Tumgik
#Greensboro Bound Literary festival
shannonpurdyjones · 4 months
Text
At the Greensboro Bound Literary Festival today. It lights my creative fire seeing so many amazing authors from all walks of life and writing traditions in one place. There's truly nothing like literary community. I'm so grateful for mine 🥰
1 note · View note
foodpilgrim · 5 years
Text
Pilgrim on Book Tour
For a variety of reasons, it’s been a while since I’ve posted. Sorry for the hiatus. Most recently I’ve been traveling about twice a week to promote The Month of Their Ripening, my book on NC heritage foods. I spoke to a group of some 65 agriculture students at the University of Mount Olive in eastern NC last week. These students go to school where one of the state’s best-known products is prepared and packaged—Mt. Olive pickles. Though there might be the faint scent of vinegar in the air, strawberries are in the fields around town right now. My route also took me past scuppernong vines on either side of the road as far as I could see. No leaves yet on the vines, but spring has definitely come to that greening campus among the snowy dogwoods.  
Near the end of my talk, one of the students questioned a comment in my chapter on goat’s milk. I had written about the prevalence of mechanized farming in relation to dairy cows, suggesting that goat’s milk by contrast was more likely to be gently produced and the milking done by hand. The student said that the phrase “mechanized farming” sounded scary and unfair. She told me that she and many of her classmates were headed to family farms after graduation, where the cows were actually treated quite well. She said it might be different elsewhere, but in North Carolina there are still many small, family-owned farms that treat their dairy cows like family.
Of course, that is true, now that I think about it. In Orange County where I live, my friends Portia McKnight and Flo Hawley of Chapel Hill Creamery make outstanding cow’s milk cheeses bearing the names of local landmarks. Hillsborough’s Maple View Dairy still uses recyclable glass bottles, offers whole milk, an almost chewy buttermilk, and the most luscious ice cream. Their farm stand is a destination that draws families by the car load this time of year to sample cones and sundaes while rocking on the front porch and observing the grazing herd before them. Other small farms in the region contribute to the milk produced by Durham’s long-running Maola Milk and Ice Cream.
Tumblr media
Chapel Hill Creamery: where the cows are happy. So, I stand corrected. If you live in the Piedmont and want to learn more about these operations, the annual Piedmont Farm Tour, co-sponsored by the Carolina Farm Stewardship Association and Weaver Street Market, is April 27 – 28 from 2 – 6 pm. For a fee of $30 per car you can visit more than 40 farms throughout Alamance, Chatham, Durham, Franklin, Johnston, Orange, Person, and Wake Counties.
In January, I was the guest author at a colorful and scrumptious Middle Eastern spread created in support of Greensboro’s Scuppernong Books by patrons David and Susan Gutterman. The bookstore is a major organizer for the Greensboro Bound Book Festival held in May, along with a teen writing camp offered during the summer. Besides celebrating the scuppernong, our state’s official fruit, the eponymous bookstore on Elm Street in downtown Greensboro also serves food and wine and provides a cozy community space—really more like a living room--where visiting writers can comfortably share their work. The bookstore’s creativity in programming is unparalleled. Check out the schedule for Greensboro Bound in May.
Tumblr media
The feast in Greensboro for Scuppernong Books and Greensboro Bound Literary Festival 
In February, I was touched when I arrived at Main Street Books in Davidson. The proprietors had prepared apples, persimmons, and goat cheese (also topics in my book) for patrons to sample during the presentation.
Soon I’ll be heading to far western North Carolina in Highlands for “The Month of Their Ripening Weekend” at Half-Mile Farm. I’ll be talking about spring foods—foraged and cultivated--while guests at the B and B sample dishes created from these ingredients, all crafted by the expert chefs at the Farm.
Botanical illustrator Carol Misner, who contributed her work to the book, will be demonstrating her painting techniques in the Garden Room. Photographer Donna Campbell, whose portraits of the fishmongers and farmers are also featured in the book, will be around to answer questions. Breakfast is likely to feature ramps, goat cheese, and prosecco flavored with muddled figs.
