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Welcome New District 6 Member Kimber Silver

10/30/2021

 
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Today, we are happy to welcome Kimber Silver to the Kansas Authors Club. 

My love of reading began early, cultivated by my grandmother. I cut my teeth on the works of Louis L'Amour. Then my curiosity for other genres blossomed, and I spent any free time I had in the library. The stories took me away from the farm, and the small town I lived in, to a world so vast, that I felt I could achieve anything.

My imagination has always been vivid, and my grandparents encouraged me to write down the stories I regaled them with.  I have never felt more alive than when I'm immersed in a new tale, as it takes form.


I am active on Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, and I have a website.
Twitter: @kimber_silver21 
Facebook: @AuthorKimberSilver  
Website: kimbersilver.com 
Goodreads: Kimber Silver 

Welcome New District 5 Member Nicole Sullivan

10/26/2021

 
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Today, we welcome Nicole Sullivan as a new member (she's the one on the right.) Nicole tells us she's excited to join KAC. We are excited, too, Nicole. 

Here's a little bit about her. 

Nicole Sullivan began writing short stories in kindergarten and continued on to write longer works as she got older. Her strength is writing contemporary romance, and one of her manuscripts was on the list for three out of five rounds of the 2013 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. 

After eight years of educational sign language interpreting and a progressive hearing loss, she has transitioned to the role of a Teacher of the Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing for Wichita Public Schools; she is a student of the Texas Woman’s University’s online Deaf Education master’s program. 

When she isn’t writing, teaching, or studying, Nicole enjoys spending time with her family and friends, or her two cats, Pickles and Banana. She is an active participant in Beer & Spirituality, a local discussion group and ministry that explores spiritual questions and doubts for those who aren’t too sure about church. 
​

Currently, Nicole is venturing outside of her typical contemporary romance and exploring the science-fiction genre with a space opera that is prepped to be her 2021 NaNoWriMo project. 

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Convention 2021: Award of Merit for Achievement in Writing

10/25/2021

 
Each year, members are asked to nominate those who deserve special recognition for service to the club, for work on a special accomplishment, or for achievement in writing.
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It is a pleasure to nominate Hazel Hart.  She is a person who excels at her writing and editing craft but does not seek applause.  I met Hazel when my manuscript of Posts of a Mid-century Kid was a 150,000-word rambling of posts.
 
We met at the coffee shop in Emporia and that began my appreciation of Hazel and the editing process. Hazel told me to cut 50,000 words from my book. That seemed daunting but as I marked off posts, I began to see a new story emerge.
 
For the next year, Hazel and I would meet for coffee and she helped me craft 92,000 words into a clean manuscript.  The first time she sent me edits, she advised not to stress out with all of the red down the side.  I did anyway.  We made a style sheet and with each edit, I saw the final book emerge.
 
One of my favorite memories with Hazel is when she asked me if I knew how many times my kitties made biscuits in my book? No, I didn’t but, it turned out to be many times.  We also discovered that I liked the word “tiny” which appeared 100 times and had to be reinvented.
 
Hazel is a gifted editor.  She has also become a good friend and I am indebted to her for her wise guidance and knowledge.  She always hears the writer’s voice.
 
On top of her gifts as editor, Hazel excels as an author. She has published 13 titles of her own, from how-to books on writing to suspense and historical fiction. In September, Hazel released the 5th volume in a series of historical fiction set in Kansas, The Pierce Family Saga. This series has had tremendous success on Amazon, with volume 1 consistently ranking in the top 100 in several categories including frontier fiction and literary sagas. 
 
Hazel is a multi-year winner of the Kansas Voices contest out of Winfield, as well as a frequent winner in the prose division of Kansas Authors Club contests.
 
For her talent as an author, as well as her skill in guiding others to improve their manuscripts, I nominate Hazel Hart for an Achievement Award.
 
