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Office: Fretwell 290D
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Monthly Archives: December 2025

Honoring D.G. Martin and His Contributions to North Carolina’s Literary Community

December 13, 2025 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

D.G. Martin died on December 9, 2025, at the age of eighty-five. Over the course of his life, Martin achieved success in many different endeavors. He was a star basketball player at Davidson College. He served as a Green Beret. He graduated from Yale Law School and practiced law in Charlotte for many years. He held several leadership positions with the University of North Carolina System, and he wrote a weekly column that ran in many North Carolina newspapers.  Of his many accomplishments, however, the one that stands out for me was his long run as the host of North Carolina Bookwatch, a series that aired on PBS North Carolina.

D.G. Martin began hosting North Carolina Bookwatch in 1999, and he continued in this role through 2021 when the series finally came to an end. The series featured North Carolina writers in conversation with Martin. As a frequent viewer of the program, I enjoyed his informal, low-tech approach. He did research on the authors he featured and always carefully read their books beforehand, but he never peppered his guests with preset questions. His conversations with the authors seemed relaxed and nuanced in nature. While watching the program, I sometimes had a sense that I was eavesdropping on a conversation between two people who loved to tell stories.

Martin and his production team paid close attention to Charlotte’s literary scene, and North Carolina Bookwatch often featured Charlotte writers, such as Kathy Reichs and Tommy Tomlinson. Shortly after I started my Storied Charlotte blog, I received an email from Kathy Loebrich, the producer/director of the program, in which she told me that Martin and other members of their team appreciated my blog. As she put it, “We’re always glad to connect with our fellow bibliophiles—especially those working with writers & educators & bookstores to bolster the literary arts across the state. Your blog is neat! You’ve definitely got you finger on the literary pulse of Charlotte.” I saved her email because it helped me feel like I was connected to Martin and to the larger North Carolina literary community.

Even though D.G. Martin lived in Chapel Hill for the second half of his life, he lived and worked in the Charlotte area for many years. He had a longstanding interest in Charlotte’s writers, and he did much to promote writers with Charlotte connections. He will be missed in Storied Charlotte and beyond.

Tags: D.G. MartinNorth Carolina Bookwatch

A Trip to the Book Tree 

December 06, 2025 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

Every December, I visit Park Road Books to buy books for children whom I have never met and will likely never meet. This annual ritual is tied the Book Tree Initiative, a collaborative project involving Communities In Schools (CIS) and Park Road Books.   The CIS website includes the following description of the project:

Communities In Schools and Park Road Books in Park Road Shopping Center team up each year to give the joy of reading and books to CIS students.  A tree in Park Road Books’ store is decorated with ornaments created by our students, including the name, age, and “book wish” of a student.  Customers who select an ornament are given a 20% discount on a book purchased for the student.  It’s a wonderful way to give a new book to a child who may never have had a book of his or her own.

This past week my wife and I selected two ornaments from the Book Tree.  My wife picked an ornament created by a girl who expressed a desire for a book from the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series.  Jeff Kinney launched this series in 2007, and there are now twenty books in the series. My wife selected one of the more recent books in the series. I picked an ornament created by a boy who said he would like a “baseball book.” I took a look at the store’s collection of books for middle-school readers, and I spotted Change-Up: Mystery at the World Series by John Feinstein.  We paid for these books and left them with the helpful cashier.  The staff at Park Road Books will make sure that the books get into the hands of the children who requested them.

For readers who want to know more about Communities In Schools, please click on the following link: https://www.cischarlotte.org

We are  big believers in providing children with their own books, which is why we always take a trip to the Book Tree.  We like the fact that the children who participate in this program are given an opportunity to say what book or type of book they want, and we enjoy making their “book wishes” come true.  

I wish everyone in Storied Charlotte a wonderful holiday season, and I hope that everyone’s “book wishes” all come true.   

Tags: Communities In SchoolsPark Road Books
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