Winners Announced in Canadian Authors Association National Capital Region Writing Contest

CAA-NCR Press Release from Louise Rachlis:
Winners announced for 25th Annual National Capital Writing Contest

The awards were presented May 8th at an event at the Main Branch of the Ottawa Public Library. The Canadian Authors Association-National Capital Region sponsored first prize, the Ottawa Citizen sponsored 2nd prize, and Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeebar, the 3rd. After the presentations, the First, Second and Third prize winners each read their winning piece.

The contest was open to any writer within the National Capital Region. It is blind-judged. Each manuscript is coded when received by the branch contest co-ordinator, then forwarded to the judges, who are selected from across Canada.
In a letter congratulating the finalists, Paul Sarkozy, Ottawa Citizen Vice President of Marketing and Reader Sales, noted:  “As a champion for literacy and the written word, we at The Citizen believe the written word has always had its own unique value that spoken words do not capture. For example, written words have a preciseness and permanence about them which other forms of communication lack.”

This year’s Poetry category winners:

First Place: Joan McKay, Ottawa – In the Beginning

Second Place: Maureen Korp, Ottawa – Friday Afternoon

Third Place:  Carol Stephen, Carleton Place – Walking in Thomson’s Red Sumac

Honorable mentions: Alison Griffith, Nepean – A Writer’s Page;  Joan McKay, Ulster Crescent, Ottawa – In the Middle of this Century (Dust Covered), and Luminita Suse, Gloucester – Mammogram.

Short Story winners:

First Place: Ken McBeath, Perth – Walking the Tunnel

Second Place: Karen Massey, Ottawa – Tar Man

Third Place:  James Hooper,  Ottawa – The Shifting Sands

Honorable mentions: Dick Bourgeois-Doyle, Felicity Crescent, Ottawa – Sylvain et Les Senateurs; Roberta Jones, Rockhurst Road, Ottawa – The Stringhouse; André Narbonne, Stewart Street, Ottawa – My mother is in shadow at the top of the stairs, and Miriam Sciala, Lanark – Music Mag.

“The National Capital Writing Contest is the biggest event of our program year,” says Sharyn Heagle, President – National Capital Region (Ottawa) Branch of the Canadian Authors Association. Heagle says that the CAA encourages writers to test their skills against some of the best writers in the National Capital area. “Becoming a finalist in this contest is validation of your abilities as a writer.” She says it’s exciting to see the friends and family members who come out to the Awards Night in support of the finalists. “Writing is a lonely occupation and having that sort of visible support is a blessing for any writer.”

Small stones 23 and 24 and poems going to the End of the World

I wrote about my poem being entered in the Poetry for the End of the World contest, and being a finalist. I wanted to share the link to the video showing the balloon launch on Saturday, Jan. 21. If you scroll down the page you will also see the winning poem by Ian Ferrier.

http://www.versefest.ca/about/poetry-for-the-end-of-the-world/

Day 23

randomness of weather
today rain turns winter’s
clean white to grimy gray,
pools of water over the slick
of ice, waiting for someone
to slip-slide into wet.

Day 24

to focus large on life is to realize
that more of it has passed
than is to come.

to focus small on life I realize
I have each day: a glass
to fill with wonder
or to empty, untasted.

Carol

 

January challenges: small stones and comfort zones

 

 

Carol A. Stephen

Day 22

sounds for a Sunday morning

clock tick and fridge hum
the rhythmic shush of shovel on snow
muted by a closed window
the slosh of slush against car wheels
the quiet when everything pauses to breathe

 

I had a successful result this week with my week One effort, the submitting of two poems to a contest, Poetry for the End of the World.  I was among the six finalists. I attended the fundraiser for VERSeFest, Ottawa’s new Poetry Festival, and read my poem, The Walking-Off Place in the End-Time, along with the other finalists. Although mine didn’t win, all six of the finalists’ poems were placed into a tube and then into a weather balloon and at 10 p.m. E.S.T. last night, the balloon was released. Off it sailed up into the sky. Destination the End of the World, or…? Doesn’t matter, really. What fun!

As for this week’s challenge, I am still working on lightening up and trying to find some balance rather than obsessing about things.  I have had some weight gain over the holidays, so this week I have been making a good effort to avoid chocolate and cookies (and cakes, and pies, and fudge and….!)  I have done reasonably well at that, other than a small treat last night while having dinner out with a friend. But I watched my portions, so I am not counting that as bad.

Poets plan to send a message to the end of the world

Carol A. Stephen

PRESS RELEASE ISSUED BY VERSeFest

[OTTAWA, January 5, 2012] There’s a popular belief that the year 2012 will be momentous: some say it will be the end of the world. And in Ottawa, a group of poets have decided that this is a great reason to throw a party and send a poem to the end of the world, as a message of sorts.

Poetry for the End of the World, on January 21, is a social evening and party in support of VERSeFest, which takes place February 28 to March 4. Along with live music by Ottawa folk/acoustic band Call Me Katie and Montreal indie band Puggy Hammer (both bands claim poets in their membership,) an open mike, and featured readings of apocalyptic poetry, the organizers will name the winner of VERSe Ottawa’s ‘Poetry for the End of the World’ contest, and then, to crown the night, the winning poem will, quite literally, be sent off to the End of the World.

The idea to send the winning poem off into the unknown came as the organizers were thinking up the best way to celebrate the supposed apocalypse, and they have gotten their hands on a weather balloon, which will be launched from outside Arts Court, at 2 Daly Avenue, at 10:00 PM, after which everyone will head back inside to hear Puggy Hammer perform.

The poem will be laminated to protect it from the elements before launching. A weather balloon can climb to 100,000 feet (high enough to see the curvature of the earth), and can travel great distances if they catch the jetstream. The assumption is that the balloon will climb, and expand as it climbs, until the helium inside it expands too far and it bursts, taking the poem out “not with a whimper, but with a bang,” to misquote the famous poem by T. S. Eliot. Maybe not literally the End of the World, but this is poetry: it’s the metaphor that matters.

The Poetry for the End of the World contest is open until January 7th, and poets can submit their work, or sign up for the open mike, at versefest.ca. The party will be held on January 21, starting at 7:00, and guests are welcome to attend some or all of the events. The full schedule is available at the VERSeFest website.

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 For more information, or to arrange interviews, please contact:

Rod Pederson or Kathryn Hunt

verseottawa@live.ca

Rod Pederson: 613-747-1464

Kathryn Hunt: 613-314-4821

http://VERSeFest.ca