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The Writer Files: Writing, Productivity, Creativity, and Neuroscience
Acclaimed debut novelist Emily Everett spoke to me about finding a writing community, impostor syndrome, setting aside self-doubt, and her literary debut, ALL THAT LIFE CAN AFFORD. Emily Everett is a writer and the managing editor of The Common, a literary magazine based at Amherst College. Her debut novel All That Life Can Afford, is the Reese's Book Club pick for April 2025 (out now from Putnam Books), was named a most anticipated book of 2025 by Harper's Bazaar, Town & Country, and E! News, as well as an Apple Books Audiobook Staff Pick. Described as “A taut and lyrical coming-of-age debut about a young American woman navigating class, lies, and love amid London's jet-set elite.” New York Times bestselling author Sarah McCoy said of the book, “Emily Everett's All That Life Can Afford is a wildly entertaining fish-out-of-water story meets Cinderella fairy tale.” Emily Everett has an MA in literature from Queen Mary University of London, where she lived and worked from 2009 to 2013. Her short fiction appears in Electric Literature, Tin House, and Mississippi Review, among others. [Discover The Writer Files Extra: Get 'The Writer Files' Podcast Delivered Straight to Your Inbox at writerfiles.fm] [If you're a fan of The Writer Files, please click FOLLOW to automatically see new interviews. And drop us a rating or a review wherever you listen] In this file Emily Everett and I discussed: Teaching SAT classes for wealthy families abroad Why you don't have to wait to get started on your book Her thirst to prove herself with the first novel Time-blocking vs writing in the margins with a full-time job On crappy first drafts And a lot more! Show Notes: emily-everett.com The Common literary magazine All That Life Can Afford: Reese's Book Club by Emily Everett (Amazon) Emily Everett on Instagram Kelton Reid on Twitter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Episode 32 features singer-songwriter Chris Pierce, London band The Golden Dregs, musician Dave Murphy, and pianist Sarah McCoy.
Lumière sur Sarah McCoy, autrice, compositrice et surtout chanteuse de blues, soul et jazz. L'artiste Franco-Américaine se produira dans la mythique et sublime scène du théâtre de Dole, mercredi prochain, le 19 février. C'est l'occasion de la rencontrer.
Agus tús á chur an tseachtain seo leis an tríú sraith is fichead den chlár, labhraíonn muid leis an léiritheoir Sarah McCoy.
Propos recueillis par Benoit Basirico à Cannes La Prisonnière de Bordeaux, de Patricia Mazuy Au cinéma le 28 août 2024 Musique originale composée par Amine Bouhafa Entretien à lire : https://www.cinezik.org/infos/affinfo.php?titre0=20240527222049 Amine Bouhafa rencontre Patricia Mazuy (succédant à Theo Hakola, John Cale et Wyatt E dans l'œuvre de la cinéaste) pour parler de la relation entre deux femmes issues de milieux différents (Alma - Isabelle Huppert, seule dans sa grande maison bourgeoise, et Mina - Hafsia Herzi, jeune mère dans une lointaine banlieue), réunies par les visites au parloir où leurs maris sont détenus. La musique tisse un lien entre les personnages et représente cette amitié, caractérisée par un thème allant de la guitare aux saxophones, se terminant par un sifflement final. Le compositeur a également composé la chanson d'ouverture et de clôture du film, "Je Sens Tu Mens", interprétée par Sarah McCoy, sur des paroles de la cinéaste. L'audace du récit réside dans l'absence d'éclats ou d'événements majeurs (avant une dernière scène de trahison), la musique insuffle ainsi une dose de romanesque, et élargit le cadre des murs.
JazzOmania #106 avec Stéphane Kochoyan avec Canal 30, Stellar Média & Jazz70 La playlist Spéciale Nîmes Metropole Jazz Festival 2024 Du 20 septembre au 19 Octobre 2024 Renseignements locations nmjf.fr Une thématique Afro Blues & Soul pour la 18ème édition de ce festival itinérant sur le territoire de Nîmes Métropole qui s'annonce exceptionnelle avec Flavia Coelho , Fatoumata Diawara , Sarah McCoy, José James, Chief Adjuah , Bernard Allison, Kareen Guiock Thuram… Ayo ouvrira le festival le vendredi 20 septembre 20h30 à Saint-Geniès-de-Malgoirès. 1 - Ayo - Money Love 2 - Ballaké Sissoko, Vincent Segal, Emile Parisien, Vincent Peirani - Esperanza 3 - Flavia Coelho - Lapa 4 - Laura Prince feat Gregory Privat- In Your Eyes 5 - Bernard Allison - Too Many Women 6 - Sarah McCoy - Go Blind 7 - Kareen Guiock-Thuram - Mr. Bojangles 8 - Daniel GarcÌa Diego - AlegrÌas Pa AverÌo 9 - José James - 38th & Chicago 10 - Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah, Sarah Elizabeth Charles - The Walk 11 - Fatoumata Diawara, M.anifest - Mogokan 12 - Celia Kameni - The Lights 13 - Ethioda & Muyiwa Kunudji - Ambassel Groove 14 - Justine Blue - It Makes Me Feel Alright 15 - Sunscape - Starlink 16 - Le Maestrio - Symphonie 25 #Jazz #Festival #NîmesMétropole #Podcast #Jazz70 #Radio #JazzOmania
durée : 00:55:40 - Côté Club - par : Laurent Goumarre - Côté Club, le rendez-vous de toute la scène française et plus si affinités reçoit Philippe Cohen-Solal et Sarah McCoy pour un album collaboratif ainsi que l'ancien leader du groupe Wall of Death, Gabriel Auguste, pour son premier album en solitaire. Bienvenue au Club ! - réalisé par : Stéphane LE GUENNEC
durée : 00:55:40 - Côté Club - par : Laurent Goumarre - Côté Club, le rendez-vous de toute la scène française et plus si affinités reçoit Philippe Cohen-Solal et Sarah McCoy pour un album collaboratif ainsi que l'ancien leader du groupe Wall of Death, Gabriel Auguste, pour son premier album en solitaire. Bienvenue au Club ! - réalisé par : Stéphane LE GUENNEC
durée : 01:29:33 - Le grand dimanche soir - par : Charline Vanhoenacker - Avant de partir en tournée dans toute la France pour son nouvel album "Crash cœur", Eddy de Pretto vient nous rencontrer au studio 104. Le tout dans une ambiance jazz et soul avec la chanteuse Sarah McCoy.
durée : 01:29:33 - Le grand dimanche soir - par : Charline Vanhoenacker - Avant de partir en tournée dans toute la France pour son nouvel album "Crash cœur", Eddy de Pretto vient nous rencontrer au studio 104. Le tout dans une ambiance jazz et soul avec la chanteuse Sarah McCoy.
De bakkersdochter is een roman van Sarah McCoy die twee vrouwen verbindt: de jonge journaliste Reba Adams en de oudere bakkerij-eigenaresse Elsie. Het boek onthult Elsie's aangrijpende verleden tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog, waarin ze een rol speelde in het verzet tegen de nazi's. Het verhaal verkent thema's als moed, liefde en de impact van oorlog. Website: https://onzeboekencast.podbean.com/ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1RCSbWgHjXrdXRoplhBDzp Itunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/nl/podcast/onze-boekencast/id1502166520 Twitter: https://twitter.com/onze_boekencast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Onze-Boekencast-110337417458188 Ways by Alex-Productions www.onsound.eu Enchanted by Keys of Moon www.soundcloud.com/keysofmoon
No sabemos si esto te lo veías venir pero, sinceramente creemos que es lo mejor que ha hecho Kuve hasta ahora. Lo puede decir más alto pero no más claro, este es su renacimiento, lo que siempre ha querido a ser. Es más Kuve que nunca y este nuevo camino le sienta de lujo. Es ella, es 'Queen M', se publica mañana, viernes, 17 de febrero pero ya lo tienes en este podcast. Aparte, escuchamos a Caroline Polachek, Sarah McCoy, Inhaler, Luz Casal... SARAH MCCOY - Go Blind CAROLINE POLACHEK - Blood And Butter INHALER - Love Will Get You There LUZ CASAL – Hola, Qué Tal? ROSALIA – LLYLM GORILLAZ ft. ADELEYE OMOTAYO - Silent Running DANI – Nubes KUVE – Queen M DUA LIPA – Physical LOS INVADERS - Lady Goodman LA LA LOVE YOU & SAMURAI - El Principio De Algo TIGRES LEONES ft TULSA - A Banda CALA VENTO - Ferrari KING TUFF – How I Love STEVE MASON - The People Say SHAME – Six Pack RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS – Give It Away Escuchar audio
Blues Note i Verve han publicat els seus discos, per
durée : 00:55:34 - Côté Club - par : Laurent Goumarre - Côté Club, le rendez-vous de toute la scène française et plus si affinités reçoit H-Burns pour un nouvel album ainsi que Sarah McCoy. Bienvenue au Club ! - invités : H-BURNS, Sarah McCOY - H-Burns :, Sarah McCoy :
Contaminé par le virus de la musique, Gwen l'a propagé tout au long de sa vie. De disquaire à animateur radio, de showcases à accompagnement d'artistes, il vous embarque dans sa rétrospective, sans antibiotique juste une bonne cure musicale. Le Coin du Mange-Disques : https://www.radiolocalitiz.fr/le-coin-du-mange-disques/ Titres diffusés : Barbara Pravi & Fredrika Stahl - Prière vers l'horizon : https://music.apple.com/fr/album/prière-vers-lhorizon/1656234972?i=1656235546 Martin Luminet - ÉTOUFFER : https://music.apple.com/fr/album/étouffer/1660048089?i=1660048574 Sarah McCoy - Sorry For You : https://music.apple.com/fr/album/sorry-for-you/1657779134?i=1657779998 Pi Ja Ma - Nobody's Wife : https://music.apple.com/fr/album/nobodys-wife/1654705621?i=1654707813 Julia Jean-Baptiste - Je continue à danser (feat. Jean-Sylvain Le Gouic) : https://music.apple.com/fr/album/je-continue-à-danser-feat-jean-sylvain-le-gouic/1652748926?i=1652749667 Pierre de Maere - Enfant de : https://music.apple.com/fr/album/enfant-de/1653146513?i=1653146525
Artistes que tenen la veu com una arma de seducci
