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Written by Administrator
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Monday, 11 March 2013 00:00 |
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III Islands by Bob Holt
CreateSpace $12.75, paperback / $1.95, e-book ISBN: 978-1470122591 May, 2012 Fiction Available from the author, your local bookstore, or www.Amazon.com
At the first opportunity, Max Howard left the farm he grew up on near Pink Hill, NC. Armed with two years of college from LCC in Kinston, NC, and his Real Estate Salesman’s license, he moved to Arapahoe, NC, wanting to be near the water.
It took a year of waiting tables before Ray Brinson gave him a shot at selling real estate and he proved immediately he could sell becoming the top producer as he beat the highways and back roads of Pamlico county searching for FSBO’s (for sale by owner). The locals realized he could be trusted and called him constantly, trusting him to handle their real estate needs.
He dated occasionally, living frugally, in a very small rental house on Seafarer Road for eight or nine years not wanting to get involved romantically, but enjoying casual relationships with each year’s new crop of summer waitresses.
On one of his forays, he chanced on the house of his dreams and made an offer to the New Jersey couple that had built it to retire in but found it much, much too quiet and tranquil for their lifestyles. They’d posted a FSBO out front and left. He stole it when they accepted his second counter.
What followed was like a merry-go-round settling into his new gabled, four-level home, complete with an elevator, on the banks of the Neuse River at its confluence with the Pamlico Sound, meeting Candi, the girl of his dreams, becoming involved with the Jernigans at Janiero wanting to build a sub-division on their property, and picking up listing after listing in the Oriental, NC, area as property values sky-rocketed with Oriental becoming the sailboat capital of the east coast.
Now in business for himself, with his marriage to Candi just a few weeks away, tragedy struck knocking him off his heel’s leaving him with an emptiness, wondering if it could ever be overcome…
Bob Holt, a North Carolina native, spent a tour in the Air Force before beginning his fifty-year career selling restaurant equipment. During the last twenty-five years, he also held an active real estate “brokers” license. Traveling northeastern North Carolina as a “traveling salesman” for over thirty years, he met many interesting people and each had an interesting story to tell. He used these stories as inspirations to future works. His hobbies are many and diverse encompassing woodworking, decoys, watercolors, pencil sketching, photography, ham radio, genealogy, and writing. He currently lives in Winterville, NC, with this third wife, Diana.
Holt’s other novels include I Am Janie and Jim's Recurring Dream Was Back Again, also both set in North Carolina. |
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Last Updated on Monday, 11 March 2013 15:32 |
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 08 March 2013 14:03 |
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Sweet Souls and Other Stories by Charles Blackburn, Jr.
Main Street Rag $13.95, paperback ($12.50 if ordered before March 12, 2013) ISBN: 978-1-59948-398-6 March, 2013 Fiction Available from the publisher, your local bookstore, or www.Amazon.com
"Sweet Souls and Other Stories is full of surprises: a character named Goody Koonce had 'a Gibson Hummingbird guitar with cigarette burns on the head stops from wedging them between the strings, a basset hound named Merle, his father's looks and his mother's sense.' Prose often becomes poetry: the 'migraine heat of August beat the fairground to dust.' Blackburn changes into marvelous and believable stories the things he no doubt has seen and heard." —Shelby Stephenson, Professor Emeritus of English, UNC-Pembroke, and Editor Emeritus, Pembroke Magazine
"Charles Blackburn's stories simmer in the imagination long after the first reading. His ironic gaze ranges broadly embracing the pseudo-historical, the fantastic, and even the outlandish. A story might start in recognizable down home Carolina, maybe on the road to Morehead City, but in the turning of a page, you get dropped into a world you never imagined with hilarious characters you don't want to leave. Some of these natives may be 'quaint beyond reason,' or even wanderers adrift from some other literary stream, but whatever their distinctive voice or voyage, they are always entertaining and their surprising fates totally satisfying." —Katherine James, Associate Editor, Crucible
"Where 'Golf in Pakistan' came from in Blackburn's creative mind, I can't say, but the reader is in for a hair-raising bus trip careening backward over a cliff, passengers falling out along the way; a sweltering train ride with stops for communal showers; and finally a game of extreme golf on a 'sporty little course' hacked out of the jungle, with an army of 100 ragged caddies who carry a single club, or carry the sedan chairs (and a case of single malt scotch), or retrieve balls, or who beat the bush 'never know what might be lurking about.' Did I mention the dead body on Number Eight?" —Marsha Warren, Executive Director, Paul Green Foundation; former Director, North Carolina Writers' Network
These stories range from the rural South to the Middle East. Their subjects include the home front in World War II, the dangers of unexploded Confederate ordinance, a small-town lawyer's encounter with the supernatural, and a modern-day outlaw whose exploits breathe life into a dying newspaper. In "Borer Bees," a lonely recluse's unusual method of bee control robs him of a gabfest with two visiting missionaries, and in "Ghost of a Scientist," babysitting an elderly gentleman in a spooky old house leads to an unexpected revelation. "Sweet Souls," "The Golden Pine Cone," and "Golf in Pakistan" all won Crucible magazine's annual fiction contest, and "Sweet Souls" won a literary fellowship from the North Carolina Arts Council.
