Category Archives: news

Nana Lampton Reading at Carnegie Center

Nana Lampton Reading on January 20th 2016 at the Carnegie Center for Literacy and LearningThis is the final reminder that Nana Lampton (author of Accents Published Wash the Dust from My Eyes and Bloom on a Split Board) will be reading tonight at the Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning in Lexington, Kentucky at 6pm.

Nana Lampton is CEO and chair of Hardscuffle, Inc. and American Life and Accident Insurance Company of Kentucky, and she’s the founder of the Snowy Owl Foundation. She recently spoke at the Network for Entrepreneurial Women’s annual NEW Showcase last year. Nana is also the 2013 winner of the 2013 Kentucky Governor’s Awards in Arts.

Wash the Dust from My Eyes is a multi-genre, hardbound book tells the story of her grandfather—a World War I cavalryman who is uncertain about the future of the war. The book also draws from Lucretius and includes photographs of her grandfather.

Copies of Wash the Dust from My Eyes are currently available from the Accents Store.

To visit the Facebook page for the event, click here.

When: Wednesday, January 20, 2016 @ 6pm
Where: The Carnegie Center
251 W. Second Street
Lexington, KY 40507
(859) 254-4175

Wash the Dust From My Eyes Ships This Friday

Wash the Dust from My Eyes by Nana LamptonIf you’ve already ordered Nana Lampton’s multi-genre, hardcover collection Wash the Dust From My Eyes, it will ship this Friday, January 15th. If you haven’t pre-ordered a copy, copies are still available!

In this first-of-its-kind collection of nonfiction, poetry, art and photography 100 years in the making, Nana Lampton combines the journal entries of her grandfather—a World War I cavalryman uncertain about the future the war holds, yet ready to play his part—with her own poetry inspired by his writing. As she reaches back through a century to see the world from his perspective, Lampton invites the words of Roman poet and philosopher Lucretius to illustrate the timelessness of feelings that we can all appreciate—apprehension, ambition, camaraderie, and love—in the face of war and in the hope for what comes after.

What others are saying:

Nana Lampton creates a moving meditation on war and its brutal mechanization in the 20th century, capturing the idealism and dutifulness of the young, the tedium of camp life, and the anachronism of cavalry on the eve of ‘the war to end all wars.’ These voices, these poems, chime.

—Richard Taylor

 

Through John Mason’s history, we see the outer man of a cavalry captain training for the Great War. But through her poetry, we view also his imagined inner soul and the unimaginable horrors of war. The result is a powerful journey that all should take.

—James C. Klotter

 

Ultimately, these literal entries, ancient lines, and her lyrical envisioning of her grandfather’s life become one sinuous keening utterance of the desperation of man at war and the cherished triumph of love over all.

—Jeanie Thompson

To order, click here to go to the Accents Store.

2015—Lexington Poetry Month

Every June is Lexington Poetry Month, and the Accents Publishing Blog hosts the Lexington Poetry Month Writing Challenge, which challenges everyone who signs up to write a poem every day and post as many (or few) of them to the blog as they’d like.

This year was our best ever LexPoMo Writing Challeng, and below are a few stats from the event:

  • 175 people signed up for this year’s Writing Challenge
  • 142 poets wrote at least one poem
  • 1,477 poems were published during the challenge
  • Users from 55 countries visited the blog during June.
  • 2,784 comments were written in support of our poets

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2015—The Authors

Barbara Headshot 2Barbara Goldberg is the author of four prize-winning books of poetry, including The Royal Baker’s Daughter, winner of the Felix Pollak Poetry Award. She is the translator of Scorched by the Sun, poems by the Israeli poet Moshe Dor. The two selected and translated four anthologies of contemporary Israeli poetry. Goldberg received two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts as well as awards in translation, fiction and speechwriting. Her poems appear in Best American Poetry, Paris Review, Poetry and elsewhere, Goldberg is the series editor of the Word Works’ International Imprint.

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2015—The Books

Accents Publishing released ten books in 2015.

Jay McCoy Reads with Julie Hensley at the Morris book shop

At 6pm today, the Morris book shop will host Jay McCoy reading from The Occupation and Julie Hensley reading from Viable (Five Oaks Press). Both authors will also be signing their books after the reading.

Jay McCoy has deep roots in Eastern Kentucky, works at the Morris book shop, co-founded the Teen Howl Poetry Series, and occasionally heads LGBT writing workshops for the Carnegie Center.

Julie Hensley is an Associate Professor at Eastern Kentucky University and lives in Richmond, Kentucky with her husband and two children. She grew up on a sheep farm and loves horses. Viable explores motherhood and fertility.

When: Friday, December 18, 2015 @ 6pm
Where: the Morris book shop
882 E. High Street
Lexington. KY 40502
(859) 276-0494

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Accents Publishing Best of the Net Nominations

Accents Publishing is happy to announce our recent nominations for the Best of the Net.  Poems were selected from the Lexington Poetry Month Writing Challenge 2015.

  • “Murder my Machismo” by Alex Simand
    • Alex Simand tells himself he is a writer daily, though he works full time as an engineer in San Francisco. His work has appeared in Mud Season Review, Red Fez, Ash & Bones, among others. He is currently working on his MFA in Creative Writing from Antioch University Los Angeles. Alex writes about love, hate, cultural otherness, and fantasies between strangers. His left brain and his right brain are warring factions.
  • “the maternity ward” by Serena Devi
    • Serena Devi is in the SCAPA Literary Arts program at Lafayette High School. She dyes her hair a lot and watches too much reality TV.
  • “wreck: a noun” by Jeremy Paden
    • Jeremy Paden is an Associate Professor of Spanish and Latin American at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. His poems and translations have appeared in various journals and anthologies. He is the author of Broken Tulips, a chapbook of poems.
  • “I Saw the Frank in Hank and Then  I Set Him Free” by Nettie Farris
    • Nettie Farris is the author of Communion, from Accents Publishing. Her chapbook, Fat Crayons, is forthcoming from Finishing Line Press. In her spare time, she writes poems, practices yoga, attends mass, prays the rosary, and, like Alice, goes to tea parties.
  • “Just Before” by Whitney Baker
  • “What I Think When You are the shoulder I Lean On” by Eduardo Ballestero
    • Eduardo Ballestero was born in San Carlos, Costa Rica and grew up in Kentucky. He has a BA in English from the University of Kentucky and lives and works in Lexington. He is at work on a collection of persona poems.

Poetry Reading: Circe’s Lament: Anthology of Wild Women Poetry

The Wild Fig Coffee & Books will be hosting a reading from Accents Publishing’s newest release Circe’s Lament: Anthology of Wild Women Poetry this upcoming Thursday, December 17th. Many of the contributors from the anthology will be reading, including:

Kate Hadfield
Bianca Spriggs
Karen George
Marilyn Kallet
Sherry Chandler
Tina Parker
Lynnell Edwards
Frank X Walker
Jeremy Paden
Tina Andry
K. Nicole Wilson

Circe’s Lament has been described by Cecilia Woloch, author of the 2014 Two Sylvias Press Chapbook Prize Earth and Narcissus, as a “celebration of the wild feminine: the fierce, the furious, the bruised and battered, the hilarious, the mythical, the stereotypical, the fairytale turned inside out.”

Circe’s Lament: Anthology of Wild Women Poetry can be ordered at our website here.

When: Thursday, December 17, 2015 @ 7pm
Where: The Wild Fig
726 N. Limestone
Lexington, KY 40508
(859) 252-3052

Accents Publishing Pushcart Nominations

Accents Publishing is happy to nominate the following poems for the Pushcart Prize: