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A second collection of eight prized plays. ?Hanging-Cat? Honorable
Mention, Stage Play Script, Writer's Digest 2001 Writing
Competition. ?The Cover Crop? as the short story ?In Hot Pursuit of
Genetics and Human Behavior, ? Finalist, WordSmitten Media, Inc.,
TenTen Fiction Competition, 2007. The Gar Hole? as short story
Second Place, Green River Tales: Short Stories, Green River Writers
2004 Contest. ?Grace-Noted Albatrosses? with A Brave Going at Fate,
Fourth Place, Mindful of Miracles, 1999 Annual Awards, Poetry
Society of Texas. ?Why Couldn't Mama Be a Jewish Mother Third
Place, Mount Dora [Florida] Festival of Music and Literature, 2005.
?If I?m Any Judge? one of the winners, 2003 Annual Vitality
Playwriting Contest. ?Barbie's Mother Calls Home? as poem, Barbie's
Mother Calls Home, Second Prize, Joe Logan Short Humor Awards,
Amelia, 1999.
A collection of eight prized plays. "Sassing the Sphinx"
commissioned for the first Robert Frost Symposium 'Celebrating
Robert Frost: An International Conference' Winthrop University,
1997. "Women of the Condor" honorable mention as a short story,
Twelfth Consecutive New Millennium Writing Awards, 2001. "Lillie
Langtry's 'Lash La Rue Sweet Potatoes'" quarter-finalist as a
screen play, Lone Star Screenplay Competition, 1997. "Boo Radley
and the Village People" honorable mention as a poem, Long Poem
Contest, Rhyme Time, 2002. "Ms. Spam Maps of Vegas" winner Florida
First Coast Writers' Festival Playwriting Contest, 2006. "Death
Nell" winnerTampa Writers Alliance Play/Screenplay Competition,
2005. "Gnat" award Paul Green Multi-Media Award, North Carolina
Society of Historians, 1996. "Second-Time-Around" winner Judith
Siegel Pearson Award, Wayne State University, 2008.
Writer/Editor Dr. Lynn Veach Sadler, (former) college president,
Distinguished Woman of North Carolina, and National Women s Hall of
Fame member, has published widely in academics and in creative
writing. She has published 5 books and 72 articles and edited 23
books/proceedings and 3 national journals and published 3 newspaper
columns (1 now). In creative writing, she has 11 poetry chapbooks
and 5 full-length collections, 125+ short stories, 4 novels, a
novella, 5 short story collections and 2 nonfiction collections.
One of her 41 plays was commissioned for the First International
Robert Frost Symposium. As North Carolina s Central Region
Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet 2013-2015, she mentored student
and adult poets. Lynn s awards include teaching, Civil Rights, and
Exceptional Service to the History of the State.
Writer/Editor Dr. Lynn Veach Sadler, (former) college president,
Distinguished Woman of North Carolina, and National Women's Hall of
Fame member, has published widely in academics and in creative
writing. She has published 5 books and 72 articles and edited 23
books/proceedings and 3 national journals and published 3 newspaper
columns (1 now). In creative writing, she has 11 poetry chapbooks
and 4 full-length collections, 125] short stories, 4 novels, a
novella, 5 short story collections (including Litmus Tests, Volumes
I and II), and 2 nonfiction collections. One of her 41 plays was
commissioned for the First International Robert Frost Symposium. As
North Carolina's Central Region Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet
2013-2015, she mentored student and adult poets. Lynn's awards
include teaching, Civil Rights, and Exceptional Service to the
History of the State of North Carolina.
Writer/Editor Dr. Lynn Veach Sadler, (former) college president,
Distinguished Woman of North Carolina, and National Women's Hall of
Fame member, has published widely in academics and in creative
writing. She has published 5 books and 72 articles and edited 23
books/proceedings and 3 national journals and published 3 newspaper
columns (1 now). In creative writing, she has 11 poetry chapbooks
and 4 full-length collections, 125+ short stories, 4 novels, a
novella, 5 short story collections (including Litmus Tests, Volumes
I and II), and 2 nonfiction collections. One of her 41 plays was
commissioned for the First International Robert Frost Symposium. As
North Carolina's Central Region Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet
2013-2015, she mentored student and adult poets. Lynn's awards
include teaching, Civil Rights, and Exceptional Service to the
History of the State of North Carolina.
Writer/Editor Dr. Lynn Veach Sadler, (former) college president,
Distinguished Woman of North Carolina, National WomenIs Hall of
Fame member, and Central Region Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet
(2013-2015), has published widely in academics and in creative
writing: books, articles, newspaper columns, poetry chapbooks and
full collections, short stories, novels, a novella, short story
collections and nonfiction collections. One of her 41 plays was
commissioned for the First International Robert Frost Symposium.
Lynn pioneered/consulted in Computer-Assisted Composition,
published its first journal and established the first microcomputer
laboratory for teaching writing. She originated the first academic
computing conference in North Carolina, was Visiting Distinguished
Scholar in Educational Leadership, and directed a National
Endowment for the Humanities Seminar for College Teachers. Her
awards include teaching, Civil Rights, and Exceptional Service to
the History of the State.
