Knoxville Writers' Guild Speakers' Bureau: Journalism

Speakers selected to represent the Knoxville Writers Guild are not paid by the Guild, but have agreed to donate 10% of all honoraria, compensation and book sales to the KWG. Neither the Bureau nor the Guild acts as an intermediary or agent in recommending individual speakers. How to use the Speakers Bureau: You may either search the list of speakers or select a particular category such as Poetry or Regional Writing and chose a writer with expertise in that category. Return to list of all speakers.

Once you have selected the speaker who best suits your organizations needs and the interests of your members, contact him or her directly using contact information on the Speakers Bureau web site. You and the speaker can then set program content, compensation (if any) and logistical arrangements. Since the Speakers Bureau is a community service of the Knoxville Writers Guild, we are anxious for your feedback. After the program, we invite you to fill out the exit survey, either on-line at this website [link] or in hard copy provided by the speaker.

Fiction
Nonfiction
Poetry
Humor
Journalism
Memoirs & Journaling
Professional & Technical Writing
Publishing & Marketing
Regional Writing
Songwriting & Performance Art
Grammar for Grownups

Teaching Writing & the Writing Process
Writing for Young People
K-12 School Programs

Carole Borges Carole Borges, author of Disciplining the Devils Country has published poems in Poetry, Kalliope, Crosscurrents. Her non-fiction credits include Rudder Magazine, Vegetarian Digest and Review, and Horsemans Journal. A series of her non-fiction essays was featured in the North Shore Sunday magazine. As a freelance journalist, her work has been seen in the Lynn Item, the Dorchester Community News, the West Side Gazette, and the Enlightener newspaper in Knoxville.

Twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize, Carole was also the recipient of Massachusetts Artists Foundation award. Her unique Writing Your Family Memories and Elements of Fiction workshops have been presented in a variety of settings. She has been a presenter at the East Coast Writing Conference and the Florida Scholastic Press Associations Workshop for High School Seniors. Carole is currently available as a reader, speaker or workshop leader. She has experience working with small and large groups and writers at all levels.

Categories: Poetry, Fiction, Nonfiction, Writing for Young People, Teaching Writing, K-12 School Programs, Memoirs & Journaling, Journalism, The Writing Process, Publishing & Marketing.

E-mail: caroleann1@yahoo.com

Fred Brown Fred Brown, Senior Writer for the Knoxville News-Sentinel, is a member of the Scripps Howard Hall of Fame and a recipient of the prestigious Malcolm Law Trophy for Feature Writing and a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship at the University of Michigan. He traveled to the Persian Gulf and Saudi Arabia during the buildup of the first Gulf War, and in 1988 he covered the Olympics in Korea, writing a column for Scripps Howard called Soul to Seoul.

With his wife,
Jeanne McDonald, he has co-authored two books, The Serpent Handlers: Three Families and Their Faith (winner of the Harry Caudill Award for Journalism and several other awards); and Growing Up Southern: How the South Shapes Its Writers..

Fred's book on fall road trips in East Tennessee, Discovering October Roads: Fall Color and Geology in Tennessee, is co-authored with geologist and photographer Harry Moore, and his most recent book with UT Press is Marking Time, stories behind the historical markers on East Tennessee highways. He writes for the Ulster-Scot news magazine and The Civil War Courier and was the founding editor for Appalachian Life Magazine. In addition, he was one of the founding members of the Knoxville Writers Guild and served as president for two years. He is currently working on a civil war novel.

Categories:  Memoirs & Journaling, Regional Writing, The Writing Process, Journalism.

E-mail: tennwriter@bellsouth.net

Catherine E. Crawley holds a Ph.D. in Science Communication from the University of Tennessee, and has experience in teaching, journalism, and public relations. Additionally, she has been a workplace consultant for the Gallup Organization and consulted for Fortune 500 companies in the United States and Singapore. She has taught journalism and English at the middle school, high school, and college-level. She began her career as a newspaper reporter at the Star-News in Pasadena, California, and covered the White House and Congress for trade publications in Washington, D.C. She is a published academic author and has published creative fiction in KWG's Literary Lunch anthology.

Dr. Crawley currently writes grants, conducts research, and writes and edits for private clients of her business, Crawley Communications & Research.

