{"id":117797,"date":"2023-05-15T12:34:30","date_gmt":"2023-05-15T16:34:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/v2fr5er78d.funnewsdaily.com\/movies\/western-writers-of-america-ready-to-celebrate-70th-anniversary-during-2023-convention-in-rapid-city\/"},"modified":"2023-05-15T12:34:30","modified_gmt":"2023-05-15T16:34:30","slug":"western-writers-of-america-ready-to-celebrate-70th-anniversary-during-2023-convention-in-rapid-city","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/v2fr5er78d.funnewsdaily.com\/movies\/western-writers-of-america-ready-to-celebrate-70th-anniversary-during-2023-convention-in-rapid-city\/","title":{"rendered":"Western Writers of America Ready to Celebrate 70th Anniversary During 2023 Convention in Rapid City"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Owen Wister Award recipient, Spur Award winners to be honored<\/i><\/p>\n

CENTRAL, UT, UNITED STATES, May 12, 2023\/EINPresswire.com<\/a>\/ — Western Writers of America<\/a>, a 700-plus-member nonprofit that promotes and honors Western literature, celebrates its 70th anniversary during the organization\u2019s annual convention<\/a> in Rapid City, South Dakota, June 21-24.<\/p>\n

\u201cWestern Writers of America is honored and eager to celebrate our 70th anniversary in an area as vibrant as Rapid City,\u201d WWA President Melody Groves said. \u201cSurrounded by Black Hills history, our writers will undoubtedly be influenced by the grandeur of South Dakota.\u201d<\/p>\n

Highlights of the convention, which is open to nonmembers, include a tour of nearby Deadwood; a presentation of the history of the Crazy Horse Memorial; a panel on 70 years of WWA and True West, a Cave Creek, Arizona-based Western history magazine that also celebrates its 70th anniversary this year; and a Friday fundraising auction sponsored by the Homestead Foundation, a 501(c)(3) that supports WWA by providing educational and award support.<\/p>\n

Holiday Inn Rapid City Downtown-Convention Center is the convention hotel.<\/p>\n

Other highlights include:<\/p>\n

\u221a Presentation of the Owen Wister Award<\/a> for lifetime contributions to Western Literature to Joseph M. Marshall III, an Oglala\/Sicangu Lakota writer of nonfiction and fiction who grew up on the Rosebud Indian Reservation, 10 miles southwest of White River, South Dakota.<\/p>\n

\u221a Induction of Marshall and Charles Badger Clark (1883-1957), South Dakota\u2019s first poet laureate, into the Western Writers Hall of Fame, which is housed outside the McCracken Research Library at the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Cody, Wyoming.<\/p>\n

\u221a Presentation of the annual Spur Awards and Spur Award finalist certificates to the 2023 recipients (for materials published\/released last year) whose works, inspiration, image and literary excellence best represent the reality and spirit of the American West. <\/p>\n

Western Writers of America was founded in the early 1950s by writers Harry Sinclair Drago (1888-1979), Norman A. Fox (1911-1960), D.B. Newton (1916-2013), Nelson C. Nye (1907-1997), Wayne D. Overholser (1906-1996) and Thomas Thompson (1933-1982). The first convention was held in 1954 in Denver, and WWA has met in different cities annually each June since \u2013 except in 2020 when the pandemic canceled the convention scheduled for Rapid City.<\/p>\n

\u201cWWA members were saddened when COVID silenced our 2020 Convention in Rapid City,\u201d Groves said. \u201cWe\u2019re fortunate to be able to return this year for our 2023 Convention, and we\u2019re all looking forward to visiting beautiful South Dakota.\u201d
WWA last met in Rapid City in 1999. Next year\u2019s WWA convention is scheduled for June 19-22 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.<\/p>\n

The organization has grown from writers of traditional Western fiction to writers across the world, including bestselling novelists C.J. Box, Sandra Dallas, Anne Hillerman, Craig Johnson, David Morrell and the husband-wife team of W. Michael and Kathleen O\u2019Neal Gear; award-winning nonfiction authors Tom Clavin, Jeff Guinn and Paul Andrew Hutton; Emmy Award winners Kirk Ellis and Walter Hill; and award-winning children\u2019s book author Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve, a Lakota who lives in Rapid City.<\/p>\n

\u201cI have been a continuous member of Western Writers of America for more than one-half of the organization\u2019s existence,\u201d says early frontier historian James A. Crutchfield, WWA\u2019s first executive director (2004-2006) and the 2011 Owen Wister Award recipient. \u201cTrust me, a lot has gone on since those earlier days. The last half of WWA\u2019s existence has definitely presented challenges that our old friends, the pulp writers, never had in the 1950s. The important thing, however, is that we faced each issue as it was presented, worked our ways through the difficulties, and still ended up friends at the end of the day.\u201d<\/p>\n

Among the writers scheduled to attend the Rapid City Convention are South Dakota historians Bill Markley and Peggy Sanders; children\u2019s book author-illustrator SD Nelson, a member of South Dakota\u2019s Standing Rock Sioux Tribe; songwriters Patty Clayton, Micki Fuhrman, Jim Jones and W.C. Jameson, a past WWA president; and past WWA presidents Johnny D. Boggs, Loren D. Estleman, Preston Lewis and Nancy Plain, all winners of multiple Spur Awards.
Groves will pick up her first Spur Award, winning in the Best Western Biography category for Before Billy the Kid: The Boy Before the Legendary Outlaw.<\/p>\n

Other 2023 Spur winners scheduled to attend the convention include Kathleen O\u2019Neal Gear (for Best Short Western Fiction, \u201cNo Quarter,\u201d published in Rebel Hearts Anthology); Randy Huston (Best Western Song, \u201cWay of the Cowboy,\u201d released on Times Like These); Matthew Ross Kerns, (Best Western Short Nonfiction, \u201cTexas Jack Takes an Encore,\u201d published in Wild West magazine); Candy Moulton and Bob Noll, (Best Western Documentary Script, The Battle of Red Buttes); Ann Parker (Traditional Western Novel, The Secret in the Wall: A Silver Rush Mystery); Bob Rosebrough (Best Western Contemporary Nonfiction Book, A Place of Thin Veil: Life and Death in Gallup, New Mexico); Larry D. Thomas (Best Western Poem, \u201cNew Mexico Bootheel: A Triptych,\u201d published in San Pedro River Review); CK Van Dam (Best Western Romance Novel, Best First Novel, Proving Her Claim: On the Dakota Frontier); and James Wade (Contemporary Western Novel, Beasts of the Earth).<\/p>\n

For membership information, log on to www.WesternWriters.org<\/a> or e-mail wwa.membershipchair@gmail.com.<\/p>\n

Johnny D. Boggs
Western Writers of America
+1 505-920-4113
roundupwwa@aol.com
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\n May 12, 2023, 16:00 GMT\n <\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/div>\n

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