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What’s happening in the Alabama writing world…

Annual John & Miriam Morris Memorial Chapbook Competition
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ALABAMA STATE POETRY SOCIETY  ANNUAL 

JOHN AND MIRIAM MORRIS MEMORIAL CHAPBOOK COMPETITION

Deadline is May 31, 2020.

Winner receives $100 and 25 copies of his/her winning chapbook.  

How to enter:

  1. You don’t have to be a current member of ASPS in order to enter this contest.

  2. Submit 20-24 total pages of poetry, no more than one poem per page, however a single poem may continue for more than one page.

  3. Include two title pages, one with author information, and one without.  Author information should appear on only one copy of the title page and nowhere else on the manuscript so that manuscript can be read blind.

  4. No need for a theme, index, intro, or acknowledgement of previous publications unless you just want to include these.  Poems may be previously published if poet retains all rights. A table of contents can be helpful.

  5. Send entry with $15 reading fee (made out to New Dawn Unlimited, Inc. and postmarked by May 31, 2020) to:

    New Dawn Unlimited, Inc.

    Morris Memorial Chapbook Competition

    1830 Marvel Road

    Brierfield, AL 35035

Previous chapbook winners can be purchased through New Dawn Unlimited, Inc at 1830 Marvel Road, Brierfield, AL 35035 for $5 each. 

A complete list is available at NewDawnUnlimited.com under the "chapbooks" button.

ASPS sponsors both Fall and Spring contests as well as the Morris Chapbook competition.  Info is available through the Muse Messenger newsletter or online at the Alabama State Poetry Society website..

Alina Stefanescu
How State Poet Laureate Jennifer Horne Celebrates Poetry During a Pandemic
A still from the video readings.

A still from the video readings.

For National Poetry Month this past April, the pandemic put a stop to many readings and forced the poetry community to find other vehicles for celebration. Alabama State Poet Laureate Jennifer Horne did what she has often done in the past—she mobilized an effort from the grassroots and managed to create a gift for Alabama poetry lovers.

A Little Spark, A Love for Poems, and A Lot of Social Media

After deciding to honor Alabama poets by sharing a reading daily, Horne realized she would need to use social media. So she created an event, “Alabama Reads Poetry”, on Facebook, and invited the public to join her in reading a poem on their preferred social media and use the hashtag #ALreadspoetry. To quote:

“In the absence of getting to see people read in person, my hope is that this ongoing statewide event will generate a host of online poetry readings. I also hope that we'll keep using the #ALreadspoetry hashtag for future events and announcements to link our Alabama poetry community. Feel free to include a link if you have a new book. However you do it, that's the right way--just read us all a poem!”

Then Horne slowly, carefully, prodigiously read a poem each day and shared the reading on twitter from the Alabama Poet Laureate account.

By the end of National Poetry Month, Horne had created a all-over-Alabama digital archive of readings featuring the work of the following Alabama poets:

  1. Andrew Glaze (see above)

  2. Brian Voice Porter Hawkins

  3. Ken Autrey

  4. Carter Williams Martin

  5. Bonnie Roberts

  6. Emma Bolden

  7. Ashley M. Jones

  8. Daniel Blokh

  9. Ramona Hyman

  10. Jeanie Thompson

  11. Jessica Temple

  12. Charlotte Pence

  13. Georgia Ann Banks-Martin

  14. Deidra Suwanee Dees

  15. Kwoya Fagin Maples

  16. Mike Wahl

  17. Anne Markham Bailey

  18. David Kopaska-Merkel

  19. Rodney Jones

  20. Jerri Hardesty

  21. Jennifer Horne

  22. M. P. Jones

  23. Lauren Slaughter

  24. Sue Brannan Walker

  25. Ramey Channell

  26. Tina Mozelle Braziel

  27. TJ Beitelman

  28. Alina Stefanescu

  29. Harry Moore

We are grateful and inspired by this beautiful collection—and yet another reminder why our state values and treasures our state poet laureate so much.

