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DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221105T170000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
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SUMMARY:Holiday Book Fair
DESCRIPTION:After two years of virtual and hybrid book fairs\, the Holiday Book Fair is back in person!Produced by the Association of English-language Publishers of Quebec (AELAQ) in partnership with the Quebec Writers’ Federation (QWF)\, the Holiday Book Fair presents a stellar lineup of new works from local publishers\, authors\, and translators\, plus a full program of hybrid literary events and author signings.The book fair itself is open Friday and Saturday\, November 4–5\, 11 am–5 pm. Special events—including a wine and cheese\, hybrid readings and discussions\, and a launch party for the Montreal Review of Book‘s Fall issue—will occur in the days leading up to and alongside the book fair\, starting November 2. \n\n\n\n\nVIEW SCHEDULE AND BOOKS FOR SALE
URL:https://qwf.org/event/holiday-book-fair-2022/
LOCATION:Atrium\, McConnell Building\, Concordia University\, 1400 de Maisonneuve Boulevard West\, Montreal\, H3G 1M8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Read Quebec Book Fair
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221104T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221104T143000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20221020T145737Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221020T151959Z
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SUMMARY:Eight Voices: Finalists for the QWF Spoken Word Prize
DESCRIPTION:Part of the 2022 Holiday Book FairFree\, no registration requiredIn person and live-streamed (see details below) \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nIn an exciting world premiere\, the eight finalists for the inaugural Quebec Writers’ Federation Spoken Word Prize will offer short performances showcasing their talents. The prize is open to all forms of spoken word performance\, from storytelling to sound poetry\, hip hop\, and dub. Presented by the Quebec Writers’ Federation and Concordia’s SpokenWeb project\, the event will be hosted by poet and SpokenWeb director Jason Camlot. For more information on the performers\, see the finalist list below.  \n\n\n\nIn-person event details\n\n\n\nIn accordance with public health guidelines\, mask wearing is optional\, though strongly encouraged. The 4th Space is fully accessible from the Maisonneuve entrance\, with an elevator located at metro level for those travelling underground.  \n\n\n\nLive streaming details\n\n\n\nThe event will be live-streamed to our YouTube account\, no prior registration is required. Tune in at 1 pm on November 4\, 2022\, to view and participate in the Q&A via the chat function.  \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nExplore other 2022 Holiday Book Fair events here\, and discover more English-language books written\, published\, or translated in Quebec at ReadQuebec.ca. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCaitlin Murphy is a writer\, director\, and dramaturg.  She has performed in one-woman shows\, stand-up and sketch comedy\, and a web-series she created called Mothers Try.  Caitlin has also written and directed plays and short films and recently launched a digital collection of her pandemic-related art\, Candy for Covid. \n\n\n\nDebbie Braide is an energy and development specialist\, spoken word poet\, World Economic Forum Global Shaper\, and British Chevening alumna. An Abuja Literary Society Poetry Slam Champion\, she has performed for such organizations as the United States Embassy and VSO International. She is committed to sustainable development and gender equity. \n\n\n\nErín Moure is a poet and poetry translator. Her most recent work includes Chus Pato’s The Face of the Quartzes (Veliz\, 2021) and her own chapbooks Retooling for a Figurative Life (Vallum\, 2021) and Arborescence (Columba\, 2022). Her translation of Chantal Neveu’s This Radiant Life (Book*hug\, 2020) won the 2021 Governor General’s Award for translation.  \n\n\n\nJohanne Pelletier is a storyteller with work featured in Canada and the US. She is the winner of the GRIT 99-Second Story Grand Slam\, the producer of Good Gyn-Bad Gyn: Women’s Health Stories\, and an amateur boxing judge. She teaches storytelling to scientists and start-ups. \n\n\n\nLiana Cusmano (Luca/BiCurious George) is a writer\, poet\, spoken word artist\, and filmmaker. They were the 2018 and 2019 Montreal Slam Champion and runner up in the 2019 Canadian Individual Poetry Slam Championship. Their first novel\, Catch and Release (2022)\, was published by Guernica Editions. \n\n\n\nLucia De Luca is an English teacher and spoken word poet. She was a finalist at the 2021 Canadian Individual Poetry Slam and recently participated in Brickyard Spoken Word’s mentorship program. As an organizer\, she brought McGill University its first slam and\, in the summer of 2022\, oversaw the Grove Campus Poetry Show. \n\n\n\nRaïssa Simone is a multi-disciplinary artist and writer based in Tiohtià:ke (Montreal). She has competed at numerous national poetry slams and been invited to perform at multiple spoken word shows\, including the Canadian Festival of Spoken Word\, Toronto International Poetry Slam\, Hillside Festival\, and When Sisters Speak.  \n\n\n\nRoen “Blu’Rva” Higgins is an award-winning spoken word poet\, educator\, speaker\, and creative evangelist. As the founder of The Elevated Creative\, her mission is to elevate others through creative literacy and help them find their flow and tap into their genius zone. \n\n\n\nThank you to our generous funders\, partners\, and sponsors!
URL:https://qwf.org/event/eight-voices-finalists-for-the-qwf-spoken-word-prize/
LOCATION:4TH SPACE\, McConnell Building\, Concordia University\, 1400 de Maisonneuve Boulevard West\, Montreal\, Quebec\, H3G 1M8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Performance,Read Quebec Book Fair
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221104T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221104T163000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20221020T150525Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221020T151801Z
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SUMMARY:Jazz Stories: En Direct
DESCRIPTION:Part of the 2022 Holiday Book FairFree\, no registration requiredIn person and live-streamed (see details below) \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nIn this Holiday Book Fair feature event\, author and Radio Canada personality Stanley Péan will discuss his new book Black and Blue: Jazz Stories with host Jason “Blackbird” Selman. They will be joined by Anita Anand (A Convergence of Solitudes)\, Rana Bose (Shaf and the Remington)\, and Kasia Van Schaik (We Have Never Lived On Earth) for a musically inspired session of improvised live writing\, projected on the 4th Space screens.  \n\n\n\nIn-person event details\n\n\n\nIn accordance with public health guidelines\, mask wearing is optional\, though strongly encouraged. The 4th Space is fully accessible from the Maisonneuve entrance\, with an elevator located at metro level for those travelling underground.  \n\n\n\nLive streaming details\n\n\n\nThe event will be live-streamed to our YouTube account\, no prior registration is required. Tune in at 3 pm on November 4\, 2022\, to view and participate in the Q&A via the chat function.  \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nExplore other 2022 Holiday Book Fair events here\, and discover more English-language books written\, published\, or translated in Quebec at ReadQuebec.ca. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nStanley Péan is the author of eight novels\, a couple of essays (mostly about jazz) and eight short story collections\, including the upcoming Crépusculaires (Éditions Mains libres\, 2022). Since the summer of 2009\, he has been piloting the program Quand le jazz est là every week night on ICI Musique\, Radio-Canada’s all-music radio network. The original French version of Black and Blue: Jazz Stories was awarded the Prix Victor-Barbeau for best essay by l’Académie des lettres du Québec in 2020. Last Summer\, the Festival international de Jazz de Montréal has presented Péan the Bruce-Lundvall Award\, given annually to a non-musician who has left a mark on the world of jazz or contributed to the development of the music\, through the media\, the concert or record industries. Black and Blue: Jazz Stories will be available for purchase at the Véhicule Press table at the Holiday Book Fair\, or online here. \n\n\n\nJason “Blackbird” Selman is a Montreal born poet\, trumpet player and community worker. He is the author The Freedom I Stole (2007\, Cumulus Press)\, Africa As A Dream That Travels Through My Heart (2016\, Howl) and co-editor of the poetry anthology Talking Book (2006\, Cumulus Press) which chronicles the writings of Kalmunity Vibe Collective (of which he is a founding member). He works as a teaching artist\, conducting poetry workshops in schools across the Montréal area and beyond. His work is grounded in the themes of ethno-musicology\, surrealist expression\, love and the intersection of masculinity and emotional vulnerability. \n\n\n\nAnita Anand is not the Minister of Defense\, merely her namesake. She is an ESL teacher\, literary translator and author from Montreal. Her first book\, Swing in the House and Other Stories\, won the QWF-Concordia University First Book Prize. A Convergence of Solitudes is her first novel\, which will be available for purchase at the Librairie Paragraphe Bookstore table at the Holiday Book Fair\, or online. \n\n\n\nRana Bose is a novelist\, poet\, playwright and retired professional engineer. He is a founding editor of montrealserai.com. His fourth novel\, Shaf and the Remington\, was released on September 25\, 2022\, and will be available for purchase at the Baraka Books table at the Holiday Book Fair\, or online here. His third novel\, Fog\, was awarded the Best Canadian Fiction for 2019\, by the Miramichi Reader. \n\n\n\nKasia Van Schaik is the author of the linked story collection\, We Have Never Lived on Earth\, and the poetry chapbook\, Sea Burial Laws According to Country. Her writing has appeared in the LA Review of Books\, CBC Books\, The Rumpus\, Maisonneuve Magazine\, Electric Literature\, and elsewhere. A postdoctoral fellow at Concordia University\, Kasia is currently working on a book of cultural criticism entitled Women Among Monuments and is also co-editing an essay collection\, Shelter in Text\, which interrogates the relationship between the physical and textual spaces we inhabit. Kasia lives in Tiohti:áke (Montreal).