Nominated by: Ann Vigola Anderson
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photo credit: Cheryl Unruh

Convention 2021: Award of Merit for Service to the Club

10/25/2021

 
Each year, members are asked to nominate those who deserve special recognition for service to the club, for work on a special accomplishment, or for achievement in writing. ​
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Anne Shiever joined Kansas Authors Club in 2004. She is a familiar face at our annual conventions, as well as at state board meetings, where the real work of the club gets done. She always has a smile on her face and kind words for her fellow KAC members. She has served as a past D4 president, as well as many years running on the state board including positions of publicity, assistant recording secretary, and now Awards Chair. I am honored to call Anne Shiever friend and fellow writer, and I want to take this opportunity to thank you, Anne, for all you do for our organization.

​Nominated by: Tracy Million Simmons
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Convention 2021: Service to the Club

10/25/2021

 
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Each year, members are asked to nominate those who deserve special recognition for service to the club, for work on a special accomplishment, or for achievement in writing. 
​
Letter of Nomination:

It was a painful decision for each member of the 2021 Convention Planning Committee to pull the plug on their plans to host a live convention in Topeka. For more than a year, I sat in on many of their planning sessions. I was impressed by the energy and attention to detail as they planned their marketing strategy and put together what I think you will agree is an impressive lineup of speakers and workshop presenters. Multiple times, some members of the committee met with the director of events at Ramada Inn, or simply wandered through on their own, to examine the facilities and make sure they understood what would happen where.

Because this is a virtual convention, you can never have a full appreciation of how much work went into planning those aspects of the convention that had to be scrapped. For a year, they planned for a live convention under the cloud of uncertainty created by COVID, knowing that much of their planning might be of no avail. Then, in early spring, as numbers of cases and deaths dramatically dropped and the pandemic appeared to be running its course, they voted to forge ahead full speed with their plans for a live convention.

The emotional roller coaster they then endured as the Delta variant heated things up again made it all the more difficult for them to cancel the live portion of the convention. But it was clear as they discussed their decision, that what they dreaded most was the thought of feeling personally responsible for some of you becoming sick or even dying as a result of infection at the convention.

Because this is a virtual event, you can never have a full appreciation of how much work went into planning those aspects that had to be scrapped. I could sense their disappointment as each one raised his or her hand to vote to torpedo much of their own plans. Through their determination to bring you and me a high-quality convention, these individuals serve as role models for us all. We can learn from them how to pivot and persevere when confronted with circumstances we cannot control.
I hope you will give them a thumbs up as we call out their names.

Members of the committee are:

District 1:
Fred Appelhanz
Audrey Bosley
Max Dunavan
Reaona Hemmingway
Ruth Maus
Anne Spry
Janet Jenkins Stotts
Barbara Waterman Peters
Carol Yoho

District 5:
Connie Rae White

  
Nominated by: Duane Johnson

Convention 2021: Service to the Club

10/25/2021

 
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Each year, members are asked to nominate those who deserve special recognition for service to the club, for work on a special accomplishment, or for achievement in writing.
 
In 2021, Connie Rae White submitted Sandee Taylor for acknowledgment. In her nomination, Connie said, “Sandee has been a member of District 5 for several years, but this year she took the new position of D5 Webmaster. Sandee has been invaluable for her internet skills as we navigated COVID and incorporated distanced meetings with Zoom. Sandee has contributed many hours to revising our D5 web page and posting announcements and has helped keep my head above water in the deepening technological challenges.”

The nomination was seconded by Tracy Million Simmons. "Sandee has taken the D5 portion of our website in hand and keeps it beautiful and tidy. As well, she helps by posting applicable D5 news to state website."

Sandee received a certificate of thanks for her work on both the D5 and the state website. Thank you, Sandee!