Charles Blackburn, Jr. grew up in Henderson, NC, attended Barton College and UNC-Chapel Hill and now lives in Raleigh with his wife and daughter. Early in his career he roamed the state as a reporter and editor for four small-town newspapers. He has been part owner of a Chapel Hill used and rare bookshop, for which customers were even rarer. His stories, feature articles, and poems have appeared in many regional and national publications. He has written about NC history, people, and places for Our State magazine. Charles is a past president of the North Carolina Writers' Network and the North Carolina Writers Conference. In 2008, St. Andrews Presbyterian College presented him the Sam Ragan Award for Literature. |
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Last Updated on Friday, 08 March 2013 10:34 |
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Written by Administrator
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Monday, 04 March 2013 15:28 |
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Colony Collapse Disorder by Keith Flynn
Wings Press $16.00, paperback ISBN: 9781609402945 February, 2013 Available from your local bookstore, the publisher, or www.Amazon.com
"The poems of Colony Collapse Disorder form a geopolitical abecedarium that lives up to Keith Flynns reputation as 'a seminal force in poetry.. a voice for the dispossessed...with rock-gospel charisma and riddle-like revelations.'" —Choice
"Colony Collapse Disorder is a book of journeys, journeys across the world, journeys of conscience and witness, journeys of spiritual discovery. Flynn is one of our finest contemporary troubadours, heir to Bop, to the Beats, the poetry of Rock and Roll, the roar of Walt Whitman, and the seduction of cinema. He is a poet of overwhelming energy, in rebellious ballads, stunning life riffs, and wry meditations. In this work we feel a relish for both improvisation and craft, in delicate lyrics of longing, in songs of protest, and progressive commentary on todays violent and chaotic news. Like the best music, Flynn's poems bind us together with a shared sense of failure, challenge, joy, and love." —Robert Morgan, author of Terroir
"Keith Flynn's lyrical travelogue, a revolution of sound and story, celebrates the reader as witness. Not only are we transported to gorgeously-crafted locales, but we are rooted there by the poet's unerring narrative, transforming each poem with a facet of light, an illuminative hallelujah. Scan the poetic landscape all you want, but you won't find anything like this." —Patricia Smith, author of Blood Dazzler
From the Introduction: The poems in this book are built in a circular fashion like a Mayan calendar, its architecture and interconnected narrative have a hive mind, with each poem connected to the poem in front and behind it by a theme, an image, or a single word. Colony Collapse Disorder is a place-based abecedary in which each letter of the alphabet is represented by two places, cities, countries, or regions whose name corresponds to the letter and its assigned poem. The poem may be inspired by the place or its traditions, written with geography's characteristics in mind, or can be aimed at the place, or may take the irony of the place and nestle its rhythm next to the future that is drifting inexorably closer.
There are a wide variety of forms and textures, but each poem, 52 in all, correspond with the weeks of the year, and interlock the entire collection with historical vignettes and try to capture a sense of what a worker bee might see through the eyes of a human, how the various places might feel and think through their gauze of feuds or appetites or vanities. Poetry is language with a shape, and a music all its own, my hope is that these shapes bring the reader along, around the world in eighty or so pages, and to feel as if they are completely at home between its covers, bent toward the horizon with a new awareness of the other spirits that are occupying their hive.
Keith Flynn (www.keithflynn.net) is the author of six books, including five collections of poetry: The Talking Drum (1991), The Book of Monsters (1994), The Lost Sea (2000), The Golden Ratio (Iris Press, 2007), and Colony Collapse Disorder (Wings Press, 2013), and a collection of essays, entitled The Rhythm Method, Razzmatazz and Memory: How To Make Your Poetry Swing (Writer's Digest Books, 2007). From 1984-1999, he was lyricist and lead singer for the nationally acclaimed rock band, The Crystal Zoo, which produced three albums: Swimming Through Lake Eerie (1992), Pouch (1996), and the spoken-word and music compilation, Nervous Splendor (2003). He is currently touring with a supporting combo, The Holy Men, whose album, LIVE at Diana Wortham Theatre, was released in 2011. His award-winning poetry and essays have appeared in many journals and anthologies around the world, including The American Literary Review, The Colorado Review, Poetry Wales, The Cuirt Journal (Ireland), Takahe (New Zealand), Poetry East, The Southern Poetry Review, Margie, Rattle, Shenandoah, Word and Witness: 100 Years of NC Poetry, Crazyhorse, and many others. He has been awarded the Sandburg Prize for poetry, the ASCAP Emerging Songwriter Prize, the Paumanok Poetry Award, and was twice named the Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet for North Carolina. Flynn is founder and managing editor of The Asheville Poetry Review, which began publishing in 1994. For more information, please visit: www.ashevillepoetryreview.com. |
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 05 March 2013 06:13 |
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Page 8 of 160 |
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Hat's Off!
Hats Off! to Malaika King Albrecht, whose poetry collection What the Trapeze Artist Trusts (Press 53) was praised by 2013 Oscar Arnold Young Award Final Judge Robert Lee Brewer. He said, “Albrecht invites the reader to join her on the poetic trapeze act she performs” but “is always there, ready to catch the reader before sending her off again.” |
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