CAA-NCR BI-WEEKLY LITERARY NOTICES FOR AUG. 25 TO SEPT. 7, 2014

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NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION BRANCH (NCR)

Bi-Weekly Notices for the two weeks of Aug. 25 to Sept. 7, 2014

 16 ITEMS, 12 NEW. MANY NEW SUBMISSION & CONTEST CALLS

 

English: Canadian parliament from the Musée ca...

English: Canadian parliament from the Musée canadien des Civilisations in Gatineau (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

NOTICE TO ALL READERS: Please send all submissions & event notices to Carol Stephen at cstephen0@gmail.com
#Find writing-related services offered by our members at our CAA-NCR website http://www.canauthors-ottawa.org/hire-a-member.shtml

ITEM 1: CAA-NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION (OTTAWA) PROGRAM INFORMATION AND IMPORTANT MESSAGE RE PRESIDENCY FALL, 2014                 NEW

IMPORTANT NOTICE TO THE MEMBERS REGARDING THE 2014-16 CAA-NCR PRESIDENCY

There is an immediate need to secure a new Branch President following the recent retirement of Phyllis Bohonis from the position.

There will be an election at this September 9th meeting, in which we strongly encourage you to participate. Filling this position is of utmost importance to the ongoing operations of the Branch. (PLEASE NOTE ITEM BELOW REGARDING THE MEETING LOCATION)

To make a nomination for the position, or if you are interested in taking on responsibility for the position yourself, kindly (as soon as possible) contact Sharyn Heagle (sharyn_40@yahoo.com) Past-President of the branch.

In the interim, Dr. Qais Ghanem, currently VP of Communications, has graciously agreed to take on the position of Acting President pending the outcome of the September election.

Also, please note that we have several vacant positions in the Branch. If you have even a limited amount of time to spare, we can find a place for you in the operation of the branch. CAA is an organization run by volunteers.

 We need you!

 Please attend the September 9th meeting, register your vote, and speak to us about taking on some role in the organization. Your participation is vitally important to the branch.

ITEM 2: SEPTEMBER 9TH, 2014 – MEETING INFORMATION             NEW!

NOTE: Beginning in September 2014, CAA-NCR will hold its regular monthly meetings in the McNabb Recreation Centre, at 180 Percy St. off Bronson Ave.
Close to the Queensway in a safe neighbourhood next to lovely McNabb Park, the Centre has plenty of free on-site parking and wheelchair accessibility.

TOPIC: Creating a community of writers

PRESENTERS: Kevin T. Johns and Catherine Brunelle
#OttawaWrites and OttawaWrites.com
DATE: Tuesday, September 9, 2014
TIME: 7:00 – 9:00 P.M.
LOCATION: McNabb Recreation Centre, 180 Percy St. off Bronson Ave.

Join us for a fun evening with Kevin and Catherine as they tell us about the community they are creating through #OttawaWrites and OttawaWrites.com. Their facebook and Twitter pages connect Ottawa writers of every style and genre and celebrate their talents and successes. Their Ottawa Writes Podcast features insights into publishing, writing, festivals, PR, printing, and more.

ITEM 3: CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS TO CAA-NCR’s BYLINE MAGAZINE
If you have an article of interest to writers contact the Editor, Sharyn Heagle, at sharyn_40@yahoo.com. Byline pays 2-1/2 cents per word to a maximum of $25 on publication. Member promotional material is included in Byline at no cost. Contact the Editor, Sharyn Heagle for details Sharyn_40@yahoo.com

ITEM 4: UPCOMING EVENTS NEW!

Event: Library & Archives – A Resource for Writers Date: Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Time: 7:00 – 9:00 pm
Description: Reference Librarian, Megan Butcher, will guide us in making the most of Canada’s documentary heritage resource. She will show us the research steps, including protocols, and tips to make your research easier. Website: http://www.canauthors-ottawa.org/

Event: Make Your Book an E-Book Date: Tuesday, November 11, 2014 Time: 7:00 – 9:00 pm Description: Details to follow Website: http://www.canauthors-ottawa.org/

CAA NEWS FROM OTHER BRANCHES

ITEM 5: NEW CAA BRANCH OPENS IN MUSKOKA! NEW!

New Twig in Bracebridge

 

Manitoba Street, high street of Bracebridge, O...

Manitoba Street, high street of Bracebridge, Ontario, Canada. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

 

 

The new Muskoka Branch of CAA launched on July 23 in Bracebridge, Ontario, with award-winning author, Terry Fallis as their guest speaker! Over 50 people attended the opening event with several new members joining. CAA Muskoka holds its next meeting with author/facilitator Sue Reynolds on August 27 at Riverwalk Restaurant, 1 Manitoba Street, Bracebridge. Doors open at 6:00 pm so attendees can order from the special menu prepared for these events. The meeting starts at 6:30 pm.

NORTH WOODS LITERARY FESTIVAL OCTOBER 3 TO 5, 2014

 

Bracebridge, Ontario, Canada

Bracebridge, Ontario, Canada (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

CAA Muskoka is also excited to announce North Words Literary Festival taking place in Bracebridge, October 3-5, 2014. Over twelve acclaimed Canadian authors are scheduled to attend including Anthony De Sa, Terry Fallis, Richard Scrimger, M.G. Vassanji, Michelle Berry, and Anne Lazurko. A highlight of the festival will be a full day writers’ workshop on Friday, October 3. For information please contact Festival Organizer, Cindy Watson, at 705-645-5595 or cwatson@watsonlabourlaw.com.

CAA NEWS FROM NATIONAL

ITEM 6: CANADIAN AUTHORS IS HITTING THE ROAD! COME SEE US THIS FALL AT THE FOLLOWING EVENTS: NEW!

Event: The Word On The Street Date: Sunday, September 21, 2014

 

Queen's Park Legislature, Toronto, Ontario.

Queen’s Park Legislature, Toronto, Ontario. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Location: Queens Park Circle, Toronto Time: 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Details: http://www.thewordonthestreet.ca/wots/
 

 

 

Event: Culture Days Date: September 26 – 28, 2014
Location: Across Canada
Details: http://culturedays.ca/en

Event: INSPIRE! Toronto International Book Fair Date: November 13 – 16, 2014
Location: Metro Toronto Convention Centre (N. Building), Toronto
Time: Friday & Saturday 10:00 am – 8:00 pm, Sunday 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
Details: http://www.torontobookfair.ca/

OTHER WORKSHOPS AND CONFERENCES

ITEM 7: OTTAWA U NEW UNDERGRAD POETRY WORKSHOP WITH PHIL HALL NEW!
As befits its situation in the heart of the nation’s capital, the Department of English in the University of Ottawa is committed to a strong programme in Canadian literature and to the fostering of the creative community in Canadian letters. To this end the Department offers its expertise to aspiring writers through consultation and formal workshops. Within the Department an informal and lively community of writers and poets has developed in recent years; their enthusiastic sponsorship of such projects as poetry readings and literary magazines has greatly enriched the cultural life of the University and the community at large.

 

At left, Morisset Library. At right, former he...

At left, Morisset Library. At right, former headquarters of campus radio station CHUO, currently the Déjà Vu lounge. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

ENG 4398 A Workshop in Poetry With 2014 writer-in-residence Phil Hall
This creative writing workshop focuses on the writing of poetry and includes a survey of literary magazines and other avenues for publication of finished work. The professor’s written approval is required for registration in this course. Students may apply to register by submitting up to ten pages of their fiction to Creative Writing, Department of English, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5. Students will be selected solely on the basis of aptitude as indicated by work submitted.
Portfolios will be accepted and considered for admission until the course is full. http://arts.uottawa.ca/english/news/new-undergrad-poetry-workshop
Phil Hall won the 2011 Governor General’s Award for Poetry in English, and the 2012 Trillium Award, for his book Killdeer. His most recent books are The Small Nouns Crying Faith (2013), and Notes from Gethsemani (2014).

ITEM 8: THE KULDIP GILL WRITING FELLOWSHIP — WRITER IN RESIDENCE
University of the Fraser Valley NEW!

Apply to UFV’s Writer in Residence Program
http://www.ufv.ca/english/writer-in-residence/apply/

 

Abbotsford campus library

Abbotsford campus library (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Writer in Residence term lasts for ten weeks, from January to April of each year. The yearly application deadline is September 1. Candidates should have a substantial publishing record, including two books or the equivalent with a recognized publisher. A generous stipend is attached to the position.
Our program has been careful to balance the writer’s public engagement with his or her own writing practice. While the primary function of a writing residency is to provide the writer with an extended period of time to concentrate on his or her own writing, the program consistently contributes to the wider audience’s appreciation and understanding of both the writer’s work and, more generally, contemporary Canadian writing.
Candidates interested in applying for the position of Writer in Residence should forward a cover letter and CV to: Andrea MacPherson, Creative Writing Committee Chair, English Department, University of the Fraser Valley andrea.macpherson@ufv.ca

ITEM 9: SUSAN HICKMAN WORKSHOPS AUGUST & SEPTEMER 2014 NEW!
An 8-week writing workshop that encourages you to write what you know (fiction and non-fiction), give and receive valuable feedback within a small group, and learn to take risks with your writing. A guest speaker (published author) will join us for a session.

Mondays, September 22 to November 17, 7-9 pm
Dymon Storage boardroom, 323 Coventry Rd. $174 Spaces are limited

For more information about veteran writer/journalist Susan Hickman
http://www.linkedin.com/in/hickmansusan Contact Susan at shickman19@gmail.com for more information and/or to register

FOR THOSE WHO ARE UNABLE OR UNWILLING TO COMMIT TO THE FALL WORKSHOP,
I am running a 4-week intensive workshop to help writers kickstart a piece of writing they have been working on, or want to start. It’s an opportunity to polish off that little gem, start Something completely new and/or exercise your creativity.

Four end-of-summer evenings, Mondays AUGUST 25 to September 15, 7-9 p.m. Same location, $99. I’m also offering the option to take both courses, 12 weeks straight through, for only $250. Susan Hickman 613-290-7646

ITEM 10: AUTHENTIC POETIC VOICE WORKSHOP WITH BRANDON WINT (AUG. 2014 AND ONLINE) NEW!

Date: Begins Tuesday Aug. 26, location to be announced

Starting Tuesday, August 26th, this new series of poetry-writing workshops will investigate how to uncover and express our inner-most truths through poetry. Through discussion and writing exercises we will broaden our understanding of how poetry can be used as a tool for healing, self-discovery, and the expression of our authentic voices.

When: Tuesday evenings at 7pm, beginning on August 26th
Where: TBA Cost: $120

How to register: Send the $120 registration fee via e-mail money transfer to brandontwint@gmail.com Alternatively, contact Brandon via facebook or e-mail to arrange a time and place to register in person.

***This class is also available online for people who reside outside of Ottawa. If you are interested in taking the course online, please reach Brandon via e-mail at brandontwint@gmail.com :) ****  More info here: https://www.facebook.com/events/237909539753152/

ITEM 11: WORKSHOP SCHOLARSHIP: ARTSMITH’S WRITER ISLAND WITH PEGGY SHUMAKER NEW!
Artsmith is delighted to announce the Doug & Ann Johnson Scholarship for our Fall 2014 Writer Island with Peggy Shumaker. The Doug and Ann Johnson Scholarship covers the recipient’s workshop fees for “Geographies of the Mind and Heart: A Weekend of Writing” October 24-26, 2014 on Orcas Island in Washington State’s San Juan Islands, plus two nights’ lodging at the historic Kangaroo House Bed and Breakfast during the workshop and retreat.
To apply, submit a five-page writing sample along with a reading fee of $20 by September 1, 2014. The scholarship recipient will be announced on the Artsmith website by September 30, 2014. Those who register for the workshop by September 30, 2014 can upload a writing sample with their registration form to be entered for the scholarship for no additional fee. Learn more about Artsmith’s Writer Island and the scholarship here: http://orcasartsmith.org/workshops.html
Apply for the Doug & Ann Johnson Scholarship here: https://artsmith.submittable.com/submit
Writer Island with Peggy Shumaker. October 24-26, 2014, Orcas Island, WA
Geographies of the Mind and Heart: A Weekend of Writing on Orcas Island
You’re welcome to come spend three days immersed in words–writing, talking, laughing–on Orcas Island in Washington State’s San Juan Islands. We’ll concentrate on generating new work, creating prompts to use on the spot and others to take home. We’ll also discuss topics of particular interest to the participants. The workshop is open to writers in all genres. Please bring writing materials, a sense of adventure, and a sense of humor.

 

Orcas Island Historical Museum, Eastsound, Orc...

Orcas Island Historical Museum, Eastsound, Orcas Island, Washington. NOte the rather unusual relief carving on the back side of the totem pole. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Peggy Shumaker: As well as being the Artsmith Artist of the Year, Peggy Shumaker has been chosen as the Rasmuson Foundation’s Distinguished Artist for 2014. She is the author of seven books of poetry, most recently Toucan Nest, Poems of Costa Rica. Her lyrical memoir is Just Breathe Normally. Professor emerita from University of Alaska Fairbanks, Shumaker teaches in the Rainier Writing Workshop. She is founding editor of Boreal Books, publisher of fine art and literature from Alaska. She edits the Alaska Literary Series at University of Alaska Press. Peggy Shumaker was Alaska State Writer Laureate for 2010-2012.

ITEM 12: ARTSMITH ARTIST RESIDENCY JANUARY 4 – 11 2015 NEW!

Each year Artsmith grants up to five Artist Residency Fellowships for artists, scholars, and writers to have one week of focused time to create new works. The 2015 residency takes place January 4-11 on Orcas Island in Washington State’s San Juan Islands. Fellows stay in individual rooms with private baths as guests of Artsmith and Kangaroo House Bed and Breakfast, and have access to the inn’s amenities, including wireless Internet and garden hot tub. Five dinners are provided during the residency. Fellows are responsible for all other meals. Being within walking distance of the beach, library, coffee shops, restaurants, galleries, and Darvill’s Bookstore, and only a few miles from Moran State Park and Turtleback Preserve, residents have no shortage of inspirational sustenance.
Visual artists, please note that Artsmith does not have artist studios, much as we wish we did. As a result, the residency is best suited for artists who do not require use of a studio. If in doubt, please email us at info @ orcasartsmith.org to inquire.
The Selection Process
The Artsmith Peer Review Panel, comprised of artists, writers, and scholars, selects Fellows based primarily on two main criteria:
1. How well the proposed work will benefit from the residency setting
2. Do the statement of intent and work sample reflect originality and evidence of pushing the boundaries of craft
The makeup of the Peer Review Panel changes each year, but is always selected to reflect the interdisciplinary nature of the residency.
To Apply: For the January 4 to 11, 2015 Artsmith Artist Residency, applications will be accepted until September 30, 2014. Please submit the following online via Submittable (https://artsmith.submittable.com/submit)
1. Cover letter, including residency statement of intent, contact info for two recommenders, and commitment that you can spend the entire week in residency (maximum 250 words to be pasted in online form).
2. Artists: Up to three digital work samples; Writers: Up to 10 pages writing sample in one file
3. $35 application fee
Previous Fellows, please wait two years after your last residency to reapply. 2013 Fellows may apply for the 2015 residency.

ITEM 13 : WELCOME to the next UNICORN WRITERS’ CONFERENCE
March 14, 2015 at Reid Castle, Purchase, NY

ManhattanvilleCollegeCastleSpringtime This year we will be welcoming 38 literary agents and 9 NYC major book editors, not to mention some incredible guest speakers. We are known for our 1-1 manuscript review sessions – 40 pages reviewed for $55- 30 minute meeting with an agent and/or book editor. Unicorn also offers a Query letter workshop for $40 with an agent for 1 hour. This workshop is limited to 10 writers per 1 hour session, with four Query Letter Workshops with four different agents. Book Summary/Flap Copy Workshop returns this year for $40 for 1 hour, limited to 10 writers per session with four book summary workshops at various times during the day. This year we have five different workshops every hour to select from on the day of the conference, three (3) agent panels, and one editor panel. The price is $300 for all the workshops and three gourmet meals (excluding query letter workshop ($40) and 1-1 manuscript review sessions- $55). You may also sign up for one-to-one 30 minute meeting with all the guest speakers to discuss your book, marketing, and other areas of the speaker’s expertise (excluding our best selling author this year.) More info here: http://unicornwritersconference.com/Pages/Registration.html

SUBMISSION CALLS AND OPPORTUNITIES

ITEM 14: BYWORDS.CA SUBMISSION CALL
DEADLINE: The 15th of every month for the following month’s issue
Bywords.ca considers previously unpublished poetry from emerging and established poets for our online monthly magazine. We consider work by current and former residents, students and workers of Ottawa. We also publish poems by contributors to our predecessor, the Bywords Monthly Magazine. FOR SUBMISSION INFORMATION VISIT http://www.bywords.ca and click on Guidelines. Amanda Earl, Managing Editor. Check out Bywords.ca’s literary events calendar here: http://www.bywords.ca/calendar/index.php with up-to-date info on NCR readings, book signings, writers’ circles, literary festivals, spoken word showcases & slams. Event submissions can be sent to events@bywords.ca

IN THE INTEREST OF WRITERS HELPING WRITERS

ITEM 15: POETRY READINGS AROUND TOWN NEW!

