Thursday, March 1, 2018

Mountain Writers of NC, have a book signing every weekend in March 2018, at Blue Ridge Books in Hazelwood, NC



From Mountain Writers of NC, Waynesville, NC:
Every Saturday 2-4 p.m. this month there will be a book signing by MWNC authors at Blue Ridge Books in Waynesville, NC. Drop by & say hi if you can!
March 3: Charley Pearson
March 10: William Everett
March 17: Tom & Polly Davis
March 24: Jacqui Letran
March 31: Darryl Bollinger




(828) 456-6000
428 Hazelwood Ave.
Waynesville, NC 28786
blueridgebooks@ymail.com
 

 

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

New Post on Network blog about Nancy Simpson

Today on http://www.ncwriters.org/whitecross/ you can find a blog post about Nancy Simpson. Remembrances from Janice Moore and Blanche Farley take us back to the days before there was a NCWN or NCWN-West. See photos of Nancy as a young woman who traveled with others to Atlanta to find a place to read her poetry to an audience.

Karen Holmes, outstanding poet and friend to Nancy, writes about Nancy's poetry. I write about how I met Nancy and what she has meant to me as a writer.

If you like poetry and you don't have Nancy's last book, click on the link below to order it.

https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780932112613

Many people are visiting this site to read the interview I did with Nancy in 2003 and to read more recent posts about Nancy. Please leave a comment on this blog or email me, glendabeall@msn.com to express your thoughts.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

NCWN-West's Spring 2018 Flash Fiction Writing Contest call for submissions



Call for Submissions
North Carolina WritersNetworkWest (Network-West)
Spring 2018 Flash Fiction Writing Contest

Whos Eligible: Members of Network-West whose dues are paid up to date.

Original Work: The entry must be the author's original work and not previously published.

Eligible Genres: The entry must be fictional and includes all genres except childrens fiction. Creative non-fiction is not eligible for submission.

Dates: Submissions will be accepted upon receipt of this announcement. All entries must be emailed or postmarked by April 15, 2018.

Entry Fees: An author may enter up to three submissions. A fee of $5.00 must accompany each entry. Entry fees will be used for awarding prizes to the winners.

Length: The word count (excluding the title) may not exceed 1,000 words.

How to Enter: No entry form is required. Electronic and paper entries are acceptable. Handwritten copies cannot be accepted.
To submit by email, copy and paste the manuscript into the body of an email or send the manuscript as an email attachment to novelistapproach@gmail.com
Paper manuscripts and checks for email and paper entry fees should be submitted by mail to Pat Meece Davis, 23 Tutor Lane, Brevard, NC, 28712.
An author may enter up to three manuscripts, but each entry must be submitted separately with a $5.00 fee for each.

Authors Identifying Info: The author's identifying information and manuscript title should appear on the subject line of the email or on a separate sheet of paper if entering by mail. No identifying information should be on the manuscript.

Judges: Judging will be non-biased. Writersidentities will not be shared with the judges.
  
Agreement to Publish on the Network-West blog: By entering this contest, the author agrees that Network-West may publish the winning entry/entries on its website. Each winner will be asked to provide a short one-paragraph biography to accompany the published manuscript.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Cherry Mountain

Cherry Mountain
In memory of:  Poet Nancy Simpson


Above the frost line
on Cherry Mountain,
daffodils spread a quilt


on Valentine's Day.
The rain crow cooing
above the frost line.


A breeze whispers your name,
muse flowing like a brook
on Cherry Mountain.


The mountain writer
leaves a legacy of words,
daffodils spread a Lone Star quilt.


              --Brenda Kay Ledford


Nancy was a dear friend.  Like many other writers, I studied poetry under her.  She was a mentor to many people and always encouraged us to express our creativity.  We will miss her very much.

Monday, February 19, 2018

Great Opportunities for all at NCWN-West Bookfest

NCWN-West is holding a Bookfest

Where: Moss Memorial Library   26 Anderson St, Hayesville, NC 28904

When: Saturday, March 24, noon until 4:00 PM.

Who is invited: Everyone!!

ADMISSION: FREE TO ALL

Ten or more authors, members of NCWN-West, will be on hand to sign books, to talk with the public about publishing and marketing, and to give tips and advice based on their own experiences in the literary world.

Participating authors are eligible for drawing for one year's paid dues to North Carolina Writers' Network.

Drawings for door prizes will be held  throughout the afternoon including a free writing class at Writers Circle around the Table in Hayesville, NC and free editing by Carol Crawford of up to thirty pages of your writing.

Refreshments will be offered.

Speakers include:
 Deanna K. Klingel: author of  books for young and young-at-heart readers. Deanna’s first published book, Just for the Moment: The Remarkable Gift of the Therapy Dog, 2010, was inspired by her own golden retriever therapy dogs and is a collection of moments that the dogs made a difference in other people’s lives.

