Kansas Authors Club
  • Home
  • Membership & Benefits
    • Join Today
    • Renew Your Membership
    • Writers in the Community
  • Meeting Locations
    • How to Start a City Group
    • Tips & Inspiration for Writing Group Formation
  • Current News Feed
    • #ReadLocalKS
    • Invitation to Attend
    • Invitation to Submit
    • Member Book News
  • Calendar of Deadlines
  • Meet our Members
    • Member Blogs & Websites
    • Member Books
    • Board of Directors >
      • Past Presidents
    • Appointed Offices
    • Awards of Merit
    • In Memory
  • Publications
  • Monthly Programs
    • 2024 Programs
    • 2023 Programs
  • 2025 Writing Retreat
    • Past Conventions
    • 2024 Convention
    • 2023 Writing Retreat
    • 2022 Convention
    • 2021 Convention
    • 2020 Convention
    • 2019 Convention
    • 2018 Convention
    • 2017 Convention
    • 2016 Convention >
      • 2016 KAC Poetry Contest Results
      • 2016 KAC Prose Contest Results
      • 2016 KAC Youth Contest Results
    • 2015 Convention
    • 2014 Convention
    • 2013 Convention >
      • Sponsors & Supporters - Thank You
      • Convention Speakers
      • "Our Town" Slideshow
  • Writing Contests - All Ages
    • Adult Literary Contest Guidelines
    • Youth Contest Guidelines
  • Book Awards
    • J. Donald Coffin Memorial Book Award >
      • J. Donald Coffin - Winners
    • Nelson Poetry Book Award >
      • Nelson Poetry - Winners
    • Martin Kansas History Book Award >
      • Kansas History Book - Winners
    • Kansas Authors Children's Book Award >
      • Children's Book - Winners
    • "It Looks Like A Million" Book Award >
      • Design Award - Winners
  • KAC on Facebook
  • Donate
  • Advertising Packages
  • Member Pages (log-in required)
    • Welcome >
      • Introduction to Our Website
      • Monthly Program Access
      • Help us Help You
      • Author Talk Archives
      • Resources for Writers
      • Speakers Bureau
      • Yearbooks & Newsletters
      • Bylaws
      • Club History
    • Board Members (log in required)
  • Upcoming Meetings & Opportunities for Members
  • Submit News

Member Books Selected as "recommended titles" by the Kansas National Education Association's Reading Circle Commission

4/1/2024

 
Members Cathy Callen, Lawrence, and Julie A. Sellers, Atchison, had books selected this year as a "recommended title" by the Kansas National Education Association's Reading Circle Commission.
Picture
Cathy's book is A Packrat Named Orange. It was illustrated by Barbara Waterman-Peters.
Learn More: A Packrat Named Orange
Picture
Julie's book is Ann of Sunflower Lane.
Learn More: Ann of Sunflower Lane

20 Memoirs by Kansas Authors

6/19/2023

 

A LIST OF BOOKS BY KANSAS AUTHORS CLUB MEMBERS, PAST AND PRESENT


Inspired by the June program by Denise Low, "Embellishing Prose and Poetry with Memoir," we pulled books by Kansas Authors Club nembers that illustrate the many and varied techniques of memoir writing.

If you have examples of member books to add (your own or a friend's) please put your addition in the comments section.
Members - View June Program
sign-on required

PicturePosts of a Mid-Century Kid, by Ann Vigola Anderson (Anamcara Press, 2021)
Anderson takes us on a journey to 1950s and 60s Kansas and treats the reader to hometown cooking in her tasty memoir Posts of a Mid-Century Kid. With humor and richly crafted details, she chronicles her mid-century childhood, offering a sampling of another era. This delightful and mischievous memoir advocates coloring vividly outside of the lines!

PictureHeadwinds: A Memoir by Edna Bell-Pearson (Meadowlark, 2019)
When World War II made her way to southwest Kansas, Edna Bell-Pearson’s life was forever changed. After meeting her husband Carl Ungerer—a pilot stationed in Liberal for the war— Edna’s moved to the opposite corner of the state, and she became one of the first private female pilots in Kansas. Her story takes place over the course of five years and tells of Ungerer Flying Service, a family-owned and operated business stationed in Marysville. As the business is born and takes on the challenges of life, Edna learns to appreciate the importance of the little things: hunting and fishing trips, a good housekeeper, and crisp, autumnal days without wind.

PictureRunning Out of Footprints, by Cathy Callen (2013)
Running Out of Footprints is the true story of three generations of the Neff family, who arrived on the scene in Kansas City in the late 1800s full of energy and potential, contributed as political, business, religious and medical leaders in the city, and then gradually disappeared into obituaries and census data. The author, a fourth generation Neff herself, came into possession of a metal box full of old letters, documents and photographs after her father's death. The questions she asked about these keepsakes and the answers she sought and found, led to writing this collection of biographies.

PictureLovers, Dreams & Thieves, by Marcia Cebulska (Flint Hills Publishing, 2023)
"With a novelist’s eye for detail and a poet’s gift for language, Cebulska has written a visceral knockout of a memoir packed with vibrant, unforgettable family members and unexpected happenings. Cebulska is a brilliant, big-hearted, and luminous storyteller who can capture a world in a short vignette. I was entirely captivated by these intimate and moving family portraits that have shaped the author's life and work.” -Harriet Lerner, author of The Dance of Anger and Why Won’t You Apologize?

PictureHigh Plains Homestead, by R. Kent Crawford (Post Rock Press, 2023)
Scorching heat. Bitter cold. Relentless wind. No trees. Scarce water. That’s what settlers faced on the Kansas plains. Crawford grew up on a farm in Russell County that his great grandparents homesteaded in 1879. Tales of hardship, humor, and grit merge with details of the enormous changes in mechanization, economics, and political forces as the country transitioned from a mostly rural nation to a mostly urban one. Crawford's personal story coupled with meticulous research on the evolution of farming from the homestead years to the recent prairie fires describe the birth and transformation of his family farm. The narrative concludes with a thought-provoking discussion of the future of rural communities, the options for farmers, and High Plains farming.

PictureIn the Shadow of the Wind, by Ann Christine Fell (2014)
Following a series of tragic losses, thirty-year old Ann Fell struggles alone in a strange and frightening world. The young widow and bereaved mother retreats to the wilderness for comfort and healing. Planning to stay forty days, she sets up a solitary camp on the river bank of her family’s abandoned farm homestead. Marooned by rising flood waters after only a few days, she faces her own mortality.

PictureAnd I Cried, Too, by Mike Hartnett (Meadowlark Press, 2020)
Mike and his wife, Barbara, moved to Lincoln, Illinois, in 1972. The town of 17,000 was charming, friendly, and safe. As employees of Lincoln College, a small, private junior college, they quickly grew to enjoy the subtle pleasures of small-town living. Then the campus was hit with a series of burglaries and a student disappeared. Finally, the murders began. This is Mike Hartnett’s personal story, memories that have taken him more than forty years to write. This is not a true crime exposé or a who-dunnit mystery. This is simply a story about one man on the periphery of a series of events that devastate a community for a time. It is a story about the guilt that lingers and the questions that remain.

