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Remembering Sheryl Brenn

1/31/2025

 
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Sheryl Kay Brenn
July 18, 1944-January 17, 2025

Member 2014-2025
Sheryl Brenn was the spark plug for Kansas Authors Club, District 7, helping us to keep our western Kansas members on the map. Since joining the club in 2014, she filled the role of multiple offices, many times fulfilling the duties of Secretary, Treasurer, President, and Contest Manager all at the same time. Sheryl served as District 7 Secretary and Treasurer right up to the point of her death, both leading and attending meetings.

Sheryl worked hard to make sure that our western Kansas members were notified about meetings and events. She was the contact for the District 7 writing contests. Officially, she served as District 7 Vice President in 2015. She served as District 7 Treasurer from 2016-2025. And she served as Secretary 2024-25.
Obituary
"Sheryl Brenn was a "Sparkplug" in any organization she was involved with--from Lions Club to Kansas Authors Club--leading creatively to positive actions. And she was a friend."   --John Howard Sanders (D7)
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Sheryl Brenn often attended our programs via Zoom. Here she is at the 2024 Annual Meeting of the General Membership.
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Sheryl received the Merit Award for Service to the Club in 2024. Here she is with members John Sanders and Millie Horlacher of District 7.

Remembering Ronda Miller

12/11/2024

 
It is with great sadness we report the passing of Ronda Miller on December 10, 2024. Ronda was many a poet's first introduction to Kansas Authors Club. She served our organization in many capacities, including State President from 2018-2019. Ronda will be greatly missed.

Please share your memories of Ronda via our submit form. We will add them to this page.
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Ronda Miller
Member (D2) 2011-2024

State President 2018-2019
State Vice President 2016-2017
District 2 President - 2014-2017
​State Poetry Contest Manager - 2012-2015
Poetry Books
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Going Home: Poems from My Life
MoonStain
(Meadowlark, 2015)
WaterSigns (Meadowlark, 2017)
Winds of Time (Kellogg Press, 2019)
I Love the Child (Kellogg Press, 2019)

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2019 Interview by Cheryl Unruh

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I met Ronda when I volunteered to help with the registration desk when attending my first KAC convention which was held in my hometown of Lawrence. She had seen our ad in the local newspaper where she was employed as a blogger, and we immediately became friends. Of course, I had to encourage her to become a member too.

At the first meeting she attended, our connection deepened when she tearfully described recently losing her ex-husband, the father of her children, with whom she still had a soul-bond and obviously still loved. I related immediately since I had lost my husband and soulmate just a few years prior.

Later, we discovered that we both had M.S. My symptoms were more prevalent than hers, but it was another commonality of our lives. During our friendship, we shared many experiences such as  representing KAC at the annual holiday event in downtown Lawrence, selling books at the same holiday fairs, and then having her contributing stories in two of my anthologies.

What I learned about Ronda was that she was an independent, very intelligent and loyal friend who always encouraged others. She bought our books, commented on our Facebook posts, offered help before it was asked, could never say no when needed, and never complained. She was a very spiritual person who valued everyone, with the ability to forgive which kept her positive and able to see the world as it could be. I know she must have been a wonderful asset as a Life Coach to her clients.

Due to both of our physical constraints, I had not seen Ronda for a while, but we still made occasional contact. When I saw the simple subject line that said “Ronda Miller,” tears welled in my eyes because I knew, even before reading its content, what the email would say. She was doing so well and her passing was a shock. I could only pray that God would hold her in His arms and give her the blessings and joy that she deserved for the wonderful legacy she left for others.
-Vicki Julian


"I will forever miss her kindness, her love of words, her love of people, the way she always brought snacks, and the way she always encouraged me. Until we meet again, my friend!" -Curtis Becker

"When I first met Ronda I was more than a little intimidated! She is a force. After we met more personally and she did my final edits on Sunshine, we connected.
Her photo’s were beautiful and her poetry was inspiring."
​-Deb Irsik

"I've worked and rode and wrote and explored with Ronda for so long in so many ways, I can only start to grasp this loss while feeling how much I love her. I can't remember when we met exactly, but she was central to my efforts when I was Kansas Poet Laureate and we did many a road trip and lots of meetings and meals and figuring things out together. She also co-chaired the Power of Words conference from the Transformative Language Arts Network with me and was very involved for years."
-Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg
Riding With Ronda, by CMG

"Ronda will be missed for her words, her photographs and her beautiful spirit. Condolences to her family and many writing friends." -Anne Spry

"Ronda was a person who put her hands together and gave you a lift. I barely knew her when I came to her event at The Raven. She asked me to read one of her poems and I was honored. When she was not having a good day one time, I got small cherry pies and we sat in her backyard, eating them and watching her cat, Timothy."
​-Ann Vigola Anderson

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"Ronda Miller was a beautiful, creative, kind, giving, supportive and talented human. When I got news yesterday that she had passed, it felt a bit like a gut punch. Early on in this writing adventure of mine, she was an ever-present support, whether it be through her kind words, or helping me get hooked into cool experiences as a writer/ poet. Ronda was the reason I was able to go on the television program, Absolutely Kansas, to talk about my first book. It wasn’t because they were looking at me, but Ronda saw something in me that she wanted to help promote. She asked me to be a part of one of her book launches at the Raven Bookstore in Lawrence, and this was another example of her wanting to promote and support other poets.

