Anthologies
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Williamson
County
Authors
Adaptations
Anthologies
Literary Projects
Anthologies
Our Voices, 1995 Williamson
County
Literary Review
The
following Williamson County authors are included in this volume of
short stories, essays, and poems: Ruth A. Bloing,
Nancy Fletcher-Blume, Lucas B. Boyd, Stephen Cavitt, Donnie Clemons, Louise
Colln, Richard B. Davies, Gary Frazier, Margaret Fuller, Kristin Hammer, Randy
Hammer, James Richard Hanback, Evelyn Frank Hanna, Angela Humphrey, Nancy Day
Hutcheson, Shawnda Leigh James, Terri Wood Jerkins, Mel Maurer, Beverley
Overbey, Bill Peach, Marion Bolick Perutelli, David Petschulat, Lynn Phillips,
Kathy Rhodes, I. Scott Sawyer, Kimberly Antoinette Cotham Smith, Jim Gray
Strickland, Marcia E. Williams, and Wanda Andrews Wright.
Discovering by Writing, 1996
Members of Writing, Etc., a writing group that meets every two
weeks at the College Grove Senior Enrichment Center, put their insights and memories to paper in
the forms of essays, poetry, memoirs, and fiction.
Lections and Other Pieces Along Our Paths, 1997
Our Voices, 1997 Williamson
County
Literary Review
The
following Williamson County authors are included in this volume of
short stories, essays, and poems: Dan Armfield,
Barbara Bouthier, Alan W. Bowen, Reginald A. Bowes, Doris Boyce, Lucas G. Boyd,
Matt Brown, Linda Bull, Kecia Burcham, Louise Colln, Nancy Fletcher-Blume,
Janis Foster, Gary Frazier, Margaret Fuller, Evelyn Frank Hanna, Stephen T.
Harvey, Kay Hodge, Caroline Glyn Horner, Cate Howard, Susie Sims Irvin, Heidi
Sara Jamar, Michell Scott Karnes, Erika Leigh Kendrick, Stephanie Mae Kindrick,
Mary Elizabeth Marley, Debby Mayne, Jim McGregor, Janet McKeown, Jennifer L.
Muller, Joyce A. O’Hara-Lee, Beverly Overbey, Bill
Peach, Sela Pearson, Marion Perutelli,
Michelle M. Poag, Rober M. Ranchino, Joan Lund Reesman,
Kathy Hardy Rhodes, Scott Sawyer, J.D. Sibley, Clay Stafford, Kathryn L.
Steele, Cindy Sterling, R.M. Thaler, Rita Wood
Venable, Jean Brown Waggener, C. Sybil Waldrop, Mark Thomas Whitten, Tim Wibking, Marcia E. Williams, and Wanda A. Wright.
Our Voices, 1998 Williamson
County
Literary Review
The following Williamson County authors are included in this volume of
short stories, essays, and poems: Dan Armfield, Barbara Bouthier, Lucas
G. Boyd, Judy Bumbalough, Louise Colln,
Warren Denney, Susan Fisher, Nancy Fletcher-Blume,
Marian Gospodarek, Joseph Griffey,
Cate Howard, Kellie Jaffrey, Janet McKewon, Barbara Moscato, Joyce
O’Hara-Lee, Marian Perutelli, Kathy Hardy Rhodes, J.
Scott Sawyer, J. D. Sibley, Clay Stafford, Kathryn Steele, L. K. Browning, Jean
Brown Waggener, Mark Whitten, Tim Wibking, Marcia
Williams, and Wanda Wright.
Seasons of the Heart, 1998
Morning
Light: Meditations to Awaken the Dawn,
1999
Twelve
men of the Empty Hands Fellowship contributed to this inspirational book based
on an album by Steve Green. They wrote from their various traditions and
individual styles, and the result is a reflection of much of the religious life
of Franklin—intense, various, and filled with love.
The authors include:
Steve Green, Tom
Moucka, Hewitt Sawyers, Bob J. Smith, William Lane,
Scott Roley, Rev. Chris Williamson, Denny Denson,
Rev. C. Michael Smith, Elder Walter M. Amos, Jr., Rev. Benjamin W. Johnson Sr.,
and Michael Card.
Dew South, 2000
Wordsmiths,
Ink, a group of novelists, poets, memoir writers, essayists, and inspirational
writers, pooled their work and created two volumes.
Hands to Heart, 2000
The Poets of St. Paul’s: An Anthology, 2000
Fifteen poets, all present or past
members of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church contributed to this
anthology. The editors divided the book into sections such as “Spiritual
Experience,” “Nature,” and “Families.” The first section consists of poems on
the architectural features of St. Paul’s sanctuary; the last
section is a group of light-hearted pieces.
Patchwork: An Uncommon Quilt
of Words,
2001
An anthology of four Williamson County authors: Marilyn Mitchell,
W. Keith Sloan, Florine Robinson, and William
Fletcher Allen, who pooled their poetry, essays, and memoirs to form a book
suited to its title.
Crockett Character, 2002
Crockett Elementary School librarian, Julia Andrews, organized
this effort to produce a book. Each class, kindergarten through fifth grade,
had the following list of words given them as subjects: responsibility, caring,
perseverance, citizenship, trustworthiness, and courage.
Chocolate for a Woman’s Soul Volume II, 2003
An anthology of 77 stories by
different authors compiled by Kay Allenbaugh, creator
of the best-selling Chocolate series, includes “The Wedding Hankie” by Williamson County author Kathy Hardy Rhodes.
Writings from the Heart, 2003
Muscadine Lines: A Southern Anthology, 2006
Kathy Rhodes of Franklin is the Contributing Editor of an anthology of 28 writers, based on the online magazine Muscadines Lines : A Southern Journal. The following eleven Williamson County authors are included in this volume of short stories, essays, and poems: Susie Dunham, Nancy Fletcher-Blume, Joyce A. O. Lee, S. R. Lee, Ginger Manley, Louise Colln, Ben Norwood, Marion Bolick Perutelli, Kathy Rhodes, C. K. Speroff, and Kristin O'Donnell Tubb.
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Literary Projects:
Histories
Burwood, 1986
Compiled by Anita Harris Grissom,
Pat Gray Logan, Mary Rainey Martin, and Judy Grigsby Hayes, this spiral
soft-back book originated as a Homecoming 1986 community history project and contains
historical information on the community of Burwood,
as well as many photographs.
Flat Creek: Its Land and Its People, 1986
Ennis Wallace, Sr., Jo Ann Reed
Petty, Marjorie Eady Redmond, and Martha Ann Jackson
Hazelwood were co-authors and compilers of this history of the community of
Flat Creek. Mr. Wallace was born on the upper watershed of Flat Creek near the
Revolutionary War grant of his ancestor, and he maintained his family farm in
Flat Creek. Mrs. Petty grew up on her family’s farm in Flat Creek. Mrs. Redmond
was born on the headwaters of Flat Creek and grew up in the community. After
many years in Nashville, she and her husband retired to the Eady homeplace. Mrs. Hazelwood, a
native of Franklin, married into a founding family of Flat
Creek. A Homecoming 1986 project, the book
includes formal histories of founding families and their local descendants and
of the community’s churches and schools. It also includes accounts of events
and institutions that make up the community’s shared past and personal memoirs
of “the good old days.”
Franklin:
A Photographic Recollection,
Vol. 1, 1989.
After Bob and Jackie Canaday acquired the extensive negative and print file of
their predecessor, T. W. “Woody" Dickerson, they published two volumes of
old Franklin and Williamson County photographs.
Homespun Tales: The Battle
of Franklin, 1989.
Homespun
Tales was a project of the Pioneers’ Corner Association and First Citizens
Bank of Franklin. It began as an editing of the master's
thesis of Nancy Amelia Greer Miller and contained her accounts of 1930
interviews with eyewitnesses of the 1864 battle and some written accounts of
the battle, both private and published. New sources of information led to some
"fleshing out" of the original material.
