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Buffett Book Launch

Warren Buffett-Bill uffet

Bill Buffett and cousin, Warren Buffett, at a signing for a book I edited, Foods You Will Enjoy: the Story of Buffett's Store.

Carol, Bill Buffett

Warren contributed a chapter of the book and helped Bill (above, wih me) plug it at his Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting in Omaha. Both Warren and Bill worked at the legendary family grocery.

 



Loire Valley, France

In June, 12 of us had a wonderful week of writing and sketching at LePin, a chateau alive with history and full of great places to write.

Lepin

We're hoping this visual writing residency will be the first of many.



Doha women writing students

teaching in Qatar

I had a fascinating six-weekresidency in Qatar, where I taught writing to a group of Qatar University students and to the QU library staff. I also taught a day-long writing workshop to a group of ex-pats, living in Qatar. For news about the programs click here and here.

And for more informal details, and pictures from my stay there, visit my blog.

 



gulf times

My Doha Students' First Reading Made the Regional News

Our program was recently featured, in the (Doha) Gulf News.To read it,

Click Here.

 

For more pictures and impressions of my experiences, visit ...

<Carol's Blog>.

 

A Weekend of Workshops

Hospital

October 26 - 28, Shelby. NC

I was invited to present a series of writing workshops for medical and pastoral professionals, in addition to thelay population. The weekend was sponsored by the Cleveland County NC Healthcare System's Center for Lifelong Learning. Other sponsors included local churches, health care centers, and civic groups.

 

carol in pulpit

Billed as "Finding Hope through Reflection & Writing, a Weekend with Carol Henderson."

On October 13, I was proud to speak at the

3rd Annual Heartstrings Walk to Remember,

in Greensboro, NC, sponsored and produced by the Heartstrings Infant Loss Support Group.

Heartstrings Walk to Remember


 

Carol's Blog

Carol's Blog

What I'm up to now...
with pictures.



New...

Carol's Picks

Carol's Picks

Click here for Carol's Picks,some of my favorite books about writing, along with some memoirs and essay collections I really like. Soon I'll be adding poetry collections and more books about writing. It's my new "store," so feel free to click and buy.

 



Coming Up...

Fall 2008

Workshops now posted.

For schedule, click here



In the Works

Lepin-livingroom

In the coming summer (2009) we hope to return to LePin for another "week of writing and sketching -- a visual writing residency. Plan to join us.

Farther into the future...a possible workshop in Scotland. Stay tuned.


 

Special workshop "Journaling into a Larger Life," a mini course, 4 Tuesdays, starting in July. ArtsCenter of Chapel Hill-Carrboro.

Click here.



Fall 2008 Workshops
the new s chedule will be posted in June.
For more information...

Click here



Sign up for my Email Newsletter...
to be double sure you get the word on workshop schedules, special events, and other announcements.

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Testimonials

"I have just returned from an incredible week in the South of France with Carol Henderson at the helm of a writers’ workshop. I can’t say enough about it. The accommodations, companionship, scenery, outings, adventures and food, were only outdone by the time spent with Carol discov-ering hidden voices. Writing is no longer a labor, not always inspired, but always a joy. Thank you so much Carol, it was a life changing event for me. I can’t wait to attend the next one."
--Sandra Elliot, Chapel Hill, NC

"My time spent at Carol's writing work-shop in Provence was
a life-changing event. I will always remember it with great joy as one of the best weeks of my life!
"
--Kit Stewart, entrepreneur and author, Pittsboro, NC

"In Provence, with Carol and our workshop, I found the peace and content-ment with which to explore my thoughts, as well as the encouragement and support to write and share them. It was also an enor-mously fun time."
–Liza Collins, playwright and screenwriter, Providence, RI

"Carol Henderson's workshop was exactly what I needed to jumpstart my writing... it was a productive and fun week."–Stephanie Silberstein, Writer, Fayetteville, NC

"My goal for the writing residency was to be motivated to get back to my writing of a memoir that deals with my journey from mourning to joy. You provided that motivation and inspiration for doing just that... Thank you for the integrity and vulnerability with which you facilitated our work together."
–Wilson Brent, pastor (ret.) Cary, NC

 

Chapel Hill News logo

"Bag Girl Has Vision for the Future"

December 29, 2007

 

We've given up holiday gift giving in my family -- even the African cows and Afghan goats you buy and never have to feed or clean up after. We're done with all of it. Over Christmas the extended family gets together for two days (that's about everybody's limit) at my sister's house in Washington to enjoy meals, walks, a movie and maybe a museum or two, if we can face the crowds.

 

This year, however, my older daughter bought a gift for each of us, in all three generations.

 

"This is my cause," she said, handing out little rolled-up packages, like tiny sleeping bags, bound in pink ribbon.

 

Unfurled, each was a large, colorful, eco-friendly polyester bag with
shoulder straps, made by a company called Envirosax.

 

"I freaked out one day when I pulled down a plastic bag from the high
shelf in my bedroom closet and started an avalanche," she told us. "Hundreds of plastic bags! Every time I'd gone to Duane Reade for toothpaste, I got one; bought a can of soup, I got one. It's horrifying how many bags one person can collect."

 

New Yorkers, she explained, can't lug around those canvas bags from Weaver Street or Whole Foods. And they can't keep reusable bags stashed
in their cars because they walk everywhere.

 

"These bags fold up to nothing and fit in your pocket," she said. "And
they're cute! I've given them to friends in the city and everybody's crazy about them. I haven't used a plastic bag in months."

 

I think for a minute about how this daughter has always loved bags, of every kind. From the time she could toddle, she collected random items -- magazines, stuffed animals, dog bones -- in bags: purses, totes,
pillowcases. She would carry her loot around the house for hours, purposefully emptying and refilling her bags.

 

It was never the stuff that mattered -- it was the bags.

 

For me this sack was a timely gift. I happen to be reading an essay by
Susan Casey called "Plastic Ocean" about a boat captain, Charles Moore, who, in 1997, takes a northern detour home from Hawaii through an area of the Pacific avoided by most sailors-well-named "The Doldrums."

 

This area was "like a desert -- a slow, deep, clock-wise swirling vortex of
air and water caused by a mountain of high-pressure air that lingered
above it."

 

An intrepid sailor, he'd traveled this route many times, and experienced some awe-inspiring acts of nature, but this new phenomenon was utterly bizarre.

 

"It began with a line of plastic bags ghosting the surface, followed by an
ugly tangle of junk: nets and ropes and bottles, motor-oil jugs and cracked bath toys, a mangled tarp. Tires. A traffic cone."

 

This plastic mass was the size of Texas. Literally. Now, 10 years later, it's twice the size of Texas.

 

"Everybody's plastic, but I love plastic," Andy Warhol once quipped. "I want to be plastic." His famous quote isn't funny or camp anymore.

 

"We've got to do something about all this plastic," my daughter said.

 

When I suggested shopping less as a way to combat waste and rubbish and plastic islands, she sighed and said, "Mom, face it, there's no way people are going to shop less. We have to find ways to make them shop green. These bags are a start."

 

She's young and enthusiastic about what certain corporations are doing -- Envirosax donates substantially to the Australian Marine Conservation Society. She listed a bunch of other significant green projects she's tracking.

 

I like my little shopping bag. But the real gift my daughter has given us is her vision of the future, a view that's hopeful, in spite of the steadily
growing plastic behemoth out there in The Doldrums.


 

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