We are Transitioning to a New Website

Please have patience with us as we transition to a new website. The links in this menu will take you to the new site as those pages become available.
Showing posts with label Roy Beckemeyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roy Beckemeyer. Show all posts

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, April 15, 2020

The Meadowlark Reader: Three by Roy Beckemeyer

Each Wednesday we will share an excerpt from a Meadowlark book. Sign up at Feed Burner to receive Meadowlark updates by email. 

Meadowlark- September 2018
ISBN-13: 978-1732241039
Winner of the Nelson Poetry Book Award,
by Kansas Authors Club - 2019

Purchase: 




When Is It Summer in Kansas?

When the wind sends your words back
into your throat as you speak them.

When the sun banks its heat up
under your hat brim, and the cool
of morning is lost in months past.

When robins thirst thirteen ways
for water, and the first cicada
rasps at the heat before noon.

When leaves curl and click rather
than brush against one another
in the breeze, and turtles scratch
at parched earth for moisture.

When heat wavers above roads
in spasms, and farmers disk
spindly wheat back into dusty ground.

When foxes dig their dens
a little deeper, and earthworms
are nowhere to be found.

When storm clouds say with lightning
what they refuse to speak with rain.

Stage Whispers
Copyright © 2018 Roy J. Beckemeyer
meadowlark-books.com 



Family

  A Golden Shovel Poem after
  Gwendolyn Brooks’ “We Real Cool”

There was no such thing as spare change. We
didn’t ask for pennies for candy. We really
did know the score. If we wanted heat on cool
mornings we needed to bank the fire at night. We
ate what was on our plates; there were no left-
overs. We walked through snow and rain to school.

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Meet Meadowlark Authors in February

Meadowlark authors are keeping busy! Here are several options for meeting a Meadowlark author in person this month.

Saturday, Feb. 8, 3:00-5:00pm
Mike Hartnett is a panel member discussing
Writing Program for Douglas County inmates
at Kansas Authors Club, District 2 Meeting
Lawrence Public Library

Wednesday, Feb. 12, 6:30pm  Feb. 13, 6:30pm* date changed due to weather
Ruth Maus, Valentine Reading
Beck-Bookman Library
420 West 4th Street, Holton, KS

Saturday, February 15, 1:00pm
Ronda Miller presenting with Kellogg Press
When Poet Meets Editor: Books Happen
Kansas Authors Club, District 1 Meeting
Topeka Public Library

Saturday, February 22
Roy Beckemeyer and friends at
Eighth Day Books, Wichita
2838 E. Douglas Avenue


Feb. 13, 6:30pm* date changed due to weather

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Nelson Poetry Book Award and Martin Kansas History Book Award Presented to Meadowlark Authors at 2019 Kansas Authors Club Convention


Two books by Emporia publisher, Meadowlark Books, received honors at the annual convention of the Kansas Authors Club held this year in Wichita on October 5-7, 2019. Both the Nelson Poetry Book Award and the Martin Kansas History Book Award went to Meadowlark titles.

photo of Roy Beckemeyer and Duane Johnson
Roy Beckemeyer receives the Nelson
Poetry Book Award from Duane
Johnson, VP Kansas Authors Club,
for Stage Whispers (Meadowlark, 2018)
Stage Whispers, by Roy J. Beckemeyer, was the recipient of the Nelson award. Judge Paul Hawkins wrote, “The scope of subjects covered in the collection of poems is engaging and interesting. Each of the 90 poems is an invitation to read, speak, listen and see. Topics range from the Anderson Creek fire in Barber County, Kansas to the psychology of bullying to the civil war in Syria. Beckemeyer’s adeptness as a poet is illustrated through word choice, image and dialogue. He generously shares his experiences and understandings about life. Through his poems a sense of trust and honesty is conveyed to the reader.” 

Since 2002, a Kansas poet has been honored with Nelson Poetry Book Award. The prize was started by Dr. Raymond and Margaret Nelson in 2002. The couple served the organization in various offices, including terms as president for each of them, beginning in 1979.

The Martin Kansas History Book Award went to Golden Rule Days: History and
photo of Cynthia Ross and James Kenyon.
Cynthia Ross (Gail Lee Martin Family)
presents James Kenyon with the
Martin Kansas History Book Award
for Golden Rule Days
 (Meadowlark, 2019)
Recollections of 109 Closed Kansas High Schools
, by James Kenyon
. This is the second history book award for the author, who also received the Martin in 2018 for his first Meadowlark book, A Cow for College and Other Stories of 1950s Farm Life.

