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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 17 May 2013 13:30 |
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The Red Leather Chair by Ingrid Kraus
Wry Hill $10.98, paperback / $4.99, e-book ISBN: 978-0-615723709 Fiction November, 2012 Available from your local bookstore or www.Amazon.com
The Red Leather Chair is a fast-paced family drama. Each character reacts to the extreme betrayal of a key family member and follows his or her own path through rage, revenge, and redemption. The Red Leather Chair is set in the American Heartland and examines how a woman born in an age of deference may emerge as her own person, how a man raised to embrace a traditional notion of masculinity may reconstruct his identity, and how a family on the brink of disintegration may establish a renewed foundation. As one reviewer noted, "The Red Leather Chair holds up a mirror to each of our lives."
Watch Ingrid Kraus read at the 2013 NCWN Spring Conference!
Ingrid Kraus is a writer and psychologist who lives with her husband in the mountains of North Carolina. The Red Leather Chair is her debut novel. She is currently at work on a new project about the integration of a premier Alabama high school in the mid-1960s. She is fascinated by themes of similarity and difference, acceptance and bigotry, and the overarching role that our points of view play in what and whom we are drawn to and repelled by. |
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Last Updated on Thursday, 16 May 2013 09:13 |
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Written by Administrator
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Monday, 13 May 2013 13:30 |
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A Hero for the People: Stories of the Brazilian Backlands by Arthur Powers
Press 53 $17.95, paperback ISBN: 978-1-935708-83-4 May, 2013 Fiction Available from your local bookstore, the publisher, or www.Amazon.com
“Set in the vast and sometimes violent landscape of contemporary Brazil, this is a gorgeous collection of stories—wise, hopeful, and forgiving, but clear-eyed in its exploration of the toll taken on the human heart by greed, malice, and the lust for land.” —Debra Murphy, Publisher of Idyll's Press, Founder of CatholicFiction.net
"This is a remarkable collection. The Brazil that Arthur Powers brings to life in these stories is a testing ground for the human heart, an alarmingly real place where the extremes of poverty and opulence, iniquity and justice, hate and love, bring his characters—and readers—face to face with life." —Bernardo Aparicio García, Publisher of Dappled Things
“A Hero for the People is a stirring narrative about the people, history, and culture of Brazil. At root are the working-class men and women who sparkle with delight and labor in pain—and the reader is implicated intimately in their elemental emotions and vital experiences. This is a book where otherwise parched historical details become life stories worth imbibing, remembering, and repeating.” —Gregory F. Tague, Professor of English, General Editor of Editions Bibliotekos
“Arthur Powers is more than a totally captivating, adventurous storyteller. He is a wonderfully accomplished writer who enriches the reader's experience of life, and is a mighty skillful reporter who knows the ins and outs of people and places. While his locations are often fascinatingly exotic, more importantly his people are always engagingly real! In short, Powers is in that rare company of authors who are impossible to put down!” —John Reid, director of the Tom Howard/John H. Reid Short Story Contest
Arthur Powers went to Brazil in 1969 as a Peace Corps Volunteer and spent most of his adult life in that country. In the late 1970s, while practicing international law, he accompanied his wife in her work as a community organizer in the Rio de Janeiro slums. From 1985 to 1992, they worked for the Catholic Church in the eastern Amazon region of Brazil, organizing subsistence farmers and rural workers' unions in a region of violent land conflicts. Subsequently they directed relief and development programs in the drought-ridden Brazilian Northeast.
Arthur has received a Fellowship in Fiction from the Massachusetts Artists Foundation, three annual awards for short fiction from the Catholic Press Association, earned 2nd Place in the 2008 Tom Howard Fiction Contest, and 1st Place in the 2012 Tuscany Press Novella Award. He was a Press 53 Open Awards Finalist in 2011 and 2012. His poetry and fiction have appeared in numerous magazines and reviews. His award-winning novella, The Book of Jotham, is forthcoming from Tuscany Press in 2013. |
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Last Updated on Monday, 13 May 2013 06:55 |
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 10 May 2013 13:30 |
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Turnings Poems of Transformation by William Johnson Everett
Wipf and Stock Publishers $11.00, paperback ISBN: 978-1-62032-735-7 March, 2013 Poetry Available from your local bookstore, the publisher, or www.Amazon.com
"William Everett's beautifully structured Turnings gathers together limpid poems of memory that shine like pebbles underneath the clearest flow of water, as well as poems of personal faith and theological wisdom. Rising up from the pages like long-forgotten messages, they glow in the light of Everett's language: lyrical, crystal clear, as if on the brink of turning into nothing less than song itself." —Kathryn Stripling Byer, author of Descent and Wildwood Flower
"Everett is a master of words, fitting the right words together the way a master mason fits stones to shape beautiful structures. Poems he constructs reflect solid integrity. Readers can depend on his writing to convey thoughtful expressions, ethical conclusions, and invigorating structural styles selected to match the themes of each piece. His poetry reassures us that all good poetry does not belong to the past." —J. C. Walkup, Penny Morse, and Buffy Queen, editors of Fresh Magazine
Like works in wood upon a lathe, these poems are word-turnings that reveal the inner grain of our human experience. They are bowls to catch our turnings of memory, conversion, falling in love, and passing through our seasons and the wrenching turns that mark our lives. Above all these turnings are a shout of praise, a murmur of wonder, a turning away from life as usual, a merciful re-turning to the songs, images, and stories that move our lives.
William Johnson Everett taught Christian social ethics for over thirty years in theological schools in the US, Germany, India, and South Africa before turning to fiction and poetry. His many books and articles in ethics were followed by an eco-centric work of historical fiction, Red Clay, Blood River (2008). His poems have appeared in Spiritus, Bay Leaves, and Fresh. Both his ethics and his poetry have tried to explore the ways we give shape and meaning to our thoughts, feelings, and actions within the mysterious powers of creativity and love that undergird our existence.
When not writing, he constructs furniture for worship settings in his home shop near Waynesville, NC. His online journal is at www.WilliamEverett.com. |
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Last Updated on Thursday, 09 May 2013 11:49 |
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Upcoming Readings & Events
Thu, Jun 20th, @10:30am - 12:00PM Brenda Ledford Reading |
Sat, Jun 22nd, @9:00am - 04:00PM Kathryn Stripling Byer, Ingrid Kraus, and Ed Southern Reading |
Sat, Jun 22nd, @9:00am - 04:00PM Ingrid Kraus Reading |
Sat, Jun 22nd, @3:00pm - 05:00PM NCWN Charlotte Metro-South |
Sun, Jun 23rd, @5:00pm - 07:00PM Janet Pittard Reading |
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