THIS BLOG IS NO LONGER OPERATIONAL. PLEASE ENJOY WHAT IS HERE, AND DO LEAVE A COMMENT IF YOU WISH. NORTH CAROLINA'S NEW POET LAUREATE IS CATHY SMITH BOWERS. SHE WILL SOON HAVE HER OWN WEBSITE THROUGH THE NORTH CAROLINA ARTS COUNCIL SITE. I WILL BE SHIFTING MY ATTENTION TO HERE, WHERE I AM, (SEE SIDEBAR)USING IT TO DRAW ATTENTION TO WRITERS WHOSE WORK DESERVES ATTENTION. I INVITE YOU TO VISIT ME THERE.

For a video of the installation ceremony, please go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xAk6fOzaNE.

HERE, WHERE I AM HAS BEEN NAMED ONE OF THE 30 BEST POETRY BLOGS.

How a Poem Happens: http://www.howapoemhappens.blogspot.com/

Go to http://www.yourdailypoem.com/, managed with finesse by Jayne Jaudon Ferrer, who says, "Our intent is to make visitors to Your Daily Poem aware of the joy and diversity of poetry."

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

SUNSET FIRE




We should have a beautiful sunset this New Year's Eve. The sky has been completely clear, with fierce wind sending our dogs terrified onto the porch, eager to come in. Me, too, hurrying in with table cloths and other laundry from the line, having left them overnight, forgetful as always. The trees on the ridge looked about to come tumbling down. A lawn chair fled across the lawn. Branches creaked and thrashed.

Safely inside, I looked up Frank O'Hara's poems and wanted to share a couple of stanzas from "Animals." I don't plan to watch the big Times Square celebration tonight. And I don't really like champagne. What to do? Read poetry. Maybe Frank O'Hara.



"Have you forgotten what we were like then
when we were still first rate
and the day came fat with an apple in its mouth

it's no use worrying about Time
but we did have a few tricks up our sleeves
and turned some sharp corners..."

from ANIMALS

Time is the sunset fire we burn inside. That burns inside us. Around every sharp corner there it is.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Sándor Kányádi: Brief Encounter with Cartagena (two days before the New Year)



(Sándor Kányádi)

The last few days have settled atop me like a dreary blanket. If only the sun would shine. If only I could be walking along a beach with bright blue stretching beyond me. Somewhere in the gloom rise up a few lines from the Hungarian poet Sándor Kányádi, whose work I've promised myself to read in the new year. Not that our Blue Ridge Mountains have been icy, as Sandor describes the Carpathians. But lately they have seemed gray and overbearing. Or is this an internal landscape I'm describing? Sometimes it's hard to distinguish between the two.

And then my husband turns on CNN and like Kányádi I want a gulp of light and color and hope, more than one gulp, actually. The reference to the Spanish Poet Federico Garcia Lorca, his voice a broken string, murdered in an olive grove by fascists, makes me want to call out, despite everything, with this Hungarian poet about whom I know nothing, to a place within a country suffering its own internal horrors---Cartagena, Cartagena!

And I marvel, yet again, at how a poet from another country, writing in a language indescribably difficult and unknown by most English speakers, could move me at a time like this--the beginning of another year with its unknowable terrors and challenges. How the voice of poetry continues to call out to us, beseeching us to answer, however we can.
 

"one gulp of your light and color
will be plentiful enough
in the icy Carpathians
to gild my remaining years with love"



Brief Encounter with Cartagena
(Románc)
        

Composed by a Hungarian traveling singer
        on a broken string of Federico Garcia Lorca


Plowing water with one wing
the airplane started flying low
till among lagoons it came
upon a landing strip aglow;
the sky was brightly bubbling blue,
the ground became a green concave
when the plane bumped down to land
letting its engines roar and rave,
the tiny little huts on stilts
tucked their scanty shadows in,
rattling like flea-market toys,
wind-up frogs, made out of tin,
earth in sky and blue in green,
each lived in the other’s face
with a drunken-love embrace,
and the sign said: Cartagena.
A noon like that I’d never seen,
fired by a flaming sun,
in it bushes, bays, and huts
mingled in erotic fun;
the plane stopped there a half an hour,
the time it takes to birth a child
or inter an unknown dead
found abandoned in the wild,
but in that time you seduced me
and since then kept me in your thrall,
I dream of life in one of your huts,
forgotten by and forgetting all;
atop the staircase rolled up to
the stranded plane I plainly saw
that your earth and sky, green and blue,
were mine to drink, oh, Cartagena.
Taking off I felt quite sure
the vibration of each hut
had a loving couple in it,
belly to belly, butt to butt.
Oh, why did we have to part,
why didn’t you tighten your embrace?
Now every season is a winter
and snow surrounds me every place.
I’d give my soul, my salvation,
for just one of your sultry nights,
I’d gladly exchange eternity
for one moment of your delights!
This love has made a fool of me,
a loving fool who sobbingly writes
about his fear he’ll never see
his love again, oh, Cartagena.
But one gulp of your light and color
will be plentiful enough
in the icy Carpathians
to gild my remaining years with love;
what we have is but a pale
imitation of your sun,
it rises and sets reminding me
of the brightness now long gone.
Oh, your blue and green, you Siren
of the Caribbean Sea,
your blinding light has forever
etched your magic name in me;
to gringos you’re a travel poster
but to me a love come true,
I often catch me calling you,
Cartagena, Cartagena.

Translated by Paul Sohar

Monday, December 22, 2008

A Sheaf of Christmas Poems



Going through old computer files yesterday, I found these Christmas poems, originally part of the manuscript that became BLACK SHAWL. I saw Mary in these pieces as being here in the NC mountains rather than being a young girl in Nazareth over 2000 years ago. The reader at LSU Press suggested they be dropped, that they functioned better as a small chapbook of poems to be published later. They've waited ever since. As well as I can remember, they were first printed years ago in a journal whose poetry editor was my friend Janice Townley Moore. The Georgia Journal, I believe was its name. Anyway, here they are again, two days before another Christmas. The photos come from sunsets in S. Georgia and holly bushes, as well as waxing and full moons, here in the mountains.



BLUE

is her color
because it was always the last
thing she saw through

her window before losing
count of the heddle’s
beat. Blue hem

beyond reach, she
dreamed herself
wearing it, skirt flaring

out of the narrow glass
where she saw turning
and turning her own image

till in a swoon
she might gather up into the blue
lap of heaven

the stars and the moon
as if they were no more than
the first fruits of May,

the wild strawberries
she loved to eat as she carried
them home to her table.








AVE



This wind!
She cannot hold her bonnet
against it and lets go
the sashes. A kite of blue
calico sails away over
the fields while a child laughs
and points at the spectacle,
blustery March making light
of her modesty till not a hairpin’s
left clinging, her heavy braids
tumbling like bell-ropes
around her. So here she stands,
skirt swelling forth in its manifold
emptiness, as if she’s come
to the edge of a sea
and hears far out a voice
calling, gull maybe,
though she lives nowhere near
water and she knows her name
is not BEATA.






OH MARIA, MARIS STELLA


what have we made of you,
when you were happy enough to be suckling
your baby, ignoring the tumult of heaven,
the scuffle of shepherd’s feet.
Wise men on camels meant little to you,
their frankincense, myrrh.
You could take it or leave it.

What good what it do you
whose only concern was the milk you felt
slowly beginning to thicken your breasts?
Or the worry that Joseph had not eaten,
you should have brought along more
of your grandmother’s journey-cake,
more of her dried figs and almonds.

No seafarer's daughter, you grew up
to quail at the stories of drowning men
merchants brought back from the sea ports,
for you were no braver than most women.
You liked to think of yourself as a drop
in the Lord’s deep and, save for a scribe’s
error, you might have stayed "stilla maris"
forever. You had no desire to be star

to whom mariners cried out
for centuries, struggling to grab
hold your sleeve as they’re sinking.


YOU SIT


looking out at the straggle
of sheepherders leading their flock
to the hovel where you are still groggy
from childbirth. You wish they would go away,
seek out some other to worship,
for you are too tired to look blessed.
But it is expected of you.
Now and for two thousand years you must
lift up your eyes from your infant
and hear us out, bearing
such words as could almost make you
believe you are beautiful.






