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Art Works

Summer 2002


Radio series offers
intimate visits with writers

Program highlights

Mentor shares art and life

The creative mentor

The Griffin & the Minor Canon

Interview with David Selby

What is W;t about?

Quality arts education?

How can I help students in my
community get a quality arts
education?

WV songwriters on new CD

Quilting the Sun: Journey of
a Play

Dance from your heart

New festival celebrates
singer-songwriters

Radio series offers intimate visits with writers

By Colleen Anderson

Here’s a tip for any avid reader, writer, student or teacher: Get your calendar. Beginning with September 17, make a date with your radio every Tuesday evening at eight o’clock until mid-December. Other commitments? Reschedule. You won’t want to miss a single week of “In Their Own Country,” a series of 14 hour-long programs about West Virginia writers.

 

Sandra Belton
Sandra Belton

Kate Long, who produced the series for West Virginia Public Radio, first thought of interviewing West Virginia writers after attending a conference at West Virginia Wesleyan College in the early 1990s. “Writers I’d heard of, like Jayne Anne Phillips and Denise Giardina, were there. But there were also a bunch of dynamite writers I didn’t know — Richard Currey, Irene McKinney, Pinckney Benedict. I started reading their books. The more I read, the more impressed I was.”

She was moved by their literal, as well as their literary, voices — the cadences, accents and figures of speech that identified them as Appalachian. “I knew they could make shivers go up people’s spines. I started dreaming about radio.”

Years of work later, Long has discovered that the sum of the series is more than its parts. “When you hear one writer, it’s about that writer. When you hear 14 or 15 writers from one place, it’s about the culture. It’s important for people anywhere to know that place’s writers and visionaries. It’s especially important in West Virginia. West Virginians hear so many put-downs from the outside. This series contradicts that. Collectively, these writers confirm the idea that West Virginia is a special, deep place filled with original people.”

Each show is part interview and part reading by the author, with just enough expository narrative to make the hour a good story as well as an intimate visit. The programs are complemented by music recorded by West Virginia musicians as they listened to the writers, playing “to the tempo of their voices.”

Stephen Coonts
Stephen Coonts

In the opening show, for instance, the gentle tones of Bob Webb’s dulcimer, guitar and cello flow under the lyrical voice of West Virginia poet laureate Irene McKinney. McKinney’s funny, insightful stories about her working farm upbringing in Barbour County are mixed with stunning poems that peel back the surfaces of ordinary life — a divorced woman who now has two gravesites, a dying father whose “mind is like a flapping line of laundry.”

In another show, children’s writer Sandra Belton describes her early love of the Beckley library, one of the few places where black and white children were treated equally — except for the “missing books,” the ones about black children. Now she writes them, to much national acclaim. Belton’s rich voice is perfectly accented by Tim Courts’s equally warm piano accompaniment.

Richard Currey delivers nearly photographic glimpses of the Vietnam ground war, the West Virginia mine wars, murderers and traveling musicians. The show is full of valuable advice for writers from a physician-turned-fiction-writer whose work has been translated into a dozen languages.

National Book Award winner Mary Lee Settle explores the themes of her five-volume Beulah Land quintet that traces several families from Cromwell’s England to the Kanawha Valley, and reads from her memoir of her grandmother Addie.

Marc Harshman
Marc Harshman
Cynthis Rylant
Cynthis Rylant

 

There is even a rare visit with one of the world’s best-loved children’s writers, Cynthia Rylant, who reads favorites like When I Was Young in the Mountains but also delves into the unexpected — a young soldier in World War II who sees his buddy die horribly, a teenager whose mother has lost her mind.

Jayne Anne Phillips
Jayne Anne Phillips
Pinckney Benedict
Pinckney Benedict
Mary Lee Settle
Mary Lee Settle
Denise Giardina
Denise Giardina

Most of the interviews took place at locations chosen by the writers — some wanted to be at home, others preferred a studio setting. A few readings by others and existing recordings were added to round out two shows about authors Breece Pancake and Davis Grubb, both of whom died before Long conceived the project.

The writers in the series were chosen by a committee, and, according to the producer, many more deserve to be in this series. “If people like it, maybe there will be more programs,” Long said.

“In Their Own Country” is funded by grants from the WV Humanities Council, the National Endowment for the Arts, the WV Commission on the Arts, West Virginia Public Broadcasting and the Charleston Gazette. The West Virginia Library Commission will make CD recordings of the interviews available to schools and libraries in the state, and copies will also be available for purchase by the general public.

For more information about the radio series, visit www.wvpubcast.org or contact Carole Carter at West Virginia Public Broadcasting, 600 Capitol Street, Charleston, WV 25301.