Picture31 Days (Nights), by Reginald Jarrell (Blue Cedar Press, 2022)
Reginald D. Jarrell’s book of essays is a thoughtful exploration of experiences that molded him as a Black man growing up and raising his family primarily in Kansas. Mr. Jarrell also lived in Mississippi, Iowa, California, and Washington, D.C. As a pastor, lawyer, communications professional, and university professor, Mr. Jarrell is first of all a truth teller.

PictureThe Art of Listening to the Heart, by James Kenyon (2016/ 2022)
In this memoir collection, retired veterinarian James Kenyon recalls his days in veterinary practice. From heartwarming to heartbreaking and everything in between, Kenyon writes of his care for beloved family pets, livestock, and their human caretakers. His memories illustrate a true devotion and love for veterinary work, as well as a passion for people and local history. Each chapter relates a specific memory of working with a quirky, loyal, and loveable animal, as well as the quirky, loyal, and lovable humans who owned them. The work offers not just insight into the work of a veterinarian, but to human nature and the manner in which people relate to and care for each other, as well as their animals.

PictureJigsaw Puzzling: Essays in a Time of Pestilence, by Denise Low (Meadowlark Press, 2022)
Writer of poetry, essays, memoir, and fiction—Denise Low did what so many of us did in the spring of 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic sent us to spending long days at home. Denise’s jigsaw puzzling went well beyond pictures put together piece-by-piece, however. The 15 essays in this book document the pestilence that impacted our entire world. In them, Low explores the very culture of jigsaw puzzles while providing poetic lessons in art, geography, history, and more.

PictureDiary of a German War Bride, by Trudy McFarland (2006)
"Trudy McFarland's telling of her mother's story in diary form, from her parents' 'love at first sight' meeting in post World War I Germany to 1988 when her mother's very full life ends, is a remarkable account of family relationships, historical events, and the characteristics which make a family strong and memorable. It is a fascinating read!"
​--Evie Green, Coordinator of Write Stuff

PictureMy Flint Hills Childhood, by Gail Lee Martin (Blurb, 2009)
A childhood on the Kansas prairies in the 1930s springs vividly to life in the detailed memories of Gail Martin. Her simple accounts of long ago school days, celebrations and family life are a treasure. Travel back in time to life in the Flint Hills during the Great Depression and the time leading up to World War II. The memories include her father's work in the oil field, trips to town in the family's Model A, raising her pet badger, fishing on the Cottonwood River, and wearing dresses made from feed sack material. The book also explores her family's role in early Kansas history with details of covered wagons, homesteading, the Civil War and fledgling industries. These range from Tyro to Teterville to Eureka.

PictureCourtesy Boy: A Memoir of Addiction, by Mike Matson (Flint Hills Publishing, 2021)
“Thirty years after my last ingestion of chemicals, I inventoried the traits and behaviors connected with my addiction, chronicled my early adult life, and wrote a book. My motivation is to help those suffering and their loved ones connect the dots between the destructive traits and behaviors—and the potential for addiction. In so doing, infuse some fresh air into the oppressive stigma that clings to addiction and mental health.

PictureThe Sky Begins At Your Feet, by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg (Ice Cube Press, 2009)
I cannot figure out who I am as a body these days, writes Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg in this powerful, tender and humorous memoir about resiliency and love in the face of cancer. Mirriam-Goldberg braves breast cancer, the breast cancer genetic mutation and the loss of a parent by connecting with an eclectic Midwest community, the land and sky, and a body undergoing vast renovation. 

PictureCop in the Classroom, by Sgt. Jim Potter (Sandhenge Publications, 2007)
Learn how kids and cops connect at school. You will enjoy 33 personal stories about one officer's professional career as a deputy sheriff and school resource officer. Cop in the Classroom gives an insider's look at the emotional experiences behind the badge--and life lessons for us all. 

PictureI've been fighting this war within myself, poetry by Antonio Sanchez-Day (Meadowlark Press, 2023)
Even though he was often vastly outnumbered by enemies on the outside and by demons on the inside, Antonio Sanchez-Day took on life. He fought against racism as a boy, fought against family troubles, and fought as a street soldier for his gang which was the “family” he’d always wanted. Then he had to fight simply to survive 13 years of incarceration. Inside the walls, Antonio found his main weapon, his pen. He wrote brilliantly, and with pen in hand, he turned his life around. The 123 pages of new, unpublished poetry in this book was put together by Antonio’s friend and mentor, Brian Daldorph, to “cement [his] legacy” (Antonio’s words).

PictureThe Big Quiet: One Woman's Horseback Ride Home, by Lisa D. Stewart (Meadowlark Press, 2020)
At 54, Lisa Stewart set out to regain the fearless girl she once had been, riding her horse, Chief, 500 miles home. Hot, homeless, and horseback, she snapped back into every original cell. 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 document modern rural America, the people, animals, and land. ​

PictureGravedigger's Daughter, by Cheryl Unruh (Meadowlark Press, 2021)
Gravedigger's Daughter: Vignettes from a Small Kansas Town is more than a story of the author and her father. It is a reminder of the relationships we all have, more than skin deep, an examination of the complexities of the people we love and care for. It is a love letter to the individuals who always exist at our very core.

PictureIt's All Showbusiness, by Connie Rae (Page Publishing, 2019)
Lee Edward Atterbury was born September 1, 1924, into the Atterbury Circus family. He was the fifth of seven children born to Robert L. and Rose Atterbury. By the time Lee was old enough for school, his older siblings were accomplished aerialists and his mother was a slack wire walker. The Atterbury Circus was a road circus, traveling the highways of rural America from Iowa and the Dakotas to Texas throughout the years of the Great Depression. (written by Connie Rae White)

PictureMemoirs of the Dysfunctional? by Joann Garrity Williams (Meadowlark, 2018)
Memoirs of the Dysfunctional depicts the unconventional, but necessary lifestyle, and results, of a family forced to live a somewhat nomadic existence because the father, who was blinded as a child, had no means of support other than working as a street musician. The author, Joann Garrity Williams, is the oldest child of Ethel and Francis Garrity. She served for four years as state president of the Kansas Authors Club. This is the first time many, including family members and close friends, will learn the truth about Joann’s unique childhood and upbringing.

March 5th Invitation to a Book Launch

2/9/2023

 
Picture
Cathy Callen is a member from Lawrence.

Barbara Waterman-Peters is a member from Topeka. 

Lawrence author Cathy Callen and Topeka artist/illustrator Barbara Waterman-Peters are hosting a book launch for their collaborative children’s book,
A Packrat Named Orange on Sunday afternoon, March 5th, from 2:00-4:00. The event will be held in Topeka at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 4775 W. 21st.
 