URL:https://qwf.org/event/jazz-stories-en-direct/
LOCATION:4TH SPACE\, McConnell Building\, Concordia University\, 1400 de Maisonneuve Boulevard West\, Montreal\, Quebec\, H3G 1M8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Book Launch,Read Quebec Book Fair
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221104T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221104T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20221020T151202Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221020T152135Z
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SUMMARY:Holiday Book Fair Opening Cocktail
DESCRIPTION:Part of the 2022 Holiday Book Fair \n\n\n\nFree\, no registration required \n\n\n\nFollowing the book fair events in the 4TH SPACE\, attendees are invited to join us for a wine and cheese reception in the McConnell Atrium\, with guest speakers Bert Archer\, Montreal Gazette editor-in-chief\, and special guest author Stanley Péan.  Guests are invited to mingle\, peruse and purchase books throughout the reception.  \n\n\n\nIn accordance with public health guidelines\, mask wearing is optional\, though strongly encouraged. The Concordia Atrium is accessible from the Maisonneuve entrance\, with an elevator located at metro level for those travelling underground. This event is in-person only and will not be live-streamed. \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\nExplore other 2022 Holiday Book Fair events here\, and discover more English-language books written\, published\, or translated in Quebec at ReadQuebec.ca.
URL:https://qwf.org/event/holiday-book-fair-opening-cocktail/
LOCATION:Atrium\, McConnell Building\, Concordia University\, 1400 de Maisonneuve Boulevard West\, Montreal\, H3G 1M8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Read Quebec Book Fair
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221105T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221105T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T182815Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T182818Z
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SUMMARY:Spoken Word – An Introductory Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nIn this introductory workshop\, participants will craft a spoken word performance based on their own lived experience. Before attending\, participants are encouraged to think of a few topics or experiences they would like to write about. The workshop will begin with video examples of spoken word performances and a number of writing exercises. Memory and recollection will then be used as starting points to create pieces that are vivid and relatable\, and sharing will be encouraged at every stage of the writing process. The act of remembering\, and creative writing as remembering\, is like time travel – if you wanted to bring your reader with you on this journey\, how would you describe what happened? Which of the five senses would you lean on? There will be time for discussion as well as silent periods dedicated solely to writing. Participants will receive guidance in using similes\, metaphors\, images\, alliteration\, and other poetic devices to further enhance their writing. They will also be encouraged to play with form\, structure\, and punctuation in a step-by-step process\, as they write pieces that will reflect who they are and the experiences they have lived. \n\n\n\nOnce the pieces are written\, participants will participate in a number of performance exercises. They will explore how their voices\, facial expressions\, gestures\, and movements can make their performances unique and bring their poems to life. Tone\, inflection\, volume\, and emotion will be explored as tools to help tell a story. \n\n\n\nThe objective of the workshop is for each participant to write a poem and present it to the group. Since this is an introduction to spoken word\, the challenge inherent in writing and sharing personal stories will be openly addressed. Participants’ bravery and vulnerability will be celebrated and encouraged in a warm and supportive atmosphere. Participants will come away with a finished piece and a better understanding of how to tell the stories that are most important to them. \n\n\n\nLiana Cusmano (they/them/iel/lu)\, aka Luca and BiCurious George\, is a writer\, poet\, spoken word artist and filmmaker. They are the 2018 and 2019 Montreal Slam Champion and runner-up in the 2019 Canadian Individual Poetry Slam Championship. Liana has presented their work in English\, French\, and Italian across North America\, Europe\, and Asia. They wrote and directed the film Matters of Great Unimportance (2019)\, screened at the Blue Metropolis Festival\, and also wrote the film script for La Femme Finale\, which screened at the Cannes Film Festival (2015). Their first novel\, Catch and Release\, was published by Guernica Editions. \n\n\n\nInstagram: l_cantoncusmano \n\n\n\nFacebook: Liana Cusmano \n\n\n\nTwitter: @L_CantonCusmano
URL:https://qwf.org/event/spoken-word-an-introductory-workshop/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221107T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221107T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220727T160507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T160708Z
UID:10002944-1667844000-1667851200@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Advanced Memoir: The Second Draft
DESCRIPTION:This workshop on memoir is designed for people who have already studied at the intermediate level with Elaine Kalman Naves. Don’t be daunted by the “advanced” label. If you’ve completed an intermediate workshop with Elaine and are interested in writing\, reading\, and talking about memoir\, you are at a level to benefit from this workshop. \n\n\n\nAs of now\, we plan to host this workshop in-person at the QWF office\, with some slots open for remote participation. \n\n\n\nThough you need not be working on a book-length narrative\, you will be expected to have a specific project in mind. It can be something you were working on in a previous workshop or something entirely new. \n\n\n\nDuring the course of the eight-week workshop\, you will have the opportunity to submit a piece of up to 3000 words\, and with luck you will have a chance to present a second time. (More details about this once we get rolling.) \n\n\n\nInstead of a text\, you will have the opportunity to read some fine memoirs\, and the long lead-up to this fall workshop will give you a chance to do some advance reading. Please give priority in your summer reading to the terrific memoirs by the four writers who will be guest lecturers over the course of the session. (See below.) Once we have established who the actual workshop participants will be\, we will also supply you with a list of suggested optional works to enjoy over the course of the summer. \n\n\n\nThe emphasis will be on student input. Participants will not only be presenting their own work to the group but will also be expected to give careful reading of each other’s pieces in order to provide vital critical feedback. This element of the program is equally important to the writing. As in the past there will also be in-class exercises and discussion of topics of writerly interest. In a new departure\, we will start critiquing participants’ pieces at the very first session. Participants who volunteer to present early in the session will be much appreciated! Getting a head start will make it possible to present second drafts. Again\, we will work out these details ahead of time once the class list is established. \n\n\n\nHere are the names of the guest lecturers and their respective titles: \n\n\n\nMark Abley\, The Organist \n\n\n\nLinda Leith\, The Girl from Dream City \n\n\n\nHarriet Alida Lye\, Natural Killer \n\n\n\nRobyn Sarah\, Music\, Late and Soon \n\n\n\nAnd please don’t forget that William Zinsser’s On Writing Well is useful to have as a reference at your fingertips! \n\n\n\nTo apply\, please send the following to riley@qwf.org no later than July 6\, 2022. \n\n\n\nA 3- to 5-page double-spaced writing sample (nonfiction or fiction) that you feel is representative of your abilities.A paragraph or two outlining the writing project you plan to pursue in the workshop.\n\n\n\nElaine Kalman Naves is a long-time literary journalist and the author of seven non-fiction titles\, and of a novel.  She is a two-time recipient of the Mavis Gallant Prize for Non-Fiction\, the winner of two Canadian Jewish Book Awards\, and of a Canadian Literary Award for Personal Essay. Her memoir Journey to Vaja: Reconstructing the World of a Hungarian-Jewish Family has been made into a documentary film. Elaine’s novel\, The Book of Faith\, was nominated for the Leacock Prize for Humour. She has led workshops at the QWF since their inception in 1998.  To find out more about Elaine\, visit her website athttp://www.elainekalmannaves.com/
URL:https://qwf.org/event/advanced-memoir-the-second-draft/2022-11-07/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221107T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221107T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220808T152458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220818T164258Z
UID:10003017-1667851200-1667858400@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Writing About Trauma (Without Being Super Annoying)
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model.  \n\n\n\nThere was a time when bad things would happen to me\, and I would be like\, this is so terrible\, my life is so awful. Then\, I became a writer. Now\, when bad things happen to me\, I think: this kind of thing is so awful… for people who are not writers. This is going to make such a good essay. \n\n\n\nBeing a writer is a superpower. Writers are often uniquely sensitive\, which can make us vulnerable — but that sensitivity\, when channelled appropriately\, can turn into our greatest strength. When we learn to transmute our challenging\, painful\, and even traumatic experiences into art\, we learn a very real kind of invulnerability: a capacity to spin agony into gold\, a way in which we are always safe\, always on top\, and can always have the last word. At its best\, this skill can allow us to wrest power back from our worst experiences and literally pave a road to fame\, fortune\, healing\, and transcendence. There are\, however\, a few essential skills we must learn along the way. \n\n\n\nIn this eight-week workshop\, Montreal-based poet and nonfiction writer Tara McGowan-Ross will take the participants on a journey through their shadows\, mistakes\, betrayals\, and heartbreaks\, towards the end of creating a powerful and transformative piece of work. She will cover subjects ranging from basic critical thinking and how to apply it\, to how to create a safe container for your difficult feelings\, to the ethics of writing nonfiction\, which inevitably includes other people with opinions and boundaries — to injecting the kind of skill\, humour\, and humanity required of a work so that it may avoid the most common pitfall of writing trauma narratives: being\, like\, super annoying. \n\n\n\nTara McGowan-Ross is an urban Mi’kmaw multidisciplinary artist and writer. She graduated from Concordia University’s philosophy program with a minor in Creative Writing in 2016. She is the author of poetry collections Girth and Scorpion Season\, and the memoir Nothing Will Be Different. She has served on numerous editorial boards\, including Goose Lane’s Icehouse imprint\, and has been anthologized in Best Canadian Poetry and Anthologie de la poésie actuelle des femmes au Québec. She lives in Montreal\, where she is a theatre critic\, a rebel educator\, a Substack columnist\, and the host of Drawn & Quarterly’s Indigenous Literatures Book Club. \n\n\n\ngirthgirl.ca \n\n\n\ntaramcgowanross.substack.com \n\n\n\n@girthgirl (Instagram/Twitter)