"Ronda was always willing to share the stage-so to speak.
The William Stafford: living a poetic life event at the Watkins Museum is an annual poetry reading that I look forward to every year. She had poets from all over the state come and read out at that event, and I was able to be a part of that as well. I got a kick out of the fact that Ronda described my poetry as “Staffordy”

"So, Ronda did all of that. That event was her creation. I’m one of many who benefited personally and professionally from having Ronda as a friend, and support in their life.
In terms of her body of work, she was an accomplished and gifted poet. I always enjoyed hearing her read out her work, and I know she took great pleasure in hearing other poets read out their work as well. Her footprint on the Lawrence poetry scene, and the Kansas scene as a whole, is one of substance.

"Ronda loved beautiful things, whether it be flowers, or words, or a warm hug before or after a poetry reading.
Actually, Ronda just loved.

"I know so many people that were touched by her, and I can venture to guess that I am not the only one feeling the void right now.

"Ronda’s legacy will live on, through her written work, and her contributions to our greater writing world. It will also live on because many of us will remember the loving and caring human being that she was.

"My deepest condolences to her family, all of her friends, and damn if we weren’t lucky to have been able to spend time with her, and love her.

"She will be greatly missed."

​-Kerry Moyer


I remember Ronda Miller on the day she joined our club. I believe at the point I was president of our district. We asked everyone to give their name and a short summary of what they wrote. Ronda got up and recited one of her recent poems. At another time she visited our home to find out how I was doing and just chat. Prior to that she wanted me to recite some of my poems in her back yard, and at another time she invited me to a Slam where local poets were reading their poetry out loud. Ronda and I were admirers of each other's poetry.
​
​-Tom Mach

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I don't remember when Ronda Miller and I met through KAC, but I have no doubt that she would, because she was sweet like that. We weren't in the same KAC district, but she kept up with the news of the district I'm in and kept me "in the know" of news in her district and KAC at the state level. She was always so supportive! She always treated me as a best friend although we didn't know each other for a long time.

In 2023, I responded to an email request she sent out for help with a rather large editing project she was doing for a friend of hers who was writing his memoir. She and I kept in contact even after the project. She and I wrote often as friends on Facebook. She would sweetly end many messages with "I love you!" Later that same year we ended up attending the same book signing for local authors at the Winfield Public Library in my hometown of Winfield, KS. In true Ronda-like fashion, she greeted me warmly and asked if we could get our picture taken together. We continued connecting on Facebook after that. I was especially inspired by her beautiful pictures of nature. Often the pictures were of sunrises, sunsets, and other moments in nature that she sought out in order to help her heal throughout her terrible illness. I was honored that she shared some intimate details about that illness with me and I was glad to offer empathy where I could. I was saddened and shocked to hear of her passing, but I do believe she is now healed. I can still picture her enjoying beautiful sunrises and sunsets. She is missed.

​-Melody Cole

Thank you to Roy Beckemyer, Curtis Becker, and Meadowlark Press for sharing photos.

We Remember Betty Laird

11/10/2024

 
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Betty A. Laird October 19, 1925 - November 5, 2024
Betty Laird was a member of Kansas Authors Club since 2006.  She was a research analyst in Russian studies and Kansas history. She was also a professional actor who appeared in 10 stage plays and more than 40 commercials. She also co-starred in various productions, such as “Sarah, Plain and Tall” with Glenn Close, “Monday After the Miracle” alongside Roma Downey, and “Gone in the Night” with Edward Asner. Apart from that, she also founded the Hasting College Radio Players and has served on four board of directors, of which two she chaired. (source: Nebraska Authors)
Obituary

In Memory: Frank Powers

7/12/2024

 
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Franklin C. Powers
December 2, 1936 - June 24, 2024

​Member 2017-2024

District 7 President and member of Kansas Authors Club since 2017, passed away on June 24, 2024. Though a relatively new member of the club, Frank stepped into a leadership role and enjoyed documenting stories from his life and of the history of Gove County. He published memories in Reminisce Magazine and enjoyed reading stories each year to the children at Quinter Elementary where his grandchildren attended school. 
Obituary for Frank Powers
Members who would like to share memories of Frank, please feel free to add them in the comments section of this post or email them to KansasAuthorsClub AT gmail DOT com. 