A Packrat Named Orange is a story about a packrat with an artist’s eye, who collects orange marbles for her under-the-porch-steps art museum. The book is based on the true story of the disappearance of orange marbles from the author’s front “marble garden.” The book is suitable for children ages 5-10. It includes a section of additional information with questions to ask readers for enhancing their experience of the book’s content. The book price is $20 plus 9.15 %  tax.

It is not necessary to purchase a book to attend. Guests can enjoy round, orange snacks, play marble-related games such as Chinese Checkers, or win a prize by guessing the number of orange marbles in various containers. An exhibit of framed photographs will also be on display, including ones of the orange “Gates” from the 2005 Christo project in New York City taken by photographers Barry Molineux and Cathy Callen. More recent photographs of blue, green, red and orange marbles will add to the festivities.

Appreciation for our 2022 State Executive Board Members

12/28/2022

 
Picture
Please take a moment to thank the officers who have shared their time and talent with writers across the state of Kansas and beyond. The following individuals served on our 2022 State Board.
Tracy Million Simmons, President
Emporia, Kansas
Tracy Million Simmons enjoys writing about the people and places of her home state of Kansas, both real and imagined. Her writing resume includes more than 500 articles in print, from feature articles in national and niche publications to ghostwritten material for busy health professionals. She has worked with small press and book packagers on everything from book layout and design to editing. She is a past mini-fellowship winner from the Kansas Arts Commission and has been an honorable mention in the Kansas Voices contest (Winfield). Tracy is the author of Tiger Hunting (a novel) and A Life in Progress (short stories, fiction). 

Tracy is the founder of Meadowlark Press, an independent publisher that focuses on stories and authors from the heartland. The press is the home of The Birdy Poetry Prize (since 2019) and 105 Meadowlark Reader: A Kansas Journal of Creative Nonfiction.
 
Tracy joined Kansas Authors Club in 2000. She has been a member and has served in various offices of Districts 7, 1, and 2. Tracy produced the Kansas Authors Club yearbook from 2006-2016. She has also served as Prose Contest Chair (2004), Newsletter Editor (2007-2010), Assistant Financial Secretary (2017-19), Financial Secretary (2018-20), and State Vice President (2021). In 2022, as well as fulfilling the role of president, Tracy served as the club’s first paid part-time manager.
Monica Graves, Financial Officer
Emporia, Kansas
Monica Graves is the Director of Dental Assisting and Division Chair of Health & Human Services at Flint Hills Technical College in Emporia, Kansas. She was recognized as a Distinguished Alumna of FHTC in 2017. Monica writes engaging stories about her upbringing in the rural Flint Hills where she lived with her parents, five sisters, one brother, and a couple of aunts in a farmhouse furnished with one bathroom and lots of love. 

Monica has been published in 105 Meadowlark Reader. She has been a member of Kansas Authors Club since 2015.

​Monica makes her home in Emporia with her husband, Michael D. Graves, author of the Pete Stone Private Detective series. Mike and Monica currently sponsor the First Chapter of a Book category of the annual literary contest.  
Cathy Callen, Secretary
Lawrence, Kansas
Cathy Callen graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a bachelor's degree in English and elementary education, and from the University of Kansas with a master's degree in early childhood special education. She also attended the Kansas City Art Institute for two years, majoring in photography. Cathy spent her career with Topeka Public Schools as a teacher and later as coordinator of the district’s preschool special education program. Cathy has had poetry published in Inscape, a publication of Washburn University, and in Tallgrass Voices, a publication of poems by members of the Kansas Authors Club, edited by Gary Lechliter. Her non-fiction article, “Reconstituting Allen,” appeared in the Fall/Winter 2012 edition of Connections, a journal published by the Indiana Historical Society. Her non-fiction article, “Magic Mondays,” appeared in the Summer 2013 edition of UU World, the magazine of the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations.  Cathy’s article, “The Kansas City Daily Drovers Telegram and its leading role covering the livestock industry,” is included in the summer 2016 issue of the Jackson County (Missouri) Historical Society journal. In addition, she has written four books: Running out of Footprints (a family history), in 2013; Words in Rows, Poetry and Prose (a collection of poems and short prose), in 2016; Ginkgo Glen (a novel) in 2018; and Marble Shorts (essays) in 2022.

Cathy has been a member of the Kansas Authors Club since 2008 and was KAC state treasurer for 6 of those years. Cathy resides in Lawrence, Kansas.

Her website is: www.cathycallen.com
Kristine A. Polansky, Vice President
Manhattan, Kansas
As a writer, Kris Polansky, is best known for her poems, four of which were published in Tallgrass Voices edited by Gary Lechliter. She experiments with various poetic forms, studying how content and form shape each other. She grew up in Western Kansas (short grass country), writing puppet plays and short stories. She took a fiction writing class from James Gunn at the University of Kansas and went on to teach middle school English and social studies ten years before returning to school, the Washburn University School of Law in Topeka, Kansas, where (she jokes) she learned to write creative nonfiction. She has been named KAC Poet of the Year three times, most recently October 2021.  Her poem, “Turning Points” won the 2016 Martin Luther King, Jr. Art and Writing Contest, adult division, Manhattan, Kansas. She has served KAC for four years (2010-13) as Youth Contest Manager, 2021 as KAC Financial Secretary, and multiple years as District 4 Treasurer. She has also served as a judge for the youth contest. 

Congratulations to the following members who will be published in Issue #4 (the food issue) of 105 Meadowlark Reader: A Kansas Journal of Creative Nonfiction

10/25/2022

 
Picture

Lindsey Bartlett teaches composition and literature at Emporia State University. An Emporian by choice, she lives in the Flint Hills region of Kansas where she spends her days writing in various coffee shops, holed up at home with a good book, or driving the countryside for good photo opportunities. You can find her wherever there is a sunset. Bartlett has published one poetry collection, Vacant Childhood. Her writing and photography have appeared in The Write Bridge, Flint Hills Review, 105 Meadowlark Reader, and The Wyandotte Window.

Boyd Bauman grew up on a small ranch south of Bern, Kansas, with his dad the storyteller and his mom the family scribe. He has published two books of poetry: Cleave and Scheherazade Plays the Chestnut Tree Café. After stints in New York, Colorado, Alaska, Japan, and Vietnam, Boyd now is a librarian and writer in Kansas City, inspired by his three lovely muses. Visit him at boydbauman.weebly.com. 

Cathy Callen was born in Kansas City, Missouri. Since then, though, she has lived mostly in Kansas. Her father worked for Southwestern Bell, and every time he was promoted, the family got to see more of Kansas. They lived in Sunflower, Manhattan, Hays, Salina, Topeka, and Wichita. Her career as a teacher and special education coordinator with Topeka Public Schools kept her in the state for more than thirty years. After retiring, she moved to Lawrence with her soon-to-be husband, Barry, and it is her current favorite Kansas location. She likes the Lawrence Busker Festival, the Art Tougeau parade, the library, The Raven Bookstore, the political environment, the summer pooch swim, Liberty Hall, Wheatfield’s Bakery, and walking on the KU campus and in her friendly neighborhood.