Tumblr media
Garden Room at Half Mile Farm, Highlands, NC
Just this past weekend I was in Columbia, North Carolina, on the Scuppernong River, visiting with fishmonger Willy Phillips at Full Circle Crab Company. He said a small number of soft-shell crabs are already coming in from South Carolina because ocean waters are warmer than usual. (It will be May before Willy starts harvesting peelers.)
As for oysters, the peak season is winding down. While many new aquaculture operations around Pamlico and Beaufort were disrupted by Hurricane Michael, the new crop from Ocracoke, called Woccocan Oysters (so called after the native name for the island) have been delicious.  It may not be too late to get a sample at restaurants across the state where Locals Seafood, a North Carolina distributor, delivers. We sampled some on the half shell a couple weeks ago—fresh, chilled, salty and perfectly saltine-sized—at Transfer Company Food Hall, a new venue, market and gathering place at 500 East Davie Street in downtown Raleigh. Created as a collection of vendors in a space designed for multiple forms of finger food with various spaces for sharing, meeting, drinking, and feasting, Transfer Co. is housed in what was the Carolina Coach Garage. There you’ll find Locals Seafood Oyster Bar, Che Empanadas, Benchwarmer Bagels (go early on weekends—the line is out the door), and Asheville’s prizewinning Burial Beer Company, a small-batch specialist. More food vendors will be opening there soon.
Chapel Hill Friends—I’ll be at Flyleaf Books at 7 pm on April 7th  and at the Carol Woods Community on April 18 at 7 pm.  In between I’ll be at the Blowing Rock Art and History Museum (BRAHM) at 6 p.m. See you somewhere perhaps?  Happy Spring!
0 notes
sagerountree · 5 years
Text
Greensboro Bound Postview/Kripalu Preview
Alexandra and I had a wonderful visit to the Greensboro Bound Literary Festival last weekend, full of sweet surprises. Among them: author gifts including delicious homemade cheese straws, a host of interesting people who turned up to hear about Teaching Yoga Beyond the Poses, and this amazing art from Hanna Barnhardt, @wandering_witness:
View this post on Instagram
View On WordPress
0 notes
tfrohock · 6 years
Text
I've got news: MystiCon, Greensboro Bound, and ConCarolinas
It’s been a while, hasn’t it?
Time got away from me during the final half of 2018. I had so many things happen—some were quite wonderful and others not so much. The upshot of it is that I simply didn’t have a lot of time to blog. The next Los Nefilim novel was due on February 8, 2019, and due to many circumstances beyond my control, I was woefully behind in writing it. Likewise, the deadlines for helping my Pitch Wars mentee, Elvin Bala, were also falling roughly into that time frame. Working with Elvin took no time at all … the novel, Carved from Stone and Dream, almost killed me.
So I essentially dropped everything that wasn’t novel or Pitch Wars related and disappeared to get ‘er done, and I did, we did, everything worked out, and I took this past weekend off and died ded and rested. Now I’m back to tell you about Where Oblivion Lives and gear up for promo and cons in 2019.
I spent a little time tweaking the webpage to make things easier to find. You can see a list of categories in the righthand sidebar.
I’m working on an interview for the Fantasy Hive and a couple of guest posts this week. In preparation for upcoming conventions, I’m devising panel topics to submit. Speaking of conventions, I’m also getting geared up to hit the con trail in 2019.
Cons and festivals
On February 22-24, I’ll be attending MystiCon in Roanoke, Virginia (you can find my full schedule here), and on April 5-7, I’ll be at RavenCon in Williamsburg, Virginia
May is going to be a busy month. I’m very excited that I will be attending Greensboro Bound (May 16-19), a local literary festival in Greensboro, North Carolina. Then I will be at ConCarolinas, which is hosting Deep South Con 57 (May 31-June 2) in Charlotte, North Carolina.
November 22-24 will find me back in sweet Charleston, South Carolina for AtomaCon. I lived in Charleston during the mid-to-late 1980s and haven’t visited the city in my years, so I’m greatly looking forward to heading south again.
So that’s it for now. There will be a lot more in the coming weeks.
Watch for me …
0 notes