Notre 1er invité est Kepa pour la sortie de son 2ème album Divine Morphine (Éditions Miliani). C'est toujours la même chanson, celle qui tient en un mot. Cinq lettres, trois consonnes et deux voyelles. Un B, un L, un U, un E et la marque du pluriel au bout. Un mot international, qui désigne à la fois une musique, un état émotionnel et vaguement une couleur. Vous l'avez, là ? Chut… Il ne faut plus l'écrire, ni le nommer, pour ne pas tomber dans ses clichés, ni y emmener les auditeurs du deuxième album de Kepa. Kepa ne veut plus en entendre parler, pourtant il l'a. Dans sa guitare en métal qui, entre de bonnes mains, ressemble à une lampe d'Aladin, à une épée mythologique. Dans son harmonica, cet instrument qui fait trembler le cerveau quand on en joue avec le cœur. Dans sa vie de tous les jours et même de tous les hiers. Au fond de ses tripes, comme un frisson qui remonte jusqu'à ses cordes vocales, un super pouvoir dont il faut aussi avoir peur. Dans ses gênes, son corps endolori, son sang altéré. Dans le titre de ce nouvel album, Divine Morphine. Le premier, sorti il y a trois ans, s'appelait Doctor, Do Something. Un début de concept, toujours la même chanson, comme une affection longue durée. Kepa l'a attrapé comme une maladie. En 2013, Kepa s'appelait Bastien Duverdier et il vivait la vie de skater professionnel, humain augmenté capable de voyager loin et de s'envoler sur une planche à roulettes. Quant tout à coup, il s'est senti devenir vieux. Rongé par une maladie auto-immune qui a bouleversé sa vie, les chiens de l'enfer à ses trousses, qui ne le lâcheront jamais. Il a trouvé une planche de salut, sans roulettes mais avec des cordes, dans la musique, pratiquée sur sa guitare en métal et de préférence sur un ou deux accords qui tournent, à la recherche d'une transe intérieure, d'une vibration musico-thérapeutique, d'un rite auto-chamanique. Bastien est devenu musicien, sortant donc en 2018 Doctor, Do Something, premier album réalisé avec Taylor Kirk du groupe canadien Timber Timbre. L'album a été très bien accueilli, et des centaines de concerts ont fait connaître Kepa, son humour, sa musique et ses jolies chemises. Mais, malgré tout le bien qu'on a pensé de Doctor, Do Something, on peut l'affirmer sans forfanterie : Divine Morphine est mille fois mieux. Doctor, Do Something était une carte de visite. Divine Morphine est le récit d'une expédition au fond de soi, d'un voyage au bout de l'enfermement. Personne ne t'entendra crier. Il a fait ce disque pour chercher à comprendre, dompter et raconter cette maladie qui l'a chamboulé jusqu'à l'implosion, à l'orée de la folie. «Du plomb dans l'Eldorado», chante-t-il en duo avec Sarah McCoy sur l'incroyable dark-pop song Eldorado, un vrai tube du nouveau monde. Du plomb dans l'Eldorado, c'est un peu ce que tout le monde ressent depuis l'année 2020, non ? Le calvaire des uns est la Covid-19, le sien s'appelle HLA-B27, pour human leucocyte antigen. Personne ne peut le vivre à sa place, mais tout le monde peut ressentir et apprécier comment il s'est soigné avec Divine Morphine. Le premier morceau est un peu son All Aboard (Muddy Waters) à lui. Un solo d'harmonica basse façon train song, qui aurait eu sa place sur Doctor, Do Something, mais qui d'un coup tourbillonne, se dérègle et annonce la suite. Le train vient de dérailler et d'entrer dans une autre dimension, celle du vertige opiacé, de la perte de contrôle, de la musique qui rêve et dérive… Une chanson va sonner comme la bande-son d'un western où Kepa fait un duel avec lui-même (Dog Days). Une autre emmène les vieux Bukka White et Alan Vega danser dans un club de Détroit pendant un tremblement de terre (Wet Dream). Le temps de deux reprises, Kepa s'agenouille sans se prosterner devant des totems intimes : Hard Time Killin Floor Blues de Skip James (avec Rodolphe Burger), et Sodade de Cesaria Evora dans une version hallucinée, où l'on voit l'océan geler autour des îles du Cap-Vert. Six pieds sous terre reste sous les tropiques le temps d'une murder ballad. La chanson Divine Morphine est presque badine, indolente, ritournelle dans un état second. L'instrumental Messe HLA-B27 montre les progrès guitaristiques fulgurants de Kepa, affranchi des exercices de styles, devenu son propre maître. Sa voix aussi a changé, il la pousse vers la plainte dans des aigus hululants. Il joue différents instruments, des claviers comme des stalactites, la trompette et d'autres choses avec sa bouche, des bruitages d'origine non identifiée. Il est l'homme-orchestre du Titanic, au final seul survivant du naufrage, puis échoué sur une île déserte – le dernier morceau, Merle, ressemble à la prière païenne d'un Robinson en lévitation. L'album est maintenant terminé. Personne n'en sortira indemne. Et tout le monde n'aura qu'une envie : y retourner. Stéphane Deschamps. Titres interprétés - Divine Morphine, Live RFI - Sodade, extrait de l'album Divine Morphine - Eldorado, Live RFI - Hard Time Killing Floor, extrait de l'album Divine Morphine. Puis nous recevons Jawhar pour la sortie de l'album Tasweerah (62TV/PIAS). Tasweerah est le quatrième album du singer / songwriter tunisien Jawhar. Tasweerah veut dire en tunisien à la fois : portrait, image, mais aussi : projection de l'esprit… L'album est une série d'arrêts sur image, de portraits plus ou moins personnels. Les chansons sont, chacune à leur manière, des tentatives vers un portrait universel de l'artiste. Elles questionnent sa place et celle de l'imaginaire dans la société, posent «la création et la quête de la beauté» au centre de l'album. Volontairement brut et sans artifice, Tasweerah nous replonge dans la folk / pop claire-obscure de Jawhar, proclamé dans la catégorie Arabic Dream Pop. Né d'une mère professeure de Littérature arabe, éprise de musique et de poésie, et d'un père qui se consacre au théâtre puis à la politique culturelle, Jawhar grandit dans la banlieue au sud de Tunis, à Radès. Très tôt, il est fasciné par une certaine culture populaire, par la force de ses images et de ses expressions verbales, musicales et gestuelles. Quand il part à l'âge de vingt ans étudier l'anglais à Lille, c'est plutôt la poésie abstraite qui l'attire, celle de William Blake et d'Emily Dickinson… En plus d'un amour grandissant pour un certain Nick Drake qui le liera de manière irrévocable à sa folk impressionniste. Titres interprétés - Malguit Live RFI - Schizo Hyout, extrait de l'album Tasweerah voir le clip - Sayyed Ezzin, extrait de l'album Tasweerah - Foug Layyem Live RFI voir le clip. Son : Fabien Mugneret, Mathias Taylor, Benoît Letirant. (Rediffusion du 27 mars 2022)
Sarah McCoy is back on the podcast this week to discuss her new novel Mustique Island, a compulsive, sun-splashed voyage of self-discovery with a wealthy divorcee and her two headstrong daughters in 1970s Mustique, the world's most exclusive private island, where Princess Margaret and Mick Jagger were regulars and long-held secrets are the buried treasures.
O magii chleba powszedniego, szczęściu z słodkości, cieple pieca. O miłości, zagubieniu i przebaczeniu. O tym jak jesteśmy różni i jak bardzo musimy oswajać samych siebie. Posłuchajcie...
“The Liz Taylor Ring is a gorgeously written multigenerational novel, tracing the path of a diamond ring across decades, through the ups and down in the lives of one family. Brenda Janowitz beautifully weaves stories of love, of motherhood, and of the unbreakable bonds between siblings. I absolutely devoured this dazzling book!” - Jillian Cantor, USA Today bestselling author of Beautiful Little Fools Picked as one of the “must read” picks for 2022 by everyone from Town and Country magazine to Katie Couric Media, Brenda's latest amusing romp is part love story, part family saga. Hi there, I'm your host Jenny Wheeler, and today on Binge Reading Brenda talks about building a mystery and a family story across generations, built around a famous memento like the ring Richard Burton bought Elizabeth Taylor, or Grace Kelly's wedding dress. Beach Reads Books Giveaway We've got our usual book giveaway. This week it's Best Beach Reads. You can find the link to download those on the show notes for this episode at www.thejoysofbingereading.com. OR HERE https://books.bookfunnel.com/pka-beach-read-mysteries/17c2mks8na DOWNLOAD BEST BEACH READS If you'd like to get a weekly prompt when episodes are posted, you can join our weekly newsletter and have all the links in one place. Links in this episode: The Elizabeth Taylor Ring (formerly known as the Krupp Diamond): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Taylor_Diamond Princess Margaret and Elizabeth Taylor: https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2019/02/princess-margaret-elizabeth-taylor-hollywood Elizabeth Taylor's double eyelashes: https://www.news18.com/news/india/elizabeth-taylor-born-with-two-sets-of-eyelashes-364781.html Lesson in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58065033-lessons-in-chemistry The Summer Place by Jennifer Weiner: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58532615-the-summer-place Marrying the Ketchups by Jennifer Close: https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/58537243-marrying-the-ketchups Mustique Island by Sarah McCoy: https://www.amazon.com/Mustique-Island-Novel-Sarah-McCoy/dp/0063252201 Where to find Brenda Janowitz: Website: www.brendajanowitz.comFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/BrendaJanowitz/Email: brendajanowitz@gmail.comInstagram: @brendajanowitzwriter What follows is a "near as" transcript of our conversation, not word for word but pretty close to it, with links to the show notes in The Joys of Binge Reading.com for important mentions. Introducing author Brenda Janowitz Jenny Wheeler: Welcome to the show, Brenda. It's fantastic to have you with us. Author Brenda Janowitz Brenda Janowitz: Thank you so much for having me. I'm thrilled to be here. Jenny Wheeler: Your latest book, The Liz Taylor Ring, has got a wonderful title for starters, but it's your seventh novel and it's received a great series of accolades. It's been welcomed by many publications people would listen to. It was one of Town and Country's best books for February, the Katie Couric people thought it was one of the best books of 2022 and Pop Sugar's most anticipated reads of 2022. Did that give you a bit of a lift to start? Brenda Janowitz: My goodness yes. It was so incredibly exciting. Certainly by book seven, you think you'd be used to it and everything would be old hat, but it feels like with every book you're starting fresh and you're starting over, so it's always a miracle when anyone likes your book. It feels like, okay, it's not terrible. We've got something here. Jenny Wheeler: I know you've had a lot of success in the past, but would you consider that this was almost a breakthrough book for you? Is it that good? Brenda Janowitz: I do think each book is reaching a little higher for me. The Grace Kelly Dress was a breakout for me because I was on one path and The Grace Kelly Dress put me out there a little more. Certainly with the follow up being The Liz Taylor Ring,
Episode two hundred one - part four Travel to MUSTIQUE ISLAND with Sarah McCoy, who joined us to discuss both the island and the book based on the very real island that hosted the biggest stars of the 70's. Sarah shared some of her own findings about MUSTIQUE which lead to her need to write this novel and tell the story of Willie May, her fabulous protagonist. Take this book to the beach and take it all in.