Carol Crawford: Poet and author of Habits of Mercy, Poems about Daughters and Mothers. She is owner of Carol Crawford Editing,

 Polly Davis: Writer, author, college professor, mother of two, and world traveler. Her recent memoir is Stumbling Toward Enlightenment: A Wife's Thirty-year Journey with Her Green Beret

 Tom Davis: A writer, publisher of the Old Mountain Press, and 30 year military veteran. Tom’s memoir covers it all!.The Most Fun I Ever Had with My Clothes On.

Lisa Turner: Newspaper columnist and author of House Keys: Tips & Tricks from a Female Home Inspector. This book won Writers' Digest award for best self-published eBook.


Carol Crawford, editor and writer

Lisa Turner, award winning author

Polly Davis, author

Tom Davis, writer and publisher

Deanna Klingel, award winning author


Contact Glenda Beall, glendabeall@msn.com with any questions or for more information.

A Poet of Distinction, Nancy Simpson

It was with a very sad heart that I heard the news I had feared hearing today. My mentor and teacher, Nancy Simpson, poet and co-founder of NCWN-West, passed away today, February 17, 2018. She had been ill for a few months and had surgery at Emory Hospital.
We will miss her advice, her knowledge of our history and the journey she traveled to bring writing and publishing opportunities to those who lived where the difficult terrain of these mountains made it hard to find, and form a writing community. She was a strong advocate for those of us who were being short-changed because of where we lived. She was often a force to be reckoned with when she saw discrepancies in the way the poets and writers here in our area, back in the nineties, seemed to be ignored although we paid the same dues as those in the Piedmont area.
Nancy Simpson was a poet of distinction. Her poems appeared in the best journals. She authored three poetry books, Night Student, Across Water and Living Above the Frost Line, New and Selected Poems published by Carolina Wren Press (N.C. Laureate Series, 2010.)  With the late Kathryn Stripling Byer, Nancy Simpson went to the leaders of NCWN and the NC Arts Council to insist they bring to us a program which we have used for more than twenty-five years to form a writing community that has grown in number and in quality of work published. At first the program stumbled when the original program coordinator moved away. But Nancy Simpson stepped in and dedicated her time and energy for thirteen years as program coordinator and kept NCWN-West working for all of us. 
As many of us who enrolled in classes with Nancy at Tri-County Community College can attest, she gave generously of herself to her students. With Nancy's mentoring we fell in love with poetry as she had. In my first class with Nancy at the John C. Campbell Folk School, I shyly handed her some verses I had written. "Is this a poem?" I asked. She read it, smiled, and said, "Yes, this is a poem."
Within a year I had submitted and had published several poems. So many of us in Clay and Cherokee Counties in North Carolina and Towns and Union Counties in Georgia owe Nancy Simpson more than we could ever repay.

As program coordinator, she always had two representatives in the eight counties of NC, and the north Georgia region when she had only the telephone with which to communicate to those members so far from where she lived. All counties were involved through their representatives. This was before there were any regional reps for NCWN. Unlike in a city, writing groups were scarce in our area.


Nancy taught us how to hold a critique group where everyone respected each other and no one was rudely treated, verbally attacked, or made to feel they did not belong. She was a teacher and a leader. She helped to create professional critique groups for our members. This brought writers from miles away who were looking for that kind of group.

As a teacher of writing now, I refer to my notes from Nancy's classes in 1995, 1996, and later. I pass on the teachings of my mentor, my friend. Even after she resigned as program coordinator, she stayed involved with NCWN-West. She edited our last anthology, Echoes Across the Blue Ridge, which sold nearly 2,000 copies.

Nancy Simpson was also a special needs teacher in the schools in Hayesville, NC. After teaching all day, she drove two hours one way at night to Warren Wilson College to earn her masters degree.


The death of her son from cancer was a devastating blow. I believe that was when her health began to fail. While grieving her loss, she worked day and night on Echoes Across the Blue Ridge. It was a big undertaking for someone who was in mourning. She was proud of the book and so were we all. 
She spent so much of her time encouraging and teaching others, that she fell behind in publishing her own books of poetry. When her last book was submitted to a press, I heard that the editor was not eager to publish it because of Nancy's age. Her age was not the problem. It was her health. Sadly, by the time the book came out, Nancy was not strong enough to travel and do book signings. Although all of us who knew her treasured that book, if she had been able to travel across the state so many more people would own one of them. The book is still available  Here.

To know more about this outstanding woman, visit her blog. She had the most gorgeous flower garden and joyed in sharing pictures with her readers. Read her poetry and learn from this poet who published in all the major journals and was highly respected by editors and publishers, not only in North Carolina, but from California to Maine.

While Nancy Simpson is not with us physically we will always carry with us the memories of her teaching, her mentoring and her love for poetry.

Glenda Barrett, one of Nancy's poetry students,  and Nancy Simpson