Archive for the ‘Archived entries’ Category
Seven Questions with Sally Moore
What literary character most influenced you when you were young, and why?
I love the classics, so Dickens, Jane Austen, Bronte sisters. Plus I read a lot of fairy tales, and in my teens I read Bruno Bettleheim and historical biographies about the Tudors and Stuarts. But my favourite character was John Trenchard of JM Faulkner’s Moonfleet, a fifteen year old boy in England in the 1700’s who gets involved with pirates.
Can you recall the premise of your earliest work?
I wrote a lot of little poems and stories as a child, but none of them have survived. When I was 14, I invented the heroine of my epic novel, The Legend of the Triple Crown. Aramanda was
everything I was not: bold, strong, powerful, and she didn’t take any crap from anyone. Then I learned to become slowly more like her. The character evolved into an historical fiction novel about a princess who competes with her brother for her father’s throne. It’s epic classic in form, but the theme of a woman struggling for individuality in a man’s world mirrors my rise in business in the eighties and nineties, and focuses on the resulting sense of personal loss. The final draft was written in 2009.
Do you have a favourite writing place? Routine?
I don’t have a lot of time and I travel a lot, so I write everywhere. Planes, trains, in the shower, in the car commuting to work, waiting for a meeting, in the boardroom while the others are arguing over a spreadsheet. I have learned the trick of unfolding a scene in my head and holding it there, sometimes for days until I have time to write it down. When I have time, I go to Starbuck’s with my niece and we write for hours, sometimes all day and all evening too. Those are heavenly days.
Reading is…. Essential
Reveal some themes that often come up in your work… (digestive organs, pavement, Norway…??)
For some reason, I had a recent obsession with raspberries… but usually I don’t have anything particular like that that sticks. My writing is about the interactions of relationships, the passion, the disappointment, the abandonment, of how people fail each other, or rescue those they love.
A Choice (or seven):
Sweet or Savoury? Both
KD Lang or PK Page? Neither
Theatre or Film? Both, most enthusiastically! (Editor’s note: I’m sensing some confusion with the word ‘choice’…)
Lake or Ocean? Both, but only to be near them, I don’t like to go in. (I drowned as a baby, and my parents had to revive me, so I’ve always had a healthy respect for water.) Water is fascinating, powerful, mysterious, comforting and dangerous, and my writing reflects that emotion towards it. My novel, Wings of a Fly, features bodies of water quite prominently in the setting and theme, and, having grown up in Kingston, I am obsessed with Lake Ontario, almost like a touchstone. So maybe I should have listed water in the question about themes.
Short Story or Fat Novel? Novel. Most definitely. I have written four of them.
Canoe or Bicycle? Canoe is work to me, and too slow to keep me amused, plus ‘on’ is a little too close to ‘in’ the water; as for bicycle, mine was stolen about two years ago and I haven’t gotten around to replacing it. Maybe I will get an electric one…. But I attend yoga and aquafit classes which I enjoy.
FB or Twitter? Most vociferously neither! As a marketing executive, I distrust them as a tool of manipulation. and as a person, I resent them as intrusive. My friends all think I’m a little uptight about this…
What advice would you give someone who said: I’m thinking of writing my life story…?
Be sure to make a lot of it up….
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Sally Moore lives in Whitby, Ontario. Articles and essays have appeared in The Globe and Mail, Ottawa Business Magazine and Word Weaver, and poetry forthcoming in the Ontario Poetry
Society’s Arborealis Anthology of Contemporary Canadian Poetry. She is a graduate of the Humber School for Writers, studying under authors Alistair McLeod, Nino Ricci and Susan Swan, and has recently completed a novel, Wings of a Fly. Sally has served on the Board of Directors of Norman Jewison’s Canadian Film Centre, and won a Gold Remi Award at the Houston Television and Film Festival as Executive Producer of the environmental documentary, A Sustainable Future. Other writing credits include Lifecycle Guarantors of Sustainability, published in The Sustainable City IV by Wessex Institute; forwards to the Artshow series of design books; and numerous promotional and web-based materials. Sally is serving on the WCDR Board of Directors this year as Workshop Coordinator.
