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Monthly Archives: March 2026

Barbara Presnell’s New Memoir about Her Father, World War Two, and a Family Quest 

March 21, 2026 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

Long-time Charlotte writer Barbara Presnell has a deep interest in history, and this interest is reflected in her work as a creative writer.  In her poetry collection Piece Work, for example, she delves into the lives of the textile millworkers who played such an important role in the history of the South.  In her latest book, however, she delves into her own personal history. Otherwise, I’m Fine: A Memoir is a moving account of her efforts to come to terms with her suppressed grief related to her father’s death in 1969 when she was fourteen years old. At the time, her mother gathered Barbara and her two siblings together and told them that it would be best for them to get on with their lives and not talk about their deceased father.

Barbara attempted to follow her mother’s advice, but the grief that she felt did not dissipate—it just stayed bottled up. Many years later, Barbara came into possession of her father’s World War II belongings, including his uniform, a scrapbook, and his letters.  These tangible reminders of her father prompted Barbara and her siblings to embark on a quest to visit the places in Europe where her father was stationed during his time in the military. Otherwise, I’m Fine tells the story of this quest, but it is also a personal reflection about the history of her family and the importance of renewing family bonds.

I recently contacted Barbara and asked her for more information about her memoir. Here is what she sent to me:

The process of both living and writing the story of the book, Otherwise, I’m Fine, began in 2014 when, along with my brother and sister and two spouses, we researched, planned, and executed a 21-day tour of Europe, following our father’s maps, journal, photos, and the generous offerings of multiple guides. Our father was a WWII veteran (30th infantry division) who entered France at Omaha Beach, D-Day + 6, and was in every major battle across France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany, finally reaching the Elbe River in Magdeburg, Germany, where he and his company shook hands with officers and soldiers of the Soviet army, and the war was essentially over. 

He returned from the war to marry, return to his job at the textile factory in Asheboro, and begin to raise his family. He died unexpectedly in 1969, and in order to face the practical and emotional aftermath of his death, our mother instructed us children not to dwell on his death but to move on. We took her advice to heart, and for over 30 years until her death, we did not talk about him. Our Europe trip became a resolution for unresolved grief and renewal of sibling relationships. We all healed, each in our own way. 

The book parallels our Europe journey in 2014 with events before and after our father’s death. One of my goals in the telling was to bring my father back to life on the page, and I hope I did that. The University of South Carolina Press, specifically editor Michael McGandy, saw potential in an early draft and offered objective insights, particularly on structure. The book was released in April 2025. In many ways, it is a raw and vulnerable book, full of emotional highs and lows, but it has been praised for understatement (whew!) and emotional balance. It does have a happy ending. It is, of course, a poet’s memoir, with a focus on language, imagery, and suggestion. 

The Charlotte launch was held at the home of Malcolm and Lauren Campbell. Members of the Charlotte writing community, of which I have long been a part, as well as UNC Charlotte faculty and Charlotte family members–my husband grew up in Charlotte and two brothers as well as our son live in Charlotte–filled the Campbell living room on a very rainy Saturday. 

As you probably know, I graduated from the MFA Creative Writing program at UNCG and earned an additional degree in literature at the University of Kentucky. Mine has been a career of balancing teaching and writing. In addition to Otherwise, I’ve published five poetry books. I taught writing at UNC Charlotte for twenty years. I spent twenty years prior to that teaching writing–creative, expository, advanced, you name it–to people of all ages at colleges, community centers, state arts programs, and more. 

Finally, I will point you to my website, www.barbarapresnell.com. There you’ll find reviews and links to reviews. DO take a look at the magnificent trailer made for me by a Greensboro filmmaker–https://youtu.be/XXw_IUsMGqU?si=hTg5tfcEALqcWwqB (it’s also on the website). 

I congratulate Barbara on publication of Otherwise, I’m Fine: A Memoir.  It’s an important addition to Storied Charlotte’s growing corpus of memorable memoirs. 

Tags: Barbara Presnellmemoir

North Carolina Reads Book Club Returns for Its Fifth Year

March 15, 2026 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

North Carolina Humanities sends out sends out a monthly newsletter, and the March issue came out last week. One of the articles in this newsletter is titled “North Carolina Reads March Book Club Event.” While reading this article, I realized that I had not yet covered this year’s North Carolina Reads Book Club program in my Storied Charlotte blog.  Even though the program launched in February, I decided that the maxim “better late than never” applies in this case. 