In Memory: Delbert Bryant

6/18/2023

 
Delbert Bryant joined Kansas Authors Club in 1994. He was a poet who kept every yearbook of the Kansas Authors Club on a shelf in his home office.
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Delbert Edward Bryant

​January 3, 1924 - April 3, 2023
Obituary
a note from Tracy Million Simmons:

Delbert was quite proud of his association with Kansas Authors Club. We began writing letters when I took over management of the KAC membership list and asked him to check in yearly as an octogenarian. He shared news of his move from his home to an assisted living facility. 

"I intend for this to be a short note only to confirm our relationship in the KAC," he wrote in May of 2022, my last letter from him. "I look at our troubled world and consider all others as brothers and sisters in a broad way." His letters were always signed, "On my way HOME."

Delbert shared this story in the 2021 KAC Yearbook. 
Reason for Hope
 
It happened like this: On July 15, 2020, a very warm day, I had just finished mowing a heavy part of our lawn on my riding mower, leaving behind scattered mowed grass to blight my mowing job. I had raked up piles for pickup by the sanitation crew on Friday. This 96-year-old body felt it necessary to rest a bit, so I sat down on a rock ledge near a huge reddish rock in the shade in our front yard.

After probably ten minutes, I tried to get up and proceed on my project only to fall backwards and I simply laid there before making another try. I did not strike my head on the huge rock, for which I am grateful. As I was struggling to stand once again, I heard a young voice say, “Are you OK? Do you need help?” I felt his hand on my arm and as I placed my hand on his shoulder, I was aware that a helping young man had come to my aid.

I thanked him sincerely and said, “I think I can make it now.” He said, “Are you sure?” He returned to his waiting buddy and they cycled off on their way.

My daughter, Jan Gauntt, made a plea on Facebook for possible info on who this good Samaritan might be. Kathy Rice got a little closer with enquiries with her neighborhood group and got some results. The young boy’s name is Aiden Roberts, 12 years old. His father’s name is Dustin. I was informed that they had been vacationing since the incident and would be contacting me later, but no word yet.

I want to thank Aiden’s folks and him for having such an observing, kind son--stuff a real man is made of in part. This is a promising attribute of our Lord’s command to love one another. I would relish knowing Aiden and his parents better.

​Now you’ve heard the rest of the story.
 
 
Delbert Bryant
“On my way home”
Delbert on WIBW - 2022

Remembering Carole Katsantoness

2/21/2023

 
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Carole Katsantoness 1941 - 2020
Member 2010-2020

Carole described herself as “writing for therapeutic release.” Her published books, Kat Tales, volumes 1 and 2, revolved around her childhood experiences and ties to the Kansas City area. She was published in The Best Times, Good Old Days, and more. The Kansas City Railway Historical Society published “Love at the Train Station,” a tribute to Carole’s parents. She also enjoyed the challenge of writing poetry, some of which was included in Tallgrass Voices published by Hill Song Press and by the Johnson County Library, in Overland Park, Kansas.

​Carole was a member of District 2. In 2018, she paid her dues ahead to 2021 when she would be an Octogenarian. She was eager to maintain her connection with Kansas Authors as she started a new adventure, moving to Florida to be near her family. Though Carole was recognized by the club in 2021, we sadly learned that she did not quite make it to her 80th birthday. Carole passed away in April 2020.

Remembering Sam Majdi

2/18/2023

 
This is a belated post. We recently learned that Sam passed away in September 2020. 
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Sam Majdi was s a retired teacher of English with over 30 years experience.

He was a District 5 member from 
Wichita and had a B.A. in English literature.

Sam joined Kansas Authors Club in 2001. He was an advocate of human rights all his life.

Sam published the following books:

The Nobel Laureates in Literature (1901-2014)
, is a unique collection about the lives, achievements, and works of Nobel Prize winners in laureates in literature. Each recipient has a whole page of biography, with his or her works and honors. The comprehensive glossary gives information about a variety of people and sites and contains the short biographies of 95 notables.


The Wisdom of the Great is about the lives and works of 450 notables from 50 countries of the world. It contains over 2600 quotations in 3 millenniums (9th century B.C.-21st century). 

​Lovers Paradise Book of 222 Love Quotations was Sam's first book. It is a collection of short biographies of 111 notables of 17 countries. It contains the names index and a detailed glossary.

Remembering Doris Schroeder

1/14/2023

 
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Doris Schroeder 1933 - 2022
From Don Pady's History of Kansas Authors Club:
When Doris joined KAC in 1983, she was a member of District Seven until 1989 when the districts were reorganized, and she found that she was now a member of District Six. In 1996 she was elected secretary of her district for two years, and in 2000 she was elected district president for two years. That same year she took the office of state recording secretary, and in 2002 she assumed the duties of state vice-president for two years. During that time, Doris also took the office of state recording secretary, then assumed the duties of state vice-president for two years. She then served KAC’s 62nd state president (2004 to 2006).

Doris remained on the board as parliamentarian from 2008-2016. It is quite possible that Doris installed more state officers into office than any other member of Kansas Authors Club.