URL:https://qwf.org/event/writing-about-trauma-without-being-super-annoying/2022-11-07/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221108T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221108T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T160501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220808T151538Z
UID:10002953-1667930400-1667937600@qwf.org
SUMMARY:(Un)broken: Leveraging the Poetic Line
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nWith few exceptions\, poets have access to one tool that other writers do not: the line. A defining feature of its genre\, the poetic line plays many roles in shaping a poem’s character. The line can serve simultaneously as pacing device\, secondary grammar\, image container\, rhythm driver\, and spotlight for sound. \n\n\n\nIn contemporary free verse\, attention is often paid to breaking the line. While valuable\, this thinking locates a line’s gravitational pull largely at its end\, sometimes excluding other possibilities. Lines\, after all\, are made as well as broken. And through this making\, a poem’s fingerprint takes shape. \n\n\n\nThis generative poetry workshop offers poets of all levels the chance to develop a broader and more nuanced understanding of how poems derive power from the line’s possibilities—including\, but also extending beyond\, its breaking. We’ll consider first lines\, line integrity\, flavours of enjambment\, and the line as both sound-vessel and gloss. We’ll also reflect on what happens between lines by thinking about juxtaposition\, stanza\, and pacing. \n\n\n\nOverall\, the goal is to support participants in enhancing their free verse at the line level as they generate new work. Participants can expect to draft four to six new poems and have at least one poem workshopped by the group. Early sessions will involve generative writing prompts and craft discussions\, while later sessions will focus on workshopping. To anchor our craft discussions\, we’ll look at work from a variety of contemporary poets. Writers should bring one of their own poems to the first session as a way of introducing themselves and their work. \n\n\n\nSarah Wolfson is the author of A Common Name for Everything\, which won the A.M. Klein Prize for Poetry. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Canadian and American journals such as The Walrus\, The Fiddlehead\, TriQuarterly\, Prairie Fire\, CV2\, Michigan Quarterly Review\, and PRISM international. Her work has earned notable mention in Best Canadian Poetry and funding from the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers’ Conference. She holds an MFA from the University of Michigan. Originally from Vermont\, she now lives in Montreal\, where she teaches writing at McGill University. \n\n\n\n@SarahWolfson1 (Twitter) \n\n\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/sarah.wolfson.14 (Facebook)
URL:https://qwf.org/event/unbroken-leveraging-the-poetic-line/2022-11-08/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=QWF Office 1200 Atwater Avenue Room 3 Westmount QC H3Z 1X4 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3:geo:-73.5864377,45.4886431
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221108T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221108T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T161912Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220808T152156Z
UID:10002961-1667937600-1667944800@qwf.org
SUMMARY:The Art of Writing Speculative Fiction
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nSpeculative Fiction\, a literary genre that can encompass anything from science-fiction and fantasy to magic realism\, slipstream\, alternate history\, horror\, steampunk\, fairy tales and fables\, dystopia\, and surrealism\, has been with us for as long as we’ve been telling stories. In recent years\, it has grown in importance as writing genres continue to cross and blur\, and even the most conventional writers of literary fiction experiment with speculative tools as a means to add wonder and power to their tales. \n\n\n\nThis workshop is open to both new and experienced writers\, whether of speculative fiction or of other genres. In each session of this eight-week workshop\, we will delve into a different topic and/or element of craft. The sessions will typically include a presentation\, examples from the work of experienced writers\, an in-depth\, participative discussion\, and a hands-on exercise. In addition\, each participant will have the opportunity to present their own work of speculative fiction—be it a short story or an excerpt from something longer—for detailed discussion and feedback. There will be clear ground rules for workshopping that are designed to ensure that our discussions remain constructive and respectful at all times. \n\n\n\nSome of the topics that the workshop will cover include: \n\n\n\nWhat is speculative fiction and what distinguishes it from other types of fiction? What are its special powers and challenges?Questions of content and your story’s four limbs: idea\, world\, character\, plot;Questions of structure and your story’s bones: point-of-view and narration\, chronology\, tense\, tone;Special focus on world-building;Special focus on character-building\, voice\, and dialogue;What kind of story are you writing? What are you trying to say?How to edit and improve your speculative fiction and prepare it for publication.\n\n\n\nSu J  Sokol is a social rights advocate and a writer of speculative and interstitial fiction. Originally from Brooklyn\, xe now resides in Montréal. Sokol is the author of Cycling to Asylum (2014)\, long-listed for the Sunburst Award for Excellence in Canadian Literature of the Fantastic; Run J Run  (2019); and Zee (2020)\, finalist for the Janet Savage Blachford Prize for Children’s and Young Adult Literature. Sokol’s short work has appeared in various magazines and anthologies. This summer\, Sokol’s debut novel was translated into French and published under the title Les lignes invisibles by VLB Imaginaire.  Check out Sokol’s website at www.sujsokol.com \n\n\n\nFacebook: cyclingtoasylum \n\n\n\nInstagram: cycling2asylum \n\n\n\nTwitter: cyclingtoasylum
URL:https://qwf.org/event/the-art-of-writing-speculative-fiction/2022-11-08/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221109T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221109T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T163058Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T163156Z
UID:10002970-1668016800-1668024000@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Your Story\, Embodied
DESCRIPTION:Open to storytellers of all levels of experience. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nHave you ever sat captivated by a stranger standing on a stage recounting true events from their life? Did you get caught up in the tension of the room\, waiting with everyone else to find out what would happen next? Ever wonder what it would be like to hold an audience’s breath in the palm of your hand? \n\n\n\nYou can. You already have everything you need: your body. \n\n\n\nJoin Lukas and Emma\, two seasoned and engaging storytellers\, for eight weeks of exploration into using your body to craft and perform your own true-life stories. \n\n\n\nThe objectives of this workshop are to: \n\n\n\nEquip participants to prepare and perform a five-minute true story with no notes and no props.Facilitate and support exploration of emotionally charged material in search of unique stories.Harness the inherent strength of your body – the vessel for sharing your stories.Examine the tenets of storytelling\, including finding your narrative\, conflict\, and other essential elements of storycraft.\n\n\n\nThese intimate sessions will involve a mixture of group discussion\, critical analysis of stories\, and workshopping participants’ own stories with the goal of embodying an original five-minute story for invited guests at the final session. Stories will be workshopped in groups as well as one-on-one with facilitators and fellow workshop participants. \n\n\n\nEach week will focus on a particular theme with a corresponding body part\, with story examples to support each theme and illustrate the foundations of storytelling. By week 3\, participants should have a story in mind that we will work on for the final presentation. \n\n\n\nLukas Rowland is a writer\, storyteller\, and bodywork practitioner. He has told many stories with Confabulation\, where he is producer and communications coordinator. He was selected for the QWF Mentorship Program in 2020\, where he studied under Carousel author April Ford as a fiction mentee. He curated and produced an evening of queer stories for the Violet Hour. Though he has lived in and around Montreal these past 14 years\, he comes from Southern Louisiana\, where storytelling is part of every Cajun’s life. You can find him on Twitter @lukaslikeswords and on Instagram at @luka2ndfloor and at lukasrowland.com. \n\n\n\nEmma Lanza is a born-and-bred Montrealer with a background in storytelling\, theatre performance\, and arts management. She earned her Master’s degree in Library Science and currently works in medical research administration. A self-proclaimed fat bisexual babe\, Emma is a staunch believer in fat liberation and radical self-love and she wants you to know you look fabulous in that outfit! She has performed at Confabulation\, YARN\, The Wiggle Room\, Concordia University\, and Grownups Read Things They Wrote As Kids. She founded the bi-monthly Fattie Book Club @fattiebookclub and can be found on Instagram @emma_lanza and on Twitter @emmalanza.
