Sharon Wachsler Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Artist with Humor

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Sharon Wachsler Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Artist with Humor

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Having a chemical Sensitivity is a depressing outlook for most of those with this debilitating environmental Illness,  but Sharon gets past the mask to share her wicked wit.  This information Diva has quite a following and recently was featured on WMAC radio on the roundtable discussion.  Following is the recent news:

Just a quick note to invite you to listen to me read my humorous essay, "Bringing Home the Anti-Lassie" tomorrow morning, Tuesday 1/20/04.

My essay will air a little after 10:15 AM Eastern Time during the morning program, "The Roundtable" on Northeast Public Radio, WAMC. It tells the tale of my first adventure with my as-yet-untrained service dog, Gadget.

WAMC is the NPR station out of Albany which broadcasts to most of New York (upstate),  as well as Western Massachusetts and parts of Vermont, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut.

If you are outside the broadcast area you can tune in via the Web. Go to www.WAMC.org.

For the list of WAMC stations/call letters/frequencies, see below.

Enjoy!

Sharon Wachsler
www.sharonwachsler.com
Writer, Humorist, Dog Trainer, MCS & Disability Educator
Check out my collected humor columns at www.abilitymaine.org


WAMC, 90.3 FM
Albany NY

WAMC, 1400AM
Albany NY

WAMK, 90.9 FM
Kingston NY

WOSR, 91.7 FM
Middletown NY

WCEL, 91.9 FM
Plattsburgh NY

WCAN, 93.3 FM
Canajoharie NY

WANC, 103.9 FM
Ticonderoga NY

WAMQ, 105.1 FM
Great Barrington MA

W205AJ, 88.9 FM
Oneonta NY

W226AC, 93.1 FM
Rensselaer-Troy NY

W299AG, 107.7 FM
Newburgh NY

W220CE, 91.9
Southington CT


NEW NEWS!

DISABILITY LITERARY JOURNAL LAUNCHED BY ONLINE NEWSPAPER


Contact:     Sharon Wachsler, Editor

            Breath & Shadow: A Journal of Disability Culture and Literature
            BreathandShadow@aol.com or 413-625-9820; www.abilitymaine.org/breath


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MARCH 23, 2004


RESOURCE AND ACTIVISM ORGANIZATION SPAWNS CULTURAL ENDEAVOR


MONROE, ME (March 23, 2004) -- AbilityMaine.org, the online newspaper of news, resources, and activism information on disability in Maine and the world, has branched out to promote literary writing by people with disabilities. On January 30, 2004, AbilityMaine launched Breath & Shadow, the only online literary journal with a focus on disability. The monthly publishes poetry, fiction, essays, interviews, drama, and other writing from the perspective of life with disability.

Originally the idea of AbilityMaine editor, Norman Meldrum, the project was taken up by award-winning poet and writer, Sharon Wachsler, whose humor columns have drawn readers to the online newspaper since February 2002. "I'm proud to be editing the sole cross-disability literary magazine written and edited entirely by people with disabilities," says Wachsler. "As a writer who has a disability, I know firsthand how frustrating it is to have my work turned down by editors who are confused or frightened by my life. A big part of the impetus for Breath & Shadow is to provide opportunities for other talented writers with disabilities to make their voices heard."

Breath & Shadow is succeeding in attracting such talent. The first issue includes an essay by two-time Pushcart nominee and novelist, New Yorker Tobias Seamon, as well as poetry by Rhode Island's Peggy Munson — winner of several awards and fellowships and contributor to Best American Poetry 2003. "I'm thrilled with the quality of submissions that have come in," Wachsler acknowledges. "And the quantity. We received over 100 submissions in just the first month. The community's enthusiasm for this venture has surpassed my expectations."

Each issue touches on a theme. The inaugural edition focused on "Beginning"; the second,
"Trust/Distrust" opens with "Maine poet Patricia Ranzoni's gentle, lyric trust of the people in her life flows lightly under her words — like the streams and rivers about which she writes — even as she has learned to trust her body's unpredictability." It is followed by Tricia Owsley's essay "Programmed," about a nightmarish experience in an Illinois mental hospital.

"We have some powerful, beautiful, diverse pieces coming up," promises Wachsler. These artists include Texan Suzie Siegel, a newspaper reporter whose 20-year career was halted by cancer and playwright Kari Ann Owen of California, whose work will be presented at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts this June by VSA Arts. (Both in Issue 3, March 26, on "Treatment.") "Visual Art Reflections," (Issue 4) profiles Deaf art ambassador Brenda Schertz, who curated the first fine art exhibit of Deaf artists and is organizing a Deaf film festival. Future contributors include Edward McInnis, former "Naked City" columnist for Boston Magazine, disabled by fibromyalgia and Kenny Fries, author of multiple books of poetry and prose and winner of the Gregory Kolvakos Award for AIDS Writing. "Don't be scared away by preconceived notions of what writers with disabilities have to say," Wachsler cautions. "I can promise plenty of surprises for our readers. I'll even have a humor column in the 'Death' issue."

Startup funding for Breath & Shadow has been provided by Resources for Organizing and Social Change (ROSC) — the grassroots, nonprofit organization of which AbilityMaine is a part. "The people at ROSC and AbilityMaine have been fantastically supportive and integral to the project," says Wachsler. "However, it's the public's support that will keep us going."

Read Breath & Shadow at www.abilitymaine.org/breath. Visitors to the site can also learn about sponsorship opportunities, the history and staff of the project, and how to subscribe (for free) or submit their work. For more information, e-mail breathandshadow@aol.com. Wachsler asks allies of artists with disabilities to make a tax-deductible contribution to Breath & Shadow by sending a check to ROSC, PO Box 776, Monroe, ME 04951.



Hello Sick Humorites,

I forgot to mention I have another article currently published online. It's at Ragged Edge Magazine online. It was published 3/17/04.

Sharon Wachsler's article, "MONKeying with disability rights," is now online at http://www.raggededgemagazine.com/mediacircus/monkshot0304.html and is linked from their home page at http://www.raggededgemagazine.com

Or click here: MONKeying with Rights

Thanks!
-Sharon
P.P.S. Don't forget about the www.sickhumorpostcards.com special I mentioned a few days ago. # for the price of 1.

Sharon Wachsler
www.sharonwachsler.com
Writer, Humorist, Dog Trainer, MCS & Disability Educator
Check out my collected humor columns at www.abilitymaine.org