In 2012 Doris received a Service Award of Merit from the Club for "loyal and enthusiastic support of the organization," also saying that she was "instrumental in the Centennial Celebration of KAC." The centennial book that was published while Doris was president included poetry and prose entries from members of the club and was distributed to all members for free. 

Doris wrote columns about "the good 'ole days" for the Hutchinson News and "I Remember" columns for the Rural Messenger. 

Obituary
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2010: Doris Schroeder (far right) installs new officers at the Lawrence convention. Also pictured (from left) Joann Williams, Don Pady, Tracy Million Simmons, William Karnowski, Maryann Barry, Carol Yoho, Anne Shiever, Reaona Hemmingway, Annette Wood, and Kristine Polansky.
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Doris receiving an award in the inspiration category of the KAC Annual contests, with Nancy Julien Kopp and Evie Green. 2010.
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Doris at the 2011 Convention in Coffeyville.

Writers give life flavor
by Doris Schroeder

Entry to the 2014 KAC Yearbook

The Kansas Authors Club is one of the oldest writing groups in the U.S. and possibly the world. It began in 1904, and life was very different from what it is today. To read somebody’s writing was one of the few things that could be done for entertainment.

On the 100th anniversary of the Kansas Authors Club in 2004, we enjoyed a play put on by the Topeka writers, showing the quiet determination of the members. Opportunities were not as abundant in the beginning of the twentieth century as they are today. Can you imagine having to write with a scratch pen that had to be dipped in an inkwell? Could you do your writing by the light of a dim kerosene lamp while you were wearing glasses without progressive lenses? While you were writing, you would occasionally stop to add coal or wood to the fire. You had to write out each copy. If you wanted more than one, you used a sheet of carbon paper.
  
In the time frame of the beginning of our organization life was tough in the physical sense. We had such illustrious members as Margaret Hill McCarter, the first woman to address a Republican National Convention. Another famous writer was William Allen White, the well-known newspaper editor from the Emporia Gazette. Who hasn’t heard of Arthur Capper, a two term governor of Kansas and a five term senator who demonstrated his interest in young people with the establishment of the Capper Foundation for crippled children and many more. They all had a gigantic vision for the writers of Kansas.
 
As writers, we have it all in 2014. We have modern technology. It is easy to type on computers, send e-mails and texts, getting information by pressing a button, getting information and taking pictures with our smart phones. “But what good is that if we lack purpose?”
 
When we are born into this world, we have some talents given to us. If we have Christ in our life, we are given spiritual gifts that God would like us to carry on. In other words, we are created for a purpose. The fact that we have the talent of writing certainly must have some significance as to our function.
 
We may not have all the answers but we can put our own thoughts down to get people to think about the possibilities. We can write stories from our imagination and/or experience  to help come up with solutions. We can help people get their thoughts going and perhaps inspire others to get involved. We, as writers, can help flavor the thinking of the people.
             
Making the world a more interesting place to live the purpose-driven life, the writers in the Kansas Authors Club are definitely the salt of the earth!
 

Remembering Yvonne "Evie" Green

12/2/2022

 
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Yvonne "Evie" Green
September 1, 1931 – November 23, 2022



Evie joined Kansas Authors Club in 2000. She served as Youth Contest Manager in 2004 and was an ongoing supporter, both as cheerleader and financial supporter of KAC’s youth programs. She served as Vice President of District 1 2004-2015. Evie was a frequent winner in the Haiku and Whimsy categories of the Kansas Authors Club annual literary contest. She led the Write Stuff group at the Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library for many years.

Topeka, KS: Yvonne (Evie) Green was born Sept 1st, 1931, in Oklahoma City, OK to Mark and Florence Casas Elsea. She passed away on Nov 23, 2022. Evie graduated from Classen High School in Oklahoma City and received her bachelor’s degree in Education from the University of Oklahoma in Norman, OK, where she met and later married Phillip Green. She then worked as an elementary school teacher, helping to put her husband through medical school. Evie and Phillip had three children and the family relocated to Topeka, KS in 1960, where Phillip became an air force psychiatrist and later a resident psychiatrist at the Menninger Foundation. Evie continued to teach in Topeka for the 501-school district and retired in 1975. She also led school field trips for Environmental Education. Evie volunteered throughout her life as a beloved docent and zoo schoolteacher at the Topeka Zoo. She was a member of a small writing club in Topeka called “Write Stuff.” Evie was also a long-time member of the Kansas Authors Club and received KAC writing awards for her haikus and poetry. Evie had (2) short stories published in Chicken Soup for the Soul, most recently in 2019. She is survived by her children: Elizabeth Green (Topeka, KS), Leslie Green Renzelman (Los Angeles, CA), Jeffrey Green (Eudora, KS) and four grandchildren: Amy Green Esplund (Lawrence, KS), Caroline Renzelman (Los Angeles, CA), Daniel Green (Eudora, KS), Jessica Renzelman (Portland, OR).