Sarah McCoy (Mustique Island) is on the Radar! We're immersed in the lush, private Caribbean island of Mustique in the 1970s - a place where royalty and celebrities can cavort … far away from the eyes of the press and the expectations of upper class society. We cover just a handful of the themes in this rich novel, including motherhood, sisterhood, class distinctions, colonialism, and fate versus faith. We talk about our missteps as parents, as well as our unique ability as humans to do better. Is it ever too late to change? We don't think so. Join us for a fascinating discussion with Sarah!
durée : 00:59:28 - Bang ! - par : Nathalie Piolé - Bang ! Quelle est donc cette explosion ? Un coup de feu ? Un coup de chaud ? Repérons-nous à l'oreille... et allons voir ! - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat
The Fab Four welcome bestselling authors Sarah McCoy (MUSTIQUE ISLAND) and Chanel Cleeton (OUR LAST DAYS IN BARCELONA). The women discuss their research processes and how that was effected by Covid restrictions on travel, the challenges of writing about real historical figures in fiction, and how much of their actual family stories and histories were folded into their writing of their recent historical novels. On the After Show we welcome the writing duo of Christina Lauren to discuss their latest rom-com SOMETHING WILDER.
Scott Richards talks with Sarah McCoy about her new novel, Mystique Island.
"Don't put definitions or parameters on what you think the world should be like because it's going to blow your mind." Zibby is joined by New York Times bestselling novelist Sarah McCoy to talk about her latest novel, Mustique Island, which was just named an Amazon Best Book of Literature and Fiction for May. The two discuss how Sarah stumbled upon Mustique's scandalous history, the drama that unfolded when she scheduled a trip to the island in March 2020 (as well as which famous writer offered her encouraging advice afterward), and what she included in the story to pay homage to her Puerto Rican and Caribbean heritage.Purchase on Amazon or Bookshop.Amazon: https://amzn.to/3wpRwHOBookshop: https://bit.ly/3l2Tdp5Subscribe to Zibby's weekly newsletter here.Purchase Moms Don't Have Time to Read Books merch here. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sarah McCoy, author of Mustique Island joins Carol Fitzgerald to talk about her latest book, which is set on one of the tiniest islands in the Caribbean. The story is set in the early 1970s, when Mustique was owned by British playboy. As the book opens, a beauty queen sails to Mustique looking for a place to reassess her life and meets the famous friends of Tennant, whose days are spent partying. This is as much a mother/daughter/sister story as it is a story about extravagant island life. Sarah shares how a book about Colin Tennant got her imagination whirling. She planned at trip to stay at Mustique on March 30, 2020, and we can guess how that went. After the discussion, you'll see why you want to pack a copy of Mustique Island for your vacation reading this summer. Book Discussed in This Episode: Mustique Island by Sarah McCoy https://www.bookreporter.com/reviews/mustique-island More Bookreporter Talks To: The Long Weekend: https://youtu.be/vmH2hNHFH6U Sister Stardust: https://youtu.be/0JqRcvnKPro The Lifeguards: https://youtu.be/9tXdDnMrkbs Check out our Bookaccino Book Club live events! Lisa Scottoline: https://youtu.be/-SCBGFZeoaM Lisa See: https://youtu.be/SdfiOwpBJ2s Sign up for the weekly Bookreporter.com newsletter here: http://tbrnetwork.com/newsletters/bookreporter-weekly-newsletter-subscribe FOLLOW US Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bookreporter Website: https://www.bookreporter.com Photography Credit: Greg Fitzgerald
Sponsors: Central Seminary, CBF Church Benefits, Baptist Seminary of Kentucky, & The Forum for Theological Exploration. Join the listener community at https://www.classy.org/campaign/podcast-listener-support/c251116. Music from HookSounds.com
Notre 1er invité est Kepa pour la sortie de son 2ème album Divine Morphine (Éditions Miliani). C'est toujours la même chanson, celle qui tient en un mot. Cinq lettres, trois consonnes et deux voyelles. Un B, un L, un U, un E et la marque du pluriel au bout. Un mot international, qui désigne à la fois une musique, un état émotionnel et vaguement une couleur. Vous l'avez, là ? Chut… Il ne faut plus l'écrire, ni le nommer, pour ne pas tomber dans ses clichés, ni y emmener les auditeurs du deuxième album de Kepa. Kepa ne veut plus en entendre parler, pourtant il l'a. Dans sa guitare en métal qui, entre de bonnes mains, ressemble à une lampe d'Aladin, à une épée mythologique. Dans son harmonica, cet instrument qui fait trembler le cerveau quand on en joue avec le cœur. Dans sa vie de tous les jours et même de tous les hiers. Au fond de ses tripes, comme un frisson qui remonte jusqu'à ses cordes vocales, un super pouvoir dont il faut aussi avoir peur. Dans ses gênes, son corps endolori, son sang altéré. Dans le titre de ce nouvel album, Divine Morphine. Le premier, sorti il y a trois ans, s'appelait Doctor, Do Something. Un début de concept, toujours la même chanson, comme une affection longue durée. Kepa l'a attrapé comme une maladie. En 2013, Kepa s'appelait Bastien Duverdier et il vivait la vie de skater professionnel, humain augmenté capable de voyager loin et de s'envoler sur une planche à roulettes. Quant tout à coup, il s'est senti devenir vieux. Rongé par une maladie auto-immune qui a bouleversé sa vie, les chiens de l'enfer à ses trousses, qui ne le lâcheront jamais. Il a trouvé une planche de salut, sans roulettes mais avec des cordes, dans la musique, pratiquée sur sa guitare en métal et de préférence sur un ou deux accords qui tournent, à la recherche d'une transe intérieure, d'une vibration musico-thérapeutique, d'un rite auto-chamanique. Bastien est devenu musicien, sortant donc en 2018 Doctor, Do Something, premier album réalisé avec Taylor Kirk du groupe canadien Timber Timbre. L'album a été très bien accueilli, et des centaines de concerts ont fait connaître Kepa, son humour, sa musique et ses jolies chemises. Mais, malgré tout le bien qu'on a pensé de Doctor, Do Something, on peut l'affirmer sans forfanterie : Divine Morphine est mille fois mieux. Doctor, Do Something était une carte de visite. Divine Morphine est le récit d'une expédition au fond de soi, d'un voyage au bout de l'enfermement. Personne ne t'entendra crier. Il a fait ce disque pour chercher à comprendre, dompter et raconter cette maladie qui l'a chamboulé jusqu'à l'implosion, à l'orée de la folie. "Du plomb dans l'Eldorado", chante-t-il en duo avec Sarah McCoy sur l'incroyable dark-pop song Eldorado, un vrai tube du nouveau monde. Du plomb dans l'Eldorado, c'est un peu ce que tout le monde ressent depuis l'année 2020, non ? Le calvaire des uns est la Covid-19, le sien s'appelle HLA-B27, pour human leucocyte antigen. Personne ne peut le vivre à sa place, mais tout le monde peut ressentir et apprécier comment il s'est soigné avec Divine Morphine. Le premier morceau est un peu son All Aboard (Muddy Waters) à lui. Un solo d'harmonica basse façon train song, qui aurait eu sa place sur Doctor, Do Something, mais qui d'un coup tourbillonne, se dérègle et annonce la suite. Le train vient de dérailler et d'entrer dans une autre dimension, celle du vertige opiacé, de la perte de contrôle, de la musique qui rêve et dérive… Une chanson va sonner comme la bande-son d'un western où Kepa fait un duel avec lui-même (Dog Days). Une autre emmène les vieux Bukka White et Alan Vega danser dans un club de Détroit pendant un tremblement de terre (Wet Dream). Le temps de deux reprises, Kepa s'agenouille sans se prosterner devant des totems intimes : Hard Time Killin Floor Blues de Skip James (avec Rodolphe Burger), et Sodade de Cesaria Evora dans une version hallucinée, où l'on voit l'océan geler autour des îles du Cap-Vert. Six pieds sous terre reste sous les tropiques le temps d'une murder ballad. La chanson Divine Morphine est presque badine, indolente, ritournelle dans un état second. L'instrumental Messe HLA-B27 montre les progrès guitaristiques fulgurants de Kepa, affranchi des exercices de styles, devenu son propre maître. Sa voix aussi a changé, il la pousse vers la plainte dans des aigus hululants. Il joue différents instruments, des claviers comme des stalactites, la trompette et d'autres choses avec sa bouche, des bruitages d'origine non identifiée. Il est l'homme-orchestre du Titanic, au final seul survivant du naufrage, puis échoué sur une île déserte – le dernier morceau, Merle, ressemble à la prière païenne d'un Robinson en lévitation. L'album est maintenant terminé. Personne n'en sortira indemne. Et tout le monde n'aura qu'une envie : y retourner. Stéphane Deschamps. Titres interprétés - Divine Morphine, Live RFI - Sodade, extrait de l'album Divine Morphine - Eldorado, Live RFI - Hard Time Killing Floor, extrait de l'album Divine Morphine. Puis nous recevons Jawhar pour la sortie de l'album Tasweerah (62TV/PIAS). Tasweerah est le quatrième album du singer / songwriter tunisien Jawhar. Tasweerah veut dire en tunisien à la fois : portrait, image, mais aussi : projection de l'esprit… L'album est une série d'arrêts sur image, de portraits plus ou moins personnels. Les chansons sont, chacune à leur manière, des tentatives vers un portrait universel de l'artiste. Elles questionnent sa place et celle de l'imaginaire dans la société, posent "la création et la quête de la beauté" au centre de l'album. Volontairement brut et sans artifice, Tasweerah nous replonge dans la folk / pop claire-obscure de Jawhar, proclamé dans la catégorie Arabic Dream Pop. Né d'une mère professeure de Littérature arabe, éprise de musique et de poésie, et d'un père qui se consacre au théâtre puis à la politique culturelle, Jawhar grandit dans la banlieue au sud de Tunis, à Radès. Très tôt, il est fasciné par une certaine culture populaire, par la force de ses images et de ses expressions verbales, musicales et gestuelles. Quand il part à l'âge de vingt ans étudier l'anglais à Lille, c'est plutôt la poésie abstraite qui l'attire, celle de William Blake et d'Emily Dickinson… En plus d'un amour grandissant pour un certain Nick Drake qui le liera de manière irrévocable à sa folk impressionniste. Titres interprétés - Malguit Live RFI - Schizo Hyout, extrait de l'album Tasweerah voir le clip - Sayyed Ezzin, extrait de l'album Tasweerah - Foug Layyem Live RFI voir le clip. Son : Fabien Mugneret, Mathias Taylor, Benoît Letirant.
