Sunday, October 31, 2021

Glenda Beall interviews Ed Southern



We appreciate the Executive Director of NCWN and author of Fight Songs, Ed Southern taking the time to answer these questions. I have read this book considered one of the best sportsbooks you will read, and found it is all about the south and our southern fanaticism about college football as well as our history. Although I am not a sports fan, I found it totally engaging and it kept me reading page after page. Be sure you join us on Zoom when Ed is featured on Writers' Night Out, sponsored by NC Writers' Network-West, November 12, 7:00 PM. Contact me at glendabeall@msn.com if you want to sign up for Open Mic that evening.

GLENDA: I grew up in a male-dominated household that loved sports. I never played team sports and am not a football fan. Please tell me why someone like me will enjoy your book.

ED: Fight Songs isn’t really about sports. It’s about the roles that sports play in our culture and in our lives, and how and why they took on those roles. I like to think that anyone with an interest in the South would enjoy this book.

GLENDA: Your wife, Jamie, is a huge football fan and she is from Alabama. Your love story is told throughout the book. How did she influence you as a football fan?

ED: My football fandom was pretty well fully formed by the time we met, but she certainly reinforced it. Watching football and reading are our only two shared hobbies.

GLENDA:  Some of the men in my family, when UGA lost a game, said it ruined the entire following week for them.  Are you the kind of fan who takes losing this seriously?

ED: I can’t be: I’m a Wake Forest fan. Wake lost way too many games for me to let them ruin my entire week. I’d have never had a good week growing up.

GLENDA: You say that NC is more of a basketball state than a football state. Why are sports fans in NC more interested in basketball?

ED: Well, you have to read Fight Songs to get the full story, but the short answer is that NC college basketball teams won national championships, and college football teams didn’t. The question then is, Why?

GLENDA: North Carolina is known for great writers, its higher education and medical centers. In your book, you say that some southern sports fans claim that NC is not really a southern state and the south ends with South Carolina. How is NC different from the deep south states?

ED: The short answer is, one, NC didn’t have as large or as powerful an antebellum plantation aristocracy as the Deep South states; and, two, the state had a longer time between its “frontier” period and the Civil War. Really, though, we’re not all that different than the Deep South. We just managed to avoid having demagogues in our governor’s mansion during the Civil Rights Movement. We managed to keep a better public image.

 GLENDA: My husband, Barry, was obsessed with college football and particularly the SEC. He taught my niece to love and understand the game of football. It is hard for me to understand the passion men have for the sport and harder to understand it in women. Does it have anything to do with the male ego or does it have to do with belonging to a group of like-minded men?

ED: I’m sure male ego has a lot to do with it for some men. I’m sure the sense of belonging – which can be healthy or unhealthy – has a lot to do with it for some people, male and female. 

I love it for many reasons. I love how the game combines great intricacy of technique and tactics with brute force and raw speed. I love that it’s usually played outdoors, in the fall. I love how you find a story – a set-up, rising suspense, climax, and resolution – not only in every game, but in every snap of the ball, and in every season as a whole. I love the sense of community I feel, and how it connects me with my friends and family.

 GLENDA: Fight Songs, your book, began as an essay but became a highly praised book. Will you tell us how this happened and how a fun little love story about sports, became what is called “one of the greatest sports books you will ever read?”

ED: My editor at Blair, Robin Miura, also edits an online magazine called South Writ Large. I spoke to her about the essay for SWL. She passed on it but asked if I’d be interested in expanding the essay into a book. I didn’t think there was enough there for a book, but she convinced me otherwise, and she was right.

GLENDA: You say that football is a game of violence and basketball is a game of assertion. I don’t enjoy football because I abhor the violence on the field and the violent language in the stands. Since deep south fans seem to be rabid about football, is it the violence, the physical damage done to the players that intrigue them?

ED: For some, I’d imagine that it is. Some may be sadists who like watching damage done to others. Some may imagine the players as their avatars, inflicting damage on their behalf. I don’t think that’s limited to football fans in the Deep South.

I think what appeals more in the South is how football embodies notions of domination and honor, notions that held sway in most of the South long before anyone saw a football.

GLENDA: There is talk lately of paying college football players who earn millions of dollars for the colleges where they play. If they get hurt playing for their college team and can never play professional ball, their hopes of earning anything from the game are doomed. In your research did you find support for this and what do you think?