Alina Stefanescu
Literary Community During Pandemic: Thriving While Cancelled
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Last year, no one anticipated the way literary, domestic, and economic life could change as the result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Even our science fiction writers didn’t quite prepare us for life under shifting quarantine, with it’s sports-lacking spring and its absence of barbecue. Important literary events have been cancelled, including the Alabama Book Festival in Montgomery (which will take place next year) and Mobile Literary Festival (which will be rescheduled at some point in the future).

Some Alabama literary events are continuing in their usual form. For example, the Alabama Writer’s Forum High School Literary Arts Awards took place last month, with Lenore Vickery, Susie Paul, James E. Cherry, Caitlin Rae Taylor, and James M. Hilgartner serving as judges. Visit the website for an exciting list of up-and-coming young Alabama writers.

Other Alabama groups are building alternative venues for literary community which can be accessed online. The Huntsville Literary Association and the Alabama State Poetry Society have been sharing readings, writing prompts, and various other forms of craft fun in their Facebook groups. At times of social difficulty, emotional difficulty is not far behind. We, as a community of writers and readers, are working to find ways to be support, encourage, and nurture each other in hope and life.

The Economic Impact

For the writers whose livelihoods have been impacted by job loss or furlough, national organizations have made efforts to help provide financial relief. If you have been impacted, consider applying for Artist Relief grants. There are countless other organizations, both national and local, currently offering grants and aid to writers. Here’s a list. The Author’s Guild also offers free webinars and financial advice and assistance to working writers of every genre, including a #Support Authors Social Media Campaign for those struggling with the release of new books.

State Poet Laureate’s National Poetry Month Readings

Our beloved State Poet Laureate, Jennifer Horne, has been celebrating National Poetry Month by reading a different Alabama poet every day on social media. She hopes that we'll keep using the #ALreadspoetry hashtag for future events and announcements to link our Alabama poetry community, and encourages poets to include a link if they have a new book.


Magic City Poetry Festival

Birmingham’s fabulous Magic City Poetry Festival was scheduled for April until COVID changed the landscape. After mourning briefly, the Board quickly shifted some aspects online, though it currently plans to reschedule readings, workshops, and features. In the meantime, the celebration of poetry continues with the 2020 Virtual Book Fair featuring the work of poets in the 20202 festival as well as the brand-new, just-bloomed Shelter in Magic Reading Series, an online video reading archive of Birmingham-connected poets reading short poems in under three minutes. Stay tuned in for more on that.

And here’s the State of Birmingham Poetry Address by MCPF Director Ashley M. Jones.

PEN America in Alabama

Many of you know that the PEN America Birmingham Chapter opened last year. This put the national power of PEN in the state of Alabama, where we can promote and support writers covering difficult topics or writing against the grain. We are so proud of that accomplishment as well as its Co-Directors, Ashley M. Jones and Alina Stefanescu.

In addition to offering a Writers’ Emergency Fund to support those struggling with loss of income or livelihood, PEN America has been actively trying to promote free expression and support writers through a limited-run podcast, "The PEN Pod," to provide regular updates and conversations about literature & free expression, and provide an outlet for our canceled/postponed in-person events.

What matters is that the poem gets written; it does not matter if I write it. You cannot humble yourself yourself. You must be humbled.
— Dan Beauty-Quick, "January Notebooks"

Podcasts

Ear buds and headphones are the quarantined family’s best friend. Podcasts offer auditory engagement, whether for entertainment, craft, or personal development. A few podcasts that writers might find worthwhile:

  • The Longreads Podcast features interviews, essays, reporting and discussion from the home of the best longform stories on the web.

  • The S-Town podcast is a must-hear for local history buffs. Hosted by This American Life’s Brian Reed, S-Town is a podcast in chapters about a man named John who despises his Alabama town and decides to do something about it. He asks Brian to investigate the son of a wealthy family who’s allegedly been bragging that he got away with murder. But then someone else ends up dead, and the search for the truth leads to a nasty feud, a hunt for hidden treasure, and an unearthing of the mysteries of one man’s life.

  • Paranormal Alabama is Will Hopper’s paranormal podcast about everything unexplained in Alabama. If you like ghosts, thumps, spooks, and uncanny objects, this is worth your listen.