Per Evie’s wishes, there will be no funeral service. Instead, her family and friends will have a memorial dedication at the Topeka Zoo in the spring - to honor her love of animals and her many years of volunteer service at the zoo. The family requests in leu of sending flowers, donations be made in her name to the Topeka Zoo or to the local Humane Society (ASPCA).
Evie's Obituary at Penwell-Gabel Funeral Home
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Kristine Polansky, Tracy Million Simmons, Evie Green--Convention in Hutchinson, 2015.

What can I say? Evie was so many things to me—a friend, a teacher, another mother. If she had a superpower, it was her ability to encourage. Those of us who joined the Write Stuff group which met Tuesday mornings at the public library knew how effective she was not only encouraging us to write but also encouraging us to push for excellence. We also knew some of her own personal story and caught glimpses of how effective she was encouraging others to meet their own problems head-on. I had the honor of seeing her interact with youth when I taught social studies in the U.S.D. 501 system and she taught in the outdoor education program, encouraging seventh graders (as well as other youth) to take an interest in the Topeka community as well as the wonderful outdoors world she loved so much.
                                          - Kristine A. Polansky


I went to my first KAC convention alone. I must have Iooked lost, as this tiny dynamo of a woman grabbed my arm and said, “You can sit with us.” Evie Green introduced me to Trudy McFarland, Barbara Brady, Sam Pierson and likely many more KAC members who I eventually l counted as friends. When I moved from Dodge City to Topeka, it was wonderful to have this network of support already in place. Evie welcomed me to Topeka where I enjoyed monthly meetings of Kansas authors for the first time. She took my kids fossil hunting, a trip they still talk about to this day. She was such a natural teacher, and Evie often told the story of my son with a bag of fossils in hand declaring, “This is the best day ever!” After that field trip, I remember my son musing, "So there's an Evie Green and an Evie Simmons. Do you think there is a Kaman Green? A Maddie Green?"

I often addressed Evie Green as “my 2nd favorite Evie” because she and my daughter shared the nickname. One day, we were visiting Evie's house where she had introduced my kids to her pet turtle, and then advised them to think long and hard before getting a turtle. “They live long lives!” She told my kids. “You have to think about who is going to take care of them when you are not able to do so.”
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Evie carried a notebook of her favorite writings with her, and I was thrilled one year when she pulled it out at the convention and showed me that she had put some of my work in her book. She said it was full of favorite pieces that made her feel good and she would sit down and read it whenever she needed a lift. I enjoyed correspondence and phone calls from Evie over the years, and always loved reuniting at the conventions once I’d moved on to Emporia. Her gracious welcome left a big impression. She is missed.
                                          - Tracy Million Simmons
Submit a note about Evie to add to this page.

In Memoriam: Edna Dyck

10/6/2022

 
Edna Dyck was a District 4 member of Kansas Authors Club from 1970 to 2022. Starting in 2016, she sent letters to the club annually. On her 101st birthday, she sent a letter giving her regrets, saying that it was time to put away her pen and give up her membership. Edna passed away on May 12, 2022.

Edna wrote poetry, nonfiction, essays on religion and inspiration and memoir. Edna was recognized for 50 years of membership in 2020.
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Edna Dyck 1920-2022
Edna's Obituary

Remembering Mike Hartnett

10/6/2022

 
Mike Hartnett, member of District 2 since 2014, president of District 2, 2019-2020, passed away on September 6.

Mike was a retired high school English/Speech teacher and business journalist (magazine columnist and editor and newsletter publisher), winning awards from the American Society of Business Press Editors. He led a memoir-writing group for the Douglas County Senior Citizen Center and was a co-leader of a men’s writing group at the Douglas County Jail.

He was the co-author of a play, Worthy of the Name, which was presented at Chicago’s Cultural Affairs Center, and a collaborator of a readers’ theater production, Prose & Cons, Voices From Behind Bars. He was the author of a memoir, And I Cried, Too: Confronting Evil in a Small Town (Meadowlark, 2019).
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Mike Hartnett 1946 - 2022
Memories of Mike
Mike Hartnett was my close friend and my colleague in the writing class at Douglas County Jail from 2015 to 2020, when the class was shut down because of Covid.

Mike's easy-going nature, non-judgmental ways and love of writing were a good fit for this class.  He felt very comfortable in the classroom and the jail guys soon appreciated him.

Mike had started his career as an English teacher in the 1960s, so it was like his life had come full circle and he really enjoyed himself in the classroom, appreciating the work of the writers in the class and sharing his own work.

He told the class about his own book based on the notorious murder case from his time at Lincoln College in Illinois in the late 1970s.  Mike hoped that in retirement he could finally finish the book and the class encouraged him week after week.  At last he was able to bring a published copy of the book to class, and we all applauded. It was one of the highlights of my twenty-year teaching at the jail.

Mike would often tell the story about a guy in jail hugging him at the end of class after Mike had told the class about his wife's struggle with cancer.  It meant the world to Mike that someone in a bad situation felt moved enough to offer him sympathy this way.