Categories: Professional & Technical Writing; Grammar for Grownups; Teaching Writing & the Writing Process; Journalism; K-12 School Programs; Fiction; Nonfiction

Email: ccrawley@crawleycommunications.com

 Alex Gabbard Among his 17 books, Alex Gabbard is a 2-time Book of the Year recipient with hundreds of magazine and newspaper features illustrated by thousands of his photos on topics of travel, non-fiction and fiction. Gaspee, his latest work of historical fiction, asks, When did Americas Revolution begin." Checkmate is a modern intrigue set in Oak Ridge, and Blood of the Rose, is a Freedom Book of the Month selection. Return to Thunder Road is an Amazon.com 5-star book, and Adventures of an H-Bomb Mechanic, a memoir of life in America after the Manhattan Project, is an accounting by a Top Boomer during the Cold War era.

Categories: Fiction, Non-fiction, Teaching Writing, 9-12 School Programs, Memoirs & Journaling, Journalism, Regional, The Writing Process.

Alexs web site is: www.alexgabbard.com.

E-mail: GPPress@att.net

 

 

Joe Rector writes a weekly column for the Knoxville News Sentinel and The Focus. His works have also appeared in the Knoxville Writers' Guild anthology Low Impact, and he has published works in Chicken Soup for the Mother and Son Soul, Chicken Soup for the New Mother's Soul, and Chicken Soup for the Menopause Soul. Additionally, his works have appeared in Knoxville Magazine and Grandparent Magazine.

After a thirty year career of teaching English in high school, Rector works with his new web site, Teacher Tales, where classroom teachers share their stories, as well as continuing as a freelance writer.

Web sites: www.teachertales.net and www.thecommonisspectacular.com

Categories: Teaching Writing in K-12, Memoirs & Journaling, Grammar for Grownups, Journalism, Editing, Writing about this Region.

E-mail: joerector@comcast.net

Pam StricklandPam Strickland is a widely published essayist and journalist for both regional and national publications writing on politics, social justice, religion, health and family. The high school yearbook she advised was nationally recognized. Currently adjunct teaching at Roane State Community College, while freelance writing, she is co- author of the upper elementary fiction book, Under One Flag: A Year at Rohwer by August House Publishing, which is a 2006 Historic Preservation Book Prize nominee. She has also done editing for August House and others.

Categories: Nonfiction, Memoirs & Journaling, Journalism, Regional, Teaching Writing & the Writing Process, K-12 School Programs.


E-mail: pamstrickland@mac.com

Don WilliamsDon Williams is a prize-winning columnist for The Knoxville News-Sentinel, as well as a freelance journalist, short story writer and the founding editor and publisher of New Millennium Writings, an annual anthology of fiction, nonfiction and poetry.

His awards include a National Endowment for the Humanities Michigan Journalism Fellowship, a Golden Presscard Award and the Malcolm Law Journalism Prize.

Williams is finishing a novel, Oracle of the Orchid Lounge set in his native Tennessee. His book of journalism, Heroes, Sheroes and Zeroes is on sale now.

Categories: Fiction, Poetry, Nonfiction, Memoirs & Journaling, Publishing & Marketing, Regional, Grammar for Grownups, Journalism.

E-mail: donwilliams7@charter.net

Or visit the NMW website at www.mach2.com

 

 

 Marianne Worthington Marianne Worthington is on the faculty at University of the Cumberlands and the Kentucky Governors School for the Arts. Her poems have appeared in Shenandoah, Kalliope, The Louisville Review, Kaleidoscope, Natural Bridge, Wind, and other literary magazines. Her recently published poetry chapbook is entitled Larger Bodies Than Mine. She won the Sue Ellen Hudson Excellence In Writing Award in 2003 and was a 2005 finalist in the Sue Saniel Elkind Poetry Contest. Mariannes reviews, essays, and other non-fiction have appeared in Appalachian Heritage, Appalachian Journal, Journal of Appalachian Studies, Mossy Creek Reader, and Journal of Kentucky Studies, Louisville Magazine, Now & Then, and Arts Across Kentucky, Wind. Her prose and poetry are widely anthologized.

She has presented workshops and lectures for the Knoxville Writers Guild, Alabama Writers Conclave, New Opportunity School for Women, Montessori Schools in Knoxville, Kentucky Governors School for the Arts, Laurel County (KY) Public Library, Bellarmine University, Lincoln Memorial University, and Eastern Kentucky University. In Kentucky, she lives with her husband and two fabulously lazy dogs.

Categories: Poetry, Nonfiction, Journalism, Regional, K-12 School Programs.

E-mail: marianneworthington@hotmail.com

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