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Showing posts with label Family Plowing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family Plowing. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

You're Invited! Local Writers Read, April 8th

 




Learn About Our Readers

Jerilynn Jones Henrikson

Like First Citizen William Allen White, Jerilynn is proud to be from Emporia. Her schooling is of this place. Here, she met and married her husband, Duane Henrikson, also an Emporia native. Their four children were raised here, and two of them have returned to raise their families here. One of her seven grandkids attended ESU. Jerilynn says she’s addicted to this town, this prairie and its sky. She is also addicted to words and the stories they build. She taught Language Arts at Emporia High School for 20 years, and after retiring in 2003 began tending to her desire to be a writer. She has written eight children’s picture books, a humorous memoir, and two historical fiction YA novels, including her award-winning Meadowlark book, A Time for Tears


Julie Sellers

Julie Sellers was born and raised in the Flint Hills near the small town of Florence, Kansas. Those great expanses of tallgrass prairie and reading fueled her imagination, and she began writing at an early age. After living in several states and countries, Julie is happy to make her home in Atchison, KS. She has published three academic books, and her creative prose and poetry have appeared in publications such as 105 Meadowlark Reader, Wanderlust, Kansas Time + Place, and more. Julie was the Kansas Author’s Club Prose Writer of the Year in 2020 and 2022. In the Kansas Voices Contest, she was the Overall Poetry Winner in 2022 and the Overall Prose Winner in 2017 and 2019. Her collection Kindred Verse: Poems Inspired by Anne of Green Gables (Blue Cedar Press) was released in 2021. Her debut novel, Ann of Sunflower Lane, was released by Meadowlark Press in 2022.


Duane L. Herrmann

Duane L. Herrmann’s family has lived in Kansas since the 1860s. His poetry celebrates the prairie and life on the prairie. He is an internationally published, award-winning poet and historian and the author of 11 books, including Family Plowing, a poetry collection published by Meadowlark in 2019. This book consists of new unpublished poems, published but previously uncollected poems, and some poems from previous collections, many revised. In addition to writing, he has carried baby kittens in his mouth, pet snakes, and has conversations with owls, but is careful not to anger them! Duane is an important voice in poetry, honoring the Midwest, its culture, its wildlife, and its people.


Lisa Stewart

At 54, Lisa Stewart set out to regain the fearless girl she once had been. Hot, homeless, and horseback, she snapped back into every original cell—riding her horse, Chief, 500 miles home. On an extraordinary homegoing from Kansas City to Bates and Vernon Counties in Missouri, Lisa exhausted herself, faced her past, trusted strangers, and stayed in the middle of her frightened horse to learn, perhaps for the first time, that this world was out to protect her. You can read all about it in her memoir, The Big Quiet, published by Meadowlark in 2021.


Olive Sullivan

Olive Sullivan holds an MFA from Stonecoast at the University of Southern Maine and an MA from the University of Colorado-Denver. A bookbinder, she lives in Pittsburg, KS, where she grew up. She loves taking long walks on the prairie with dogs and traveling anywhere that requires a passport–and almost anywhere that doesn’t. Olive’s Meadowlark books include Skiving Down the Bones, published in 2022, and Wandering Bone, published in 2017.


A’Kena LongBenton

A’Kena LongBenton is a metro Detroit native, who recently moved to Emporia (with her husband, Larry Benton) to teach instructional design and technology courses at Emporia State University. As a Harvard-trained college educator, A’Kena specializes in video productions of classic/cultural literature and other disciplines. She has written for a professional development magazine, academic/literary journals, and print/online educational newsletters in the disciplines of English, language arts, instructional technology, and distance learning. Her work has been featured in a regional criminology college textbook regarding multicultural issues facing America. A’Kena has written an academic-related booklet on public speaking, two books of poetry, and two booklets of short stories using only six words or less. Most of her 20+ writings have been in academia, but A’Kena takes immense joy in the moments when she can write for pleasure. Specifically, A’Kena was asked to write a poetic piece on Summer Palace (an imperial garden created by the Qing Dynasty) when she was teaching college professors in Beijing, China. 


Wednesday, September 29, 2021

HAPPY BOOKIVERSARIES! Stage Whispers & Family Plowing

Our Meadowlark mission to to bring books to readers that allow them to explore, connect, and discover. While the content holds its own, it's also our job to share resources with you that allow you to explore, connect to, and discover our authors. 

To help celebrate the September bookiversaries for Stage Whispers by Roy Beckemeyer and Family Plowing by Duane Hermann, below (hyperlinked) are some of the places you can read poems from these books, learn about and connect with the authors, and more. Bon voyage!

Stage Whispers by Roy Beckemeyer (2018)

Roy Beckemeyer's Website

Book Webpage

30-Page Sample on Issuu

Video of Publicist Linzi Garcia Reading an Excerpt

Map of Kansas Literature Entry

Nelson Poetry Book Award

Kansas Authors Club Author Talk

Goodreads Author Page

Leave a Review: Amazon, Goodreads

Order Stage Whispers Here!