North Carolina Humanities is again sponsoring its North Carolina Reads Book Club. Now in its fifth year of operation, this program is a statewide book club that meets virtually on a monthly basis.  I am a big supporter of North Carolina Reads in part because it fosters a sense of community among the participants. After all, discussing shared texts can bring readers together and bridge cultural differences.  Another reason I support this program is that always showcases books that have deep connections to North Carolina.  For readers who want to know more about North Carolina Reads, here is the official description of the program: 

North Carolina Reads is North Carolina Humanities’ award-winning, virtual, statewide book club! North Carolina Reads annually features five books that explore the history and culture of North Carolina. The people, places, and events in the books offer an opportunity to reflect on how people can contribute to shaping their communities.

From February to June, North Carolina Humanities hosts virtual monthly book club discussion events where participants will hear from book authors and topic experts. Libraries, community groups, and individuals across North Carolina are encouraged to read along with North Carolina Humanities, attend North Carolina Reads book club discussions, and host their own local book programs to further conversation, camaraderie, and community.

Books, reading, literacy, and literary history are important parts of North Carolina Humanities’ mission. At the heart of North Carolina Reads is North Carolina Humanities’ desire to connect communities through shared reading experiences. Reading is vitally important because it nourishes and helps develop our critical-thinking skills, strengthens our minds, expands vocabulary, elevates mental health, and creates opportunities to explore different perspectives.

In 2023 North Carolina Reads received a national Schwartz Prize from the Federation of State Humanities Councils for its outstanding statewide impact. Since 2022, North Carolina Humanities has distributed nearly 16,000 free North Carolina Reads books and resources across the state to help increase broader access to books.

2026 North Carolina Reads Book Club Full Schedule

  • February 25, 2026 – Morningside: The 1979 Greensboro Massacre and the Struggle for an American City’s Soul by Aran Shetterly
  • March 30, 2026 – Daughters of Green Mountain Gap by Teri M. Brown
  • April 28, 2026 – The Devil’s Done Come Back: New Ghost Tales from North Carolina edited by Ed Southern
  • May 27, 2026 – The Caretaker by Ron Rash
  • June 23, 2026 – Night Magic: Adventures Among Glowworms, Moon Gardens, and Other Marvels of the Dark by Leigh Ann Henion

Please join us on March 30th at 6:15 for the March book club event. Author Teri M. Brown and historian Dr. Jessie Wilkerson will discuss our March book, Daughters of Green Mountain Gap.

I thank North Carolina Humanities for organizing this program and for drawing attention to these five noteworthy books.  I understand that North Carolina Reads is a statewide program, but I take a certain amount of civic pride that the North Carolina Humanities is headquartered in Charlotte.  As I see it, Storied Charlotte and the North Carolina Humanities for are a perfect match.  

Tags: North Carolina HumanitiesNorth Carolina Reads Book Club

Roald Dahl, the Enormous Crocodile, and Me 

March 10, 2026 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

Over the course of my long career as a children’s literature professor in the English Department at UNC Charlotte, I have researched the lives and works of many children’s authors, none more than Roald Dahl.  My connection to Dahl goes back to 1985 when I published an article titled “Regression and the Fragmentation of the Self in James and the Giant Peach.” I thought that Dahl might be interested in the article about his book, so I sent him a copy of it. To my surprise, he wrote a letter back to me in which he made kind comments about my article. A few years later, I received a book contract to write a critical study of Dahl’s works. As part of my research for this book, I travelled to England where I spent an October day in 1988 interviewing Dahl. My book on Dahl came out in 1992, two years after Dahl’s death in 1990. Since the publication of my Dahl book, I have remained interested in Dahl, and on occasion, I have written additional pieces about him and his books.

In the past month, Dahl has re-entered my life in a big way.  It started with the recent Read Aloud Rodeo that I organized. I decided to read Dahl’s picture book The Enormous Crocodile. I enjoy reading this book aloud to children because they like its fast-moving plot as well as the humor that runs throughout the story. It also gives me an opportunity to use lots of different voices. Another plus for children and for me are Quentin Blake’s amusing illustrations, which perfectly match Dahl’s zany story. 

About a week after the Read Aloud Rodeo, my wife and I travelled to London.  We took a day trip to Cardiff, which is where Dahl grew up. There is a plaza in Cardiff called Roald Dahl Plass, and I read that a sculpture of the Enormous Crocodile is located not too far from the plaza. I took the short walk in search of the Enormous Crocodile, and sure enough, I spotted him, looking just like Quentin Blake portrayed him in the book.  As I approached the sculpture, I saw two children climbing on the crocodile’s long, bumpy back. They appeared to be a brother and a sister, which I thought was fitting since a brother and a sister have an encounter with the Enormous Crocodile in the book.  I waited until the children left with their parents before I took a few photographs. When I got close up to the Enormous Crocodile, I noticed that he seemed to be peering sideways at me as if he were thinking about having me for lunch, but luckily for me, he made no effort to gobble me up.

