No-Comfort Zone Update Week ending June 10 2012

Well, for last week I found out that I have been accepted to participate in the next issue of TheLight Ekphrastic. That will be coming up in August, I believe. I submitted 5 poems and received 3 art pieces back in return. I am to write a poem based on one of those. Then the artist creates a piece based on one of my 5 submitted poems. Both poems and both art pieces then appear in the online issue.  It is a challenge, but it is a good way to stretch myself as a writer.

This week I took my new camera with its 24x zoom out into the countryside for a test drive. I am not a photographer by any means, but I would like to start taking my own pix for use on the blog and perhaps in my chapbooks. A 3x zoom was not going to do it for me. I can see that I have added another challenge to my weeks to come, learning how to use this beast.  So far, I can figure out how to take closeups of flowers. That doesn’t sound like I have progressed very far, does it?  Interesting that the next time I took the old camera out it had completely died. I am taking that as an affirmation of my decision to make this purchase. It is no longer an indulgence, so I can feel good about it! (AND, I did go back and get a refund when I found a competing ad with a better price. So that was another challenge met, since I tend to let those things slide…)

Of course, looming over my shoulder is the other challenge: submissions.  Not much done there yet. But it is still high on the list!  C.

No-Comfort Zone Challenge update for week of May 27

Well, this week I started to get back to my life beyond writing retreats, long my focus as I prepared for that. Happy to say that my back fence is once again straight and strong, thanks to my brother Norm. But along with that, I have been tidying up the garden, tossed away a lot of broken things that seemed to have some kind of sentimental value for a long time, but are too rusty or shabby or just plain broken to keep any longer. This is a small breakthrough in its own way.  And some of the plants are now thinned out as well.  New flower baskets have added colour.  This is all in preparation for putting my house on the market come fall. Need to move to a smaller house, or one with fewer than three floors. This is my next BIG life challenge, but taking slow steps for that.

I am also happy to say that I am thinking about where I might go on my next trip. And when. And whether it will be alone or not. Baby steps there too. Next week the challenge is to write a presentation on the poet, Yosef Komunyakaa, who is nominated for the International Griffin award. Three volumes of poems to read first to select which of his pieces I am going to include. Update on that next Sunday!  Thanks for listening.

Carol

Canadian Authors Association Announces the ShortList for the CAA Literary Awards

2012 Literary Awards Shortlist Announced by Canadian Authors
May 21, 2012 – The shortlist for the Canadian Authors Association’s 2012 Literary Awards was announced last night at the association’s CanWrite! conference in Orillia, Ontario.
The shortlist is as follows:
CAA Award for Fiction
Patrick deWitt, Portland, Oregon, for The Sisters Brothers, published by House of Anansi Press
Helen Humphreys, Kingston, Ontario, for The Reinvention of Love, published by HarperCollins Canada
Miriam Toews, Toronto, Ontario for Irma Voth, published by Alfred A. Knopf
Lela Common Award for Canadian History
Douglas Gibson, Toronto, Ontario, for Stories About Storytellers, published by ECW Press
Richard Gwyn, Toronto, Ontario, for Nation Maker – Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times, published by Random House Canada
Jonathan F. Vance, London, Ontario, for Maple Leaf Empire: Canada, Britain, and Two World Wars, by Oxford University Press
Award for Poetry
E.D. Blodgett,Surrey, British Columbia, for Apostrophes VII: Sleep’ You’ a Tree, published by University of Alberta Press
Brian Henderson,Kitchener, Ontario, for Sharawadji, published by Brick Books
Goran Simić, Edmonton, Alberta, for Sunrise in the Eyes of the Snowman, published by Biblioasis
The winners of all three genres will be announced at the CAA Literary Awards dinner on Saturday, July 28, 2012, during the Leacock Summer Festival at the Leacock Museum National Historic Site in Orillia, Ontario. The shortlisted authors will be invited to read from their works during the Festival as well.
The Stephen Leacock House located at 50 Museum...

The Stephen Leacock House located at 50 Museum Drive in Orillia, Ontario, Canada. Was Leacock’s summer cottage on Lake Couchiching (near Lake Simcoe) designed by architect Kenneth Noxon. It is now a museum and National Historic Site (designated in 1992). (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Introduced in 1975, the CAA Literary Awards continue the association’s long tradition of honouring Canadian writers who achieve excellence without sacrificing popular appeal. The above nine finalists were selected from nearly 300 nominations.
Founded by Stephen Leacock and several other prominent Canadian writers in 1921, the Canadian Authors Association has continued to carry out its goal of “writers helping writers” since its inception. Some 25,000 writers have been members of the CAA in its 91-year history, including Bliss Carman, Nellie McClung, and Robert W. Service.
Information about the CAA Literary Awards and this year’s shortlisted authors is available at www.canauthors.org/awards.
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MEDIA CONTACTS
Anita Purcell
Executive Director
Canadian Authors Association
T   705 719 3926
TF 866 216 6222
Cell 705 955 0716
For information about the 2012 Leacock Summer Festival or the Leacock Museum National Historic Site:
Fred Addis
Curator
Leacock Museum National Historic Site
T 705 329 1908 ext. 803