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Woodbury Writes

Woodbury Writes

By Sandy Carlson

Hosted by Sandy Carlson, poet laureate of Woodbury, CT, this podcast features Sandy's conversations with local authors about the art of writing, the books they produce, and the passion that drives them.

Woodbury Writes is produced in collaboration with the Woodbury Public Library. Marla Martin and Ron Fairchild are executive producers.

Production edits by Ed Dzitko.
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Currently playing episode

Writing about the Holocaust - A Visit with Deb Holman

Woodbury WritesNov 27, 2022

00:00
20:24
On Horror for Middle Grade Students - A Visit with Stephanie Klose

On Horror for Middle Grade Students - A Visit with Stephanie Klose

Stephanie Klose, member of the Horror Writers Association (HWA) in Connecticut, is a freelance writer and book reviewer.  Formerly, she was horror editor for Library Journal

Books Stephanie mentioned: Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark by Alvin Schwartz; the HWA anthology Don’t Turn Out the Lights: A Tribute to Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark; Tales to Keep You Up at Night by Dan Poblocki; This Appearing House by Ally Malinenko; Graveyard Girls series by Lisi Harrison and Daniel Kraus; Serwa Boateng’s Guide to Vampire Hunting by Roseanne A. Brown; The Visitors by Greg Howard. 

A couple of additional recommendations from Stephanie: The Clackity by Lora Senf; Ravenous Things by Derrick Chow; A Comb of Wishes by Lisa Stringfellow.

And more: Nominees for the first middle grade Bram Stoker Awards, Summer Scares resources, and suggestions for middle grade novels to adults


Sep 30, 202321:06
A Visit with John Opalenik - A Horror Genre Reading List
Sep 10, 202359:23
On Writing Fiction for Teens that Honors Them - A Visit with S.J. Valentine
Aug 20, 202327:58
On Caring for Animals Despite the Human Obstacles - A Visit with Tracy Bittner, Veterinary Technician and Author
Aug 18, 202330:43
On Writing about War and The Drive to Survive - A Visit with Anne Howard

On Writing about War and The Drive to Survive - A Visit with Anne Howard

Anne Howard has been a practicing attorney for 20 years, including two years as a judicial decision writer for the federal government. Howard holds a bachelor of arts degree in English literature from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, and a law degree from the University of Cincinnati College of Law.

In addition to writing Escape From Mariupol: A Survivor's True Story with Adoriana Marik, Howard has also written His Garden: Conversations with a Serial Killer. She wrote The Ghost in Her, Book One in the Ungilded Series, under the pen name Anika Savoy. Proceeds from the sale of Escape will benefit Adoriana. She will be discussing her work at The Norfolk Hub, 2 Station Place, Norfolk Historic District, Connecticut, on Aug. 8, from 6 to 7 p.m.

Co-author Adoriana Marik will have an art exhibit at The Norfolk Hub Sept. 3, from 2 to 5 p.m. 

Jul 29, 202341:10
When the past sets the course of your story - A Visit with Richard Seltzer

When the past sets the course of your story - A Visit with Richard Seltzer

Author Richard Seltzer lives in Milford, Connecticut, where he writes novels, essays, and comedy full-time. Richard graduated from Yale and earned a master of arts degree in comparative literature from the University of Massachusetts. At Yale, he had creative writing courses with Robert Penn Warren and Joseph Heller. He has written and published two dozen books, which are available on Amazon.



Jun 07, 202334:41
Connecting through Writing with the People Around You - A Visit with David Bibbey

Connecting through Writing with the People Around You - A Visit with David Bibbey

David is a talented Emmy winning writer, producer, and broadcast TV host, known for Connecticut's Cultural Treasures (2013) and All Things Connecticut (2015). Skilled in front of and behind the camera, he also is known for bringing out the best in people, capturing the ‘on camera’ moments, ‘telling the tale’ with pith, wit, charm and empathy. A British citizen with ability to work in Europe and USA, David has lived in Connecticut since 2009.

Jun 07, 202332:29
On Turning a Moment in a Movement - Justice Southbury

On Turning a Moment in a Movement - Justice Southbury

Justice Southbury is a social justice initiative organized by local volunteers.

Julia Bower Richardson is the founder of Justice Southbury. Julia is an undergraduate student at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY, majoring in Human Development and Psychology and minoring in Inequality Studies. She is a lifelong resident of Southbury, graduating among the top ten students of her class from Pomperaug High School in 2019. She has always been passionate about social justice movements, specifically racial equality, women’s healthcare rights, and gun control.

Rick Richardson is a partner in the Woodbury law firm Giuliano Richardson Sfara LLC. He focuses his practice in the areas of divorce, custody, family law, and representation of victims of serious injuries. Rick is a member of the American Association for Justice, the Connecticut Trial Lawyers Association, the American and Connecticut Bar Associations, and Fellow of the American and Connecticut Bar Foundations. He is past president of the Waterbury Bar Association Family Law Committee, president of the Woodbury Business Association, and a member of the Southbury Business Association.