"Words is a Powerful Thing" Book Launch with Brian Daldorph (D2)

10/25/2021

 
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Register
Words is a Powerful Thing | Book Launch with Brian Daldorph (this is an eventbright meeting - attend virtually)​
Brian Daldorph's launch of "Words is a Powerful Thing: Twenty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at Douglas County Jail"
​
**this book launch is offered as a free event with donations encouraged**

"Words is a Powerful Thing" is Daldorph’s record of teaching at the Douglas County Jail for the two decades between 2001-2020, showing how the lives of everyone involved in the class—but especially the inmates who came to class week after week—benefitted from what happened every Thursday afternoon in that classroom, where for two hours inmates and instructors became a “circle of ink and blood,” writing together, reciting their poems, telling stories, and having a few good laughs.

The book brings into the light the works of more than fifty gifted inmate writers whose works deserve attention. Their poetry speaks of “what really matters” to all of us and gives the reader sustained insight into the role that creativity plays in aiding survival and bringing positive change for inmates, and, in turn, for all of us.

Daldorph’s account of his teaching experience not only takes the reader inside the daily life in a county jail but also sets the work done in the writing class within the larger context of inmate education in the US corrections system, where education is one of the few lifelines available to inmates. "Words Is a Powerful Thing" provides a teacher’s guide for instructors working with incarcerated writers, offering an extensive examination of both the challenges and benefits of education inside the walls.

This book launch will involve Daldorph, Sherry Gill (Programs Director at Douglas County Jail since 2015), and writing class instructors Mike Hartnett and Ayah Wakkad. The event will also feature the words of former inmate Antonio Sanchez-Day, who later became a co-instructor of Daldorph's class.

Ann Fell Speaks at Winfield Library

10/19/2021

 
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Friends of the Winfield Public Library invited D5 member Ann Fell to talk about her writing journey at their October 11 meeting. Ann shared her lifelong quest to learn how to be a writer in a packed on-site event. Her speech was titled, “Sonatas and Songbirds: Past, Present and Future.” In it Ann shared her past, present, and future hopes for writing.

From being an avid bookworm as a child, to finding a niche in literary circles, her heart has always been set on free-lance writing. As a young adult, articles appeared in KANSAS!, family magazines, and trade journals in the piano service industry while she worked diligently on her first novel. Tragic family events sidelined her dreams for several decades. She is now writing again.

Ann advises, “It’s never too late to follow where your heart leads, but be prepared for a detour or two.”

Ann has published four books in the last ten years.
In the Shadow of the Wind
Grandma Georgia's Recipe File
Sonata of Elsie Lenore
​Sundrop Sonata

Two Dean Poems Published

10/19/2021

 
D5 member Robert L. Dean, Jr., has two new poems published, in two online journals. The first is "Baby Blues Birds," published in MacQueen's Quinterly, Issue 10, Oct 2021. The second is "What We Found After," published in October Hill Magazine, Fall 2021, Volume 5, Issue 3. Links to each are given below. Dean has appeared in every issue of MacQueen's Quinterly to date, and this is his third appearance in October Hill Magazine. The link to "Baby Blues Birds" is directly to the poem; the link to "What We Found After" is to a pdf of the issue; Dean's poem, as mentioned in the table of contents, is on (printed) page 100. Be sure to check out all of both issues for your fine reading pleasure.
Baby Blues Birds
What We Found After

October 24 Book Launch: Posts of a Mid-Century Kid, by Ann Vigola Anderson (D2)

10/18/2021

 
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Book Description
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This is Ann Vigola Anderson’s memoir of her 50s and 60s childhood in Kansas, her travels across the United States and her gentle return to her home state.  With great warmth and richly crafted details, she chronicles her mid-century childhood, bringing the reader back in touch with many memories of childhood toys, family festivities and the personal growth of a child to adulthood. 

This book is beautifully written in a post format and is like reading a devotional book to childhood, home and family.  The pages spill out like a box of black and white treasured photos for the reader to enjoy over and over again.

PRE-ORDER YOUR FAVORITE FORMAT FROM YOUR
FAVORITE BOOKSELLER TODAY!