All smart and looking-to-be-smart kids and all parents,
grandparents and teachers need to read My Computer Journal of
Family Dining. In this tragi-comic novel, teenager Zy Slayter, via
technology, struggles with 11 SEPTEMBER 2001 and his "drugger"
father. His mainstays are his "ancient," wise-droll, hip/hep
grandfather, with whom he works on The Great Mystery of the World;
his Black friend Doak; and another omnipresent but secret constant.
Along the way, we get tragic race relations, Blues and theremin
music, Trolls and football as play and computer game, a new "Boo
Radley," a Miss North Carolina candidate "sunk" by a chicken
costume..."[Y]ou cannot, finally, live life on the computer or in
the virtual world. The real world feeds great parts of you, too.
Nor can you, finally, bow down before evil and calamity. The spirit
rebounds. There will come a morning when you step out into
sunshine, and the spirit can do nothing less."
In a futuristic/paranormal but hot/steamy novel set against the
backdrop of a Russo-Islamic-Chinese take-over of the United States,
a woman is transformed and transforms. But who is cannibalized-Winn
Miller herself? Her husband Scott? Industrialist Christopher
Godbolt and General Sun, the men of her consuming fantasy? DREAM
himself/itself? Are the experiences of this intellectual,
once-chaste female and the revival of such ancient lore as alchemy
necessary to help us resolve world crises? What do we make of and
how do we survive in a diminished world?
Ex-Marine Acton Sanderson, the local sheriff, lives in one of the
converted missile towers on Boatswain Island, home to America's
first missile site. Older and newer entangled families with secrets
produce their own virtual Tower of Babel. Acton has to let Suelima
Pardee know that her older sister, Charlotte, who runs the Silver
Mullet Pier and Motel founded by their father, has had a breakdown.
By the time she interrupts completing her doctorate in literature
at the University of Chicago to come to her aid, Charlotte is dead,
and the island's "bad boy," Wes Thomas, is missing. Suelima seems
destined to sort out matters and solve the mystery [mysteries?]. A
secondary motive for her return is to determine, prior to answering
the marriage proposal of philosophy professor "Jamie" Winthrop,
whether her feelings for Acton are merely the dregs of a childhood
crush. After what she uncovers, can Suelima be satisfied that she
has done her best by the island she loves and not left it a place
of "whited sepulchers"?
Tonight I Lie with William Cullen Bryant is literary fiction with
touches of Southern Gothic, "coming-of-age," mystery, and the humor
that saves us daily. It offers a wry comment on race relations and
proof that many of today's concerns (e.g., the American Dream,
migrants, "gypsies," victimization of the weak, and persistent
blindness to that beneath the surface) were seeded in a
past-that-teaches. All humans have "big" lives with the potential
to enrich or subvert the human cause. A compelling novel written
with masterful touch and attention to detail.
She's not a composer, for all I know. She loves to dance - that I
do know, maybe she likes to sing in the shower?...I never asked.
Neither do I think she is a chef, though I am certain she can
prepare a perfectly boiled egg. As for love matters, that's easy,
if I quote her as being neither a "gusher" nor a "sentimentalist".
So what is there with Dr. Lynn Veach Sadler and a poetry book
called "Music, Food, Poetry"? Well, in one word - everything. In
one other word, making it a total of two - perfection. In one other
word...ok, got the idea? Lynn can take any subject and turn it into
a masterpiece of allusion, illusion, collusion and above
all...profusion. This is another collection we are proudly
collating for the wide public, with nothing else in mind but the
diffusion [sic] of incredible quality.
She finds them everywhere - in history, art, religion, industry,
her own back porch. She is awed by them, delighted by them,
saddened by them and by our misunderstanding of them. She gets them
in her poetry, immortalizing them with her mastery of word, stanza
and composition. Dr. Sadler turns, for the thickness of one book of
poetry, into an animals' master, transporting us into a world we
knew yet never really paid full attention to - "their" world, what
"they" mean to us. Most probably, many of us do need our eyes
opened.
It is absolutely impossible to define this humorous collection of
poetry, born at the finely sharpened end of Dr. Lynn Veach Sadler's
pencil, other than...absolutely marvelous. Delving in, stealing
from and exploiting unfathomable depths of academia, pun, and
personal wit, Dr. Lynn threads word-barbs on the steel of
sentence-wires with machine-gun speed at sniper-rifle accuracy. She
could have had easily qualified (among her numerous other titles)
for the "Muhammad Ali of the ho[a]xing world [of English]" title,
had such a title existed. This short review is written by one of
Dr. Lynn's aspiring students, poorly trying to imitate her
inimitable style.
This volume explores adult work-world writing issues from the
perspectives of five seasoned professionals who have logged
hundreds of hours working with adults on complicated written
communication problems. It examines the gap between school-world
instructional practices and real-world problems and situations.
After describing the five major economic sectors which are writing
intensive, the text suggests curricular reforms which might better
prepare college-educated writers for these worlds. Because the
volume is based on the extensive work-world experiences of the
authors, it offers numerous examples of real-world writing problems
and strategies which illustrate concretely what goes wrong and what
needs to be done about it.
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