My third recent Dahl-related experience is tied to a new ten-episode podcast called The Secret World of Roald Dahl.  Aaron Tracy, the creator and host of the podcast, interviewed me about my thoughts on Dahl’s stories.  We also talked about the day I spent with Dahl so many years ago.  The episode featuring me, which is the concluding episode in the podcast, will be released on March 23rd.  For more information about this podcast, please click on the following link: https://www.listentoparallax.com/shows/secretworldofpodcast  

Roald Dahl is but one of many children’s authors who have connections to the children’s literature program at UNC Charlotte. My colleagues who also teach in this program have published their own important research on various children’s authors and their books.  This extensive body of scholarship is one of the reasons Storied Charlotte is known as a place where children’s literature is taken seriously.  

Tags: Roald DahlThe Enormous Crocodile

Three Books That Relate to the History of Black Women in the South 

March 01, 2026 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

I am writing this blog post on March 1, 2026, which is both the last day of Black History Month and the first day of Women’s History Month. Given this convergence, I thought today would be an appropriate time to revisit three books that relate to both of these month-long celebrations. These books are Malika J. Stevely’s Song of Redemption, Sonya Y. Ramsey’s Bertha Maxwell-Roddey:  A Modern-Day Race Woman and the Power of Black Leadership, and Alicia D. Williams’s Jump at the Sun: The True Life Tale of Unstoppable Storycatcher Zora Neale Hurston. All three books are by Charlotte writers, and all relate to the history of Black women in the American South. 

Song of Redemption is a historical novel.  Most of the story takes place on a French and English-speaking plantation in Louisiana in the years just before the Civil War, but the opening chapter is set in 1932. In this chapter, a group of construction workers are fixing up an abandoned plantation mansion when they discover the body of a woman behind one of the walls. This event actually happened.  When Malika Stevely heard about it, she became curious about the story of the woman whose body was discovered.  After doing extensive investigative research, she decided to write a novel based on the life of this woman. In commenting on her approach to writing this novel, Malika said, “I wanted to humanize her as well as solve the mystery behind the oral history. This could only be done by researching and sharing her story as well as the experiences of other enslaved individuals whose names and accounts were silenced or never told. And in conjunction, it was imperative that there was a rich illustration of culture and languages in the book along with the perspectives of women, Blacks, Creoles and Creoles of color.”

Bertha Maxwell-Roddey:  A Modern-Day Race Woman and the Power of Black Leadership is a biography of a living legend in Charlotte’s educational circles.  Bertha Maxwell-Roddey founded UNC Charlotte’s Black Studies Program (which eventually evolved into the current Africana Studies Department). Before joining UNC Charlotte’s College of Education in 1970, she had an illustrious career as a teacher and principal in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg School System. When asked to comment on this biography, Sonya Ramsey said her book is “not just a biography of a phenomenal woman. It represents the untold story of Black women and others who fought to turn the promises and achievements of the civil rights and feminist movements into tangible realities as they fought to make desegregation work in the quiet aftermath of the public civil rights marches and the fiery speeches of Black Power activists in the board rooms and classrooms of the desegregated south from the 1970s to the 1990s.”

Jump at the Sun:  The True Life Tale of Unstoppable Storycatcher Zora Neale Hurston is picture book biography of folklorist and writer Zora Neale Hurston.  The book is written by Alicia D. Williams and illustrated by Jacqueline Alcántara. In this book, Alicia shows how Hurston’s experiences growing up in Eatonville, Florida, during the 1890s shaped her interest in African American folklore and sparked her love of storytelling.  Alicia focuses much of the book on Hurston’s childhood and early adulthood, but she touches on Hurston’s career as a folklorist, anthropologist and professional writer. One of Alicia’s goals in writing this book is to introduce children to the joys that come with sharing folktales. As she told an interviewer, “I want this whole engagement of bringing back the storytelling and oral traditions and sharing them and having fun with them.”

While I have previously written individual blog posts about these books when they first came out, I think that it is good to write about them together in one post, for it seems to me that these books are in conversation with each other. These books tell individual stories, but they all contribute to a larger narrative about the contributions of Black women to the history of America. Since these books are by Charlotte writers, they also contribute to the literary history of Storied Charlotte.

Tags: Black History MonthWomen's History Month
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