On this episode, LLF's Lainey Mays interviews Sarah McCoy, author of MUSTIQUE ISLAND, on sale May 10, 2022. Find the show notes here: https://bit.ly/3iaS39R For more information, go to librarylovefest.com. You can find us on Facebook (@librarylovefest), Twitter (@librarylovefest), and Instagram (@harperlibrary). We also have a voicemail! Give us a call at 212-207-7773.
Show Notes:Intro - On the Needles - ~Fairy Lights Shortie Socks - French Vanilla Cappuccino Socks by ME! on US1.5 (2.5mm), West Yorkshire Spinners Signature 4-Ply in the Fairy Lights colourwayProject bag from Lizzie Bags & Stitch Marker from Tilting PlanetFinished Projects - ~2021 Preemie Hat #31 on US6 (4mm), Vidalana Ambient Worsted in the Michelangelo colourway & Knitologie Glowing Worsted in the Pachyderm colourwayFlosstube - Begins at timestamp 5:45~Dreaming Girl by Barbara Ana DesignsProject Bag from The Black Needle Society~Edinburgh Castle by Terra Luna StitcheryUsing Pattern Keeper software on Kindle Fire 7Needle Minder from TopKnotStitcherProject Bag from KnitRunDigGrime Guard from Crab Shack StitcheryBitzy Bob Basic from That's So Kelly Co.Silicone tiesYummies (our current favourite things) - ~Knit Crate - Use the coupon code GEEKY20 to get 20% off of your first order! This code will only work to discount the first month of a recurring monthly subscription and any of our Shop items.~Autumn in Stars Hollow The Black Needle Society - unboxing video next week~Winnie the Pooh tumbler from LME Creations from kjohnsen21What We're Watching, Reading, + Listening To - Please be aware that we do discuss recent tv show episodes that have aired in the last week or so. This is your spoiler warning!July / August / September 2021 RAL - 15 minutes of reading daily challenge* 88-92 of 92 days - 1 or more giveaways for eBook, everyone gets $1.20 off any single pattern coupon code & 88+ days RAL virtual badge* 61-87 of 92 days - 1 or more giveaways for single pattern, everyone gets 61+ days RAL virtual badge* #GGKRAL21* #GGKRAL21~ July / August / September* 92 days - 10 entries* 88-91 days - 8 entries* 61-87 days - 5 entries~ October / November / December* 92 days - 10 entries* 88-91 days - 8 entries* 61-87 days - 5 entries~ Read All 365 days - 10 bonus entries~ Complete the Modern Mrs. Darcy 2021 Reading Challenge - 12 bonus entries [all or none] (we'll open a thread for you to post this in December 2021)Episode 455 Bookshop List~The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk - reading~Does Jesus Really Love Me?: A Gay Christian's Pilgrimage in Search of God in America by Jeff Chu - readingUnashamed Love Collective ~ A Community for LGBTQ+ People and Allies~Better Than People (Garnet Run #1) by Roan Parrish - finished reading~Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy - finished reading~Everything Leads to You by Nina LaCour - listening~The Sugared Game (The Will Darling Adventures #2) by K.J. Charles - reading~Law & Order: Special Victims Unit - watching episodes for That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast~Gilmore Girls - rewatching Season 1 with the I Am All In With Scott Patterson Podcast~Chilling Adventures of Sabrina - watching Season 1~Glow Up - finished Seasons 1 and 2~Unorthodox - finished watching~Leverage: Redemption - watching~My Favourite Murder podcast~Random Spotify PlaylistsJune / July / August Summertime and the Living is Easy AL -*Runs from 1-June through 31-August*Details - any project you knit/crochet/weave/spin/stitch/sew that you can convince us relates to summertime*No WIPS - Your project must be begun no earlier than 1-June and finished no later than 31-August*Each project that you knit/crochet/weave/spin must be at least 20yds/18.3m that you finish and post in the Facebook Group FO Thread counts as 1 entry into the giveaways. If your project is not at least 20yds/18.3m, you need to group it in a single post with other projects that together total at least 20yds/18.3m. For stitching/sewing projects, we'll leave it to your best judgment. If you wanted our official ruling, PM email us at ggkcspodcast@gmail.com*Feel free to poly-dip in other ALs as long as it fits in with other rules*Please complete our Google form in order to help us make sure you are receiving a prize that you'll actually enjoy using.*Prizes: If you'd like to donate one, email us at ggkcspodcast@gmail.comKnitCrate - 2 skeins of 2-ply superwash undyed sock yarn (fingering weight, 399 yd / 365 m, 100g) & Kool-Aid to dye it with - 2 winners will each win 1 setMineville Wool Project Super Sock 80/20 in the 2909-36-4 colourwayI'd Rather Be Buying Cross Stitch WalletCountess Ablaze Braid - Geeks Like Rainbows TooYarn Squad Drawstring Backpack*Must be a member of the our Facebook group ~ GGKCS Podcast / FlossTube to participate*Social Media Hashtag: #GGKCSSummertime21*Thread will be locked the morning of 1-September and winner(s) drawn on the next podcast following that*For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!*There is a Chatter Thread in our Facebook group so we can encourage each other along the way.Ask the Geeks - Originally asked/answered in 2018:Rebecca asks:I am researching old podcasts. In episode 19 you talked about the word create for your word of the year. Goal was to knit enough socks so you would not have to wear store bought. Have you accomplished this? May we have a virtual tour of your sock drawer? Lol. How many socks have you knit in your lifetime? Do you wear store socks? What are your favorite shoes for handmade socks?Misc. - ~Pride AL - Runs from 17-May-2021 [The International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT)] through 30-June-2022. #GGKCSPrideAlong2122~Support the Podcast, Become A Patron~Support the Podcast, Join us on YouTube~Each week, we create a list on Bookshop of all the books we talk about in that week's episode. 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Thanks in advance for your support!If you are in the UK, please click this link, Amazon.co.uk, or the banner below to shop:If you are in Canada, please click this link, Amazon.ca or the banner below to shop:~For any and all giveaways, prizes, competitions, ALs, etc. that we host, the winner(s) have 30 days from the date of announcement (the date the podcast episode in which the winner was announced goes live) to contact us to claim their prize or it will be forfeited. If this occurs, the prize will be used for another giveaway at our discretion. Thanks for understanding!Find Us Online -C.C. - (she/her)~ on Instagram as CC_JavaPurlDami - (they/them)~ on Instagram as damisdoodlesPink Purl - ~on Instagram as pinkiepurlJavaPurl Designs~ JavaPurl Designs websiteGGKCS -~ our Facebook group ~ GGKCS Podcast / FlossTube~ our Facebook page~ email us: ggkcspodcast@gmail.com~ on Apple Podcasts~ on YouTube~ Support the Podcast, Become a PatronUntil next time,
BAO partage ses découvertes musicales avec vous. Coups de cœur connus et moins connus depuis la cabane... Cette semaine : Jay-Jay Johanson - Emma Peters - Sarah McCoy - Pomme - Blonde Redhead - The Marías - Shintaro Sakamoto
This here episode marks the last episode of a very tumultuous year. At Least we gave you the super upbeat story of the Dozier School For Boys for your Christmas listening. This week we are going out with a bang! You may think you know the story, you probably know the names, you didn't know that Moody's wife is directly related to both families, and lastly you probably want us to get to the point. So here it is…. This week we celebrate the new year by talking about none other than the Hatfields and the McCoys...and the new years day massacre. The patriarchs of each family during the majority of the feud were William Anderson Hatfield and Randolph McCoy. Hatfield was born September 9, 1839, in western Virginia (now Logan, West Virginia), the son of Ephraim and Nancy (Vance) Hatfield. His nickname "Devil Anse" has a variety of supposed origins: it was given to him by his mother; by Randolph McCoy; earned from his bravery during battle in the American Civil War; or as contrast to his good-tempered cousin, Anderson "Preacher Anse" Hatfield.A Southern sympathizer, Hatfield enlisted in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. He was commissioned a First Lieutenant of Cavalry in the Virginia State Line in 1862, a group made to protect the territory along the Kentucky-Virginia border where resident loyalties to the North and South were mixed. The Virginia State Line eventually disbanded in 1863 and Hatfield enlisted as a private in the newly formed 45th Battalion Virginia Infantry, before being appointed first lieutenant and later captain of Company B. His unit spent most of its time patrolling the border area against bushwhackers sympathetic to the Union as well as engaging in guerrilla warfare against Union soldiers. Devil Anse himself has been connected to battles and killings of several Union fighters, including trackers Ax and Fleming Hurley in 1863.Devil Anse and his uncle Jim Vance later formed a Confederate guerrilla fighting unit called the "Logan Wildcats." One of the group's victims was Union General Bill France; killed in revenge for losing one of their members to France's unit.[ In 1865, he was suspected of having been involved in the murder of his rival Asa Harmon McCoy, who had fought for the Union Army and was waylaid by The Wildcats on his return home. Hatfield had been home ill at the time of the killing, which was probably committed at the instigation of his uncle, Jim Vance. This may have sparked the beginning of the notorious feud between the two families that claimed many lives on both sides.Devil Anse was the patriarch leader during the Hatfield-McCoy feud. His family and Randolph McCoy's fought in one of the bloodiest and most well-known feuds in American history. He was instrumental during the execution of McCoy boys Tolbert, Pharmer and Bud, as well as being present during the Battle of Grapevine Creek before most of his sons and friends were arrested for the murder of the McCoys.Hatfield was baptized on September 23, 1911 in Island Creek by William Dyke "Uncle Dyke" Garrett and converted to Christianity (he had maintained a largely agnostic or anti-institutional view of religion prior to this conversion). He went on to found a Church of Christ congregation in West Virginia. He was an uncle of the eventual Governor of West Virginia, and United States Senator, Henry D. Hatfield. Randolph "Randall"(or sometimes Ol’ Ran’ll) McCoy grew up in the Tug River Valley, which marked the boundary between Kentucky and West Virginia. He was born on the Kentucky side of the valley, one of 13 children. There he learned to hunt and farm, two main ways people living in this part of Appalachia supported themselves. McCoy grew up in poverty. His father, Daniel, had little interest in work, so his mother, Margaret, had to struggle to care for, feed and clothe the family. In 1849, McCoy married his first cousin, Sarah "Sally" McCoy. Sally inherited land from her father a few years after they married. They settled on this 300-acre spread in Pike County, Kentucky, where they had 16 children together. During the Civil War, McCoy served as a soldier for the Confederacy. He may have even been a part of the same local militia as his later nemesis, William Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield. The Family trees of these men are huge. There are many descendants around to this day. This also made keeping track of some of the issues tricky. Lots of people involved. First cousin marriage. Romeo and juliet type relationships between the families...crazy shit. The Hatfield–McCoy feud, also described by journalists as the Hatfield–McCoy war, involved two rural American families of the West Virginia–Kentucky area along the Tug Fork of the Big Sandy River in the years 1863–1891. The McCoy family lived mostly on the Kentucky side of the Tug Fork; the Hatfields lived