Annabelle Corrick was born and raised in Topeka, lived in five other Kansas towns and three other states, returned to Topeka the last decade, and currently resides in Columbia, Missouri. She earned advanced degrees from Emporia State University and Kansas State University and was the Kansas Authors Club 2015 Prose Writer of the Year. Her writings have appeared in The Poet’s Art, 2016 Kansas Voices Writing Contest, Well Versed, and other publications. Her most awesome Kansas experience has been standing against the wind and viewing the vast vista of western Kansas where her paternal grandparents pioneered. 

Michael Durall grew up in the thriving metropolis of Pawnee Rock, Kansas, population 250. He was the champion sentence diagrammer in his sixth grade English class, which eventually led to his writing nine books about his work as a consultant to nonprofit organizations. He lives in Salina and writes a weekly column for the Salina 311 newspaper and has recently published a book of essays from local residents for the Salina Arts and Humanities Commission on the theme of The Day That Changed My Life Forever.

Mark O. J. Esping first lived in a Swede-Town in Pottawatomie County. He graduated from Bethany, a Swedish-Lutheran College. He reprinted NEQUA, a feminist sci-fi novel first published in Topeka, Kansas, in 1900. Mark directed www.folklifeinstitute.com, a nonprofit, and two N.E.A. Folk Art grants. His work has appeared in The Clarion Folk Art, Country Living, Scandinavian Review, Victorian Homes, and Hemslöjden. He is an Eagle Scout and a veteran. He and his wife share a home in Merriam, Kansas, with three near-feral cats. Twin deer occasionally graze in their backyard. Mark tells stories, true stories, with a humorous nature and a hint of morality. In collection they are packets of maps that are Near Invisible, Like Footprints in Ever Shifting Sand.

Beth Gulley first moved to Newton, Kansas, when she was two. Her family moved to Latin America, but Beth returned to the Olathe area for college where she met her husband. They moved to Paola, Kansas, to raise their family. Beth has advanced degrees from UMKC and the University of Kansas. She teaches writing at Johnson County Community College. Her recent writing is included in Kansas City Voices, Dragonfly Magazine, Kansas Speaks Out, and The Write Bridge. She has published three full-length poetry collections: The Sticky Note Alphabet, Dragon Eggs, and The Love of Ornamental Fish. She currently resides in Spring Hill, Kansas, which gives her easy access to Hillsdale Lake where she enjoys trail running and fishing.

Carolyn Hall is an award-winning author who grew up on a farm outside Olmitz, Kansas. Her childhood on the farm provided wonderful memories which she shared in her book, Prairie Meals and Memories: Living the Golden Rural. It was named to the Kansas Sesquicentennial’s Best 150 Books list. Her stories and poems have appeared in Chicken Soup for the Soul, The Christian Science Monitor, The Kansas City Star, and various anthologies. She lives in Lenexa, Kansas.

Jerilynn Jones Henrikson, a retired English teacher, has always loved teaching, telling, reading, watching, and writing stories. To date, Jerilynn has published nine children’s picture books, an adult memoir, and a young adult historical fiction novel. Her work reflects her sense of humor, love of words, and talent for detail. Jerilynn finds her inspiration in the rolling hills of east central Kansas. No matter the subject of a current work, she is motivated by the people, history, and changing seasons of this place. As a student of history and language, she enjoys traveling to beautiful places. But ultimately, she finds the greatest joy in travel is coming home. www.prairiepatchwork.com

Thomas N. Holmquist is a fifth-generation farmer and rancher near Smolan, Kansas.  He also is a retired teacher in the Smoky Valley School District having taught music, American History, and agriculture for forty-four years. He has also published three books, including Pioneer Cross, Swedish Settlements Along the Smoky Hill Bluffs, Bluestem, a novel, and Salemsborg, A History of the Salemsborg Church and Community, Volume 1, 1869-1939, for which he won the Award of Commendation for Lutheran Church History from the Augustana Historical Association. Tom has several writing projects in the works in between feeding cows, putting up hay, and planting and harvesting crops. 

Deb Irsik was the owner of Makin’ Waves Salon in Emporia, Kansas, and retired from the beauty industry after twenty-five years. She is a Kansas girl and shares her life with her husband Mike, and children John and Emily. Deb is a member of the Kansas Authors Club and Emporia Writers Group. Deb’s favorite thing about Kansas is the people. “Most people in Kansas have a strong work ethic and family values. The beautiful Flint Hills and Kansas sunsets are second to none. What’s not to like?” Poetry and lyrics have always been part of her life, but she felt a call to write middle-grade Christian fiction after her daughter found it difficult to be “that God girl” in eighth grade. “It is my hope that my books will encourage young people to hold onto values and faith as they navigate their teen years.” Deb’s “Heroes by Design” series was completed in 2020, and she hopes to dedicate her time to creating a book of poetry and continuing to write essays, prose, and fiction. Deb can be found online: facebook.com/D.A.Irsikauthor,  Twitter:@Writerwannabe1, www.dairsik.com, amazon.com/author/dairsik, https://instagram.com/debirsik/

Miriam Iwashige lives on a three-acre property outside of Partridge, Kansas, near where her preacher-farmer dad and mom raised twelve children. She aims to live large from this small place, just as the land and sky around the property suggest. Reading, earning a bachelor’s degree, teaching, conversing, and traveling have often fostered large living, as did homeschooling her children and investing deeply in many aspects of homemaking, gardening, animal husbandry, nature study, and church and community life. She and her Japanese-immigrant husband parented three sons who all live nearby right now. Those who have joined their sons’ families through marriage or birth (nine grandchildren!) spent childhood years in such diverse places as Bangladesh, Kenya, El Salvador, and Washington state.

Sally Jadlow grew up in Ft. Scott, Kansas. After marriage, she and her husband moved to Overland Park. Teaching creative writing for the Kansas City Writers Group is one of her joys. She writes historical fiction, inspirational stories, devotionals, and poetry. Sally has published thirteen books. Her work has appeared in many compilations including Chicken Soup for the Soul and many other publications. Her books are available on Amazon.com. Sally also loves to bake, cinnamon rolls, her specialty. Family Favorites from the Heartland contain her favorite recipes. The eastern Kansas countryside with its gently rolling hills claims Sally’s most favorite area of the state. She believes what Dorothy says, “There’s no place like home,” is true—if you live in Kansas.

Amy Deckert Kliewer has lived her entire life in Kansas. She grew up in Pawnee Rock, Kansas, and went to high school in Larned. After attending Bethel College and graduating from the University of Kansas, Amy lived and worked in the Kansas City metro area as a civil engineer. Recently retired, Amy and her husband moved to North Newton to enjoy the smalltown feeling and be close to family. She is enjoying exploring her Next Chapter.

