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Piedmont Laureate

~ Promoting awareness and heightened appreciation for excellence in the literary arts throughout the Piedmont Region

Piedmont Laureate

Author Archives: Katy

The Only 2017 Resolutions You Need

03 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by Katy in Katy Munger

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by Katy Munger, 2016 Piedmont Laureate

This is my last blog post as the 2016 Piedmont Laureate and I am using it to bring you the most important message I have to share: the world has never needed the arts more than it does now. The arts inject genuine emotion into a superficial, staged, commercially-driven world. The arts can cross borders and boundaries and generations. The arts illuminate the human dreams and emotions that unite us rather than creating issues to divide us. The arts can win over hearts and minds, counteracting the political negativity that turns us against one another.

Music… theater… books… art…. dance… museums: these are your weapons in 2017, the tools that you can use to increase peace, love, understanding and joy in the world. Are you with me? If so, forget losing 40 pounds or organizing your closet. Choose from among these suggestions for your New Year’s resolutions for 2017. And if you have an idea for more, or want to commit to some of these resolutions with me, please post in the Comment section below!

Join museums. Continue reading →

Twice the Advice: Out with the Old and In with New!

14 Wednesday Dec 2016

Posted by Katy in Katy Munger

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by Katy Munger, 2016 Piedmont Laureate

In this very special, and close-to-final blog post of mine as the 2016 Piedmont Laureate, I asked the 2017 Piedmont Laureate — the ever fabulous poet Mimi Herman — to join me in answering some of the more interesting questions we writers get. We each answered without knowing what the other had to say. It’s a pretty interesting read, if I do say so myself. If you grab a beer or glass of wine before reading this post, it will almost be like you are sitting at the quiet end of the bar with me and Mim on a cold winter’s night. Enjoy!

Where do you think creativity comes from? What is it made of? 

Herman: I find creativity in the mysterious merging of a problem that needs to be solved with the time and space (and willingness) to take risks. For me, creativity is composed of time, urgency and indulgence in ideas, plus a passion for pursuing them.

Munger: I think creativity is a combination of hopes, dreams, past experience, past lives, the collective unconscious, and random electrical impulses of the brain — all mixed up in a stew that we attempt to make sense of. It’s a beautiful, chaotic expression of our individuality as well as our connections to the world around us. I like to think of it as a holding pen for our brains, where all that has gone before us and all that might be lives. I’d wander through that space forever if I could. Continue reading →

Where I’m coming from

29 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by Katy in Katy Munger

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by Katy Munger, 2016 Piedmont Laureate

All writers owe thanks to the writers who came before them and left their literary footprints to follow. There’s not an author on the planet who didn’t start at, at some point, as a reader. I think of every page I turned as a child as somehow leaving a trace of longing on my fingertips, a feeling that sank deeper into my heart and, eventually, grew into a belief that I, too, could have my name on the cover of my book. That I, too, could be an author.

I thought about that a lot this Thanksgiving, in part because I stumbled across the wonderful quote above from Kurt Vonnegut. Yes, I found, and still find, humanity and humor in books, along with so much more—including lessons my teachers did not intend when they steered me toward these writers:

  • Joseph Wambaughtaught me that every character, no matter how minor, was worthy of love and care and respect. They make your books come alive. I will always love him for that.
  • Flannery O’Connershowed me that the darkness within us is universal and indecipherable—and, oh, so interesting to examine.
  • G. Wodehouse and Eudora Weltysteered me toward the joys of gentle, dry humor—an approach that inspired my first mystery series.
  • Ernest Hemingwaymade me realize I wasn’t a man and did not particularly want to be one or write like one, a more valuable lesson than you’d think.
  • Shirley Jacksonscared the crap out of me and made me realize that the need to acknowledge our fears is a powerful and fundamental human drive that can anchor a book.
  • Scott Fitzgeraldconvinced me I never wanted to squander my gifts and be known as someone who could have done so much more.
  • Robert Craisshowed me that you can write contemporary crime fiction without sounding like a bad imitation of a 50’s noir movie.
  • Ray Bradburystretched my imagination and showed me that, actually, you don’t have to write about what you know.
  • Erma Bombeck,of all people, opened my eyes to the humor lurking in the most ordinary of actions and events-–an appreciation that found its way into all of my series, even the serious one.
  • Both James Lee Burke and Tony Hillermanproved to me that an evocative sense of place was critical to creating a book that feels real enough for a reader to live in.
  • John Irvingmade me appreciate huge, sweeping plots and the joy of an ending where all the threads come together. I still pray for Owen Meany.
  • Stephen Ambrosemade me realize that the world needs real heroes and that it’s easy to overlook the best among us.

All of these writers influenced me because of the literary legacy they left for me to discover. Indeed, if you took bits of them all and whirred them up in a blender and poured them out over blank pages… you’d probably end up with a Katy Munger book. It’s always good to know where you come from.

What authors have influenced you and how? I’d love to know your own literary equation.

The Joy of Unspoiled Voices

13 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by Katy in Katy Munger, Uncategorized

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by Katy Munger, 2016 Piedmont Laureate

One of the great joys of working with young authors is that their voices have yet to be shaped by disappointment, cynicism, or the expectations of strangers. Their imaginations are still on overdrive, unsquelched by the weight of everyday responsibilities, and they give voice to their imaginations with a delightful and unadorned boldness.