mostly on the West Virginia side. The majority of the Hatfields, although living in Mingo County (then part of Logan County) fought for the Confederacy in the American Civil War; most McCoys also fought for the Confederates, with the exception of Asa Harmon McCoy, who fought for the Union. The Hatfields were more affluent than the McCoys and were well-connected politically. Anse's timbering operation was a source of wealth for his family, while the McCoys were more of a lower-middle-class family. Ole Ran'l owned a 300-acre farm. Both families had also been involved in the manufacturing and selling of illegal moonshine, a popular commodity at the time. The first event in the decades-long feud was the 1865 murder of Randolph’s brother, Asa Harmon McCoy, by the Logan Wildcats, a local militia group that counted Devil Anse and other Hatfields among its members. Many people—even members of his own family—regarded Asa Harmon, who had served in the Union Army during the American Civil War, as a traitor. At the time of his capture, he was recovering from a gunshot wound to the chest. During the early months of the Civil War, Asa joined a company of the Pike County Home Guards, under the command of Uriah Runyon, and it is thought he sustained the wound while serving in this unit. Asa's Company E was mustered out on December 24, 1864, in Ashland. He was killed near his home on January 7, 1865, just thirteen days after leaving the Union Army. A group of Confederate guerillas took credit for the killing and his wife's pension application states that he was "killed by Rebels". There are no existing records pertaining to his death and no warrants were issued in connection with the murder. McCoy family tradition points to James "Jim" Vance, an uncle of Anse and a member of a West Virginia Militia group, as the culprit. Relations between the two families continued to sour over the next decade before flaring again over a seemingly small matter: a dispute over a single hog. In 1878 Randolph McCoy accused Floyd Hatfield, a cousin of Devil Anse, of stealing one of his pigs, a valuable commodity in the poor region. Floyd Hatfields’s trial took place in McCoy territory but was presided over by a cousin of Devil Anse. It hinged on the testimony of star witness Bill Staton, a McCoy relative married to a Hatfield. Staton testified in Floyd Hatfield’s favor, and the McCoys were infuriated when Floyd was cleared of the charges against him. Two years later, Staton was violently killed in a fracas with Sam and Paris McCoy, nephews of Randolph. Sam stood trial for the murder but was acquitted for self-defense reasons. Within months of Staton’s murder, a heated affair of a different sort was set ablaze. At a local election day gathering in 1880, Johnse Hatfield, the 18-year-old son of Devil Anse, encountered Roseanna McCoy, Randolph’s daughter. According to accounts, Johnse and Roseanna hit it off, disappearing together for hours. Supposedly fearing retaliation from her family for mingling with the Hatfields, Roseanna stayed at the Hatfield residence for a period of time, drawing the ire of the McCoys. Although they certainly shared a romance, it rapidly became clear that Johnse was not about to settle down with Roseanna. Several months later he abandoned the pregnant Roseanna and quickly moved on. In May 1881 he married Nancy McCoy, Roseanna’s cousin. According to the romanticized legend, Roseanna was heartbroken by these events and never recovered emotionally. The real turning point in the feud, according to most historical accounts, occurred on another local election day in August 1882. Three of Randolph McCoy’s sons ended up in a violent dispute with two brothers of Devil Anse. The fight soon snowballed into chaos as one of the McCoy brothers stabbed Ellison Hatfield multiple times and then shot him in the back. Authorities soon apprehended the McCoys, but the Hatfields interceded, spiriting the men to Hatfield territory. After receiving word that Ellison had died, they bound the McCoys to some pawpaw bushes. Within minutes, they fired more than 50 shots, killing all three brothers. Though the Hatfields might have felt their revenge was warranted, the law felt otherwise, quickly returning indictments against 20 men, including Devil Anse and his sons. Despite the charges, the Hatfields eluded arrest, leaving the McCoys boiling with anger about the murders and outraged that the Hatfields walked free. Their cause was taken up by Perry Cline, an attorney who was married to Martha McCoy, the widow of Randolph’s brother Asa Harmon. Years earlier Cline had lost a lawsuit against Devil Anse over the deed for thousands of acres of land, and many historians believe this left him looking for his own form of revenge. Using his political connections, Cline had the charges against the Hatfields reinstated. He announced rewards for the arrest of the Hatfields, including Devil Anse. The media started to report on the feud in 1887. In their accounts, the Hatfields were often portrayed as violent backwoods hillbillies who roamed the mountains stirring up violence. The sensationalist coverage planted the seed for the rivalry to become cemented in the American imagination. What had been a local story was becoming a national legend. The Hatfields may or may not have been paying attention to these stories, but they were certainly paying attention to the bounty on their heads. In an effort to end the commotion once and for all, a group of the Hatfields and their supporters hatched a plan to attack Randolph McCoy and his family. This attack would become known as the New Year's Day Massacre. Ever on the offensive, the Hatfields staged a sneak attack on the McCoy homestad. On New Year's Day 1888, they set fire to the McCoy home in what was eventually dubbed the New Year's Night Massacre. According to some accounts, the fire was set while the family was still in the house, asleep, as a means of forcing Randolph McCoy to come outside where a Hatfield ambush awaited him. As the flames grew, the Hatfields opened fire on the house. McCoy did come out, but managed to escape into the woods along with some children, who suffered frostbite. Other members of the McCoy clan weren't so lucky. Two of his children were killed during the blaze, and his wife was beaten so badly she was permanently disabled. With his house burning, Randolph and his remaining family members were able to escape to the woods; his children, unprepared for the elements, suffered frostbite. The remaining McCoys moved to Pikeville to escape the West Virginia raiding parties. During the 1888 New Year's Night Massacre, the Hatfields set fire to the McCoy homestead in hopes of flushing the family out in the open. During the mayhem, Randolph McCoy's wife, Sarah, was so badly beaten her skull was crushed. His son Calvin and daughter Alifair were killed in the crossfire Sarah McCoy had never participated in the violence of the feud, so beating her almost to death served no purpose other than sending a message. And send a message it did – to the local authorities. Sarah McCoy's gruesome beating, and the murder of her children, brought about the murder trial that judicially ended the feud between the warring families. This incident led to the last great skirmish of the feud as tensions were at an all time high! After the murders and the burning of the house there was an outcry for the Hatfields to be brought to justice. This led to the battle of grapevine creek. On January 19 Devil Anse and a large party of his supporters faced off with Frank Phillips and his men in a large gun battle which entered local lore and the legend of the feud as the Battle of Grapevine Creek. Despite involving a large number of men, and despite being the single biggest engagement of the entire feud only two were killed in the battle, though a deputy who supported the Hatfields was executed by Phillips after the battle. Following the engagement Phillips withdrew to Kentucky, having succeeded in rounding up nine members of the Hatfield clan. Once there he learned that another Governor, E. Willis Wilson of West Virginia, had entered the fray, and at least to all appearances on the side of the Hatfields. Wilson demanded that the illegally taken prisoners be returned to West Virginia.Wilson expressed outrage to both governor Buckner and to the federal government, sued the government of Kentucky for the illegal arrest of the nine prisoners being held there, and demanded reparations for the raids into his state. He also ordered the West Virginia Guard to mobilize and move units to the border with Kentucky to prevent further incursions into the state. In response, Buckner dispatched units of Kentucky’s guard to the border area as protection against retaliatory raids by either West Virginia troops or supporters of the Hatfields. Only two decades after the end of the Civil War the military assets of two states were facing each other over their shared border, as a result of the feud between the Hatfields and the McCoys.Among the nine men taken to Kentucky to stand trial for the murder of Alifair McCoy and others was Valentine Hatfield, known as Wall and a man with some connections in the government of West Virginia. Through his ministrations, Governor Wilson demanded the return of the prisoners by arguing that they had been denied due process and had been illegally extradited by Kentucky. Kentucky argued that the prisoners were in custody, under indictment, and that the state had no obligation to release them to West Virginia or any other entity, regardless of the circumstances of their arrest. In April the case was appealed by Governor Wilson to the Supreme Court of the United States. The Court issued no finding regarding the legality or illegality of the arrest, but agreed with Kentucky in their argument that no federal law existed which would prohibit the prisoners from being tried for the crimes committed in Kentucky, regardless of the nature of events which resulted with them being in custody. The finding was 7-2 in favor of Kentucky. With the nine men in custody pending trial the feud was effectively over, at least as pertains to violence against the other family. But several questions over the feud itself and the many participants arose in the aftermath of the arrests. Devil Anse was not among the prisoners, and neither West Virginia nor Kentucky authorities sought his arrest, despite his physical location being well known. Nor was Cap Hatfield in custody. One of the prisoners taken to Kentucky for trial was Valentine Hatfield, and at his trial he was convicted of involvement in the murders of the McCoy children and sentenced to life in prison. Wall Hatfield may not have been involved in the attack for which he was charged, in 2014 his great-grandson, an Episcopal priest, told the Bluefield (West Virginia) Daily Telegraph that family lore was that Wall surrendered voluntarily and that he hadn’t been guilty of the crime for which he had been charged. He also recounted a story of another relative visiting the Kentucky State Prison to review the records of his great-grandfather and learning of a different cause of death than that recorded by most historians.ADVERTISEMENTAccording to most accounts of the feud, once he was convicted Wall communicated with his brothers, asking for their assistance in getting him out of jail, but they refused over fears of being arrested. Wall died in prison under circumstances which remain officially unknown. According to his great-grandson, an official of the Kentucky prison system reviewed the records at the request of a relative of the Hatfields, and reported to her that he was placed in a cellblock alongside several convicted members of the McCoy clan, who killed Wall Hatfield in prison. The cause of death and the location of his grave were never released officially to the Hatfield family, who still question the nature of his role in the