Nancy Julien Kopp grew up in the Chicago area and moved to Kansas, her adopted state and home, in 1975. She started writing in her mid-fifties, realizing a long-held dream. She has been published in many anthologies, including twenty-three times in Chicken Soup for the Soul books, in addition to publication on websites, in magazines, and in newspapers. She writes creative nonfiction, including personal essays and short memoir pieces, and also poetry, short fiction for children, and articles on the craft of writing. Nancy and her retired husband live in Manhattan, Kansas, and are strong supporters of all things K-State. She is mother to two and grandmother to four. She is a voracious reader and enjoys playing bridge. www.writergrannysworld.blogspot.com

Marilyn Hope Lake, PhD, writes short fiction, poetry, plays and children’s picture books. She has many awards for writing, including through the Kansas Authors Club contests.  Dr. Lake’s first-place story, “Harry’s Stone,” was published in Words Out of the Flatlands; Kansas Writers Association. Lake has been published in Rock Springs Review, STIR, Well-Versed: Literary Works, the Gasconade Review, and the Mizzou Alumni Magazine. Marilyn lived in Hutchinson, Kansas, from 2002-2017, is a Kansas Authors Club ten-year member, and was a facilitator of the 2014 Annual Conference. Her Kansas favorites are the Wichita Art Museum, State Fair, Underground Salt Mine, Delos V. Smith Senior Center, Hutchinson, and others. Although she misses her Kansas friends, she is happy to live with her dog, Hugo, and near family in Columbia, Missouri.

A Kansan through and through, Sandee Lee celebrates being published in every edition of 105 Meadowlark Reader. Her favorite writing topic for nonfiction and fiction is Kansas. The turmoil of the mid-1800s in the Lawrence area is the topic of her current fiction project. Relaxing on her porch with her two border collies lying by her feet and watching cattle graze on the hillside is where you’ll find Sandee most evenings except in the winter months. From that porch she can observe the homestead where her family has lived since 1925.

Errin D. Moore, an emigrant from Montana, has called Kansas home for eight years. She lives in the Flint Hills near Leon with her husband, infant son, and eighteen-year-old stepson—along with their menagerie of chickens, turkeys, geese, pigs, and an overabundance of cats. She fell in love with the unique beauty Kansas offers, most especially the magnificent sunsets. Errin and her husband own Able and Ready Appliance Repair. She runs the office from home while raising Oliver. She was a teacher and administrator for nineteen years, and she owned and operated a bookstore in El Dorado. Her humorous, touching, and unique sense of voice is especially effective when she writes about the joys and challenges of being a first-time mother at the age of forty-four.

Audrey Phillips is a Kansan through and through. She grew up in Overland Park, attended the University of Kansas, and is now living in Kansas City, Missouri. Audrey loves to represent her favorite parts of being a Kansan by cheering on her Jayhawks or Chiefs or Sporting Kansas City. Audrey loves Kansas because of the way everyone feels like family here. She is a proud midwesterner and strives to promote the kindness that midwesterners possess. She has always loved to write, even from a young age. She was and continues to be inspired by her famous Aunt Mary-Lane Kamberg who has published many books in her time as an author. Even though now she lives right across the state line, Kansas will always be her home.

Cynthia Schaker (Cindy), a retired Kansas educator of thirty-seven years, grew up on a farm outside of Hamilton, Kansas, in Greenwood County. Cindy taught grades six through eight at Towanda Grade School and served as school counselor at Circle Middle School in Butler County. One of her favorite places in Kansas is the Flint Hills because they remind her of going home. She currently resides in El Dorado, Kansas, with her rescue dog Moxie. Cindy does volunteer work in the Gift Shop at Susan B. Allen Memorial Hospital in El Dorado. She serves as President of the SBAMH Auxiliary. She loves humorous writing and penning stories from her childhood. She recently had her humorous murder mystery play performed at Cardinal Creek Farm in Butler County.

Julie A. Sellers was raised in the Flint Hills near the small town of Florence, Kansas. She currently resides in Atchison, Kansas, where she is an Associate Professor (Spanish) and Chair of the Department of World Languages and Cultures at Benedictine College. Julie’s creative work has appeared in publications such as Cagibi, Wanderlust, Unlost, The Write Launch, and Kansas Time + Place. Julie was the 2020 Kansas Authors Club Prose Writer of the Year, and the Overall Poetry Winner (2022) and Overall Prose Winner (2017, 2019) of the Kansas Voices Contest. She is the author of Kindred Verse: Poems Inspired by Anne of Green Gables (Blue Cedar Press, 2021) and the novel, Ann of Sunflower Lane (Meadowlark, 2022).

Perry Shepard is a Vietnam veteran who has written two novels: The Hero versus Me and Monkey Jo, and Hard Love. He co-wrote two plays in the anthology titled Annabelle. He won a second-place award in Eber and Wein’s Best American Poetry of 2013, and an honorable mention in Writer’s Digest 84th annual Poetry Competition. Perry is a member and former District 2 president of Kansas Authors Club. He makes his home in Eudora, Kansas.

A month after the sudden death of her second husband, Anne L. Spry had a mystical dream that detailed a new business based on capturing personal history for writing memoir. She had already begun publishing books through Createspace for herself and others following a twenty-seven-year career as a newspaper publisher and editor. Since the fortuitous dream, Spry and partner Cheri Battrick have developed a DIY Memoir Kit and Spry has expanded her book publishing to some two dozen titles under the Personal Chapters LLC banner. They include children’s books, memoir and fiction, and a few titles authored by Spry. Anne serves as President of District 1 of Kansas Authors Club and produces a newsletter for that group and another for a local Sweet Adelines group. She is married to a retired military pilot, and they live on a family acreage south of Topeka where Anne spent her first five years.

Chuck Warner is a lifelong Kansan. After growing up in Wichita, he has lived in Lawrence since first attending the University of Kansas in the 1960s. With business and law degrees, he embarked on a nearly forty-year career in business and banking. After he retired in 2008, he began writing about his maternal grandfather and in 2019 Birds, Bones, and Beetles: The Improbable Career and Remarkable Legacy of University of Kansas Naturalist Charles D. Bunker was published by the University Press of Kansas. In 2020 his book was recognized as a Kansas Notable book, and also won awards for the best Kansas history and best book layout from the Kansas Authors Club, and was a finalist in the High Plains Book Awards.   

