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Monthly Archives: June 2025

Samis Rose Remembers 

June 28, 2025 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

Last week I received an email message from my friend Mark Williams with the following re message: “An excellent memoir for Pride Month!”  He went on to tell me about Samis Rose’s new memoir, Two of a Kind: A Love Story. As Mark put it, he helped his “friend Samis Rose edit and format an eBook of her ‘Thoughts’ (actually brief bits of memoir) about her life and particularly her love with Billie Rose.”

Intrigued, I set out to learn more about Samis and her new memoir, but I knew that I needed to move quickly in order to get my post up by June 30, since that is the last day of Pride Month. I immediately contacted Samis and asked her for more information about Two of a Kind. Here is what she sent to me:

I grew up in a small community in North Carolina. In Two of a Kind,  I tell the story of growing up gay in the South, finding the love of my life, and then losing her all too soon to cancer. Told in a series of “Thoughts” rather than in one continuous narration, my observations and opinions are woven into my  memories. Readers should expect empathy, humanity, and kindness among these pages, amid the challenges of living life as a Lesbian woman in a conservative society.

These writings all began because I needed something to occupy my time now that I am retired and wheelchair bound.  I began to write about my memories and opinions. Having nowhere else to disseminate these little gems, I began sharing them with friends on Facebook as a sort of serial.  They were well received, so I set out to turn them into a book. I had help with this project. The one person I need to thank is Mark Williams. He formatted and edited the book and encouraged me far beyond what I thought possible.  

This is not your conventional book. It doesn’t have regular chapters. It doesn’t have murders or car chases…well, not many. The occurrences shared here are all from my life. Along the way, I became a skilled singer, juried craft show artist, Wimmin’s Festival vendor, raised and rescued various animals and made an appearance on a major game show in New York. Most importantly I shared 22 years with Billie, my real-life love story. These writings are small, self-contained nuggets that can be read at anytime, anywhere. Like real life, there are good moments and bad.

Charlotte has been my home for many years, and my writings draw deeply from that well….of wisdom, common courtesy and human empathy.

For readers who want to know more about Samis’s memoir, please click of this link: https://a.co/d/hIQm0eO

For readers who want see a slide show of the photos from Two of a Kind accompanied by Samis’s recording of a song from her album Dancin’ Slow, please click on the following link:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTzysMEMqUY

For readers who are interested in the Billie and Samis Rose Papers at UNC Charlotte’s  J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections and University Archives, please click on the following link:  https://findingaids.charlotte.edu/repositories/4/resources/1385

While reading several Samis’s “Thoughts” from Two of a Kind, I had my own thoughts about these passages.  They remind me of beads.  Since Samis and Billie made jewelry together, I asked Samis the following question:  “When you create jewelry, do you use beads very much?  It occurred to me that your ‘thoughts’ are kind of like beads on a necklace.” She responded by saying, “Yes, we did beaded things.  What a lovely thought!”  All of us in Storied Charlotte and beyond are fortunate that Samis has strung together these memory beads to create this new beaded thing that she calls Two of a Kind. 

Tags: memoirSamis Rose

Ken Harmon on the Founding of Iron Oak Editions and Editing Ecobloomspaces

June 21, 2025 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

I recently reached out to Ken Harmon, the founder and editor of the Charlotte-based literary journal West Trade Review.  I had heard something about Ken launching a new press called Iron Oak Editions, and I asked him for more information about this press.  Ken told me that what I had heard was true. Iron Oak Editions, he informed me, officially launched in 2024. A few months ago it released its first book, Ecobloomspaces: Poetry at the Intersection of Social Identity and Nature, Environment, and Place, which Ken edited.  Ken offered to send me a copy of the collection, and of course I took him up on his offer.  

Books Launching in April 2025 - Community of Literary Magazines and Presses

When my copy of Ecobloomspaces arrived, I read Ken’s thoughtful introduction and many of the poems.  I also read the acknowledgments page, and I was pleasantly surprised to see that Ken mentioned the late Jim McGavran, a dearly missed friend of mine and a longtime professor who taught in the English Department at UNC Charlotte until his death in December 2014.  Ken wrote, “This anthology would not have been possible without the guidance of the late Dr. Jim McGavran.  Our conversations about queer literature during my early days of grad school led me to notice patterns within many texts that situated queer love in natural settings as a statement about the beautiful and powerful possibilities of queer love.”   

