Events
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Start: 10:00 am
End: 11:30 am
Sat 5/14 10am-12noon (2nd Saturdays)
Prompt Writing Class with Nancy Peacock
Prompt Writing: Serious writing begins with playful writing. Please join this unique ongoing group of supportive adult writers and play your way into the possibilities of the written word. Based on the work of Natalie Goldberg (WRITING DOWN THE BONES, WILD MIND) we set a timer for fifteen minutes and write using prompts as our launch pads. This class is free and open to the public.
Nancy Peacock’s first book LIFE WITHOUT WATER was published and chosen as a New York Times Notable Book. It was followed a few years later by another novel HOME ACROSS THE ROAD and most recently by a work of nonfiction, A BROOM OF ONE’S OWN: WORDS ON WRITING, HOUSECLEANING, AND LIFE. Nancy lives in Chatham County and runs writing workshops in her studio and this Prompt Writing class every second Saturday at Flyleaf Books.
Start: 2:00 pm
End: 3:00 pm
Sat 5/14 2pm-3:30pm
Poetry & Music with Lou Lipsitz and Gregory Blaine
Lou Lipsitz will read from his new award-winning poetry collection If This World Falls Apart. Musician Gregory Blaine will be on hand to perform a musical integration of some of the poems.
About Lou's new collection:
Lou Lipsitz has been awarded the 2010 Blue Lynx Prize for his poetry collection, If This World Falls Apart, his fourth full-length book of poems. The prize carries a $2,000 cash award, and
publication by Lynx House Press, a Spokane based independent literary publisher that began sponsoring this national manuscript competition in 1996. The book will be released in April, 2011.
Mr. Lipsitz' first book, Cold Water, was published by Wesleyan University Press in 1967 and was widely admired for its crystalline imagery, its remarkable concision, and the freshness of its tones and metaphors. That book addressed,among other matters, the Vietnam War, nuclear proliferation, civil rights, and other issues that exploded during the late 1960's. Many of the poems it contained were widely anthologized and admired. Of his most recent book,Seeking the Hook, published in 1997, George Hitchcock wrote: "These are poems of clarity, wit and passion. The best of them are the equal of anything now being written in America."
The focus of Lipsitz's work has shifted somewhat during his career. His new book combines the bold imagery of the earlier poems with quiet and deep reflection upon our inner struggles: loss, psychological change, the vagaries of fate, the ways in which we are unknown to ourselves, and issues faced particularly by men in our society. For many years a professor of political science at the University of North Carolina, since 1995 Mr. Lipsitz has been a
practicing psychotherapist, following in the footsteps of the great William Carlos Williams as a healer-poet.
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