JOSEPH



And what of you, Joseph? Still lost in the barn
shadows, stroking your beard
while the curious goats crowd about her,
as if they have already guessed who she is,
not just any poor country girl born

to the tending of livestock. When she calls,
you do not go near.
Is the sight of such bringing forth
more than you fear you can bear?
Not to mention her blood
and the odor of animal everywhere.

All night you stand in the dark stall pretending
your name never crosses
her lips. How much longer before you will go
to her, man enough at last to look
upon God in His baffling dependency?

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

For All You Dreamers--during the holidays

This poem by Langston Hughes has inspired poets, especially young ones, by the dozens. If you go to my October post on The Basketball Poets in Supply, NC, you will find Alyssa Miller’s poem inspired by this particular piece. I suggested students take this poem as a model and see what they themselves could bring to their own poetry. Liz Cronan’s 5th Graders at Sugar Loaf Elementary School in Taylorsville accepted the invitation and soon I received 48 poems in response. Here as one long post are their poems, preceded by Hughes’ poem.

Bring me all of your dreams,
You dreamer,
Bring me all your
Heart melodies
That I may wrap them
In a blue cloud-cloth
Away from the too-rough fingers
Of the world.

--by Langston Hughes

"


Thought keeper
Bring me all your thoughts,
you thinkers.
Bring me all your brain storms,
that I can put them in a safe.
Only for you to see. -SD


Moon keeper
Bring me all your craters.
Keep away all the cold memories
So I can be free of nightmares,
That haunt me at midnight. -AB


Bring me all your happiness,
you happy people.
All your happiness will come to me.
I will wrap it in a green cloth,
So I can keep it away from the hands of the sad. -LS


Bring me all of your beliefs
Bring me everything you believe in.
So I may wrap them up in a green cloud cloth,
Away from the bad minds of the world. -ES


Bring me all your madness.
Bring me all your bad memories.
So I can lock them in a dark jail cell.
So you can carry on with your life. --DS


Faithkeeper
Bring me your faith,
You religious people.
So I can put them in a box.
Where only God can see. -MW


The Laughkeeper
Bring me all of your warm laughs,
You laughers.
Bring me all of your feelings,
So I may wrap them in a soft yellow cloth
Where only hearts who see happiness may see. -LW

Bring me your happy thoughts,
Bring me the fun times.
So that I may wrap them in cool feelings
and be in peace from the world. -PT


Bring me all your faithfulness,
Bring me all your warm memories,
I may take them away to a
World of freedom so you may keep all. -MC


Bring me all your beliefs,
you believers.
Bring me all your desires,
so that I can soak them up with a gentle touch of feeling
and no enemies will lay eyes on these faithful gifts. -KC

Bring me all your braveness,
Bring me all your good times,
So I may wrap them in a brown cloth
and keep them away from the darkness. -ZD


Bring me all your hopes,
you hopers.
Bring me all your heart beats of hope.
That I may wrap them in a deep red cloth,
Away from the rejecting souls of the world. -CB


Bring me your courage,
The fall of your faith,
The wish of your commands,
however the small act of kindness.
I shall wrap them up in the crystal cloth
And they shall stay mine. -KL


Bring me all your thoughts,
Bring me all your ideas,
So I can put them in a box
Away from the evil world. -SW


The Wishkeeper
Bring me all of your wishes,
Bring me all of your hopes,
So I may pack them in a small brown box,
Where only the person who seeks them may see. -HF


Bring me all your wisdom,
Bring me all you know.
So that I may hide them from the world,
so no one else can see. -LO



Bring me all your courage,
Bring me all of your braveness,
that I can cover them,
away from evil. -NR


Bring me all your knowledge
Bring me all your wisdom,
So I may wrap them up in bly sky cloth
Away from those untrusted. -TS



Bring me all your worries,
Bring me all the bad ones,
So I may wrap them up in a light blue cloth and replace
Them with good thoughts. -AB


Bring me all your warm memories of your hearts’ desire.
Bring me all the sweet melodies
That I may wrap them in all the hearts’ love
Where no one will see. -AM



Couragetaker
Bring me all your courage,
Bring me all your bravery
So you can have it when you need it,
To climb a tree. -MC


Bring me all your love,
Bring me all your sadness,
Bring me all your hopes,
Bring me all your failures,
So I can lock them all away,
From the negative world around. -KB

Bring me all your beliefs in politics,
So that I may fix them to be right
And cast the wrong ones in fiery depths
So the world can be fresh with Republicans. -CGN


Bring me all your knowledge
Bring me all your wisdom
So I can wrap them in a cloud cloth,
Away from the hands of the world. -CR
November 12, 2008 11:54 AM





Bring me all your happiness,
Bring me all your laughter,
So I may wrap it in peacock feathers,
Where good people can see it. -JF

Bring me all your love,
Bring me all your kindness,
So I may wrap it in soft black and white cloth,
Where only people that deserve it can see. -JC

Bring me your beliefs,
Bring me your faith,
So I may keep them in my heart,
Where only I can see them. -TD


Bring me all your secrets,
Bring me all your thoughts,
So I may lay them in a pink blanket,
Where only worthy ears can hear them. -KB

Bring me all your happiness,
Bring me all your joy,
So I may keep it safe,
Where I can listen to them. -JL

Bring me all your respect,
Bring me your honor,
So I may respect other people,
Where I can be respected too. -DD


Bring me all your memories,
Bring me the best memories you've ever had,
So I may keep them in a little box,
Where no one will ever see them. -KC



Bring me your memories,
Bring me your thoughts,
So I may wrap them up
Where I can keep them safe. -MF


Bring me the memories of your heart,
Bring me all your happiness and all your sadness,
So I amy wrap them up in a red cloth,
Where I will keep them for all my hearts desire. -MF


Bring me all your hopes,
Bring me all the things you are dreaming of doing,
So I may lock them away in my heart,
Where only I can see them. -JeF


Bring me all your angry feelings,
Bring me all you madness,
So I may wrap them in a black cloth,
Where no one can touch them. -HD


Bring me all of your sweet love,
Bring me all of your lost love,
So I may spread it throughout the world,
Where everyone can experience it. -KE


Bring me all your feelings,
Bring me all your happiness and sadness,
So I may wrap them up in a purple silky cloth,
Where others can't get to them. -CB



Bring me your feelings,
Bring me your sadness, happiness and love,
SO I may wrap them in soft yellow sun,
Where only you may seee. -AC



Bring me all your happy thoughts,
Bring me all your memories,
So I may keep them warm and safe,
Where anyone can't see them. -MM


Bring me all your sadness,
Bring me all your bad feelings,
So i may make them into great feelings,
Where only happiness can grow. -JacB


Bring me all your love,
Bring me your heart,
So I may respect you,
Where ever you are. -CD



Bring me happiness,
Bring me all your joy,
So I may wrap them in an orange cloth,
Where I can give it to Jesus. -HB


Bring me all of your sunlight,
Bring me all of your warmth,
So I may keep it
Where I like best, in a blanket of safeness and warmth. -DB

Friday, December 12, 2008

Full Moon, by Kathryn S. Byer



FULL MOON

Full moon says look I am
over the pinebreak, says give me
your empty glass, pour
all you want, drink, look
out through your windows of ice,
through the eyes of your needles
observe how I climb, lay aside
what you weave on your looms

and see clouds fall away
like cold silk from your shoulders,
be quiet, hear the owl coming back
to the hayloft, shake loose
your long braids and rise up
from your beds, open
windows and curtains, let light
pour like water upon your heads,

all of you women who wait, raise
the shades, throw the shutters
wide, lean from your window ledge
into the great night that beckons
you, smile back at me
and so quietly nobody can hear you
but you, whisper, "Here am I."

by Kathryn Stripling Byer, from BLACK SHAWL, LSU PRESS, '98

Thursday, December 11, 2008

DEATH'S HALF ACRE, by Margaret Maron


(Image from Amazon.com, but go to an Indie Bookstore instead!)