Well, as so often happens when I start doing the research for my blog posts, I became even more curious.  I sent Ken another email message, requesting that he share the story of how he came to found Iron Oak Editions and edit Ecobloomspaces.  Here is what he sent to me:

Professor Kenny Harmon

There were so many things that led to the development of the Ecobloomspaces term:  growing up in the South and the history of the land and people, my experiences with my maternal grandfather and the deep connection with nature he instilled within me, conversations with Dr. Jim McGavran in the independent study at UNC Charlotte about the texts we read together, my identity as a gay man (I came out in the late ‘80s), and my coursework and research related to a dissertation in a Ph.D. program that I was unable to complete because my partner, Tony, passed away.  I completed all requirements for the degree with the exception of writing the dissertation.  All the coursework, research for the dissertation, proposal, etc., were completed, but when Tony passed away it just broke me in ways that I didn’t think were possible, and although I tried, I just couldn’t focus and the time to degree expired.  Honestly, the degree or the dissertation just didn’t seem all that important anymore, and I had to walk away from both to just survive and keep my life together.   

After a few years of reflection after Tony’s death, I revamped West Trade Review, found a new group of people to work with, and that work gave me something to care about again.  The journal revamp began during the pandemic.

When we decided to make the move to become a press, that’s when I mentioned the theoretical term that I coined, Ecobloomspace, during my dissertation work.  So, in a way, the anthology was a way for me to continue to explore that idea.

What I really need to do is to fully develop an academic book explaining what an Ecobloomspace is, but I have two other creative books that I want to do (one poetry, one memoir).  That writing is very difficult, though.  Grief and loss and what I’ve learned about that are at the center of each. Focusing so much on everyone else’s writing also makes it more difficult for me to find the time to work on my own. I’m very passionate about the press’ work, though, and it brings me a great deal of joy and personal satisfaction.

For more information about Iron Oak Editions, please click on the following link: https://www.ironoakeditions.com/about-us

For more information about Ecobloomspaces: Poetry at the Intersection of Social Identity and Nature, Environment, and Place, please click on the following link:  https://www.ironoakeditions.com/ecobloomspaces-preview-2025

I know that Jim would be proud of Ken for editing this collection.  Jim had a deep interest in nature writing and poetry about the natural world.  This interest was also reflected in his love of growing plants.   In fact, on the day that he suffered the stroke that brought his life to an end, he had just purchased pansies to plant by the front door of his home. 

I was the chair of the English Department at the time, and I helped organize a celebration of Jim’s life.  At this event, two departmental colleagues performed “Turn, Turn, Turn,” which is also known as “To Everything There Is a Season.”  As one of the lines in this song goes, there is “a time to plant.” In a sense, founding Iron Oak Editions and editing Ecobloomspaces is like planting seeds.  Storied Charlotte is a better place because Ken took the time to plant these seeds.

Tags: EcobloomspacesIron Oak EditionsKen Harmon

Of Toys and Stories

June 14, 2025 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

Ever since I worked as a preschool teacher in the 1970s, I have been fascinated by the relationship between toys and stories.  I remember observing children at this preschool using toys to create their own stories.  Sometimes toys functioned as characters in their stories, or they used toys as props in complex narratives that they made up on the spot while engaging in pretend play.  Sometimes the children brought in toys based on characters from movies or television shows.  I remember a girl who liked to bring to school several finger puppets representing characters from Sesame Street. She carried these finger puppets in a Sesame Street lunch box.  Around Christmastime, another child brought in his mother’s tattered copy of a Little Golden Book called Santa’s Toy Shop, and he asked me to read it to him over and over again.  His mother told me to be careful with the book because it was one of her favorite books from her own childhood.

Once Upon a Toy: Essays on the Interplay Between Stories and Playthings [Book]

A few years ago, I was talking to Kathy Merlock Jackson, my friend and frequent collaborator, about the narrative elements associated with toys, and I found out that she shares my interest in this topic.  We decided to edit a book about toys and stories, and we set to work contacting potential contributors and editing their submissions. I am pleased to announce that this book, which is titled Once Upon a Toy: Essays on the Interplay Between Stories and Playthings, will be published later this month.  Kathy and I are excited that the book is already listed as an “Amazon Hot New Release” in the category of children’s literature criticism. The contributors to Once Upon a Toy come from around the world, but Charlotte writers are well represented. In addition to my essay on “The Winnie-the-Pooh Toys and Their Immigration to America,” the collection includes two other essays by Charlotte writers.

