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Roane State’s Ralph Monday to host poetry reading March 13, Oak Ridge campus

Posted at 2:00 pm February 27, 2019
By Owen Driskill Leave a Comment

Ralph Monday

Ralph Monday

 

Roane State Community College English Professor Ralph Monday, who has had hundreds of his poems published in more than 100 journals, will hold a poetry reading on March 13 on the college’s Oak Ridge campus at 701 Briarcliff Avenue.

The event will be held at 3 p.m. on Wednesday, March 13, in the City Room of the Coffey-McNally Building. The public is invited, a press release said.

Monday is originally from Clairfield, Tennessee, a small Appalachian town on the Kentucky border.

He holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Tennessee, and obtained his doctorate from Northcentral University, the press release said.

Among his published works: a chapbook, “All American Girls and Other Poems,” was published in July 2014, and Aldrich Press published his book, “Empty Houses and American Renditions,” in May 2015.

A Kindle chapbook, “Narcissus the Sorcerer,” was published in June 2015 by Odin Hill Press, and an e-book, “Bergman’s Island & Other Poems,” was published by “Poetry Repairs” in 2017.

In much of his poetry, “an exploration of time occurs again and again as a theme, especially in my book ‘Empty Houses and American Renditions,’” Monday said.

His humanities textbook, dealing with topics ranging from literature to law, politics, and religion, was published by Kendall/Hunt in 2018 and spans the Paleolithic period—popularly called the Stone Age—to the 14th Century Renaissance, the press release said.

Monday is working on the second volume of his humanities text, and he has two complete poetry collections that have not been published yet.

The college’s literary readings series is organized by assistant professor DeAnna Stephens.

More information will be added as it becomes available.

This press release was submitted by Owen Driskill.

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Filed Under: College, Education, Entertainment, Front Page News, Writing Tagged With: DeAnna Stephens, poetry, Ralph Monday, Roane State, Roane State Community College

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