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Seven Questions with Lucy Brennan
What literary character most influenced you when you were young, and why?
Jane Eyre — because she had everything against her at the start of her life and, while remaining kind and loving in spite of harsh treatment, she kept hoping against hope and so brought
happiness to herself and others. Note: I was brought up in convent boarding school and have remained an incurable romantic all my life.
Can you recall the premise of your earliest work?
It was a poem. It must have been 1963. It was a poem questioning how Jackie Kennedy was going to bring up her two children without the destructive hatred that their father’s assassination might engender in them.
Do you have a writing “routine”? Or how about themes that tend to come up often in your work? (roses, winegums, Nepal?)
No, unfortunately I do not have a writing “routine”. My first play (and the only full-length play of mine to be fully produced), though not autobiographical, was about a young woman trying to make up her mind about emigrating from Ireland. My second play was about homeless people like those I had got to know at one stage of my life and whom I serve in a lunch kitchen nowadays. My third play came out of nowhere. Two ten-minute plays, which were produced at Trafalgar 24 in Whitby, were based on information contained in a book about the history of Whitby.
Reading is…. my mind’s blood.
Recite a favourite passage from a favourite book. Why is it special?
“In the midst of Winter I finally learned that there was in me an invincible Summer.” Albert Camus (I can always call on it when things are not working out at all the way I’d wish. It is short and easy to call to mind.)
A Choice (or seven):
Yeats or Keats? Yeats
Stratford or Shaw? Shaw (This question presumably refers to the Festivals not to
the authors!)
Lake or Mountain? Mountain
Sonnet or Haiku? Sonnet
Chekhov or Moliere? Moliere (A difficult question to answer.)
Canoe or Bicycle? Canoe
Pen or Keyboard? Pen
What is the writer’s role in society?
To help us absorb a multitude of visions.
~
Lucy emigrated from Ireland in 1957. Her poetry has been published in Canada, England and
Ireland and her first collection is entitled Migrants All. She has produced a CD of stories and poems, The Tellings and Mad Sweeney. She is happiest when entertaining an audience, whether with stories, poetry or as an actor. Her play, ‘Daughter of the House’, was produced in Toronto in April/May 2008.
Lucy can be reached at lbrennan7109@rogers.com and (coming soon!) at her website www.lucybrennan.ca
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Suzanne Schmidt
Appearance on Hugh Reilly’s ‘Liquid Lunch’
Suzanne can also be found at: www.writingfromthesoulsuzanne.com
Seven Questions with Sherry Hinman
What literary character most influenced you when you were young, and why?
Francie Nolan, in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. This book was my introduction to poverty, and a young woman’s longing for a better life. My life was so ordinary compared to Francie’s and,
despite their difficulties, there was something exotic about their lives. I was fascinated by Francie’s admiration of her father, despite his inability to provide for the family, and I must have been just the right age to feel the ache of her longing.
Can you recall the premise of your earliest work?
The earliest work I can remember was a children’s adventure story about two boys who discover their teacher has invented a magnificent machine that can create sensory illusions.
Do you have a favourite place to write? Certain conditions that make the process easier/impossible?
I write best in front of my computer screen. I have a laptop, with which I could curl up just about anywhere, but I prefer my widescreen monitor. The quieter the better, and absolute silence is perfection.
Recite a favourite passage from a favourite book; why is it special?
“June dawns, July noons, August evenings over, finished, done, and gone forever with only the
sense of it all left here in his head. Now, a whole autumn, a white winter, a cool and greening spring to figure sums and totals of summer past. And if he should forget, the dandelion wine stood in the cellar, numbered huge for each and every day. He would go there often, stare straight into the sun until he could stare no more, then close his eyes and consider the burned spots, the fleeting scars left dancing on his warm eyelids; arranging, rearranging each fire and reflection until the pattern was clear… So thinking, he slept. And, sleeping, put an end to Summer, 1928.”
—Ray Bradbury, Dandelion Wine, 1957
Ray Bradbury was my first and most powerful writing influence, and Dandelion Wine was my first Ray Bradbury book. He was the first author who showed me how to transform the ordinary into magic. This passage closes the book and it’s one of hundreds that could have illustrated his ability to evoke something as ethereal as summer in such simple words.