feud. According to the accounts of several historians regarding the feud, Kentucky Special Officer Frank Phillips captured a deputy named Bill Dempsey who had been supporting the Hatfields, and executed him on the spot, an act of outright murder, though he was not held accountable for the crime. Other accounts have Phillips similarly executing Uncle Jim Vance rather than taking him into custody. Phillips referred to himself as “Bad Frank”, and claimed to have ridden at one time with the James-Younger Gang. Whether or not true, he did name one of his sons Jesse James Phillips, and he was indicted at various times in several jurisdictions. MORE ON THE FUEDGoing back to Perry Cline, Whether Perry Cline instigated the feud, using Randolph McCoy and his family as a red flag to enrage Devil Anse, has been debated by many over the years. The story of Anse using the courts to deprive Cline of a significant section of valuable land has been cited as the motive for Cline to try to damage the Hatfield clan. Some writers and historians have laid the blame for the feud at the feet of Perry Cline, using his many instances of arousing the anger of the McCoy’s against the Hatfields as evidence that he manipulated the feud, and inflamed it during its several periods of near-dormancy. But other aspects of Cline’s character and his achievements in Pike County call this judgment into question in many ways.There is little doubt that the McCoy family and their supporters suffered more deaths and the destruction of property over the course of the feud, and Randolph McCoy’s frustrations were elevated by his failures to obtain justice in the courts. Cline may have just been using his influence and political connections to help the McCoy family. Cline was well respected in Pike County and its environs; he started the first school for black children in the county and was elected to the state legislature, where he exhibited significant political skills. The theory that Cline incited the feud to get back at Devil Anse also falls flat when it is considered that Anse’s business remained intact and profitable in the feud’s aftermath, and if anything his influence in Logan County was enhanced.One of the motivating factors for the Hatfield attack on Randolph McCoy’s home was the bounty placed on the heads of several members of the clan, including a $500 bounty on Devil Anse, the recognized leader of the Hatfield’s and their supporters. Anse has gone down in history as the undisputed leader of the West Virginia Hatfield clan, despite the fact that he was not arrested and was never tried for any of the multitude of violent crimes he supposedly directed. While some have ascribed his eluding prosecution to his political connections in West Virginia, it has been noted that his brother Wall held similar connections, which did not preclude him from being tried, convicted, and imprisoned in Kentucky, where he died. Anse was never, except when attempting to outmaneuver Frank Phillips and his posse of vigilantes, on the run; his whereabouts were well-known to both members of the Hatfield clan and the McCoy faction attempting to bring him to justice. Court records also demonstrate that Anse was prone to using the courts, both in Logan County and in Pike County, to resolve differences, as indicated by the incident with the stolen hog. Nor was he present during the attack on the McCoy home. He was part of the murder of the three McCoy brothers following the murder of his own brother, an incident which much of the Tug Valley found to be justified. If he was in fact the leader of the Hatfield clan, as most accounts claim, he nonetheless escaped legal retribution, and attempts to exact justice upon him ended with the trial of the Hatfield’s in Kentucky. Cap Hatfield was the second son of Devil Anse, a man known to have a violent streak and a quarrelsome nature throughout the Tug River region. Cap was the type of man who preferred fighting to discussion and believed that vengeance was a duty of the offended. Cap was one of many of the feud’s participants of which there are conflicting accounts, some say he was arrested by Frank Phillips on the same day that the latter killed Uncle Jim Vance, others recount that he escaped Phillips on that day. At one point he was in the Logan County (later Mingo County) Jail, from which he reportedly escaped and eluded justice, probably with the help of his father. Cap was never brought to justice.ADVERTISEMENTDuring the trial which led to the sentencing of Ellison Mounts to death, eyewitness testimony from Randolph McCoy was that it was Cap Hatfield who had killed Alifair McCoy, testimony which conflicted with the confession offered by Mounts. As Cap frequently sided with his mentor, Jim Vance, who consistently recommended violent solutions to perceived slights, it seems likely that he was present during the attack, probably leading it along with his uncle. Cap escaped the feud and the pursuit of the vigilantes and vanished. In 1930, he died at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, one of the last survivors of the feud. His death was described in the New York Times as being the result of a brain ailment.James Vance was well-known in both Logan and Pike Counties, referred to as Crazy Jim Vance by the McCoy family and as Uncle Jim Vance to the Hatfield clan. The McCoys liked to point out that his father, Abner Vance, had been hanged and had never been married to Jim’s mother. A guerrilla fighter in Logan and Pike Counties during the Civil War, Vance was widely believed to have been the killer of Asa Harmon McCoy in 1865. Vance was accused by the McCoy’s of being the leader of the assault on the McCoy home during the New Year’s attack, and there was testimony that it was he who had severely beaten Sarah McCoy with a rifle butt as she attempted to reach her wounded daughter.Vance has been portrayed down the years as a psychopathic killer, one of the leading proponents of the violence which marked the feud. Following his death and the disappearance of Cap Hatfield, the violence of the feud subsided, despite Devil Anse, the presumed leader of the Hatfield clan, remaining at large. Some historians believe that Cap Hatfield witnessed the execution of the wounded Jim Vance at the hands of Frank Phillips, which led to Cap’s decision to flee the region. Despite his criminal history, Vance at one point served as a constable, though many of the Hatfield’s did so in Logan County, despite being considered outlaws in Pike County, so Vance’s service with the law cannot be a consideration when evaluating his true character. Throughout the twentieth century, the Hatfield and McCoy feud grew in legend. It became sensationalized in newspapers and magazines, fictionalized in periodicals and film, satirized in vaudeville, and trivialized in cartoons and comics. Portions of the feud were presented as romantic drama, as in the film Roseanna McCoy, released in 1949, which approached the feud from the perspective of star-crossed lovers of the Romeo and Juliet type. Mark Twain was one of the first to use the feud as a basis for one of his tales, describing the feud between the Grangerfords and the Sheperdsons in his novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Even Betty Boop appeared in the cartoon with a feud as a backdrop.On June 14, 2003, in Pikeville, Kentucky, the McCoy cousins partnered with Reo Hatfield of Waynesboro, Virginia, to declare an official truce between the families. Reo Hatfield said that he wanted to show that if the two families could reach an accord, others could also. He had said that he wanted to send a broader message to the world that when national security is at risk, Americans put their differences aside and stand united: "We're not saying you don't have to fight because sometimes you do have to fight," he said. "But you don't have to fight forever." Signed by more than sixty descendants during the fourth Hatfield–McCoy Festival, the truce was touted as a proclamation of peace, saying "We ask by God's grace and love that we be forever remembered as those that bound together the hearts of two families to form a family of freedom in America." Governor Paul E. Patton of Kentucky and Governor Bob Wise of West Virginia signed proclamations declaring June 14 Hatfield and McCoy Reconciliation Day. Ron McCoy, one of the festival's founders, said it is unknown where the three signed proclamations will be exhibited and that "the Hatfields and McCoys symbolize violence and feuding and fighting, but by signing this, hopefully people will realize that's not the final chapter.the Hatfield and McCoy Reunion Festival and Marathon are held annually in June on a three-day weekend. The events take place in Pikeville, Kentucky, Matewan, West Virginia, and Williamson, West Virginia. The festival commemorates the famed feud and includes a marathon and half-marathon (the motto is "no feudin', just runnin'"), in addition to an ATV ride in all three towns. There is also a tug-of-war across the Tug Fork tributary near which the feuding families lived, a live re-enactment of scenes from their most famous fight, a motorcycle ride, live entertainment, Hatfield–McCoy landmark tours, a cornbread contest, pancake breakfast, arts, crafts, and dancing. Launched in 2000, the festival typically attracts thousands with more than 300 runners taking part in the races.[29]Statue honoring Randolph McCoy at the McCoy Homeplace in Hardy, KYIn August 2015 members of both families helped archeologists dig for ruins at a site where they believe Randolph McCoy's house was burnedIn September 2018, a wooden statue, standing over 8 feet tall, was erected in honor of Randolph McCoy at the McCoy homeplace in Hardy, Kentucky. Carved by chainsaw carver Travis Williams and donated to the property, this statue had been commissioned by McCoy property owner and Hatfield descendant Bob Scott. The statue was unveiled during Hatfield-McCoy Heritage Days in Pike County, Kentucky, an event that occurs every September that brings Hatfield and McCoy descendants back to Pike County to celebrate the long-standing peace between the families. The McCoy homeplace, like many others associated with the feud, is open to tourists year-round Top horror movies set in kentucky...there is only 4 apparently…Films set in Kentucky - IMDb Horror movies set in west virginiaFilms set in West Virginia - IMDbThe Midnight Train Podcast is sponsored by VOUDOUX VODKA.www.voudoux.com Ace’s Depothttp://www.aces-depot.com BECOME A PRODUCER!http://www.patreon.com/themidnighttrainpodcast Find The Midnight Train Podcast:www.themidnighttrainpodcast.comwww.facebook.com/themidnighttrainpodcastwww.twitter.com/themidnighttrainpcwww.instagram.com/themidnighttrainpodcastwww.discord.com/themidnighttrainpodcastwww.tiktok.com/themidnighttrainp And wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts. 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In our final interview of this season, we focus on Sarah as she tells us about asexuality, the differences between romantic and sexual attraction, and more! Follow Sarah: @ReelMcCoyTweets & @reelsarahmccoy Episode transcript: https://tinyurl.com/y6tnzueo Follow Us: @QueerFriendsPod Email: allyourfriendspod@gmail.com Artwork by Frankie Diaz (@catslovefrancisco) Intro song by Nathan Veshecco (nathanveshecco.com) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/queerfriendspod/message
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
An interview with Associate Professor, Sarah McCoy.
Sarah McCoy published The Beauty of Holy Choices in 2015. It examines people from the Bible who pleased God by making a hard choice in a difficult circumstance. The twelve chapters are stand-alone stories, woven together by their emphasis on holiness and arranged in the order in which they appear in Scripture. Chapters end with clear application to today's Christian walk and a challenge to the reader.