Pressed - interior Tues. Aug. 26: Words to Live By featuring Jenna Tenn-Yuk at Pressed, 750 Gladstone Ave. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. More details here: https://www.facebook.com/events/693019380751966/?ref=51&source=1

Wed. Aug. 27: The Reading Series, The Clocktower Pub at 575 Bank St. featuring Rusty Priske 9 p.m. More details here: https://www.facebook.com/events/284530995085557/?source=1

treereadingserieslogoAnd watch for the return of Tree Reading Series on Tuesday, Sept. 9 with April Bulmer and Helen Guri, workshop with Peter Richardson. More info next time. http://www.treereadingseries.ca

 

 

The beautiful village of Eden Mills

The beautiful village of Eden Mills (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

ITEM 16: 2014 EDEN MILLS WRITERS’ FESTIVAL

The Eden Mills Writers’ Festival is thrilled to reveal the majority of our 2014 program on our brand new site, which was designed by Jud Haynes, who also conceived of our “literary picnic” imagery for this year.

 

The 26th annual festival takes place from September 11 to 15 and these dates include: a special Thursday night event in Guelph featuring noted music writer Carl Wilson, first-time novelist Sean Michaels, and musical performances by Scott Merritt and Sandro Perri; a Friday evening gala in Eden Mills; a yet-to-be-determined Saturday event; our traditional Sunday of author readings, which we’re very proud of; and the Hundred Story Wood workshop on Monday, which unites stellar Canadian authors with high school students, eager to teach each other more about the craft of writing.

With the support of our tireless volunteer-run Board of Directors, our Artistic Director Kim Lang has worked tremendously hard in programming the EMWF this year and, once again, her efforts have paid off. Some of the most decorated and lauded authors in the world are visiting Eden Mills in September. Eleanor Catton, Lynn Coady, David Adams Richards, Claire Cameron, Miriam Toews, Steven Galloway, Anne Michaels, Heather O’Neill, Terry Fallis, Gillian Deacon. These and many more represent some of Canada’s finest literary minds. Spend some time on our new site to read about these talented imagineers and their latest works. And while you’re at it, why not purchase your tickets for Festival Sunday (a Festival pass is forthcoming).

MAGAZINE SUBMISSION CALLS:

NO DEADLINES SPECIFIED:

NEW! Lime Hawk seeks submissions of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and visual art for its third issue, to release this fall. Check out our previous issues at http://www.limehawk.org. Submit: http://www.limehawk.submittable.com/submit

NEW! ROMCOMPOM: A JOURNAL OF ROMANTIC COMEDY POETRY (romcompom.wordpress.com) seeks submissions for its inaugural issue. What is RomComPom poetry? It’s a poetry that inhabits the same emotional space as romantic comedy. Its symptoms include, but are not limited to, laughter, delight, crying (or at the minimum, a lump in the throat), self-doubt replaced by selfless confidence, the realization of love in an unexpected person, and the overwhelming urge to want to fall in love or eat chocolate. There’s more to it, but we’re not quite sure what that is. It might even include the snarky. So send us poems to help give shape to this new sub-genre. Make us laugh and/or cry. Make our hearts turn to chocolate. Email submissions of 1-5 poems to RomComPomATgmailDOTcom. Either paste the poems into the body of the email or attach all the poems in ONE document. The latter method is heavily preferred. Also, please include a short bio and be sure to include your favorite romantic comedies. Simultaneous submissions are fine, but please let us know immediately by email if your poem or poems have been accepted elsewhere. We do not accept previously published poems. Complete submission guidelines are here: http://romcompom.wordpress.com/submissions/

NEW! Illuminations: An International Magazine of Contemporary Writing will resume publication after a one-year hiatus. The next issue, #30, will appear in May/June 2015. First appearance in Columbia, South Carolina in 1982, featured poems by Seamus Heaney, Stephen Spender, and newcomer Sam Boone. Subsequently edited from England, Japan, and Tanzania, the magazine returned to South Carolina in 1996 until 2011. Illuminations has remained consistently true to its mission statement to publish new writers alongside some of the world’s finest. A number of new poets whose early work appeared in Illuminations have gone on to win prizes and accolades, and we at Illuminations sincerely value the chance to promote the work of emerging writers. Beginning August 1st, 2014, Illuminations is again accepting submissions of poetry. Please send no more than six poems at a time. Devoted primarily to poetry we publish only one or two pieces of short fiction and/or non-fiction in any given year, and sometimes none at all. Please make sure that anything you send us has not been published elsewhere already and is not currently under consideration elsewhere. In the case of a piece translated from a language other than English, please send us the original along with your translation (this is for review purposes only; we generally publish the translation only). Mailed submissions, with an accompanying SASE for response, to Simon Lewis, Editor, Illuminations, Department of English, College of Charleston, 66 George Street, Charleston, SC 29424-0001. We also accept e-mailed submissions via Submittable.com–there is a $2:20 fee for e-mail submissions. To submit via e-mail, go to https://illuminations.submittable.com/submit For further information, please contact the editor Simon Lewis at lewissATcofcDOTedu.

2014 DEADLINES:

NEW! Mom Egg Review seeks submissions of work in all genres for its 13th issue, plus a special themed poetry folio, “Compassionate Action”. Mom Egg Review, a print literary journal featuring poetry, creative prose, short fiction, and visual art, seeks your fine work for its thirteenth annual issue. The issue is un-themed, but will also contain a special poetry folio to be curated by Jennifer Jean, “Compassionate Action”. We publish work by mother writers or by anyone about mothers or motherhood. There is no fee to submit. Submissions will be open until September 1, 2014. Please read our full guidelines before submitting. visit: http://www.momeggreview.com/themomegg/Submit.html

NEW! Sequestrum Call for Submissions: September 1st marks the deadline for Sequestrum: Summer ’14 and the beginning of our Fall’14 issue! About Sequestrum: We average 1,000+ readers a month, keep our archives free and open to the public, are a paying market, and pair all our publications with stunning visual arts created by outside artists or our staff. Our contributors range from award-winning novelists and poets (with other works featured in publications including The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The American Scholar, The Kenyon Review, many other university periodicals, and Best American Anthologies) to emerging voices and first-time writers. We’re proud of our little plot on the literary landscape and the writers and artists we share it with. Come see why. To browse our archives, subscribe (for free), and find our complete guidelines, visit http://www.sequestrum.org/submissions

NEW! Pentimento is available in print and in the future — online. The reading period for the Winter 2014/2015 issue is under way, with submissions accepted through September 15, 2014. We are seeking disability-related true stories on “Romance” for The Readers’ Pen submission category. http://pentimentomag.org/

NEW! BLAST FURNACE Call for Submissions: Volume 4, Issue 3, SLATED FOR SEPTEMBER RELEASE. DEADLINE: SEPT. 15, 2014. We accept a SEVERAL submission formats: portable document format (.pdf), rich text format (.rft) and .doc/docx (Microsoft Word) files, OR .mp3/.wav audio files. Please submit no more than three (3) of your BEST poems, or, if you prefer to create an audio recording of yourself reciting your poetry, send ONLY ONE (1) file attachment of NOT MORE THAN 2 MINUTES/120 seconds in total duration to http://blastfurnace.submittable.com/Submit We are entertaining poems with the theme of love of country, as well as fine original poetry outside of this/these theme(s). We simply ask that individual submissions do NOT exceed more than three (3) poems per poet, and that each individual poem NOT exceed more than three (3) pages. Please read our Mission/Values, Submission Guidelines and Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) posted near the top of our web page, before Submitting to review what resonates with us. We love a variety of poetic styles, but we are also picky.

NEW! Eye to the Telescope (ETTT) is a guest-edited online publication of the Science Fiction Poetry Association. ETTT 14 will be edited by John C. Mannone, who is looking for ekphrastic submissions for the October 2014 issue. Deadline September 15, 2014. There is no particular theme for this issue, but the speculative poems (sci-fi, fantasy, surrealism, etc.) must be exactly 100 words(excluding titles and epigraphs/postscripts that cite other sources) and be connected to the visual art linked below (see website). They may contain tones of humor or horror, but most importantly, I am looking for literary quality writing with literary depth. All forms/styles are accepted. Either write a poem directly inspired by one of the images shown on the site or pair up a poem influenced by a current science event (include an online reference) that also complements one of the pictures. Identify which image elicited each poem. See http://eyetothetelescope.com/submit.html for the links to the pictures and for more submission details.

NEW! If and Only If: A Journal of Body Image and Eating Disorders seeks submissions of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and art work for our inaugural issue to be published in Fall 2014. We are seeking works related to body image, the body, and eating disorders in all of their various definitions. Send up to five (5) poems, 6000 words of fiction/nonfiction, or three (3) images to the editors at iffjournalATgmailDOTcom by October 1, 2014. Please include a brief bio and your contact information along with your submission. All work should be submitted as an attachment. Written work should be submitted in .doc, .docx, or .pdf format. Visual submissions should be in .jpeg or .gif format. More information and full submission guidelines at: http://ifandonlyifjournal.wordpress.com/

NEW! Welter has been the University of Baltimore’s student-run literary journal for more than 40 years, publishing works from across the country. We are currently accepting submission for the 2014-2015 edition of Welter. We are accepting the following: fiction, memoir, essay: 3,000 words max as a Microsoft Word document. Poetry: up to five poems of any length in a single Microsoft Word document. Comics, photos, artwork: Upload a single digital file in either PDF or JPG format. Submissions can be up to three 5″x8″ pages in length, or must be able to be reduced to this size later. Work must be publishable in black and white. Things to note: Please do not put your name or contact info anywhere on the manuscript or document that you submit. Your identifying information should appear only in your cover letter. Submissions that do not adhere to the stated requirements will not be read. Deadline: October 1, 2014 https://welter.submittable.com/submit/33804/?MPpromoefforts

NEW! Holy Cow! Press is seeking poems about Lake Superior that are environmental, ecological, historical, spiritual, geographical, etc–in particular from Minnesota, Ontario, upper Michigan, Wisconsin. New work, previously published poems are welcome–three poems limit. $10 reading fee requested. Please include a SASE (no electronic submissions) and send to: The Editors, Lake Superior Anthology, Holy Cow! Press, Post Office Box 3170, Duluth, Minnesota 55803. Deadline: October 1st, 2014.

Upstairs at Duroc Submission Guidelines: Upstairs at Duroc is interested in English language poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction and translations. We welcome innovative or cross-genre forms, prose poems and flash fiction. Standalone excerpts from longer works will also be considered. Submit no more than 5 poems, or two prose pieces not exceeding 2000 words each. Include cover sheet with name, address, phone number, email address, word count for prose, and a short Bio. Work is read anonymously by our Editorial Board. Submission dates: We accept submissions from October 1 to February 28. Please submit only previously unpublished material! Poetry submission: Submit up to five poems. Attach them in a single Word document, one poem per page. Prose submissions: For short stories, send one or two pieces of no more than 2000 words each. Send up to five flash fiction pieces, attaching them in a single Word document, one piece per page. Visual Art submissions: We seek drawings, etchings and photographs with good contrast. Mostly black/white, plus one color piece per issue (for the cover). Send artwork in jpeg format. Send submissions to: upstairsatduroc@wice-paris.org For any queries regarding submissions, please write to The Editors at upstairsatduroc@wice-paris.org
Snail mail submissions should be sent to: WICE c/o Upstairs at Duroc 10 rue Tiphaine 75015 Paris
France http://upstairsatduroc.org/submission/

Rattle Magazine: We’re currently seeking submissions Japanese forms for our Spring 2015 issue. The poems may be any style or length, but must be written in a traditional or adapted Japanese form: haiku, tanks, renga, haibun, etc. Since some of these forms are very short, please feel free to submit up to four pages of poems rather than the usual four poems. We might also be interested in essays on the contemporary use of Japanese forms. For more information, see our call for submissions page at http://www.rattle.com/poetry/submissions/guidelines/
To submit poems or essays, just follow the regular guidelines and note which (or all) should be considered for the tribute. It’s fine to send poems and essays at the same time. We’re not picky. The deadline for this issue is October 15th, 2014.

NEW! Lunch Ticket is now accepting submissions for its Summer/Fall 214 issue. Starting August 1, 2014, the following genres are encouraged to apply: Fiction, Flash Fiction, Poetry, Writing for Young People, & Visual Art. The deadline is set for October 31, 2014. Send us your best work! For guidelines and submission manager, visit our website: http://lunchticket.org/

NEW! Raleigh Review is Now Accepting Submissions! We believe that great literature inspires empathy by allowing us to see the world through the eyes of our neighbors, whether across the street or across the globe. Our mission is to foster the creation and availability of accessible yet provocative contemporary literature. We are looking for poetry, flash fiction, and short fiction that is emotionally and intellectually complex without being unnecessarily “difficult.” Find our submission guidelines at http://www.raleighreview.org/Submission_Guidelines.html Please submit by October 31, 2014 for our Spring 2015 issue. We look forward to reading your work!

NEW! Ontologica aims to present an eclectic mix of prose and art. Ours is a journal of differing perspectives. We want to offer material that is illuminating, challenging, and, if need be, antagonizing. Above all it must accessible. Accessibility here doesn’t just mean a lack of specialized language, but a writing style that invites the reader in. Work with a philosophical slant is preferred, but not required. What is required is contemporary relevance and, more or less, general appeal. (An essay on the difference between Transcendentalist and Romantic poetry, no matter how well written, will most likely not find a home in Ontologica. See the Contact Us Page for submission email addresses. At present we accept electronic submissions only. Simultaneous submissions are encouraged. We will only review and respond to submissions sent during the open reading periods. Our next Open reading period will be for the Winter 2014 Issue, and will run from September 1st through October 31, 2014. More info here: http://www.warriorpoetgroup.com/Ontologica/submissions.shtml Anything outside of our published reading periods will sit in a void until a new period opens. Upon acceptance, Ontologica reserves First North American Rights of the work, and the published work will remain online for as long as Ontologica maintains a web presence. After initial publication, all rights revert to the author. Ontologica does not compensate authors for publication.
NEW! Open Submissions: HFR is currently accepting submissions for Issue 4.1. Submit your fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, hybrid, comics, art, etc. by Nov. 1st.Please read our guidelines before submitting. http://heavyfeatherreview.com/submit/

NEW! Little Patuxent Review is accepting submissions of poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and artwork for the Winter 2015 Food issue. How many tongues can you access through the language of food? How many minutes could you commune with a family at a foreign table, supported with the language of food? LPR seeks a variety of takes on the theme, from the broad issues, places, and people that “feed” you, to the ground level stories and poems that mark your daily interactions with food. Send LPR your most full bellied work because, as Virginia Woolf suggests, “One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well.” Submissions will be open until November 1, 2014. Please note: Our new editor is Steven Leyva. Laura Shovan has moved into the role of Poetry Editor. Address fiction submissions to Jen Grow and non-fiction to Emily Rich. Full submission guidelines are available at: http://littlepatuxentreview.org/submissions/

NEW! Call for Submissions – Mason’s Road: A Literary & Arts Journal. We are pleased to announce the opening of our next submissions period! We are now accepting your best Fiction, Creative Nonfiction, Poetry, Drama, and Craft Essays. The theme for Issue #10 is“Memory,” and we are looking for unique and arresting takes on this topic. Our submissions period runs for three months: August 15 – November 15, 2014.There are two ways to submit toMason’s Road. You can submit for free any time during our submissions period, and your work will be given thorough consideration for publication.Or, you can submit with a $10 fee, and your work will also be considered for ourMason’s Road Literary Prize, which includes publication and a $500 prize to the best entry we receive. Please look here: http://www.masonsroad.com/about-2/submission-guidelines/ for submission guidelines. Visit http://www.masonsroad.com to check out all of the current issue’s works. Submit here: http://www.masonsroad.com/submissions/

Deadline 30 July and 30 December: The French Literary Review: twice-yearly international magazine of poetry and prose. We are looking for contemporary poems; short stories and articles (1000-3000 words); extracts from novels which stand on their own; paintings/drawings, all of which must have a French connection. Submissions: Barbara Dordi, Editor, chemin de Cambieure 11240 CAILHAU, Aude, France.