Reveal some themes that often come up in your work… (hummingbirds, one legged ferrets, Herb Alpert…??)
No real common themes, but my stories are often set in forests or by the water (river or seaside).
A Choice (or seven):
Atwood or Munro? Munro (and then Atwood)
Canoe or Jet Ski? Canoe
Notebook or Keyboard? Keyboard
Paper or Screen? Screen (paper only on holidays)
Outline or Revision? Revision (though I’m training myself to like outlines)
Poetry or Song? Song (I’m a bad poet)
Comedy or Mystery? Comedy
Who could you read if you had to read someone exclusively?
Who would have thought this would be the hardest question? One? I usually devour any author I like (Stephen King, Ray Bradbury, Robertson Davies, Alice Munro, etc.), so by the time I’m on that desert island, I’ll have nothing left to read if I don’t try someone new. Maybe Wally Lamb. I’ve just discovered him and loved his first two books. Oh, what about Ayn Rand? Barbara Kingsolver! Anne-Marie MacDonald! Annie Proulx! MG Vassanji! Khaled Hosseini! Oliver Sacks! Tolkien! Rowling! Oh, I get it. It was a trick! Forget it. I can’t answer this one.
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Sherry Hinman has been a full-time freelance editor/writer for the past eight years, and specializes in technical and consumer health care. She is a certified structural and stylistic
editor as well as an experienced copy editor. Sherry has had over 100 magazine articles published, as well as the odd personal essay and work of short fiction. She is a professor at Durham College and teaches at Oshawa Senior Citizens’ Centres. Sherry is also past president of The WCDR and vice-president and inaugural chair of the Ontario Writers’ Conference.
She can be found at www.thewriteangle.ca
Sherry is also author/compiler of the WCDR ’book list’ .
Seven Questions with Barb Hunt
What literary character most influenced you when you were young and why?
It’s not one character, but many. I grew up on Grimms fairytales (in the original German) as well as many folksongs. All part of the first generation experience. These tales are not Disney-esque (gag, gag!) in the least and really prepared me for other medieval writings that I was
exposed to in University. I believe it led to the dark, gritty, haunting quality of much of my prose and poetry.
Can you recall the premise of your earliest work?
Spending entire summers at the cottage with only the radio and record player, my first writing accompanied drawing (cartoons to be precise). I would assemble my own comic books to fill the gaps for me and my sibs between weekly purchases of Archies, Millie the Models and Huey, Dewey & Louies at Pearson’s Landing general store. That quarter went a long way back then, but I felt I had to augment their meager selection by creating my own.
Do you have a favourite writing place/routine/pen?
I’m scattered so routines are out. Any place will do. I write with pen and paper therefore I have a whole collection of pens that are comfortable between thumb and fingers – I’m very fussy! These pens are all around my house, in every bag I carry and my car.
Reveal some themes that often come up in your work (fog, Figi, love letters written in chalk)…
Loss. You’d think I hadn’t grown up with a perfectly happy childhood. I’m be nature a glass-half-full person, but I tend to write about the underbelly of things.
Recite a favourite passage from a favourite book; what makes it specail?
Recite? Are you kidding? I don’t memorize things (even bible verses). My brain-space is more valuable than that. I believe we don’t have to remember, just remember where to look it up! And I have stacks of books that I just HAVE to OWN all around my house.
A choice (or seven):
Long fictionor Short? I have a warm place in my heart for short fiction (but like long too).
Waltz or Polka? (my father was always a mean polka dancer – Eastern European – my feet would leave the floor and I’d be flying!).
Notebook or Keyboard? Those white lined pads ten-to-a-pack.
Billy Collins or Mary Oliver? Sorry, both!! I’m a poet, remember? (Editors’ note: yes, I do remember… that’s precisiely why you got this question—what, you thought this was going to be easy?)
Shaw Festival or Stratford? Shaw
Movie or Book? Love both – and sometimes like to read then watch to compare (that’s why some friends and I are writing a screenplay).
Munro or Gallant? Both because of their different voices. (Editor’s note: ok, that’s it, brother, I give up…)
What advice would you give someone who said: I’m thinking of writing my life story…?