ANAMCARA PRESS
YOUR FAVORITE LOCAL BOOKSTORE
AMAZON

COME PARTY!
BOOK LAUNCH EVENT DETAILS
​
TIME: 5-6:30 p.m. DATE: October 24, 2021
PLACE: Jayhawk Tennis Center
              233 Rock Chalk Lane, Lawrence, KS 66049
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Ann Anderson is an author, tennis coach, and creator of the comic strip, “The Borrego Springs Sun”. With roots deep in Kansas, Ann’s led a rich career from the Governor’s Office of the Great State of Kansas, to working with the American Cancer Society, to directing the Chamber of Commerce and Visitor Center in Borrego Springs, CA. She is active in the Kansas Authors Club and the Lawrence Writers’ Group, supports dog and cat rescue organizations, and takes ukulele lessons. She lives with her husband, Vann, and three cats in Lawrence, KS.


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If you have news of writing events that would be of interest to all Kansas Authors Club members, or if you are a member (dues current) who would like to announce an achievement, please submit your news via this form.

Don't Miss Award-Winning Gretchen Eick

10/13/2021

 
​Gretchen will give away her secrets for writing historical pieces--both fiction and nonfiction at the D5 meeting Saturday.

D5 meets October 16. Some may choose to attend in person at Asbury Church on 15th Street and St. Paul Street. The meeting will start promptly at 1:30.  There is no need to preregister if you are attending in person.

For those of you who will attend via Zoom, click on the preregistration link below.
Zoom Preregistration for Oct 16

Has last weekend’s convention encouraged you to encourage young writers?

10/11/2021

 
Tuesday, October 12, 2021, at 7:00 p.m., Kris Polansky will be leading a Zoom discussion on youth and writing, with an emphasis on ways we, as authors, can help teachers achieve classroom writing goals and how we can encourage the young writers in our own families. Kris will share several of her lesson plans, including one aimed at getting young students to “own” their poems (or other writings) when presenting them orally. That is a skill all of us can use!

This and other 2nd Tuesday Zoom Meetings jointly provided by KAC Districts 3 and 4 are open to all KAC members. As noted in the District section of the KAC website, contact KAC email for the meeting link. 

Thanks to our 2021 Poetry Contest Judges

10/10/2021

 
Manager: Linzi Garcia
 
Theme Contest:
Amy Sage Webb-Baza is Professor of English and Director of the Creative Writing Program at Emporia State University, where she was named Roe R. Cross Distinguished Professor and directs the Donald Reichardt Center for Publishing and Literary Arts. She is managing editor for Bluestem Press and Flint Hills Review. She publishes fiction, poetry, and nonfiction, and is author of Your Own Life: Kansas Stories (Woodley Press, 2012).
 
Classical Poetry:
Kristin Van Tassel teaches writing and American literature at Bethany College in Lindsborg, Kansas. She writes essays and poetry about place, teaching, motherhood, and travel. Her work has appeared in literary, academic, and travel publications, including The Chronicle of Higher Education, World Hum, ISLE, The Journal of Ecocriticism, The Los Angeles Review of Books, Wraparound South, Temenos, Burningword, Capsule Stories, and About Place.
 
Free Verse:
Jason Ryberg is the author of fourteen books of poetry, six screenplays, a few short stories, a box full of folders, notebooks and scraps of paper that could one day be (loosely) construed as a novel, and, a couple of angry letters to various magazine and newspaper editors. He is currently an artist-in-residence at both The Prospero Institute of Disquieted P/o/e/t/i/c/s and the Osage Arts Community, and is an editor and designer at Spartan Books. His latest collection of poems is Are You Sure Kerouac Done It This Way!? (co-authored with John Dorsey, and Victor Clevenger, OAC Books, 2021). He lives part-time in Kansas City, MO with a rooster named Little Red and a billygoat named Giuseppe and part-time somewhere in the Ozarks, near the Gasconade River, where there are also many strange and wonderful woodland critters.
 
