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Piedmont Laureate

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

Piedmont Laureate

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The Morning After Our Program on ‘Writers and Social Change’ the Durham County Library Received A Bomb Threat. Here’s What Happened.

16 Tuesday Apr 2024

Posted by Steven Petrow in Uncategorized

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bomb threat, book reading, books, community, libraries, library, piedmont laureate, rainbow story hour, Reading

(From left to right: Marcie Cohen Ferris, Jaki Shelton Green, and Steven Petrow)

Breaking news: “Durham County Main Library was evacuated as a precaution Saturday morning because of a bomb threat. It happened just before a story hour hosted by an LGBTQ organization began.”

A scant day before I’d been overjoyed to share the stage at the Durham County Public Library at its fourth annual Library Fest. With me were Jaki Shelton Green, North Carolina’s Poet Laureate, and Marcie Cohen Ferris, one of our most important food writers. Together, we talked about the role of writers and social change, and the importance of libraries as safe spaces. 

For those who don’t know, Library Fest is in celebration of National Library Week, and all the good work that libraries do. Early on in the conversation the three of us talked about the role of libraries in our upbringing. I spoke about my grandmother, “Marian the Librarian,” who ruled the roost at my local library in Forest Hills, N.Y. I recalled that as a teen I went to the card catalogue (obviously, this was long before everything had been digitized) to seek information about “homosexuality” (obviously, this was long before I came out). I was terrified that Grandma Marian might stop by at the wrong moment—and discover my truth—so I came up with a clever excuse for being at that particular drawer. If questioned, I’d reply, “I’m actually looking up ‘homo sapiens,’ Grandma.” Nothing of the kind happened, and I came away secure with the notion that libraries are safe spaces for all. 

Jaki and Marcie concurred, with Jaki telling us how, as a child, she became the first Black girl to integrate her segregated library. We talked about a good deal more, including those who had influenced us to become writers and agents of change (a lot of credit went to family), various role models, how we found our voices, and the challenges we’ve encountered in speaking our truths. I could not have asked for a more engaged panel—or audience.

Before the evening ended, a bit overtime, each of us had thanked library staff for all they do, praising the library building itself, which is open, inviting, full of light, a true community center.

The Durham County Main Library.

I wish I could end my story right here. 

_____

On tap the next morning was a program called “Rainbow Story Time” hosted by  Rainbow Collective for Chance. According to news reports, about half an hour before the program was to begin, the library was informed of a bomb threat, specifically mentioning Maya Christina Gonzalez, whose book was to be read during the story hour.

In its statement, Rainbow Collective for Change said:

“RCC has been hosting monthly Rainbow Story Times and other events for 2 years now and this is our first experience with a serious threat…We will continue to advocate for LGBTQIA+ and gender-affirming schools and build community spaces where our children can be who they are and celebrate that love makes a family. We – together with RCC families and partner organizations — will not let hate win and will continue advocating for a safe and affirming community that all our children deserve.”

As for the library, it closed for the rest of the weekend. By Monday morning, its doors re-opened—to everyone.

As one staffer told me, “We will not be deterred or intimidated.”

No, we won’t.

Piedmont Laureate Steven Petrow In Conversation With Bestselling Author, Damon Tweedy, MD

12 Friday Apr 2024

Posted by Steven Petrow in Uncategorized

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book review, Fiction, historical-fiction, knitting, medicine, music, piedmont laureate, self help, writing

At Quail Ridge Books, The Two Writers Talk About Tweedy’s New Book, Facing The Unseen: The Struggle to Center Mental Health in Medicine

I was thrilled to be Dr. Damon Tweedy’s “conversation partner” at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh this week. Together we were taking about his new book, Facing the Unseen, which is about the mental health crisis in this country, in our hospitals, and within our families. Tweedy, the bestselling author of Black Man in a White Coat and a professor of psychiatry at the Duke School of Medicine, has written another powerful volume, one that combines expert interviews, personal experience, and policy analysis to examine how the medical system fails people with mental illness. As he writes, “When a system marginalizes mental health … patients pay the price.”

Clearly, Dr. Tweedy was on his home turf at Quail Ridge Books, as he engaged the audience for close to 45 minutes with stories from his world—personal and professional—and then took at least a dozen questions from the audience. By 8 p.m., the program had ended and the good doctor took out his pen, signing his name in the books of a great many individuals who waited in a long line to greet and thank him.

To purchase Dr. Tweedy’s books from Quail Ridge, please click here. Or buy them from your local book store, Bookshop.org, or Amazon.com.

