Final WordFest of 2024 offers humor, mystery, and poetry on November 12

The final WordFest event of the year will take place on Tuesday, November 12, 6:00-8:00 pm, at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 1428 22nd Avenue in Longview.

Retired judge and WordFest favorite Ed Putka will be reading the latest addition from his Cleveland stories, humorous tales about growing up in his Polish neighborhood in Ohio. In “The Redemption of Sister Mary Motts,” Ed offers his take on how nun’s get their nun names.

Craig Allen Heath will be reading the first chapter from his new Eden Ridge mystery series, Killing Buddhas. When the famous guru Branden Frank dies while visiting Eden Ridge, the great man’s legend begins to unravel. He helped millions find happiness and inspired Alan Wright’s ministry, but his private life holds secrets that will shake Alan’s admiration and complicate the truth of how Frank died. Did his aging and troubled heart give out, or was he killed? One man had threatened to kill him in front of a hundred witnesses. Another confesses to the murder, but police question his claim. A local woman is suspected, but her story throws the investigation into a tailspin. Alan and The Little Red Hens race to untangle the many knotted threads and find the truth. 

Craig decided he wanted to be a novelist at age fourteen. He achieved that goal fifty years later, in 2022, by publishing Where You Will Die. He is now working on the third in the series, Reason Not the Need

Elisa Carlsen grew up in Humboldt County, Nevada. A queer, outsider poet and artist, her writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Trumpeter, Cirque, Argentum, Brushfire, Nevada Arts Council, Anti-Heroin Chic, and elsewhere. Elisa is a Poetry Editor at New American Press and the author of Cormorant (Unsolicited Press 2023). Her poems have won awards from the Writer’s Guild of Astoria and the Oregon Poetry Association and she has been nominated for Best of the Net and a Pushcart Prize. 

Elisa will read from Cormorant, a collection of short poems with a brief essay about her experience helping the Army Corps of Engineers develop the Double-Crested Cormorant Wildlife Management Plan. Prepared under the umbrella of federal salmon recovery efforts on the Columbia River, the plan resulted in a large culling of the birds with zero benefits to threatened salmon. Elisa dedicated her book to Sharnelle Fee, Founder of the Wildlife Center of the North Coast, who passed away from what many believed to be heartbreak over the killing of the birds. Proceeds from the book’s sale will be donated to the Wildlife Center. 

Eric Fair-Layman, aka Papasquatch, (presumably the one on the left) is a Portland poet and spoken-word artist.  The styles of his poems vary from humorous and edgy to mournful laments, often with biting social commentary in the subtext.  By day, he is a bookkeeper and licensed massage therapist, and has two teenagers that he raises, full time.  By night, he puts his significant science and math education to work by writing poems. You can find him on Instagram at Papa_Squatch2229.

  

An open mic will follow the presentations.

The monthly gathering of readers and writers meets the second Tuesday of each month, 6:00-8:00 PM, in the fellowship hall of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church. The events are free and open to the public.

Serial Killers & Serial Storytellers at October’s WordFest

A variety of Northwest writers spin their magic at WordFest on Tuesday, October 8, 6:00-8:00 pm, at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 1428 22nd Avenue in Longview.

WordFest regular and true-crime fan Sharon Cope-Jeffries will read from personal letters exchanged between Sam Wilson and Ted Bundy, offering a look into the mind of the high-profile serial killer. These letters were written between March 4-October 5, 1987. Now deceased, Sam was the younger brother of Penny Lightfoot, writer, WordFest member, and close friend of Sharon’s. Sharon will also read from Sam’s correspondence with true crime writer Ann Rule. 

Sharon is a Longview native, growing up in the Coal Creek area, and graduated from Mark Morris in 1981. A retired hairdresser, she loves creating all kinds of art, supports local, live theater, reads mostly non-fiction and poetry, and obsessively watches true crime programs.         

Tom Larsen will be reading an excerpt from Getting Legal, Book Two in The Wilson Salinas Ecuador Mysteries. In this book, Wilson is hired by the Attorney Arturo Moreno to negotiate the release of the attorney’s grandson who has been kidnapped. Wilson enters the unfamiliar world of wealth, lies, adultery, extortion and murder, where nothing is as it seems.

Tom was born and raised in New Jersey and was awarded a degree in Civil Engineering from Rutgers University. He is the author of six novels in the crime genre. His short fiction has been published in “Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine,” “Mystery Tribune,” “Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine,” and “Black Cat Mystery Magazine.” Tom’s short story, “Pobre Maria” (Poor Maria) appeared in the anthology Best Mystery Stories of the Year 2023 from Mysterious Press.  

Cheryl Landes’ latest book, The Best I Can Do, is about her experiences as a caregiver for her late husband, who had an undiagnosed mental illness that resulted in their marriage falling apart and forcing them into homelessness. The memoir, taking place in Seattle, New York City, and New England, received the Gold Book Award for Nonfiction from Literary Titan and the Silver Book Award for Nonfiction from the Nonfiction Authors Association.

Cheryl is a full-time technical communications consultant, travel writer, and also the author of Rainbows in the SnowBeautiful America’s SeattleBeautiful America’s Idaho, and Those Wild Northwest Days. She lives in Vancouver, WA, where she enjoys hiking, photography, listening to music, and reading.

Columbia
Storytellers

Debz Briske and Leslie Slape head the Columbia Storytellers, a group committed to the tradition of sharing personal tales that connect to us all. Debz, a storyteller and writer of psychological & paranormal horror and personal monologues, will perform her story, “Dancing with Myself: How dancing taught me to walk.”  Leslie, local playwright and author of The Harder Courage and Zorro’s Grape Adventure, will perform, “The Toy Piano: How I learned about the performer’s trance at the age 6.” 

Also, Craig Werner, co-founder of a band of independent filmmakers, will show a short film about local storytelling groups in Portland. (Technical glitches prevented the film being shown at the September WordFest.)

An open mic will follow the presentations.

The monthly gathering of readers and writers meets the second Tuesday of each month, 6:00-8:00 PM, in the fellowship hall of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church. The events are free and open to the public.