I was reminded of this over the past month as I read through the submissions of a young writers contest the Piedmont Laureate program sponsored at www.summersleuths.org. The assignment was to write a mystery or crime fiction short story and a few prompts were provided to get kids thinking. But most of the authors opted to submit stories based on their ideas. I was blown away by their creativity as well as the quality of their writing.

Sometimes the subjects were familiar: being late for school, moving to a new town, or the usual fears of childhood like fitting in or losing a pet. But they approached these topics with such elan and a cheerful enthusiasm for catching the bad guys that real law enforcement can only hope to emulate. Bus drivers, little old ladies, jealous friends, and others became villains, but many of the authors pointed out that, at heart, these villains still had good in them. Just as often, they would write about a situation where they were afraid of something, only to reveal later that they had simply misinterpreted what was going on. I love this view of the world: that no one is all bad and that we all have the resilience to overcome our fears. We just have to adjust the way we look at them.

Nearly all of the young writers excelled at creating a mood in their stories. One atmospheric submission spoke of monsters outside the window, describing a gradual increase of fear with a sparse, moody elegance I greatly admired. Other stories captured the loneliness that comes with being new to a classroom or town, or the loving interplay between child and parent. Are you wondering whether kids really hear what you say to them? Wonder no more: their ear for dialogue is astonishing.

These are kids who are paying attention to the world. These are young authors who are learning from what they see. ­­I would take nine billion of them.

Some stories were concise, others ran on and on -– leaping into different time periods and new worlds with endless energy and unpredictable creativity. May every page I write have that much joie de vivre. We could all use a little excess.

One young man even wrote a beautiful homage to British police procedurals; I wanted to call up his parents and salute them on their television watching policies. He captured the loneliness of responsibility that comes with being a senior detective who makes the decisions, the aching fear of making the wrong decision, and the price that comes with making a mistake. Somehow, this young man conveyed the essence of many a PBS series and he’s just 11 years old. Well done. He’s not just observing the world, he is absorbing it.

And unlike adults, faced with a crime, these young writers were not so concerned with dispensing justice. Bad guys might be captured, but they weren’t necessarily punished. There was little need for retribution. I rather liked this relaxed approach to good and evil. It signified a belief in the universe and its own ability to balance good and evil that I would like to embrace.

Most of all, I came away impressed with the power that stories have on our lives. These are young people raised on narratives everywhere they look, from the television commercials they see to the subjects they are taught in school, to the endless parade of books, movies, and shows that have shaped their lives. This consumption of stories has clearly made them storytellers — the advanced structures of these stories show this clearly. That gave me hope and underscored my belief that, going forward, in a world of sound bites, it will be shared stories that bind us.

Our beautiful, beautiful state

16 Sunday Oct 2016

Posted by Katy in Katy Munger

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by Katy Munger, 2016 Piedmont Laureate

Yesterday, in the midst of our acrimonious national election and the seeming collapse of civility everywhere, I sought refuge in the dignity and community of the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame 2016 induction ceremony. Over a hundred people gathered on a perfect autumn afternoon at the Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities in Southern Pines to watch as Clyde Edgerton, Margaret Maron, and the great Carl Sandburg were all inducted.

Leaders from North Carolina’s arts community were there, along with columnist J. Peder Zane, the inimitable Bland Simpson, and North Carolina Poet Laureate Shelby Stephenson, among others. The common theme? How the arts brings us together. And, truly, yesterday they did. Political differences were forgotten. Our diverse backgrounds and lives bound us rather than keeping us apart. We were all in it together, as North Carolinians. It was a good feeling, one I had missed.

We are lucky to live in  this beautiful state, a state that treasures its writers and its people, in all of our diverse glory. I hope when this election is over, we can get back to being the North Carolina we deserve to be and can be again, one linked by our love for the state we live in, a respect for those who are different from us, and a focus on how we are all connected beneath those differences.

Thank you to everyone at Weymouth and the Literary Hall of fame who made today possible and reminded me that life is about being together. For those of you who could not be with us, I thought you might enjoy these photos, courtesy of Bob Witchger and author Kaye Wilkinson Barley:

Books, Beer and Bluejazz: Be There!

16 Sunday Oct 2016

Posted by Katy in Katy Munger

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Books, Beer & Bluejazz

Saturday, November 19th    Noon to 4:00 PM

The Blue Note Grill  709 Washington St  Durham, NC 27701

 

Are you tired of the election? Are you ready for some fun? Would you like to get together to laugh and talk about something other than politics? If so, mark your calendars now! There is light at the end of the tunnel: 

Join us the afternoon of Saturday, November 19th for an unforgettable event sponsored by the Piedmont Laureate program as part of the Durham Art Walk Holiday Market. Books, Beer & Bluejazz will feature well known Durham-area authors reading from their work, bluegrass and jazz playing in between readings, local beers, and the downhome food of the renowned Blue Note Grill.

From noon until 2:00 PM, the Nash Street Ramblers will play their signature brand of blue grass, followed from 2:00 until 4:00 PM by the unforgettable North Carolina Jazz Ensemble — featuring six band directors, a 90-year old trombone player, and some of the state’s finest jazz musicians. Authors Michael Malone, Margaret Maron, 2016 Piedmont Laureate Katy Munger, Eryk Pruitt, Sarah Shaber, Cat Warren, and more will read from their work at intervals and take questions from the audience. Information on recommended books for the holidays will also be provided.

Admission is free and open to the public. The event is family friendly, though most suited to children age 10 and over. It’s going to be an epic Durham event that you won’t want to miss!

Let’s celebrate the arts and the start of the holiday season together.  See you at the Blue Note Grill on November 19th!

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