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Here’s an excerpt from the BookPage review of Dr. Tweedy’s new book:

“Mostly, though, Facing the Unseen is about his patients. Tweedy is an excellent storyteller, making the people whom he treats unforgettably visible in all their complexities. Their stories embody why recognizing the mind-body connection is critical. There’s Natalie (all patients’ names are pseudonyms), an Iraq war veteran with PTSD, who came to the ER desperate for help. But treating her drug withdrawal was not considered a medical priority, and she was left to seek outpatient psychiatric care elsewhere. A passionate advocate for integrated medical and psychiatric care, Tweedy cites statistics that tally addiction and opioid abuse, PTSD, depression and anxiety, and the prevalent use of prescription pills. Throughout, he uses powerful descriptions that yield keen insights, showing us how the health care system sets doctors up to fail their patients, and offering solutions that will help.”

Hello! I’m the Piedmont Laureate for 2024. Let Me Introduce Myself

19 Monday Feb 2024

Posted by Steven Petrow in Uncategorized

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Tags

events, news, piedmont laureate, poet-laureate, Poetry, steven petrow, writing

It’s no understatement to say that I’d been waiting for years for the Piedmont Laureate program to return to creative non-fiction so that I might be eligible to apply. In those years I’ve been engaged in other volunteer efforts seeking to promote writing, reading, and literacy, which I see as fundamental to democracy, not to mention to our general well-being and our ability to empathize with those who are different from us.

So, who am I? Well, first of all I’m going to admit that I went to Duke as an undergraduate. I know I’ve now lost half of you; I’m sorry. I remember when I first moved back to The Triangle (from the San Francisco Bay Area), a neighbor whose house could have been considered a living monument to Carolina pulled me aside to say: “Steven, I have no problem accepting that you’re gay, but I’ll never accept the fact that you went to Duke.” Eighteen years later, Sandra and I still laugh about that first encounter, and I’ve told her—as I’ll write here: “Some of my best friends are Tar Heels.”

I wrote my first book, Dancing Against the Darkness, soon after the HIV/AIDS epidemic emerged in the mid-1980s. In that book, I told the stories of nearly a dozen individuals—gay and straight; male and female; white, brown, and black—who had the courage to share their personal lives with me and many a reader. By the time I completed the manuscript, most of them had succumbed to the virus, and I realized the importance of capturing and safeguarding the stories of those who are most vulnerable. That remains a core part of why I write today.

Since then I’ve written six (or is it seven?) additional books. In 2021, Stupid Things I Won’t Do When I Get Old was published; that book is a memoir about my late parents.  I was originally convinced they just kept making one wrong decision after another that made their lives smaller and less connected. I started to keep a list. My dad refused to get a hearing aid, which meant that he could not hear his family or friends. My mother made her own refusal, not giving up the car keys, even when she kept hitting other cars (fortunately, they were all parked at the time). I, along with my siblings, tried to reason with them, but to no avail. I declared that I’d learned all the lessons and that I’d never be like them! Well, it’s now more than a decade later and I’ve come to see how much I’ve become like them, sometimes now, doing some of the same stupid things. Argh! As I wrote at the end of that book, they did as well as they could, which is all any of can do. And my biggest lesson? Learning greater compassion.

My next book is titled, The Joy You Make: Finding the Silver Linings in Good Times and Bad, and it will be published this coming September. I won’t write too much about that now but suffice it to say it’s about my journey—our journey—to find light, love, laughter, connection, and joy in these troubling and turbulent times. And yes, I believe there’s hope.

[Do you want to buy books online and support your local bookstore? Well, you can do that through Bookshop.org. They have raised more than $30 million for independent bookstores.]

Let me circle back to why I had hoped to serve as your Piedmont Laureate. Since 2018,  I’ve been a writing mentor in Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center’s Visible Ink program, where I’ve helped people (mainly patients) give voice to their stories through writing. As a board member of the Virginia Center for Creative Arts, I initiated the “Virtual VCCA” program in the spring of 2020 (very soon after the pandemic closed down the artists’ residency program) to provide a platform for writers, visual artists and composers–and to develop an online community. While serving as a board member of the Orange County Literacy Council, I co-chaired (with my pal, Jeff Polish, who runs The Monti program) several of our most successful community events, again connecting writers to the community and vice versa. During the pandemic I hosted virtual interviews with Orange County authors, as part of the Hillsborough Arts Council’s Writers’ Series.  As a queer man, I’ve  moderated events at Duke and UNC, usually on LGBTQ subjects, including a panel earlier last year on student activism.

Before I sign off for now, I want to express my appreciation to the sponsoring organizations–Raleigh Arts, United Arts Council, Durham Arts Council, and the Orange County Arts Commission. I’m very glad to be working with them. Also, I owe a debt of gratitude to my immediate predecessor, Dasan Ahanu, as well as to my inspiring friend and role model, Jaki Shelton Green, once upon a time ago a Piedmont Laureate and now Poet Laureate of North Carolina.

I think that’s enough for now. You can find me in Hillsborough, often walking my cocker spaniel, Binx. Or you can reach out to me via email at stevenpetrow@gmail.com. I hope to see you at one of the many Piedmont Laureate events in the coming months. Please don’t be shy. I even hope you’ll accord me a moment of grace for having attended the wrong color blue university in Durham.

–Steven Petrow

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