  • The White Lies podcast follows the 1965 murder of Rev. James Reeb in Selma, Alabama. Three men were tried and acquitted, but no one was ever held to account. Fifty years later, two journalists from Alabama, including Birmingham’s Chip Brantley, return to the city where it happened, expose the lies that kept the murder from being solved and uncover a story about guilt and memory that says as much about America today as it does about the past.

  • The Moth Radio Hour is a weekly series featuring true stories told live on stage without scripts, notes, props, or accompaniment. Each Moth Radio Hour mixes humorous, heartbreaking, and poignant tales that captivate, surprise, and delight audiences with their honesty, bravery and humor. You can listen it on your local public radio or stream it online.

  • The PEN Pod provides regular updates and conversations about literature & free expression, and provide an outlet for our canceled/postponed in-person events.

  • If you’re looking for local book reviews by a bibliophile, look no further than Jacob’s Red Star Reviews. Who knows—maybe Jacob will review your book if you send him a copy?


Virtual Book Clubs & Library Events

Alabama librarians continue to serve their communities through online book clubs, readings, and workshops. Book collectives and clubs are working alongside them to keep books and words alive in conversation and social life. All the events below are free and open to the public.


Writing Prompts & Free Workshops

  • Ernest & Hadley Booksellers is offering a free online writing workshop with Susan Zurenda on May 28th. Register online before spaces fill up. The workshop will cover both the basics of story and the importance of genuine emotion in stories. It will also examine how writers achieve success in creating human emotion in contrast to why writers sometimes fail in this essential endeavor. Ample illustrations will be provided, some from the Susan’s novel, Bells for Eli, and participants will be given writing prompts with time to write, followed by real time feedback.

  • Poetry Highway offers free poetry writing prompts.

  • Those wanting to explore poetic form can play with Jacob Jan’s free online Pantoum Generator.

  • There’s nothing like a walk in the woods to get the words moving again. If you decide to take a hike, please do it safely. Remember that social distancing rules still apply on trails and footpaths.


Submission Calls & Opportunities

  • COVID LIT, a new magazine, spreads art, poetry, and prose using the disease's name. What makes this project a bit different, however, is that rather than accepting submission fees, we require writers to donate at least $3 to a nonprofit of their choice. Write, submit, and assist with the same hand.

  • Pangyrus has launched an online series with quick turnaround: “In Sickness & In Health: Life in the Pandemic and Beyond.” Editors are seeking well-crafted, thought-provoking writing and multimedia storytelling in every genre. No deadline.

  • Sky Island Journal is seeking poetry, flash fiction, and creative nonfiction from around the world that provides culturally diverse perspectives on, and experiences with, the COVID-19 pandemic. Deadline: June 30th.

  • For its “Covid-19 in the South” call, The Bitter Southerner is accepting pitches and full pieces focused on individual and community responses to the coronavirus. How are people across the south coming together in response to the pandemic? No deadline. 

  • Appalachia Journal is seeking essays responding to COVID-19 for its “Mountains and a pandemic” call. Thoughtful prose related to wilderness, mountains, and river adventure and environment during this time are being reviewed. Deadline: May 20.

  • The Center for Interfaith Relations is seeking “Sacred Essays” exploring “connection, contemplation, and common action in times of social distancing.” Deadline: June 2.

Alina Stefanescu
Brent Stauffer reviews Ghostly Demarcations by Joe Taylor.

What follows is one AWC member sharing their thoughts on a new book by another AWC member. We are grateful to Brent Stauffer for his close reading of this short fiction collection by Joe Taylor (Sagging Meniscus Press (June 1, 2019).

“Unabashedly conventional horror tales with an understated but remarkable lead character.,” says Kirkus Reviews.

Joe Taylor’s story collection Ghostly Demarcations is a meditation on friendship, growing up in the South and the nature of haunting. Taylor’s voice rings true, with a lyricism woven from homespun cloth, shot through with threads of otherworldly gold. Only the fantastical elements of wraiths, poltergeists and the like remind you that perhaps this isn’t, strictly speaking, a memoir.