Mar 25, 202333:09
On Writing & Perseverance: From Idea, to Book, to Movie - A Visit with Chris Belden

On Writing & Perseverance: From Idea, to Book, to Movie - A Visit with Chris Belden

Chris Belden was born and raised in Canton, Ohio. He is the author of Shriver, a satirical novel soon to be a major motion picture titled A Little White Lie, starring Michael Shannon and Kate Hudson. He attended the University of Michigan, where he received a BA in Film & Video Studies. After college, he worked lousy day jobs for several years while playing drums in the band The Slang. He later moved to New York City, where he worked in the publishing industry and started writing fiction in earnest. His work has appeared in numerous publications, including American Fiction, SN Review, and Skidrow Penthouse. He is coauthor of the feature film Amnesia, and has also written extensively for the stage. He received an MFA from the Fairfield University MFA Program, and has taught writing at Fairfield University, as well as at such nontraditional venues as senior centers, soup kitchens, and a maximum-security prison. Belden lives in Connecticut with his family.

Feb 26, 202325:32
On Writing for Kids and Young Adults - A Visit with Katie Carroll

On Writing for Kids and Young Adults - A Visit with Katie Carroll

Katie L. Carroll is an award-winning author who has published seven novels over the past 10 years. Her young adult fantasy Elixir Bound was the winner of the 2019 Connecticut Indie Author Project award. She is a Library Board member, and she loves to present writing and publishing workshops to students and adults. Her books are Elixir Bound (Elixir Chronicles book 1), Elixir Saved (Elixir Chronicles book 2), Pirate Island, Witch Test, Mommy's Night Before Christmas, The Bedtime Knight, and Selfies From Mars: The True Story of Mars Rover Opportunity (releasing in February 20223). You can purchase her books there as well as from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Bookshop.org.

Feb 25, 202334:57
On Writing and Faith - A Visit with Jennifer Covello

On Writing and Faith - A Visit with Jennifer Covello

Jennifer Covello is an award-winning author with more than 30 years of marketing and communications expertise in the development and execution of integrated marketing communications, copywriting, editing, and strategic marketing. Jennifer holds a B.S. degree in Management Information Systems from Indiana University of Pennsylvania, an M.B.A. in Marketing Management from Pace University (NY), and a bachelors in Theology from Life Christian University. A native of Long Island, New York, Jennifer resides in Fairfield County, Connecticut.

Feb 25, 202325:20
On Writing Nazi Escape, Superman, and Marilyn Monroe - A Visit with Helene Stapinski and Bonnie Siegler

On Writing Nazi Escape, Superman, and Marilyn Monroe - A Visit with Helene Stapinski and Bonnie Siegler

Host Sandy Carlson visits with best-selling author Helene Stapinski and co-author Bonnie Siegler of The American Way: A True Story of Nazi Escape, Superman, and Marilyn Monroe.

Family lore had it that author Bonnie Siegler’s grandfather Jules crossed paths in Midtown Manhattan late one night in 1954 with Marilyn Monroe, her white dress flying up around her as she filmed a scene for The Seven Year Itch. Jules Schulback had his home movie camera with him, capturing what would become the only surviving footage of that legendary night. Bonnie wasn’t sure she quite believed her grandfather’s story...until, cleaning out his apartment, she found the film reel. That discovery would prompt her to investigate her grandfather’s seemingly tall tales —and lead her in pursuit of a remarkable, poignant piece of forgotten history bridging old Hollywood, the birth of the comic book, and the Holocaust.

The journey began when Siegler contacted reporter Helene Stapinski in 2017, which led to a viral internet hit in The New York Times -- “The Lost Footage of Marilyn Monroe.” Stapinski and Siegler connected instantly and spent years researching and hand-crafting The American Way. The result is a colorful, vivacious story of two very different men both striving to make their way in New York – their lives intersecting with a glittering array of luminaries, from Billy Wilder and Joe DiMaggio to Superman creators Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel. The American Way is a kaleidoscopic tale of hope and reinvention, of daring escapes and fake identities, of big dreams and the magic of movies, and what it means to be a real-life Superman.

Feb 24, 202322:39
On Writing Horror - A Visit with Thomas Tessier

On Writing Horror - A Visit with Thomas Tessier

Author Thomas Tessier has been a journalist and publishing director. Born in Waterbury, Conn., Tom lived in Dublin for six years and in London for seven. Over the course of his career, he has written novels, novellas, short stories, poems, and plays. His books are available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Ebay, Audible, and Apple Books. 