NEW! Poemeleon: A Journal of Poetry is now accepting submissions for our next issue, Volume VII, The Disobedient Issue. We are leaving the interpretation of the concept of disobedience open, but know that this issue was inspired by reading Poetics of Disobedience by Alice Notley and by necessary acts of civil disobedience everywhere. Please send only your best work, any length, any style. Deadline for this issue: January 31, 2015. More info, details and link for submissions here: http://www.poemeleon.org/guidelines/

UPCOMING WRITING CONTESTS

2014 CONTESTS

AUGUST DEADLINES:

• NEW! Win cash, publication, and recognition in the Seven Hills Literary and the Penumbra Poetry and Haiku Contests, sponsored by the Tallahassee Writers Association. Deadline for entries is Aug. 30. The contest is open to all. Previously published work is not accepted. Rules and details at link below. Electronic submissions only. Categories include short story, children’s chapter book excerpt, young adult novel excerpt, flash fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry and haiku. All work must be submitted electronically through https://sevenhillsreview.submittable.com/submit

• NEW! BENJAMIN SALTMAN Poetry Award. $3000 Award. Deadline: August 31, 2014. Final Judge: Douglas Kearney. The winner of the 2014 Benjamin Saltman Award will be announced in 2015. Established in 1998, in honor of the poet Benjamin Saltman (1927-1999), this award is for a previously unpublished original collection of poetry. Awarded collection is selected through an annual competition which is open to all poets. This year’s final judge will be Douglas Kearney. Award is $3000 and publication of the awarded collection by Red Hen Press. Entry fee is $25.00. Name on cover sheet only, 48 page minimum. Send SASE for notification. Entries must be postmarked by August 31. See more at: http://redhen.org/
• Aesthetica Creative Writing Competition 2014: Now Open For Entries! Now in its seventh year, the competition champions and nurtures creative talent from across the world in a celebration of outstanding poetry and short fiction. Creative Writing Competition 2014 Prizes: £500 prize money for the Poetry Winner, £500 prize money for the Short Fiction Winner, Publication in the Aesthetica Creative Writing Annual, A selection of books from competition partner organisations. Submit in the categories of Short Fiction and Poetry. Fiction entries should be no more than 2,000 words each and poetry entries should be no more than 40 lines each. Both Short Fiction and Poetry entries should be written in English. Submissions previously published elsewhere are accepted. DEADLINE: AUG. 31, 2014 Visit http://www.aestheticamagazine.com/creativewriting to enter.

SEPTEMBER DEADLINES:

• NEW! Geist’s inaugural Tobacco Lit Contest is the most unusual contest in this list. They want your 500 word story about, well, tobacco. First prize is $500. That’s a buck a word! Deadline is September 1st ($20). Second prize is $250, third is $150 and even an honourable mention prize of $100. What is tobacco lit? According to their website: “Tobacco lit can be any collection of words that are (in some way) directly or tangentially about tobacco—whether it’s about those who smoke it, roll it or grow it; detailed instructions on how to use it or how to avoid it like the plague; a scathing review of its sociocultural impact on the modern world; or poetry written from an ashtray’s point of view, it’s tobacco lit.” http://www.geist.com/contests/tobacco-lit/tobacco-lit/
• NEW! When Women Waken is currently accepting submissions of poetry, short fiction, short non-fiction, visual art and photography. Submissions open through September 1, 2014. See submission guidelines at http://www.booksbywomen.org/whenwomenwaken/submissions/

• NEW! Call for submissions for New Rivers Press’s 3rdannual e-Book Series Competition: Submission Period: July 1, 2014 through September 1,2014: Reading Fee: $20.00. $250.00 Honorarium and e-Book Contract https://newriverspress.submittable.com/submit/31134 . New Rivers Press is seeking manuscripts in the genres ofFantasy, Horror, Mystery, Romance, Science Fiction, Thriller/Suspense,Westerns, Young Adult, Inspirational, and all sub-genres within and acrossthose categories for The New Rivers Press Electronic Book Series, ane-Book-only series that publishes popular fiction titles with literary value.Manuscripts will be accepted electronically through Submittable July 1 throughSept. 1. There is a $20 reading fee. Each author selected for publication willreceive a $250 honorarium and a standard electronic book contract. All books will be distributed nationally and internationally in e-Book formats. Details about the e-Book Series may be found at: http://newriverspress.blogspot.ca/2014_02_01_archive.html

• NEW! Deadline for Gemini Magazine’s Sixth Annual Flash Fiction Contest is September 2, 2014. The grand prize is $1,000. Second place wins $100 and four honorable mentions each win $25. All six finalists will be published online in the October 2014 issue of Gemini. Maximum length: 1,000 words. Any style, subject or genre. Writers’ names are removed from entries before reading, so each entry gets an equal chance. Both new and established writers have won our fiction contests. Entry fee: $4 ($3 for each additional entry). Full details at http://www.gemini-magazine.com/contest.html

• NEW! Subject: Dogwood submissions close on Sept. 5. http://dogwoodliterary.com/submissions/contest/ https://dogwood.submittable.com/submit Dogwood: A Journal of Poetry and Prose is open for 2015 contest and non-contest submissions until Sept. 5. A prize of $1000 goes to one winning entry. Dogwood welcomes entries in poetry, fiction, and nonfiction for its annual contest with a $1000 grand prize, which will be chosen from winners in nonfiction, fiction, and poetry. Winners in the other two genres will receive prizes of $250. Entry fee is $10 (reduced from $15 last year); all submissions considered for publication in the14th annual edition of this print and e-pub journal. Non-contest entries will also be considered; please submit under the “Non-Contest” tab with the $3 processing fee. Results of the contest will be announced in Spring 2015 and published in the 2015 issue of Dogwood. All entrants receive an electronic PDF of the journal. Please use our online submission manager for your submissions, and see the guidelines for all details.

• NEW! Poems Please Me Prize 2014, third international competition Judge: Anthony Watts. Closing date: 11.59 pm BST Sunday 14th September 2014. Results will be published by Poems Please Me and mailed individually to winners before 31 October. 2. Subject: this is an Open competition this year. The choice of subject is yours. 3. Language: English 4. Length: 12 to 40 lines (excluding title). 5. Prizes. First: £600 Second: £300 Third: £150 Highly Commended (number at discretion of judge and organiser): £30 each. Also: illustrations will be created of each winning and commended poem. The Artists’ Quarter (TAQ) will create a selection of digital art to illustrate the winning and commended poems. (A poem’s potential for illustration will not be a factor in the judging.) TAQ is a worldwide online community of digital and traditional artists led by the UK’s Tim Shelbourne. TAQ on Facebook. Winners of the top three prizes will receive a mounted print of the illustration of their choice. Winning and commended poems and TAQ illustrations will be published on Poems Please Me (in featured Poems, a Gallery & an e-Book) and by TAQ. Browse 2013 e-Book of winning poems and illustrations. 6. Copyright in all poems remains with the poet, and in TAQ artwork with the artist. 7. Original poems required, not published elsewhere prior to 1st November 2014.
8. Entry fee: £5 for one poem; £9 for two; £12 for three. 9. How to enter (online or post) SEE INFO AT: http://www.poemsplease.me/?page_id=118

• NEW! The Golden Key announces our first-ever flash fiction contest, judged by Karin Tidbeck. Winner receives $200 and publication in our 6th issue (Spring/Summer 2015). As each of our issues are themed to be inspired by an “object” that might come out of the little iron chest, the subject of the winning story will also determine the theme for Issue 6. We will be accepting submissions of flash fiction (up to 500 words) between July 15 and September 15. The fee for entry is $5 for one piece, or $7 for two. Entry fee donations go directly into the fund we are raising to pay writers. The winner will be announced November 1. Deadline: September 15, 2014. Contest Details: http://www.whatwonderfulthings.net/main/the-golden-key-flash-fiction-open/

• NEW! Gloria E. Anzaldúa Poetry CHAPBOOK Prize $15.00 USD ENTRY FEE. SEPT. 15 DEADLINE. GUIDELINES: http://www.newfoundjournal.org/poetry-prize/

• NEW! Submissions to the Brittingham and Felix Pollak Prizes in Poetry now open! Any poet with an original, full-length collection is eligible. Each manuscript, accompanied by a $25 reading fee, will be considered for both prizes. Each prize offers $1,000, plus publication by the University of Wisconsin Press. The submission deadline is September 15. Before visiting our online submissions manager, put together a single pdf including a title page, a table of contents, the manuscript poems, and an acknowledgments page listing any magazines or journals where the submitted poems may have first appeared. Your name and contact info should not appear anywhere on the document. Manuscripts should be fifty to ninety pages in length on 8.5″ x 11″ pdf pages. Once your manuscript is ready, visit http://creativewriting.wisc.edu/submissions/ and complete the form in the center of the page. After you’ve successfully submitted, you will be redirected to our secure pay portal, where you can pay the $25 submission fee. Postal submissions are discouraged but will be accepted. Postal details can be found at http://creativewriting.wisc.edu/submit.html Simultaneous submissions are permitted, provided the poet agrees to withdraw the manuscript via the submissions manager if it is accepted elsewhere. If you have any questions, please first consult our FAQ. If you don’t find your answer, query Series Editor Ron Wallace at rwallace@wisc.edu.

• NEW! Consequence Magazine is currently accepting submissions for the 2014 Consequence Prize in Fiction. As always, submissions must address the culture and consequences of war, and the deadline is September 15th. The winning story will be published in our 2015 issue and the author will receive a $250 prize. Contest entry guidelines are posted on the Submissions page of our website at http://www.consequencemagazine.org

• The brand new Mslexia Women’s Memoir Competition is now open for entries. The only competition of its type in the UK, this year we’re looking for memoirs of at least 50,000 words of prose that narrate actual events in the writer’s own life. Said writer must not have had a memoir published, but can be previously published in other genres. It’s a crime to let wonderful life stories go untold, so if your writing fits the bill get those fingers typing, you only have until 22 September to submit your entry. The first prize is a massive £5,000Please visit our website for full details of how to enter and specially-commissioned memoir writing workshops. https://www.mslexia.co.uk/whatson/msbusiness/ncomp_active.php

• The Ontario Poetry Society Food for Thought Contest. Deadline Sept. 30, 2014. Food-themed poems. Fees: 1 poem for $5.00 or 3 poems for $10.00. See website for full details: http://www.theontariopoetrysociety.ca/contest_Food%20for%20Thought.htm

• The Thomas Morton Memorial Prize in Literary Excellence is awarded to the single best submission in the respective categories of poetry and fiction. The prize is open for submissions each year from January 1st to September 30th through our online submissions manager. The judges for this year’s prize are Margaret Atwood (for poetry) and Zsuzsi Gartner (for fiction). In addition to publication in Issue 27: Fall 2014, each winning author receives $1000 as well as a prize pack of books drawn from 17 donating publishers, each valued at approximately $750. DEADLINE: SEPT. 30, 2014 DETAILS: http://puritan-magazine.com/submissions/

• NEW! PHILIP LEVINE POETRY BOOK PRIZE 2014. $2000 prize and publication by Anhinga Press.
Postmark Deadline: 9/30/2014. Manuscript should be original poetry, not previously published in book form, 48-80 pages, no more than one poem per page. Include two manuscript title pages: one with name and contact information and one with the name of the manuscript ONLY. Manuscripts are screened and judged anonymously. Multiple submissions are fine as long as the manuscript is withdrawn immediately upon its acceptance elsewhere. The entry fee is $25. Checks should be made out to “Fresno State (Levine Prize)”. Poets can submit more than one manuscript, but each will be considered a separate entry and must be accompanied by the $25 fee. Online payments can be made via credit or debit card at the link below. Submit entries online at the link below OR mail hard copy entries to: Philip Levine Prize in Poetry Department of English, Mail Stop PB 98 5245 N. Backer Ave. California State University, Fresno Fresno, California 93740-8001 Full guidelines, as well as the link for online submissions and online payments, can be found on our website: http://www.fresnostate.edu/artshum/english/graduate/mfa/levine.html contact email: connieh@csufresno.edu

• NEW! Devil’s Lake 2014 Driftless Prize in Fiction and Poetry now accepting online entries for its first annual Driftless Prize in Fiction and Poetry. Submit here: https://devilslake.submittable.com/submit Submissions: Entries to include two poems totaling five pages or fewer. One entry is defined as one short story or two poems; you may submit up to two entries, but you must submit them separately and pay an entry fee for both. All work submitted must be previously unpublished. Simultaneous submissions not permitted. Please do not include your name or any identifying information on the manuscript itself, but only in the “cover letter” box, as all submissions will be read blind. Only accepting online entries through Submittable. Ensure that your account includes a working e-mail address—it’s the only way for us to contact you! Unfortunately we cannot offer any refunds for submissions. Deadline September 30, 2014, at 11:59 pm CST. Winners announced in November 2014, and will receive $100 and publication in the Spring 2015 issue. Entry fee: $10. All contest entries will be considered for publication in Devil’s Lake.

• NEW! Tom Howard/Margaret Reid Poetry Contest All styles and themes Submission period: April 15-September 30 Total prizes: $3,000 Accepts published and unpublished work Special award for verse that rhymes or has a traditional style http://winningwriters.com/our-contests

• NEW! *CONNECTICUT RIVER REVIEW POETRY CONTEST – Deadline: September 30, 2014.Prizes of $400, $100, and $50 are offered. To enter, send up to 3 unpublished poems, 80-line limit each. Include 2 copies of each poem, one with complete contact info on it and one with NO contact info on it. Include SASE for results only. A $15 reading fee is required. Make the check out to CPS. Send submissions to CRR Poetry Contest, PO Box 270554, W. Hartford, CT 06127. The judge for this year’s contest is Charles Rafferty, author of 10 books of poetry and currently the director of the MFA program at Albertus Magnus College.

OCTOBER DEADLINES:

• NEW! The Shelf Unbound Writing Competition for Best Independently Published Book, sponsored by Bowker and Blurb. Any independently published book in any genre is eligible for entry. Entry fee is $40 per book. The winning entry will be selected by the editors of Shelf Unbound magazine. “Independently Published” books include self-published books and e-books (such as those published through Blurb.com, CreateSpace, Lulu.com, iUniverse, etc.) and/or books and e-books published through small presses releasing less than five titles per year. Books entered in last year’s competition are eligible for re-submission in this year’s competition. There is no limit to the number of books an individual can enter; each book is a separate entry. The competition is open to authors worldwide; books must be in English. Any length book is eligible. This year the competition will also introduce the Pete Delohery Award for Best Sports Book, open to fiction and non-fiction sports-related books, in honor of Pete Delohery, author of the novel Lamb to the Slaughter. The official rules for the competition can be found at here. The deadline for entry is midnight on October 1, 2014. The winners will be notified by November 2, 2014. Additional information and rules can be found on our contest rules page at http://www.shelfmediagroup.com.

• NEW! TALKING WRITING 2014 Contests. Submit flash nonfiction (500 words) or great writing advice articles. Winners receive $250 plus publication in Talking Writing. Judges: Dinty W. Moore, editor of Brevity (flash nonfiction); Emily Toth, “Ms. Mentor” of Chronicle of Higher Education (writing advice). Entry fee: $15. Deadline: October 1. Details: http://talkingwriting.com/contests

• NEW! New Delta Review second annual Ryan R. Gibbs Award for Short Fiction. New Delta Review is looking for short fiction (1500 words or less)that stuns, a full narrative in a small package, where every sentence contributes something necessary and integral to the whole. The winner will receive a $500 prize and be published in the winter edition of New Delta Review. All entries will be considered for publication in the magazine, and will be eligible for our Matt Clark Editor’s Prize of $250. Deadline for entry is October 4, 2014. All submissions require a $10 entry fee and must be sent to NDR through Submittable. About Us: New Delta Review is a literary journal published graduate students in the MFA program at Louisiana State University. For more information, and to take a look at what we’ve published in the past, visit our online journal at http://www.ndrmag.org.

• NEW! The Writer’s Block Festival/Memorious Poetry Contest. Judge: Rebecca Morgan Frank, editor-in-chief of Memorious. Award: $500, plus publication in Memorious. Entry: $10 submission fee, which goes to support Louisville Literary Arts and the Writer’s Block Festival. Manuscripts are being accepted now at https://writersblockaward.submittable.com/submit through the October 15, 2014 deadline. Send 1 – 3 previously unpublished poems in ONE WORD DOC (no more than 1 poem per page, and no more than 6 pages, collectively). Email writers14blockATgmailDOTcom writers14block@gmail.com with further questions.

