Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Schedule Schedule Schedule

There is a printable schedule now available on the website ww.cmlitfest.org (both on the home page and the schedule page.)

Also, your eyes do not deceive you. Bob Plott had been on Friday morning's schedule, but he is unable to attend because he's feeling under the weather. You can send him happy thoughts.

There are many other fine authors to hear Friday morning including young-adult author Monika Schroder, op-ed writer Zack Allen, poets Joseph Bathanti & Britt Kaufmann, novelists (and cousins somehow) Pamela Duncan and Charles F. Price, storyteller Sherry Lovett and Brenda Lunsford Lilly (who writes for both screen and stage). Yes, she's the one who wrote The Ballad of Tom Dooley and Along About Sundown which you may have seen at the Parkway Playhouse.

photo used with permission from MaryLee Yearick Photography

To read a recent review of Along About Sundown, click here.

Review of "Belonging" by Britt Kaufmann

Review written by Janice Willis Barnett, author of Unicoi and Limestone Cove.

I pick up Belonging by Britt Kaufmann and the book opens to “Hand-Me-Down Gift,” the poem on its center page. “Ahhh yes…,” I say to myself and re-relish reading this poem the narrator offers to her children: the gift of a childhood like her mother gave her, “refashioned” for them.

Giving to others via a refashioned life is one of the themes at the heart of Belonging. In “A Sturdy Weave,” a rag rug serves as the metaphor for the refashioned life of a grandmother “rolled out functional again” to “protect the next generation of toddling walkers from hardwood.” The poem speaks eloquently to an older woman’s sacrifice of time and a quiet life to care for her family.

“Mount Revelation” reveals other refashioned lives: the lives of mountain families driven off their land “to put soup in bellies” and the lives of the new landowners, who “have gated the way” to their second homes. Kaufmann uses the language of the King James Bible to guide the reader along the ridges of those who have “sold their own inheritance” to those who “failed to build an altar to God, so wend their way down Mount Revelation to sit in pews with their brothers and sisters.” The journey is unflinching, its end a revelation as the congregation
...joins the old quilter
who casts her eyes unto the hills,
sees those mansions through the eye
of her needle as she threads it to bind
together layers of a new comforter.
In this last stanza of “Mount Revelation,” there is a suggestion of reconciliation between the culture of the “old quilter” and that of the wealthy newcomers. The reconciling factor is the sacrament of faith. This same coming together of newcomer with the existing mountain culture is suggested in “These Lost Counties.”
It’s always hard hard hard work,
to make your way in here,
to live in these oldest mountains.
At the end of the poem, the narrator is “among kindred spirits of unlike minds.” The poem concludes with
Here, I find myself
in these Lost Counties,
and I am bound.
In “These Lost Counties,” the narrator has turned her life as a newcomer to western North Carolina’s mountains “into craft into art.” The result is reconciliation in this place “where kindred spirits of unlike minds . . . clear space to test our mettle against the isolation, set our own standards.”

This poet’s standards are measured by the heart; the spirit in her words like that in “Crocus Courage,” the first poem in Belonging. Take this short but spirited collection of poems to that place you go when you need your soul refreshed and let it renew you with the same courage as crocuses that “risk winter . . . and sleep through summer lazy, covertly plotting fresh color.”

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Kicking off the Festival on Thursday at 7pm


On Thursday September 8, the Carolina Mountains Literary Festival will kick off the weekend with a locally produced documentary "The Day Carl Sandburg Died" about the important American poet. The free screening will be in the Community Room of the Yancey County Public Library at 7 p.m.

Carl Sandburg died in July of 1967, but director Paul Bonesteel finds his life story and his creative legacy as relevant and provocative as it was in 1916 when his "Chicago Poems" changed American poetry. “Labor unrest, global wars, socialism, immigration and race issues… this was the subject matter that fueled Sandburg for much of his poetry and writing that shocked the world,” comments Bonesteel. “The intensity of his work was over simplified later in his life. He was both an anarchist and a deeply patriotic American.”

