<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>27 Views of Wilmington: The Port City in Prose & Poetry is the latest in Eno's popular series of local anthologies. The book showcases the literary life of one of North Carolina's most popular cities by featuring the works of more than two dozen hometown writers.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><em>27 Views of Wilmington: The Port City in Prose & Poetry</em> is the latest in Eno's popular series of local anthologies. The book showcases the literary life of one of North Carolina's most popular cities by featuring the works of more than two dozen hometown writers. The result is a mosaic of perspectives about life in the Port City in a variety of genres--journalism, history, fiction, poetry, and more. <br /> <br /> To date, contributors include Wiley Cash, Nan Graham, Jason Mott, Gwenyfar Rohler, Melodie Homer, Kevin Mauer, Virginia Holman, Dana Sachs, Rhonda Bellamy, Susan T. Block, Hannah Dela Cruz Abrams, Emily Smith, John Jeremiah Sullivan, Bertha Boykin Todd, Philip Gerard, and more.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>The introduction of <em>27 Views of Wilmington: The Port City in Prose & Poetry</em> is by my favorite North Carolina humorist and syndicated columnist Celia Rivenbark. And views include those by Ecotone editor Emily Louise Smith ( Winter light spares nothing on this island. ), novelist Jason Mott talking about the frigid early morning he lost his virginity in the backseat of a car in Hugh MacRae Park); Wendy Brenner on the Serpentarium and its intrepid owner; and Jim Leutze, former chancellor of UNC Wilmington, on what happened in Wilmington in 1898. If you want to get to know a town the way its residents know it, this is the book to buy. And, as they used to say on TV, Hey, kids. Why not collect the whole set! --Dannye Romine Powell, Charlotte Observer, Nov. 5, 2015<br /> <br /> The recently-published anthology, <em>27 Views of Wilmington: The Port City in Prose and Poetry<em>, compiles literary pieces from 27 accomplished, local writers--in addition to an introduction by Celia Rivenbark. It s produced by Eno Publishers--a very small non-profit that puts out about two books a year. <em>27 Views of Wilmington<em> is the last in the 27 Views series, which now has eight different editions, spotlighting Charlotte, Chapel Hill, Asheville, Raleigh, and Greensboro among others. In writing about the collection, Ben Steelman of the <em>StarNews<em> said, This book is a tribute to the depth of our literary bench. --CoastLine, Nov. 19, 2015<br /> <br /> Call me chauvinistic, but I think ours might be the best of the lot. This book is a tribute to the depth of our literary bench. Eno had so much writing talent to call upon, they didn t even use Clyde Edgerton. They do, however, publish the likes of John Jeremiah Sullivan ( Pulphead ), Wiley Cash ( This Dark Road to Mercy ), Jason Mott ( The Returned ), Karen Bender ( Refund ), Dana Sachs ( The Secret of the Nightingale Palace ), Wendy Brenner, Philip Gerard ( Cape Fear Rising ) and more. Celia Rivenbark wrote the introduction. There is, in short, plenty of good stuff in here. The anthology, however, poses quite a few questions. What, exactly, is Wilmington? There s plenty about Downtown, of course. For poet Emily Louise Smith, though, Wilmington means jogging on and around Wrightsville Beach. Hannah Dela Cruz Abrams writes about heading to Holden Beach for seafood, then swimming in the Brunswick surf on a rare night of bioluminescence. Cash takes the trek to Fort Fisher and, naturally, chats with some re-enactors. Daniel Ray Norris heads as far as White Lake.<br /> <br /> Another question: When is Wilmington, or which Wilmington do you mean? For Smith, Wings is a beach landmark. (She s too young to remember Newell s, which came before it.) Nan Graham -- who was in the Azalea Festival court the year of Esther Williams and Andy Griffith -- remembers the old Fergus Ark, the floating restaurant which predated the battleship. Rivenbark remembers the old Princess Street newsstand and its mascot, the yellow cat Rusty, who used to frustrate aging roues by curling up asleep on the girlie magazines. At its best, 27 Views is like a gemstone that reflects off different facets. Jason Mott has funny and poignant memories of making out in a parked Honda in Hugh MacRae Park. StarNews contributor Jason Frye goes to an oyster roast; StarNews alumnus Kevin Maurer samples the beer and the memorabilia down at The Fat Pelican in Carolina Beach. --Ben Steelman, StarNews, Sept. 20, 2015</em></em></em></em></em></em></p><br>
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