We first meet our unnamed hero at ten years old, in rural Kentucky, as his best friend Galen describes his recent ghost sighting. (The book is, in part, dedicated to a person named Galen. Maybe these stories are more true than an adult brain can comfortably fathom!) Their unbreakable bond is a main fixture around which all the events described, spooky or otherwise, revolve.  This is true even when the arcs of their lives have bent away from each other. In “Angel’s Wings,” where Galen is in the Navy, worlds away, he is yet heard by his friend in a time of great need via a rinky dink homemade radio. Not only does Galen figure prominently in every story of the collection, he usually appears in the first page, if not the opening sentence itself. In “Faithful Companion,” which takes place during his days at the University of Kentucky, the narrator remarks, “Ha! Let UK’s atomic clock click it’s loudest: what care I, with such a faithful companion close by?”

   Another near constant element of these tales is a wry humor, sometimes self deprecating, other times displayed with postmodern flair. Taylor teases us a couple times with the nameless nature of our protagonist:  in “I Am the Egg” elderly, clueless  Mister Howard rifles off a list of incorrect monikers. (We get a good sense of what his name isn’t!) In “The Perfect Ghost Story, Plus One,” when a girl introduces herself by name, our hero tries to reciprocate only to be rudely interrupted!

Underneath the humor and homespun texture of these stories, however, lurks the   constant threat of an incursion of the supernatural. Time after time, Taylor regales the reader with a charming tale of growing up in the New South; and when a comfortable mood is firmly established, the bottom drops out with the arrival of something that is Not of This World. More than once a reader might have to go back over a passage for a missed clue, only to find that the abruptness of the shift is, indeed seamless. After continuing to encounter these transformations, one develops a slight tickle in the back of the brain as the story unfolds in stately fashion. The anticipation, subconscious or not, of a surreal explosion creates a pleasing background tension that keeps the reader awake and engaged. 

The combinations of real and unreal, humorous and poignant, full fledged characters and well crafted master storyline, create, in Ghostly Demarcations, an overall delight. The exploration of friendship over time is laid across the known and unknown, in particular, quite naturally, the mysterious dynamics between Life and Death. The reader is left with a profound sense that life, with all its unexpectedness  and certainty of a tragic end, is well worth the living.

Alina Stefanescu
Get to know AWC Board Historian, Clarence Bonner.
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Dean Bonner was born and raised in rural Georgia but can claim naturalized citizenship in Tallapoosa County, Alabama and Virginia Beach, Virginia. As a retired Coast Guard veteran. Bonner left the tarpaper shacks of Appalachia for a long military career, rising through the enlisted and officer ranks. He was a skilled Morse telegrapher and a calming voice during many search and rescue cases. He left a town of 300 souls to travel the world, living in Boston, New Orleans, DC, and even on the island of Guam for a couple of years. 

During his 30 year Coast Guard career, he earned his BS in Security Management and still maintains the highest international certification in Security Management, Certified Protection Professional.  He served his final eight years of active duty as an Intelligence Officer. 

Dean is a skilled Studebaker car mechanic, tube radio repairman, firefighter, and a weekend gold prospector.  His upcoming projects include recording two albums of his original humor and writing a new compilation of short stories. His wife Patricia, a multi-talented artist, shares these same interests. Together, they travel and spend time at homes in Alabama and Virginia.

Dean was a weekly columnist for The Dadeville Record before he began work as a freelance writer for Lake Magazine and Lake Martin Living magazine. His favorite assignment to date was exploring the Hog Mountain gold mine where his grandfather and great-grandfather worked. 


His poetry is published in two collections called The Breaking and A Stormy Beginning, by Scars Publications.  His work was featured in the February 2016 issue of Down in the Dirt literary magazine. 

He wrote feature articles for The Alexander City Outlook, Dadeville Record, Lafayette Sun, and for the arts magazine The Revelator

He was a contributing editor for Lisa Ditchkoff's book, The Girl with Caterpillar Eyebrows, about educating herself while she grew up in hiding from her father, an associate of Boston mobster Whitey Bulger.  

Dean was a 2013 winner in nonfiction in Alabama’s largest writing competition, the Alabama Literary Competition, organized by the Alabama Writers' Conclave. He competed against writers nationwide with his nonfiction short story "Seeking Asylum" about visiting his mother in the state insane asylum when he was three.  

