Old Enough: Southern Women Artists and Writers on Creativity and Aging

Edited by Jay Lamar , Jennifer Horne
With Katie Lamar Jackson
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Old Enough: Southern Women Artists and Writers on Creativity and Aging

Edited by Jay Lamar , Jennifer Horne
With Katie Lamar Jackson
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Overview

ENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: May 01, 2024
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: University Of Georgia Press
  • ISBN: 9781588385185
  • Dimensions: 7.0" W x 0.8" L x 10.1" H

JAY LAMAR worked in arts and humanities outreach at Auburn University, where she was the founding director of the Alabama Center for the Book, before becoming executive director of the Alabama Bicentennial Commission. She has been a writer and editor for almost thirty years and is coeditor of The Remembered Gate: Memoirs by Alabama Writers. She lives in Auburn, Alabama.

JENNIFER HORNE served as the twelfth Poet Laureate of Alabama, 2017–2021. She is the author of three collections of poems, a short story collection, and a biography, Odyssey of a Wandering Mind: The Strange Tale of Sara Mayfield, Author, and has edited or coedited five volumes of poetry, essays, and stories related to the South. Horne has taught creative writing in a variety of settings and has been recognized for her work by the Alabama State Council on the Arts, the Alabama State Poetry Society, and the Tuscaloosa Arts Council, among others. She lives in Cottondale, Alabama.

CAROLYN SHERER is an American photographer interested in issues of identity. She works in series, making individual images to create a composite portrait of often-marginalized communities. Her past work has featured people with disabilities, people living with HIV, and multiple projects related to the LGBTQ community. She lives in Homewood, Alabama.

KATIE LAMAR JACKSON is a freelance writer and photographer with four decades of experience working as a journalist, author, editor, and educator. Her work has been published in myriad newspapers, magazines, and essay collections and covers a diverse array of topics—gardening, wildlife, the environment, arts and culture, history, biography, and travel among them. She has authored or coauthored eight nonfiction books. After more than twenty-five years at Auburn University, she retired as communications director for Auburn's agricultural and natural resource programs. She currently lives in Opelika, Alabama, where she is working on a variety of creative nonfiction projects.

Emmy-winning writer and producer WENDY REED’s work includes regional documentaries and the TV series Bookmark and Discovering Alabama. Her books include An Accidental Memoir: How I Killed Someone and Other Stories and All Out of Faith and Circling Faith. She has taught in Honors Colleges and is passionate about compelling science-writing, critical thinking, combatting disinformation, and books. Various Universities and the Alabama State Council on the Arts have awarded her writing fellowships. Currently she is a director at UAB’s Alabama BRAIN Lab.

If I had to come up with one word to describe these essays, it would be life-affirming, or maybe age-affirming or art-affirming. All the affirmings. I felt validated and inspired by the voices of other like-minded women artists who write about the call to create, about how they conceive of and create their art, about finding time to pursue art while also parenting and caregiving, adapting to aging, and facing illness. - Amy R. Martin - Southern Review of Books

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