Feb 18, 202321:27
On Writing Historical Fiction - A Visit with Jackson Kuhl

On Writing Historical Fiction - A Visit with Jackson Kuhl

Jackson Kuhl is a writer and author specializing in American history, biography, and historical fiction. His novel A Season of Whispers (Aurelia Leo) is a gothic mystery set in a 19th-century utopian commune. Kirkus Reviews called it “a slim but delightful tale of terror set in transcendentalist New England.” Kuhl’s first book, Samuel Smedley, Connecticut Privateer (The History Press), is a biography of the American Revolution’s most daring sea captain. Kuhl has spoken about pirates and privateers at bookstores, libraries, historical societies, museums, and private clubs. Kuhl has written for Atlas Obscura, Electric Literature, Journal of the American Revolution, National Geographic News, the New York Post, and other publications. For more than a decade he contributed to a pair of children’s magazines about archaeology and history. He also wrote a regular column on dinosaurs.

Kuhl lives in coastal Connecticut. He has contributed to local outlets such as Connecticut Magazine, Fairfield County Weekly, Fairfield Minuteman, and the Stamford Advocate. His historical fiction has appeared in Professor Charlatan Bardot’s Travel Anthology, Love Letters to Poe, and other anthologies. Kuhl has also ghostwritten a number of memoirs and worked as a freelance web producer in the field of education. Jackson’s work is available on his website, Goodreads, where you can find alternative retailers such as Barnes & Noble, AbeBooks, IndieBound, and more. He will be appearing with other members of the Connecticut chapter of the Horror Writers Association at events throughout Connecticut.

Feb 11, 202328:48
On Writing for Children - A Visit with Sylvia Crunden
Feb 11, 202322:13
Writing for Interaction - A Visit with Carl Baker
Feb 11, 202316:49
On W.P. Kinsella - A Visit with William Steele
Feb 04, 202341:43
On Writing Baseball - A Visit with Paul Hensler

On Writing Baseball - A Visit with Paul Hensler

Paul Hensler worked for many years in information technology.  A lifelong Connecticut resident, Paul is a baseball enthusiast of the period from the 1960s to the 1980s. His publications include Pride of the Greyhounds: Ray Legenza and 64 Straight Wins By Connecticut’s Best High School Baseball Team (2022);  Gathering Crowds: Catching Baseball Fever in the New Age of Free Agency (Rowman & Littlefield 2021); and “Swagger Comes to Town: The Evolution of Attitude at Shea Stadium in the 1980s,” in David Krell, ed., The New York Mets in Popular Culture: Critical Essays (McFarland Publishers 2020), Bob Steele on the Air: The Life of Connecticut's Beloved Broadcaster (McFarland Publishers 2019); “Mr. October: Cheers, Reggie! Everybody Knows Your Name!,” in David Krell, ed., The New York Yankees in Popular Culture: Critical Essays (McFarland Publishers 2019); The New Boys of Summer: Baseball's Radical Transformation in the Late Sixties (Rowman & Littlefield 2017); and The American League in Transition, 1965 – 1975: How Competition Thrived When the Yankees Didn’t (McFarland Publishers 2012). His books are available on Amazon.

Feb 04, 202342:40
On Writing for Kids and Encouraging Civil Discourse - Visit with Stephen Bowling

On Writing for Kids and Encouraging Civil Discourse - Visit with Stephen Bowling

Stephen G. Bowling runs a non-profit organization called The Prometheum Foundation that has a high school program called the Franklin Forum. The program teaches civility in civil discourse and the ability to disagree and still be agreeable even in a passionate exchange of views. Steve's children's books are Calvin the Christmas Tree, Simon's Tree Party, Simon's Search for the Scary Dragon, and Simon's Rocket to the Moon. Steve’s next book, Grandma’s Haunted House, is coming out soon.

Jan 28, 202324:55
Writing Novels, Writing Poetry, and Creating Art - A Visit with Steve Parlato

Writing Novels, Writing Poetry, and Creating Art - A Visit with Steve Parlato

Poet, author, artist, and professor Steven Parlato has taught all levels of English and writing at Naugatuck Valley Community College in Waterbury, Connecticut, for more than 20 years. He also teaches Intro to Drawing at the school, where he started as a teacher of graphic design. He has two gritty, realistic young adult novels, The Namesake and The Precious Dreadful. He has also had poetry published by several journals, including Freshwater, Peregrine, Borderlands, and Margie. His collage series, They Are Not Disposable, has been exhibited in Connecticut and Ohio.

A lifelong Connecticut resident, Steve lives in Middlebury with his wife, artist and writer Janet, and his grown children, Ben and Jillian. Steve has been involved in theater productions throughout Connecticut, playing roles ranging from the Scarecrow to Macbeth. His novels are available through Simon & Schuster and can be purchased via most online booksellers. 