• The Ontario Poetry Society Ultra Short Poem Competition. Deadline Oct. 30, 2014. Poems no longer than 8 lines, 8 words per line. Fees: 1 poem for $2.00 or 3 for $5.00. http://www.theontariopoetrysociety.ca/contest_Ultra%20short%20poem14.htm

AND LATER:
• NEW! POETRY CHAPBOOK CONTEST/OPEN SUBMISSIONS: Heavy Feather Review
Heavy Feather Review is happy to announce that the Featured Poetry Chapbook Contest is back featuring judge Kristina Marie Darling. $10 entry. $250 prize and publication to the winner. Other prizes will be given to five finalists. Blind reads. 40 pages max. All submissions receive a 1-year digital subscription to HFR. DEADLINE NOV 1st. http://heavyfeatherreview.com/submit/

• NEW! Split This Rock’s Annual Poetry Contest is now accepting poems with socially engaged themes. Submit up to 3 poems for a chance to win the following prizes: First place $500; 2nd and 3rd place, $250. Winning poems published on Split This Rock website and winners receive 2016 festival registration. First-place winner reads winning poem on the festival main stage! Entry instructions at: http://www.splitthisrock.org/programs/contests-awards/

• NEW! UVic’s The Malahat Review has several contests: “With a contest for every taste and stage of career, it’s easy to find one that matches your ambition and abilities.” The deadline for their 2015 Open Season Awards (poetry, short fiction and creative non-fiction) is November 1st ($35). You can submit three poems, maximum 100 lines each, and a story of up to 2,500 words. Winners in each category receive $1,000 each. http://malahatreview.ca/contests/contests_info.html

• NEW! First Annual Poets@Work Book Prize Submission Deadlines are November 15, 2014 Postmark (mail) December 1, 2014. To be Judged by Stephen Dunn Poets@Work is happy to announce an open call for manuscripts of a full-length collection of poems in English from all over the world. Final judge will be Pulitzer Prize winning poet Stephen Dunn. All finalists will be considered for publication. Winners will receive $1000 and 25 copies of the winning collection. Standard publishing contract and royalties will also be issued. Manuscripts will be judged anonymously Details and submission guidelines: http://poetsatwork.org/paw-press/first-annual-poetswork-book-prize-stephen-dunn-judge/

• NEW! UBC’s Prism holds three contests. Their creative non-fiction contest deadline is November 21 ($35). Each entry must be a maximum of 6,000 words. First prize is $1,500, runner up is $300 and second runner up is $200. Prism also has a short fiction and poetry contest (deadlines are January 23, 2015). http://prismmagazine.ca/contests/

 

 

• NEW! Prairie Fire accepts longer pieces for their contest, deadline November 30 ($32). They are looking for short stories up to 10,000 words, poems up to 150 lines, and creative non-fiction up to 5,000 words. First place $1,250, second place $500, third place $250. http://www.prairiefire.ca/contests/2012-contests/contest-rules/
• NEW! http://www.thefiddlehead.ca/FHcontest.html Atlantic Canada’s The Fiddlehead contest deadline is December 1 ($30). That’s 150 days from today! They accept short stories up to 6,000 words and up to three poems, 100 lines each They are published in the issue and interviewed on their blog site as well. Winners receive $2,000 (one in poetry one in fiction) and runners up each receive $250 (two in each of those categories).

• NEW! Freefall’s annual poetry and prose contest deadline is December 31st ($25). If you don’t celebrate Christmas, for reasons of religion or reluctance, then this deadline will keep you busy the last two weeks of December. Who am I kidding — it’ll keep you busy the last few days of that month! Prose entries must be a maximum of 3,000 words, and they accept up to five poems per entry. For each category, first prize is $500, second is $250 and third prize is $75. http://www.freefallmagazine.ca/contest.html

• NEW! The 2015 Mississippi Review Contest is now open for submissions. Our annual contest awards prizes of $1,000 in fiction and in poetry. Winners and finalists will make up the 2015 print issue of Mississippi Review. For more details and to submit, visit https://mississippireview.submittable.com/submit key dates: Contest opens: August 1, 2014 Postmark deadline: January 1st, 2015 Winners and finalists announced: March 2015 Issue publication: June 2015 Entry: $16 submission fee, each entrant will receive a copy of the prize issue. View complete contest guidelines at https://mississippireview.submittable.com/submit . If you have questions please e-mail msreviewATusmDOTedu msreview@usm.edu, call 601-266-4321, or check our Facebook page at facebook.com/msreview.

******

CAA-NCR Literary Notices for Nov. 5 to 10th, 2013

CAA LOGO

NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION BRANCH (NCR)

Weekly Notices for the week of Nov. 5 to Nov. 10, 2013

10 ITEMS 6 NEW AND 1 NEW CONTEST

Please send all submission & event notices to Carol Stephen at cstephen0@gmail.com   ####Find writing-related services offered by our members at our CAA-NCR website   http://www.canauthors-ottawa.org/hire-a-member.shtml

CAA-NCR EVENTS

NOTE TO CAA MEMBERS: Recently published a novel, won a writing award, had a
spectacular book signing or in some other way been recognized within the
writing community? Write a short blurb about it & we’ll publish it in
Byline, the CAA-NCR branch Magazine. We’re all excited, and encouraged, when
someone in our writing family shines. Send a note to Sharyn Heagle, Editor,
Byline at <sharyn_40@yahoo.com>

 

ITEM 1: CAA-NCR MONTHLY MEETING NOVEMBER      

DATE: Tuesday, November 12, 7:00 p.m.

LOCATION: Meeting Room, Lower Level, Ottawa Public Library Main Branch, Metcalfe and Laurier Streets. N/C to CAA members, $10 for non-members

Ottawa Public Library's Main Branch, designed ...

 

 

FROM GOOD IDEA TO GOOD READ, Speaker: Phil Jenkins: Taking a writing project from start to finish. 

Phil will introduce and explain his ten-step program for marshaling that big thought,
that “now that would be something worth writing about” all the way down the
line(s) to a publishable package. Complete with tips on discipline, approach,
and most of all on readability.

Bio:
Phil Jenkins  Phil Jenkins returned to Ottawa from Liverpool in 1978, with a degree in Environmental Sciences and a Teaching Certificate. He is a writer and performing musician. He has written over eight hundred columns with the Ottawa Citizen
since 1991, numerous magazine articles, included ones for National Geographic Traveler, Canadian Geographic, Ottawa Magazine and Toronto Life, and four national
bestsellers: Fields of Vision, An Acre of Time (an Ottawa history), River Song, and Beneath My Feet, as well as three commissioned local histories; The Library Book, Off the Shelf and A Better Heart. He teaches and lectures in writing and Ottawa history and has released a CD, Car Tunes, with the band Riverbend. For more information about Phil Jenkins go to www.philjenkins.ca.

 ITEM 2:CANADIAN AUTHORS ASSOCIATION-NCR –                NEW!

HOLIDAY SOCIAL IN THE COUNTRY                                                                                                            

DATE: Sunday, December 1, 2013  TIME: 3:00 pm until 8:00 pm

LOCATION: Sharyn Heagle’s country home TYPE: pot luck

 

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Mark the above date on your calendar before it fills up with other events. Come meet your fellow writers in a casual, congenial and celebratory
atmosphere. We invite you to:

·      Read from your work, published or otherwise

·      Bring your books and give folks an opportunity to purchase a copy

·      Network, meet old friends and discover new ones

·      Enjoy the diverse culinary creations contributed by your fellow
writers

 All are invited – CAA Members, CAA Student Members, and Non-members! Bring your
spouse; bring your partner; bring your friends; bring your offspring 18 years
or older.

 

sharyn Drop Sharyn a note at sharyn_40@yahoo.com,
and let her know you’re coming, and what exciting contribution of an edible
nature you will be bringing with you. She’ll send directions to her home.

 

OTHER WORKSHOPS

 ITEM 3: OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARY WRITING PROGRAMS

 The Ottawa Public Library is hosting a series of 10 writing programs in November, for novice or experienced writers:

·
Self-publishing in the Digital Marketplace, Main Library, November 4, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

·      Writing Workshop: Denise Chong (For adults 50+) Stittsville, November 5, 2:00-3:00 p.m. *MASC

·      The Seeds of Fiction: Alan Cumyn (For adults 50+) North Gloucester, November 6,
10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Greenboro, November 25, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. *MASC

·      Keeping a Diary: Peter Scotchmer Sunnyside, November 6, 1:00-3:00 p.m., Carlingwood, November 23, 2:00-4:00 p.m.

·      Book Self Publishing: Raymond Samuels (Agora Publishing) Ruth E. Dickinson, November 7, 6:30-8:00 p.m.

·      Writing for Younger Audiences: Alan Cumyn (For adults 50+) Rosemount, November 16, 1:30-3:30 p.m. *MASC

·      Imitation: Brian Doyle (For adults 50+) Sunnyside, November 20, 1:00-2:00 p.m. *MASC

·      Story, Structure and Getting Started: Jeff Ross Main Library, November 25, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

·      Write On! A Creative Writing Workshop: Michele Vinet Carlingwood, November 30,
2:00-4:00 p.m.

 Online registration is required to attend these free programs. The
programs indicated with *MASC are offered in partnership with Multicultural
Arts for Schools and Communities). For a complete list of programs,  visit
http://www.BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca/programs

For more information, contact InfoService at 613-580-2940 or EMAIL: InfoService@BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca

 ITEM 4:  WRITESCAPE WORKSHOPS THIS FALL NEW EVENTS ADDED!

NANOWRIMO Inspiration Nights

 

DATES: Mondays in November 7:00 –9:00  p.m.

LOCATION: Whitby Public Library

 Writescape teams up with Whitby Public Library this November to help you achieve your word count for National Novel Writing Month. Gwynn and Ruth will start off the evening with inspiration & nudges to fire up your  pen and get you writing. There is no charge for this special program. 

    Four evenings of writing in community

    Guided creativity prompts from Writescape presenters

    Fun activities to track your word count

Register for Come Write-in @ Central on the Whitby Public Library
website.

 DATES: November 22-24 at Fern
Resort in Orillia

LOCATION: FERN RESORT, ON LAKE COUCHICHING Fern Resort

Three-day all-inclusive writing retreat at the fabulous Fern Resort, just 2 hours north of Toronto on Lake Couchiching. Our guest author is Bill Swan, winner of the 2012 Red Maple Award.

·      Professional writing instructors

·      Inspiring writer’s craft workshops

·      Plenty of time to exercise your pen

·      Private setting and first-class amenities

For more information or to register: Visit Writescape at www.writescape.ca,
email info@writescape.ca or call 905-728-7823.

 ITEM 5: POST GRADUATE PROGRAMS  THE UNIVERSITY OF KING’S COLLEGE                                                                               NEW!        

 Applications are now open for our post graduate journalism
programs. The application can be accessed via the following link:
http://www.ukings.ca/apply-now

 ·
The Bachelor of Journalism Program (8 months) can launch your career as a reporter or editor, or enable you to move into any profession that calls on you to write well and communicate effectively, to analyze complex issues and to connect with other people. Bachelor of Journalism Info Page: http://www.ukings.ca/admission-requirements-one-year-bj-program

 ·
The Master of Journalism Program prepares students for exciting work in investigative data journalism or entrepreneurial business journalism. Master of Journalism Info Page: http://www.ukings.ca/master-journalism-program

 ·
The Master of Fine Arts in Creative Nonfiction Program provides students with a degree, a polished book proposal and at least 200 pages of a finished manuscript. Master of Fine Arts Info Page: http://www.ukings.ca/master-fine-arts-creative-nonfiction

 There are numerous entrance bursaries, five diversity scholarships (including one that offers full tuition)and two additional awards through the the School of Journalism.

We will be hosting an open house on January 20th. All are welcome to attend. Please RSVP to william.barton@ukings.ca. For more program information, please visit the following links or contact terra.bruhm@ukings.ca.

 

 SUBMISSION CALLS AND OPPORTUNITIES

 ITEM 6: BYWORDS.CA SUBMISSION CALL    

DEADLINE:  The 15th of every month for the following month’s issue. Bywords.ca considers previously unpublished poetry from emerging and established poets for our online monthly magazine. We consider work by current and former residents, students and workers of Ottawa. We also publish poems by contributors to our predecessor, the Bywords Monthly Magazine.  FOR SUBMISSION INFORMATION VISIT www.bywords.ca and click on Guidelines.  Amanda Earl, Managing Editor.  Check out Bywords.ca’s literary events calendar here:http://www.bywords.ca/calendar/index.php, with up-to-date info on NCR readings, book signings,
writers’ circles, literary festivals, spoken word showcases & slams. Event
submissions can be sent to events@bywords.ca.

ITEM 7: THE 2014 TREE CHAPBOOK CONTEST IS NOW OPEN! NEW!  

tree-logoWe will be accepting collections up to 40 pages long until December 31st, so get writing! The contest is open to all Tree readers, supporters and listeners.

For contest details check out the link below   Tree Press Chapbook Contest –
Tree Reading Series

http://www.treereadingseries.ca/awards/chapbook-competition The Tree Reading Series is one of the longest running series in Canada.

 

 ITEM 8: CANADIAN SENIOR ARTISTS RESOURCE NETWORK (CSARN)  NEW MENTORSHIP PROGRAM                                                              NEW!

 

This program will offer a unique opportunity for senior members (60+) of the League of Canadian Poets to act as mentors.  A key element of the program is that the senior artists will be paid for their work as mentors.  There is also an opportunity for members to apply for mentorships as a mentee. The program will be piloted in Ontario and will expand to other provinces in Year 3. Please contact readings@poets.ca if you’d like to receive the mentor and/or mentee application.

 CSARN MENTORSHIP PROGRAM

Strengthening Canadian culture by providing opportunities for
transfers of knowledge between senior artists, emerging professionals, other
artists and communities. CSARN-CRAAC is preparing to launch a mentorship program that will link senior artists with other artists, including emerging professionals.
Mentors will be paid for their work and mentees will be reimbursed for expenses.

Background

The notion of mentoring and apprenticeship has a longer a history
in the arts (and crafts) than in any other form of human endeavour. Since the
earliest times in each art form, apprenticeships have been the primary way to
hone skills, teach the subtleties of the art and pass on traditions. In current
times, despite all the technological advances, in many instances this is still
true. Enhanced by technology much has been gained, for example, in restoring
and authenticating works of visual art, choreographic intention in dance, and
clarity of intention in old literary and musical manuscripts. Nevertheless, it
is the oral tradition, the hands-on passing of knowledge through example and
teaching that makes the art form alive and vital. It is our belief that much is
lost if we ignore those who still have valuable information, much to contribute
and the ability to shed light on historical inaccuracies. Creativity in young
and mid-career artists can only be enhanced by exposure to the experience and
wisdom of those who have spent a lifetime committed to their art. It has been
shown that most mentorships end up being a two-way process, with the mentor
also benefitting from the very different perspectives and experiences of the
mentees.

Any formal or informal education, which leads to thinking about
context, clear concepts, methodology, the value of intuition, and spontaneous
as well as rational thinking is valuable. This and many other aspects of their
experience is only a small part of what senior artists have to offer.

In the creation of this program, as in all CSARN’s activities, we
will not duplicate any existing program but will fully co-operate and, if
possible, co-operatively deliver and/or enhance those programs.

Canadian Senior Artists’ Resource Network (CSARN) | Centre de
ressources pour les artistes aînés du Canada (CRAAC) 1000 Yonge St, Suite
300-B, Toronto, ON M4W 2K2 info@csarn-craac.ca

What kind of mentorship opportunities will be offered by
CSARN-CRAAC?

 Traditional one-on-one arrangements.

    Senior artists in either lectures or residencies in schools, businesses or other institutions.

    Seminars, workshops or lectures, for smaller groups or the public.

    Senior artists’ residencies in communities.

 How will the program work?

 Qualified professional senior artists will indicate their willingness to be a mentor and through a questionnaire will identify in what areas they can share knowledge and
expertise. A database of this information will be prepared.

    Qualified professional artists will apply to the program and indicate what they hope to learn. The applicant will be matched to an appropriate mentor. The parties will then meet to see if their interests and personalities are compatible.

    As far as possible, the matching process will not involve any artistic judgment.

    As a final step, the mentor and mentee must agree to the relationship, including common goals, time frames and outcomes, and sign a contract.

 The program will be piloted in Ontario and will expand to other provinces in Year 3.

What is CSARN-CRAAC?

The Canadian Senior Artists’ Resource Network was launched in 2011
by the arts and cultural community to assist professional artists to live in
their senior years with dignity and respect. It fulfills its mandate by
providing information, programs and services.

Please visit our website http://www.csarn-craac.ca/

IN THE INTEREST OF WRITERS HELPING WRITERS

 

ITEM 9:  JEROME ROTHENBERG IN A B SERIES                NEW!

DATE Tuesday, November 5, 2013 8:00 P.M.

LOCATION: Library, Arts Court, 2 Daly Ave., Ottawa, Ont.

 More info: http://abseries.org/

 Join us for a reading by Jerome Rothenberg!

 JEROME ROTHENBERG’s publishing career began in the late 1950s as a translator of German poetry, first for Hudson Review and then for City Lights Books. Founding Hawk’s Well Press in 1959, Rothenberg used it as a venue to publish collections by some of the up-and-coming poets of the era, including Diane Wakoski and Robert Kelly. He also self-published his first book of poems, White Sun Black Sun, under the
Hawk’s Well imprint. From the beginning, his work embodied experimentation with
syntax, image, and form that drew on varied influences and moved in diverse
directions. Poetic and artistic forebears such as Gertrude Stein, James Joyce,
Dali, the Dadaists, Ezra Pound, and Walt Whitman affected the voice and content
of his early work. In a career that has already spanned half a century,
including seventy books of his own poetry, plus plays, acclaimed anthologies,
and other works, Rothenberg has gone on to explore primitive and archaic
poetry, sound poetry, found poetry, visual poetry, collaborations, further
translations, his own Jewish heritage, and much more.

