Poet, writer and performance artists Song Kowbell and Kathryn Smith will perform in the Nevada County Poetry Series at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Song Kowbell has lived and loved in Nevada County for 34 years. She raises dairy goats, chickens and her three dogs on her Udder World Farm in Penn Valley. A lover of animals and babies, she is a retired SAR K9 Handler and a Dog Trainer and owns Creative Canine Training. Kowbell prefers the company of animals and nature. Her latest book is called Lick Your Wounds and Want Again.
Kathryn Smith has written poetry since her childhood in Texas. After 20 years as a physician, she now works as a community activist, KVMR broadcaster, priestess, artist and fourth generation lover of the Sierra Foothills. Smith's work draws on the influences of Native American chant, romance and Celtic myth. Her topics encompass nature, passion, Mexican ruminations and the feminist perspective. She performs locally and regionally, recently at Berkeley's Water Shed Strawberry Creek Walk— one of Northern California's premier environmental festivals.
General, senior and student tickets cost $5. Tickets cost $1 for children 18 and under. Tickets available at the door. Refreshments and open-mic included. The show will be in the Granucci Room (use the main entrance) at the Center for the Arts, 314 W. Main St., Grass Valley. For information, call (530) 432-8196 or (530) 274-8384.
The reading and open mic will be recorded for presentation on NCTV, channel 11.
Song Kowbell has lived and loved in Nevada County for 34 years. She raises dairy goats, chickens and her three dogs on her Udder World Farm in Penn Valley. A lover of animals and babies, she is a retired SAR K9 Handler and a Dog Trainer and owns Creative Canine Training. Kowbell prefers the company of animals and nature. Her latest book is called Lick Your Wounds and Want Again.
Kathryn Smith has written poetry since her childhood in Texas. After 20 years as a physician, she now works as a community activist, KVMR broadcaster, priestess, artist and fourth generation lover of the Sierra Foothills. Smith's work draws on the influences of Native American chant, romance and Celtic myth. Her topics encompass nature, passion, Mexican ruminations and the feminist perspective. She performs locally and regionally, recently at Berkeley's Water Shed Strawberry Creek Walk— one of Northern California's premier environmental festivals.
General, senior and student tickets cost $5. Tickets cost $1 for children 18 and under. Tickets available at the door. Refreshments and open-mic included. The show will be in the Granucci Room (use the main entrance) at the Center for the Arts, 314 W. Main St., Grass Valley. For information, call (530) 432-8196 or (530) 274-8384.
The reading and open mic will be recorded for presentation on NCTV, channel 11.




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