Education
Macon studied business at Adelphi University and also attended Meredith College.
Macon studied business at Adelphi University and also attended Meredith College.
She was named by Governor Pat McCrory as the eighth North Carolina Poet Laureate, a position she was set to hold from 2014 to 2016. Appointed on July 11, 2014, she subsequently resigned on July 17, 2014 amid controversy over the appointment. Macon continues to work for the state"s Department of Health and Human Services processing claims for Disability Income Benefit and Social Security Benefits.
Her two books of poetry were published by a vanity press in 2011 and 2014.
Macon lives in Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina and has worked as a disability determination specialist at the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services since 1997. As of July 20, 2014, Macon was listed as Recording Secretary of the North Carolina Society.
Macon"s qualifications for the position have been questioned and McCrory was criticized for bypassing the establishing process and making the appointment without consulting the North Carolina Arts Council for input. Kathryn Stripling Byer, the state"s fifth poet laureate, acknowledged that while there is no law requiring the governor to consult with the Arts Council, the process has always been more open and democratic in the past
McCrory later claimed that he was "not aware of the traditional process that was in place" for selecting the state"s poet laureate.
Macon subsequently resigned the post on July 18th.
The governor"s July 11th announcement indicated that Macon"s books "Shelf Life" and "Sleeping Rough" were nominated for a Pushcart Prize. While true, critics have pointed to the prize"s limited rules which make her books ineligible. Prior to being taken down, Macon"s website listed her as a Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet, though she later "confirmed she wasn"t," only having been "mentored by a poet who had won that honor," Becky Gould Gibson.