Dean has a development contract with Los Angeles-based Council Tree Productions for a television series called Tar Nation that is based on his book I Talk Slower Than I Think.  He co-authored a television pilot screenplay with Heidi Carroll for Tar Nation that placed as a Second Rounder / quarterfinalist in the 2019 Austin Film Festival.

And now you know a little bit more about a person who donates his time and skills to serve the members of Alabama Writer’s Cooperative as historian. Be sure to reach to him if your interests (or paths) cross.

Alina Stefanescu
AWC Community Writing Workshops: Beginning 2020 with a Burst of Words
Memoir Writing Workshop in Orange Beach.

Memoir Writing Workshop in Orange Beach.

One of our new programs is the AWC Community Writing Workshops, which aims to connect local Alabama writers with readers and emerging writers at the microcosmic level. What does this mean?

Well, Jessica Renee Langston and Karim Shamsi-Basha created a Memoir-Writing Workshop free and open to the public in Orange Beach. Of the workshop, Jessica said:

“Making Memories into Memoirs: How to Capture and Convey Your Stories” was fantastic. Karim Shamsi-Basha, our instructor, immediately  made everyone feel comfortable and willing to share. We got to know each other, went through several exercises including title creation, idea maps and outlines, then we delved into writing our memoirs. Many of us shared our stories and it was amazing to see the quality of work created right there in a four-hour window. Karim made writing our life stories seem manageable instead of overwhelming. And we had a lot of fun, too.

Poet Laureate Emerita Sue Walker was in attendance—and she expressed a sincere appreciation for Karim’s workshop. If you aren’t familiar with Sue, she is not only a proficient and celebrated poet but also the publisher of Negative Capability Press located in Mobile, Alabama. Take a peak at this interview she conducted with author Eugene Platt on the NCP blog.

Diane Clark shares a snippet of her life story during a memoir workshop held at the Coastal Arts Center of Orange Beach on Jan. 4.

Diane Clark shares a snippet of her life story during a memoir workshop held at the Coastal Arts Center of Orange Beach on Jan. 4.



Meanwhile, up in Hoover, Claire Datnow put together a fabulous AWC Community Workshop, “A Behind the Scenes Glimpse: Environmental Education and Literature” with an interactive look into how she creates her science-based environmental Eco Mysteries.

Nature lovers, writers, conservationists and adventurers in attendance explored vicarious field trips to diverse natural habits and met the dedicated conservationists who are saving Alabama’s endangered species. The adventure began with a virtual trip to Sehoy Plantation, deep in the heart of a longleaf pine plantation, where the attendees observed Eric Spadgenske with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and Mark Bailey, a conservation biologist banding Endangered red-cockaded Woodpeckers. Attendees also traveled to the Mobile-Tensaw Delta to observe the Diamondback Terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin), listed as a species of Highest Conservation Concern, where Research Biologists Ken Marion and Thane Wibbles capture breeding females in the summer, to raise them in a hatchery at UAB.

Ken Wills author of Exploring Wild Alabama and President of Moss Rock Preserve has traveled the entire state as a natural resource planner and biologist for the Alabama Environmental Council. Ken Wills outlined his successful conservation …

Ken Wills author of Exploring Wild Alabama and President of Moss Rock Preserve has traveled the entire state as a natural resource planner and biologist for the Alabama Environmental Council. Ken Wills outlined his successful conservation projects to clear invasive species at Moss Rock and Limestone Park, and replace them with native wildflowers and grasses.

We encourage you to read Claire’s blog post on this workshop and rest in the awe of it.



Vitaly Charny, lepidopterist, photographer and co-author of Butterflies of Alabama talked about his field trips over a twenty year period to document Alabama’s butterflies. This project resulted in The Alabama Butterfly Atlas.

Vitaly Charny, lepidopterist, photographer and co-author of Butterflies of Alabama talked about his field trips over a twenty year period to document Alabama’s butterflies. This project resulted in The Alabama Butterfly Atlas.

Your Turn

If you have a workshop you’d like to share with the public, please read more about our Community Writing Workshops and apply to host or develop your own. Alabama writers bring so much good into their communities and localities. We hope to support this regularly.

Alina Stefanescu
The Alabama Poet Laureate Outreach Fund
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AWC was able to raise $1,340.00 for the 2020 Alabama State Poet Laureate Outreach Fund!