Sarah McCoy is undoubtedly one of the most exuberant and talented singer-songwriters around, unafraid to bear her heart and soul in her music. "Honesty is important," says the 35-year old American. "If I were just singing about how it's sunshiny all the time, well some people can do that, but it's my job to sing about when it rains." McCoy was picked out by a French researcher singing and playing piano in clubs and bars in New Orleans. After a few years on the road, living rough, she moved to Paris in October 2017 where producers Chilly Gonzales and Renaud Létang helped produced her debut album Blood Siren. Listen to the podcast to hear her story, along with songs from this remarkable record. Official website here. Follow McCoy on facebook and instagram
Sarah McCoy is undoubtedly one of the most exuberant and talented singer-songwriters around, unafraid to bear her heart and soul in her music. "Honesty is important," says the 35-year old American. "If I were just singing about how it's sunshiny all the time, well some people can do that, but it's my job to sing about when it rains." McCoy was picked out by a French researcher singing and playing piano in clubs and bars in New Orleans. After a few years on the road, living rough, she moved to Paris in October 2017 where producers Chilly Gonzales and Renaud Létang helped produced her debut album Blood Siren. Listen to the podcast to hear her story, along with songs from this remarkable record. Official website here. Follow McCoy on facebook and instagram
Meredith and Kaytee are back in your earbuds this week for another new episode of Currently Reading and we have lots of fun stuff to share with you! First, a quick announcement about our Patron-only book club: we will be discussing The Dream Daughter by Diane Chamberlain, and the author will be joining us to chat about her book on November 17th! So, if you’ve been on the fence about reading or joining our Patreon, now may be the time to do it! Second, we have a Currently Reading Listener Survey for you this week. Please click through to the survey and tell us your thoughts about all things Currently Reading! You’ll hear a “bookish moment of the week” from each of us: a local author event and pre-reading a book for a friend. Next, we discuss our current reads for the week. We’re each sharing two reads this week since Belly Up episodes end up running long. Strong opinions abound in our novels this week! We’ll move on to a short Slow But Steady update from each of us, including a “completed!” update. For our deep dive this week, we are discussing the Currently Reading 2019 Challenge category 11: Books Pressed by an IRL or Online Book Club. We already shared a lot of Book Club thoughts in episode 4 of season 2, so this ends up being an ode to finding your bookish tribe. Finally, this week, we are Bellying Up to the Book Bar with DeeAnn Haworth. This was a bit of a challenge for one of us, but we’re excited to talk about some new to you and to us titles! As per usual, time-stamped show notes are below with references to every book and resource we mentioned in this episode. If you’d like to listen first and not spoil the surprise, don’t scroll down! *Please note that all book titles linked above are Amazon affiliate links. Your cost is the same, but a small portion of your purchase will come back to us to help offset the costs of the show. Thanks for your support!* . . . . . 1:15 - The Dream Daughter by Diane Chamberlain 1:40 - Patreon 1:53 - Currently Reading Listener Survey 2:51 - Garcia Street Books in Santa Fe, NM 3:23 - The Lager Queen of Minnesota by J. Ryan Stradal 3:33 - Minisode with J. Ryan Stradal 5:22 - Outlander by Diana Gabaldon 5:45 - The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley 7:14 - The Dearly Beloved by Cara Walls 7:20 - Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner 7:40 - Knox McCoy on The Popcast 7:43 - Shelf Subscription on Bookshelf Thomasville 14:06 - An Absolutely Remarkable Thing by Hank Green 19:50 - The Swallows by Lisa Lutz 20:05 - Magic for Liars by Sarah Gailey 20:07 - The Whisper Network by Chandler Baker 25:29 - Currently Reading on Patreon 25:46 - The Dream Daughter by Diane Chamberlain 31:59 - Hannah Coulter by Wendell Berry 33:15 - The Road Back to You by Suzanne Stabile and Ian Morgan Cron 33:56 - Frankenstein by Mary Shelley 34:50 - Gone With The Wind by Margaret Mitchell 36:30 - Currently Reading 2019 Reading Challenge 36:47 - Episode 4 of Season 2 38:00 - Meredith on Episode 85 (I said 89, but that was a mistake!) of Sorta Awesome Podcast 42:13 - bookish.com 43:43 - Michael Connelly’s Harry Bosch series 43:46 - JA Jance’s Joanna Brady and JP Beaumont series 43:54 - Whistling Past the Graveyard by Susan Crandall 43:57 - Saving Ceecee Honeycutt by Beth Hoffman 44:00 - Richard Paul Evans’ The Walk series and The Broken Road series 44:05 - An Eldery Lady is Up to No Good by Helene Tursten 44:10 - The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins 44:12 - Elevation by Stephen King 44:15 - Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy 44:19 - When by Victoria Laurie 45:55 - Sue Grafton’s Alphabet Series 46:42 - Mickey Haller/Lincoln Lawyer series by Michael Connelly 46:56 - When the Bough Breaks by Jonathan Kellerman 47:22 - Patricia Cornwell’s Kay Scarpetta series 47:59 - In Her Bones by Kate Moretti 48:37 - Joshilyn Jackson’s The Almost Sisters and A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty 48:50 - Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk by Kathleen Rooney 49:21 - A Man Called Ove by Fredrick Backman 49:46 - Rabbit, the Autobiography of Ms. Pat by Patricia Williams 50:20 - Aunti Poldi series by Mario Giordano 50:45 - Celine by Peter Heller 50:49 - The River by Peter Heller 51:39 - Setting Free the Kites by Alex George 51:42 - Harry’s Trees by Jon Cohen 51:56 - Little Lovely Things by Maureen Joyce Connelly 52:40 - The Mother-In-Law by Sally Hepworth 53:12 - Thinner by Stephen King writing as Richard Bachman 54:16 - The Grown-Up by Gillian Flynn 54:45 - McNally’s Secret by Lawrence Sanders 56:20 - Listener Survey - one more time!
Annette Lennartz im Gespräch mit Indra Rios-Moore. Moderation: Annette Lennartz || Sounds: Jens Fischer Webseite: jens-c-fischer.de
Title: Let’s Talk about Writer’s Block, BabyEpisode #5 Note: the preshow music is a sampling of what Barry is writing to accompany Drema’s novel, Victorine. 1. Advisory: This podcast may contain explicit language and contagious ideas. Listener discretion is advised. 2. Welcome/Intro Welcome to WATT, your biweekly home for all things writing instruction, analysis, inspiration, and writing news and trends. We’re sometimes irreverent, but our material is (we hope) always accessible. I’m Drema Drudge, author of the forthcoming novel, Victorine, from Fleur-di-Lis Press. I’m a graduate of the Spalding University MFA in Creative Writing Program, and I’m currently a freelance writer and writing coach. I’m Barry Drudge, co-host and recent MFA graduate of Spalding University, former ghostwriter and a songwriter and musician who has worked with Grammy winners in Nashville. 1. News and trends: Fears that Barnes & Noble would close have been allayed by it being acquired by the hedge fund Elliott ‘s Advisors, according to Publishers and Writers. The fund paid $638 million for what is the remaining largest bookstore chain in the United States. Stay tuned for what if any changes will occur as a result of this purchase. According to the bookstore chain’s website, the store’s origins was truly homespun: Charles Barnes started a book business from his Wheaton, Illinois home in 1873. His son, William, partnered with G. Clifford Noble in what became Barnes & Noble in 1917. Their flagship store opened in NYC during the Great Depression. Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch, winner of the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction, is coming to the big screen in September 2019. The director of the project is John Crowley, who also directed Brooklyn, the well-received film adaptation of Colm Toibin’s novel. Not unexpectedly, Tayari(Ta YAH Ree) Jones won the 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction recently, the award often known as the Orange and Baileys for the sponsors. This UK award was given for Jones’ novel An American Marriage. Jones is on the faculty of the Rutgers University MFA program. Her book was an Oprah book club selection in 2018. This is next on my list! Been waiting for this one, and it’s finally available at the library! 2. Whatcha readin’? Barry – Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Drema – Marilla by Sarah McCoy. From Anne of Green Gables series. n My Sister the Serial Killer -- satirical 5. Topic of this episode is: Writer’s Block, by popular demand. This topic has been hot on Twitter, with some writers saying it doesn’t exist, while some saying it’s crippling their craft. Emotions are running high. Here are our FB group’s members’ thoughts, edited by us for length and clarity but not content. Bob Henderson says: I feel I suffer from it when writing music. When I'm out rising my bicycle or doing something I can sing something random and be like that would be cool to add as a lyric, but when I sit down and try to force it to be something it's hard to add more content to it. I have a lot of instrumentals that would be fully completed songs, but writers block seems to hinder a lot of that. It’s gotta be natural and in the moment, not forced is what I am learning. Liz Wilkes notes:I feel like I'm always dealing with writer's block. With or without an outline, I stilSupport the show (https://c6.patreon.com/)
Dit keer met fijne muziek van Roos Blufpand, Sarah Mccoy, Lori Mckenna, Tom Waits, George Ezra en Black Leather Jackets
Collection Development Specialist, Jessica Trotter recommends "Marilla of Green Gables" by Sarah McCoy. **[Borrow it today!](http://opac.cadl.org/search/q?author=Mccoy&title=marilla+of+green+gables)** Book lovers are in for a treat each episode of the [Reader's Roundtable Podcast](https://audioboom.com/playlists/4625371-reader-s-roundtable-podcast). Collection Development Specialists, Jessica Trotter, Mari Garza and Sherri McConnell discuss books, interview authors and check in with other staff members.
This week we have a conversation with the talented Sarah McCoy.
Sarah is the first woman to teach as a full time faculty member at the Maritime College of Forest Technology! She has a passion for helping others learn about many facets of forests and talks about it with us in a great episode! She has a Bachelor of Technology in Environmental Horticulture from Dalhousie University & the Nova Scotia Agricultural College, and Forest Technologist diploma from Maritime College of Forest Technology (MCFT) I have worked as a forest technician both in urban forest roles (ISA certified Arborist) and for the Canadian Forest Service working with invasive and native insects. I have worked on many research projects including brown spruce long-horned beetle and spruce budworm. Currently: Forestry Instructor at the Maritime College of Forest Technology (MCFT) in Fredericton NB. I teach 5-6 courses a year including forest entomology and pathology, Urban Forestry, Dendrology, Botany, Public Speaking and Arboriculture Sciences. Each year I have approx 100 students training to be forest technologists! Hobbies: Raising chickens! Social Media: Incorporating more into my classes. I think social media is a great tool and they should know how to use it effectively. Want to be featured? Schedule your interview with Talking Forests on this link:calendly.com/talkingforests Voice by Gordon Collier www.linkedin.com/in/jgordoncollier/ Spring by Ikson soundcloud.com/ikson Music promoted by Audio Library youtu.be/5WPnrvEMIdo --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/talkingforests/support
This week, I'm thrilled to welcome a kindred spirit to the podcast. Sarah McCoy is here to discuss her new book, Marilla of Green Gables. This prequel to Anne of Green Gables brings the world and characters of L.M. Montgomery back to life. If you've ever wondered about Marilla's story before Anne arrives (and that time she called … Continue reading Ep. 15: Sarah McCoy, Author of Marilla of Green Gables →
Michael Fynan sits down with Sarah McCoy, author of MARILLA OF GREEN GABLES. Learn more: https://www.harperacademic.com/book/9780062697714/marilla-of-green-gables.