ED: Yes, public opinion has turned in favor of paying college athletes. College football and men’s basketball have generated tremendous revenue for decades, but that revenue has grown exponentially since the 1980s, with the rise of TV contracts. It’s way past time for the players to get a fair share of that.

GLENDA: Will you tell us how the COVID-19 pandemic influenced sports and the fans. What were the major effects, and will they last after the pandemic is finally over?

ED: Again, you really have to read the book to get the full answer to that. The pandemic influenced some fans greatly. They began taking sports less seriously, willingly stayed away from games, even lost their fandom entirely. Others, though, weren’t influenced by the pandemic at all. They saw it as an inconvenience, keeping them from watching their beloved games.

I think the widespread effects will not last, once the pandemic ends. I think the effects on individuals might.

GLENDA: You are just coming off a book tour.  Did your publisher schedule the tour or did you plan and pay for it?

ED: My publisher and I worked together to plan it, and they scheduled it.

GLENDA: What did you like and what did you dislike about the tour?

ED: I loved visiting people and places I hadn’t seen in a while, and I was humbled by readers’ enthusiasm for this book. I disliked touring during a pandemic, which was fraught with fears and doubts.

GLENDA: Do you have a certain place and/or time when you write?

ED: I usually write early in the morning, before anyone else has woken up. I like the quiet.

GLENDA: Thank you, Ed, so much for giving us your time to answer these questions. We appreciate your being our guest on Writers’ Night Out, November 12. I am sure our members and others will want to meet you and hear more about this interesting book.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, October 30, 2021

Carole Thompson - Poem accepted for publication in November

Congratulations to Carole Thompson resident of Union County, Georgia who has been a member and supporter of NCWN-West for many years.  While grieving the passing of her husband, she wrote and submitted a poem. 

Carole Thompson

This is what Carole said, "I was so pleased to receive the good news that my poem, “Sounds of Life” has been accepted for publication in the November 2021 issue of POEM , the Literary Association’s Journal out of Huntsville, AL. They only print 2 journals a year, so I was surprised I heard back from them in only a month.  Just wrote this poem a couple of months ago." 

Carole's poems, fiction, and narrative nonfiction have been published in magazines, journals, and reviews. She also published Enough, a book of poems.

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Ledford's Story Published


 Brenda Kay Ledford (left) and her mom, (Blanche L. Ledford).


Brenda Kay Ledford's story about her mother, "Pennies From Heaven," has been published  on the "Daily Inspired Life," website.

dailyinspiredlife.com/nothing-can-separate-us-by-brenda-kay-ledford



Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Jackson County Open Mic for November--save the date!

The Jackson County group of the North Carolina Writers' Network-West, supported by the splendid City Lights Bookstore in Sylva, will host its monthly Open Mic night via Zoom at 7:15 on Friday, November 19th.  If you'd like to attend, listen, and/or read, please e-mail Jackson County reps Matt Nelson (mattnelson.poet01@gmail.com) or Catherine Carter (ccarter@email.wcu.edu) to request it.  We were Zoom-bombed last time, and though Matt's quick work evicted the trolls in less than a minute, it wasn't pretty--so if you do request and receive the link from us, please don't give it to anyone whose identity you aren't sure or, or publish it online.  Thanks!  We hope to see you in the virtual world!

Friday, October 22, 2021

Ed Southern, Guest for Writers' Night Out November 12

 Ed Southern author of the highly praised book, Fight SongsA Story of Love and Sports in a Complicated South.



This meeting will be on Zoom so all of our members will be able to attend. Get your questions ready for Ed. This is his fourth book.

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Congratulations to Tipper Pressley whose YouTube channel reached 100,000 subscribers recently.

Estelle Rice, writer and member of NCWN-West and Katie Pressley at Coffee with the Poets in 2007. Katie read a poem that day. Now she is a grown young woman with many talents.

Tipper is a writer who publishes a post on her blog, Blind Pig and the Acorn every day. Her mission is to show the world how wonderful is life in these mountains and to keep the Appalachian way of life alive for generations to come. She researches and uses natives of this area to inform her readers about the old ways of cooking, gardening, playing music, and so many other things. She has a huge following for her blog, but since she went to YouTube and has made it her full-time job, her readers are from all over the world. 