"The Day Carl Sandburg Died" was more than six years in the making with a cast of more than twenty notable scholars, performers and Sandburg family members. Sandburg’s daughter Helga Sandburg Crile, Pete Seeger, Norman Corwin and the late Studs Terkel contribute to the film along with contemporary poets Marc Smith, Ted Kooser and others. Also contributing significantly to the film is Sandburg biographer and Winston Salem resident Penelope Niven.

This 84 minute film has been shown at the River Run International Film Festival, the Blue Wiskey Independent Film Festival, and received Honorable Mention at LA New Wave International Film Festival.

To see the entire weekend's schedule of events visit cmlitfest.org

For more about the film and its producers visit thedaycarlsandburgdied.com

Friday, September 2, 2011

Review of "Yancey County" by Elaine Dellinger and Kiesa Kay

Review by Janice Willis Barnett, author of Unicoi County and Limestone Cove.

Part of the appeal of an Images of America book lies in the unexpected photographs found amidst the usual family portraits and school groups. In this pictorial history by Elaine McAlister Dellinger and Kiesa Kay, one of my favorite such photographs is of three midwifes standing in front of a building with long rows of large windows. The brief caption beneath the picture tells us these women were sisters and the large white bag each one holds in her left hand contains the crochet hooks and other instruments they used to deliver babies. The building with the windows isn’t identified. This “appetizer” nature of the captions usually found in Arcadia pictorial histories is one of the things that make them so appealing. The more succinct the caption and provocative the picture, the more it stirs our imagination.

Dellinger and Kay’s book features photographs related to Yancey’s cultural history from the late 1800s to the present, including its legacy as a mountainous county rich in natural resources. Yancey’s relationship to its abundant waters is illustrated in pictures of its rivers and old bridges and mills. Images of mica mines, timber operations, and the old bowl factory from 1907 also help preserve the county’s resource history. Farm life from bygone days is pictured in the chapter titled, “Sweet Taters, Corn, and Tobacco.” The chapter titled “Down the Dirt Road” includes many photographs of families whose roots go way back in Yancey’s early history.

One of the distinctions of the book is the obvious care the authors took to include photographs portraying aspects of mountain religious life. The opening chapter features creek baptisms, old-time preachers, faith groups, and even Decoration Day celebrations.

Other features of Dellinger and Kay’s book that illustrate their efforts to include as many aspects of Yancey’s history as possible can be seen in images related to the Shirley Barnett Whiteside story. Whiteside’s admission to the school system ended segregation in the county before the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. The book also contains a few images related to Celo, the alternative community founded by Arthur Morgan in 1937.

Dellinger and Kay have done well in their efforts to preserve in images and words this part of beautiful Yancey County’s history and heritage.

Dellinger will present her book and stories at the History Museum at 4:30 on Friday and Saturday.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Review of "Brooklyn Nine" by Alan Gratz


Reviewed by Luke Antinori, an 8th grader at Cane River Middle School who plays baseball and is an avid reader.

The Brooklyn Nine is a little untraditional in the way it’s written, because it’s told in 9 “innings.” Each inning tells the story of a generation in the same family’s history, starting in 1845, when a German boy stows away on a ship and goes to America to be with his uncle. The second generation is the

little German boy’s son, who is fighting in the Civil War. The seventh inning takes place in 1957, Brooklyn New York. A boy named Jimmy Flint gets into a fight over baseball cards with a bully who’s bigger than him. The eighth inning is dedicated to Michael Flint, who may or may not have thrown a perfect game on a warm summer day in 1981. The common line that prevails through time is each character’s love for America’s favorite pastime, baseball.

All throughout the book, someone from this family is connected to a piece of our nation’s history. Starting in the first generation, Felix Schneider helps stop the 1845 fire of Manhattan. His son is a Union soldier in the Civil War. In the fourth inning Walter Snider, a boy living in Coney Island, faces the issue of segregation. After that episode, the characters’ direct involvement in historic events become less and less until the 9th inning which has no tie-in to history.

Overall The Brooklyn Nine was an excellent book, and I would recommend it
to anyone over the age of 11 who enjoys the game of baseball. I really liked the fact that it had so many characters, and you got to learn all about them. I could see traits of their parents in them. The book made me feel like I had grown up with every single kid and I knew them very well. I read it cover to
cover in one sitting. That’s how good it is.

Gratz' most recent book is Fantasy Baseball.