Margaret Maron is the author of twenty-four novels and two collections of short stories. Winner of several major American awards for mysteries (Edgar, Agatha, Anthony, Macavity), her works are on the reading lists of various courses in contemporary Southern literature and have been translated into 16 languages. She has served as president of Sisters in Crime, the American Crime Writers League, and Mystery Writers of America.

A native Tar Heel, she still lives on her family's century farm a few miles southeast of Raleigh, the setting for Bootlegger's Daughter, which is numbered among the 100 Favorite Mysteries of the Century as selected by the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association. In 2004, she received the Sir Walter Raleigh Award for best North Carolina novel of the year. In 2008 she received the North Carolina Award for Literature.



(go to www.margaretmaron.com for more information about the author)
----------------------------



---------------------------------------------------------
Death's Half Acre. (Grand Central Publishing ©2008)

[In the following passage, Judge Deborah Knott watches as her father paints the name and date on a rock that will serve as a grave marker for the house dog that died that day.]

The stone that Andrew had brought for Blue’s grave was about the size and shape of a five-gallon bucket. Daddy sat on a nearby rock and pried up the lid of the paint can.
With the rag, he brushed the dirt away from a fairly flat area on the stone and dipped his brush in the paint.
“Do you believe in a life after this?” I asked him from my perch on a rock that marked the grave of Aunt Sister’s ugly pet goat. “In heaven?”

“Wings and halos and streets of gold?” He smiled and shook his head. “Naw, that never made much sense to me.”
“What do you believe in then?”

He shrugged. “Just because I don’t believe in heaven don’t mean I believe there ain’t nothing after this. We can’t never know, can we? I used to study on it, ’specially when your mama was dying. Now I’ve quit worrying about it. If being alive’s a accident, then we’re the luckiest accident in the universe, ain’t we?”

He finished lettering Blue’s name and the day’s date, then capped the can and leaned back against the fence to watch the sun slip lower. A light breeze brushed our faces and ruffled his white hair.

“You ever think about them stories your mama used to read y’all? Stories from all over the world about old gods?”
“The myths?” I asked, surprised that he recalled them.

“I reckon. One of ’em was about a chief in one of them cold countries where they have mead halls. Adam wanted to know what a mead hall was. Your mama said it was where they had big feasts, with singing and laughing and beer made with honey.”
I smiled, having no memory of this.

“Anyhow, somebody asked the chief if there was anything after this and the chief pointed to a moth up near the roof timbers that’d got in and was flying down the length of the mead hall. He said that moth was like life. It comes in out of the darkness, it stays a while to see the feasting and laughing and song-making and story-telling and then it flies back out into the darkness. We can’t see in the darkness, but the moth flies on like there might be something better a little further on out there.”

“Is that what you believe, Daddy?”

He stubbed out his cigarette with the toe of a scuffed brogan and smiled over at me. “Well, shug, I got to say it makes more sense than angel wings and streets of gold.
The sun sank below the horizon in a blaze of reds and purples and oranges. “But for right now, this is one mighty fine mead hall, ain’t it?”
=

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Becoming Billie Holliday, by Carole Boston Weatherford


Becoming Billie Holiday
A fictional verse memoir
By Carole Boston Weatherford
Art by Floyd Cooper

The world knew her as Billie Holiday, but first she was Eleanora Fagan--neglected by her parents, raped by a neighbor, and sent to reform school. She scrubbed marble steps, drank bootleg liquor, smoked then-legal weed, worked in a brothel, and found her voice--all before leaving Baltimore. She hit New York just as the Harlem Renaissance gave way to the Great Depression. Luckily, Eleanora had a voice. She began her singing career as a teen and, by age 25, had not only fronted the era’s hottest bands, but recorded her signature song “Strange Fruit.” Poems by Weatherford trace the singer's journey from B-girl to jazz royalty. Cinematic, sepia-toned art by Cooper completes this fictional verse memoir.

Ages: Teen-adult
Hardcover, 120 pages, $19.95
Boyds Mills Press/Wordsong
October 2008
ISBN: 1-59078-507-X
ISBN-13: 978-1-59078-507-2







Baltimore-born and -raised, I composed my first poem in first grade and dictated the verse to my mother. My father, a high school printing teacher, printed some of my early poems on index cards.

Since my literary debut with Juneteenth Jamboree in 1995, my books have received many literary honors. Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led her People to Freedom (2006), illustrated by Kadir Nelson, won a Caldecott Honor, the Coretta Scott King Award for Illustration and an NAACP Image Award. Birmingham, 1963 won the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award, the Jane Addams Children's Literature Honor and the Jefferson Cup from Virginia Library Association. The Sound that Jazz Makes (2000) won the Carter G. Woodson Award from National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) and an NAACP Image Award nomination. Freedom on the Menu: The Greensboro Sit-Ins (2005) and Remember the Bridge: Poems of a People (2002) both won the North Carolina Juvenile Literature Award. Dear Mr. Rosenwald received a Golden Kite Honor from the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. And, in 2007, I received the Ragan-Rubin Award from the North Carolina English Teachers Association. More about my books.

I earned a Master of Arts in publications design from the University of Baltimore and a Master of Fine Arts from the University of North Carolina-Greensboro. I teach at Fayetteville State University and live in High Point, N.C. with my husband Ronald and our college-age son and daughter.

Three poems from BECOMING BILLIE HOLLIDAY



YOU GOTTA SHOW ME

After-hours jam sessions
were a crash course in jazz.
Every chance I got,
I saw beside piano players,
studying their fingers
striding the keyboard,
striking sharps and flats
and major and minor chords,
trilling syncopated melodies.
I trailed their fingers
for octaves as they charmed
the secretsof swing.
Piano masters offered up
music's mysteries.
I put myself in their hands.


HOW DEEP IS THE OCEAN?

Without the microphone,
there would be no spotlight,
no band backing me
with buesy swing.

My voice was small,
barely an octave,
but the mic enlarged my songs,
let me hold listeners close.

With the microphone,
my voice was an ocean,
deep as my moods,
and audiences dove in.


I ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU


I guess I'm a sucker
for a sad-eyed pooch
'cause I was a stray myself,
running the streets, going from pillar
to post as a girl, not sure when
or where Mom would pawn me off
on neighbors or distant kind.

Someday when I settle down,
I'm gonna get a dog to wag its tail
like a metronome when I come home
and nudge me with its nose.
I'll take my pooch everywhere--
clubs, restaurants, even church--
and dare a soul to throw us out.

CHRISTMAS PRESENCE: edited by Celia Miles and Nancy Dillingham



Dillingham, Nancy and Celia H. Miles. CHRISTMAS PRESENCE. North Carolina: Catawba Publishing Company, 2008. 221 pages. Trade paperback. $18.00.

From Celia Miles: "This anthology features writings about the Christmas season from 45 western NC women writers, some published (Sherry Austin, Susan Reinhardt, Julia Nunnally Duncan, for example); others published in local venues and anthologies, and some published for the first time. We did a quick count when finalizing the bios and saw that the contributors have over 45 books published (Nancy and I account for 10 or 11); counties represented range from McDowell to Swain, with Buncombe and Henderson having the most."



(The editors--Celia Miles and Nancy Dillingham)

For orders, send to these addresses: Celia Miles-- 104 Clubwood Court Asheville, NC 28803 or Nancy Dillingham: 48-A Dunstan's Rd. Asheville, NC 28803. Email: celiamiles@fastmail.fm

“Christmas is a special time, an intense season when emotions are heightened, memories are made, hearts are warmed or broken, illusions blanketed or shattered. Relationships reveal their soft and sharp edges; joys are magnified and so are losses. These stories, memories, reflections, and poems by western North Carolina women shine with the sincerity of a Christmas star and glow with the warmth of a winter’s fire. They invite you to come into the presence of Christmas.”

-----Joan Medlicott author of "Ladies of Covington Series"

"You'll smell the cedar, feel the warmth of a fireplace, watch snowflakes twirling through the mountains, taste gingerbread, and hear "Jingle Bells," in CHRISTMAS PRESENCE. This is a wonderful collection of stories, essays, and poems by 45 western North Carolina women writers. Many of these contributors describe the Christmas customs of mountain people during the Great Depression."