URL:https://qwf.org/event/your-story-embodied/2022-11-09/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221109T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221109T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T164302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220805T201243Z
UID:10002977-1668024000-1668031200@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Playwriting 101: A Playwriting Intensive
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nThis workshop will be conducted via Zoom. \n\n\n\nPlaywriting is an artform about curiosity\, obsession\, energy\, entertainment\, transformation\, and illumination. It’s about inspiration\, dedication\, and practice. It’s about following your impulses and shaping those impulses; about creating a series of freedoms and constraints that focus inspiration into a text that can be used as a blueprint for performance. Unlike most other forms of writing\, a play text must leave space for other creators to bring their artistry to the work. Director\, actors\, designers and technicians eventually fill in those spaces left by the writer to transform what is on the page into a three-dimensional performance that necessitates an audience for it to be fully realized. Having written plays that have been staged throughout Canada and beyond (Stratford Festival\, Shaw Festival\, Soulpepper Theatre\, Segal Centre\, Centaur Theatre)\, Erin Shields has developed a number of exercises\, strategies and best practices to imagine\, explore\, and write plays. \n\n\n\nPlaywriting 101 is an invitation for writers of other genres to try their hand at playwriting and for playwrights to deepen their practice. Throughout this eight-week workshop\, participants will bring their own particular understanding of story\, character\, and theme to the table\, to explore how to apply those same skills to the art of playwriting. Each class will focus on one of the following dramatic elements: character\, conflict\, desire\, premise\, form\, plot\, and structure. Through conversations\, focused exercises\, and sharing work\, participants will gain an understanding of how to organically and technically write a play. The process will alternate focus each class between the micro elements (character\, dialogue) and macro elements (theme\, story structure)\, as writers gradually learn how to build the world of the play with nuanced characters. \n\n\n\nDuring these eight weeks\, participants will write. A lot. By the end of the workshop\, writers \n\n\n\nwill have a strong understanding of the basic elements of a play and how to use those elements to write their own play. \n\n\n\nErin Shields (www.erinshields.ca) is a Canadian playwright. Most of her work highlights the negation or misrepresentation of women in classical texts by adapting these stories through a feminist lens for a contemporary audience. Erin’s adaptation of Paradise Lost premiered at The Stratford Festival of Canada and won the Quebec Writers Federation Prize for Playwriting. Erin won the 2011 Governor General’s Award for her play If We Were Birds\, which premiered at Tarragon Theatre. Other theatre credits include: Jane Eyre (Citadel Theatre)\, Piaf/Dietrich (Mirvish Productions/Segal Centre)\,The Lady from the Sea (The Shaw Festival). Upcoming productions include Queen Goneril for Soulpepper Theatre and Ransacking Troy for The Stratford Festival.  \n\n\n\nFacebook: Erin Shields \n\n\n\nInstagram: shieldserin1 \n\n\n\nWebsite: www.erinshields.ca
URL:https://qwf.org/event/playwriting-101-a-playwriting-intensive/2022-11-09/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T165449Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T165503Z
UID:10002986-1668103200-1668110400@qwf.org
SUMMARY:The Art of the Short Story
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nOpen to writers of all levels\, this 10-week workshop is an investigation of the modern short story. What exactly is a story? What distinguishes it from an anecdote\, or a lie?  Most of us recognize a good one when we meet it on the page. It moves us\, often unexpectedly\, to laughter or tears. And it marks us\, reaching inside us and shifting\, sometimes subtly and other times with a jolt\, our views about ourselves and the world. The best stories articulate truths that we hadn’t\, until the moment of reading\, thought to put into words. \n\n\n\nThere is no set of rules for how to write a good story.  Each writer has to find their own way\, and each story demands fresh experiments. Writing is like living. It requires close listening and relentless improvisation.  The best way to learn how to write a good story is to read one. In this workshop\, we’ll read “In the Cart” (1897) by Anton Chekhov\, and investigate Chekhov’s views about this genre. We’ll also look at his technique: how he used elements like detail\, narrative point of view\, and speech to create a story strong enough to withstand the tests of time and translation. Over a century after Chekhov’s death\, his stories are still read and loved in places totally unlike Czarist Russia. What secrets can his work reveal to us in 21st-century Quebec? \n\n\n\nOur first four meetings will be devoted to discussing “In the Cart” (accessible online; also translated as “The Schoolmistress\,” and “A Journey by Cart”). Exercises relating to various elements of craft will be offered. The last six meetings will be reserved for workshopping our own stories and continuing the exploration of what exactly a story is\, and how to write one. \n\n\n\nClaire Holden Rothman is a Montreal writer\, translator\, and fiction editor who has published two collections of stories and three novels. The Heart Specialist (2009) was long-listed for The Scotia Bank-Giller Prize\, and My October was long-listed for the Giller and short-listed for the Governor General’s Award. Her most recent novel\, Lear’s Shadow\, was short-listed for Quebec’s 2020 Jacob Isaac Segal Award\, and won the 2019 Vine Award for Jewish Canadian Fiction. For many years\, Claire taught English literature and creative writing at Marianopolis College. She has also taught fiction workshops at McGill and Bishop’s Universities.
URL:https://qwf.org/event/the-art-of-the-short-story/2022-11-10/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T210000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T180335Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220805T201303Z
UID:10003004-1668106800-1668114000@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Edit like an Editor: How to Edit Your Own Prose
DESCRIPTION:This workshop is open to all levels of writers who have a prose manuscript they want to work on. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nThis workshop will be conducted via Zoom. \n\n\n\nUsing tips\, tricks\, and hands-on exercises\, workshop participants will learn about the different types of editing (including developmental editing\, line editing\, copyediting\, and fact checking) and how to see their own work with fresh eyes. \n\n\n\nThrough reading\, discussion\, and exercises\, this workshop will cover: \n\n\n\nHow to see your own work with an editor’s eyeSpotting common problems (info dumping\, “as you know\, Bob” explanations\, insufficient conflict\, misunderstanding genre conventions\, etc.)Understanding character development (goals and motivation)How to make the most out of dialoguePoint of view\, and common problems with point of view (e.g. head hopping)\n\n\n\nThis workshop is geared toward book-length manuscripts\, including short story and essay collections. Applicants must submit an excerpt from their manuscript (maximum 25 pages) along with a short description of the whole project in order to be considered for the workshop. After registering below\, you have until September 9 to send your document(s) to workshops@qwf.org\, with “For Maria Turner” in the subject line. \n\n\n\nBy the end of the workshop\, participants will have an in-depth editorial plan for their manuscript and have a solid understanding of the different types of editing and how to apply them to their own work. \n\n\n\nMaria Schamis Turner is a freelance editor specializing in developmental editing and line editing for fiction and creative nonfiction. She is a founding editor and previous editor-in-chief and creative nonfiction editor of the literary magazine carte blanche. She worked for 10 years on literary projects for CBC Radio\, including as an editor for Canada Writes. She was also the producer of the true story storytelling series This Really Happened and has taught numerous workshops on storytelling\, writing\, and editing. \n\n\n\nTurneredits.com \n\n\n\nTwitter: @turnmaria \n\n\n\nFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/turnmaria
URL:https://qwf.org/event/edit-like-an-editor-how-to-edit-your-own-prose/2022-11-10/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221110T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T175106Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T175205Z
UID:10002996-1668110400-1668117600@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Writing Outside the Box: A Workshop on Edgy Fiction
DESCRIPTION:Open to writers of all experience levels. \n\n\n\nDue to the content in some of the exercises\, this workshop is restricted to participants aged 18+. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nLooking to shake up your process? Interested in breaking the rules a little? Designed to inspire unique approaches to creative writing\, this workshop will help squash your inner editor and provoke your inner rebel\, giving you the confidence you need to write more openly and honestly. \n\n\n\nOver the course of eight weeks\, participants will delve into the work of unconventional writers like Italo Calvino\, Kelly Link\, John Elizabeth Stintzi\, and George Saunders. You’ll learn tips and techniques for producing work quickly and fearlessly. You’ll dabble with ekphrasis\, magic realism\, and second-person perspective\, and you’ll hone your ability to give and receive constructive feedback in a wildly creative working environment. \n\n\n\nThis is a fun\, provocative\, and productive workshop that’s generated award-winning fiction and long-term friendships. It is suitable for writers of any experience level\, from the shy beginner to the established professional\, working in any medium or genre. And while filled with lesson-based exercises and guided assignments\, this workshop is happily (and willfully) anti-academic. Participants are not taught writing theory but are encouraged to develop their skills through the acts of reading and writing alone. Here\, you learn by doing. \n\n\n\nThere is no submission required prior to the first session. Participants will be expected to share fiction with the group as the workshop progresses. \n\n\n\nThis is the perfect way to kickstart a project\, rejuvenate your existing process\, or to simply step outside of your comfort zone by experimenting with new approaches to creativity. \n\n\n\nCome play with the weird kids of creative writing. (One of us. One of us.) \n\n\n\nTrepassey-born writer Tracey Waddleton splits her time between the island of Newfoundland and the island of Montreal. Her first book\, Send More Tourists… the Last Ones Were Delicious\, was published by Breakwater Books in July of 2019 and won the 2020 ReLit Award for Short Fiction. She is the inaugural recipient of the Quebec Writers’ Federation Max Margles Writing Residency and is spending/spent the month of August writing in Dublin\, Ireland  in 2022. \n\n\n\nwww.traceywaddleton.com \n\n\n\nInstagram: @bartlebomb \n\n\n\nTwitter: @traceywaddleton \n\n\n\nFacebook: www.facebook.com/tracey.waddleton
URL:https://qwf.org/event/writing-outside-the-box-a-workshop-on-edgy-fiction-4/2022-11-10/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221112T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221112T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T182105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T182107Z
UID:10003008-1668247200-1668268800@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Narrative Prose: The Magic & the Nitty-gritty
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nThis one-day workshop is for writers of prose (fiction and nonfiction) seeking to make the most of their writing practice and create quality\, publishable work. It is geared to both beginner and intermediate writers. \n\n\n\nDuring the course of the day\, the workshop will explore: \n\n\n\nThe magic of the creative process\n\n\n\nWhile the impulse to write is personal\, intangible\, and beautiful\, it is also often fraught with obstacles\, such as lack of focus or time\, and fear. The workshop will begin with a brief review of self-bolstering techniques to enhance your writing practice. \n\n\n\nThe nitty-gritty of storytelling\n\n\n\nThe workshop will focus mainly on the craft of writing\, with an intensive review of the fundamentals of narrative prose. Topics will include characterization and voice\, pacing and structure\, suspense and drama\, and how to refine your work through redrafting and editing with a view to getting published. \n\n\n\nOptional: Each participant is invited to submit up to one page (double-spaced) of an opening to a story\, essay\, or chapter. This work should be emailed to workshops@qwf.org one week before the workshop\, with the subject line “For Cora Siré.” Submissions will be discussed in the afternoon of the workshop in a friendly\, respectful\, and inclusive manner. \n\n\n\nBy the end of the day\, participants should leave with a toolkit for pursuing artistic excellence and a strengthened sense of confidence. \n\n\n\nCora Siré is the author of five books\, including two novels. Her latest book\, Fear the Mirror\, is a collection of stories published by Véhicule Press in 2021. \n\n\n\nCora’s fiction\, essays\, and poems have appeared in many anthologies and in magazines such as Grain\, Geist\, Literary Review of Canada\, Montréal Serai\, carte blanche\, Confabulario (Mexico)\, Circumference (US)\, and The Night Heron Barks (US). Her work has been translated into French and Spanish. \n\n\n\nShe has delivered workshops and talks for QWF\, libraries\, and universities and participated in literary events in Canada\, the US\, and Europe. \n\n\n\nAuthor website:        www.quena.ca \n\n\n\nTwitter:                       @corasire \n\n\n\nInstagram:                 @la_cora_sire
URL:https://qwf.org/event/narrative-prose-the-magic-the-nitty-gritty/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221113T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221113T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220928T155451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220928T155518Z
UID:10003041-1668349800-1668362400@qwf.org
SUMMARY:LAUNCH & CONCERT
DESCRIPTION:Book launch of AN OPERA IN 3 ACTS STARRING GINO QUILICO by Connie Guzzo McParland\nWith a special concert by GINO QUILICO\, accompanied on the piano by Dominic Boulianne.