Paula T. Connolly, a professor of English at UNC Charlotte, contributes an essay titled “From Luxo to Lou: Toys in Pixar Shorts and the Search for Meaning.” In this essay, she analyzes the roles that toys play in several of Pixar’s short films, including Luxo Jr. (1986), Red’s Dream (1987), The Tin Toy (1988), Knick Knack (1989), Geri’s Game (1997), Sanjay’s Super Team (2015), and Lou (2017). As Paula points out, these short films served as a springboard for Pixar’s famous Toy Story films.  In her essay, she argues that these short films “provided creative opportunities for Pixar to explore the often complex and varied roles that toys play in our lives.”

Maya Socolovsky, who is also a professor of English at UNC Charlotte, contributes an essay titled “The Edge of Play: Belonging and Borderlands in Juan Felipe Herrera’s Picture Book Super Cilantro Girl/La Superniña del Cilantro.”  In her essay, Maya focuses on a 2003 bilingual picture book by Juan Felipe Herrera. She examines how Esmeralda, the young girl who is the central character in this picture book, incorporates a found plaything, in this case a bouquet of cilantro, in her fantasies. Esmeralda imagines that the bouquet of cilantro gives her superpowers, which she uses to help rescue her mother who has been detained at the border between Mexico and the United States. In her essay, Maya writes, “The bouquet of cilantro… becomes, through her imagination, all at once a thing of play, quest, and adventure, as well as a vehicle for rehearsing activism, social justice, and change.”

For readers who want to know more about Once Upon a Time, please click on the following link:  https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/once-upon-a-toy/

Paula’s and Maya’s contributions to Once Upon a Toy underscore for me the important scholarship that is coming out of Storied Charlotte in the field of children’s culture studies.  

Tags: children's cultureToys

The Carolina Theatre and The Sound of Music: The Intertwining of Two Escape Stories

June 09, 2025 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

A few years ago, I wrote several blog posts about distinctive places in Charlotte that are associated with the sharing of stories.  At the time, I did not write a post about the legendary Carolina Theatre because it was still in the process of being restored. However, this spring the beautifully restored theatre reopened, and it is now providing Charlotte audiences with opportunities to see films and live performances in the same auditorium that originally opened to the public in 1927. 

A $90 million restoration has renewed the Carolina Theatre in uptown Charlotte to its 1920s splendor.

For many years, the Carolina Theatre served as Charlotte’s premier performance venue.  The Carolina Theatre hosted performances by such famous stars as Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, and Katharine Hepburn, but it was primarily known as a movie theatre. The blockbuster films of the day often made their Charlotte debut at the Carolina Theatre. One such film was The Sound of Music, which opened in March 1965 and continued to play in the theatre until October 1966. 

In celebration of the 60th anniversary of The Sound of Music, the Carolina Theatre is bringing back the movie for one day. On June 28, 2025, there will be two screenings of the film, one at 2:00 p.m. and a sing-along screening at 7:00 p.m.  Tickets start at only $10 and can be purchased online at TheCarolina.com. 

I think it is fitting the Carolina Theatre is reviving The Sound of Music, not only because the film had a remarkable 79-week run at the theatre, but also because the theatre and the film are both examples of escape stories.

When the Carolina Theatre closed in November 1978, it seemed destined to be razed to make room for a new skyscraper, but local preservationists launched a campaign to save the theatre.  Their efforts almost came to naught after a fire broke out in 1980, which came close to destroying the structure. Somehow the theatre survived years of neglect and its narrow escape from fire. In 2012, the Foundation for the Carolinas acquired the structure and begin the twelve-year process of bringing it back to life. 

Sound of Music 50th Anniversary Edition

The Sound of Music is also the story of a narrow escape.  The film is about the Von Trapp family and their daring plan to leave Austria and flee to Switzerland before the Nazis annexation of Austria.  The family’s willingness to risk everything to escape the Nazis underscores for contemporary audiences the real dangers posed by the rise of Fascistic governments.  The Sound of Music has its light-hearted moments, but there is much more to the movie than singing about “Do-Re-Mi.”

I commend the Caroline Theatre for bringing back The Sound of Music.  I have fond memories of seeing this film when I was a boy, and I am looking forward to seeing it again in this Storied Charlotte venue.

Tags: Carolina TheatreThe Sound of Music
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