 Rothenberg identified with both the twentieth-century avant-garde and with “a range of tribal and subterranean poetries” that can provide “a poetics big enough to account for human creativity, human language-making, over the broadest span available.” Of his poetry and his experimental “anthology-assemblages,” he once
wrote: “My own contributions (nomenclature and praxis) have included ‘deep
image,’ ethnopoetics, ‘total translation,’ poetics of performance, and assorted
attempts ‘to reinterpret the poetic past from the point of view of the
present.”

 Rothenberg is widely and highly respected as a consummate anthologist and poetic theorist as well as a poet. In the massive 1,700-page, two-volume Poems for the Millennium: The University of California Book of Modern and Postmodern Poetry, edited with Pierre Joris, Rothenberg presents what Hacsi Horvath of Whole Earth considered “a brilliant kaleidoscope of writing unstuck in time, both in English and in fine translation, from numerous archaic/modern/postmodern voices.” Writing in
Vort, Kenneth Rexroth described Rothenberg and his poetry in the following way:
“Jerome Rothenberg is one of the truly contemporary American poets who has
returned US poetry to the mainstream of international modern literature.”

ITEM 11: FALL 2013 OTTAWA INTERNATIONAL WRITERS FESTIVAL NEW!

Web: writersfestival.org for more information and tickets

Email: info@writersfestival.org

 Thursday Nov. 7 7:00 p.m. • Southminster United Church. Canada in a Century of Change: One on One with Joe Clark

 Monday Nov. 11 7:00 p.m. • Southminster United Church Not Quite the Classics: One on One with Colin Mochrie

 Tuesday Nov. 12 6:30 p.m. • Nepean Centrepointe OPL OPL Teen Author Festival: Lemony Snicket

 MAGAZINE SUBMISSION CALLS:

 NO DEADLINES SPECIFIED:

 

 Circa: A Journal of Historical Fiction (Ottawa, ON) is accepting submissions on a historical theme. Accepts fiction, creative non-fiction, book reviews, and articles that have a fresh take on history. Also appreciates genre-crossing, and speculative and alternative history. Length: 2500 words max. (fiction) and 800 words max. (reviews and articles). As a Canadian journal, Circa especially likes Canadian stories. Deadline: Rolling. Guidelines: circajournal.com/submissions

 

The Mackinac (Canada/US) seeks poetry that “bridges the strait between nostalgia and the immediate, the wilds seen and unseen, the best of emerging and established voices.” Submit up to 5 poems for consideration. Deadline: Ongoing.   Guidelines: themackinacmagazine.com/submit.html

 

Dentists on the Frontier (Canada) seeks short, pithy, provocative and even happy stories of dentists and dental procedures from practitioners and patients of dentistry. Filed under the title “Writing Home Again,” stories should be in the form of an anonymous open letter (Dear Dentist or Dear Patient). Accepting nonfiction and creative nonfiction only. Length: 600 words max. Deadline: ongoing.  Guidelines: dentistsonthefrontier.com/submissions/

 

Featured Fifty Poetry: We’re Seeking Your Best Poems for writers age 50 and older.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/24/featured-fifty-poetry_n_3489074.html

 

Ploughshares’ reading period is now open! We’re accepting submissions for Ploughshares literary magazine and for our Ploughshares Solos series of long stories and essays. You can now submit all those poems, essays, and stories that you’ve been working on and saving up since January. For guidelines and to submit, visit our website. http://www.pshares.org/submit/index.cfm

 

Dead Beats (Sheffield, UK), a student-run publishing and live poetry organization, seeks submissions. Accepting poems, short stories (max. 2000 words) and experimental pieces from everyone, regardless of experience. Seeks to “share inspired and inspiring works from around the globe.” No deadline. Guidelines: http://www.deadbeats.eu/submission

 

Independent hybrid lit mag The Holler Box accepts submissions of poetry, fiction, lyric essays, nonfiction, and artwork year-round. Each issue is published online and in the form of a limited release handmade chapbook. Welcomes the alternative and experimental, as well as new and unpublished writers. Length: 5000 words max (prose) and poetry (up to 3). Guidelines: https://thehollerbox.submittable.com/submit


Online arts review magazine The Coastal Spectator (Victoria, BC) seeks reviews of theatre, books, music, film, visual arts, and other cultural happenings around coastal BC specifically (but not exclusively). Submit pieces that are “short and sharp.” Length: 300-500 words. Payment: stipend of $25. Partial to views that reflect a coastal slant on things. Query the editor at lvluven@uvic.ca.

 

Quarterly journal Squalorly (US) welcomes submissions of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, illustration, and photography. Submit story/essay (5000 words max), flash pieces (up to 3), and poems (up to 5). Appreciates work with emphasis on emotion: “Move, amaze, horrify, and educate.” http://www.squalorly.com/submit

 

Gervais Advertising is looking for short articles on a wide variety of subjects for their small shopping/tourism guides available at locations throughout central Ontario. Articles do not need to be location-specific and should have a casual slant based on fun, personal experience. Payment: $0.12 per word for accepted articles/stories. Contact Editor, Cyndy Gervais: syndy@bmts.com.

The Mackinac is accepting poetry submissions. Details at: http://www.themackinacmagazine.com/submit.html.

 

Running out of Ink, a new webzine, is accepting short stories of all genres. For more information, visit: www.runningoutofink.com.

Riddle Fence is currently accepting submissions for its spring issue. The publisher is looking for poetry, fiction, non-fiction and visual art. Info please visit http://www.riddlefence.com.

Fierce Ink Press Co-op Ltd. is currently open for submissions. The publisher is looking for books between 50,000 and 80,000 words long in all young adult genres.  For more information, please visit http://fierceinkpress.com/submissions/.

Decoded Past is looking for writers with expertise in history and/or prehistory. This internet site will showcase articles written by experts for the general reader: new interpretations of past events, new developments or theories, the past in the context of the present. Writers must hold a degree in the social sciences or historical sciences and be writing in an area of personal expertise, or have an established platform in professional historical writing. Contact Rosemary Drisdelle at info@rosemarydrisdelle.com.

CIRCA: A Journal of Historical Fiction is accepting submissions. Details are available at: http://circajournal.com/submissions/.

Dragon Ink Press is accepting submissions from comic artists, fantasy writers and poets for their new comics and literary anthology. Guidelines: http://dragoninkpress.tumblr.com/.

From the Well House is accepting fiction, scholarly essays and poetry. Details can be found at: http://fromthewellhouse.org/?bu0Dd7M9.

Ruminate Magazine is now accepting submissions. Guidelines and deadlines are available at: http://www.ruminatemagazine.com/submit/submission-guidelines/.

Carousel is accepting submissions. Info: http://www.carouselmagazine.ca/submit.html.

Antiphon: accepting poetry submissions. Info: http://antiphon.org.uk/index.php/submissions.

Convert Publishing, a new digital publisher, is accepting manuscript submissions. For more details, visit: http://convertpublishing.com/?page_id=19.

 

Neon: A Literary Magazine accepting submissions, info: http://www.neonmagazine.co.uk/

Queen’s Quarterly is accepting articles, reviews, short stories and poetry. Details can be found here: http://www.queensu.ca/quarterly/correspondencesubmissions.html.

Event Poetry and Prose is accepting submissions. Guidelines are available at: http://eventmags.com/about-2/submission-guidelines/fiction-poetry/.

The Ottawa Arts Review seeks prose submissions (including short fiction, personal essays, reviews, and interviews) relating to literary and visual arts, poetry, drama, and visual art. oar.uesa.ca/submissions/submission-guidelines/

 

Sweptmedia.ca, an online youth-culture magazine based in Toronto/GTA, is looking for original contributions in all print mediums: journalism, short fiction, poetry, etc. Also willing to consider other forms of visual communication modes: photography, painting, comic strips, etc. info: sweptmedia.ca/index.php/contact-us

 

New online magazine The Island Review (international) seeks submissions of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, photography and art from islanders, island-lovers, and those whose work is influenced by islands, or explores ideas of islandness. http://www.theislandreview.com/submissions/ 

 

The recently-launched Northern Cardinal Review (Canada) is seeking creative and vivid poetry, non-fiction essays, and book reviews. Open to writers living in Canada, Alaska, or the northern border states of the U.S. http://northerncardinalreview.wordpress.com/submissions/

Comedy website The Higgs Weldon (US) seeks forms of writing (1000 words max.) and cartoons. Deadline: Ongoing: http://thehiggsweldon.com/submit/

Kolaj (Montreal, QC) is a quarterly, print magazine about contemporary collage. Seeks critical reviews and essays, artist profiles, event highlights, articles on collage making, collecting, and exhibiting, and other contributions. Pays. kolajmagazine.com/content/submissions

 

Formalist poetry review The Rotary Dial (Canada) seeks poetry from Canadian and international writers. Looking for work that rhymes and/or scans but isn’t too versey: blank verse, syllabic verse, etc. Response within two weeks. http://therotarydial.ca/submissions/

 

Garbanzo Literary Journal (US) is published in limited-run copies as part of a hand-created series of chapbooks. Seeks stories (1172 words max.) poems (43 lines max.), micro-fiction, macro-faction, creative nonfiction, and a variety of verse forms. Appreciates writing that disregards the rules: http://www.garbanzoliteraryjournal.org/Submission_Guidelines.html

 

BareBacklit is an online bi-monthly magazine seeking poetry, prose, and visual art. Accepts poetry (4 poems max.), fiction (2500 words max.), and flash fiction (1000 words max.). Prefers work that is “unpretentious, minimalist… entertains first, and provokes thought later.” http://www.barebacklit.com/Submissions.html

 

LWOT (Lies With Occasional Truth) seeks fiction from writers in Canada “(and sometimes by Americans who pretend, in their cover letters, to be Canadian)”. The term fiction is open to interpretation.  : http://lwot.net/submission.htm

 

Online journal Pithead Chapel seeks fiction (short and flash) and nonfiction (experimental, personal, lyric essays) “that moves toward something bigger… takes chances.” Accepts stories and essays 4000 words max. Reads year-round.  : http://pitheadchapel.com/submission-guidelines/

 

The New Inquiry welcomes short- and long-form pieces “from anyone who wants to write.” Looks for well-written, original posts on ideas, books, art, culture, and more. No fiction or poetry.  : http://thenewinquiry.com/submit-to-tni/

 

Literary journal Revolver (US) seeks “short range” (up to 1000 words), “long range” (1000-5000 words), and art for its next issue. Welcomes fiction, poetry, essays, lists, and art. Also accepting bar stories for “Shots with Strangers”.  : http://www.around-around.com/submit/

 

Website strange bOUnce accepts short stories, satire, and poetry, that have been “lightly brushed with sport.” Send work to IWantToWrite@strangebOUnce.com. No payment. http://strangebounce.com/

 

 Small circulation literary publication Cant Journal (US) seeks poetry and prose for Issue #5. Accepts poetry, short inventive prose (micro fiction, flash fiction, etc.; 300-1000 words), poetry book reviews, essays on poetry, and interviews with poets. Submit 3-7 poems, 1-3 short prose pieces, or 1 poetry book review or essay on poetry. Journal is small (5 x 11); writers are encouraged to keep this in mind when submitting. Publishes annually in April. Payment: Three copies.   Guidelines: cantjournal.com/submission-guidelines

 

Red Kitty is a webzine and limited run print zine based out of Austin, TX. Accepting poetry, prose, short fiction, personal narrative, humor, and experimental journalism; illustration, photography, and doodles; and sound portraits, video art, and spoken word. Prefers works that takes risks and gets messy, including the “strange, thought-provoking, funny, demented.” Deadline: rolling. Guidelines: redkittyzine.weebly.com/submit.html

 

Independent magazine Bitterzoet (US) is now looking for new poetry, fiction, and artwork for their monthly online zine and bi-annual print editions, and mini chapbooks. Publishes work that engages in the “interplay between bitterness and sweetness, light and darkness, salvation and damnation.” Accepts poetry (3-8) prose (6 pages max), and artwork. Also looking for shorter pieces (“bonbons”) of poetry (10 lines max) and prose (150 words max.). Deadline: rolling. Guidelines: bitterzoetmag.submittable.com

 

Independent online journal Black Heart Magazine (U.S) seeks short fiction for its weekday (M-F) publication cycle. Length: 1500 words max. All genres accepted, with a literary angle preferred. Appreciates ‘short-form modern literature, from pulp to literary fiction and everything in-between.’ Deadline: Ongoing. Guidelines: blackheartmagazine.com/submission-guidelines

 

GlassFire Magazine (US) seeks submissions of fiction and non-fiction (3000 words max.), poetry, and artwork for the Winter 2013 issue. Pays $5 per poem/artwork/photography and $10 per story/nonfiction Deadline: Rolling. http://www.peglegpublishing.com/glassfire.htm

 

NOVEMBER DEADLINES:

The Muse, An International Journal of Poetry, an online bi-annual journal of poetry from India, is seeking submissions for their next issue. Accept poems (send 1-5 poems), and essays and research papers (3000 words minimum). Deadline: November 10, 2013. http://themuse.webs.com/

Four Anthology Calls From Scarecrow Press

1. Making Libraries Integral In The Lives Of Baby Boomers Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press Editor: Carol Smallwood, Bringing Arts into the Library, ed., (ALA Editions, 2013);  Library Services for Multicultural Patrons to Encourage Library Use co-ed., (Scarecrow Press, 2013)

Chapters sought for an anthology by practicing public librarians and LIS faculty in the United  States and Canada: creative, practical how-to chapters on strengthening and expanding services to the age group called baby boomers. Possible topics: fostering positive staff attitudes;  encouraging endowments and advocacy; programming and workshops; maximizing their  experience as volunteers; instruction in technology; needs assessment surveys; genealogy and oral histories; grants. Concise, how-to chapters based on experience to help colleagues totaling 3,000-4,000 words, or two chapters that come to 3,000-4,000 words. No previously published or simultaneously submitted material. One, two, or three authors per chapter; if two chapters they are to be by the same author(s). Compensation: one complimentary copy per 3,000-4,000 word accepted submission, discount on more copies.

Please e-mail titles of  2-4 topics each described in 2 sentences by November 30, 2013 with brief biography sketch(s); place BOOMERS and Last Name on the subject line to: smallwood@tm.net

 

 

 

2. Women, Work, and the Web: How the Web Creates Entrepreneurial Opportunities.

Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press Editor: Carol Smallwood, Women on Poetry: Writing, Revising, Publishing and Teaching (McFarland, 2012) on Poets & Writers Magazine “List of Best Books for Writers.” Writing After Retirement: Tips by Successful Retired Writers forthcoming from Scarecrow Press.http://www.amazon.com/Carol- smallwood/e/B001JS613M/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1380659357&sr=1-2-ent

Seeking chapters of unpublished work from writers in the U.S. and Canada for an anthology.  Interested in such topics as: Women Founding Online Companies; Women Working on the Web With Young Children or Physical Disabilities; Woman’s Studies Resources and Curriculum; Surveys/Interviews of Innovative Women on the Web. Chapters of 3,000-4,000 words or two chapters coming to that word count (up to 3 co-authors) on how the Internet has opened doors, leveled the playing field and provided new  opportunities for women, are all welcome. Practical, how-to-do-it, anecdotal and innovative writing based on experience how women make money on the Web, further careers. One complimentary copy per chapter, discount on additional copies. Please e-mail 2-4 chapter topics each described in two sentences by November 30, 2013, along with a brief bio to smallwood@tm.net  Please place INTERNET/Last Name on the subject line; if co-authored, paste bio sketches for each author.

 

3. Creative Management of Small Public Libraries in the 21st Century. Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press Co-editor: Carol Smallwood, public libraries consultant; Library Management Tips That Work, ed., (ALA Editions, 2011);  Library Services for Multicultural Patrons to Encourage Library Use co-ed., (Scarecrow Press, 2013)

Chapters sought for an anthology by practicing public librarians and LIS faculty in the United States and Canada: creative, practical how-to chapters for a handbook on strengthening small and rural public libraries as centers of communities serving populations under 25,000. Possible topics: fostering positive staff attitudes; making an inviting atmosphere; successful living endowments; programming; handling patrons, volunteers, meetings;  using technology; effective networking; staff evaluations; professional development; needs assessment   surveys.

