss. Contact Cherokee County Reps at the email addresses below:
Mary Ricketson- maryricketson311@hotmail.com
Lucy Cole Gratton- lgratton@hughes.net


Program Coordinator for NCWN-West


Thursday, December 14, 2017

Popular YA and Children’s Author, Deanna K. Klingel to be featured at Coffee with the Poets and Writers at the Moss Memorial Library, Hayesville, NC, December 20, 2017, at 10:30 AM



This month at Coffee with the Poets & Writers, the featured author will be Deanna K. Klingel. CWTPW is held at the Moss Memorial Library, 26 Anderson Street, Hayesville, NC. Klingel calls Sapphire Valley, NC home. A compulsive writer all her life, she never sought publication until their seven children were grown and gone from home.


Klingel writes primarily, not exclusively, for young adult readers. She has thirteen books published and others in the que. One of her picture books is available in Spanish, and there are teacher/classroom study guides for two historical fictions. Klingel will be reading from her lastest book: Spirit the Tiny White Reindeer, a children’s book.


Klingel blogs twice a week at booksbydeanna.com, and travels with her books across the South and beyond, appearing at schools, museums, and events. Her books are widely distributed and are available wherever books are sold.


There will be an open mic following the author’s reading. Coffee is provided, and the public is always invited. Coffee with the Poets & Writers is an event sponsored by the North Carolina Writers’ Network-West.