Tuesday, May 29, 2007

QWERTY Reads

So it is now official: the next Qwerty Reads is scheduled for Saturday, June 9th from 3pm - 5pm at the Wilser's Room Pub.

Ware hoping to get a big crowd out to our first "Q Reads with drinking" to support the readers and impress the owner of the pub. We have the next few months tentatively scheduled on that same Saturday and hope to keep those dates.

We have some great readers this time including: Mark Jarman, Stephanie Yorke, Greg Shupak, Carson Butts, Katie Brown, possibly Hugh Thomas, Danny Jacobs, Jeannine and more. Also music from Matte and Kora from Vetch (and possibly the whole band!!). And, the open mic at the end so everyone should bring some stuff of their own to share with the rest.

So we're really looking forward to it!

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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Fredericton International Simultaneous "Words of the World" Poetry Reading

Everyone is invited to participate or to listen to the multilingual Fredericton International Simultaneous "Words of the World" Poetry Reading on 28 May 2007, Monday, at 5 pm, at Ingrid Mueller Art + Concepts gallery at 117 York Street. The reading is free.

This multilingual reading coincides with Palabra del Mundo at the Basilica of the Franciscan Convent, Old Havana, Cuba. Poets in fifty Cuban communities have joined this event and they have invited poets in other cities around the world to join in by organizing an event in their own cities. The Havana reading is within the context of the XII Festival Internacional de Poesía de La Habana, 2007.

Simultaneous readings are happening in: Asunción (Paraguay), Bologna and Lanusei (Italia), Dolores, Luján and Morón (Argentina), Douglas and Fredericton (NB), Guadalajara, México City, and Pachuca (México), Magdalena (Perú), Málaga (España), Recife (Brasil), San José (Costa Rica), San Salvador (El Salvador), Saskatoon, and other places around the world.

The Fredericton reading is sponsored by Capítulo de Fredericton, Academia Iberoamericana de poesía, Nela Rio and the Registro Creativo (Asociación Canadiense de Hispanistas), revue ellipse mag & Festival Side by Side, BS Poetry Society, Broken Jaw Press Inc., and Ingrid Mueller Art + Concepts.

Poets reading in all languages are welcome to participate. Please email your lead poem and your intent to participate in the Fredericton reading to: Joe Blades .

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Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Opportunities

Great Blue Heron Workshop

The deadline for applications is coming up soon! Applications should be postmarked by May 28th. The workshop will take place at St Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, NS from July 3-7, 2007. Faculty members include Sheldon Currie (Fiction & Playwriting), Charles Gaines (Screenwriting), Jeanette Lynes (Poetry), Alistair MacLeod (Fiction), and Lisa Moore (Fiction). For more information contact gbheron@stfx.ca or phone (902) 867 4533. See www.stfx.ca/workshops/gbheron for details.

27th Atlantic Film Festival Seeks Feature Film Outlines for the Festival’s Inspired Script program. Deadline for outlines: June 8, 2007. Full details can be found at the AFF website: www.atlanticfilm.com under ‘Filmmakers & Delegates.’

CANSCAIP is hosting two upcoming conferences. The Prairie Horizons conference in Lumsden, Saskatchewan, September 14-16th (http://www.canscaip.org/ph.html) and the Packaging Your Imagination conference in Toronto, November 3rd (http://www.canscaip.org/pyi.html). Visit the websites for more information. SCBWI, the society of children’s book writers and illustrators, is also having a conference on June 23 in Barrie, Ontario. For more information, please visit: http://www.scbwicanada.org/east

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Sharon McCartney featured poet at odd sundays at molly’s May 20

Sunday, May 20, 2007, 2 pm
Molly’s Coffee House
554 Queen Street, Fredericton

Featured Reader Sharon McCartney, is a poet, editor, technical writer, mother, brilliant observer of life. McCartney jumps with both of her poetic feet into various and compelling worlds of fiction— Little House on the Prairies series, Anna Karenina. Once there, she conjures for us poignant co-narratives, and feeds them to us as poems drawn from characters both animate and inanimate. They touch and re-touch the soul. Perhaps she will read for us from her latest book of poetry, The Love Song of Laura Ingalls Wilder, or from her previous book, Karenin Sings the Blues.