Concise, how-to chapters based on experience to help colleagues totaling 3,000-4,000 words, or two chapters that come to 3,000-4,000 words. No previously published or simultaneously submitted material. One, two, or three authors per chapter; if two chapters they are to be

by the same author(s).  A complimentary copy per 3,000-4,000 word accepted submission as compensation, discount on more. Please e-mail titles of  2-3 topics each described in 2 sentences by November 30, 2013 with brief biography sketch(s);  place SMALL and Last Name on the subject line to: smallwood@tm.net

 

4. Writing After Retirement: Tips by Successful Retired Writers Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press Co-editor: Carol Smallwood co-edited Women on Poetry: Writing, Revising, Publishing and Teaching (McFarland, 2012), on Poets & Writers Magazine’s “List of Best Books for Writers”; edited Pre- & Post-Retirement Tips for Librarians (American Library Association, 2012). Co-editor: Dr. Christine Redman-Waldeyer, Assistant Professor, Coordinator of the Journalism Option Program, Passaic County Community College, Paterson, New Jersey; Editor/Founder, Adanna Literary Journal; Author, Eve Asks (Muse-Pie Press, 2011). 

http://www.amazon.com/Carol-Smallwood/e/B001JS613M/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1380659357&sr=1-2-ent

An anthology of unpublished 3,000-4,000 word chapters or two chapters coming to that word count by successful, men and women retired writers from the U.S. and Canada  (up to 3 co-authors) previously following other careers than writing. Fiction, poetry, memoir, nonfiction,

journalism, and other writers welcome. Looking for topics as: Business Aspects of Writing, Writing as a New Career, Networking, Using Life Experience, Finding Your Niche, Privacy and Legal Issues, Using Technology. With living longer, early retirement, popularity of memoir

writing, this is a how-to for baby boomers who now have time to write. Compensation: one complimentary copy per chapter, discount on additional copies.

Please e-mail two chapter topics each describe d in two sentences by November 30, 2013 with brief pasted bio to smallwood@tm.net placing RETIREMENT/Last Name on the subject line. If co-authored, pasted bios for each.

 

AND LATER:

 

The Beloit Fiction Journal (US) seeks contemporary short fiction, including traditional and experimental narratives. Very long and very short stories welcome. Deadline: December 1, 2013.     Guidelines: beloitfictionjournal.wordpress.com/how-to-submit/

 

Online literature/arts magazine The Broken City (Toronto, ON) is currently accepting submissions for its winter 2013 edition: “Turn on, tune in.” Looking for music-related poetry, fiction, essays, comics, illustrations, photography, reviews as well as mp3 submissions for a mixtape. Deadline: December 1, 2013. Non-paying. Guidelines: thebrokencitymag.com/submissions.html

 

 Sunshine in a Jar Press. Looking to get published? Sunshine in a Jar Press is welcoming submissions to its new anthology “The Writing Spiral” which will be released in Fall of 2014. They are seeking poems, memoirs, stories and essays, and possible themes are love, loss, joy, decadence, deprivation, hope, fear, friendship, family, work, social responsibility, health, culture, light, and darkness. There is also the opportunity for monthly writing classes to feed your process at Trent University, Oshawa Campus. Deadline: March 1, 2014 Details: www.sunshineinajar.com/ or call 289 252 1978

 

Online literary magazine The Steel Chisel (Canada) is “perpetually looking” for prose and poetry submissions from Canadian writers. Include a short bio with location, occupation, and any relevant award/publication accomplishments. Deadline: Rolling, on 6th of the month.     Guidelines: http://www.thesteelchisel.ca/contact.html

 

 The Potomac Review (Montgomery College, Maryland) accepts submissions of poetry (up to three), fiction and nonfiction (5000 words max.), photography, and artwork. Appreciates both realistic and experimental prose and poetry. Deadline: May 1, 2014.  Guidelines: cms.montgomerycollege.edu/EDU/Alt.aspx?id=19015

 

UPCOMING WRITING CONTESTS

 

NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER DEADLINES:

 

  • FRIENDS of Canadian Broadcasting is pleased to announce the 2013 Dalton Camp Award. The winner will receive a $10,000 prize for excellence in creative, original essay-writing on the link between democracy and the media in Canada. New for 2013, a discretionary second prize of $2,500 may be awarded for the best essay by a post-secondary student. The 2013 Award is open to both students and other Canadians. The deadline for entries is November 15, 2013. Download the 2013 Dalton Camp Award PosterThe official rules, past winning essays, a video biography on Dalton Camp, and other details about the Award are available from the Dalton Camp Award website:   www.daltoncampaward.ca

 

  • InkTears Short Story Competition 2013. The Ink Tears Short Story Competition is now open for entries. All prize-winners will have their story published to the InkTears Readers and consideration for a short story collection/anthology publication.  Length 1000 – 3000 words, any theme and open to age 18+. Stories may have been previously published or unpublished.  Deadline: November 30, 2013 Entry fee: £6.00 Prize: Winner:  £1000; Runner-up:  £100; 4 x Highly Commended £25.00 Details: www.inktears.com

 

  • LOTR 100-Word Story Contest. Submit a 100-word story about love and travel and you could have it published online and win a free copy of the forthcoming book Love on the Road 2013. Love on the Road 2013 is an anthology of 12 stories about love and travel from a dozen different writers, some very accomplished, others just starting out. It’s scheduled for publication in early December. We’ll take submissions until November 30 and then declare three winners and send them (for free) paperback copies of Love on the Road 2013. There’s more information at loveontheroad2013.com.  Best, Sam Tranum Dublin, Ireland
  • Prairie Fire’s Banff Centre Bliss Carman Poetry Award, Short Fiction and Creative Non-Fiction Contests. Deadline is November 30, (postmarked). http://www.prairiefire.ca/contests.

 

  • Bottle Tree Productions One Act Play Competition for Writers 2013. DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 30, 2013. Go online at http://www.bottletreeinc.com/script_contest.html.  First Prize $1,000, Second Prize $250, Third Prize $100. The entry fee for each submission is $25. One Act Plays of from 10 minutes to 70 minutes may be submitted by mail or email. By mail to Bottle Tree Productions, 445 Southwood Drive, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7M-5P8. Please make cheque payable to Bottle Tree Productions. For environmental and storage reasons email submissions are preferred. By email to contest (at) bottletreeinc (dot) com. Go online at http://www.bottletreeinc.com/script_contest.html
  •  RopeWalk Press (US) invites entries for the The Nobody Series AWP Postcard Contest. Seeking short-short stories “destined for immediate celebrity.” Winning story printed on art postcards displayed for sale among postcards of RopeWalk Press fiction covers. Prize: a signing, 10 copies of the postcard, and a $25 gift certificate to your favorite bookstore or $50 in RopeWalk Press titles .Entry fee: $5. Deadline: December 1, 2013.    Guidelines: http://ropewalk.org

 

  • Briarpatch Magazine is accepting entries for their third annual writing contest, Writing in the Margins. Seeking fresh, fiction and creative non-fiction “that brings to life issues of political, social, and environmental justice.” Cash prizes totalling $750. Length: 2000 words max. Entry fee: $25 (includes subscription). Deadline: December 1, 2013.  Guidelines: briarpatchmagazine.com/announcements/view/creative-writing-contest

 

  • FREEFALL MAGAZINE Just for fun we’ve added a new contest: “The Corner of 13th and 13th” Flash Fiction. Write a story in 500 words or less about what happened on Friday September the 13th 2013 at one of the 13th Avenue and 13th Street intersections in the photos found at: http://www.freefallmagazine.ca/flash-fiction-contest.html. Entry Fee: $13.00. First Prize: $130.00. Deadline to enter is: Friday Dec 13th 2013

 

 

  • 2013 annual FreeFall Prose and Poetry Contest is now open! Contain your joy as we let you know that we’ve doubled the first place prize money from $300 to $600. Deadline to enter is: December 31, 2013. For current contest info visit: http://www.freefallmagazine.ca/contest.html.

 

2014 CONTESTS

 

  • Gemini MAGAZINE  is now accepting entries for its fourth annual Poetry Open competition. The grand prize is $1,000. Second place wins $100 and four honorable mentions will each receive $25. All six finalists will be published online in the March 2014 issue of Gemini. The entry fee is $5 for each batch of three poems. Deadline: January 2, 2014. We are open to any type of poetry, any subject matter, any length. Scroll down the Poetry Open page http://gemini-magazine.com/poetryopen.html to see the broad range of work from previous winners and finalists.

 

  • League of Canadian Poets announces: Submissions are now open for the Jessamy Stursburg Poetry Contest for Canadian Youth. There are two age categories, junior (grades 7-9) and senior (grades 10-12). First place poems in each category will receive a cash prize: Winners: $350 Second Place: $300 Third Place: $250 All winning poems will be published in the LCP’s e-zine, Re:verse at www.youngpoets.ca. All winners will receive Jessamy Stursberg Poetry Contest for Canadian Youth certificates and student membership in the League of Canadian Poets for one year. Deadline: January 15, 2014. http://poets.ca/jessamy-stursberg-poetry-contest-for-canadian-youth/
  • NEW! Poetry School / Pighog Pamphlet Competition. We’re still poring over Kate White’s The Old Madness,  the collection which won this year’s Poetry School / Pighog pamphlet competition … but we’re also starting the search for next year’s winner. We’re now taking submissions for our second collaborative competition – details are here: http://www.pighog.co.uk/prize/pamphlet-competition.html and judges Simon Barraclough and Catherine Smith are waiting eagerly to read your entries. DEADLINE: Jan. 31, 2014

 

  • Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry. Awarded annually to the best poetry manuscript by an emerging Canadian writer (a writer who has published fewer than two books). Each year the winning manuscript will be selected by an established poet in co-operation with Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint. The winner receives a trade paperback contract with Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint which will include the publication of the manuscript and a $500 advance. DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: January 31, 2014 Info here: http://matrixmagazine.org/rkaward/ Each entry must be accompanied with a business size SASE and an entry fee for $30.00 Canadian. Please make all cheques and money orders payable to “Matrix Publications.” No cash please. Send manuscripts to: The Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry, Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint, c/o Matrix, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. LB 658, Montreal QC H3G 1M8  Or via Submittable:  https://matrixmagazine.submittable.com/submit Alternatively, you may send you manuscript electronically to Kroetsch2014@gmail.com and send your payment via PAYPAL: RK Award Entry Fee $30

 

  •  Waxing PressWaxing Press (Ohio, US) invites entries for its inaugural contest for works of fiction, the Tide Lock Prize. Seeks new work in the form of a novel, novella, or collection of short stories. Length: 150 pages minimum. Prize: Publication in the journal’s print and digital editions. Entry fee: $5. Deadline: February 1, 2014.     Guidelines: http://waxingpress.submittable.com

              

  •  Lynn Manuel Children’s Fiction ContestGrasmere Publishing (BC) invites entries for the Lynn Manuel Children’s Fiction Contest. Prize: $500 cash, $1000 advance against royalties, and publication. Open to novels suitable for children aged 7-16 years old. Looking for an engaging voice, well-developed characters, and a strong storyline. Length: 25,000-75,000 words. No theme, but no violence. Open to Canadian and US residents who have not previously published a novel for children. Deadline: March 1, 2014 (first chapter only). Entry fee: $30.     Guidelines: grasmerepublishing.com

******

 

CAA-NCR Literary Notices Week of Oct. 28 to Nov. 3, 2013

CAA LOGO

NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION BRANCH (NCR)

 Weekly Notices for the week of  Oct. 28 to Nov. 3, 2013

15 ITEMS 9 NEW or UPDATED EVENTS

Please send all submission & event notices to Carol Stephen at cstephen0@gmail.com####Find writing-related services offered by our members at our CAA-NCR website   http://www.canauthors-ottawa.org/hire-a-member.shtml

CAA-NCR EVENTS

NOTE TO CAA MEMBERS:  If you’ve recently published a novel, won a writing award, had a spectacular book signing or in some other way been recognized within the writing community, write up a short blurb about it and we’ll publish it in Byline, the CAA-NCR branch Magazine. We are all excited, and encouraged, when someone in our writing family shines. Send your note to Sharyn Heagle, Editor, Byline at <sharyn_40@yahoo.com>

 ITEM 1:CAA – NCR WORKSHOP NOV. 2 2013

SOCIAL MEDIA FOR AUTHORSTaking Your Online Presence to the Next Level

DATE: Saturday, November 2, 2013, 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.

English: Taken by SimonP

English: Taken by SimonP (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

LOCATION: Algonquin College, 1385 Woodroffe Avenue, Ottawa. Building T & Room 230 Cost: $45 for members; $75 for non-members Registration: Contact Arlene Smith somertonsmith@yahoo.com

 

The web has created some amazing new opportunities for authors to publish and promote their work. Self-publishing is becoming increasingly easier, and social media tools have enabled authors to find and engage directly with a passionate audience.  This one-day workshop will teach you to navigate the tools of the social web, so you can determine how you can best use them to develop an online presence, or enhance an existing one that will help you to build your audience and promote your work. More than just a “how-to” for tools like Twitter and Facebook, this session will go in-depth around how to use social media to share your message, as well as help you to find ways to maximize your effectiveness in the online world, and still have time to do what you do best — write!

 

SusanMurphy Susan Murphy has been working in media and communications for 24 years. Susan is also a part time professor at Algonquin College in the Interactive Multimedia Developer program, where she teaches Video Production and Web Media. Suze’s experience in social media is extensive. She has been blogging since 2006 atsuzemuse.com, and has participated in social media actively since 2007. Susan also co-hosts I Can Haz Podcast, a weekly social media marketing show.

 

ITEM 2: CAA-NCR MONTHLY MEETING NOVEMBER       NEW!

DATE: Tuesday, November 12, 7:00 p.m.

LOCATION: Meeting Room, Lower Level, Ottawa Public Library Main Branch, Metcalfe and Laurier Streets. N/C to CAA members, $10 for non-members

Ottawa Public Library's Main Branch, designed ...

Ottawa Public Library’s Main Branch, designed by Bemi & Associates Architects (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

 

FROM GOOD IDEA TO GOOD READ, Speaker: Phil Jenkins: Taking a writing project from start to finish

Phil will introduce and explain his ten-step program for marshaling that big thought, that “now that would be something worth writing about” all the way down the line(s) to a publishable package. Complete with tips on discipline, approach, and most of all on readability.

 

Phil Jenkins Bio: Phil Jenkins returned to Ottawa from Liverpool in 1978, with a degree in Environmental Sciences and a Teaching Certificate. He is a writer and performing musician. He has written over eight hundred columns with the Ottawa Citizen since 1991, numerous magazine articles, included ones for National Geographic Traveler, Canadian Geographic, Ottawa Magazine and Toronto Life, and four national bestsellers: Fields of Vision, An Acre of Time (an Ottawa history), River Song, and Beneath My Feet, as well as three commissioned local histories; The Library Book, Off the Shelf and A Better Heart. He teaches and lectures in writing and Ottawa history and has released a CD, Car Tunes, with the band Riverbend. For more information about Phil Jenkins go to www.philjenkins.ca.

 

CAA-NCR MEMBER NEWS

 ITEM 3: CAA MEMBER KIT FLYNN ANNOUNCES BOOK LAUNCH BY THE OTTAWA STORY SPINNERS Black Lake Chronicles, Volume 4

 DATE: Monday October 28, 2013

LOCATION: Private room at the Boston Pizza, 521 W Hunt Club – Hunt Club and Merivale, 6:30 P.M. with readings by the authors at 7:15 P.M.

The Ottawa Story Spinners have produced their fourth volume of the Black Lake Chronicles. It is an eclectic compilation of short stories containing both fiction and non-fiction pieces.

 Kit Flynn, an active member of CAA and the moderator of the Centrepointe Writers Circle, is one of founding members of The Ottawa Story Spinners.

 OTHER WORKSHOPS

 ITEM 4:GAIL TAYLOR PRESENTS…CREATIVE NON-FICTION   

A 6-week Fall Writing Workshop For writers of memoir, personal narrative, essays, travel writing, journals . . . & more

DATES: Saturdays October 26 – November 30, 2013  2pm – 4:30 pm,

LOCATION: Where: Overbrook Community Centre, 33 Quill Street, Ottawa

Register: By October 15th (space limited to 12) How: Phone or email: Gail Taylor Telephone: 613–421–6629 Email: abigael@rogers.com Cost: $ 150

 

Using elements of fiction and non-fiction alike, creative non-fiction gives shape and voice to accounts from the rich resources of real life. If you are interested in making narrative meaning from your life world, this workshop is for you!

Gail Taylor, M.Ed., M.A., is a published writer of creative non-fiction and poetry and

an educator and editor with years of experience teaching writing. Well-honed

strategies and exercises for creative discovery and productiveness are hallmarks of

her workshops.

 

ITEM 5: THE BANFF CENTRE LITERARY ARTS  CALL FOR APPLICATIONS                                                                                                                

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS! SPOKEN WORD

 

Program dates: March 31 – April 11, 2014 Application deadline: November 15, 2013

Faculty: Tanya Evanson (director), Emilie Zoey Baker, Jean-Pierre Makosso

Guest: George Elliott Clarke  

Lift your poetry off the page and deliver it with passion and precision in a public performance! Spoken Word offers space to write and time to develop strong performance dynamics with a specific piece or broader project in mind.

The Banff Centre’s Spoken Word program is the first program of its kind, offering a unique milieu for artists to explore and develop their voices and career paths. Also included in the program are workshops, special events, and one-on-one mentorship. You’ll have the opportunity to engage with a vibrant network of spoken word artists. Cultivate your craft with the language, rhythm, music, and beat of spoken word. To apply: Banffcentre

http://www.banffcentre.ca/programs/program.aspx?id=1398

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: WRITING STUDIO                          UPDATE!