Mike was a good guy, a humble man, beloved by those of us lucky enough to know him.

Brian Daldorph

When I first received Mike's manuscript (And I Cried, Too), it had been more than 40 years in the making. I met a kind and thoughtful man who obviously still carried the weight of the events from his years at Lincoln College. We talked extensively about his desire to publish his book, and his decision to publish it now, finally, in 2019. Almost as soon as he had signed his publishing contract, Mike's wife Barbara was diagnosed with cancer. The pleasure of seeing his book come to life was mixed with the pain of sharing his final years with the love of his life. All our plans for a book launch and book tours were set aside, though the book has done exceptionally well despite all of life's distractions. Barbara passed away in the spring of 2021.

Through Mike, I met the poet Antonio Sanchez-Day (now deceased), and became better acquainted with Brian Daldorph, both of whom became/will become Meadowlark authors. Mike will forever be considered a cornerstone author of Meadowlark Press. He took a chance on me when I was still relatively small and less experienced. His book solidified Meadowlark as a Midwest press, and much enlarged our audience of readers.

In our most recent email exchange a few weeks ago, I shared my delight at the success his book was achieving in ebook format. He replied immediately that he was "doing ok" and shared future events where we might have an opportunity to visit in person. I am very sorry to miss those visits. 
​
Time is often so much shorter than we imagine it will be.


Tracy Million Simmons
Owner/Publisher, Meadowlark Press
Mike's Obituary
If you have memories of Mike that you would like to add to this page, please send them via the "submit news" page on our website.

In Memory: Dan Close

6/17/2022

 
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Dan Close joined Kansas Authors Club in 2009. He was a member of District 5 and served as D5 Vice President in 2020, and on the state convention committee in 2019. He served as State Prose Contest Manager in 2017-18, and was the State Vice President in 2018. He served as presenter and panel member at several KAC state conventions and was a frequent contest member.
​

Dan received his B.A. in Journalism from Wichita State University in 1981. He worked as a reporter and journalist for fourteen different newspapers, and gained his M.A. in Communication from WSU in 1993. He had been an editor at The Wichita Eagle prior to taking a position as Associate Professor in the Elliot School of Communication at WSU. Dan's career included radio broadcasting, public relations, advertising, photography and design.  He has written award-winning fiction and poetry, and was adviser of the WSU student paper, THE SUNFLOWER for sixteen years. He was a DART Fellow at Columbia University in New York in 2011. 

Dan Close
August 29, 1958 - May 28, 2022
Dan Close Obituary
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Dan Close (D5) and Jolene Haas (D3) are recognized for 10 years of membership at the 2019 Convention in Wichita.

In Memory: Joyce Long

4/15/2022

 
Joyce Long joined Kansas Authors Club in 1997 and served as District 3 President, among other offices, for many years. She was a frequent workshop presenter, speaker, and had a hand in the planning and organizing of multiple conventions. She was a high school English teacher and writer. 

Joyce wrote a series of children's books called The Misadventures of Zortz. The ventriloquist's puppet was a often a feature of her presentations.

    
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Obituary: Joyce Long
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Joyce Long at the 2011 Convention in Coffeyville.
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Joyce Long with William Karnowski at the 2017 convention in Coffeyville.

Remembering Dr. Prem Bajaj, 2011-2013 Kansas Authors Club State President

1/26/2022

 
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(seen here with wife, Raj Bajaj) Prem was a supporter of the youth awards. He worked to increase the diversity and numbers of entries in the annual youth contest. He also began sponsoring the Bajaj Award for the Best Youth Writer of the Year in 2013.
PictureThanks to Prem's October birthday, we often had birthday cake at the convention board meetings!
Dr. Prem Bajaj became a member of Kansas Authors Club in 2007. He served as State Financial Secretary in 2008 and State Treasurer in 2009 and 2010. In 2011, he became State President, serving for three years. 

Remembering Prem:
What I remember about working with Prem is that he encouraged us to question our procedures and policies. We experimented with giving membership discounts for those who wanted to pay for multiple years. He was very good at getting a variety of people involved in committees and discussions on policy. Prem didn't just ask why our organization was lacking in diversity, he went out and recruited new members of all ages. He was also very kind and quick to acknowledge the work of others within the organization. He would often surprise members by making an example of them at a meeting or presentation.

Tracy Million Simmons, D2

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D7 Member Millie Horlacher, Prem Bajaj, and D2 Member Alan D'Sousa, a Prem recruit who served as Literary Contest Chair, Youth Contest Chair, and assisted with conventions in a variety of ways over the years.
Remembering Prem:
I was a fairly new member when Prem was first elected president of the Kansas Authors Club. I didn’t even know who he was when he nominated me to be state treasurer. I accepted that nomination and held the post for about six years. During that time, I attended many meetings where he was in charge. I was always impressed with his gentle leadership style. Prem was instrumental in getting a yearly budget incorporated into our KAC operating structure. Another of his interests was the inclusion of younger writers into our group. I was impressed that he encouraged his grandchildren to write and to be members of KAC. I believe the grandchildren won several writing awards over the years; I was especially fond of one poem that John Bajaj wrote called “Brainstorming.” Prem was also very good at paying attention to and complimenting the work that KAC officers and others did. I admired him very much as a leader, and liked him very much as a person.