Narrative Poetry:
John E. Epic is the author of the non-fiction memoir, Ill Digestions, the illustrated children’s book, Such a Little Apple: the anatomy of a bully, and numerous poetry books that illuminate beauty within the mundane, meaning within the seemingly insignificant, and humor to all of life’s absurdities.  As an avid advocate of the arts John E. Epic co-created DroneBEE Gazette Publishing, an agency dedicated to publishing previously unknown artists, poets, photographers and authors. Bio Pic by Rim Valiakhmetov (Moscow, Russia)  
 
Whimsy:
Lori Brack is the author of three books of poems: A Case for the Dead Letter Detective (Kelsay, 2021), Museum Made of Breath (Spartan, 2018), and A Fine Place to See the Sky (The Field School, 2010). She lives in Lucas where she is a freelance writer for nonprofits, a writing coach and instructor.
 
 
Japanese Poetry:
Dr. Cynthia Patton has been a member of the English faculty at Emporia State University since 2000.  For the past fifteen years, she has researched and taught Japanese literature and film in English translation, as well as her original fields (19th- and 20th-century British literature, literary criticism and theory).  Her favorite haiku is by Yosa Buson:
harusame ya monogatari yuku mino to kasa.  Spring rain: / so the story goes-- / straw raincoat and umbrella
 
Performance Poetry:
Matt Spezia is the Kansas Program Director for Poetry for Personal Power. In art, Matt is a national powerhouse of lyrical ability, combining an eight-time national award-winning poetry style, Kansas City hip hop, and thespian teachings. He has three albums and a book published and has appeared in an anthologized CD and book. Matt uses his platform and his art to promote self confidence and betterment, social awareness, and cultural change. Outside of art, Matt is a mentor and has worked to directly influence school children in 36 different districts. He has given numerous presentations on performing for the public forum at a number of state-wide venues and on the floor of the Kansas capitol building. Matt has experience with hosting radio shows and producing commercials, music videos, and films. Above all, Matt believes everything is a #teameffort.
 
New Poets:
Jason Baldinger is from Pittsburgh and looks forward to roaming the country writing poems again. His newest books are A Threadbare Universe (Kung Fu Treachery Press) and The Afterlife is a Hangover (Stubborn Mule Press).  A History of Backroads Misplaced: Selected Poems 2010-2020 (Kung Fu Treachery) is forthcoming later this year. His work has been published widely across print journals and online. You can hear him read his work on Bandcamp and on lp’s by The Gotobeds and Theremonster.
 

Thank you to the Judges of our Prose Writing Contests

10/10/2021

 
Contest Manager: Kerry Moyer
 
Judge: Writing for Youth
Sarah Moyer is a career educator in Emporia, Kansas who has taught at the elementary school level since 2002. Sarah is an Emporia State University graduate and resides in Emporia with her husband Kerry and their boys Edward and Miles.
 
Judge: Playwriting
Cate Crosby Grundleger received her Ph.D. from The Ohio State University in Second and Foreign Language Education. She is currently teaching in the Intensive English Program at Emporia State and First Year Writing at Baruch College in NYC. She enjoys cycling, reading, and exploring with her husband, Adam. 
 
Judge: Memoir & Short Story
Lindsey Bartlett teaches Composition to first year writing students at Emporia State University. Bartlett is an Emporian by choice and considers the Flint Hills region of Kansas her home. She grew up on a dilapidated farmstead in west-central Kansas, and her rural background informs much of her writing. Bartlett has published one poetry collection, Vacant Childhood. Her writing and photography have appeared in Flint Hills Review, 105 Meadowlark Reader, and MidAmerican Fiction and Photography.
 
