Skip to main content

Recap of 'Conversations With Cait' episode 1: Kayla King on writing, editing and 'The Elpis Pages'

"Conversations With Cait," a new podcast that centers on the arts, culture and race and gender politics, is set to air on 91.3 WBNY-FM on Monday at 7:30 a.m.

Don't have time to tune in? "Conversations With Cait" is now available on YouTube and SoundCloud. Here's a recap of episode one.



For the first episode, published fiction and poetry author Kayla King shared with listeners her journey as a writer and more about her two collectives, “Pages Penned In Pandemic,” and “The Elpis Pages,” both of which are collections of poetry, short stories, flash fiction, essays and more. 

All proceeds from “The Elpis Pages,” according to King, will be donated to Planned Parenthood Action Fund, an organization which helps protect access to safe, legal abortion and reproductive rights.

What's the story behind these two collectives?

For “Pages Penned in Pandemic,” she began a featured interview series in summer 2020.

photo credit: Golden Rose Creative

“I was really interested in hearing from other authors and seeing how they were coping with the pandemic, if they were avoiding their art or using their writing as a catharsis to get through such difficult times," King said.

She reached out to her best friend in New York City who’s an editor to help start this project, and in total, they received over 70 works from all over the world ranging from Germany to Singapore.

“It was so wonderful seeing all these people come together, and sharing their artwork, sharing their writing,” King said.

What sparked her interest to launch “The Elpis Pages,” was the passing of the Texas abortion law, also known as Senate Bill 8.

She, along with many others around the world, were upset about the decision.



When we can find common ground and similarities between everybody, it lets us know we're not alone,” King said. “It also shows that womanhood is more than one thing, and that not everybody has the same experience.”

How did she reach worldwide participants?

It was all thanks to Twitter and Instagram, the two primary platforms that glues the writing community together.

She also reached out to her personal writing group as well.

Using Google Forms for interview questions, in only two months, they received over 300 submissions for "Pages Penned In Pandemic" from all around the world.

For "The Elpis Pages," they received over 200 submissions in just one month.

What led her to become a writer?

Growing up, King was always an avid reader since elementary school, and just as many millennials and generation Zers, she was a fan of Harry Potter.

“I think those of us that are of the Potter generation really saw what an imaginary world can do, and growing up with those books was so important.” she said.

It was really when she was in her senior year of high school when she took an experimental writing class that her English teacher said to her that they see her as a writer, and she realized that stories could be brought to life.

When she went college, she originally majored in interior design at Villa Maria College, but a semester later, she knew that writing was indeed her passion, so she transferred to the State University of New York College at Buffalo to pursue writing and graduated from the program in 2013.

“For me, stories are the way that I find my way and navigate through the world. Oftentimes, I don’t know how I feel about something until I’ve written it on a page, she said. “A lot of times, my darkest thoughts, fears, and happiest moments come out in my fiction, so for me writing and breathing are one in the same thing,” she said.

One notable professor that she had was Kim Chinquee, an associate professor in the department of English.

"I was very pleased to see her doing such fine work," Chinquee said in an email.

What advice would she give to current Buffalo students in the writing program?

King advises to utilize one’s professors, invest in the writing community, continue to read a variety of books, and submit to literary magazines.

Follow @cait_malilay_writes on Instagram for updates on articles and future episodes of "Conversations With Cait."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

ROCKLAND COUNTY TIMES: JLK Salon senior stylist shares tips on how to keep your hair fresh and radiant throughout the summer season

photo credit: Valeria Maddalena Instagran / @hair_by_vale We may be a little over a month into the summer season, but it’s never too late to revitalize your hair with a new style. Valeria Maddalena , a senior stylist at JLK Salon in New City of over nine years, shared with The Rockland County Times some of her favorite hair colors and care tips to keep in mind. Read full article here.

Resurrection by Leo Tolstoy (Part I) Review: Knowledge leads to power, but not necessarily justice

photo credit: Cait Malilay "Though hundreds of thousands had done their very best to disfigure the small piece of land on which they were crowded together, by paving the ground with stones, scraping away every vestige of vegetation, cutting down the trees, turning away birds and beasts, and filling the air with the smoke of naphtha and coal, still spring was spring, even in the town." - (Tolstoy 5) "Resurrection" was Leo Tolstoy's last written novel published in 1899. Told in the third person perspective, the book centers on a nobleman named Dmitri Ivanovich Nekhlyudov, whose values are tested when he by chance reconnects with someone from his past, someone he once loved and betrayed. The book's first chapter has strong similarities to that of Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter" with its opening passages of a prison and society focused on the fate of a fallen woman.  We are introduced to Maslova, also known as "Katusha," who i

Cait's Plate: Conwell Coffee Hall...Can we just toast to this aesthetic toast?

Conwell Coffee Hall, located at 6 Hanover Street, is a coffee shop and eatery in Life and Trust, a performing arts center.  photo credit: Cait Malilay From the moment I walked through the revolving door and up those steps, I was immersed back in time to the 1920s. I was greeted by a large art deco painting. photo credit: Cait Malilay I take a look at the menu and see the typical cafe assortment of coffee and teas, but wait...there's a whole section labeled "TOASTS?" Count me in! Being a California native, of course I'm going to order the avocado toast.  My mom orders the crab toast. Now...the beverage of choice. Since it's afternoon, we decide to go with something light, a cappuccino.  We are given a number and to our left, we see the seating area.  In the back there's leather couches and coffee tables. Spread out are rows of tables, so we see that we are going to be sitting pretty close knit with other groups. When we're trying to find a spot to sit, a ge