--Brenda Kay Ledford, from blueridgepoet.blogspot.com


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Glenis Redmond --Presence
Sherry Austin ---The Edge of Night
Nancy Purcell ---I’ll Be Home for Christmas
Penny Morse ---Grandpa and the Snowsnakes
Dare Freeman Ford ----Colored Angels
Barbara Ledford Wright ---Purple Violets
Jeri Senor --The Eve of Christmas
Lana Hendershott-- Rhella Jobe
Susan Reinhardt-- An Open Letter to Mr. Claus
Mary D. Marsh-- Memories of Wartime Christmases
Carole R. Thompson --A Bag of Sugar for Paula
Glenda Barrett--The French Harp
Jessica Heriot --Jewish Christmas
Nancy Dillingham --At Christmas
Janice Norman --Solace of Solstice
Marian Gowan --Connections
Brenda Kay Ledford --Miss Bessie and the Christmas Biker
Sonja Contois --The Year of the Socks
Nancy Sales Ca The Christmas Catalog
Cecily Hamlin Wells --Southside Diner
Louise K. Nelson --Most Memorable Christmas
Celia H. Miles-- And the Animals Knelt
Marijo Moore --Western North Carolina: Winter’s Silent Theatre (in ten acts)
Pam Shuford Murray-- O Holy Night
Cynthia Stewart --The Doll Who Came to Christmas Dinner
Mona Rae Miracle --Where’s the Spirit?
Mary Louise Welther --Elves in Our Attic--
June Bare --The Midwife of Bethlehem
Polly Kent --The Magic of Snow
H. Byron Ballard --A Season of Light: How We Celebrated a Hillbilly Yule
Cheryl Dietrich --Mavericks
Sherry W.Boone- The Silk Handkerchief
Pat Riviere-Seel -My Mother, in the Last Stages of Alzheimer’s Disease, Comes Home Christmas Day
Beverly Ohler -Tannenbaum and Stollen
Martha O’Quinn -Christmas in July
Karen Luke Jackson -Elves for Santa
Peg Rhodes -A Copper Christmas Pot
Exie Wilde Henson -A Logging Camp Christmas
Gwenda Ledbetter -Not Even a Mouse
Joan Blessing- We Didn’t Do Christmas without You
Susan Snowden -A Hair-Raising Holiday
Joan Crook- A Tiny Red Stocking
Tonya Staufer -I Believe
Cecily Hamlin -Wells Weathering Christmas
Nancy Dillingham -Santa Redux: Afterthoughts on Giving
Dee Dee Parker -The Yellow-Haired Doll
Julia Nunnally Duncan- Experience to Fiction: A Christmas Memory

UNDER THE SUN, by Glenis Redmond



UNDER THE SUN

poems by
Glenis Redmond
Main Street Rag Books
ISBN 13: 978-1-59948-133-3
140 pages, $14.95


(Glenis Redmond)

Glenis Redmond is a 2005-2006 North Carolina Arts Council Literary Award recipient and a Denny C. Plattner Award winner for Outstanding Poetry sponsored by the Appalachian Heritage journal. She has been inducted in the Mt. Xpress' Hall of Fame for Best Poet in Western North Carolina after winning for over seven years. She is a Kennedy Teaching Artist and her work has aired on National Public Radio. She is a past winner of the Southern Fried Slam and a finalist of National Poetry Slam.

She has been published most recently in Meridians, African Voices, EMRYS, The Asheville Poetry Review, 2006 Kakalak: A Journal of Carolina Poets, Appalachian Heritage and the Appalachian Journal. Glenis is a native of Greenville, South Carolina. She presently resides in Asheville, North Carolina with her twin daughters Amber and Celeste.

Website: www.Glenisredmond.com
Bookings: www.Loydartists.com

UNDER THE SUN is the long awaited birthing of poetry with purpose, a muse claiming and renaming seasons, needing no permissions, no namesakes. Glenis Redmond's word womb has burst leaking truth, grace, healing and celebration. The ground of her literary newness becomes more sacred as it receives this powerful afterbirth… libations of anointed ink.

Jaki Shelton Green

Samples:

for more, go to http://www.mainstreetrag.com/GRedmond.php



☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Six poems by Glenis Redmond



SCRIPTED HOPE

Name every nighttime shadow.
Call them out
from every corner,
every crevice of the past.
Fill yourself with the power
named survival.
Your voice will flower silver
into a circle blooming
of compassionate witnesses,
burning trembling lights.
In the brightness
my voice becomes your voice,
your voice becomes mine.
Together, our voices form
a tight constellation of hope,
a calligraphy written in stars.

☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆

Azalea

I stand at the door reverberating spring
hundreds of quiet mouths pink mouths speaking,
April’s here the month of the poet.
So they too gather blaring hard wrung words
even harder wrung feelings.
Congregations gather to hear hums of love
And richters of sorrow.
Each poem opens the heart.
This is the work of poets and flowers
centerpieces punctuating passages
keeping the door open during death and bliss.
Blooms silent with beauty, bards lit with language
witnessing both joy and grief testifying in full bloom.


☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆


A Simple Act

Tribute to Fannie Lou Hamer (1917 - 1977)
There is power in a simple act,
an intelligent step,
overriding the ignorance of labor to no end.
When did her deliverance take hold?
Spirit quaking
sending a wave through the whisper of the song
she sang,
we’ve come to know so well.
This little light of mine
I’m gonna let it shine.
On that day, what was the particular?
Was it the white-hot summer sun
or one piece of cotton
adding up to one too many on her back?
Adding fuel to a spirit
ready to jump free of the land
that tied her by slight of hand.
Was it the wisdom of God?
I believe it was
singing to her bones
humming a freedom she only dreamed but never knew.
She became a vessel full of the Holy Ghost
or ghosts of ancient sisters and brothers singing.
It is time sistah, keep the faith, rise.
She could have remained planted there,
her heart and spirit yoked like solid mounds.
Instead the burning bush came to her in the field.
Turned her into the Rock of Gibraltar, moving,
wrestling with fate in downtown doors
leading to white marbled halls—
ready to vote
take pass any test
cross the line
Where God done signed her name.

☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆

Sacrum
 
The doctor says, disc deterioration.
In other words, my father is losing his spine.
My next thought is the children’s song
that teaches the anatomy of bones,
the terrain of the body
the thighbone connected to the hipbone
the hipbone connected to the backbone
the backbone connected to the....
My next thought quiets my singing in one solid knowing moment,
I realize my father has been losing his spine a little all along.
If this poem were about forgiveness,
If I knew where his pain began,
I would take my index finger,
trace it along that beginning of the Ivory Coast.
At the base of his head, the Medulla Oblongata,
I would sing it into being on that Virginia Plantation.
Along the Thoracic vertebrae
I would call him out of that slavery,
release the yokes and chains of his sharecropper past.
I would chant Cherokee,
Sioux
and Seminole
out of the chakra of his throat.
I would follow his trail of tears
leading down the curve of his back,
the Lumbar and the Sacral regions,
and walk along flanks of cotton in his Jim Crow history.
I would stand next to him,
that malnourished man-child at the Air Force recruitment office
as he spreads the poison spiriting himself away
all with the signing of his name until he is only a misted ghost.
I would be there calling him back from all the torn places,
rattling bones,
blowing smoke into this shadow of a shadow,
balancing the forces of air too harsh
for one already prone to breaking.
Maybe just maybe this signing was his one holy act;
bench pressing the family,
and the whole of his past beyond any weight he lifted before.
Maybe this was the beginning of bones breaking.
But [comma out here] he picked them up anyway, his shape skeletal and bare.
He configured himself into the shape of leaving,
an internal dowsing rod,
a compass pointing magnetic north,
anything leading away to take him from before.
A drought of rain is severe.
A drought of marrow is devastation.
If my weight could hold it,
I would lift him to a tender liquid light
like the others, who looked on him from his youth,
and called him Sonny Boy.
He, a good looking slender man with hope in his eyes.
I’d spy that slim child placing his polished boot upon promise.
I would pour into him his calcium-spent self where ivory keys could not fortify.
Taking him down dark alleys into the pool-shark dens
no matter how many gigs played and clubs inhabited.
The spirit knows bones feed on calcium and light.
Tender fingers slid over keys eventually leading to bars,
leading to his favorite amber liquids of Jack Daniels and Jim Beam.
Maybe he tried to be present both there and here.
Maybe the slave in him revolted,
the Indian in him rose up,
the pianist within him began to play tunes.
But he is sitting now
sitting with the weight of all that soldiering,
he believed to be a pocket guide for better living.
Marching him through straight rows of cotton
corn
tobacco
into pouring stiff drinks of Old Grand-Dad,
Crown Royal and handed him a case of Black Label.
Taught him to raise hell all night,
as long as he was straight and squared away in formation
by 0600 that morning.
Our nights and weekends, his second job.
Our house on alert with the Sergeant in him in command,
and the liquid amber out of control.
He patrolled the halls of our lives on midnight shifts
cloaked with the wrath of Jack and two types of Jim.
With battle fatigue we addressed the casualties of war.
A son visibly wounded in the fight,
wearing scars to school like a uniform no second grader should have to bear.
The teacher reports to the base commander,
the base commander barks orders
“study war no more in the home
or be dishonorably discharged.”
  