Judge: Humor
Born and raised in Barber County, Kansas, Marcia Lawrence has worked as a journalist, photo-finish photographer, stockbroker, editor, corn detasseler, musician, and mom. She is a lifelong scholar of regional history and a passionate researcher. Lawrence is the author of SPIRIT OF THE PRAIRIE: THE HISTORY OF THE MAKING OF THE MEDICINE LODGE INDIAN PEACE TREATY PAGEANT. She's currently researching and writing the biography of Franklin L. Gilson, legendary founder of the Speech and Theatre Department at the Kansas State Normal (now ESU) and author of the play JOHN BARCLAY, based on William Allen White's best seller, A CERTAIN RICH MAN. If all goes according to plan, PROFESSOR OF PAGEANTRY will make its debut in 2022. She lives in Emporia, Kansas.
 
Judge: Flash Fiction
Michelle Zumbrum is a self-describing bleeding-heart social worker, writers’ groupie, and single mom of two semi-sweet/semi-surly teenagers. Hobbies include cat calling cats, imbibing cheap wine, and watching “CinemaSins” on YouTube.
 
Judge: 1st Chapter of Book
Brian Dyer is a social worker in Emporia, Kansas. He enjoys spending time with his kids, craft beer, music, Kansas, and nature.
 
Judge: Theme
Lydia Kautz is the Editor of the Junction City Union in Junction City, KS. She is also a student with Emporia State University's SLIM program and a hobby writer of fiction and other fun things.

2021 Poetry Contest Winners

10/10/2021

 

2021 Prose Contest Winners

10/10/2021

 

2021 Length of Membership Awards

10/9/2021

 
Jeff G. Guernsey – 10 years
Ronda Miller – 10 years
Ray “Griz” Racobs – 10 years
Gloria Zachgo – 10 years
Michael D. Graves – 10 years
 
Susan Hill – 15 years
Arlene Rains Graber – 15 years
Betty A. Laird – 15 years
 
Tracy Million Simmons – 20 years
 
Joann Williams – 25 years
 
Maryann Barry – 30 years
Lorine A. Gleue – 30 years
Cynthia J. Ross – 30 years
 
Frankie Roland – 35 years
 
Millie Horlacher – 40 years
 
 
Octogenarians
Carol Katsantoness
Frank Powers*
Susan Hill
 
*has reached 5 years of membership
 

2021 J. Donald & Bertha Coffin Memorial Book Award

10/9/2021

 
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They Met at Wounded Knee: The Eastman's Story
by Gretchen Cassel Eick

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From Judge, Robert Rebein:
​
This year’s field of entries featured outstanding books in multiple genres, including adult fiction (including historical fiction), young adult fiction, memoir, and biography. The sheer variety of submissions made the contest particularly difficult to judge. Indeed, I could easily have picked a separate winner from each other above categories. For this reason, I have chosen to name not only an overall winner but also the three finalists from which the winner was selected. Feel free to recognize all three or just the winner, as you see fit.
 
My three finalists are:
 
They Met at Wounded Knee by Gretchen Cassel Eick
The Big Quiet by Lisa D. Stewart
Opulence, Kansas by Julie Stielstra
 
Gretchen Cassel Eick’s They Met at Wounded Knee tells story of Charles Ohiyesa Eastman, a Dakota physician, and Elaine Goodale Eastman, a teacher and supervisor of education among the Sioux, who met while witnessing the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre and subsequently married and raised six children, even as they worked tirelessly on behalf of citizenship and equal rights for Native Americans. The book is meticulously researched and written and makes important contributions to the fields of biography, history, and Native American Studies. It succeeds not only as a portrait of two complex people and their equally complex marriage, but also as a portrait of a turbulent era in American history—roughly the last decade of the 19th century and the first three decades of the 20th century—that has much in common with the times in which we live now.
 
On the basis of its contributions to multiple fields and its daring exploration of form as a double biography, I have chosen to recognize Gretchen Cassel Eick’s They Met at Wounded Knee as the winner of this year’s J. Donald Coffin Award.
 
Please extend my congratulations to the . . . winner of this year’s award.
 