McCartney has also authored, Under the Abdominal Wall (Anvil) and the chapbook Switchgrass Stills (littlefishcartpress). Her work has been published in numerous magazines and journals including PRISM international, Event, Grain, sub-TERRAIN, Prairie Fire, Iowa City and the Malahat Review. McCartney has an MFA in poetry from the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop and a law degree from the University of Victoria. She works as a legal editor in Fredericton, New Brunswick, and is poetry editor for The Fiddlehead.

Open Set: Bring lyrics, drama, fiction, or music to present in the open set. If it is created from words, we want it.

Please join us at 2 pm on Sunday, May 20, at Molly’s Coffee House, for an afternoon engaged with literature. For information please contact allison calvern / acalvern@nbnet.nb.ca (Just say yes to poetry.)

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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

A Message from the Canada Council

Creating our future . . . An invitation to contribute to our strategic plan

The Canada Council for the Arts is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year. Anniversaries are occasions for celebrating the achievements of the past, but they also provide an opportunity for looking to the future. As announced on May 9, the Canada Council is in the process of developing a strategic plan for 2008-2011, to guide the orientation of the Council’s programs and priorities over the three-year period. We are inviting you to participate in this process, by giving us your thoughts on where the Council should be going in the short- and long-term. Creating our Future, a discussion paper and survey, is now available on the Canada Council’s web site.

We would appreciate your reading the discussion paper and sending us your ideas and suggestions by June 15 at the latest. Your opinion – and especially your responses to the questions in this paper – will inform and enrich the strategic plan and provide ideas and inspiration for the long-term development of the Council. We also would like to request that you circulate this information. We would like to hear from anyone interested in the arts. The Council’s strategic plan will be developed over the summer and early fall, and will be reviewed by the board of the Canada Council during its 50th anniversary meeting in Montreal in October 2007. Once approved by the board, it will be released to the public and posted on the Council’s web site. We look forward to hearing from you.

Info: www.50.canadacouncil.ca/en/consultation

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Job Opportunity

Executive Assistant, Part-time. One year, beginning July 6, 2007.
24 hours per week. Salary: $15.00 per hour

The Writers’ Alliance of Newfoundland and Labrador is seeking applications for the part-time position of Executive Assistant. The position will operate out of the Writers’ Alliance office in St. John’s. Duties: The Executive Assistant will report to the Executive Director and assist with office operations, event planning (AGM, annual book awards), delivery of programs and activities (mentorship program, workshops, readings), communications (weekly email newsletter and quarterly print newsletter), and member inquiries. Qualifications: strong oral, written, and organizational skills; knowledge of the provincial writing/publishing industry; familiarity with an office environment; and computer proficiency. Experience with Quark Express is an asset. Closing date: Friday, May 18, 2007. Please fax, mail or deliver your resume with cover letter to: Executive Assistant Hiring Committee

Writers’ Alliance of Newfoundland and Labrador
P. O. Box 2681
St. John’s, NL A1C 6K1

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Monday, May 14, 2007

STORIES & SONGS BY SIERRA LEONE WAR SURVIVOR SAA ANDREW

TUESDAY: *STORIES & SONGS BY SIERRA LEONE WAR SURVIVOR SAA ANDREW*

On Tuesday, May 15, at 7pm, at the UNB Art Centre, Memorial Hall, St. Thomas University student Andrew Gbongbor will tell his story of surviving Sierra Leone's civil war. Saa Andrew will sing songs he has written about the war. He will show pictures of what diamonds mean for the people of Sierra Leone and other African countries. Sierra Leone is ranked the world's poorest country by the UN Human Development Index. The Kono District has particularly high poverty levels but it has also produced billions of dollars worth of diamonds. In the past 15 years, an estimated 50,000 people in Sierra Leone, 500,000 Angolans and nearly 4 million people in the DRC have died from civil wars funded through the sale of conflict diamonds. Child and slave labour is employed in the diamond trade of many nations while the majority of artisanal diamond miners live in poverty, making less than one dollar a day. Decades of diamond mining by rich multinational companies have devastated large tracts of land, poisoned local water, and forced indigenous populations from their lands.

