“For years now, Mark Reese has been entertaining Citizen Voice and Times readers with columns about his most beloved pastimes – hunting, fishing, and observing nature in all its wonder. Whether he’s hunting or wading streams, Mark writes poetically of his forays into fields, forests, and waterways. He persistently nudges others to get outside and […]
Jay McCoy
A Home for Friendless Women follows the Home’s benevolent benefactors and several of the fallen women who live there through their daily religious lessons and hard work while grappling with a terrible secret that has the power to unravel the Home entirely.
Theiss explores the hidden history of her hometown of LaGrange using oral histories she has recorded from locals over the last 18 years. Stories highlight the life of a segregated community where time lingered over decades, simmering and stewing in a pot of relationships and interactions that have been forgotten.
The poems in A Field of First Things are evocations of experience, attempts to clarify, preserve, and share first things.
For the first time, the authors offer a concise and easy to read history of not only the origins and development of the Kentucky Reel but also the early history of baitcasting and bass fishing in Kentucky. Lavishly illustrated and featuring examples of some of the rarest Kentucky Reels, this book is a welcome introduction […]
Presented by The Kentucky Book Festival and Kentucky Humanities, this program is part of the main festival on November 2. Jonathan Eig King: A Life Jonathan Eig is a former senior writer for The Wall Street Journal and a New York Times bestselling author of several books that have been listed among the best of […]
1666: A Novel, her second work of historical fiction based on interviewing tribal elders, researching colonial documents, and studying the Patawomeck language, tells the story of her people and their unlikely survival due to the courage of two Patawomeck women.