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP87Uu3q9IDUpEl1xr8-VQA


Tipper Pressley

Tipper helped me with my first blog and has been a friend for many years.

I watched her twin daughters grow up and now they are known as The Pressley Girls who play guitar and fiddle and sing at events all over our region. 

I am so, so happy for this lovely family and the success they have found doing what they really like to do.

Subscribe to the YouTube channel or check out the Blind Pig and the Acorn. You will be glad you did.


www.glendacouncilbeall.com

www.riceandbeall.blogspot.com 

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Lorraine Bennett, native of western North Carolina, writes a thriller

Lorraine Bennett

Congratulations to Lorraine Bennett who has written a psychological thriller titled Cat on a Black Moon. It is the story of an Atlanta television anchorwoman who is being stalked by a cult run by a sinister and deranged ex-flower child from the 1960s. For those who read thrillers, this fits the bill.

Lorraine signed a contract with New York publishing company, Austin Macauley (London, Cambridge, NY, United Arab Emirates and e-books) to publish her novel. This is a hybrid publishing company where many first-time authors have found success. 

Lorraine grew up in Murphy, NC, graduated with her high school class journalism medal and received a scholarship to UNC-Chapel Hill. 
Her career began on the Atlanta Journal where she covered news and met her husband. His job took them west. She was hired by the Los Angeles Times and became the newspaper’s first woman to head a domestic bureau.

The Bennetts returned to Atlanta and she joined fledgling CNN as a news writer. She became copy editor, producer, and editorial manager before ending her career at CNN International.
She retired in 2006 and built a farmhouse on Martins Creek family land. She is writing a sequel to her first novel. 

We look forward to learning more about Lorraine's book and her publishing journey.






Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Brenda Kay Ledford's Poetry Published


 Brenda Kay Ledford's poetry, ""Ode to the Sunflower," and "Frozen," were published in Poets' Espresso Review, Summer 2021 issue.  This journal is a San Joaquin Delta College Writers' Guild Publication.

For more information:  www.poetsespressoreview.com

Patricia Ann Mayorga, editor-in-chief

Poets' Espresso Review

Friday, October 8, 2021

Jackson County Open Mic Friday, October 22nd, 7:15, on Zoom

 The Jackson County group of the North Carolina Writers' Network-West, supported by the splendid City Lights Bookstore in Sylva, will host its monthly Open Mic night via Zoom at 7:15 on Friday, October 22nd.  If you'd like to attend, listen, and/or read, please e-mail Jackson County reps Matt Nelson (mattnelson.poet01@gmail.com) or Catherine Carter (ccarter@email.wcu.edu) to request it.  We were Zoom-bombed last time, and though Matt's quick work evicted the trolls in less than a minute, it wasn't pretty--so if you do request and receive the link from us, please don't give it to anyone whose identity you aren't sure or, or publish it online.  Thanks!  We hope to see you in the virtual world!

Opportunity: Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poetry Series

 The North Carolina Poetry Society offers students (and one adult) in our area a semester of free one-on-one study with a respected poet through the Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet Series, which provides mentors for emerging poets between January and May of 2022.

 

Distinguished Poet Dr. Kenneth Chamlee will work with four aspiring poets, ideally one from middle school, high school, and college, plus an adult selected from 32 counties in western North Carolina. This period of individual study and critique culminates in a reading with the Distinguished Poet and the other students, usually at Western Carolina University during the annual Spring Literary Festival. 

 

If you all know of a middle school, high school, or college student who's really interested in writing poetry, please encourage them to apply!  And if you're an adult poet who'd enjoy this opportunity, please apply yourself!  The deadline for  applications is November 15, 2021.  Find more information on the application process at https://www.ncpoetrysociety.org/gcdps/. Email applications to caleb.gcdps@gmail.com, or mail applications to:

 

Caleb Beissert

Attn: Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet Series

123 Forest Hill Drive

Asheville, NC 28803

 

Monday, October 4, 2021

Oct 8 Seattle Poet: Online Reading, Discussion, and Open Mic

Writers' Night Out - Oct 8, 7 p.m.