What they caught and taught they didn’t treat.
Fist turned instead into verbal missiles
launching into our deepest centers.
Yet we carried on like soldiers on a tour of duty
with a sense of purpose,
standard operating procedure.
Survival our greatest mission.
We were hemmed in by heavy-handed creases,
lost in the spit-shine of shoes and high polished brass,
living between the stiff finger salute,
standing at attention for inspection.
Our straight backs gave way to gradual wear and tear
of never being at ease.
Our familial bones breaking,
a slow de-ossification.
If this poem were about forgiveness,
our foundation would begin to mend [comma out]
where it never took hold;
our sergeant in charge leading the way,
a crooked man walking with wings.


☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆

She
for Katie Latimore’s  Birthday, 101
 
Staring into Katie Latimore’s eyes
I go straight into heaven,
rest in a blueness not here on earth.
With her I feel a certain mercy
I have never known.
She who grew hollyhocks, hibiscus, hydrangeas
and drew every stray cat in the county.
She who when not pickin’ cotton,
grew vegetables in her yard,
fished in her spare time.
Rachel’s daughter,
her mother born a slave,
bore sixteen children.
She in those desperate
dangerous times
held aspirations beyond the third grade
but never made it to that one-room schoolhouse.
Her knowledge was of another understanding,
a candle lit by the Almighty.
When I am wise I sit there and study her blue flame.
She smoked her Winston 100’s,
inhaled a little,
letting the ash grow
until it fell like withered dreams beneath her feet.
She drank her Coca-Cola like medicine,
loved her potatoes sweet.
She made me thru my mother
thru and thru ‘til
I am what I am
which is why even now,
I have a penchant for all things old;
never been particular about the new.
It is why I gave birth to two incredibly old women. 
I called them the Delaney sisters.  
They came that way.
It is their spirit not their age.  
She, my mother’s mother, I am not calling a saint
but is there anybody living who would want to walk in her shoes?
She has earned the glory of these words,
any respite they might bring.
She with her jet black ambition
tied to her hands,
her running feet
running thru cane fields,
cotton fields
always somebody else’s
sharecropped land.
She deserves to run,
fight, do battle no more.
Lay it all down by the riverside.
But she is in the nursing home
with a fire, a rage burning bright.
I know because sometimes,
she won’t let no white hand touch her.
When I leave there, She whispers,
“Loves everybody, Chile,
no matter how black,
how blue,
how brown,
or how white,
loves everybody.”
For in those times
she was running water
clear, clean in that ingrown South
where revolution never happened,
not even now.
She was
IS the point of my inspiration,
showing me the revolution
is in staying alive.
I don’t know what happened to her
101 years of living in the south.
I only know
She is closer to God
than anyone I have ever known.
Coming from a shattered past,
imagine heartache after heartache,
outlasting the death of almost everyone,
lasting 101 years of living.
What are we gonna say
to that black woman?
We gonna look around pretend she not there?
What we gonna say to 101 years
of having no monuments erected in her name?
The only thing resurrected daily was the struggle and the fight.
What we gonna say to all those years of living?
If we want to be well,
we sit down and listen
with more than our ears.
 
 
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
 
The Unbearable Heat of South Carolina
for Langston Hughes

When I get to be a poet
I am going to pen poems
about the unbearable heat of South Carolina
and I am gonna put the color of the Carolina sky in it,
that perfect tint of springtime blue
wafting the perfume breeze of the yellow Jasmine,
calling to the Carolina Wren to rise.
And I am going put the frilly froof of the Mimosa in it
and thick generous Magnolia blooms
and the magenta of the Crepe Myrtle
trying to reach its [apostrophe out] twisted sister,
lavender Wisteria turning on its vine.
And I will talk of cotton,
corn and tobacco, too.
But mostly cotton.
And of those crooked tree trunk fingers
that picked the fabric of our lives
and how those large plantation foundations
were laid firm on humped and curved backs.
And I will put some gospel songs in it,
laced with the fire of West African chants,
singing of how these haunted beauties
dwarfed the shotgun shacks
next to sharecropped fields and factory mills.
And I will write down the chain
of broken black white people making a living on prayers--
Whispering the words, get by anyway you can.
And I will stand next to this quiet Palmetto faith
and understand the thunderstorms of the past grounded in red clay.
And I will release my own prayers of gravity
and hold tight to the belief
they will rise like the morning sun
and the nighttime crescent moon.
I will stand fast to the faith that carries my pen across blank pages
and I will sweat strong sweltering lines
of both celebration and woe
when I get to be a poet
and pen poems
of the unbearable heat of South Carolina.      

Souvenirs of a Shrunken World, by Holly Iglesias




Kore Press First Book Award Winner 2008

Souvenirs of a Shrunken World
Holly Iglesias
104 pages, 6 x 7" paper
Price: $13.95 ISBN 13: 978-1-888553-26-0
(korepress.org)

Kore has been publishing women’s literary art as an imperative since 1993, after choosing a name which symbolizes the idea that women are agents of change. Kore (kor-ay) is Greek for "daughter" and another name for Persephone—the goddess taken into the underworld whose re-emergence above ground caused the changing of seasons. We hope the writings we bring to light elicit change, both for writer, reader, and the bigger, collective public mind. By providing this forum for established and emerging voices, as well as writers fundamental to history, we are seeking to keep alive change-making expressions of literary passion, experiment, and collaboration.

-------------------------
Holly Iglesias is the winner of the 2008 Kore Press First Book Award. She is a poet and translator whose work has appeared in Prairie Schooner, The Prose Poem, Arts & Letters, Barrow Street, Margie, Crab Orchard Review, Massachusetts Review and Spoon River Poetry Review. She has been awarded fellowships by the Massachusetts Cultural Council and the Edward Albee Foundation. She is the author of two chapbooks, Hands-on Saint and Good Long Enough, winner of Thorngate Road’s Frank O’Hara Prize. A critical work, Boxing Inside the Box: Women's Prose Poetry, was published by Quale Press. She teaches at University of North Carolina-Asheville and at Warren Wilson College.




"This moving mosaic of the 1904 World's Fair carries the poignancy of an old family album, a presence at once here and gone. Through the poet's pitch-perfect ear and keen eye for the voices, vantages and scraps of the actual, come souvenirs of real lives transfixed in the glare of a triumphant technology's artificial light."
Eleanor Wilner
Samples from the book:

RUNNING FOR THE FAIR, A STEREOGRAPH

Shaken from a dream about hoboes, a boy hightails it through the garden toward the tracks, his stride lengthening with the pace of escape—hen house, slop pot, ice box, cheese cloth—past and future neck and neck.

Air expanding with yeast in the kitchen, a girl cools her pulse at the pump and stares at the rhubarb, the peas, the sausage casings in a basin. She hears the train, bolts to watch it pass, cars strobing the corn fields into a picture show.