We are so grateful to be able to support Jennifer Horne, our state poet laureate in advocating, educating, and cultivating poetry throughout the state. 

Thank you to everyone who shared and donated. This is an example of how much her work is valued, needed, and appreciated. It should be heartening to all of us as we move into a new year of writing, editing, publishing, reading, and journeying with words.

To learn more about Jennifer Horne, visit the State Laureate page or read this conversation about her new poetry collection.

To quote the laureate, herself:

It was such an honor to be named state poet laureate, and I went into it with the general goals of connecting poets to each other and to their communities, amplifying what was going on in the literary community, and encouraging people in Alabama to learn more about and enjoy poetry while creating literary resources and events in their own towns.

When I look at my calendar over the past two years, I can see what a rich journey it's been already (with two still to go). Predictably, I've spoken at writing conferences, done workshops and readings, and been part of a number of literary events such as the One Million Poets event. I've also spoken to a Rotary Club, judged the statewide Poetry Out Loud contest for high school students and several out-of-state contests, helped plan the state book festival, Skyped with a junior high creative writing club in Los Angeles, spoken to an OLLI group about Alabama Writers Hall of Fame inductees, appeared on a panel of poet laureates with the Mississippi (Beth Ann Fennelly) and Louisiana (Jack Bedell) laureates at the Tennessee Williams/New Orleans Literary Festival, spoken at several schools and churches, and participated in a tribute to Toni Morrison. I regularly correspond with writers seeking advice on publication and writing. I also try to use social media frequently to share information about all the literary activity going on in Alabama.

Alina Stefanescu
President to President: A conversation between TK Thorne and TJ Beitelman.

TJ Beitelman: Like a lot of organizations, AWC really seems at an inflection point. The world is changing—the world of writing/writers is changing—and it can sometimes feel daunting to keep pace and look to the future. It’s really exciting, though, too. Before we do that, though, I want to hear some of your reflections on your tenure as AWC President. What’s your proudest accomplishment in that role?

TK Thorne: I am most proud of bringing onto the board amazing people like you and Alina Stefanescu and Ashley Jones. I’ve found that leadership is often a matter of not standing in the way of good ideas and energy and figuring out ways to support, implement, and augment them. The new energy on the board and the resulting ideas have catapulted us forward, enabling a new website and newsletter which have been keys to fulfilling our mission and resulted in increasing memberships. 

I’m proud that AWC was able to support Alina and Ashley in their initial efforts to bring about the Magic City Poetry Festival, which now stands on its own. Their efforts have also brought a local chapter of PEN America to our region. And I’m really proud of the work we did to navigate a name change and a strategic planning process that has examined who we are and where we want to go. 

TJ Beitelman: That’s a lot to be proud of, for sure. I’ve really admired your vision as a leader, and it doesn’t surprise me that relationships are where it starts for you. What are some other relationships that have been valuable to you in your time as President? 

TK Thorne: I’ve particularly relied on Hank Henley who has served as membership chair and treasurer over the years. I have told him often that he is my “rock.” 

TJ Beitelman: I feel lucky that he’s agreed to stay on board as treasurer. He’s so often the smartest guy in the room, and he’s so good at both listening and then synthesizing information. 

TK Thorne: AWC is a bunch of great, supportive people. Others have contributed in many ways and without them we would not have been able to put on the annual conference (thank you, Jessica Jones), organized the writing contests and publications (thank you, Linda Parker, Carol Hull, Mary Murphy and Anne Bailey). Dean Bonner, as historian, has worked to provide an archival home for our history and a richer layer of the past, a foundation for where we are heading. Claire Datnow, in addition to taking on the position of Recording Secretary, has initiated a program to support workshops in local communities as supplementation to our annual conference. Of course, I can’t say enough about our past presidents, especially Sue B. Walker, who led AWC through challenging times and has been my mentor, always there when I had a question or needed a sounding board. 

TJ Beitelman: That’s a lot to be thankful for. 

TK Thorne: We have competent board members, both new and experienced, ready to support the new leadership. It gives me great pleasure to know the organization is in sound hands, and I am looking forward to continuing to serve as past president. Now I have a question for you: What do you see in the future for AWC?