Sue Berry, Martha Fuqua, and Pam
Oglesby led the project with help from Jim Crutchfield, Virginia Bowman, and
other local historians.
Nolensville 1797-1987: Reflections of a Tennessee
Town, 1989
Compiled by Peggy Stephenson Wilson
and produced by the Nolensville Recreation Center as a Homecoming 1986 project, this
volume is in coffee-table format with photographs and articles. The following
persons contributed to the work: Liz Burke Plattsmier,
Tette Moody Mosley, Carrie Stephenson Ozburn, Rebekah Hosse Clark, Kimi Lucile Brown,
Jessie Boyd Brown, Billie Ann Epps White, Harold Allen Brown, Marianne Wilson
Blankenship, Amanda Coffman, Dorothy Husband Arnold, Jane Hudgens
Williams, David Haywood.
Main Street: A Tasteful Passage through Historic Franklin, 1996
The Junior Auxiliary of Franklin published this cookbook as a
fundraiser. Each of twelve sections is opened with a color photograph and brief
history of one of Franklin's old buildings. The flyleaf contains an old
map showing the location of each of these structures. Graphics throughout
relate to architectural details of Main Street and of establishments
contributing recipes.
Franklin:
A Photographic Recollection,
Vol. 2, 1997.
Physicians of Williamson
County:
A Legacy of Healing 1797-1997,
1998.
This book “is a narrative and
pictorial history of medicine in Williamson County, extending from just after the
Revolutionary War until the present day.” Sponsored by Williamson Medical Center as a fortieth anniversary and
coincidentally a city and county bicentennial project, this book has text by
Hudson Alexander and photographs by Bob Canaday with
research assistance from Louise Lynch and Rick Warwick.
Soul Food: A Story to Tell, 1999
The Education Committee of the African American Heritage Society,
with the support of the Heritage Foundation, produced a cookbook which not only
includes recipes from many of the best cooks in the local black community, but
also features written sketches of some of the best known and most interesting
of these cooks. Malinda Taylor chaired the committee,
conducted the interviews and wrote the sketches that accompany the recipes. Her
son Houston Taylor, Jr. did the photography. Lloyd DeBerry
handled the graphics, Lillian Hamilton was business
manager, and Laverne
Holland was typist. Also contributing were Jackie Sturdivan, Thelma Battle, Houston Taylor, Sr., William
Coffee, and Robert Hamilton.
Franklin: Tennessee's Handsomest Town, 1999
Written by James Crutchfield and Robert Holladay, this scholarly,
well-illustrated history was funded as a bicentennial project of the City of Franklin published by Providence
House Publishers.
Spring Hill: Everybody’s Got a Story, 2001
Friends of the Spring Hill Library
published this collection of simple reminiscences from citizens of Spring Hill
to record the traditional life of the community as it faces growth and change.
The Natchez
Trace Adventure Book
Amy Reader, Connie Eddy, and
Charlotte Anderson edited work by students, parents, and faculty of Hillsboro School in Leiper's
Fork to create this entertaining book about the history and the flora and fauna
of the Natchez Trace and of their own neighborhood.
National Register Properties, Williamson
County, Tennessee: A Joint Effort of the Heritage Foundation of Franklin and
Williamson County, the Williamson County Historical Society, and Williamson
County Tourism.
Compiled and edited from the Original
Williamson County National Register Nominations by Mary Shearer Pearce, Rick
Warwick, and Jeri McLeland Hasselbring.
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Adaptations:
The following Williamson County authors participated in the
Classics Adaptation Project of Dalmation Press,
issuing great classics in grade level editions.
Fletcher-Blume, Nancy-- adapted:
Caprio, Mary-- adapted
:
Colln, Louise-- adapted:
-
A
Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett.
-
Rebecca
of Sunnybrook Farm by Kate Douglas
Wiggin.
-
Black Beauty by Anna Sewell.
Hill,
Laura-- adapted:
Knight,
Kathryn-- adapted:
Stafford,
Clay-- adapted:
-
The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain.
-
White Fang by Jack
London.
-
The Wind in the Willows by
Kenneth Grahame.
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Authors