FOUNDLING

Her mouth led her here, her milky mouth, her souring in the sun mouth. And where will it all end with the Incubators closed for the day? Half faint, she had hoped to see the infants behind glass, the porcelain cases warmed to the temperature of a womb. To stand behind a velvet rope and guess which among them might be hers. Fifteen, tomorrow remote as the moon, she moves on, her shoe glancing against a soap-baby souvenir, dusty as a mulatto and just the size of her pocket.

SWAN BOAT GONDOLIER

Embarking, they mouth soft words to the ladies—lagoon, woozy, wop—men with eight bits and an hour to kill. I am to sing as we float along, a quaint air to soothe the nerves of these princes of shoe leather and liver pills, these brewmeisters with old money stuffed into new pockets. They have paved their streets with the bones of our backs, scorned our saints and old-country hats. Walking home from our Saturday baths, we spit on the gates of their private streets, scowl through the grates at their children who are pale as dolls.



MINIATURES

I roamed the grounds for days like an Arab in the desert, searching for something just right for my wife, stuffing my pockets with buttons, pins, calendars you could lose in a breeze, till I tossed them in the rubbish. Each trinket felt smaller than experience, too cheap for the weight of our time apart or the cruel quiet of her confinement. Twelfth birth in ten years and who can say if the tiny soul will make it to winter, or when she might allow him a name. I would heap the mantel with souvenirs of a shrunken world to amuse her—gunboats, telephones, geisha girls, canoes—but I fear she is beyond diversion. My present hope fits in my hand, a silver-plate walnut with a clasp, inside a fan of vistas reduced to a bearable size.

NIGHT HUNTRESS by Joanna Catherine Scott


poems by
Joanna Catherine Scott

ISBN 13: 978-1-59948-106-7
80 pages, $14





Joanna Catherine Scott is the author of the novels The Road from Chapel Hill; Cassandra, Lost; The Lucky Gourd Shop; and Charlie; the nonfiction Indochina's Refugees: Oral Histories from Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam; and the poetry collections Breakfast at the Shangri-la and Fainting at the Uffizi. A graduate of the University of Adelaide and Duke University, she was born in England, raised in Australia, and now lives in Chapel Hill.


Comments

I wept over this book. Every one of us has known a young man or woman who has gone out and got drunk and killed themselves. In telling the story of one, Night Huntress speaks for all. And yet there is no preaching or hyperbole. The story is told simply, in language so controlled and elegant that a brutal misadventure becomes transformed into a thing of melancholic beauty. A shocking but at the same time a comforting and healing book.

—Tony Abbott



Scott succeeds in giving us not just an evening’s disaster, but the story of an entire family and the rings of joy and sorrow that surround it. Starting with what is, in fact, a compressed novel told in the heightened language of poetry, she expands outwards into a series of meditations on grief and healing, ending with the lovely benedictory "In the Dawn Valley," the title itself evoking a new beginning.

—Roy Jacobstein


Excerpts:



HOW THEY INSIST

It is good, this quiet, this getting away to sit by a pond with a small waterfall and a frog squatted on a rock beside it, early sunlight flashing off the wings of dragonflies. It is good, after everything, after the funeral, with its eulogies and weeping, and the terrifying silence of the mother looking down into the grave, not to think about my daughter's voice, taut and trembling on the phone. 'There was nothing left,' she says, 'just a leg, nothing else was left of her, the leg with the scar, the one she got playing soccer. Remember, Mother, how that big girl kicked her in the leg?' Her voice is high and breaking. I do not know how to comfort her. 'She'd been drinking,' my daughter says, 'and now there's nothing left of her. He is in the hospital. He's all smashed up and they haven't told him yet. They don't know if he'll live and his father is beside himself. Remember his father, the one who runs the sports store and the summer soccer camp?'

She did not say if the boy had been drinking too. I did not ask, and now it does not seem to matter. Either he will live or he will not live. If he lives, he will either blame the girl or he will blame himself, or else he will become a saint, and carefully, watchfully, for the rest of his careful, watchful, sainted life, he will blame no one. On the other hand, he may do none of this, either blame or not blame, because when his head was smashed, and his ear ripped off, and all the beautiful expensive orthodontics of his perfect American smile smashed along with his jaw, something happened to his brain... .





THE BOY AT THE NIGHTCLUB

The boy at the nightclub does not remember. He had been drinking, he says, and cannot swear the girl in the back seat of the convertible was real.

Pressed, he is certain she was there, her blond head glistening in the artificial light.

But he does not remember her inside the nightclub, or in the parking lot, although he remembers he came out to be sick.

He does not remember her opening the car door, or climbing in, although, he says, and there is fear in his eyes, she was there, she was there.

He recalls the color of her hair, how its blondness had a green cast, how it flowed around her as the car shot off, like seaweed, he says, like something swaying underwater, something tossed about and eddied by a violent current.

He has seen such things, he says, because he is a diver, had been out that very day, was caught in a rip, and, frightened, came home to have a drink.

That is how he puts it, although when he had drunk one, he drank another, and another, until the girl appeared, her skin luminous as shallow water underneath the street light and her pale hair swept about.

She turned to him, he says, and beckoned, although he cannot remember her face, he was too busy being sick.

He is weeping, and the two policemen asking him questions look at each other over his bent head, shrugging slightly, telling each other he is no good as a witness, that he was having visions, telling him sternly he was lucky not to have gone with her, lucky to have fallen face-down in an ocean of his own creation, floated until morning amongst brightly colored fishes hot as blood.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Dresses, Dreams and Beadwood Leaves, by Julia Taylor Ebel



Softcover: $8.95 (ISBN 978-1-932158-85-4)
Published by High Country Publishers/Ingalls Publishing Group
Publication date: January 2009
Available from Ingalls Publishing Group
828) 297-7127
sales@ingallspublishinggroup.com
www.ingallspublishinggroup.com





(Julia Ebel)

Julia Taylor Ebel celebrates nature, heritage and cultural history through stories and poetry. Her books include Orville Hicks: Mountain Stories, Mountain Roots; Addie Clawson: Appalachian Mail Carrier; Walking Ribbon, and most recently, Dresses, Dreams and Beadwood Leaves. The earlier three received North Carolina Society of Historians book awards. Over 50 of her nature poems are published in children’s magazines. Julia leads programs and workshops on keeping stories and on poetry. She lives in Jamestown, North Carolina, but a part of her heart is in the North Carolina mountains, where she finds inspiration for much of her writing.

---------------------------------------
Rosa May wears dresses made from feed sacks, but her earthy knowledge of roots and herbs gives her hope of owning a store-bought dress and feeds her dream of wearing nurse’s white. Dresses, Dreams and Beadwood Leaves sets a girl’s journey to mold her own self esteem within the cultural history of the North Carolina mountains in the late 1940s, where root and herb gathering has offered many mountain people a way to meet both needs and dreams.

Dresses, Dreams and Beadwood Leaves includes delicate pencil sketches and end notes on root and herb gathering.

(from website: www.juliaebel.com

This description from Julia Ebel's website is only the beginning of a story told in verse that will entertain and move you. Rosa May works to gather beadwood leavees to make enough money to buy a "store-bought" dress. She learns some important lessons about growing up in the process.


NOT ENOUGH

In August,
roots and herbs
add up
but not enough
to buy a dress
and the shoes I need too.
So I choose.

I open the catalog
to the page
with the red plaid dress.
Mama measures me
and helps me
choose the right size.
“You’re getting to be
a young lady,”
she says.

Mama watches me
address the envelope
to Sears, Roebuck
and lick the stamp.

And she watches me skip
to the mailbox
with my order in hand.


WAITING

One week,
two weeks,
three weeks—
how long will it take
to get my package?
I watch each day
for the mail.


CELEBRATION

Daddy comes in
grinning.
“Got a good price on beans today.
Enough to buy flour,
sugar,
and cocoa powder.”

At supper,
we celebrate
with chocolate gravy
on biscuits.


THE PACKAGE

Just in time—
the package came,
wrapped in brown paper,
but the package held
no plaid dress,
bright as autumn trees.

I’d changed my mind
and ordered shoes
to wear with the dress
Mama and I made,
blue calico
with white buttons,
tucks,
and grosgrain ribbon trim—
prettier than the one
at Mr. Kelsey’s store.