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Sunday, May 06, 2007

Workshops

The deadline for all summer programs at the Sage Hill Writing Experience has been extended to May 10, including applications for any of the 13 scholarships. Visit their website for all the details: www.sagehillwriting.ca

Creative Writing Workshops at the PEI School of the Arts

Life Writing as Story: How to Tell What: July 2-6
The Journal as Creative Writing Tool: July 9-13

Both workshops will be led by Dianne Hicks Morrow. The PEI School of the Arts workshops take place at the Gulf Shore School in North Rustico. The cost per course is $250. Workshop size is limited to ten. To register, go to the website: http://www.peischoolofthearts.com. If you have specific questions about the courses please email Dianne at 2morrows@isn.net

Writing for the Visual Arts with Bob Barriault 4 week workshop: Halifax: May 1, 8, 15 & 22, 1113 Marginal Road, 6-8 pm each evening. Weekend workshops: Yarmouth: May 11, 5:30-9:30 pm and May 12, 10 am-4:30 pm, Atlantic Superstore Community Room. In this workshop, participants will learn how to strengthen their art-related writing. Topics will include aesthetic and conceptual analysis; putting ideas into words; the secrets of clear and insightful critical writing; avoiding common pitfalls; strategies for revision and editing. Registration forms and online credit card payment are available on our website, http://vans.ednet.ns.ca

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Saturday, May 05, 2007

Atlantic Book Festival Events in NB

Unless stated otherwise, Book Festival Events are free of charge and everyone is welcome.

NEW BRUNSWICK

Tuesday May 8

Noon: Reading: Linda Little*, Saint John Free Public Library, 1 Market Square

7pm: Launch: Historic Grand Manan (Nimbus) by Elaine Ingalls Hogg, Grand Manan Museum

Wednesday May 9

Noon: Reading: Linda Little*, Fredericton Main Public Library, 12 Carleton St.

7pm: Atlantic Book Festival Celebrates Poets: Mary Dalton*, Steve McOrmond*, Pete Sanger* will read at the Faculty Staff Club, Ward Chipman Library Building, UNBSJ, Saint John

Saturday May 12


2pm: Launch: Chocolate River Rescue (Nimbus) by Jennifer McGrath Kent, Chapters, Moncton

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Friday, May 04, 2007

Nela Rio at Odd Sundays

Poetry reading: Nela Rio featured at odd sundays at molly’s, Fredericton’s longest running semimonthly poetry reading series. (New Brunswick, the poetry province.)

Sunday, May 6, 2007, 2pm
Molly’s Coffee House
554 Queen Street, Fredericton

Featured reader, Nela Rio, is a visual artist, poet, academic, critic. Rio’s great heart, steady focus, and generous spirit have combined with her academic career to give us an invaluable connection to women and their struggles with systemic violence and disenfranchisement. Through her literary connections and activist sensibilities, Rio has given women the chance to tell their stories, whether in response to state, domestic or cultural oppression. George Elliott Clarke says of her: "Rio, as a feminist heir to the great Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, calls on us to recognize that history . . . shuts its stone pages / burying / the women who write it. Rio achieves an intoxicating lightness of style matched with unbearably intense feeling."

Born in Argentina, Rio became a Canadian citizen in 1977 and holds membership in writers’ organizations in Spain, Argentina, Chile, the United States, and Canada. Author of eight books of poetry, six of them in both Spanish and English, her work has made the short list for a dozen international literary contests. Her poems and short stories have been translated into English and French, and have been published in Spain, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Poland, Brazil, Honduras, the United States and Canada. Her work is used in university courses in the United States and Canada. Uncontained by literature alone, her creativity explodes also into visual art, and Rio’s “Visual Metaphors” interlace with her literary works.

Open Set: Bring lyrics, drama, fiction, drama, or music, to present in the open set. If it is created from words, we want it.

Please join us at 2 pm on Sunday, May 6, at Molly’s Coffee House, for an afternoon engaged with literature. For information, please contact allison calvern —acalvern@nbnet.nb.ca (Just say yes to poetry.)

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Thursday, May 03, 2007

12 Hour Read-A-Thon Fredericton

This is for real! It’s your chance to be heard … on your terms. It’s the very first NO LIMITS 12 HOUR READ-A-THON. It’s on Saturday, May 19 and it’s sponsored by the Maritime Writers’ Workshop and Literary Festival.

It’s all over downtown Fredericton and there are no … absolutely no … limits on what you can read. No limits on who or what you are … you can be a writer, you can be a not-writer. You can read something you’ve written or something somebody else has written. You can read your favorite letter you’ve received from an old friend. You can read your favorite piece of documentation. You can read your favorite poem. You can read from your blog. You can read from somebody else’s blog. You can read a short story you’ve written.

There are NO LIMITS. You can be 9 years old or 90 years old. You can be a journalist or somebody who reads newspapers and magazines. You can be a sidewalk bard, a folk singer, a river poet, a radio copy writer, a computer documentation writer, an annual report writer … there are NO LIMITS!