Barbara Waterman-Peters is an artist by training and a writer by chance. Both pursuits have come together over the years in her articles about art and artists for such publications as Topeka, Kansas, and New Art Examiner magazines, in her book cover paintings for authors such as Marcia Cebulska’s Watching Men Dance, and in her collaborations with poets, most recently, Two Ponders: A Collaboration with Dennis Etzel, Jr. Co-owner of Pen & Brush Press with author Glendyn Buckley, Waterman-Peters illustrated their first two children’s books, The Fish’s Wishes and Bird which won awards from Kansas Authors Club. She co-wrote and illustrated their third book, TING & the Caterbury Tales, which came out this spring. Recently her fiction piece, “The Critique,” appeared in The Pen Woman and her creative non-fiction and poetry have been included in several anthologies. She lives in Topeka and her studio is in the NOTO Arts & Entertainment District. She spent five years living in rural Jackson County and Holton.

​Cat Webling is an actress and author based in Kansas. She loves everything mad and macabre, philosophical and silly, so that’s exactly what she writes! Scifi, fantasy, and poetry are her mainstays when she’s not writing about literature, theater, gaming, or fan culture. She currently has a novel, a couple of short story collections, and several poetry collections under her belt. She works as an editor for SUPERJUMP Magazine, is an active member of the Kansas Authors Club, and daylights as a copywriter for hire. Cat writes from her home in Russell, which she shares with her loving partner, adorable son, and several very cute cats. You can find her work at www.catwebling.com.
Picture
Theme for Issue #5 (Nov 1 - Dec 31, 2022 Submission Period):
Animal Stories
  1. Remember that our themes are simply prompts to spur your essays. There are so many directions you can go. Surprise us. Engage us. Help us remember what it was like to tame a nest of wild kittens. How did mom react when those kits turned out to be skunks? Ever snuggle with a turtle? Communicate with an owl? Swim with your pet snake?
  2. Personal essays are welcome, but we are also looking for interviews, journalistic pieces, and more. Do you know a veterinarian who deserves the spotlight? Is there an animal shelter leading the way whose operations deserve to be highlighted? There are so many true stories that need to be told.
  3. Remember, It must be a true story that happened, all or partially, in Kansas. Can your story leave the boundaries of Kansas? Sure! But you must show us that Kansas connection!
Learn More

Cathy Callen, D2 Member and State Secretary, Publishes Book with Meadowlark Press

4/29/2022

 
Picture
“I have a lot of marbles. I confess to you that I have 18,734 of them, more or less,” writes Cathy Callen in the opening essay of Marble Shorts.
 
Marble Shorts contains eight essays, filled with sparkles of color that rival the marble images that adorn these pages. This book is a gift to the collector, the curious soul, the seeker of color in this bleary-eyed world, and the rest. Meet the Marble Lady of Kansas City. Meet the Girl Scout who uses marbles to earn her “think like an engineer” badge. Meet Bruce of the Moon Marble Company. You just never know what might happen if you plant a marble. It may grow!

“What spectators view as art in homes, businesses, and museums is the culmination of a creative process that starts with an idea. The work that goes into transforming a creative idea into something that can be displayed is not always obvious. If you are a patron of the arts, I would think your interest would lie primarily in the finished product—what you can see, what you can admire, what you might purchase, what you would then display. If you are an artist, the journey toward that destination belongs to you.” –CC
​
What Readers are saying:
A sense of nostalgia pervades this charming work which introduces readers to extraordinary collectors—people who collect off-beat adventures, lasting friendships, and fascinating skills, as well as marvelous marbles. This is a summery, sunny book that can warm a winter’s day. It is a book to slow down with, to savor and enjoy, and perhaps coax up a memory or two. –Kathy Koplik
Marble Shorts is a collection of gems. Profiles, pictures, and personal observations about passion, all inspired by those perfectly round glass objects that generate smiles throughout the world. Cathy Callen introduces us to connoisseurs, history, manufacturing, and, most importantly, the sheer enchantment of those magical pieces. In this case, one can judge a book by its cover; the photo of a blue marble between the toes of a baby's foot promises the delightful read to be delivered. –Romalyn Tilghman, author, To the Stars Through Difficulty, 2018 Kansas Notable Book
Cathy Callen checks all of the boxes with this delightful book. You can’t imagine how many times I interrupted what my wife, Nancy, was doing to relate or read aloud what I’d just read. –Jack Kline, author of Rhapsody
Both Cathy Svacina and Bruce Breslow are at the top of their game when it comes to marbles . . . excellent biographical material on them, as well as the other individuals mentioned in this book. The variety of stories relating to collecting marbles and collecting in general is widespread. Well done!  –R. Merwin Kirkwood
I enjoyed learning about the people in the stories—all of whom began their marble journeys at different stages of their lives and for somewhat different reasons, although as I read through the book, it seemed clear that love of color, focus on art and science, and personal memories created their individual journeys toward creating their various collections. –Gayle Stuber
Ms. Callen has a great appreciation of enthusiastic people who take pleasure in simple joys. It is a perfect release for these anxious times. –Jim and Lene Brooke
Purchase Marble Shorts
Visit Cathy's Website
PictureCathy Callen
When I was a child, play was mostly physical. I loved to roller-skate, swim, ride my bike, walk along rock walls, and even climb a few trees. Reading was play, for me, too, and a main way I spent my time when I wasn’t outside. Family leisure time involved working puzzles and board games together, or playing cards—especially on summer vacations to Minnesota when we’d play Canasta and Hearts while slapping at mosquitoes. I had my first near-death experience at age eight, when my Dad sent me to a strip mall near our house in Salina to purchase the game of Monopoly. After making my purchase, I decided to cut through an alley behind the store. Proud of my accomplishment and hugging the bag with the Monopoly game close to me, I started to sprint home and was nearly struck by a speeding car in the alley. I did live to tell about it, and we played a lot of Monopoly.
   Play is different now.
   Any time there is a camera in my hand, or a yellow legal pad and a pen nearby, I am happy. Throw in a few thousand brightly colored marbles that need tending, and I can be ecstatic.

Meet the Officers: Cathy Callen

4/25/2021

 
Kansas Authors Club is run by an all-volunteer board. Officers from across the state devote time monthly to everything from district programming to our annual writing contests and convention. Visit with your district representative about how you can contribute!
Picture
Cathy Callen graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a bachelor's degree in English and elementary education, and from the University of Kansas with a master's degree in early childhood special education. She also attended the Kansas City Art Institute for two years, majoring in photography. Cathy spent her career with Topeka Public Schools as a teacher and later as coordinator of the district’s preschool special education program. Cathy has had poetry published in Inscape, a publication of Washburn University, and in Tallgrass Voices, a publication of poems by members of the Kansas Authors Club, edited by Gary Lechliter. Her non-fiction article, “Reconstituting Allen,” appeared in the Fall/Winter 2012 edition of Connections, a journal published by the Indiana Historical Society. Her non-fiction article, “Magic Mondays,” appeared in the Summer 2013 edition of UU World, the magazine of the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations. Cathy’s article, “The Kansas City Daily Drovers Telegram and its leading role covering the livestock industry,” is included in the summer 2016 issue of the Jackson County (Missouri) Historical Society journal. In addition, she has written three books: Running out of Footprints (a family history), in 2013; Words in Rows, Poetry and Prose (a collection of poems and short prose), in 2016; and Ginkgo Glen (a novel) in 2018.