Someday soon
I’ll order
that plaid dress.

Someday
I’ll wear white.




--------------------------

In Dresses, Dreams and Beadwood Leaves, Rosa May gathers beadwood (witch hazel) leaves to earn money. The following is from the book's end notes on herbs and herb gathering.


Witch Hazel
Beadwood
Hamamelis virginiana Linnaeus

Witch Hazel is a deciduous native shrub or small tree, growing 20 to 30 feet in height. Leaves are asymmetrical and shallowly lobed, 3 to 5 inches long. Witch Hazel grows commonly in moist, rich hardwood forests of Southern Appalachia, but its habitat extends through most of the eastern United States.

The term “beadwood” comes from the hard bead-like seed capsule. When dry, seeds explode from the capsule.

An extract from Witch Hazel leaves, bark, and twigs has long been used medicinally as a mild astringent.






from ROOT AND HERB GATHERING IN SOUTHERN APPALACHIA

The Mountain Environment

Traditional Home Uses of Roots and Herbs
For centuries, people have used native plants as food sources. People also have eased their pain and soothed illnesses with teas and salves made from roots and herbs. Mountain people knew these herbal remedies. They respected local “herb doctors,” who shared knowledge of plants’ healing powers. As trained doctors and modern medicine became more available in the mid 1900s, people used herbal remedies less.


Gathering
Many Appalachian people learned to recognize the native plants. They spoke of these plants with common names, like beadwood (witch hazel), life plant, and turkey corn. They gathered roots and herbs and passed along knowledge of wild plants to their children. By the age of six or seven, children could help with root and herb gathering.
Mountain people first gathered roots and herbs for personal use. Later, they sold these plant materials. Families bought school clothes and shoes for the children with profits from root and herb gathering. Native plants provided the primary income for some families. Money from the sale of roots and herbs not only bought clothing but also helped pay electrical bills and property taxes.

The End of Eden, by Thomas Rain Crowe



The End of Eden: Writings of an Environmental Activist by Thomas Rain Crowe, illustrations by Robert Johnson (Wind Publications trade paperback, Oct., 2008, 179 pages, $16).
http://windpub.com/booklist.htm

The essays of Thomas Rain Crowe
combine with the stirring illustrations
of Robert Johnson to produce a prophetic
vision of the world in which we live--a
vision of what we have and what we stand
to loose through our careless disregard
for the Earth and its finite resources.
A kind of activist’s handbook, this is one
man’s attempts at saving his homeland
from mindless hedonism, outside invasion,
and outright denial--writing as if there might
be enough universal truth to be of some
use to others experiencing similar incursions
in their own locales.




THOMAS RAIN CROWE Tuckaseegee, NC was born in 1949 and is a poet, translator, editor, publisher, recording artist and author of twelve books of original and translated works. During the 1970s he lived abroad in France, then returned to the U.S. to become editor of Beatitude magazine and press in San Francisco and one of the "Baby Beats" and where he was co-founder and Director of the San Francisco International Poetry Festival. In the 1980s, after returning to his boyhood home in North Carolina, he was a founding editor of Katuah Journal: A Bioregional Journal of the Southern Appalachians and founded New Native Press. In 1994 he founded Fern Hill Records (a recording label devoted exclusively to the collaboration of poetry and music).. His memoir based on four years of self-sufficient living in a wilderness environment in the woods of western North Carolina from 1979 to 1982 (Zoro’s Field) was published by the University of Georgia Press in the spring of 2005. He currently resides in the Smoky Mountains of North Carolina, where he writes features and columns on culture, community and the environment for the Smoky Mountain News. Several books of his poetry have been published, most recently by Main Street Rag. His literary archives have been purchased by and are collected at the Duke University Special Collections Library in Durham, North Carolina.

For more about Thomas Rain Crowe:
http://www.newnativepress.com/
Send e-mail inquiries to:
NewNativePress
followed by @hotmail.com
http://wnc.us/newnativepress/about_trc.html
-----------------


There are many Thomas Rain Crowes--Baby Beatnik, Sufi mystic, Celtic anthologist, bio-regionalist--that's what makes him so much fun. Crowe, the nature writer, achieved a great publishing success in 2005 with Zoro's Field, his Thoreau-like account of living simply off the land in Polk County. The End of Eden brings together essays that serve as a musing prologue to either Eden or environmental Armageddon; and then gains bite when Crowe discovers that his idyllic existence in Jackson County is threatened by development. "When I moved here in 1993, I truly felt that this place would sustain me in these kinds of ways for the rest of my life." Since the day he spotted a Florida company's surveyors working at the edge of his property, Crowe started talking with activists and experts, "trying to get a realistic picture of exactly what has been happening to Jackson County during my long idealistic sleep." Smart Growth, a pro-beauty media campaign, farmland preservation, conservation purchases, and the local food movement become Crowe's focuses for the remainder of his book.
-----Rob Neufeld, The Asheville Citizen-Times, The Read on WNC


From the Book ---

It's the end of October and I’ve still got tomatoes on the vine. Native, June-blooming rhododendrons are flowering again. Hummingbirds are still here and coming to the feeders. Walnuts hanging from the leafless walnut trees like Christmas tree ornaments, not able to drop. Yellow-jackets still coming and going actively to their underground nests. Raccoons still coming into the corn patch thinking that August must have come ‘round again and that there is corn. Following the wettest summer on record, we’re in the midst of a draught. Here in Tuckasegee, it’s only rained twice in the last two months. I’m having to hand-water the heather, just to keep them alive. With my woodpile ready for the winter, I’ve not even thought about starting a fire. Strange days. . . .
. . . . . . .

Books for Young Readers: More Than Friends: Poems from Him and Her, by Allan Wolf and Sara Holbrook






More Than Friends

Sara Holbrook and Allan Wolf
In Poetry

Ages: 11–14
Grades: 6–9
Pages: 64
List Price: 16.95
Cover: Hardcover
Published: 10/1/2008
ISBN: 1-59078-587-8
ISBN-13: 978-1-59078-587-4
(saraholbrook.com, allanwolf.com)


MORE THAN FRIENDS: POEMS OF HIM AND HER (Boyds Mills/Front Street). This book, sure to spark lively discussion among the young men and women who read it, springs from a two-year e-mail correspondence between poets Allan Wolf and Sara Holbrook. As Allan and Sara's poems flew madly through the electronic ether, a fictional teenaged couple began to emerge. Many of the poems in this collection use traditional poetic forms (i.e. sonnets, villanelles, sestinas, and tankas) to explore teen subject matter that is anything but traditional. The result is a book that traverses, in poetic form, the gap between the genders--a gap that is sometimes vast, sometimes nonexistent.



(Sara Holborok with students)

Praying at Coffee Shops, by Maureen A. Sherbondy



PRAYING AT COFFEE SHOPS

By Maureen A. Sherbondy
Main Street Rag Books
ISBN 13: 978-1-59948-108-1
Poetry chapbook, 40 pages, $10



What a thought-provoking collection for a Jewish audience! Moving from the concrete details of Jewish rituals to their spiritual implications, Sherbondy is full of wisdom and surprises – sometimes ironic, often dark, full of yearning for the tikkun olam seamstresses to stitch the broken world back together with their needles and threads. And what a treat, in the midst of the spiritual struggle, to find in the poet’s contemplation of a praying mantis that has landed on her prayer book, one of those rare, transcendent moments when “God’s long fingers are reaching, guiding us toward a promise.” These tough-minded, deceptively lovely poems yield up more of their considerable power with each successive reading.

-- Ellyn Bache



(Maureen Sherbondy)

Maureen Sherbondy grew up in Metuchen, New Jersey, and now resides in Raleigh, North Carolina with her husband and three sons. Her poems have appeared in numerous publications, including Calyx, Feminist Studies, 13th Moon, Cairn, Comstock Review, Crucible, The Roanoke Review and The Raleigh News & Observer. Two of Maureen's poems were chosen as finalists in the 2006 William Faulkner--William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition. Other poems have won first place in: The Deane Ritch Lomax Poetry Prize (Charlotte Writers' Club), The Lyricist Statewide Poetry Contest, and Gin Bender Poetry Review's 2004 Contest. Main Street Rag published her first chapbook, After the Fairy Tale in 2006. Her poetry has also appeared in many anthologies. Maureen has had fiction published, has written a novella, and is currently working on a novel.