Cathy Callen, District 2
Prem Bajaj Obituary

Remembering Marjorie L. Brown

7/14/2021

 
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Marjorie L. Brown
June 4, 1934 - July 6, 2021

Marjorie was an active member of District 7 for many years after joining the club in 2008. She served the district  president, as secretary, and treasurer at various points in her membership. She also coordinated the District 7 writing contest for several years.

Brown was the author of Secrets of Robert's Mountain, published 2015.
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Book Description
​A Kansas Authors Club Winner: Thirteen year old Tommy Carson doesn't want to go on a camping trip with his, egotistical, overbearing stepfather, Ray Kramer. Tommy's mother, Evelyn, insists that Tommy go with Ray so the two guys can get to know each other better. That camping trip on Roberts Mountain changes the lives of not only Tommy, Ray, and Evelyn, but also Jessie Roberts. Jessie is the old, half-breed Ute Indian who owns most of the north side of Roberts Mountain. Even though Tommy is an excellent Boy Scout, his lifesaving skills are greatly tested during this adventure. Many people living in the small mountain town of Temptation blame Jessie for the strange things that are reported to happen on Roberts Mountain. Brown says she writes for teenagers, but this story has something for everyone, a kidnapping, a murder, a love story, and supernatural experiences.
Link to Marjorie's Obituary.

Remembering Lorena Joyce Herrmann

7/14/2021

 
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Lorena Joyce Herrmann
February 2, 1925 - June 26, 2021
Joyce Herrmann was a member of Kansas Authors Club, District 7, from 1994-2021. She served as the New Member Chair for the state from 1997-2005 and received a service award for her contributions in 2002. Joyce was an active D7 member, serving as Treasurer and Secretary, as well as playing an active role in the organization of several conventions. 

Her grandson, Will Herrmann, compiled many of her writings into a book earlier this year entitled 
What Makes a Good Life?, which she was able to read herself. A PDF version has been gifted to members of Kansas Authors Club and can be found on at this link. 
Link to Joyce's obituary.
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Remembering Antonio Sanchez Day

3/18/2021

 
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Antonio Sanchez-Day July 21, 1974 - March 5, 2021
Antonio Sanchez-Day was a poet and an active member of KAC District 2, since 2018. He listed poetry, memoir and nonfiction as his areas of interest. He volunteered as a creative writing instructor at the Douglas County Jail. His book of poetry, Taking on Life, was published by Coal City Press in 2019. 

​If you have memories to share of Antonio, please submit them to the website manager. 


A review of Taking on Life, by D2 member, Tyler Robert Sheldon, in Tinderbox Poetry Journal.

An article about Antonio Sanchez-Day and editor/mentor Brian Daldorph, published by the University of Kansas.

Link to poem "I have been alone" by Antonio Sanchez-Day, published at The Coop: A Poetry Cooperative. 

Antonio's obituary can be read here.

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Left: Antonio and Mike Hartnett
Right: Brian Daldorph, Mike Hartnett, and Antonio Sanchez-Day

Photos shared by Brian Daldorph.

Remembering Edna Bell-Pearson

1/30/2021

 
Updated 2/4/2021 - a fundraiser has been started to help cover Edna's funeral expenses. If funds are collected beyond what it will take to cover the funeral expenses, a scholarship or other fund to benefit young writers could be established.
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Edna Bell-Pearson
December 9, 1920-January 22, 2021

Edna Bell-Pearson passed peacefully on Friday morning, January 22, 2021, at the age of 100 and 44 days. She had been residing in an independent living apartment in Louisburg, Kansas. Edna was married to Carl Ungerer from 1945 to 1959. She reunited with the Ungerer family in recent years, upon publication of her memoir, Headwinds, which details the four years after World War II when she was married to Carl Ungerer, with whom she helped build the first airport in Marysville, Kansas. At a time when the flying industry was really starting to "take off," Edna was a very accomplished pilot, making many flights across the Kansas countryside.

Edna Bell was born to Elizabeth Evangeline (Bessie) Booth and Fred Hunter Pearson. Edna was the oldest of four children, three younger brothers who predeceased her.

Her website lists her careers “other than writing” as everything from babysitting, housekeeping, and dog walking, beginning as a teenager, to being a co-operator of the first airport in Marysville, Kansas, a farmer/rancher, real estate promoter, radio and TV news reporter and more. Edna’s talents were broad and varied, and her skill at writing stories that captured readers was surpassed by few.