 Program dates: April 28 – May 24, 2014 Application deadline: November 15, 2013

 Faculty: Greg Hollingshead (director) Narrative: Dionne Brand, Tamas Dobozy, Gail Jones, Josip Novakovich, J. Jill Robinson Poetry: Karen Solie, Suzanne Buffam, Srikanth Reddy

Voice and relaxation: Dale Genge

 Spend four weeks in the Canadian Rockies—an ideal environment for artistic inspiration and growth—and soak in the time, space, and support you need to pursue your project. Intended for published writers and poets at an early or intermediate stage in their career, the Writing Studio provides an extended period of uninterrupted writing time. You’ll get one-on-one editorial assistance, an individually structured timeline to suit your goals, and the opportunity to engage with a community of artists.

 All participants may work with at least two or, in the case of poets, three faculty mentors during the four weeks of the program. Writing Studio participants and faculty also offer a weekly reading series. To help writers develop their public reading skills, we offer one-on-one sessions with a voice and relaxation instructor.

 Enrolment is limited to 24 writers. http://www.banffcentre.ca/programs/program.aspx?id=1399

 ITEM 6: OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARY PRESENTS AUTHOR SERIES THIS FALL               

The Ottawa Public Library is hosting a series of 13 author visits this Fall. Authors will discuss their most recent work, or a combination of their work, personal experience or research.

·       Charles de Lint: Over My Head, Alta Vista, October 28, 7-8 p.m.

·       Michael Redhill, Inger Ash Wolfe: The Calling, Alta Vista, November 2, 2-3 p.m.

·       Robert Douglas: That Line of Darkness: The Gothic from Lenin to Bin Laden, Main Library, November 9, 2-3 p.m.

·       Mark Frutkin: A Message for the Emperor, Carlingwood, November 16, 2-3 p.m.

·       Denise Chong: Lives of the Family, Carp, November 12, 2-3 p.m., * offered in partnership with Multicultural Arts for Schools and Communities (MASC)

·       Carolyn Abraham: The Juggler´s Children, Nepean Centrepointe, November 16, 2-3 p.m.

·       Veena Gokhale: Bombay Wali and Other Stories, Rosemount, November 23, 2-3 p.m.

·       Tamara Levine: But Hope is Longer: Navigating the Country of Breast Cancer, Sunnyside, November 23, 2-3 p.m.

Online registration is required to attend these free programs. This series is offered with the assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts. For a complete list of programs, visit

http://www.BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca/programs For more information, contact InfoService at 613-580-2940 or InfoService@BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca

 

ITEM 7: THE OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARY (OPL) IS HOLDING ITS 4TH ANNUAL TEEN AUTHOR FEST                                              

DATES: September 24 to November 29.

LOCATIONS: Various branches of OPL

 

This year´s line-up is better than ever with author readings for both teens and tweens.

Check out the full program listing below. Big names to look out for later in the

Fall include Lemony Snicket and Lauren Oliver. All programs are free and open to

teens and tweens across the city.

·       Paul Blackwell Tuesday, October 29, 1:00 p.m., St-Laurent branch, 515 Côté

·       Lemony Snickett Tuesday, November 12, 6:30 p.m., Nepean Centrepointe branch, 101 Centrepointe

·       Teresa Toten Tuesday, November 12, 2:00 p.m., Metcalfe branch, 2782 8th Line, Wednesday, November 13, 10:00 a.m., Cumberland branch, 1599 Tenth Line, Wednesday, November 13, 1:00 p.m., Carlingwood branch, 281 Woodroffe

·       Lauren Oliver Monday, November 18, 7:00 p.m., Nepean Centrepointe branch, 101 Centrepointe

·       Eric Walters Friday, November 29, 1:00 p.m., Alta Vista branch, 2516 Alta Vista

For more information, visit http://biblioottawalibrary.ca/en/TAF

or contact InfoService at 613-580-2940 or InfoService@BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca

 

ITEM 8: OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARY WRITING PROGRAMS         NEW!

 

The Ottawa Public Library is hosting a series of 10 writing programs in November, for novice or experienced writers:

·       Writing Mystery: Vicki Delany, Mary Jane Maffini, C.B. Forrest, and R.J. Harlick discuss, Main Library, November 2, 2:00-3:00 p.m.

·       Self-publishing in the Digital Marketplace, Main Library, November 4, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

·       Writing Workshop: Denise Chong (For adults 50+) Stittsville, November 5, 2:00-3:00 p.m. *MASC

·       The Seeds of Fiction: Alan Cumyn (For adults 50+) North Gloucester, November 6, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Greenboro, November 25, 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. *MASC

·       Keeping a Diary: Peter Scotchmer Sunnyside, November 6, 1:00-3:00 p.m., Carlingwood, November 23, 2:00-4:00 p.m.

·       Book Self Publishing: Raymond Samuels (Agora Publishing) Ruth E. Dickinson, November 7, 6:30-8:00 p.m.

·       Writing for Younger Audiences: Alan Cumyn (For adults 50+) Rosemount, November 16, 1:30-3:30 p.m. *MASC

·       Imitation: Brian Doyle (For adults 50+) Sunnyside, November 20, 1:00-2:00 p.m. *MASC

·       Story, Structure and Getting Started: Jeff Ross Main Library, November 25, 6:30-8:30 p.m.

·       Write On! A Creative Writing Workshop: Michele Vinet Carlingwood, November 30, 2:00-4:00 p.m.

 

Online registration is required to attend these free programs. The programs indicated with *MASC are offered in partnership with Multicultural Arts for Schools and Communities). For a complete list of programs,  visit http://www.BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca/programs

For more information, contact InfoService at 613-580-2940 or EMAIL: InfoService@BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca


ITEM 9:  WRITESCAPE WORKSHOPS THIS FALL NEW EVENTS ADDED!

 

Turning Leaves 2013

 

Taxation Tips for Writers

 DATE: Saturday, November 2, 10 am – 4 pm

LOCATION: Trent University – Oshawa Campus

 This one-day workshop with Gwynn shows you unique tax breaks available to writers and artists – even if you’re not earning money yet. Participants will learn the answers to such questions as:

        How does Revenue Canada define “freelance”?

        Are contest winnings and grants considered income?

        What if I’m published but I don’t earn any income?

        Should I keep all my novel expenses for the year it’s published?

        Do I have to register for HST?

 

Register for Taxation Tips for Writers. After all, it’s not what you earn, it’s what you keep.

 

NANOWRIMO Inspiration Nights

 DATES: Mondays in November 7:00 –9:00  p.m.

LOCATION: Whitby Public Library

 

Writescape teams up with Whitby Public Library this November to help you achieve your word count for National Novel Writing Month. Gwynn and Ruth will start off the evening with inspiration & nudges to fire up your pen and get you writing. There is no charge for this special program. 

    Four evenings of writing in community

    Guided creativity prompts from Writescape presenters

    Fun activities to track your word count

Register for Come Write-in @ Central on the Whitby Public Library website.

 

DATES: November 22-24 at Fern Resort in Orillia

LOCATION: FERN RESORT, ON LAKE COUCHICHING Fern Resort

Three-day all-inclusive writing retreat at the fabulous Fern Resort, just 2 hours north of Toronto on Lake Couchiching. Our guest author is Bill Swan, winner of the 2012 Red Maple Award.

·       Professional writing instructors

·       Inspiring writer’s craft workshops

·       Plenty of time to exercise your pen

·       Private setting and first-class amenities

For more information or to register: Visit Writescape at www.writescape.ca, email info@writescape.ca or call 905-728-7823.

 SUBMISSION CALLS AND OPPORTUNITIES

 ITEM 10: BYWORDS.CA SUBMISSION CALL    

DEADLINE:  The 15th of every month for the following month’s issue

Bywords.ca considers previously unpublished poetry from emerging and established poets for our online monthly magazine. We consider work by current and former residents, students and workers of Ottawa. We also publish poems by contributors to our predecessor, the Bywords Monthly Magazine.  FOR SUBMISSION INFORMATION VISIT www.bywords.ca and click on Guidelines.  Amanda Earl, Managing Editor.  Check out Bywords.ca’s literary events calendar here:http://www.bywords.ca/calendar/index.php, with up-to-date info on NCR readings, book signings, writers’ circles, literary festivals, spoken word showcases & slams. Event submissions can be sent to events@bywords.ca.

 

ITEM 11: FOUR ANTHOLOGY CALLS FROM SCARECROW PRESS  NEW!

 1. Making Libraries Integral in the Lives of Baby Boomers

 Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press Editor: Carol Smallwood, Bringing Arts into the Library, ed., (ALA Editions, 2013);  Library Services for Multicultural Patrons to Encourage Library Use co-ed., (Scarecrow Press, 2013)

 Chapters sought for an anthology by practicing public librarians and LIS faculty in the United  States and Canada: creative, practical how-to chapters on strengthening and expanding services to the age group called baby boomers. Possible topics: fostering positive staff attitudes;  encouraging endowments and advocacy; programming and workshops; maximizing their  experience as volunteers; instruction in technology; needs assessment surveys; genealogy and oral histories; grants. Concise, how-to chapters based on experience to help colleagues totaling 3,000-4,000 words, or two chapters that come to 3,000-4,000 words. No previously published or simultaneously submitted material. One, two, or three authors per chapter; if two chapters they are to be by the same author(s). Compensation: one complimentary copy per 3,000-4,000 word accepted submission, discount on more copies.

Please e-mail titles of  2-4 topics each described in 2 sentences by November 30, 2013 with brief biography sketch(s); place BOOMERS and Last Name on the subject line to: smallwood@tm.net

 

2. Women, Work, and the Web: How the Web Creates Entrepreneurial Opportunities

 Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press Editor: Carol Smallwood, Women on Poetry: Writing, Revising, Publishing and Teaching (McFarland, 2012) on Poets & Writers Magazine “List of Best Books for Writers.” Writing After Retirement: Tips by Successful Retired Writers forthcoming from Scarecrow Press.http://www.amazon.com/Carol- smallwood/e/B001JS613M/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1380659357&sr=1-2-ent

 Seeking chapters of unpublished work from writers in the U.S. and Canada for an anthology.  Interested in such topics as: Women Founding Online Companies; Women Working on the Web With Young Children or Physical Disabilities; Woman’s Studies Resources and Curriculum; Surveys/Interviews of Innovative Women on the Web. Chapters of 3,000-4,000 words or two chapters coming to that word count (up to 3 co-authors) on how the Internet has opened doors, leveled the playing field and provided new  opportunities for women, are all welcome. Practical, how-to-do-it, anecdotal and innovative writing based on experience how women make money on the Web, further careers. One complimentary copy per chapter, discount on additional copies. Please e-mail 2-4 chapter topics each described in two sentences by November 30, 2013, along with a brief bio to smallwood@tm.net  Please place INTERNET/Last Name on the subject line; if co-authored, paste bio sketches for each author.

 

3. Creative Management of Small Public Libraries in the 21st Century

 Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press

 Co-editor: Carol Smallwood, public libraries consultant; Library Management Tips That Work, ed., (ALA Editions, 2011);  Library Services for Multicultural Patrons to Encourage Library Use co-ed., (Scarecrow Press, 2013)

 Chapters sought for an anthology by practicing public librarians and LIS faculty in the United States and Canada: creative, practical how-to chapters for a handbook on strengthening small and rural public libraries as centers of communities serving populations under 25,000. Possible topics: fostering positive staff attitudes; making an inviting atmosphere; successful living endowments; programming; handling patrons, volunteers, meetings;  using technology; effective networking; staff evaluations; professional development; needs assessment   surveys.

Concise, how-to chapters based on experience to help colleagues totaling 3,000-4,000 words, or two chapters that come to 3,000-4,000 words. No previously published or simultaneously submitted material. One, two, or three authors per chapter; if two chapters they are to be

by the same author(s).  A complimentary copy per 3,000-4,000 word accepted submission as compensation, discount on more. Please e-mail titles of  2-3 topics each described in 2 sentences by November 30, 2013 with brief biography sketch(s);  place SMALL and Last Name on the subject line to: smallwood@tm.net

 4. Writing After Retirement: Tips by Successful Retired Writers Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press Co-editor: Carol Smallwood co-edited Women on Poetry: Writing, Revising, Publishing and Teaching (McFarland, 2012), on Poets & Writers Magazine’s “List of Best Books for Writers”; edited Pre- & Post-Retirement Tips for Librarians (American Library Association, 2012). Co-editor: Dr. Christine Redman-Waldeyer, Assistant Professor, Coordinator of the Journalism Option Program, Passaic County Community College, Paterson, New Jersey; Editor/Founder, Adanna Literary Journal; Author, Eve Asks (Muse-Pie Press, 2011). 

http://www.amazon.com/Carol-Smallwood/e/B001JS613M/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1380659357&sr=1-2-ent

 

An anthology of unpublished 3,000-4,000 word chapters or two chapters coming to that word count by successful, men and women retired writers from the U.S. and Canada  (up to 3 co-authors) previously following other careers than writing. Fiction, poetry, memoir, nonfiction, journalism, and other writers welcome. Looking for topics as: Business Aspects of Writing, Writing as a New Career, Networking, Using Life Experience, Finding Your Niche, Privacy and Legal Issues, Using Technology. With living longer, early retirement, popularity of memoir writing, this is a how-to for baby boomers who now have time to write. Compensation: one complimentary copy per chapter, discount on additional copies.

Please e-mail two chapter topics each describe d in two sentences by November 30, 2013 with brief pasted bio to smallwood@tm.net placing RETIREMENT/Last Name on the subject line. If co-authored, pasted bios for each.

 

IN THE INTEREST OF WRITERS HELPING WRITERS

 

ITEM 12: THE MEDIA CLUB OF OTTAWA PRESENTS : TWITTER 101: A QUICK TUTORIAL FOR FIRST TIME USERS                      DATE CHANGE!  

Featuring Joe Banks, Journalism professor, Algonquin College

 

DATE: Monday October 28, 2013  6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

LOCATION: Algonquin College, Woodroffe campus, Room 216b, building P

 

Journalism students with ID free, Media Club members $15, Non-members $20

Sandwiches, fresh fruit cheese and crackers provided

www.mediaclubofottawa.ca

 

ITEM 13: CAPITAL SLAM FEATURING ISAAC BOND                   NEW!

 DATE: Saturday, November 2, 2013 6:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.

LOCATION: The Mercury Lounge, 56 Byward Market Square, Ottawa

Doors and sign-up are at 6:30. $8 and free for performers. All ages welcome.

 This season has been CRAZY! Every slam gives us a different winner… who will rise up this time? The top 4 in the rankings include a current CapSlam team member, a current UL team member, the reigning OYPS Champ and a BRAND NEW FACE on the scene! Now we are on the brink of CFSW and the National Slam Championships, so who will show up at Capital Slam to try and get one last chance to practice? One thing we know for sure is that Saskatoon poetry superstar Isaac Bond will be there for a feature set!

 

“Isaac Bond has been performing hip hop and spoken word for about 12 years. In 2013, he founded Write Out Loud, which hosts all ages spoken word shows in Saskatoon and provides professional opportunities for artists to do workshops in the community. He has taken part in four national spoken word festivals, performing on the finals stages at the Canadian Festival of Spoken Word 2012 and Verses 2013 (Canadian Individual Poetry Slam). Isaac likens his poetry to the euphonic swish of basketball mesh soloing over cacophonous expressions of humanity. He learns from every poet he hears, and is humbled by all the fresh voices he discovers when he travels to share his work.”

Thanks as always to the City of Ottawa for your support to make such features possible! SEE YOU AT THE MERC!

 

ITEM 14: WORDS TO LIVE BY FEATURING ABBY KASSIRER    NEW!

 

DATE: Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2013 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.

LOCATION: Pressed, 750 Gladstone Ave., Ottawa

 

Open mic sign-up at 7:00 p.m. and show starts at 7:30 p.m. $7 at the door or free for performers.

 

At Words to Live By, we love hearing new voices and will beshowcasing Abby Kassirer for their first feature this month. How exciting!

Abby Kassirer is a sixteen-year-old slam poet whose writing style is very personal and intimate. They love telling stories through poems, as well as addressing issues close to their heart such as queer issues and feminism. They were on the Wildcard team at YouthCanSlam 2013, and won the Story Slam at CapSlam in May of 2013.

We’d also like to congratulate Benoit Christie on winning two free tickets to see, Alice Walker: Beauty In Truth, at the Inside Out Ottawa LGBT Film Festival.

 ITEM 15: FALL 2013 OTTAWA INTERNATIONAL WRITERS FESTIVAL  NEW!

Web: writersfestival.org for more information and tickets

Email: info@writersfestival.org

 

Know Presbyterian Church, Ottawa, Canada viewe...