TJ Beitelman: First I need to learn the ropes. Our succession has been a little unconventional, with JJ choosing to stick with the VP role as opposed to assuming the President’s role, as it has typically been done in the past. I’ll be glad for all of that support you mentioned earlier. 

TK Thorne: I’ll be around too, like Sue was for me!

TJ Beitelman: I’m grateful for that, and for the momentum you’ve created around expanding and diversifying our membership. And the new name is a big reflection of that, by the way. It will likely go down as one of your big legacies as President of the organization. What was that process like for you?

TK Thorne: Consideration of a name change began with input from members about a negative, outdated connotation to the word “conclave,” which means “a private or secret meeting,” the opposite of our vision of an open, inclusive organization. That perception was confirmed for me when I asked a prominent author in Canada to be a speaker at our conference, and she said she hesitated at our name. As a co-chair of the Long-Range Planning Committee, TJ, you took on leadership of a comprehensive, deliberate process that included a membership survey, a working committee, and the board. The recommendations that came out of that were ultimately put to the general membership. I’m happy with our new name, Alabama Writers’ Cooperative" and feel that it represents who we are as an organization, while keeping our sharp new logo and website and linking to our history with “AWC.” I’m really pleased with process and the result.I’m grateful for that, and for the momentum you’ve created around expanding and diversifying our membership. I love our new “tagline”—Engaging and nurturing a diverse community of Alabama writers. I want us to use that as a litmus test for all our programming, and if we do, I see no reason why we can’t really grow in healthy, sustainable ways. 

TJ Beitelman: Well said. I also love our new “tagline,” which came out of that process as well—Engaging and nurturing a diverse community of Alabama writers. I hope we can use the name and that new tagline that as a kind of litmus test for all our programming. How are we fostering a spirit of cooperation among writers and writing organizations in Alabama and beyond? How are we engaging and nurturing a diverse community of those writers? If we work with those questions in mind, I see no reason why we can’t really grow in healthy, sustainable ways. The two places I’d like to focus our energies the most are in the conference itself and in supporting the poet laureate in outreach activities throughout the state. Those are the two historical pillars of the AWC’s enterprise—the conference and the poet laureate—and I want to make sure those pillars are as strong as they possibly can be.   

TK Thorne: It’s an exciting time to be involved in the Alabama Writers’ Cooperative. 

TJ Beitelman: Yes it is. I’m looking forward to the next two years. Thanks for taking the time to volley back and forth like this!

TK Thorne: I’m happy to do it. Onward and upward!


T.K. Thorne (our Outgoing AWC President) is a retired police captain, explores murder, mayhem, and magic when a police officer discovers she’s a witch in her newest novel, House of Rose, the first of the Magic City stories. T.K.’s childhood passion for storytelling deepened when she became a police officer in Birmingham, Alabama.  “It was a crash course in life and what motivated and mattered to people.” Her writing reflects her eclectic interests. Both of her award-winning debut historical novels, Noah’s Wife and Angels at the Gate,  tell the stories of unknown women in famous tales—the wife of Noah and the wife of Lot. Her first non-fiction book, Last Chance for Justice, the inside story of the investigation and trials of the 1963 Birmingham church bombing, was featured on the New York Post’s “Books You Should Be Reading” list. T.K. loves traveling and speaking about her books and life lessons. She writes at her mountaintop home, often with a dogs and cat vying for her lap.

 TJ Beitelman (Our Incoming AWC President) chairs the Creative Writing department at the Alabama School of Fine Arts in Birmingham, where he’s taught writing and literature since 2002. A graduate of the University of Alabama’s MFA program in Creative Writing, he’s been the recipient of grants and fellowships from the Alabama State Council on the Arts and the Cultural Alliance of Greater Birmingham. In addition to his role on the AWC board, he’s also on the board of the Alabama Writers’ Forum. His work has appeared in various literary venues, including DIAGRAM, Posit, Blackbird, Quarterly West, Colorado Review, New Orleans Review, and Bellevue Literary Review. The author of six books, his latest poetry collection, This Is the Story of His Life (2018), is available through Black Lawrence Press. He can be found on-line at tjbman.me and on Twitter: @TJBeitelman.

