Monthly Archive for October, 2011

In The Studio – Celia Rivenbark

Celia Rivenbark steps into the Clearstory Radio Studio to kick off September. Don’t Miss this New York Times bestselling author, and funny lady of the written word. Wry, witty and worldly she has as much life off the page as she does on.

She found her way to the written form much like Southern Author Rick Bragg – through the arms of newspapers and deadlines. And it’s what still brings her back to the page on a regular basis as she writes her SYNDICATED WEEKLY read and loved by thousands.

Listen to Celia talk about real life, what inspires her, and a little advice for those stalker fans.

Clearstory Wedsnesday at Noon and again Sunday’s at 6:00 pm on 107.1 Nashville area or live and streaming at Http://www.clearstoryradio.com

About the Author:

Celia Rivenbark was born and raised in Duplin County, NC, which had the distinction of being the nation’s number 1 producer of hogs and turkeys during a brief, magical moment in the early 1980s.

Celia grew up in a small house in the country with a red barn out back that was populated by a couple of dozen lanky and unvaccinated cats. Her grandparents’ house, just across the ditch, had the first indoor plumbing in Teachey, NC and family lore swears that people came from miles around just to watch the toilet flush.

Despite this proud plumbing tradition, Celia grew up without a washer and dryer. On every Sunday afternoon of her childhood, while her mama rested up from preparing a fried chicken and sweet potato casserole lunch, she, her sister and her daddy rode to the laundromat two miles away to do the weekly wash.

It was at this laundromat, where a carefully lettered sign reminded customers that management was “NOT RESONSIBLE” for lost items, that Celia shirked “resonsibility” her own self and snuck away to read the big, fat Sunday News & Observer out of Raleigh, NC. By age 7, she’d decided to be a newspaper reporter.

Late nights, she’d listen to the feed trucks rattle by on the highway and she’d go to sleep wondering what exotic cities those noisy trucks would be in by morning (Richmond? Atlanta? Charlotte?) Their headlights crawling across the walls of her little pink bedroom at the edge of a soybean field were like constellations pointing the way to a bigger life, a better place, a place where there wasn’t so much turkey shit everywhere.
After a couple of years of college, Celia went to work for her hometown paper, the Wallace, NC Enterprise. The locals loved to say, as they renewed their “perscriptions,” that “you can eat a pot of rice and read the Enterprise and go to bed with nothing on your stomach and nothing on your mind.”

Mebbe. But Celia loved the Enterprise. Where else could you cover a dead body being hauled out of the river (alcohol was once again a contributing factor) in the morning and then write up weddings in the afternoon?

After eight years, however, taking front-page photos of the publisher shaking hands with other fez-wearing Shriners and tomatoes shaped like male “ginny-talia” was losing its appeal.

Celia went to work for the Wilmington, NC Morning Star after a savvy features editor was charmed by a lead paragraph in an Enterprise story about the rare birth of a mule: “Her mother was a nag and her father was a jackass.”

The Morning Star was no News and Observer but it came out every day and Celia got to write weddings for 55,000 readers instead of 3,500, plus she got a paycheck every two weeks with that nifty New York Times logo on it.

After an unfortunate stint as a copy editor–her a*s expanded to a good six ax handles across–Celia started writing a weekly humor column that fulfilled her lifelong dream of being paid to be a smart a*s. Along the way, she won a bunch of press awards, including a national health journalism award–hilarious when you consider she’s never met a steamed vegetable she could keep down.

Having met and married a cute guy in sports, Celia found herself happily knocked up at age 40 and, after 21 years, she quit newspapering to stay home with her new baby girl.

After a year or so, she started using Sophie’s two-hour naps to write a humor column from the mommie front lines for the Sun News in Myrtle Beach, S.C. The column continues to run weekly and is syndicated by the McClatchy-Tribune News Services.

In 2000, Coastal Carolina Press published a collection of Celia’s columns. A Southeast Book Sellers Association best-seller, Bless Your Heart, Tramp was nominated for the James Thurber Prize in 2001. David Sedaris won. He wins everything.

Her second book, We’re Just Like You, Only Prettier, published by St. Martin’s Press, was the winner of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Nonfiction Book of the Year and was a finalist for the James Thurber Prize for American Humor. Jon Stewart won. He and David Sedaris probably went out drinking afterwards. I’m sorry, did that sound bitter?

Celia lives in Wilmington, NC, with her husband, Scott, Director of Government Relations for New Hanover Health Network and author of the true-crime bestseller, Innocent Victims. Their daughter, Sophie, attends elementary school where she grudgingly wears a very uncool uniform. When she isn’t writing books, magazine articles or speeches, Celia enjoys watching old episodes of “The Gilmore Girls” while eating anything from Taco Bell.

