Saturday, Aug 2, 2025 at 9:30am
Schedule:
9:30 am -- “Telling the Tale: The Story in the Poem” - Val Nieman
Visitor's Center
Sylvia Plath said that prose was an open hand, poetry a closed fist. A narrative in verse lets you tell a story with access to all the poetic devices of rhyme and rhythm, concentrated imagery, the richness and denseness and musicality of sound. Even a short lyric can have a narrative drive, with characters moving toward resolution. Narrative poetry presents a story or account of events, but the stories are not necessarily linear – there are digressions, subplots, observations on life. Plot, dialogue, conflict, suspense, characterization, setting – these give the reader the pleasure and suspense of a story. In this workshop, we’ll talk about the narrative poem as it has developed, and as it is being approached by poets today. We’ll look for sources of poems that are as close as the supermarket checkout line or the photos on your phone, and use these as prompts for writing.
Valerie Nieman’s poetry and novels draw on her Appalachian heritage and deep familiarity with the natural world. Nieman is the author of three poetry collections, including Leopard Lady: A Life in Verse, a poetry novel. She has seven novels, most of them set in or connected to Appalachia, but most recently the historical novel Upon the Corner of the Moon: “Immersive, deeply evocative, and steeped in historical detail, this novel offers a richly textured reimagining of the young Macbeth and Gruach—two children torn from their families, molded by forces beyond their control, and ultimately thrust into a perilous battle for power.” She also has a short fiction collection. A graduate of West Virginia University and Queens University of Charlotte, Nieman was a founding editor of Kestrel literary journal. She has held regional grants and a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship. She’s been a journalist, farmer, editor, sailor, and professor. Now retired, she gardens and fly fishes but is expert at neither.
10:00 am -- “Writing Like Beatrix Potter” - Linda Zimmer
Visitor's Center
Ages 7 to 12.
Beatrix Potter is renowned for writing the classic children’s book: The Tale of Peter Rabbit. Many of Potter’s books, including Peter Rabbit, began as letters to children. Workshop participants will write their own stories in the form of a letter. They can also choose to include simple illustrations.
Linda Zimmer is a writer, puppeteer, and presenter for The Beatrix Potter Society. She created puppets for Mister Rogers Neighborhood and is the author of the memoir: Playing with Memory, lighting up dementia care with music, art, and a very special poodle. Linda lives in White Sulphur Springs with her husband Don and her cat and poodle muses.
11:00 am -- “Just Like Flying a Plane” - Laura Treacy Bentley
Visitor's Center
Writing a novel is like flying a plane. Practical tips will be discussed to help you focus and overcome your fear of flying/beginning from the liftoff to dealing with turbulence, a non-stop flight, soaring, staying on course, and landing the plane. Take your time and enjoy the journey.
Laura Treacy Bentley is an internationally published writer who was born in Hagerstown, Maryland. She has lived most of her life in Huntington, West Virginia, and divides her time between West Virginia and a cabin in Western Maryland. Laura is the author of a poetry collection, Lake Effect, a psychological thriller set in Ireland, The Silver Tattoo, a picture book, Sir Grace and the Big Blizzard, and a poetry/photography chapbook, Looking for Ireland: An Irish-Appalachian Pilgrimage. She received a Fellowship Award for Literature from the West Virginia Commission on the Arts, and her work has been featured on the websites of A Prairie Home Companion, Poetry Daily, O Magazine, and Publishers Weekly. She served as the writer in residence for three years at the Marshall University Writing Project and taught creative writing at the 2013 West Virginia Governor’s School for the Arts at Davis & Elkins College. Her work has been published in the United States and Ireland in journals such as The New York Quarterly, Art Times, Poetry Ireland Review, Antietam Review, Rosebud, blink, Ginseng, Wind, The Stinging Fly, Kestrel, ABZ, Crannog, Now & Then, 3×10 plus, The New York Quarterly, Art Times, The Southern Poetry Anthology, Still, Goldenseal, and The Windward Review, among many others, including a number of anthologies. One of her poems is featured on a poster published by the Greenbank Observatory in Pocahontas County in West Virginia and another poem was displayed in a city bus in Morgantown, West Virginia. Laura read with Ray Bradbury in 2003 and signed her books with Nora Roberts at her Turn the Page Bookstore in 2017. Her newest novel, Glass Mountain, is a contemporary suspense novel published by Henlo Press.
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