URL:https://qwf.org/event/launch-concert/
LOCATION:305 av Mont-Royal Est\, 305 av Mont-Royal Est\, Montreal\, Quebec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Book Launch,Performance
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://qwf.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/BANNER-FB-EVENT.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221114T063000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221114T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220902T153232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221103T134003Z
UID:10003032-1668407400-1668463200@qwf.org
SUMMARY:QWF Literary Awards Gala
DESCRIPTION:The Quebec Writers’ Federation invites you to the annual celebration of the finalists and winners of the QWF Awards\, the carte blanche Prize\, the College Writers Award\, and the Judy Mappin Community Award. \n\n\n\nThis year marks a new addition to the Gala awards roster. The QWF Spoken Word Prize will be awarded to up to three Quebec-based spoken word\, storytelling\, or literary performance artists working primarily in English in any form of performative writing\, including poetry\, story\, monologue\, hip hop\, dub\, sound poetry\, experimental or interdisciplinary work. \n\n\n\nThe theme for the event is “Complex Times: When Nothing Is Black and White.” Attendees are invited to get in the spirit of the theme by dressing up in anything but black and white. Wear your brightest\, most vibrant array of colours\, or dress in your many shades of grey. Those who participate will have their names entered into a draw for a special prize. \n\n\n\nThe ceremony begins at 8:00 p.m.\, preceded by a cocktail reception from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Doors to the ceremony open at 7:30 p.m. \n\n\n\nTickets to the reception are $50 ($40 for full-time students) and include two glasses of wine\, beer\, or non-alcoholic drink and admission to the awards ceremony. \n\n\n\nTickets for the ceremony alone are $25 ($10 for full-time students). \n\n\n\n\nBUY YOUR TICKETS\n\n\n\n\n 
URL:https://qwf.org/event/qwf-literary-awards-gala-2022/
LOCATION:Lion D’Or\, 1676 Ontario St E\, Montreal\, Quebec\, H2L 1S7\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Events,QWF Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://qwf.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/qwf_logo_colour_600px_530px_300dpi-JPG-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221114T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221114T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220727T160507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T160708Z
UID:10002945-1668448800-1668456000@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Advanced Memoir: The Second Draft
DESCRIPTION:This workshop on memoir is designed for people who have already studied at the intermediate level with Elaine Kalman Naves. Don’t be daunted by the “advanced” label. If you’ve completed an intermediate workshop with Elaine and are interested in writing\, reading\, and talking about memoir\, you are at a level to benefit from this workshop. \n\n\n\nAs of now\, we plan to host this workshop in-person at the QWF office\, with some slots open for remote participation. \n\n\n\nThough you need not be working on a book-length narrative\, you will be expected to have a specific project in mind. It can be something you were working on in a previous workshop or something entirely new. \n\n\n\nDuring the course of the eight-week workshop\, you will have the opportunity to submit a piece of up to 3000 words\, and with luck you will have a chance to present a second time. (More details about this once we get rolling.) \n\n\n\nInstead of a text\, you will have the opportunity to read some fine memoirs\, and the long lead-up to this fall workshop will give you a chance to do some advance reading. Please give priority in your summer reading to the terrific memoirs by the four writers who will be guest lecturers over the course of the session. (See below.) Once we have established who the actual workshop participants will be\, we will also supply you with a list of suggested optional works to enjoy over the course of the summer. \n\n\n\nThe emphasis will be on student input. Participants will not only be presenting their own work to the group but will also be expected to give careful reading of each other’s pieces in order to provide vital critical feedback. This element of the program is equally important to the writing. As in the past there will also be in-class exercises and discussion of topics of writerly interest. In a new departure\, we will start critiquing participants’ pieces at the very first session. Participants who volunteer to present early in the session will be much appreciated! Getting a head start will make it possible to present second drafts. Again\, we will work out these details ahead of time once the class list is established. \n\n\n\nHere are the names of the guest lecturers and their respective titles: \n\n\n\nMark Abley\, The Organist \n\n\n\nLinda Leith\, The Girl from Dream City \n\n\n\nHarriet Alida Lye\, Natural Killer \n\n\n\nRobyn Sarah\, Music\, Late and Soon \n\n\n\nAnd please don’t forget that William Zinsser’s On Writing Well is useful to have as a reference at your fingertips! \n\n\n\nTo apply\, please send the following to riley@qwf.org no later than July 6\, 2022. \n\n\n\nA 3- to 5-page double-spaced writing sample (nonfiction or fiction) that you feel is representative of your abilities.A paragraph or two outlining the writing project you plan to pursue in the workshop.\n\n\n\nElaine Kalman Naves is a long-time literary journalist and the author of seven non-fiction titles\, and of a novel.  She is a two-time recipient of the Mavis Gallant Prize for Non-Fiction\, the winner of two Canadian Jewish Book Awards\, and of a Canadian Literary Award for Personal Essay. Her memoir Journey to Vaja: Reconstructing the World of a Hungarian-Jewish Family has been made into a documentary film. Elaine’s novel\, The Book of Faith\, was nominated for the Leacock Prize for Humour. She has led workshops at the QWF since their inception in 1998.  To find out more about Elaine\, visit her website athttp://www.elainekalmannaves.com/
URL:https://qwf.org/event/advanced-memoir-the-second-draft/2022-11-14/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221114T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221114T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220808T152458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220818T164258Z
UID:10003018-1668456000-1668463200@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Writing About Trauma (Without Being Super Annoying)
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model.  \n\n\n\nThere was a time when bad things would happen to me\, and I would be like\, this is so terrible\, my life is so awful. Then\, I became a writer. Now\, when bad things happen to me\, I think: this kind of thing is so awful… for people who are not writers. This is going to make such a good essay. \n\n\n\nBeing a writer is a superpower. Writers are often uniquely sensitive\, which can make us vulnerable — but that sensitivity\, when channelled appropriately\, can turn into our greatest strength. When we learn to transmute our challenging\, painful\, and even traumatic experiences into art\, we learn a very real kind of invulnerability: a capacity to spin agony into gold\, a way in which we are always safe\, always on top\, and can always have the last word. At its best\, this skill can allow us to wrest power back from our worst experiences and literally pave a road to fame\, fortune\, healing\, and transcendence. There are\, however\, a few essential skills we must learn along the way. \n\n\n\nIn this eight-week workshop\, Montreal-based poet and nonfiction writer Tara McGowan-Ross will take the participants on a journey through their shadows\, mistakes\, betrayals\, and heartbreaks\, towards the end of creating a powerful and transformative piece of work. She will cover subjects ranging from basic critical thinking and how to apply it\, to how to create a safe container for your difficult feelings\, to the ethics of writing nonfiction\, which inevitably includes other people with opinions and boundaries — to injecting the kind of skill\, humour\, and humanity required of a work so that it may avoid the most common pitfall of writing trauma narratives: being\, like\, super annoying. \n\n\n\nTara McGowan-Ross is an urban Mi’kmaw multidisciplinary artist and writer. She graduated from Concordia University’s philosophy program with a minor in Creative Writing in 2016. She is the author of poetry collections Girth and Scorpion Season\, and the memoir Nothing Will Be Different. She has served on numerous editorial boards\, including Goose Lane’s Icehouse imprint\, and has been anthologized in Best Canadian Poetry and Anthologie de la poésie actuelle des femmes au Québec. She lives in Montreal\, where she is a theatre critic\, a rebel educator\, a Substack columnist\, and the host of Drawn & Quarterly’s Indigenous Literatures Book Club. \n\n\n\ngirthgirl.ca \n\n\n\ntaramcgowanross.substack.com \n\n\n\n@girthgirl (Instagram/Twitter)