If you’re interested send me an email at biff@biffmitchell.com or send Andrew Titus an email at atitus@unb.ca. We need to hear from you soon because Fredericton’s very first NO LIMITS 12 HOUR READ-A-THON is just 17 days away.

PLUS … there will be a poetry slam, a reading on the Green, a special venue for kids!

And please … forward this email to as many people as you can think of who might be interested in reading ANYTHING they’ve written, or anything anybody else has written … like the lyrics to their favorite Doors song, or the funniest for sale sign they’ve seen on a bulletin board, or …

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Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Great Blue Heron Writing Workshop

The 2007 Great Blue Heron Writing Workshop invites mid-level writers to engage in small-group sessions in one of four categories: fiction, fiction and playwriting, poetry, or screenwriting. Set against the backdrop of the scenic coastal community of Antigonish, NS, this four-day workshop offers a supportive atmosphere in which participants learn from established writers. During the daytime, participants will benefit from small group workshops, individual sessions, and private writing time. In the evenings, they will be encouraged to read their own work to appreciative audiences at the public readings.

Sheldon Currie - Fiction and Playwriting

Sheldon Currie was born in Reserve Mines, Cape Breton. His novel, Down the Coaltown Road (2002), set during World War II, reveals the predicament of Italians from Cape Breton who were interned at Petawawa. A story taken from his short fiction collection, The Glace Bay Miners' Museum, formed the basis for Margaret's Museum, a feature film. His play, Lauchie, Liza and Rory (2004), based on one of his short stories, won awards for three categories of the 2004 Merritt Awards, including best play. In 2005 it played at the Magnetic North Theatre Festival in Edmonton and toured the festival circuit in New Zealand. Currently at work on his latest novel, Two More Solitudes, he is also writing a film script based on Down the Coaltown Road. More.

Charles Gaines - Screenwriting


Charles Gaines, a journalist, novelist, and screenwriter, is the author of twenty-three books, three of which were made into movies. His books include Stay Hungry, a finalist for the National Book Award (1972), and the international bestseller, Pumping Iron (1974). His creative non-fiction book, A Family Place (1994), details his move from Alabama to Nova Scotia, where he and his family built a home. His most recent book is The Next Valley Over (1999). A winner of three Emmy awards for television writing, he has also written a number of movie-length features for PBS, including the adaptation of Edith Wharton's Summer. Most recently, he co-authored a screenplay with Ethan Hawke. His work has also appeared in such magazines as Architectural Digest, Audubon, Esquire, Harper's, and Sports Illustrated.

Jeanette Lynes - Poetry

Jeanette Lynes is the author of three collections of poetry. Left Fields (2003) was short-listed for the Pat Lowther Memorial Award. Her fourth collection of poems is forthcoming in 2008. Her first novel, The Girl Who Talked to Trees, will be published by Coteau Books in 2008. She teaches English at St. Francis Xavier University, and in 2005-2006, she was the Writer-in-Residence at Saskatoon Public Library. She is the Poet Laureate for the Nova Scotia New Democratic Party as well as co-editor of The Antigonish Review. Read an interview with Jeanette.

Alistair MacLeod - Fiction

Alistair MacLeod was born in North Battleford, Saskatchewan, and raised among an extended family in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. He has published two internationally acclaimed collections of short stories: The Lost Salt Gift of Blood (1976) and As Birds Bring Forth the Sun (1986). In 2000, these two books, accompanied by two new stories, were published in a single-volume edition entitled Island: The Collected Stories of Alistair MacLeod. In 1999, MacLeod' s first novel, No Great Mischief, was on national bestseller lists for more than a year. The novel won many awards, including the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.

Lisa Moore - Fiction

Lisa Moore was born and raised in St. John's. Degrees of Nakedness, her first short fiction collection, was published in 1995. Open (2002), her second short fiction collection, was nominated for the Giller Prize and won the Canadian Authors' Association Jubilee Award for Short Stories. Alligator (2005), her first novel, was also nominated for the Giller Prize and won the Commonwealth Writers Prize for the Caribbean and Canada region. She recently edited The Penguin Book of Contemporary Short Fiction by Canadian Women (2006).

The fee for the workshop is $300, which includes tuition ($250) plus the costs of the opening reception, the closing banquet, and breaks during the sessions. It also includes a $35 non-refundable deposit.