Online Reading + Discussion... + Open Mic via ZOOM

"What teaching poetry to children has taught me about writing."
with Debby Bacharach, poet, editor, & teacher

Debby Bacharach is the author of Shake & Tremor (Grayson Books, 2021) and After I Stop Lying (Cherry Grove Collections, 2015).  

Her poems and essays have been published in journals nationally and internationally, including Midwest Quarterly, Poetry Ireland Review, Vallum, Cimarron Review, New Letters, and Poet Lore, and she has received a Pushcart prize honorable mention.  Debby has been the featured reader at poetry readings in Boston, Oberlin, Seattle, South Bend, and Minneapolis.

Educated at Swarthmore College and the University of Minnesota, Debby lives in Seattle with her family. She is a college writing instructor, editor, and tutor and teaches poetry workshops for children.  Find out more about her at DeborahBacharach.com.

For Zoom link and Open Mic sign-up, email 
Glenda: glendabeall@msn.com



Writers' Night Out is a
North Carolina Writers' Network-West event
on the second Friday of every month.

We will continue via Zoom for now. 
 
Sometime we hope to continue in person at our new location:
The Ridges Resort on Lake Chatuge 
so please check your email.
 
But don't wait, join the fun and camaraderie on Zoom! 

Upcoming guests:
Nov 12: Ed Southern, NCWN Executive Director & Author
Ed's new book is Fight Songs: A Story of Love & Sports in a Complicated South

December, January, February: winter break

Sunday, October 3, 2021

Poet Pat Revere-Seel launches new book

 


Pat Riviere-Seel
recently appeared as a guest on Mountain Wordsmiths on Zoom. We enjoyed her talk and enjoyed her poetry. She has invited us to join her on Zoom for the launch of her new book on October 7. 

Come celebrate with me at my virtual book launch for When There Were Horses -  on October 7, 7-8 pm  Check my website - http://www.patriviereseel.com on the Events page for the invitation. 

 Hosted by the marvelous Malaika King Albrecht and Redheaded Stepchild, there will be an open-mic after my reading, so bring a poem to share. 

Isn't it wonderful? No matter where you live, you can attend online, meet writers and poets from other parts of our state and out of state.

 


Saturday, October 2, 2021

Mary Ricketson's new book, Lira, poems of a Woodland Woman

 

“Covered in this canopy of oak and maple, basking in soft breezes of summer,

Lira wakes to a day unrevealed, listens, reaches, sets the tempo.

Spirits invite her to live like last night’s doe, dance a jig through tall field grass, be the wind.”

Mary says, "This collection of poems centers around a fictional character who may be a little bit like me, and definitely very much a fantasy, an escape into the reality of life entwined with the natural world."

Order from Redhawk Publications:

https://redhawkpublications.company.site/Lira-Poems-of-a-Woodland-Woman-p393672533

Also available at Curiosity Bookstore in Murphy NC or City Lights Bookstore in Sylva NC.

The Lira Poems, Mary Ricketson’s latest book, certainly speaks toward enchantment. The poems enrapture ethereally with the little natural creatures on the ground – the deer, the rabbit, squirrel, the turkey and the dove – and the birds circling high over Lira’s garden, especially the red-tailed hawk. To see and imagine this “ceremony of embrace” tunes one to Nature, to the fairies, the weather changes, even as we feel ourselves participate, without intrusion, in the routine beauty of the lines, the daily walks with doggies and each of these lovely creatures. The book triumphs in that very special way of seeing a there there, and, then, again, inside the heart. The news? How marvelous to be alive! --Shelby Stephenson was poet laureate of North Carolina from 2015-2018. For thirty-two years he was editor of Pembroke Magazine. His recent books are More and Shelby's Lady: The Hog Poems.