She reports that the proudest day of her life was the one in which the Sears truck showed up to deliver a matching washer and dryer and neither one of ‘em had to go on the front porch.

In The Studio – Adventurer Jon Turk

Clearstory Radio – It’s happening Wednesday High Noon Central and Sunday nights at 6:00pm on WRFN 107.1lpfm Nashville area or streaming at Clearstory Radio and followListen Live links on Right.

One of our Favorite show’s – Join Us!

Author, Adventurer Jon Turk says he thinks all lists are both funny and suspect – then he offers this one -

  • First rock climbing party to make big wall ascents in Sam Ford Fiord, Baffin Island. (Featured in American Alpine Journal and Fifty Favorite Climbs.)
  • First ascent of Lamo-she Peak (6070 meters), Sichuan Province, China
  • Kayak passage around Cape Horn.
  • 3,000 mile kayak passage from Japan to Alaska, following a 10,000 year old aboriginal migration route.
  • Unsupported crossing of the western Gobi of Mongolia on a mountain bike.
  • Several first ski descents in the Tien Shan and Pamir Alai ranges of Kyrgyzia, volcanoes of Kamchatka, and Appolobamba of Bolivia.
  • Five expeditions to northeast Siberia in search of a shaman’s dream.
  • Recipient of three Polartec and four Gore-tex grants for outstanding adventure

Looks like he has experience that’s a little off the beaten track. Just a tad. He shares with Clearstory listeners not only his love of nature, his wild rides on the cold oceans, and also his writing discipline in the middle of all of that. As he prepares to return once again to the cold, cold water Mr. Turk pauses and shares age old wisdom and his love of words.

Join us for a fun visit with a wordsmith and kayaking wild man, and all our fun segments on words, writing and the power of story!

Nashville Nights, and A Word on Words

It was that time of year again. Downtown Nashville and the Southern Festival of the Book! Over 250 authors this year told stories and made presentations. I had the pleasure of seeing old friends and making new ones. Spoke on a panel with Katie Davis and Linda Learning. Stories to tell? Indeed. Facinating women on different journeys but amazing and wild and different and they were delightful. Reading Linda’s book now and looking forward to reading Katie’s.

Here’s a few quick photos of a few of the master events of the weekend. If you missed 2011 – for Goodness Sakes – circle your calendar early for October 2012 and don’t miss this incredible event open to the public free of charge. (And of course you know that’s due to underwriters, sponsors, and generous supporters.) A great night out with husband, Owen Hicks,  A Friday night Authors in the Round dinner, Getting my Groove on with Llama Llama Red Pajama, and loving hear stories by that man in the white light , Clyde Edgerton.

You can also watch the A Word on Words interview with John Seigenthaler at your convience here. He is such a wonderful man, gracious host, and promoter of the written word. It was my honor and pleasure to join him to discuss the new book Praying for Strangers.

In The Studio – Olivia deBelle Byrd

Join Clearstory Radio this week as the Southern Lady of Charm Olivia deBelle Byrd joins us in the studio to talk writing, southern storytelling, manners, and exotic travels. (And we do mean EXOTIC!)

MORE GREAT LITERARY Reviews, Travel News, Sight Unseen Kudo’s and Musical Interludes. You’re going to love this weeks show!  Nashville Area – 107.1fm, Steaming at Clearstoryradio.com

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Don’t Judge the Face

She was a stone, sitting on the bus stop waiting for the bus, waiting for life to change, waiting for something maybe to erase part of her past. I was leaving the IRS office, walking down the sidewalk after a busy day – an always, perpetually, busy day. And there she sat, stone cold silence. A face of frozen rock.

I stopped in front of her and asked her name. It’s the way I begin a lot of conversations these days.

“Why?” she asked, unmoveable. No tentative smile like other strangers, those who may be thinking they know me. She knew our paths hadn’t crossed before. She was certain of it.

I explained this thing I do. Remembering her before I went to sleep that night, blessings and goodness and mercy all the days of her life.

She turns, looks away but I see a ripple of something, the slightest breath of a smile. One not seen but trust me, in her soul, down in that place of her longing  it was there.

She turns back to face me, eyes as cold as Mars on the surface, “Mary,” she said.

I pat her on the knee as I turn to leave. “I’ll be remembering you tonight.”

And as I turn to go there is a barely audible, whispered, “Thank you.”




Monthly Archive for October, 2011