Praying at Coffee Shops in the South



What are these public interludes with God?
Two men at Starbucks holding hands
bent over in prayer, leaning into the invisible.

This is not church or temple,
but an invasion into my caffeinated space --
these murmurings of Lord, God, Praise Be
spiraling into my melodious Sirius radio tunes.

I want a beverage jolt, not a lightning strike
of prayer -- Hallelujah, Holy Ghost, Jesus.

My mother said no kissing in public places
but here they are --
pressing lips against java-infused air,
searching for the mouth of God.


-----------------------
Tashlich

I cut the fish,
lift fleshy pink
sliver to my lips.

How many sins
have you swallowed
dead salmon.

Jews toss
transgressions
into the water.

Breadcrumbs of infidelity
Pebbles of lies
Pocket dust of indifference

I chew and swallow
hope my body
stays free

from what
I have
eaten.

How do we live
with our sins
that return;

a small pebble
caught in the back
of our throat.

(Note: Tashlich refers to a ceremony in which sins are cast out by throwing them into a body of water.)


---------------------------------
At the Mikveh, Age Four



For weeks my brothers flooded me
with tales of drowning,
said the special pool was where
young girls sank
and did not rise again.

When we appeared at the mikveh --
attempt to quell the swell
of non-Jewish blood swimming
through our veins,
I planted myself upon a bench
refusing to budge from my position.

Wanting to live no matter
the future cost. In my heart
I was a Jew, this I knew,
no ceremony could make it so.

Better to stay than to go.
While brothers and mother
vanished under water
and prayers rang out in the other rooms,
Alone, I remained wordless, prayerless
still and silent as a stone.




AFTER THE FAIRY TALE
poems by
Maureen A. Sherbondy
ISBN: 1-59948-065-4, 38pps, $7
Main Street Rag Books



Existential Goldilocks


For years she’s felt awkward in her own
girly body, those frilly dresses and skirts,
the pink bow in her hair. The sameness
of everyday life nudges her into a state of yawn and nap.

Other girls play hopscotch and jump rope,
swing for hours at the park while
her eyes envy birds and planes, bright balloons released
into the clouds. One day she leaves
the school yard but doesn’t return
home; instead she abandons the small
Jersey suburb, journeys into the woods.

When she bumps into a cottage she lets
herself in; every open door is an invitation,
an opportunity, she reasons. No thought
is given to trespassing or danger.

Bowls of Cream of Wheat leave her unsatisfied,
chairs and beds in different colors and sizes
are not enough to comfort or engage,
and the three bears that greet her with huge bear, middle bear
and little wee bear growls only bore her.

She tries out other cottages deeper into the woods:
the circus people cottage built up in an oak tree,
the beaver cottage near the dam
and even the tiny insect one. At Kafka’s cottage she
is most at ease with Gregor who was suddenly
a cockroach. While Gregor waits to become human
again, Goldilocks, never comfortable in her own human
skin, waits to turn into a golden bird.

She sits by the warm fire with Gregor, his dark thorax
sprawled out on the floor, her girly body leaning
against his hard shell, dreaming
of the day she will wake with feathered wings and fly.


---------------------------------


Sleeping Beauty in Old Age



At Whispering Woods Nursing Home
mirrors reveal the truth of time, beauty
faded into the years. All she wants to do
is descend into sleep, but attendants
pester her into crafts, jewelry making,
flower arranging classes. She has no use
for such things. Her Prince died years
before, a heart attack while riding his horse
across the golf course. The monarchy had
ended, he was a token Prince, all title, no power.
He left life insurance, but not enough.
They never had kids because Rosamond
didn’t want to ruin her perfect size two figure.
She dreams about castles, and fairies, spinning wheels,
but when she wakes all that remains is
a sterile room, a view of the busy street,
other old faces wheeling by in the hallway
waiting for darkness filled with seamless sleep".

A Temple Looming, by Lenard Moore



ISBN 978-1934999103, 80 pages, $17.00
A Temple Looming by Lenard D. Moore is a series of portraits, painstakingly rendered, that capture the nuances of the African-Americans whose lives inspired them:
(www.wordtechweb.com/moore.html}


Splendid in uniform,
the barrel-straight stare
of his pure black face
shines like a bullet.

Imagine he’d not returned
from the Great War,
leaving a void in his family,
and in this picture.

Moore’s artistry preserves what might otherwise be lost: human lives, and their world.

“A Temple Looming is a caring look into records of our African love, our will to life. Moore is ever the guardian, watching the darkening way, listening for our song.”—Afaa M. Weaver, Editor of OBSIDIAN II

“John Milton said ‘poetry should be simple, sensuous, and impassioned.’ Cousin Lenard is surely in that tradition of prosody and hope. Read on.”—Michael S. Harper



Lenard D. Moore was born in Jacksonville, North Carolina. After graduating from high school and attending two years of college at Coastal Carolina Community College, he enlisted in the U.S. Army and had basic training at Fort Jackson in South Carolina. He later earned a B.A. from Shaw University, and an M.A. in English and African American Literature from North Carolina A&T State University. Moore is a former Writer-in-Residence for the United Arts Council of Raleigh and Wake County. He is the founder and executive director of the Carolina African American Writers’ Collective and co-founder of the Washington Street Writers Group. He is President of the Haiku Society of America. He is the founding editor of The CAAWC Newsletter. He also is the executive chairman of the North Carolina Haiku Society. Moore has taught at Enloe High School, North Carolina A&T State University (Greensboro), North Carolina State University (Raleigh) and Shaw University, and now teaches at Mount Olive College, where he is an Assistant Professor of English and directs the MOC Literary Festival and advises The Trojan Voices (former known as The Olive Branch), the MOC literary journal.e. He was also the publicity He lives with his wife in Raleigh, North Carolina. (For more about Lenard Moore go to the Wordtech site listed above.)



FRAMED

The woman
in the photo
looks like Aunt Muriel:
fair-skinned, thin nose,
full lips, broad brows,
flat forehead, and hair
long on both sides
but curled at its ends.
Her poised body,
so full
of pride in a house-cleaning world,
wears a checkered cotton dress
the way Aunt Muriel did.
The scene is somber:
she is so square
to the camera,
just right
in time’s lilac deepening
for claiming kin
nearly forgotten.



---------------------

EVALENE

I like the way you sit:
sideways, legs crossed,
cotton skirt tight
below knobby knees,
left hand on
the higher knee,
and right hand on
the chair’s round back.

I like the way you pose:
twisted around
on the chair, without words;
stiff, head tilted
towards the left shoulder;
no lines, no circles
below the eyes.

I like the way you wait:
wearing a straw hat
ringed with white flowers
like it ain’t nobody’s business;
lips glossed and puckered
as if they were fixed for a kiss;
white shirt, matching jacket,
sweet baby, as if you were kin to me.

------------------
GENERATIONS

A family of four poses,
close enough to keep out light,
two girls, little, wholly thin.

Mother smiles, child in lap,
rests chin on daughter’s head
is unearthly, could praise and sing
until notes, one by one, burst plum red.

Father has his right hand on other girl’s shoulder.
She leans against her sister whose hands are clasped.
Mother leans toward her husband, could take wing.

The man tilts toward his wife,
not fully touching; yet, a gleam
in their eyes baits and burns out strife.

--------------------------
THE OLD SYCAMORE’S LIMBS

hang over the one-lane road I walk.
Leaves lie scattered,
wind stirred.
Over the rise
across the lane:
a stand of longleaf pine,
spaced just enough to hold ghosts
behind an uneven fence.

Up the road, morning light
whitewashes everything,
creates a brilliant tunnel.
I wonder if the road remains
a bed for autumn-brown leaves
on the daystar’s other side.

No animals,
no houses between the pines.
Mist settles everywhere.
Only the sycamore is old enough
to know what might have been.
How its curved arms scratch
the bright blue sheet of sky,
wait for whatever spirit comes
to enter its dark rings.












-