 In Lira, Ricketson steps into a world of magic; magic made possible by Nature. Lira, who early on wishes for everything “pink,” meets her prince, and after the two kiss, “pink roses still bloom.” But this collection is much more than a young girl’s typical dream. Instead, it’s a fairytale where Mother Nature is a Godmother, teaching Lira how to live through her interaction with trees, seedlings, deer, and fox -- all who become her family. These family members help her “weave a life of purpose,” where “bites of misunderstanding resolve” by Rose Creek. Both hardship and beauty befall Lira, who, by virtue of keen eye and imagination, wins the respect of the Red-Tailed Hawk. A must-read, full of sounds, imagery, and flat-out magic.  -- Rosemary Royston, author of Second Sight, and Splitting the Soil

While reading Mary Ricketson's, Lira, I felt I was an innocent, care-free young girl in some sort of fairy tale world wondering along in the forest. The book is filled with exquisite images, which Mary so easily reveals because she has a deep, personal knowledge of the mountains. However, if you read it closely, you will see there is a deeper, more serious meaning to these poems. To me, this is where the true beauty lies in this bittersweet book so well written. I can promise you this will be a special
and lovely read
.    --Glenda Barrett, author of, When the Sap Rises, and The Beauty of Silence

Take an enchanting journey in Mary Ricketson’s latest poetry book, Lira. Magic tumbles over changing seasons at Cherry Cove Creek. Lira befriends trees, makes family with animals, rambles in wildflower rapture. Gnomes and fairies are her playmates. Butterflies and bluebirds dance and a red tailed hawk hovers. Ricketson is an award-winning wordsmith inspired by the healing power of nature. This book is a delightful read!

Saturday, September 25, 2021

The Big Share: Alternative Forms of Publication in a Digital Age

On Tuesday, October 21, at 7:00 pm EST, writer, editor, and teacher Katie Winkler will lead the online class "The Big Share: Alternative Forms of Publication in a Digital Age."

 If you are enjoying the online classes available to writers, as I am, you can check out this one by Katie Winkler. The fee is only $35 for NCWN members. If you are a member of Netwest (NCWN-West) you are also a member of NCWN, so you get the discounted price. 

We all want to know the best ways to reach readers of our work and this workshop is designed to help us. 

https://www.ncwriters.org/index.php/our-members/network-news/12288-online-winkler




Sunday, September 19, 2021

Poet Pat Riviere-Seel to be Featured Reader for Mountain Wordsmiths



Noted poet and writer Pat Riviere-Seel will be the featured reader for Mountain Wordsmiths on Thursday morning, September 23, at 10:30 a.m. This event, sponsored by North Carolina Writers’ Network-West, is being held via Zoom because of COVID concerns. We hope to meet again in person soon; however, we are happy that not only local writers are attending our meetings but writers outside our state as well.

Riviere-Seel’s most recent poetry collection, When There Were Horses, is scheduled for release in the fall of 2021. Her previous collections include Nothing Below but AirThe Serial Killer’s Daughter, and No Turning Back Now. 

The Serial Killer’s Daughter won the North Carolina Literary and Historical Society’s Roanoke Chowan Book Award and Nothing Below but Air was a semifinalist for the Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award. The Serial Killer’s Daughter has been staged by Shared Radiance Performing Arts Company and performed as a one-act play.

 

Riviere-Seel taught poetry classes for UNC Asheville’s Great Smokies Writing Program for 15 years. She served as the North Carolina Poetry Society’s Distinguished Poet in the Western Region from 2016-2018. The program pairs student poets with an established poet for one-on-one mentoring.

 

In 2017 she received the “Charlie Award” from the Carolina Mountains Literary Festival held in Burnsville, NC. The annual award recognizes a writer who has made significant contributions as a writer and a community builder. In 2012 she held a unique position as poet-in-residence at the North Carolina Zoo. As part of the residency, she wrote a poem for the zoo. Her poem “Summer Solstice” is on display at the black bear exhibit.

 

Her poems were first published when she was an undergraduate at North Carolina State University. After graduation, Riviere-Seel worked as a newspaper journalist, publicist, and as lobbyist for nonprofit organizations in the Maryland State House.

 

She and her husband live in the woods and tend to two black cats they adopted from Brother Wolf, a no-kill animal shelter in Asheville.

Mountain Wordsmiths meets on the fourth Thursday of each month. 

We welcome those who were regulars at Coffee with the Poets and Writers which met at Moss Memorial Library prior to COVID-19 restrictions. Those wishing to attend Mountain Wordsmiths may contact Carroll Taylor at vibiaperpetua@gmail.com to receive the Zoom link.

Members of NCWN-West will receive the Zoom link in an email before the meeting.

Anyone who wishes to participate in Open Mic may sign up upon entering the meeting, and we welcome those who would simply like to listen to the beauty of wordsmithing.

