By Sheree K. Nielsen
The 2015 Da Vinci Eye
Award Winner, Folly Beach Dances, is a ‘healing’ coffee table book
inspired by the rhythm of the sea and the changing tides, and my essay, “Beach
Dances” previously published in the Folly Current newspaper.
Folly Beach Dances features photography from a favorite South
Carolina beach by my husband, Russell, and me. Each photo is captioned with a
dance name, whether real or made-up. It’s about balance and movement on the beach
– people, dogs, birds, babies, even beach structures – moving in infinite
rhythm.
Five women author
friends (a songwriter, a grant writer, an English professor, a marriage
therapist, and poet) have interpreted the photographs (captioned with dance
names) to create poetry or short prose for the book. I merely requested the
element of positivity shine through their work. The reason I asked these
particular women to contribute, is that I felt a connection to their writing
styles. My husband, who doesn’t claim to be a writer, penned a poem for his
photograph “Angel Dance”. Rounding out the project, a travel writer
by trade, I’ve penned about nine poems.
The resulting work made
me cry. Everyone’s reflections and interpretations were poignant, touching, and
mesmerizing.
Some reader favorites
are Circle Dog Dance, Crowd Surfing, and The
Fandango. You can view three pages from the book on our website at www.beachdances.com under
the media page.
As a young girl, I built
my first pinhole camera at age five, and became obsessed with
photography. I believe pictures help recreate a story, or even form the
basis for new stories. For me, photography and writing go hand-in-hand.
The journey and vision
of Folly Beach Dances changed after being diagnosed with
lymphoma in June of 2012. Folly Beach Dances wasn’t just
another pretty coffee table book. The project became a mission of
self-care and healing – the story behind the book told on the Introduction and
Prologue pages.
Not feeling the book’s
vision was complete, I reached out to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. I met
with Debbie Kersting, the Gateway Chapter Director, at a local coffee house. We
chatted about the book’s message over cappuccinos.
I explained to Debbie
that sometimes when people have trials and tribulations, they forget to dance.
In the book, I ask each reader to take care of themselves and remember to dance,
no matter where they are, no matter their worries. Debbie wrote a beautiful
Foreword for the book.
Russell and I donate 10
percent of all book sales to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. The National
Office of LLS allows us to use their logo on the back cover. For that, we are
grateful.
I believe my purpose in
life is ‘sharing’ through inspirational writing and photography. This purpose
is evident in three personal projects – an Emerson-inspired essay collection, a
children’s picture book about confidence and overcoming handicaps, and a second
Beach Dance book about a favorite North Carolina beach. I’m just beginning the
query process for these.
So whatever you do in
life, look to the positive and remember to dance. You know you’ll feel better
if you do.
The book is dedicated to
beach lovers, dancers, dreamers, the residents of Folly Beach, and all those
with ailments. And of course, Mom and Dad – my own personal Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers.
__________________________________________________________________
Sheree K. Nielsen is an award-winning freelance writer, poet and
photographer. Her countless credits include Missouri Life, AAA Midwest Traveler, AAA Southern Traveler, and others. For two consecutive years, Sheree received First Place for
Photography from the Missouri Humanities Council
and the Warrior Arts Alliance – Awarded September 2014 for “Jimmie on the Pier”, and in October 2013 – “Dear Kindred Spirit”. The photos were selected for
inclusion in Proud to Be: Writing by American Warriors Volume 2 and 3.
Chosen by her peers, Sheree received the First Place, People’s
Choice Award for Nonfiction, Storyteller Magazine, April-June
2010. Sheree’s works are well-represented in numerous anthologies, magazines,
websites, and newspapers across the nation and Caribbean. Her essays and poems
interweave universal beauty inspired through travel, nature and family.
She enjoys teaching her “Every Picture Tells a Story” workshop
to veterans. She credits a deep affinity for the ocean to
her parents through regular vacations to the Southeast. Dad Joe, a World
War II veteran, spun tales of exotic ports of call. Her mom Gladys,
a sketch artist and master gardener, taught Sheree about art and nurturing the
soil. She blogs at Sheree’s Warm Fuzzies.
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