URL:https://qwf.org/event/writing-about-trauma-without-being-super-annoying/2022-11-14/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221115T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221115T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T160501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220808T151538Z
UID:10002954-1668535200-1668542400@qwf.org
SUMMARY:(Un)broken: Leveraging the Poetic Line
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nWith few exceptions\, poets have access to one tool that other writers do not: the line. A defining feature of its genre\, the poetic line plays many roles in shaping a poem’s character. The line can serve simultaneously as pacing device\, secondary grammar\, image container\, rhythm driver\, and spotlight for sound. \n\n\n\nIn contemporary free verse\, attention is often paid to breaking the line. While valuable\, this thinking locates a line’s gravitational pull largely at its end\, sometimes excluding other possibilities. Lines\, after all\, are made as well as broken. And through this making\, a poem’s fingerprint takes shape. \n\n\n\nThis generative poetry workshop offers poets of all levels the chance to develop a broader and more nuanced understanding of how poems derive power from the line’s possibilities—including\, but also extending beyond\, its breaking. We’ll consider first lines\, line integrity\, flavours of enjambment\, and the line as both sound-vessel and gloss. We’ll also reflect on what happens between lines by thinking about juxtaposition\, stanza\, and pacing. \n\n\n\nOverall\, the goal is to support participants in enhancing their free verse at the line level as they generate new work. Participants can expect to draft four to six new poems and have at least one poem workshopped by the group. Early sessions will involve generative writing prompts and craft discussions\, while later sessions will focus on workshopping. To anchor our craft discussions\, we’ll look at work from a variety of contemporary poets. Writers should bring one of their own poems to the first session as a way of introducing themselves and their work. \n\n\n\nSarah Wolfson is the author of A Common Name for Everything\, which won the A.M. Klein Prize for Poetry. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Canadian and American journals such as The Walrus\, The Fiddlehead\, TriQuarterly\, Prairie Fire\, CV2\, Michigan Quarterly Review\, and PRISM international. Her work has earned notable mention in Best Canadian Poetry and funding from the Bread Loaf Environmental Writers’ Conference. She holds an MFA from the University of Michigan. Originally from Vermont\, she now lives in Montreal\, where she teaches writing at McGill University. \n\n\n\n@SarahWolfson1 (Twitter) \n\n\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/sarah.wolfson.14 (Facebook)
URL:https://qwf.org/event/unbroken-leveraging-the-poetic-line/2022-11-15/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221115T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221115T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T161912Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220808T152156Z
UID:10002962-1668542400-1668549600@qwf.org
SUMMARY:The Art of Writing Speculative Fiction
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nSpeculative Fiction\, a literary genre that can encompass anything from science-fiction and fantasy to magic realism\, slipstream\, alternate history\, horror\, steampunk\, fairy tales and fables\, dystopia\, and surrealism\, has been with us for as long as we’ve been telling stories. In recent years\, it has grown in importance as writing genres continue to cross and blur\, and even the most conventional writers of literary fiction experiment with speculative tools as a means to add wonder and power to their tales. \n\n\n\nThis workshop is open to both new and experienced writers\, whether of speculative fiction or of other genres. In each session of this eight-week workshop\, we will delve into a different topic and/or element of craft. The sessions will typically include a presentation\, examples from the work of experienced writers\, an in-depth\, participative discussion\, and a hands-on exercise. In addition\, each participant will have the opportunity to present their own work of speculative fiction—be it a short story or an excerpt from something longer—for detailed discussion and feedback. There will be clear ground rules for workshopping that are designed to ensure that our discussions remain constructive and respectful at all times. \n\n\n\nSome of the topics that the workshop will cover include: \n\n\n\nWhat is speculative fiction and what distinguishes it from other types of fiction? What are its special powers and challenges?Questions of content and your story’s four limbs: idea\, world\, character\, plot;Questions of structure and your story’s bones: point-of-view and narration\, chronology\, tense\, tone;Special focus on world-building;Special focus on character-building\, voice\, and dialogue;What kind of story are you writing? What are you trying to say?How to edit and improve your speculative fiction and prepare it for publication.\n\n\n\nSu J  Sokol is a social rights advocate and a writer of speculative and interstitial fiction. Originally from Brooklyn\, xe now resides in Montréal. Sokol is the author of Cycling to Asylum (2014)\, long-listed for the Sunburst Award for Excellence in Canadian Literature of the Fantastic; Run J Run  (2019); and Zee (2020)\, finalist for the Janet Savage Blachford Prize for Children’s and Young Adult Literature. Sokol’s short work has appeared in various magazines and anthologies. This summer\, Sokol’s debut novel was translated into French and published under the title Les lignes invisibles by VLB Imaginaire.  Check out Sokol’s website at www.sujsokol.com \n\n\n\nFacebook: cyclingtoasylum \n\n\n\nInstagram: cycling2asylum \n\n\n\nTwitter: cyclingtoasylum
URL:https://qwf.org/event/the-art-of-writing-speculative-fiction/2022-11-15/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221116T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221116T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T163058Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T163156Z
UID:10002971-1668621600-1668628800@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Your Story\, Embodied
DESCRIPTION:Open to storytellers of all levels of experience. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nHave you ever sat captivated by a stranger standing on a stage recounting true events from their life? Did you get caught up in the tension of the room\, waiting with everyone else to find out what would happen next? Ever wonder what it would be like to hold an audience’s breath in the palm of your hand? \n\n\n\nYou can. You already have everything you need: your body. \n\n\n\nJoin Lukas and Emma\, two seasoned and engaging storytellers\, for eight weeks of exploration into using your body to craft and perform your own true-life stories. \n\n\n\nThe objectives of this workshop are to: \n\n\n\nEquip participants to prepare and perform a five-minute true story with no notes and no props.Facilitate and support exploration of emotionally charged material in search of unique stories.Harness the inherent strength of your body – the vessel for sharing your stories.Examine the tenets of storytelling\, including finding your narrative\, conflict\, and other essential elements of storycraft.\n\n\n\nThese intimate sessions will involve a mixture of group discussion\, critical analysis of stories\, and workshopping participants’ own stories with the goal of embodying an original five-minute story for invited guests at the final session. Stories will be workshopped in groups as well as one-on-one with facilitators and fellow workshop participants. \n\n\n\nEach week will focus on a particular theme with a corresponding body part\, with story examples to support each theme and illustrate the foundations of storytelling. By week 3\, participants should have a story in mind that we will work on for the final presentation. \n\n\n\nLukas Rowland is a writer\, storyteller\, and bodywork practitioner. He has told many stories with Confabulation\, where he is producer and communications coordinator. He was selected for the QWF Mentorship Program in 2020\, where he studied under Carousel author April Ford as a fiction mentee. He curated and produced an evening of queer stories for the Violet Hour. Though he has lived in and around Montreal these past 14 years\, he comes from Southern Louisiana\, where storytelling is part of every Cajun’s life. You can find him on Twitter @lukaslikeswords and on Instagram at @luka2ndfloor and at lukasrowland.com. \n\n\n\nEmma Lanza is a born-and-bred Montrealer with a background in storytelling\, theatre performance\, and arts management. She earned her Master’s degree in Library Science and currently works in medical research administration. A self-proclaimed fat bisexual babe\, Emma is a staunch believer in fat liberation and radical self-love and she wants you to know you look fabulous in that outfit! She has performed at Confabulation\, YARN\, The Wiggle Room\, Concordia University\, and Grownups Read Things They Wrote As Kids. She founded the bi-monthly Fattie Book Club @fattiebookclub and can be found on Instagram @emma_lanza and on Twitter @emmalanza.