 

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Celebrating Writers in Hiawassee, GA with the Appalachian Mural Trail

 


Library Mural Unveiling




"Storybook Lane," a new outdoor Postage Stamp Mural produced by the Appalachian Mural Trail, is scheduled for unveiling at 2:00 in the afternoon on Friday, September 24, 2021. The public is invited. The event takes place outside the Towns County Library, at 99 South Berrong Street Hiawassee, Georgia, telephone: 706-896-6169.

The colorful 7 feet high "Storybook Lane" mural creates a fantasy world of children's book characters from local children's book authors Marcia Hawley Barnes, Brenda Kay Ledford, Amy Ammons Garza and Carroll S. Taylor. The mural is designed to 'save the books.'

"Created to encourage children to actually pick up a book and read, the mural will help return children's interest towards books," says Artist & Appalachian Mural Trail Director, Doreyl Ammons Cain. "The mural should last for decades."

Cain painted the mural and also illustrated the four children's books included in the mural. The mural is painted on MDO art board using mural paint that will last for decades with a protective clear coat that ensures longevity.

The Towns County Library is hosting the outside mural unveiling, which includes outside storytelling, refreshments and meet & greet the Artist & Authors. Both the artist and the authors are displaying books and art to view and purchase safely.

The Towns County Library is scheduled to be featured on the Appalachian Mural Trail where the mural is showcased so that folks can read about and find directions to the mural. Check out muraltrail.com where over 125 murals are featured for people to visit and view 24 hours a day.

Image Attached, a small detail of "Storybook Lane" art by Doreyl Ammons Cain Director, Appalachian Mural Trail.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Call for Submissions from Old Mountain Press

 Old Mountain Press (OMP) is accepting submissions for Holiday Cheer PREVIOUS CONTRIBUTORS ONLY OR SOMEONE RECOMMENDED BY A PREVIOUS CONTRIBUTOR. Previously published okay. Each contributor whose work will appear in this anthology can recommend TWO writers to submit to this anthology. Someone whose work you would like included with yours–maybe right beside yours:-).


See http://www.oldmp.com/anthology/holiday-cheer.htm here you will also find guidelines and the link to an online submission form.

To indicate text to be put in italics use <your text>. To indicate bold use [your text]

View camera-ready copy of all submissions accepted so far at: http://www.oldmp.com/anthology/review/holiday-cheer.pdf


Holiday Cheer’s THEME: Anything relating to the holidays:  Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hanukkah, New Years, Valentine's Day or fall/autumn or winter.

I will accept submissions until noon on 15 October or when I have 70 contributors.

There is no reading fee, no entry fee, and no requirement for a contributor to purchase this anthology. As always, contributors will be able to purchase copies at a reduced rate. Previously published okay if you have retained rights.

Of interest to writers:
The Punctuation Guide. An excellent reference site! When to use em and en dashes and more!
https://www.thepunctuationguide.com/

ALL past OMP Anthologies are now available as Kindle and/or Nook. See http://www.oldmp.com/e-book/#anthologies  Feel free to pass the link to your friends and family!


Tom Davis
Publisher
Old Mountain Press
910-476-2542

View OMP eBooks for Kindle and NOOK at http://www.oldmp.com/e-book

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Jackson NCWN-West Open Mic, Friday, September 17th, 7:00 p.m.

Fellow writers, the Jackson County branch of NCWN-West is holding its monthly online Open Mic on Friday, September 17th, at 7:00 pm (half an hour earlier than last month.)  Length of time for each reader depends on how many readers we get.  The Open Mic is organized and hosted by Jackson County co-rep Matt Nelson; if you want to join us, please e-mail Matt at mattnelson.poet01@gmail.com for the Zoom link, or Catherine Carter at ccarter@email.wcu.edu.  Western-region writers from beyond Jackson are welcome.  We hope to see you there!

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

The Backstory of a Poem

From inspiration to revision to publishing...

First conceived in a workshop with poets Dorianne Laux and Joseph Millar, the poem, "A White Room, A Piano," then went on a journey. 

The website, Art and Humanity Framed in the Photofeature Story, features the backstory of poems, where writer/artist Christal Rice Cooper interviews poets about their step-by-step process. To see how my poem came about... and where it went, you can read the article here. You'll find lots of photos and links too.