Thanks again and best wishes,
Robert Rebein
2021 Coffin Memorial Book Award Judge

Judge:
​
Robert Rebein
was born and raised in Dodge City, where his family has farmed and ranched since the late 1920s. Rebein received his BA in English from the University of Kansas. His subsequent degrees include an MA from Exeter University in England and an MFA from Washington University in St. Louis. He is the author of two award-winning memoirs about growing up in Kansas, Dragging Wyatt Earp: A Personal History of Dodge City (Swallow, 2013) and Headlights on the Prairie: Essays on Home (Kansas, 2017), as well as a work of literary criticism, Hicks, Tribes, & Dirty Realists: American Fiction after Postmodernism (Kentucky, 2001). His unpublished works include a novel-in-progress entitled The Last Rancher. Rebein teaches creative writing at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis in downtown Indianapolis.

2021 Nelson Poetry Book Award

10/9/2021

 
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Some Electric Hum
by Janice Northerns

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There were several nominees this year that made excellent use of visual art alongside their original verse, and I was charmed enough by each of them that I struggled to put them in a comparable context with works that did not include a visual antecedent for the poetry. The engaging and immediate doodles that illustrate Ruth Maus's Valentine and the historicizations that Mark Scheel offers as paratext for Joseph Maino’s photographs in Star Chaser were both enchanting, but I think the most impressive entrant from this subgenre of poetry was by Robert L. Dean, Jr. I found the intertextual ekphrastic play between Dean’s poems and Steven Schroeder’s watercolors in The Aerialist Will Not Be Performing worked to emphasize the elastic exchange of aesthetic impressions that the images create as context for the poems. I was delighted to find references to REM peppered alongside allusions to Homeric verse, both given equal weight as vehicles for transtextual poetic maneuvers managed with aplomb. 
 
In spite of how impressed I was with that book, I ultimately decided that I must use the verse alone as a means of adjudication. In an effort to decide using that criterion, I noted that three poets in particular—Brian Daldorph, Michael Poage, and Janice Northerns—made use of intricate formal structures for some of their poems but also included poetry that felt highly naturalistic, improvisational, or even overheard. All three poets somehow made at least two disparate modes of narrative verse fit easily into their three respective volumes, and since the Nelson prize is for a book rather than a single poem, I thought I ought weigh the poetry within each volume in terms of how it functions as a unified whole. 
 
Daldorph’s sequencing of Kansas Poems worked beautifully a means by which to evoke the cycles of seasons and human lives; those cycles are woven into the content of poetry, whether rendered individually in bursts of uncomfortable confession, as in “The Football Coach’s Wife,” or colloquially, as is the case for mundane childhood remembrances or even for lists, as in “Laurel Avenue,” that all feel strangely profound in spite of their everyday qualities. Each poem is a small textured fragment given meaning by its place in a larger mosaic that creates an image of Kansas as both a landscape and a cultural context for the residual agrarian rhythms that still shape the early 20th Century.
 
Likewise, the narrative voice in Poage’s You Must Have Your Famine is less varied than the speakers who make up Daldorph's polyphonic mosaic, but the form of Poage’s poetry shifts from the controlled and neoclassical (perhaps most obviously on display in “Scottish Sonnet”) to the conversational and postmodern (“Affection,” for instance, seems as much a review of Lahiri’s The Lowlands as a musing on what love looks like from the outside). As the going-away and coming-home of the poems’ speaker pushes readers away and then pulls them close by turns, the mode of address moves from proud to vulnerable and back around by way of shame and delight, which is surely an achievement of narrative suture owed to the poet’s great skill.
 
