April 2, 2012—for immediate release
  
 Internationally Acclaimed Georgia Writer Terry Kay to  Read at New Bowers House Literary Center in Canon
  
 The University of Georgia's award-winning journal The Georgia Review and the recently opened  Bowers House Literary Center in Canon, Georgia, are sponsoring a reading by, and  up-close conversation with, writer Terry Kay at the Bowers House on Saturday,  April 21, from 2:00-4:00 p.m. A tour of the historic home, originally built as a  hotel nearly one hundred years ago, will be offered at 1:30 p.m. Both the tour  and the reading are open to the public free of charge.
                Terry Kay, a Hart County native who  currently makes his home in Athens, is the author of some fifteen books—among  them eleven novels, a collection of essays, a children's book, and a recently  released volume of short stories, The  Greats of Cuttercane.
                Three of Kay's novels have been  produced as Hallmark Hall of Fame movies: The Runaway, The Valley of Light, and his best-known  work To Dance with the White Dog—the  last of these starring the famous acting couple of Hume Cronin and Jessica  Tandy.
                 Readers around the world can find Kay's  books translated into more than twenty languages; most notably, To Dance with the White Dog has sold  some two million copies in Japan.
                After Kay's reading in the house's  spacious living room/parlor, Georgia  Review editor Stephen Corey will moderate a conversation between Kay and the  audience. A reception will follow, during which attendees may enjoy their  refreshments while walking the grounds or sitting on the first- and second-floor  wraparound porches.
                The Bowers House Literary Center is  located in the small town of Canon, four miles north of Royston and a pleasant  thirty-five drive north of Athens; just a few miles from I-85, the house is  easily reached from both Atlanta and the Greenville-Spartanburg region of South  Carolina.
                Thanks to owner Laura Bowers  Foreman, herself an active writer, the Bowers House's two-story,  4,000-square-foot, seven-bedroom space is now dedicated to the service of  writers and lovers of good writing. The house is available for a variety of  programs, from a brief gathering such as the Terry Kay reading to day-long  festivals or multi-day conferences. Individual writers, as well as small groups,  can take up residency in the Bowers House, for anywhere from a few days to  several weeks, for modest fees—all of which go to support the mission of the  house. Also, ongoing workshops and classes are currently being conducted by  Sandra Scott and others. For further information, including driving directions,  visit www.thebowershousewriters.com or e-mail to  bowershousewriters@gmail.com.
                The Georgia Review, published quarterly  at the University of Georgia since 1947, features short stories, poems,  general-interest essays, reviews, and visual art by the famous and the newly  discovered. Winner of National Magazine Awards in both the fiction and the essay  category, and a recipient of the Georgia Governor's Award in the Arts, the Review has a long tradition of  sponsoring and cosponsoring reading events on the UGA campus and in the Athens  area. For more information, go to www.thegeorgiareview.com or call  706-542-3481.