But when wanda Cox-Bailey, branch manager of the richard B. harrison library on New Bern avenue, assured me that she and librarian Thomas hancock, who also owned Capital City Tours, would handle the logistics, i agreed. after all, ...
One was at Brady's, not far from Carlton's Rock Pile. Lots of Carolina students were eating there when we sat down at the counter. ey glowered at us. Mr. Brady grew very exercised but only called the police. When they arrived, Mr. Brady ...
... she is the author of four books and many other publications. she writes fiction under the pen name Makuchi. “woman of the lake,” her short story about the 1986 lake Nyos disaster that wiped out entire communities in Cameroon, ...
Around the same time, Dr. Charles Harris was also starting a new job in Durham. He and his colleague, Dr. Ira Smith, founded Harris and Smith Ob-Gyn, and my parents were two of their first clients. Dr. Harris delivered me at Durham ...
I once found it deranged, my family's concern for a certain brand of lemon floor wax. It had to smell one citric, zesty way when any person first stepped into our front hall. (A single place in Pennsylvania still made it; ...
Although I have exchanged introductions with a few of my fellow dogwalkers, I mostly recall the names of their animals—Duffy, Miss Ella Fitzgerald, Raya Sunshine, Simon, Moose, Kiya, Gretta, Millie, Pepper, Biscuit, Samson, ...
... Corlies M. Smith, my editor at Viking, Bob Summer, former UNC Press editor, Lee Smith, colleague and fellow writer, and Alane Mason, ex-student, W.W. Norton editor, and the founder-director of Words Without Borders.
27 Views of Asheville presents a brightly colored, kaleidoscopic vision of a city lately come to prominence for its metropolitan ambience and cultural background. Here is place full of variety and surprise.
"Queen City, Hornet's Nest, Capital of the New South, Bank Town, Last Capital of the Confederacy, City of Gold, NASCAR City, City of Trees, City of the Future, City of Now .
Eco-gardening how-to book
In this memoir, novelist Craig Nova explores the interconnections between his work as a writer, his personal life, and his passion for fly-fishing.