In spite of the achievements I’ve noted in Maus, Scheel, Dean, Daldorph and Poage’s collections, I think my favorite of the nominated books is Some Electric Hum. Like Daldorph, Northerns excels at embedding a depth of characterization in an abbreviated sketch of her poem’s speakers, some of whom seem to confess or extemporize in direct address to her readers. Not all the narrative poems function this way; some of the speakers are spied upon from around hospital corners or just-glimpsed in family histories told by distant cousins to readers who find themselves embarrassed witnesses of private dramas and secret tragedies. Northern crafts tender portraits of women held hostage by desire, imagining them in a kind of atemporal community, grappling together with transgenerational trauma and pedestrian misogyny. The poems “Boys Would Come on Horses,” “Zinnia Women,” and “Mother-daughter Dresses” fit together like a puzzle, and their shared thematic content sets up a series of formal poems about marriage in the final section of the volume. This section also achieves the combination of craft with innovation that was so apparent in Poage’s verse; Northerns includes a modified sestina about what holds married people together, a fourteener-ballad about how sometimes marriages fall apart anyway, and an open-verse musing on what it means to watch a once-dear loved one slowly pass away. Whether considering family, motherhood or romantic connections, Some Electric Hum reads to me like a treatise on the ways communities are crafted by wanting, having, and then letting go. Perhaps this year more than any other, readers may wish to consider how desire, possession and loss might become meaningful if understood as necessary preconditions for human connectedness. Janice Northerns uses her poetry to explore how wanting, needing, and even withholding are the practices by which families are forged, maintained, and, when necessary, broken. This book exemplifies her skill in giving language to those fragile and ephemeral experiences of connection, as well as her determination to understand how connection might be felt in the barely perceptible hum of a completed circuit, closed but still alive with alternating electric currents. For this reason, I feel that her work is most deserving of this year's Nelson Award and I congratulate her on the achievement. 
 
All best,
Dr. Sandra Cox

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Sandra Cox is an Associate Professor at Southeast Missouri State University, where she teaches courses in contemporary American literature. She holds a doctorate in English from the University of Kansas (2011). Her first monograph, entitled An Ethics of Reading, was published in 2015. Her second book-length project, a collection of essays about gender as represented in visual narratives written by scholars from several academic disciplines, will be published under the title Intersectional Feminist Readings of Comics by Routledge this September. Her essays have also appeared in several collections edited by other scholars, including Where is Adaptation (2018), Weaving the Legacy: Remembering Paula Gunn Allen (2017), Louise Erdrich: Critical Insights (2012) and Bodies and Culture: Discourses, Communities, Representations (2012). In addition to her research on fiction and graphic novels in the US diaspora, Dr. Cox's work on cultural poetics has been published by the journals Red Feather, Interdisciplinary Literary Research, and Studies in American Indian Literature. She lives in southeast Missouri with her incredibly clever wife, two poorly trained Welsh corgis, and one very, very old Siamese cat.  

2021 Martin Kansas History Book Award

10/9/2021

 
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True Tales of Kansas
​by Roger L. Ringer

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Both of Ringer’s books are collections of very short pieces about people, businesses, places, and events in or related to Kansas . . . all the stories take place someplace in Kansas or are about people with some Kansas connection. Fatty Arbuckle, for example, only lived in Kansas as an infant, but has a relatively long story in True Tales. . . the stories are intriguing and interesting, some of the featured people are also intriguing and I wanted to read more about them (Pelican Pete in Eccentric Kansas, for example, and Maud Stevens Wagner in True Tales).
 
Ringer’s writing style is casual, as if he recorded and transcribed the stories being spoken rather than writing them. This makes the books easy and quick to read. They are not meant to be academic history, but collections of stories, and in this endeavor, Ringer is completely successful.
 
Dr. Ellen Hansen
2021 Martin Kansas History Judge

Ellen Hansen is professor emerita in the Department of Social Sciences, Sociology, and Criminology at Emporia State University, where she taught cultural geography for 22 years. Her areas of teaching and research interest are gender and development, geography and history of the U.S.-Mexico border, and geography of Kansas and the Midwest. She is a fiber arts enthusiast, has taught knitting classes at Flint Hills Technical College, and is faculty advisor to the Unwind Fiber Crafts Club at Emporia State. She is rarely without a knitting or crochet project in her hands.
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