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27 Views of Charlotte - (Paperback)

27 Views of Charlotte - (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 14.95 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>27 Views of Charlotte showcases the literary life of North Carolina's most populous city by featuring the works of more than two dozen hometown writers. The result is a mosaic of perspectives about life in Charlotte in a variety of genres- journalism, history, fiction, poetry, and more.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>"27 Views of Charlotte: The Queen City in Prose & Poetry" is the latest in Eno Publisher's popular series of local anthologies. The book showcases the literary life of North Carolina's most populous city by featuring the works of more than two dozen hometown writers. The result is a mosaic of perspectives about life in Charlotte in a variety of genres- journalism, history, fiction, poetry, and more.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>If you ve forgotten or perhaps never knew just how much Charlotte has transformed itself in recent years, 27 Views of Charlotte: The Queen City in Prose & Poetry offers a keen literary reminder. <br /> <br /> This new collection, a mix of history, essays, fiction and poems, is the sixth volume in a successful series from Eno Publishers. Each book portrays a city through the perspectives of 27 local writers.<br /> <br /> Hillsborough-based Eno Publishers launched the 27 Views series in 2010 with 27 Views of Hillsborough. When that book proved a hit, the press continued the series with Chapel Hill, Durham, Raleigh, Asheville and now Charlotte. Two more 27 Views collections, on Greensboro and coastal Carolina, are in the works. <br /> <br /> Much of Charlotte s story is about progress, and Jack Claiborne, a retired Charlotte Observer associate editor, provides a fine primer on the subject with his introduction. Charlotte, he writes, has striven to catch the next wave in hopes of becoming the first, the biggest, the best, the tallest, the most admired, or whatever other superlative was available. <br /> <br /> Since progress often means supplanting old with new, it s not surprising that several pieces celebrate defunct landmarks, such as Eastland Mall and the Coffee Cup, the diner where black and white, rich and poor, enjoyed their collards and fried chicken while sitting shoulder to shoulder.<br /> <br /> The egalitarianism of it all took me by surprise and gave me an appreciation that I otherwise didn t have for the buttoned-down city of bankers I had just moved to, Observer Associate Editor Fannie Flono writes. <br /> <br /> In an essay titled A Sense of Place, novelist Mark de Castrique describes a family farm dating to the 1700s that was about to be replaced by a parking lot for airport travelers. Fewer than eight miles from downtown Charlotte, he writes, the Bigham farm had survived a revolution, a civil war, a depression, but not prosperity. --Pam Kelley, Charlotte Observer</p><br>

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