Alina Stefanescu
Free Community Writing Workshop with Karim Shamsi-Basha.
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Making Memories into Memoirs: How to Capture & Convey Your Stories

A free workshop with Karim Shamsi-basha

All of us would love to share our life stories with family and friends. This workshop will include readings from best-selling memoirs as well as detailed instruction on outlines and structure. The workshop will include time for writing. You will leave with a plan, an outline, and the beginning of your life story. Participants are encouraged to browse through the Memoir section of the bookstore before the workshop and read some before the workshop. (This is a hands-on workshop. Bring your computer or writing materials.)

January 4, 2020, 10:00 am- 4:00 pm

Coastal Arts Center of Orange Beach

26389 Canal Rd.

Orange Beach, AL 36561


Schedule

10:00 - 10:30 am
Welcome and introductions. Each participant can share a bit of their story. If you have not put much thought into your memoir, you will be inspired after this!

10:30 - 11:00 am
Readings from best-selling memoirs and discussion.

11:00 - 11:30 am
Writing time. Participants will write the introduction to your memoir. Karim will be on hand to help walk you through this exciting task.

11:30 - 12:15 pm
Participants will tackle memoir structure including Mind Maps, Outlines, and Chapter Summaries.

12:15 - 1:15 pm
Lunch on your own.

1:15 - 2:00 pm
Mind-Mapping. The first step of creating your memoir, the Mind-Map - a collection of thought-balloons of what comes to your mind as you think of your family, history, and story.

2:00 - 2:45 pm
Outline & Summarize. The second step of creating your memoir is to transform the Mind Map into an Outline. Then we will expand the Outline into Chapter Summaries. 

2:45 - 3:15 pm
Writing time. Now that you have an outline and a chapter summary, you can begin writing your first chapter, or you can continue working on your chapter summaries.

3:15 - 4:00 pm
Sharing stories and discussion. Participants are encouraged to read some of their introduction, outline, chapter summaries, or first chapter.

Questions

Please address additional questions to Jessica Langston by email at jjsayspoetryplz@me.com.

Learn more about AWC’s free Community Writing Workshops here, and consider sponsoring your own today.


About Karim Shamsi-Basha

Karim Shamsi-Basha immigrated to the United States in 1984 from Damascus – Syria. His blog, Arab in Alabama, is on the Huffington Post nationally and all over Europe. He won two prizes in the 84th Writer’s Digest International Competetion – one for a poem and another for an essay. He has written and photographed extensively for several print and online publications including Sports Illustrated, People, Time, Southern Living, The Alabama News Center and the Birmingham News/al.com. He has published three coffee-table books: The Beauty Box, a book about beauty parlors in The South and Shelter from the Storm, a collection of portraits and quotes of the homeless. This book was commissioned by the Salvation Army and has received worldwide accolades. Home Sweet Home Alabama, shows Alabama as one of the most beautiful and friendly states. In 2005, he was one of 100 photographers commissioned to photograph for the book: America 24/7. Karim's book, PAUL and me, A Journey to and from the Damascus Road, became an international phenomena and landed the number four best seller spot in religion books on Amazon.

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About Jessica Langston

Jessica graduated from the University of South Alabama with a Bachelor’s in English in 2007, and a Master’s in Creative Writing in 2009. Jessica published her first book of poetry and photography in 2009 and has published several poems including inclusion in The Birmingham Arts Journal and Whatever Remembers Us: An Anthology of Alabama Poetry. Her poetry awards include the Shelley Memorial Scholarship and contest awards by the National Federation of State Poetry Societies, Poets and Patrons Chicagoland and the Alabama State Poetry Society. In 2014, she formed Poetic Presence, a 501 (c)3 designed to promote poetry in the community and to share the experience of written word artists with rising poets and writers--including MerFaire, a sea-themed celebration of art and books held every first Sunday of May. She was the chair person for the Alabama Poet Laureate nominations board, newsletter editor for the Alabama Writers' Conclave, and event coordinator for the Alabama State Poetry Society. She now holds the position of Vice President and Program Chair for the Alabama Writers Conclave.

Alina Stefanescu