Steve will be the February Artist of the Month at Waterbury’s Silas Bronson Library, where his collage series will be displayed during Black History Month. He will be offering a program at the library on February 8 at 6:00 pm.  Steve is always looking for opportunities to exhibit his artwork and to facilitate writing workshops or book discussions throughout Connecticut.

Jan 22, 202336:15
Writing Historical Novels - A Visit with Gioia Diliberto
Jan 14, 202329:60
On Writing Horror Fiction - A Visit with John Opalenik

On Writing Horror Fiction - A Visit with John Opalenik

John Opalenik has released four books, including the novellas The Primeval and The Primeval II, The Blue Beneath the Mountain, and Among the Willows & Other Strange Tales, a collection of horror western short stories. John is an active member of the Horror Writer's Association. Outside of writing, he is a teacher and lives with his wife, their dog Zoey, and their son Ben. Order his books online or in person through River Bend Bookshop in Glastonbury and West Hartford, CT, as well as on Amazon. Visit his website to learn more about his work and to find links to his various social media presences, and even listen to the first chapter of The Primeval II. Stay tuned: John and the HWA are working on a few events, including some halfway-to-Halloween events. 

Jan 08, 202323:27
The Role of Place in Memoir - A Visit with Bruce Coffin, Part 2
Dec 25, 202238:48
The Poetry of Philip Larkin - A Visit with Bruce Coffin, Part 1
Dec 25, 202218:52
Writing for Kids - A Visit with Chase Taylor

Writing for Kids - A Visit with Chase Taylor

Waterbury resident Chase Taylor writes and illustrates his books featuring the “Letter Critters.”  He also hosts the podcast The Social Chase and can be found reading and sharing his work in area schools.  His website contains resources to support learning from his books.  Find out more about Chase on LinkedIn.  His books are available on Amazon.

Woodbury Writes is a production of Woodbury Public Library. Marla Martin and Ron Fairchild are the executive producers. Sandy Carlson, poet laureate of Woodbury, CT, is the host.

Nov 27, 202208:47
Writing Super Fun Day Stories - A Visit with Sivan Hong
Nov 27, 202223:36
Writing Anne Boleyn - A Visit with Mary Doucette
Nov 27, 202225:17
Writing to Engage - A Visit with Barbara Connery
Nov 27, 202227:14
Writing about Touching the Divine - A Visit with Avye Andonellis
Nov 27, 202225:47
Writing about Business and Travel - A VIsit with Mark Hehl
Nov 27, 202217:37
Writing about the Holocaust - A Visit with Deb Holman
Nov 27, 202220:24
Writing about Succeeding without a Degree - A Visit with Claudia Fox
Nov 27, 202223:17
Writing in Search of Home - A Visit with Deborah Nash Ott
Nov 27, 202223:41
Writing about Aging - A Visit with Cindy Eastman
Nov 27, 202223:41
Writing with Love and Concern - A Visit with Lin Northrup

Writing with Love and Concern - A Visit with Lin Northrup

Lin Northrup of Woodbury is a retired educator who has taught both children and adults.  She continues to hold writing workshops in the area.  Her novel Leela and the Forest of Light is imbued with her love of nature and concern for the environment.  Visit Lin's Amazon page.

Woodbury Writes is a production of Woodbury Public Library. Marla Martin and Ron Fairchild are the executive producers. Sandy Carlson, poet laureate of Woodbury, CT, is the host.

Nov 19, 202236:26
Writing War Stories - A Visit with Charles McNair, MD
Nov 19, 202229:48
Writing About What's Right - Visit with Ed Edelson

Writing About What's Right - Visit with Ed Edelson

In this episode, host Sandy Carlson (www.sandycarlson.net) speaks with Ed Edelson, a former first selectman of Southbury and a retired businessman and innkeeper, about Lois’s Story, Ed’s self-published book for children that tells how the people of Southbury kept the Nazis from building a military training camp in the Kettletown area in 1937. 

This is a story of civic engagement that Ed has worked doggedly to put in the public eye and keep it there. The story is part of the Region 15 curriculum for fourth graders, and curriculum resources are available from the Connecticut State Department of Education. Check out resources about the book, the curriculum, and the time in history that the book recounts.

Woodbury Writes is a production of Woodbury Public Library. Marla Martin and Ron Fairchild are the executive producers. Sandy Carlson, poet laureate of Woodbury, CT, is the host. 

Nov 11, 202226:23
Resources #2 - Interview with a Librarian - Ron Fairchild

Resources #2 - Interview with a Librarian - Ron Fairchild

Learn about some of the resources available at, and through, Woodbury Public Library in this conversation with Ron Fairchild, reference librarian.

Nov 05, 202215:29
Resources #1 - Interview with a Librarian - Marla Martin

Resources #1 - Interview with a Librarian - Marla Martin

Learn about some of the resources available through Woodbury Public Library with Marla Martin, adult librarian and program coordinator.

Nov 05, 202211:52