From the judge, Virginia Allain: “A remarkable amount of research went into compiling Golden Rule Days. Just the collecting of personal stories for each school and weaving them into the history reflects several years of work. There are tidbits from yearbooks, memories from former students, and other bits of information collected by the author. A brief history of each locale is followed by notable graduates, memories of teachers, activities and events, athletics, triumphs and tragedies plus the reason the school closed. This is a solid Kansas history reference title for public libraries and makes fun browsing for students seeking memories of their school days.”

The Kansas Authors Club has been recognizing books for excellence in preserving Kansas History for decades. The family of Gail Lee Martin donated funds to continue the award in 2018 when the Ferguson family, supporter since 2001, retired from the task. Martin was a more than 25-year member of the organization and served in the position of State Archivist from 1995 to 2005.

photo of Jenn Bailey, Grant Overstake, and James Kenyon
Jenn Bailey, author of A Friend for Henry, recipient of the Kansas Children's Book Award.

Grant Overstake, author of The Real Education of TJ Crowley, recipient of the J. Donald and Bertha Coffin Memorial Book Award and the "It Looks Like a Million" Design Award.

James Kenyon, author of Golden Rule Days, recipient of the Martin Kansas History Book Award.

Three additional awards for published books were given at the annual convention. 

Grant Overstake, author of The Real Education of TJ Crowley (Grain Valley Publishing), was the recipient of the J. Donald and Bertha Coffin Memorial Book Award for best Kansas book, as well as the “It Looks Like a Million” Design Award for the same title. The young adult historical title takes place in 1968 Wichita and addresses racial conflict and civil rights during a time when integration laws were taking effect.

The Kansas Authors Club Children’s Book Award was given to Jenn Bailey of Lenexa for her children’s book, A Friend for Henry (Chronicle Books). The illustrated book is told from the perspective of a boy on the autism spectrum.

The Kansas Authors Club has been supporting writers since 1904. Each year the organization honors the best in Kansas books, as well as holding contests for adults and youth in prose and poetry writing. Information in membership in the club can be found at www.kansasauthors.org.

###

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Interview with Roy J. Beckemeyer, Poet


Our paths first crossed as Kansas Authors Club members, and I was delighted to publish Stage Whispers, Roy’s second book of poetry, in 2018. It was fun to visit with Roy about his poetry and process.              ~Tracy Million Simmons, Meadowlark Books

Q: First, I find your career path fascinating. It is my understanding that you are a retired Boeing Aircraft engineer. As well, you’ve published scientific papers on fossilized dragonflies. I’ve gotten to know you as a poet, of course, and as someone who follows you on social media, I would classify you as an all-around artistic personality. Photography. Painting. You are a man of many talents. Talk to me about how it ties together. How does one go from engineer to poet?

A: I’d have to say that I started out life as a reader. I can recall my father reading the Sunday comics to us as children, and I learned to be a reader from him. We lived in a small Illinois village 50 miles east of St. Louis, without a library or bookstore. We did get two daily papers, the Globe-Democrat and Post-Dispatch, the local county paper, and a weekly, along with magazines like Saturday Evening Post and Life and Look. I recall reading the papers (beginning with the funnies, which is where I still start the morning paper) as a little kid nearly every day. I was a good student, getting mostly A’s in pretty much everything except Handwriting and Deportment, but I loved science, math, and English the most. Once I got to high school, I was reading everything in the library as well as a lot of science fiction. I also wrote stories and poems. I wrote poetry to my high school sweetheart, Pat, who is now my wife of 57 years. I had a hard time deciding between majoring in English or Engineering but had an uncle with a Ph.D. in math who taught at St. Louis University, and my grandmother, who lived with us, was always telling me how, with my good grades, I might someday become a doctor and professor like him. So, I decided on engineering.

I find poetry and science/engineering not that far removed from one another. Both require one to be detail oriented—an airliner has millions of components that all need to work together in unison, and small missteps can lead to disaster; one has to pay attention both to the details and the way those details fit together into a whole. Poetry requires that you notice the special in the everyday, the universal in the personal. So, there is a similarity in terms of focus. The two areas of study do share an interest in concision, in stripping away the unimportant and laying out the essence of the matter at hand. There is a difference in the way the results are expressed; engineering demands precise and accurate description while poetry thrives on metaphor and allusion. However, Brother Guy Consolmagno (Director of the Vatican Observatory) would differ; in an article in the Wall Street Journal (“An Astronomer’s View of the Christmas Sky,” by Kyle Peterson, Dec. 22-23, 2018), he stated: “Science is also poetry. When I describe the path of a falling rock using Newton’s law of gravity, I’m saying the path that the rock makes when it falls is like the solution to this equation. It’s simile.”