Cathy has been a member of District 2, Lawrence, Kansas for about eleven years and was KAC state treasurer for six of those years.

Her website is: www.cathycallen.com

Cathy’s books:
Picture
Picture
Picture
Works in Progress:Death by Marbles, (a novel), and
Untitled, (a biography)

Spring Board Meeting Highlights

4/12/2021

 
​SPRING BOARD MEETING
Cathy Callen, KAC secretary
 
The KAC Board of Directors met by Zoom for their spring board meeting on Saturday, April 3rd, 2021. Sixteen officers and board members from across the state participated, led by KAC president, Duane Johnson.

  • A 2021 budget was presented by former Financial Secretary, Tracy Million Simmons, and approved by voice vote.
  • Preliminary plans for the fall KAC convention, to be hosted by District #1 in Topeka, were reviewed.
  • Items of discussion included a proposed change to the Bylaws for specifying the chair for the nominating committee, increasing opportunities for youth through contact with schools, partnering with libraries to increase access to district programs and statewide Author Talks, the need for adding speakers to the KAC Speaker’s Bureau, and the pros and cons of identifying contest judges to entrants in advance.
  • A task force will be meeting in May to discuss various aspects of modernizing KAC.

It was noted that all KAC contests are now open for submissions. In addition, 105 Meadowlark Reader, a Meadowlark publication, will be accepting submissions for stories about Kansas counties in May and June, with the theme, “Kansas Road Trips.”

The next KAC board meeting is scheduled for August 7, 2021.  

    RSS Feed

    How to Submit News:

    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. 