URL:https://qwf.org/event/your-story-embodied/2022-11-16/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221116T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221116T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T164302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220805T201243Z
UID:10002978-1668628800-1668636000@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Playwriting 101: A Playwriting Intensive
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nThis workshop will be conducted via Zoom. \n\n\n\nPlaywriting is an artform about curiosity\, obsession\, energy\, entertainment\, transformation\, and illumination. It’s about inspiration\, dedication\, and practice. It’s about following your impulses and shaping those impulses; about creating a series of freedoms and constraints that focus inspiration into a text that can be used as a blueprint for performance. Unlike most other forms of writing\, a play text must leave space for other creators to bring their artistry to the work. Director\, actors\, designers and technicians eventually fill in those spaces left by the writer to transform what is on the page into a three-dimensional performance that necessitates an audience for it to be fully realized. Having written plays that have been staged throughout Canada and beyond (Stratford Festival\, Shaw Festival\, Soulpepper Theatre\, Segal Centre\, Centaur Theatre)\, Erin Shields has developed a number of exercises\, strategies and best practices to imagine\, explore\, and write plays. \n\n\n\nPlaywriting 101 is an invitation for writers of other genres to try their hand at playwriting and for playwrights to deepen their practice. Throughout this eight-week workshop\, participants will bring their own particular understanding of story\, character\, and theme to the table\, to explore how to apply those same skills to the art of playwriting. Each class will focus on one of the following dramatic elements: character\, conflict\, desire\, premise\, form\, plot\, and structure. Through conversations\, focused exercises\, and sharing work\, participants will gain an understanding of how to organically and technically write a play. The process will alternate focus each class between the micro elements (character\, dialogue) and macro elements (theme\, story structure)\, as writers gradually learn how to build the world of the play with nuanced characters. \n\n\n\nDuring these eight weeks\, participants will write. A lot. By the end of the workshop\, writers \n\n\n\nwill have a strong understanding of the basic elements of a play and how to use those elements to write their own play. \n\n\n\nErin Shields (www.erinshields.ca) is a Canadian playwright. Most of her work highlights the negation or misrepresentation of women in classical texts by adapting these stories through a feminist lens for a contemporary audience. Erin’s adaptation of Paradise Lost premiered at The Stratford Festival of Canada and won the Quebec Writers Federation Prize for Playwriting. Erin won the 2011 Governor General’s Award for her play If We Were Birds\, which premiered at Tarragon Theatre. Other theatre credits include: Jane Eyre (Citadel Theatre)\, Piaf/Dietrich (Mirvish Productions/Segal Centre)\,The Lady from the Sea (The Shaw Festival). Upcoming productions include Queen Goneril for Soulpepper Theatre and Ransacking Troy for The Stratford Festival.  \n\n\n\nFacebook: Erin Shields \n\n\n\nInstagram: shieldserin1 \n\n\n\nWebsite: www.erinshields.ca
URL:https://qwf.org/event/playwriting-101-a-playwriting-intensive/2022-11-16/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T165449Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T165503Z
UID:10002987-1668708000-1668715200@qwf.org
SUMMARY:The Art of the Short Story
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nOpen to writers of all levels\, this 10-week workshop is an investigation of the modern short story. What exactly is a story? What distinguishes it from an anecdote\, or a lie?  Most of us recognize a good one when we meet it on the page. It moves us\, often unexpectedly\, to laughter or tears. And it marks us\, reaching inside us and shifting\, sometimes subtly and other times with a jolt\, our views about ourselves and the world. The best stories articulate truths that we hadn’t\, until the moment of reading\, thought to put into words. \n\n\n\nThere is no set of rules for how to write a good story.  Each writer has to find their own way\, and each story demands fresh experiments. Writing is like living. It requires close listening and relentless improvisation.  The best way to learn how to write a good story is to read one. In this workshop\, we’ll read “In the Cart” (1897) by Anton Chekhov\, and investigate Chekhov’s views about this genre. We’ll also look at his technique: how he used elements like detail\, narrative point of view\, and speech to create a story strong enough to withstand the tests of time and translation. Over a century after Chekhov’s death\, his stories are still read and loved in places totally unlike Czarist Russia. What secrets can his work reveal to us in 21st-century Quebec? \n\n\n\nOur first four meetings will be devoted to discussing “In the Cart” (accessible online; also translated as “The Schoolmistress\,” and “A Journey by Cart”). Exercises relating to various elements of craft will be offered. The last six meetings will be reserved for workshopping our own stories and continuing the exploration of what exactly a story is\, and how to write one. \n\n\n\nClaire Holden Rothman is a Montreal writer\, translator\, and fiction editor who has published two collections of stories and three novels. The Heart Specialist (2009) was long-listed for The Scotia Bank-Giller Prize\, and My October was long-listed for the Giller and short-listed for the Governor General’s Award. Her most recent novel\, Lear’s Shadow\, was short-listed for Quebec’s 2020 Jacob Isaac Segal Award\, and won the 2019 Vine Award for Jewish Canadian Fiction. For many years\, Claire taught English literature and creative writing at Marianopolis College. She has also taught fiction workshops at McGill and Bishop’s Universities.
URL:https://qwf.org/event/the-art-of-the-short-story/2022-11-17/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T210000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T180335Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220805T201303Z
UID:10003005-1668711600-1668718800@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Edit like an Editor: How to Edit Your Own Prose
DESCRIPTION:This workshop is open to all levels of writers who have a prose manuscript they want to work on. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nThis workshop will be conducted via Zoom. \n\n\n\nUsing tips\, tricks\, and hands-on exercises\, workshop participants will learn about the different types of editing (including developmental editing\, line editing\, copyediting\, and fact checking) and how to see their own work with fresh eyes. \n\n\n\nThrough reading\, discussion\, and exercises\, this workshop will cover: \n\n\n\nHow to see your own work with an editor’s eyeSpotting common problems (info dumping\, “as you know\, Bob” explanations\, insufficient conflict\, misunderstanding genre conventions\, etc.)Understanding character development (goals and motivation)How to make the most out of dialoguePoint of view\, and common problems with point of view (e.g. head hopping)\n\n\n\nThis workshop is geared toward book-length manuscripts\, including short story and essay collections. Applicants must submit an excerpt from their manuscript (maximum 25 pages) along with a short description of the whole project in order to be considered for the workshop. After registering below\, you have until September 9 to send your document(s) to workshops@qwf.org\, with “For Maria Turner” in the subject line. \n\n\n\nBy the end of the workshop\, participants will have an in-depth editorial plan for their manuscript and have a solid understanding of the different types of editing and how to apply them to their own work. \n\n\n\nMaria Schamis Turner is a freelance editor specializing in developmental editing and line editing for fiction and creative nonfiction. She is a founding editor and previous editor-in-chief and creative nonfiction editor of the literary magazine carte blanche. She worked for 10 years on literary projects for CBC Radio\, including as an editor for Canada Writes. She was also the producer of the true story storytelling series This Really Happened and has taught numerous workshops on storytelling\, writing\, and editing. \n\n\n\nTurneredits.com \n\n\n\nTwitter: @turnmaria \n\n\n\nFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/turnmaria
URL:https://qwf.org/event/edit-like-an-editor-how-to-edit-your-own-prose/2022-11-17/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T175106Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T175205Z
UID:10002997-1668715200-1668722400@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Writing Outside the Box: A Workshop on Edgy Fiction
DESCRIPTION:Open to writers of all experience levels. \n\n\n\nDue to the content in some of the exercises\, this workshop is restricted to participants aged 18+. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nLooking to shake up your process? Interested in breaking the rules a little? Designed to inspire unique approaches to creative writing\, this workshop will help squash your inner editor and provoke your inner rebel\, giving you the confidence you need to write more openly and honestly. \n\n\n\nOver the course of eight weeks\, participants will delve into the work of unconventional writers like Italo Calvino\, Kelly Link\, John Elizabeth Stintzi\, and George Saunders. You’ll learn tips and techniques for producing work quickly and fearlessly. You’ll dabble with ekphrasis\, magic realism\, and second-person perspective\, and you’ll hone your ability to give and receive constructive feedback in a wildly creative working environment. \n\n\n\nThis is a fun\, provocative\, and productive workshop that’s generated award-winning fiction and long-term friendships. It is suitable for writers of any experience level\, from the shy beginner to the established professional\, working in any medium or genre. And while filled with lesson-based exercises and guided assignments\, this workshop is happily (and willfully) anti-academic. Participants are not taught writing theory but are encouraged to develop their skills through the acts of reading and writing alone. Here\, you learn by doing. \n\n\n\nThere is no submission required prior to the first session. Participants will be expected to share fiction with the group as the workshop progresses. \n\n\n\nThis is the perfect way to kickstart a project\, rejuvenate your existing process\, or to simply step outside of your comfort zone by experimenting with new approaches to creativity. \n\n\n\nCome play with the weird kids of creative writing. (One of us. One of us.) \n\n\n\nTrepassey-born writer Tracey Waddleton splits her time between the island of Newfoundland and the island of Montreal. Her first book\, Send More Tourists… the Last Ones Were Delicious\, was published by Breakwater Books in July of 2019 and won the 2020 ReLit Award for Short Fiction. She is the inaugural recipient of the Quebec Writers’ Federation Max Margles Writing Residency and is spending/spent the month of August writing in Dublin\, Ireland  in 2022. \n\n\n\nwww.traceywaddleton.com \n\n\n\nInstagram: @bartlebomb \n\n\n\nTwitter: @traceywaddleton \n\n\n\nFacebook: www.facebook.com/tracey.waddleton