Family Plowing and Other Prairie Poems: New and Used by Duane Herrmann (2019)

Duane Herrmann's Website

Book Webpage

13-Page Sample from Bahai Library

Chicken Creek Road

Poets & Writers Entry

Map of Kansas Literature Entry

More About Duane

Additional Poetry: Origami Poems Project, Soul-Lit

Leave a Review: Goodreads, Amazon

Order Family Plowing Here!


If you have more resources for these authors, feel free to stick them in the comments! Happy bookiversaries!

***

Do you have a poetry manuscript you're ready to publish? 

We invite you to submit to the Birdy Poetry Prize, open through Dec. 1!









Wednesday, September 11, 2019

From the Publisher's Desk: Three New Books of Poetry

What an eventful year we are having at Meadowlark. We have two non-fiction books published and making their way into the hands of some very happy readers, followed by three new books of poetry that should be available by the end of this month. I thought I'd take a moment to introduce you to our poets, all new to the Meadowlark bookshelf in 2019.




 Carol Kapaun Ratchenski's A Certain Kind of Forgiveness, is the winner of The Birdy Poetry Prize, 2019.


Carol is a lifelong resident of North Dakota, where you can see the sky without ever looking up and the open spaces demand art. And sometimes, love. Her first collection of poetry, A Beautiful Hell, won the 2016 Many Voices Project and was published by New Rivers Press. A Beautiful Hell has since been adapted to the stage by Laurie J. Baker with the support of Theater “B” and Humanities North Dakota. Ratchenskiʼs first novel, Mambaby was published in 2013 by Knuckledown Press. Her work has appeared in Gypsy Cab, Red Weather, North Dakota Quarterly, Wintercount, Lake Region Review, Dust and Fire, Dash, NDSU Magazine and others as well as in the anthologies Resurrecting Grace: Remembering Catholic Childhoods, edited by Marilyn Sewell, Beacon Press, 2001, The Cancer Poetry Project: Poems by Cancer Patients and Those Who Love Them, edited by Karen B. Miller, Fairview Press, 2007, and Visiting Bob: Poems Inspired by the Life and Work of Bob Dylan, edited by Thom Tammaro and Alan Davis, New Rivers Press, 2018.

Carol is a Licensed Professional Counselor and the owner/operator of Center for Compassion and Creativity in Fargo, ND, where she also lives. She is at work on a second novel while she prepares to be honest, loving, disruptive, and groovy at age sixty.




Ruth Maus, a native of Topeka, Kansas, has pursued a love of learning around the world, with languages, curiosity, and an appreciation for all beings a constant thread.
She represented Smith College at the annual Glasscock Intercollegiate Poetry Contest where past contestants have included James Merrill, Sylvia Plath, Katha Pollit, Mary Jo Salter, James Agee, Frederick Buechner, Kenneth Koch, Donald Hall, William Manchester, Muriel Rukeyser, and Gjertrud Schnackenberg. Her poems have appeared in Inscape, Grecourt Review, Lighten Up Online, and Orchards Poetry Journal.

Valentine, Ruth's first book of poetry, is a finalist in The Birdy Poetry Prize competition, 2019.

She currently lives in Topeka where she writes poems and studies at Washburn University when not teaching animals amazing tricks with which to bore her friends.





Duane L. Herrmann was born in Topeka, Kansas, in 1951 and grew up on a nearby farm. Beginning at age two and a half he was expected to share in the care of his younger siblings and chores. This increasingly progressed to age thirteen when he managed the house half the summer while his mother was away. When she returned he was put on a tractor to begin farming. He farmed until his father was killed the year before he left home for college. Away from home he discovered and embraced the Bahá’í Faith. And, he began to write in earnest; at home that had been forbidden.

His first poems were published in 1969 when a senior in high school. Also that year his drama teacher wanted to produce the play he wrote for a class project. In college his first news articles and more poems were published. In 1974 he married, which produced four children but little writing.

In 1986, after he had built the house his family lived in, he achieved his first commercial sale. In 1989 his first book, as well as his first chapbooks of poetry, were published and he received the Robert Hayden Poetry Fellowship. The marriage ended, but he continued to be very active in his children’s lives and wrote more. 

His poetry, histories, memoirs, fiction, and children’s stories have appeared in a dozen countries in four languages and can be found in libraries on three continents. He has received prizes or recognition from the Kansas State Poetry Society, Kansas Authors Club, Writers Matrix, Ferguson Kansas History Book Award, Kansas Poets Trail, Kansas State Historical Society, and Map of Kansas Literature. 



Visit the Meadowlark bookstore online to place your order! We also encourage readers to shop for our books at their favorite independent bookstore. If your bookstore does not carry the Meadowlark Book you desire, ask them to order it! Our books are available wherever you shop for books.

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