    Categories

    All
    105 Meadowlark Reader
    2021 Convention News
    2022 Convention News
    2023 Retreat News
    2024 Convention News
    Aaron Fowler
    Abbi Lee
    Abby Bayani-Heitzman
    A.C. Williams
    Adelaide Bauman
    Aimee Gross
    Aimee L. Gross
    Alicia Troike
    Alisa Branham
    Al Ortolani
    Amanda Little
    Amber Fraley
    Amity Literary Prize
    Amy Ackerman
    Amy Kliewer
    Amy Ragland
    Amy Sage Webb Baza
    Amy Sage Webb-Baza
    Anamarie Davis Wilkins
    Anamarie Davis-Wilkins
    Anamcara Press
    Ana Wilkins
    Andrea Rome
    Andrew Garvey
    Andrew Howard
    Andy Farkas
    Angee Barcus
    Angela Bates
    Angel Edenburn
    Angie Reed
    Annabelle Corrick
    Anna Curry
    Ann Anderson
    Anna St. John
    Ann Christine Fell
    Anne Kniffendorf
    Anne Shiever
    Anne Spry
    Annette Billings
    Ann Fell
    Annual Membership Meeting 2024
    Ann Vigola Anderson
    Antonio Sanchez Day
    April Pameticky
    Arlene Rains Graber
    Arlice W. Davenport
    Ashley Clayton Kay
    Ashley Donegan
    Audrey Bosley
    Audrey Phillips
    Author Talk
    Barbara Booth
    Barbara Brady
    Barbara Meier
    Barbara Waterman Peters
    Barbara Waterman-Peters
    Beth Gulley
    Betty Berney
    Betty Laird
    Bill Isley
    Bill Sampson
    Birdy Poetry Prize
    Blue Cedar Press
    Bob Sykora
    Book Awards
    Boyd Bauman
    Brenda White
    Brett Wilkinson
    Brian Daldorph
    Brian Daldorphh
    Bruce Mactavish
    Candace Sherman
    Carey Gillam
    Carmaine Ternes
    Carole Katsantoness
    Carol Katsantoness
    Carolyn Hall
    Carolyn R. Smith
    Carol Yoho
    Caryn Mirriam Goldberg
    Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg
    Catherine Hedge
    Catherine Robertson
    Cathy Callen
    Cat Webling
    Cavalier Conference On Writing And Literature
    Chance Dibben
    Chapbook Contest
    Charles Forrest Jones
    Charlotte Crawford
    Cheryl Heide
    Cheryl Skupa
    Cheryl Unruh
    Chhaya Kolavalli
    Children's Book Award
    Chris McKitterick
    Christine Compo-Thompson
    Chuck Warner
    Ciri George
    Clyde Toland
    Coffin Memorial Book Award
    Conlan Murphy
    Connie Rae White
    Connlyn Sinclair
    Contests
    Convention News
    Craig Feigh
    Craig Lancaster
    Curtis Becker
    Cynthia Chauhan
    Cynthia C. Schaker
    Cynthia J. Ross
    Cynthia Mines
    D.A. Chadwick
    D.A. Irsik
    Dan Close
    Danielle Ramirez
    David Hann
    Davi Nicoll
    Deb Irsik
    Deborah Linn
    Debra Cole
    Debra Hodge
    Delbert Bryant
    Denise Low
    Dennis Etzel Jr.
    Diana Farthing
    Diane Palka
    Diane Wahto
    District 1
    District 2
    District 4
    District 5
    District 6
    Dixie Brown
    D. L. Winter
    D.L. Winter
    Don Marler
    Doris Schroeder
    Duane Johnson
    Duane L. Herrmann
    Earl Shook
    Edna Bell Pearson
    Edna Bell-Pearson
    Edna Dyck
    Effie Gyf
    Eileen Anderson
    Elaine McAllister
    Elizabeth Farnsworth
    Elizabeth Schmidt
    Elmer Fuller
    Emilie Moll
    Eric McHenry
    Erinn D. Moore
    Errin D. Moore
    ESU Intern
    Events
    Evie Green
    Flint Hills Publishing
    Frankie Roland
    Frank Powers
    Fred Appelhanz
    Fred Fanning
    Gail Martin
    Gary Park
    George Gurley
    Gerri Hilger
    Gina Laiso
    Ginger Zyskowski
    Glendyn Buckley
    Gloria Zachgo
    Grant Overstake
    Gretchen Burch
    Gretchen Cassel Eick
    Gretchen Eick
    Hannah Dapogny
    Hanni Hamel
    Hazel Hart
    Hazel Spire
    H.B.Berlow
    Heidi Unruh
    Holly Friesen
    Huascar Medina
    Ian Cook
    In Memoriam
    In Memory
    Invitation To Attend
    Invitation To Submit
    Iris Craver
    Irma Wassall
    Jackie Kraft
    Jaimie Kirby
    James Kenyon
    Jane Gates Bandy
    Janet Jenkins Stotts
    Janet Kelley
    Janet Rode
    Jan Gilbert Hurst
    Janice Lee McClure
    Janice Northerns
    Jared Vaughn
    Jason Ryberg
    J.D. Cole
    Jeanette Carter
    Jean Grant
    Jeanice Eagan Davis
    Jeff Broome
    Jeff Guernsey
    Jeffrey D. Cole
    Jenn Bailey
    Jerilynn Henrikson
    Jillian Forsberg
    Jim Gilkeson
    Jim Minick
    Jim Norton
    Jim Potter
    Jim Tiller
    Joan Breit
    Joann Williams
    Joe H. Vaughan
    John Queen
    John Sanders
    John Swainston
    Jolene Haas
    Jon Kelly Yenser
    Jose Faus
    Joseph Bollig
    Joseph Harrington
    Joyce Hilliard Stotts
    Joyce Long
    Judy Keller Hatteberg
    Judy Park
    Julie Ann Baker Brin
    Julie Johnson
    Julie Nischan
    Julie Sellers
    Julie Stielstra
    KAC Board News
    Kansas Book Festival
    Kansas Notable Books
    Kansas Poet Laureate
    Karen Barron
    Karen Miller
    Karis Ens
    Kate Siska
    Kathleen Dultmeier
    Kathleen Kaska
    Katie Rathburn
    Kat Struckley
    Kellogg Press
    Kelly Johnston
    Kelly Sullivan
    Kenneth Neel Holler
    Ken Ohm
    Kerrie Flanagan
    Kerri Snell
    Kerry Moyer
    Kevin Rabas
    Kevin Willmott
    Kiesa Kay
    Kimber Silver
    Kim Horner McCoy
    Kitty Hamilton
    K.L. Barron
    K.P. Kollenborn
    Kris Cain
    Kristie Clark
    Kristine Polansky
    Kristy Nerstheimer
    Krystal Yegon
    Ky Shorb
    Larry Hatteberg
    Larry Toerber
    Laura Lee Washburn
    Leonard Krishtalka
    Linda Ahrens Brower
    Linda Cook
    Linda Crowder
    Linda Heggestad
    Lindsey Bartlett
    Linzi Garcia
    Lisa D. Stewart
    Lisa Hase Jackson
    Lisa Hase-Jackson
    Looks Like A Million Book Design Award
    Lorena Joyce Herrmann
    Lori Martin
    Lorine Gleue
    Lori Stratton
    Louis Copt
    Louise Click
    Luanne Joy French
    Manhattan Writers Group
    Marcia Cebulska
    Mardel Esping
    Marian Riedy
    Mari Dietz
    Marie Asner
    Marie Fletcher
    Marilyn Hope Lake
    Marilyn Johnson
    Marjorie Brown
    Mark Esping
    Mark Jarvis
    Mark McCormick
    Mark Scheel
    Mark Simmons
    Mark Wentling
    Martha Danielson
    Martin Kansas History Book Award
    Maryann Barry
    Maryfrances Wagner
    Mary Kate Wilcox
    Mary Lane Kamberg
    Mary-Lane Kamberg
    Mason Taylor-Taite
    Maureen Carroll
    Max Yoho
    Meadowlark Books
    Meadowlark Press
    Meet A New Member
    Meet The Officers
    Melinda Briscoe
    Melody J. Cole
    Member Book News
    Member Books
    Member News
    Mennonite Press
    Michael Durall
    Michael Graves
    Michael Pearce
    Michael Poage
    Michael Stewart
    Michelle Zumbrum
    Mike Durall
    Mike Hartnett
    Mike Matson
    Millie Horlacher
    Miriam Iwashige
    Mirriam Iwashige
    Monica Graves
    Morgan McCune
    Myrne Roe
    Najiyah Maxfield
    Nancy Glenn
    Nancy Julien Kopp
    Nancy McCabe
    Natalee Ganyon
    Nelson Poetry Book Award
    Nichole Snyder
    Nicole Sullivan
    Nila Jean Spencer
    Onalee Nicklin
    Open Submissions
    Pamela Yenser
    Pat Beckemeyer
    Patricia Bonine
    Patrick Kelly
    Paula K. Nixon
    Paul Epp
    Pauline Fecht
    Paul Lamb
    Peggy M. Phillips
    Peg Nichols
    Perry Shepard
    Peter Hamel
    Petroglyphs
    POD Print
    Post Rock Press
    Prem Bajaj
    Publishing
    Quiet Storm
    Rachel Anne Jones
    Raj Bajaj
    Ralvell Rogers II
    Ray "Griz" Racobs
    Read Local!
    #readlocalKS
    Reaona Hemmingway
    Reginald D. Jarrell
    Renee' La Viness
    Richard Gwin
    Rich Hawkins
    Rick Christiansen
    R. Kent Crawford
    RL Neely
    Robert Cory
    Robert Dean
    Robert Fraga
    Robert Lofthouse
    Robert Phillips
    Robert Rebein
    Robert Stewart
    Rob Howell
    Rob Rebein
    Roger Heineken
    Roger Ringer
    Roland Sodowsky
    Ronda Miller
    Rosemary Torrez
    Roy Beckemeyer
    Roy Stucky
    Ruth Maus
    Ryan Dennis
    Salina Public Library
    Sally Jadlow
    Samantha L. Barrett
    Samantha Morrison
    Sam Majdi
    Sandee Taylor
    Sarah Jane Crespo
    Sara Neiswanger
    Sean Purdue
    Shannon Carriger
    Sharon Riley
    Sheree Downs
    Sheree Wingo
    Sherry Krehbiel
    Sheryl Brenn
    Shoshanna Aaliyah
    Skyler Lovelace
    S.L. Brown
    Spur Award
    Stacey Kielhorn
    Stacy Thowe
    State Board
    Stephen T. Johnson
    Steve Linder
    Steven Linder
    Steve Semken
    Susan Armstrong
    Susan Hill
    Susan Kander
    Susan Zuber-Chall
    Sylvia Colombo
    Symphony In The Flint Hills
    Tamara Grantham
    Tammy Gilley
    Tammy Hader
    Taylor Stuckey
    Ted Farmer
    Thaddeus Dugan
    Thea Rademacher
    Thomas Fox Averill
    Thomas Holmquist
    Tim Bascom
    Time Honored Productions
    Tim Keane
    Timothy Keane
    Tim Sharp
    Tom Holmquist
    Tom Mach
    Toni Cummings
    Traci Brimhall
    Tracy Million Simmons
    Troy Robinson
    Trudy McFarland
    Tyler Henning
    Tyler Robert Sheldon
    Tyler Sheldon
    Vickie Guillot
    Vicki Julian
    Victoria Hermes-Bond
    Warren Ashworth
    Wichita Meetings
    William Allen White
    William J. Karnowski
    Words In The Wind
    Writers In Community
    Writing From The Center
    Writing Group Formation
    Writing Opportunities
    Wyatt Townley
    Youth Opportunities

    Archives

    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    September 2018
    August 2018
    June 2018
    April 2018
    November 2017
    October 2017
    May 2017
    March 2017

Proudly powered by Weebly