As well as hundreds of published stories, articles, essays, and poems, Edna was most noted for her first book, Fragile Hopes, Transient Dreams and Other Stories, a southwest Kansas saga which was chosen during the Kansas sesquicentennial year as one of the “150 Best Kansas Books.” In 2020, Headwinds, a Memoir (Meadowlark Books), was selected as a Kansas Notable Book. Edna was a regular contributor to Kansas! Magazine and Grit Magazine for more than a decade. She wrote flying columns for the Marysville Advocate in the late 1940s, and a weekly business column for the Dodge City Daily Globe in the 1970s. Her work as stringer, reporter, feature writer, and editor appeared in the Jonesboro Sun (Arkansas), Kansas City Star, Spokane Chronicle/Spokesman Review, St. Louis Post Dispatch, and others.

In Edna’s own words: “I don’t profess to be a great writer, but a dedicated scriber/scribbler, and considering the quality/quantity of work I’ve put out over the years, I think I’m safe in signing myself off as a bona fide writer/author.
“A question often asked is how or when or why I became a writer. I didn’t “become” a writer; I was born a writer. I don’t remember when I wasn’t writing. I don’t know where my writing genes came from. To my knowledge, no other member of my family, immediate or in the distant past, has shown the slightest interest in putting pen to paper. I’ve been told that, from the time my chubby hands could negotiate a pencil, my favorite pastime was sitting with pencil and paper, deeply engrossed in scribbling. I wrote my first poem when I was five, a silly, poorly composed, rhymed thing which I still have, forever preserved, in my grandmother’s commonplace book.

“For the most part, I lived with my grandparents until I was eleven. Grandma was a great teacher; she instilled in me a love for the Bible (Grandma was very religious) and a love of reading. She loved poetry and, though she never wrote any herself, I think she hoped I’d turn out to be a poet. When I was born, Grandma and Granddaddy bought me a “Birth” day present—The Books of Knowledge. I still have the complete set—well worn—in the original case. As a child, I spent hours daily, lying on the floor in the living room, one or more of the books open before me. I virtually devoured the stories and poems, but I also spent a lot of time on astronomy, French, and geography.

“Grandma and The Books of Knowledge must have educated me well, because I skipped both the second and the fourth grades. However, I evidently used all my stored knowledge in my earlier years because once I became a fifth grader—although I still got lots of A’s—I was just an average student.”

Edna never did stop writing and had a work in progress, entitled A Tribute To A Man Folks Didn't Like Very Much. Edna also had plans for five additional books about her life, with the working titles of In the Beginning; Living off the Land; Highways and Byways; Friends and Lovers; and Old Like Me.

Edna was buried at the Hooker Cemetery, Hooker, Oklahoma, next to her grandparents.

Remembering Jane Gates Bandy

12/9/2020

 
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Jane Gates Bandy
May 4, 1929 - November 30, 2020
obituary

Jane Gates Bandy was a District 7 member, 1982-2017. She maintained her membership for several years after moving to California upon the death of her husband, Thomas. 

She was an English teacher prior to retiring and an active member in Colby. She wrote nonfiction and poetry. 


If you have memories to share with us, please send them by email. 

Remembering Diane Wahto

9/17/2020

 
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Jan 24, 1940—Sept. 16, 2020
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Diane Wahto graduated from the Wichita State University MFA program in 1985. That year, her poem, “Somebody Is Always Watching,” won the Academy of American Poets Award. Since that time she has continued to write poetry.
​
She taught journalism at Winfield High School, then taught English Composition and creative writing at Butler Community College.

Her book of poetry, The Sad Joy of Leaving, was published by Blue Cedar Press and came out in October 2018. The book launch was held at Watermark Books and Café, where she read with Michael Poage and Kelly Johnston.

Other recent publications include “Empty Corners” in Same, “Persistence,” in The Ekphrastic Review, and “Yellow Music,” in Heartland. She was co-editor of two issues of the 365 Days Anthology.

Diane joined Kansas Authors Club in 2014 and served in several positions, including two years as District 5 president and as the Awards Chair for the state 2015-2020. She was co-chair, along with Connie White, of the state convention in Wichita in 2019. 

She is survived by three children and five grandchildren, all of whom she enjoyed seeing as often as possible. She, her husband Patrick Roche, and their dog Annie lived in Midtown in Wichita, Kansas.

Diane’s website: Poet of a Certain Age

Lyrical Literature, by Jim Potter

Diane's Obituary


Swimming to Shore
by Diane Wahto


Lake Huron, cold and clear in summer,
tempts me into its deeps, alone, secure.
The Australian crawl I learned in the pool
of my home town pushes me through
the gray water with barely a ripple. Reach
of arms, kick of legs, body stretched
full out. I think of the life beneath
me, unseen fish, waving aquatic plants.
I give one kick, turn, tread water, look
at the distant sandy shore. This
is not my element. I must go back,
stand among the birch trees,
join my husband, my children,
the day that lies ahead.
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Ann Fell and Diane Wahto, 2016 Kansas Authors Club Convention
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Diane Wahto and Gloria Zachgo, 2019 Kansas Authors Club Convention
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