Start small. Tiny fragments noted over a long stretch of time can then be quilted together, embroidered and shown to the world (or just your family). Remember, everyone remembers things differently. Tell them this is YOUR remembrance of things…
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Barbara Hunt is a dry-eyed nostalgic who delivers contemporary bites of naked truth wrapped in a rich appealing texture. She writes poetry, fiction and non-fiction from her home in Port Perry, Ontario.
Both Ways is the Only Way I Want It
Reviewed by: Ruth Zaryski Jackson
Maile Meloy is a young American writer I’d never heard of before my son gave me a book of her short stories for Christmas last year. I only got down to it recently in my beside pile. I was sorry I’d delayed reading it.
The title of the book Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It, taken from a short poem by A. R. Ammons, is the theme of her eleven short stories set mostly in Montana where she grew up. All
the characters want it both ways in tricky emotional or sexual circumstances. All are caught in a dilemma of sorts. What is the socially or morally right thing to do versus what does the character want to do? In ‘Travis B.’, a young ranch hand with a gimpy leg falls in love with a young lawyer who commutes 9 ½ hours to town to teach a class he chanced to wander into. In ‘Two-Step’ female friends discuss one’s husband’s infidelity while the reader squirms realizing that the ‘other woman’ is one of them. The author doesn’t shy away from unsavory, slightly creepy motivations and feelings that are part of her characters lives. The stories are layered and rich with details.
All the stories have a tension that makes the reader uneasy. The dialogue carries the story and makes the reader feel like a fly stuck to flypaper wanting to leave but compelled to stay. Having first observed particular details, the author paints her characters with a few deft strokes leaving an indelible impression on the reader. Her spare and fast-paced prose takes the reader along for a thrilling ride to a surprise conclusion.
Maile enjoys writing short stories where the way out leads to an ending that opens possibilities. She is the author of two story collections and two novels.
Cheryl Andrews
‘The Frayed Map’, at Smoke and Salt
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Cheryl Andrews can also be found here.
www.cherylandrews.wordpress.com
First Daughter
Reviewed by Peter Cluff
If you are a Ludlum fan, you can’t help but be a Eric Van Lustbader fan too. In fact, after Robert Ludlum’s death, Lustbader wrote the last two Bourne books. The opening paragraph of First
Daughter grabs you by the short hairs and the rest of the book never lets you relax until the closing climax. It involves the kidnapping and release of the US President-Elect’s daughter and follows a retired FBI agent, brought back to handle the case at the incoming President’s request, through one dramatic twist and turn after another. The plot thickens when you find out that the outgoing President is involved.
This is a good read from an author who previously specialized in agents who were masters of martial arts centred in East Asian countries.
Books & Bevvies, June 7, 2010
With tons of pictures of all ten or twelve (or more?) of us. Unfortunately I’ve successfully deleted most of them in my zeal to be super organized of late. (Note: super organization is not possible without at least one or two clunkers. Sorry to say this was one.)
I’m tempted to do some pencil sketches of the other attendees. Lucy Brennan who was caught enjoying a drop of the most famous of Irish brews. And I don’t mean tea. Nor ale. Sally Moore was also in attendance (there was a marvellous picture of her handbag, and another of the neckline on her t-shirt–don’t ask). And a whole gang of lively folk at the other end of table that I didn’t have the chance to talk to nearly enough with. (Please identify yourselves, lively people, and any others I missed in the photo gallery!)
Here’s what did survive the organization process:

Well, me of course. (Just a fluke, honest.) And that’s Queen Myrna reading a favourite passage with Graham basking in the contentment of a well eaten plate of crab cakes.

Here’s Tom, demonstrating how the food actually component works.

Thanks to Theresa for demonstrating the Books component…

…as well as the Bevvies element. (Does the woman ever rest??)
And this, the last surviving picture, I like to call: “A Study of Two Presidents, with Tom Not Eating for a Change and the Left Side of the Face of One of the Mysterious Lively People”.
Catchy title, no?
Lucy’s table-top jigs while reading a poem by Sally Moore, and a few raucous moments from the Lively People, will have to remain undocumented.
At least until next time.