URL:https://qwf.org/event/writing-outside-the-box-a-workshop-on-edgy-fiction-4/2022-11-17/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221119T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221119T123000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220803T192607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T192609Z
UID:10003011-1668852000-1668861000@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Writing for Children's Magazines: A Pathway to Book Publication
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants. \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model. \n\n\n\nAnne Renaud credits children’s magazines for helping her hone her writing skills and\, more importantly\, for keeping her from giving up on her dream of becoming a children’s writer. More than 200 of Anne’s non-fiction articles\, poems\, craft projects\, and fiction stories have been published in Canadian\, American\, and Australian children’s magazines\, including Spider\, Cricket\, Hopscotch\, Fun for Kidz\, Odyssey\, Faces\, Clubhouse\, and Highlights for Children.  \n\n\n\nIn this workshop\, Anne shares her tips on how writers can break into this market.  This two-and-a-half hour Powerpoint presentation/workshop will include some writing exercises. \n\n\n\nHandouts will be distributed. Participants are also encouraged to send Anne specific questions they would like answered prior to the workshop date (send your questions to riley@qwf.org\, with “Question for Anne Renaud” in the subject line). \n\n\n\nAnne Renaud is an award-winning children’s author who writes in both French and English. Her publications feature picture books for four-to-eight-year-olds and historical non-fiction books for nine- to-twelve-year-olds. Her picture-book biographies include Ferdinand Cheval: The Postman who Delivered a Palace; The True Tale of a Giantess: The Story of Anna Swan; The Boy Who Invented the Popsicle: The Cool Science Behind Frank Epperson’s Famous Frozen Treat; and Mr. Crum’s Potato Predicament\, which won the 2018 QWF Prize for Children’s and YoungAdult Literature. Anne is also a regular contributor to children’s magazines\, such as Highlights\, Pockets\, Cricket\, Orbit\, Spider\,and Faces.  \n\n\n\nAdditional information on Anne’s publications can be found on her website at http://annerenaud.net/ \n\n\n\nYou can also find Anne on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064131728787
URL:https://qwf.org/event/writing-for-childrens-magazines-a-pathway-to-book-publication/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221120T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221120T160000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20221102T172718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221102T172720Z
UID:10003165-1668952800-1668960000@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Launch of The Brass Charm
DESCRIPTION:Monique Polak launches her first picture book\, The Brass Charm (Scholastic)\, illustrated by Marie Lafrance.\nAdmission is free\, but reservations are required: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/book-launch-monique-polaks-the-brass-charm-tickets-429873391887?fbclid=IwAR0iAj1ugfVvgVXe98gElGM-OH_QUnPIKu9x-Y6NvYmnY0lkirnHvlkoVac\nMonique will donate her share of book sales to the Montreal Holocaust Museum\nCopies of the French translation Le trésor d’Oma will also be available
URL:https://qwf.org/event/launch-of-the-brass-charm/
LOCATION:Montreal Holocaust Museum\, 5151 Cote Ste. Catherine Street\, Montreal\, Quebec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Book Launch
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221121T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221121T200000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220727T160507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220803T160708Z
UID:10002946-1669053600-1669060800@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Advanced Memoir: The Second Draft
DESCRIPTION:This workshop on memoir is designed for people who have already studied at the intermediate level with Elaine Kalman Naves. Don’t be daunted by the “advanced” label. If you’ve completed an intermediate workshop with Elaine and are interested in writing\, reading\, and talking about memoir\, you are at a level to benefit from this workshop. \n\n\n\nAs of now\, we plan to host this workshop in-person at the QWF office\, with some slots open for remote participation. \n\n\n\nThough you need not be working on a book-length narrative\, you will be expected to have a specific project in mind. It can be something you were working on in a previous workshop or something entirely new. \n\n\n\nDuring the course of the eight-week workshop\, you will have the opportunity to submit a piece of up to 3000 words\, and with luck you will have a chance to present a second time. (More details about this once we get rolling.) \n\n\n\nInstead of a text\, you will have the opportunity to read some fine memoirs\, and the long lead-up to this fall workshop will give you a chance to do some advance reading. Please give priority in your summer reading to the terrific memoirs by the four writers who will be guest lecturers over the course of the session. (See below.) Once we have established who the actual workshop participants will be\, we will also supply you with a list of suggested optional works to enjoy over the course of the summer. \n\n\n\nThe emphasis will be on student input. Participants will not only be presenting their own work to the group but will also be expected to give careful reading of each other’s pieces in order to provide vital critical feedback. This element of the program is equally important to the writing. As in the past there will also be in-class exercises and discussion of topics of writerly interest. In a new departure\, we will start critiquing participants’ pieces at the very first session. Participants who volunteer to present early in the session will be much appreciated! Getting a head start will make it possible to present second drafts. Again\, we will work out these details ahead of time once the class list is established. \n\n\n\nHere are the names of the guest lecturers and their respective titles: \n\n\n\nMark Abley\, The Organist \n\n\n\nLinda Leith\, The Girl from Dream City \n\n\n\nHarriet Alida Lye\, Natural Killer \n\n\n\nRobyn Sarah\, Music\, Late and Soon \n\n\n\nAnd please don’t forget that William Zinsser’s On Writing Well is useful to have as a reference at your fingertips! \n\n\n\nTo apply\, please send the following to riley@qwf.org no later than July 6\, 2022. \n\n\n\nA 3- to 5-page double-spaced writing sample (nonfiction or fiction) that you feel is representative of your abilities.A paragraph or two outlining the writing project you plan to pursue in the workshop.\n\n\n\nElaine Kalman Naves is a long-time literary journalist and the author of seven non-fiction titles\, and of a novel.  She is a two-time recipient of the Mavis Gallant Prize for Non-Fiction\, the winner of two Canadian Jewish Book Awards\, and of a Canadian Literary Award for Personal Essay. Her memoir Journey to Vaja: Reconstructing the World of a Hungarian-Jewish Family has been made into a documentary film. Elaine’s novel\, The Book of Faith\, was nominated for the Leacock Prize for Humour. She has led workshops at the QWF since their inception in 1998.  To find out more about Elaine\, visit her website athttp://www.elainekalmannaves.com/
URL:https://qwf.org/event/advanced-memoir-the-second-draft/2022-11-21/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221121T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221121T220000
DTSTAMP:20260405T023146
CREATED:20220808T152458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220818T164258Z
UID:10003019-1669060800-1669068000@qwf.org
SUMMARY:Writing About Trauma (Without Being Super Annoying)
DESCRIPTION:Open to all. \n\n\n\nLimited to 12 participants \n\n\n\nWe plan to hold this workshop in person at the QWF office\, with up to two virtual slots available for people who are unable to come to our office. If public health conditions necessitate it\, this workshop may transition to a purely online model.  \n\n\n\nThere was a time when bad things would happen to me\, and I would be like\, this is so terrible\, my life is so awful. Then\, I became a writer. Now\, when bad things happen to me\, I think: this kind of thing is so awful… for people who are not writers. This is going to make such a good essay. \n\n\n\nBeing a writer is a superpower. Writers are often uniquely sensitive\, which can make us vulnerable — but that sensitivity\, when channelled appropriately\, can turn into our greatest strength. When we learn to transmute our challenging\, painful\, and even traumatic experiences into art\, we learn a very real kind of invulnerability: a capacity to spin agony into gold\, a way in which we are always safe\, always on top\, and can always have the last word. At its best\, this skill can allow us to wrest power back from our worst experiences and literally pave a road to fame\, fortune\, healing\, and transcendence. There are\, however\, a few essential skills we must learn along the way. \n\n\n\nIn this eight-week workshop\, Montreal-based poet and nonfiction writer Tara McGowan-Ross will take the participants on a journey through their shadows\, mistakes\, betrayals\, and heartbreaks\, towards the end of creating a powerful and transformative piece of work. She will cover subjects ranging from basic critical thinking and how to apply it\, to how to create a safe container for your difficult feelings\, to the ethics of writing nonfiction\, which inevitably includes other people with opinions and boundaries — to injecting the kind of skill\, humour\, and humanity required of a work so that it may avoid the most common pitfall of writing trauma narratives: being\, like\, super annoying. \n\n\n\nTara McGowan-Ross is an urban Mi’kmaw multidisciplinary artist and writer. She graduated from Concordia University’s philosophy program with a minor in Creative Writing in 2016. She is the author of poetry collections Girth and Scorpion Season\, and the memoir Nothing Will Be Different. She has served on numerous editorial boards\, including Goose Lane’s Icehouse imprint\, and has been anthologized in Best Canadian Poetry and Anthologie de la poésie actuelle des femmes au Québec. She lives in Montreal\, where she is a theatre critic\, a rebel educator\, a Substack columnist\, and the host of Drawn & Quarterly’s Indigenous Literatures Book Club. \n\n\n\ngirthgirl.ca \n\n\n\ntaramcgowanross.substack.com \n\n\n\n@girthgirl (Instagram/Twitter)
URL:https://qwf.org/event/writing-about-trauma-without-being-super-annoying/2022-11-21/
LOCATION:QWF Office\, 1200 Atwater Avenue\, Room 3\, Westmount\, QC\, H3Z 1X4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:QWF Workshops,Workshops
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