Charlie talks with his neighbor and friend New York Times bestseller Sarah McCoy about her new novel Marilla of Green Gables, set in the Anne of Green Gables universe. Their discussion ranges from visits to Prince Edward Island, to writing the story of an already beloved character, to the evolving definition of a feminist.
Annie hosted Books and Brunch event in the shop last week and previewed some of her favorite coming releases of the fall season. This week, we're giving you an opportunity to get caught up! Annie recommends: + Bitter Orange by Claire Fuller + Unsheltered by Barbara Kingsolver (on sale October 16--preorder here) + Gone So Long by Andre Dubus III (on sale October 2) + Becoming Mrs. Lewis by Patti Callahan (on sale October 2) + The Witch Elm by Tana French (on sale October 9) + I'd Rather Be Reading by Anne Bogel + The Power of Love by Michael Curry (on sale October 30) + Gmorning Gnight by Lin Manuel Miranda (on sale October 23) + Becoming by Michelle Obama (on sale November 13) + Nine Perfect Strangers by Liane Moriarty + A Cloud in the Shape of a Girl by Jean Thompson (on sale October 9) + Personality Brokers by Merve Emre + All You Can Ever Know by Nicole Chung (on sale October 2) + Transcription by Kate Atkinson (on sale September 25) + Melmoth by Sarah Perry (on sale October 16) + Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy (on sale October 23) Thanks, as always, to Forlorn Strangers for the use of our theme music. Learn and listen more here. Listen to a full back catalogue of our show here, and, if you're interested in some exclusive content like brief interviews with not-so-hideous booksellers, consider supporting us on Patreon here.
Lainey Mays interviews Sarah McCoy, author of MARILLA OF GREEN GABLES, at the ALA Annual conference in New Orleans.
The 2018 Best of Hartford Magazine winners seemed a bit off when I perused the list this year. The deeper I got, the dumber it sounded, (like McDonald's winning best french fries) and I had a couple friends that contacted me and felt the same. On this episode of the podcast I partner up with 3 awesome and influential personalities that pretty much dominate the field in their prospective markets. Sarah McCoy from Story and Soil Coffee, Ben Dubow of Bistro on Main and Heather Riedl of the Mercado food truck and el Pollo Guapo restaurant. Together we dismantled the list, gave kudos to those that deserved, shouted out the forgotten, and had a hearty laugh at the insanely undeserving. Intro/Outro music is a track by Career Crooks titled "Good Luck With That."
Cetus Lapetus! We are on an interplanetary journey this week with our episode on the classic 1999 Disney Channel Original Movie, "Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century." We brought in the big guns and have our first special guest of the season, Sarah McCoy, co-host of Podcast from Planet Weird (podcastfromplanetweird.com) and certified DCOM expert. Find out what Zenon taught us about being a modern woman, what that creeper major Lutz was really up to the whole time, and why this movie is so iconic for an entire generation. Zoom zoom zoom! What was your favorite memory of this classic film? Let us know at onlygirlspod@gmail.com or leave a voicemail at 903.35.GIRLS! Don't forget to rate and subscribe on iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts! instagram.com/onlygirlspod facebook.com/onlygirlspod
Since the 1970's, archaeologists have sifted through the debris of St. Mary's City, the capital of colonial Maryland. What have they learned from the bits of pottery and brick they've discovered? We ask Historic St. Mary's City's Chief Archeologist Travis Parno and ----field school---- assistant Sarah McCoy . Then, Director of Research Henry Miller shares the mystery of three lead coffins discovered while excavating a chapel in 1990. Ticket info for Tidewater Archaeology Weekend (July 29-30) is here .
A powerful novel of friendship set in a traveling circus during World War II, The Orphan's Tale introduces two extraordinary women and their harrowing stories of sacrifice and survival Sixteen-year-old Noa has been cast out in disgrace after becoming pregnant by a Nazi soldier and being forced to give up her baby. She lives above a small rail station, which she cleans in order to earn her keep… When Noa discovers a boxcar containing dozens of Jewish infants bound for a concentration camp, she is reminded of the child that was taken from her. And in a moment that will change the course of her life, she snatches one of the babies and flees into the snowy night. Noa finds refuge with a German circus, but she must learn the flying trapeze act so she can blend in undetected, spurning the resentment of the lead aerialist, Astrid. At first rivals, Noa and Astrid soon forge a powerful bond. But as the facade that protects them proves increasingly tenuous, Noa and Astrid must decide whether their friendship is enough to save one another—or if the secrets that burn between them will destroy everything. “I read this novel in a headlong rush, transported by the relationship between two vastly different women during World War II: a Jewish circus aerialist and a teenage runaway with a baby. Deftly juggling secrets, lies, treachery, and passion, Pam Jenoff vividly brings to life the agonizing choices and life-or-death consequences for a hardy band of travelers under Nazi occupation.” —Christina Baker Kline, New York Times bestselling author of Orphan Train. “In prose that is beautiful, ethereal, and poignant, The Orphan’s Tale is novel you won’t be able to put down.” —Bustle “Readers who enjoyed Kristin Hannah’s The Nightingale and Sara Gruen’s Water for Elephants will embrace this novel.” —Library Journal “The Orphan's Tale is a compelling and beautifully told story about the power of female friendship, with all its complications.” ─PopSugar “A gripping story about the power of friendship to save and redeem even in the darkest of circumstances, The Orphan’s Tale sheds light on one of the most colorful and inspiring stories of heroism in Nazi Germany. This is a book not to be missed.” —Melanie Benjamin, New York Times bestselling author of The Swans of Fifth Avenue and The Aviator’s Wife. R:New York PRFiction PRHeather GudenkaufLittle MerciesImagesHG Author Photo - photo credit Morgan Hawthorne.jpgTHE ORPHAN’S TALE (MIRA Books; February 21, 2017), the powerful new novel from international bestselling writer Pam Jenoff, blends two little known aspects of the human drama that was the Second World War into a heartrending story of friendship and survival. Set amid the unconventional world of a traveling circus, the novel brings together two women—both refugees from their own pasts and each attempting to live under the radar during the Nazi incursion. Forming an at-first tentative bond, the two resilient women learn to trust and rely on each other even as the threat of exposure closes in. Noa, a sixteen-year-old Dutch girl, is banished from her home when her father discovers she has become pregnant by a German soldier. With nowhere else to turn, she enters the Nazi-run Lebensborn program, accepting care and shelter in exchange for the promise that she will give up her Aryan baby for adoption by a worthy German family. But, surrendering the baby proves devastating for Noa, and afterwards she lives in quiet desperation as she ekes out a living as a cleaner at a railway station. One day, in a railcar, she discovers dozens of Jewish infants who have been rent from their mothers, bound for certain death. On impulse, she steals one of the babies and flees. After spending a near-fatal night in the freezing forest, Noa and the baby are discovered by the denizens of a circus and given sanctuary. In order to stay with the troupe without rousing the suspicion of the local Nazi authorities, Noa must be given a part to play in the show, and it is decided she will fill a vacant aerialist’s place. She is put in the charge of Astrid, the star trapeze artist, who at first has nothing but disdain for this amateur. Still, she is surprised by Noa’s determination and innate talent, and Astrid has sympathy for the girl’s plight because of her own circumstances. The daughter of a rival circus family, Astrid is Jewish and alone in the world. Once married to a German officer, she has been disowned by her husband and, like Noa, has found welcome refuge in the sheltered, nonjudgmental world of the circus. As the circus moves across Europe, out of Germany and into occupied France, Noa hopes that she can find the means of escape to save the baby, whom she has named Theo. Yet, in this turbulent time of mistrust and betrayal, no one can be assured of safety, and the secret pasts both women shield return to haunt them and threaten their safety. Loyalty and friendship may not prove enough to save them. “A gripping story about the power of friendship to save and redeem even in the darkest of circumstances,” says Melanie Benjamin, New York Timesbestselling author of The Swans of Fifth Avenue and The Aviator's Wife. “Jenoff expertly performs a pirouetting tale worthy of a standing ovation,” adds Sarah McCoy, New York Times bestselling author of The Mapmaker's Children. ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Pam Jenoff is the author of The Kommandant's Girl, which was an international bestseller and nominated for a Quill award, as well as seven other novels. She holds a bachelor’s degree in international affairs from George Washington University and a master’s degree in history from Cambridge, and she received her Juris Doctor from the University of Pennsylvania. Jenoff’s novels are based on her experiences working at the Pentagon and also as a diplomat for the State Department handling Holocaust issues in Poland. She lives outside Philadelphia with her husband and three children where, in addition to writing, she teaches law school.
The StoryMen welcome historical fiction author Sarah McCoy to talk about how her unique life has shaped her fiction. She also tells us how she researches her novels, and finds unique voices to share her stories.
The Halli Casser-Jayne Show when some of the iconic names in women's fiction: Jenna Blum, Pam Jenoff, Sarah McCoy, Kristina McMorris, Alyson Richman, Erika Robuck and Karen White stop by the show to talk about their latest contribution to literature Grand Central: Original Stories of Postwar Love and Reunion, and so much more. Jenna Blum is the New York Times and international #1 bestselling author of novels Those Who Save Us and the Stormchasers. She is one of Oprah's Top 30 Women Writers. Pam Jenoff is the internationally bestselling author of several novels, including The Kommandant's Girl. Sarah McCoy is the author of the New York Times and international bestseller The Baker's Daughter. Kristina McMorris' works of fiction have garnered more than twenty national literary awards and have appeared on the New York Times bestseller list, including her novel Letters from Home. Among Alyson Richman's nationally bestselling titles is The Lost Wife. Her books have been published in over fifteen languages. Erika Robuck's novel Hemingway's Girl was a Target Emerging Author Pick. Karen White is the New York Times bestselling author of 18 novels. Her most recent book, A Long Time Gone was released in June 2014.In celebration of the recent 100th anniversary of Grand Central Terminal, these celebrated authors have come together to produce an iconic anthology about New York's most beloved landmark, creating their own stories, set on the same day, just after the end of World War II, in a time of hope, uncertainty, change, and renewal. For more information on The Halli Casser-Jayne Show visit http://bit.ly/hcjmain
Tutti Frutti musical. Bolas musicales de muchos sabores diferentes en este Sonidos y Sonados. Tenemos la suerte de contar en este programa con la música de Jay Me Llaman, Norus ft Nora Bago, Sarah McCoy, Kraak & Smaak ft Berenice Van Leer, Aiala & ElTornado, Ambar Luna & Lee Eye, Kinkid ft Mc Nick, GREG […]