On-campus accommodations and meals are available for those who require them. Accommodations will be in modern, apartment-style residence clusters consisting of four single bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a kitchen and living area. Participants are encouraged to take advantage of the opportunity to connect with other writers by sharing meals and accommodations. The total cost of tuition, accommodations, and all meals is $550.

For more information or to register visit http://www.stfx.ca/workshops/gbheron/index.htm

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The Insider’s Guide to Getting Published

A two-day workshop for authors who want to know how to get published and who want to understand the publishing process.

July 23 – July 24, 2007
9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Humber College

Learn

how to prepare covering letters and book proposals that get results
how to target the editor or agent who will be receptive to your writing
publishers’ internal decision-making processes
how to market your book
about the outside influences that affect publishers’ choices
the pros & cons of literary agents and self-publishing
how to build your author profile and increase your sales

“For many authors, the financial lives of their books are often a complete mystery… [and] they have unrealistic sales and marketing expectations.”

A recent Writers’ Union of Canada/Quill & Quire survey revealed that writers have little understanding of, and high expectations from their publishers

Our workshop introduces you to the basics of the financial arrangements and the sales and marketing decisions of publishers, and provides you with the strategies for improving the odds of your book getting published.

Workshop Leader, Cynthia Good, is the former President and Publisher of Penguin Canada and current Director of the Creative Book Publishing Program at the Humber College. Joining Cynthia will be Jennifer Murray, former Vice-President of Marketing, Penguin Books and Kids Can Press

The workshop runs from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the Lakeshore Campus located on Lake Shore Blvd. West, at the foot of Kipling Avenue, in Etobicoke.

Fee: $329.

For information, contact:
Cynthia Good
416-675-6622 ext. 3462
cynthia.good@humber.ca


To register, contact:
Hilary Higgins
416-675-6622 ext. 3449
hilary.higgins@humber.ca

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A Race for Real Readers

With a firsthand knowledge of the sea and the skill of a born storyteller, Keith McLaren will hoist sail and read from his book A Race for Real Sailors on May 7 at 7 pm at Alderney Gate Library, 60 Alderney Drive, Dartmouth, and on May 8 at Cole Harbour Library, 51 Forest Hills Parkway, Cole Harbour. He’ll then jib down the coast and drop anchor on May 9 at 7 pm at Lunenburg Library, 19 Pelham Street, Lunenburg.

A Race for Real Sailors is nominated for the Dartmouth Book Award for Non-fiction. The anticipation, pressure and thrill of each International Fisherman’s Cup race that ran from 1920 to 1938 is as present as sea air in McLaren’s recounting of these exciting races. For more high seas reading adventures, visit: http://www.writers.ns.ca/bookfest07

Keith McLaren was born in Victoria and now lives in North Saanich, BC. He crossed Canada to attend the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax, and stayed on to study at the Nova Scotia Nautical Institute when it was located in Pier 21. He’s been at sea for more than 35 years and today is Master of The Spirit of Vancouver Island with BC Ferries. His previous books include Bluenose, Bluenose II and Light on the Water.

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Artist and Editor LIVE!

On May 8 at noon, join New Brunswick’s most celebrated artist, Bruno Bobak, and curator and editor, Bernard Riordan, at The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, 1723 Hollis Street, Halifax for a lively and evocative discussion about the eighty-year-old artist’s career and a curator’s passion for it. For more information, contact WFNS at 423-8116 or email: talk@writers.ns.ca.

“Art is one of the major expressions of humanity,” Herménégilde Chiasson writes in his introduction to Bruno Bobak: The Full Palette, and since Bruno Bobak first discovered his art in a Saturday morning art class at the Art Gallery of Toronto he has been a master at exploring that humanity in his work.

During the Second World War, Bruno Bobak became Canada’s youngest Official War Artist. It was during the war that he met Molly Lamb, whom he later married. In 1947, he became head of the design department at the Vancouver School of Art (now the Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design) and began showing his work in national and international exhibitions. In 1960 he was appointed as Artist-in- Residence for a one-year term at the University of New Brunswick and returned to Frederiction for good in 1962 as director of the University of New Brunswick Art Centre. Today, Bruno Bobak’s paintings, drawings and prints hang in major collections in Canada, the United States, the UK, Poland and Scandinavia.

Bernard Riordon, the editor of Bruno Bobak: The Full Palette, became the founding director of the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in 1975 and has built it into a public gallery of national stature. He received the Order of Canada in 2002 and was appointed director of the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in 2003.

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