Lewisburg Literary Festival 2024
Presents
THE PORCH POETS

friday, aug 2
6pm
Visitor’s Center


Over the course of several years, four West Virginia poets, who’ve been friends for years, gathered in a beautiful place in Pocahontas County to sit on a porch to talk, live, breathe, and create poetry for days at a time. Sherrell Wigal, Cheryl Denise, Susanna Connelly Holstein, and Kirk Judd are those poets.  They found the process to be a deep, reflective dive into their own approach to the art, written at their own pace, with sharp, insightful input from one another. The end result is a 2023 chapbook called Porch Poems which contains some of the output of those sessions. The poems each have distinctive voices, but they are not attributed in the text to the individuals, emphasizing the exceptional bond these poets established with each other and with their surroundings.

The Lewisburg Literary Festival will present a one hour reading by these four Porch Poets, featuring not only a few of the poems they wrote for Porch Poems, but a sampling of some they have penned together since that book’s publication.

The reading will take place at 6 p.m. at the Greenbrier County Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, as the first festival event of the 2024 Lewisburg Literary Festival.  

Of the Porch Poets, all but Holstein have previously taught poetry workshops at the Literary Festival.  This year, Sherrell Wigal will become the first repeat presenter in LLF history, returning to teach a new workshop on Saturday morning at 9:30 a.m. 

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

Cheryl Denise grew up in Elmira, Ontario. She went to the red brick Mennonite church beside the white clapboard Old Order Meetinghouse. After nursing school, she went into Voluntary Service and worked as a public health nurse in La Jara, Colorado. She fell for her future husband while helping to make suppers at the Homeless Shelter where he was volunteering. Now they live in the intentional community of Shepherds Field, near Philippi, WV, in a timber framed home they built when they were young and brimming with energy. Cheryl is the author of the poetry books, “Fences” (2022), “What’s in the Blood” (2012), and “I Saw God Dancing” (2005), all published by Cascadia Publishing House, DreamSeeker Books, Telford, PA. She has a spoken word poetry CD, “Leaving Eden” (2012) available on Amazon. She enjoys hiking, canoeing, biking, and cross-country skiing with her husband, Mike Miller. Visit her on Facebook at Cheryl Denise, poet.

Susanna Connelly Holstein’s work has appeared in the poetry anthologies “Fed From the Blade” (Woodland Press), “Voices on Unity: Coming Together, Falling Apart” and “Diner Stories” (Mountain State Press) as well as in short story anthologies and online journals.  She was a columnist for 10 years for the regional magazine “Two-Lane Livin’” and has been blogging since 2007. A traditional storyteller and ballad singer, Susanna has performed as “Granny Sue” Holstein for national venues and to audiences across West Virginia.  In 2015 Susanna was named a West Virginia History Hero. When not writing or performing, she sells antiques and works in her gardens in Jackson County.

Kirk Judd, founding member of West Virginia Writers, Inc., has lived, worked, trout fished and wandered around in West Virginia all his life. Kirk was a member of the Appalachian Literary League, a former president (and JUG recipient) of West Virginia Writers, Inc., and is a founding member of and creative writing instructor for Allegheny Echoes, Inc., dedicated to the support and preservation of WV cultural heritage arts. Author of 3 collections of poetry “Field of Vision” (1986), “Tao-Billy” (1996), and “My People Was Music” (2014), and a co-editor of the widely acclaimed anthology, “Wild, Sweet Notes – 50 Years of West Virginia Poetry 1950 – 1999”, he is widely published. He has been featured three times on American Public Radio on “The Poet and The Poem” with WV native Grace Cavalieri and has appeared on the acclaimed public radio show Mountain Stage. Kirk was honored to be one of 5 readers selected for the installation ceremony of Louise McNeill Pease as WV Poet Laureate in 1979. He is internationally known for his performance work combining poetry and old-time music and has performed poetry in Ireland and across West Virginia at fairs, concerts, and festivals since the 1970s.

Sherrell Runnion Wigal is a poet originally from Roane County, West Virginia, now living in Wood County. In past years she served as director of the West Virginia Writers’ annual writers conference and has been the past coordinator of the literary events tent at the West Virginia State Folk Festival. She conducts numerous creative writing workshops throughout the area. Sherrell has presented her work throughout West Virginia and surrounding states. Her list of performances includes the Arthur Brandon Humanities Lecture series at Alderson-Broaddus College, the Rhythm and Rhyme series at Kanawha County Public Library, the annual Vandalia Gathering and the Stonewall Jackson Jubilee. Her writing appears in many publications throughout the country. Much of Sherrell’s poetry reflects her love, appreciation and connection to nature, people and the cultural heritage of West Virginia.

PRAISE FOR PORCH POEMS:

Porch Poems is a collection of multiple voices writing from the same, beloved place with keen descriptions, humor, and blessings. The four poets—Denise, Holstein, Judd, and Wigal—are each importantly engaged with the natural world around them. There are many birds, rivers, skies, and storms in these poems, and also objects from the human world—rusty spoons, wooden rockers, and stopped clocks. Porch Poems offers many surprises and leaves us with the rare good feeling of a small community making art together where “the spirit rises from everything.”

—Maggie Anderson, two-time NEA Fellowship recipient and founder
and editor of the Wick Poetry First Book Series and the Wick Poetry Chapbook Series.

Porch Poems is an ars poetica that invokes the great tradition of “porch sitting,” in which we are invited to sit with four of West Virginia’s best known and most beloved poets. These are poems that last, full of the natural world, made especially for those moments when time slows to a stop. These poets are the keepers of mysteries and wonder, and their poems burn with imagination as they move with ease between the borders of the past and future.

—Renée K. Nicholson, Director, WVU Humanities Center
author of Roundabout Directions to Lincoln Center and Fierce and Delicate