Know Presbyterian Church, Ottawa, Canada viewed from the north side. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

Monday, Oct. 28

        12:00pm • Knox Presbyterian Church • 120 Lisgar Street (at Elgin) Masterclass: Reading to Write, A conversation with David Gilmour

 

        6:30pm • Knox Presbyterian Church • 120 Lisgar Street (at Elgin)

        Paikin and the Premiers

 

        8:30pm • Knox Presbyterian Church • 120 Lisgar Street (at Elgin)

        The War That Ended Peace with Margaret MacMillan

 

Tuesday Oct 29

        6:30pm • Knox Presbyterian Church • 120 Lisgar Street (at Elgin)

        Living History with Denise Chong and Charlotte Gray

 

        8:30pm • Knox Presbyterian Church • 120 Lisgar Street (at Elgin)

        State of the Nation: John Ibbitson, Susan Delacourt & Paul Wells

 

Wednesday Oct. 30

        6:30pm • Knox Presbyterian Church • 120 Lisgar Street (at Elgin)

        Things That Go Bump: Carsten Stroud, Corey Redekop & Andrew Pyper

 

        8:30pm • Knox Presbyterian Church • 120 Lisgar Street (at Elgin)

        Scene of the Crime: Marcia Clark, Thomas Enger, Jorn Lier Horst & Peter Robinson

 

Friday Nov. 1

        7:00pm • Arnprior Public Library • 21 Madawaska Street, Arnprior Expressions Criminal Minds with John Lawton and Peggy Blair


MAGAZINE SUBMISSION CALLS:

 

NO DEADLINES SPECIFIED:

 

 Circa: A Journal of Historical Fiction (Ottawa, ON) is accepting submissions on a historical theme. Accepts fiction, creative non-fiction, book reviews, and articles that have a fresh take on history. Also appreciates genre-crossing, and speculative and alternative history. Length: 2500 words max. (fiction) and 800 words max. (reviews and articles). As a Canadian journal, Circa especially likes Canadian stories. Deadline: Rolling. Guidelines: circajournal.com/submissions

 

The Mackinac (Canada/US) seeks poetry that “bridges the strait between nostalgia and the immediate, the wilds seen and unseen, the best of emerging and established voices.” Submit up to 5 poems for consideration. Deadline: Ongoing.   Guidelines: themackinacmagazine.com/submit.html

 

Dentists on the Frontier (Canada) seeks short, pithy, provocative and even happy stories of dentists and dental procedures from practitioners and patients of dentistry. Filed under the title “Writing Home Again,” stories should be in the form of an anonymous open letter (Dear Dentist or Dear Patient). Accepting nonfiction and creative nonfiction only. Length: 600 words max. Deadline: ongoing.  Guidelines: dentistsonthefrontier.com/submissions/

 

Featured Fifty Poetry: We’re Seeking Your Best Poems for writers age 50 and older.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/24/featured-fifty-poetry_n_3489074.html

 

Ploughshares’ reading period is now open! We’re accepting submissions for Ploughshares literary magazine and for our Ploughshares Solos series of long stories and essays. You can now submit all those poems, essays, and stories that you’ve been working on and saving up since January. For guidelines and to submit, visit our website. http://www.pshares.org/submit/index.cfm

 

Dead Beats (Sheffield, UK), a student-run publishing and live poetry organization, seeks submissions. Accepting poems, short stories (max. 2000 words) and experimental pieces from everyone, regardless of experience. Seeks to “share inspired and inspiring works from around the globe.” No deadline. Guidelines:http://www.deadbeats.eu/submission

 

Independent hybrid lit mag The Holler Box accepts submissions of poetry, fiction, lyric essays, nonfiction, and artwork year-round. Each issue is published online and in the form of a limited release handmade chapbook. Welcomes the alternative and experimental, as well as new and unpublished writers. Length: 5000 words max (prose) and poetry (up to 3). Guidelines: https://thehollerbox.submittable.com/submit

 


Online arts review magazine The Coastal Spectator (Victoria, BC) seeks reviews of theatre, books, music, film, visual arts, and other cultural happenings around coastal BC specifically (but not exclusively). Submit pieces that are “short and sharp.” Length: 300-500 words. Payment: stipend of $25. Partial to views that reflect a coastal slant on things. Query the editor at lvluven@uvic.ca.

 

Quarterly journal Squalorly (US) welcomes submissions of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, illustration, and photography. Submit story/essay (5000 words max), flash pieces (up to 3), and poems (up to 5). Appreciates work with emphasis on emotion: “Move, amaze, horrify, and educate.” http://www.squalorly.com/submit

 

Gervais Advertising is looking for short articles on a wide variety of subjects for their small shopping/tourism guides available at locations throughout central Ontario. Articles do not need to be location-specific and should have a casual slant based on fun, personal experience. Payment: $0.12 per word for accepted articles/stories. Contact Editor, Cyndy Gervais: syndy@bmts.com.

 

The Mackinac is accepting poetry submissions. Details at: http://www.themackinacmagazine.com/submit.html.

 

Running out of Ink, a new webzine, is accepting short stories of all genres. For more information, visit: www.runningoutofink.com.

 

Riddle Fence is currently accepting submissions for its spring issue. The publisher is looking for poetry, fiction, non-fiction and visual art. Info please visit http://www.riddlefence.com.

 

Fierce Ink Press Co-op Ltd. is currently open for submissions. The publisher is looking for books between 50,000 and 80,000 words long in all young adult genres.  For more information, please visit http://fierceinkpress.com/submissions/.

 

Decoded Past is looking for writers with expertise in history and/or prehistory. This internet site will showcase articles written by experts for the general reader: new interpretations of past events, new developments or theories, the past in the context of the present. Writers must hold a degree in the social sciences or historical sciences and be writing in an area of personal expertise, or have an established platform in professional historical writing. Contact Rosemary Drisdelle at info@rosemarydrisdelle.com.

 

CIRCA: A Journal of Historical Fiction is accepting submissions. Details are available at: http://circajournal.com/submissions/.

Dragon Ink Press is accepting submissions from comic artists, fantasy writers and poets for their new comics and literary anthology. Guidelines: http://dragoninkpress.tumblr.com/.

 

From the Well House is accepting fiction, scholarly essays and poetry. Details can be found at: http://fromthewellhouse.org/?bu0Dd7M9.

Ruminate Magazine is now accepting submissions. Guidelines and deadlines are available at: http://www.ruminatemagazine.com/submit/submission-guidelines/.

 

Carousel is accepting submissions. Info: http://www.carouselmagazine.ca/submit.html.

 

Antiphon: accepting poetry submissions. Info: http://antiphon.org.uk/index.php/submissions.

 

Convert Publishing, a new digital publisher, is accepting manuscript submissions. For more details, visit: http://convertpublishing.com/?page_id=19.

 

Neon: A Literary Magazine accepting submissions, info: http://www.neonmagazine.co.uk/

Queen’s Quarterly is accepting articles, reviews, short stories and poetry. Details can be found here: http://www.queensu.ca/quarterly/correspondencesubmissions.html.

 

Event Poetry and Prose is accepting submissions. Guidelines are available at: http://eventmags.com/about-2/submission-guidelines/fiction-poetry/.

The Ottawa Arts Review seeks prose submissions (including short fiction, personal essays, reviews, and interviews) relating to literary and visual arts, poetry, drama, and visual art. oar.uesa.ca/submissions/submission-guidelines/

 

Sweptmedia.ca, an online youth-culture magazine based in Toronto/GTA, is looking for original contributions in all print mediums: journalism, short fiction, poetry, etc. Also willing to consider other forms of visual communication modes: photography, painting, comic strips, etc. info: sweptmedia.ca/index.php/contact-us

 

New online magazine The Island Review (international) seeks submissions of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, photography and art from islanders, island-lovers, and those whose work is influenced by islands, or explores ideas of islandness. http://www.theislandreview.com/submissions/ 

 

The recently-launched Northern Cardinal Review (Canada) is seeking creative and vivid poetry, non-fiction essays, and book reviews. Open to writers living in Canada, Alaska, or the northern border states of the U.S. http://northerncardinalreview.wordpress.com/submissions/

Comedy website The Higgs Weldon (US) seeks forms of writing (1000 words max.) and cartoons. Deadline: Ongoing: http://thehiggsweldon.com/submit/

 

Kolaj (Montreal, QC) is a quarterly, print magazine about contemporary collage. Seeks critical reviews and essays, artist profiles, event highlights, articles on collage making, collecting, and exhibiting, and other contributions. Pays. kolajmagazine.com/content/submissions

 

Formalist poetry review The Rotary Dial (Canada) seeks poetry from Canadian and international writers. Looking for work that rhymes and/or scans but isn’t too versey: blank verse, syllabic verse, etc. Response within two weeks. http://therotarydial.ca/submissions/

 

Garbanzo Literary Journal (US) is published in limited-run copies as part of a hand-created series of chapbooks. Seeks stories (1172 words max.) poems (43 lines max.), micro-fiction, macro-faction, creative nonfiction, and a variety of verse forms. Appreciates writing that disregards the rules: http://www.garbanzoliteraryjournal.org/Submission_Guidelines.html

 

BareBacklit is an online bi-monthly magazine seeking poetry, prose, and visual art. Accepts poetry (4 poems max.), fiction (2500 words max.), and flash fiction (1000 words max.). Prefers work that is “unpretentious, minimalist… entertains first, and provokes thought later.” http://www.barebacklit.com/Submissions.html

 

LWOT (Lies With Occasional Truth) seeks fiction from writers in Canada “(and sometimes by Americans who pretend, in their cover letters, to be Canadian)”. The term fiction is open to interpretation.  : http://lwot.net/submission.htm

 

Online journal Pithead Chapel seeks fiction (short and flash) and nonfiction (experimental, personal, lyric essays) “that moves toward something bigger… takes chances.” Accepts stories and essays 4000 words max. Reads year-round.  : http://pitheadchapel.com/submission-guidelines/

 

The New Inquiry welcomes short- and long-form pieces “from anyone who wants to write.” Looks for well-written, original posts on ideas, books, art, culture, and more. No fiction or poetry.  : http://thenewinquiry.com/submit-to-tni/

 

Literary journal Revolver (US) seeks “short range” (up to 1000 words), “long range” (1000-5000 words), and art for its next issue. Welcomes fiction, poetry, essays, lists, and art. Also accepting bar stories for “Shots with Strangers”.  : http://www.around-around.com/submit/

 

Website strange bOUnce accepts short stories, satire, and poetry, that have been “lightly brushed with sport.” Send work to IWantToWrite@strangebOUnce.com. No payment. http://strangebounce.com/

 

 Small circulation literary publication Cant Journal (US) seeks poetry and prose for Issue #5. Accepts poetry, short inventive prose (micro fiction, flash fiction, etc.; 300-1000 words), poetry book reviews, essays on poetry, and interviews with poets. Submit 3-7 poems, 1-3 short prose pieces, or 1 poetry book review or essay on poetry. Journal is small (5 x 11); writers are encouraged to keep this in mind when submitting. Publishes annually in April. Payment: Three copies.   Guidelines: cantjournal.com/submission-guidelines

 

Red Kitty is a webzine and limited run print zine based out of Austin, TX. Accepting poetry, prose, short fiction, personal narrative, humor, and experimental journalism; illustration, photography, and doodles; and sound portraits, video art, and spoken word. Prefers works that takes risks and gets messy, including the “strange, thought-provoking, funny, demented.” Deadline: rolling. Guidelines: redkittyzine.weebly.com/submit.html

 

Independent magazine Bitterzoet (US) is now looking for new poetry, fiction, and artwork for their monthly online zine and bi-annual print editions, and mini chapbooks. Publishes work that engages in the “interplay between bitterness and sweetness, light and darkness, salvation and damnation.” Accepts poetry (3-8) prose (6 pages max), and artwork. Also looking for shorter pieces (“bonbons”) of poetry (10 lines max) and prose (150 words max.). Deadline: rolling. Guidelines: bitterzoetmag.submittable.com

 

Independent online journal Black Heart Magazine (U.S) seeks short fiction for its weekday (M-F) publication cycle. Length: 1500 words max. All genres accepted, with a literary angle preferred. Appreciates ‘short-form modern literature, from pulp to literary fiction and everything in-between.’ Deadline: Ongoing. Guidelines: blackheartmagazine.com/submission-guidelines

 

GlassFire Magazine (US) seeks submissions of fiction and non-fiction (3000 words max.), poetry, and artwork for the Winter 2013 issue. Pays $5 per poem/artwork/photography and $10 per story/nonfiction Deadline: Rolling. http://www.peglegpublishing.com/glassfire.htm

 

OCTOBER DEADLINES

 

 

The Antioch University Los Angeles Creative Writing MFA program’s biannual publication, Lunch Ticket, is accepting submissions for its next issue. Submit fiction, creative non-fiction, YA fiction, poetry, and art/imagery. Theme/genre: Open. Deadline: October 31, 2013.     Guidelines: http://www.lunchticket.org/about/submission-guidelines

 

Bones – a journal for contemporary haiku: Send a maximum of 5 single haiku and/or 1 series/sequence of maximum 10 haiku. Submission deadlines are October 15 – November 15 for the December issue & April 15 – May 15 for the June issue. Submissions: submission (at) bonesjournal (dot) com. with “Submission to bones” in the subject line. Please include the works in the body of the email AND as an attached file (doc, docx, odt, rtf)

 

ROOM MAGAZINE Call for Submissions: 37.2: Contest issue.  Room would love to add a bit of your literary brilliance to our already sparkling lineup for issue 37.2, to be published in June 2014. In this open-themed issue we will showcase our 2013 contest winners, feature an interview with Canadian poet Sandra Ridley, and have commissioned short fiction by another Canadian, Jessica Westhead. If you see your work—whether it is poetry, fiction, or creative non-fiction—fitting into that mix, send it our way. Check out our guidelines for full details. http://www.roommagazine.com/submit Deadline: October 31, 2013

 


AND LATER:

 

Creative Nonfiction (US) is seeking new essays about mistakes — major or minor, tragic or serendipitous, funny or painful — for an upcoming issue. Looking for true stories about poor decisions, missteps, miscalculations, embarrassing boo-boos, dangerous misjudgments, or fortuitous faux pas that explore the nature and outcomes of human fallibility. First prize: $1000. Length: 4000 words max. Entry fee: $20 (or $25 for a subscription to Creative Nonfiction — US only). All essays will be considered for publication in a special “Mistakes” issue. Deadline: November 1, 2013 Guidelines: http://www.creativenonficction.org/submissions/mistakes

 

The Muse, An International Journal of Poetry, an online bi-annual journal of poetry from India, is seeking submissions for their next issue. Accept poems (send 1-5 poems), and essays and research papers (3000 words minimum). Deadline: November 10, 2013. http://themuse.webs.com/

 

 The Beloit Fiction Journal (US) seeks contemporary short fiction, including traditional and experimental narratives. Very long and very short stories welcome. Deadline: December 1, 2013.     Guidelines: beloitfictionjournal.wordpress.com/how-to-submit/

 

Online literature/arts magazine The Broken City (Toronto, ON) is currently accepting submissions for its winter 2013 edition: “Turn on, tune in.” Looking for music-related poetry, fiction, essays, comics, illustrations, photography, reviews as well as mp3 submissions for a mixtape. Deadline: December 1, 2013. Non-paying. Guidelines: thebrokencitymag.com/submissions.html

 

 Sunshine in a Jar Press. Looking to get published? Sunshine in a Jar Press is welcoming submissions to its new anthology “The Writing Spiral” which will be released in Fall of 2014. They are seeking poems, memoirs, stories and essays, and possible themes are love, loss, joy, decadence, deprivation, hope, fear, friendship, family, work, social responsibility, health, culture, light, and darkness. There is also the opportunity for monthly writing classes to feed your process at Trent University, Oshawa Campus. Deadline: March 1, 2014 Details: www.sunshineinajar.com/or call 289 252 1978

 

 Online literary magazine The Steel Chisel (Canada)is “perpetually looking” for prose and poetry submissions from Canadian writers. Include a short bio with location, occupation, and any relevant award/publication accomplishments. Deadline: Rolling, on 6th of the month.     Guidelines: http://www.thesteelchisel.ca/contact.html

 

 The Potomac Review (Montgomery College, Maryland)accepts submissions of poetry (up to three), fiction and nonfiction (5000 words max.), photography, and artwork. Appreciates both realistic and experimental prose and poetry. Deadline: May 1, 2014.  Guidelines: cms.montgomerycollege.edu/EDU/Alt.aspx?id=19015

UPCOMING WRITING CONTESTS

 

OCTOBER DEADLINES:

 

·        ArtAscent invites entries for their “Dark” International Art Competition. First prize: $50 and publication. Theme: Dark — shadows, expectation, foreboding, mystery, villains, secrets, memories, challenges, hauntings. Entries may include fiction, non-fiction, poetry, short stories and other written explorations (up to 1000 words). Previously published or unpublished are eligible. Writers retain copyrights. Entry fee: $7. Deadline: October 31, 2013,     Guidelines: artascent.com/call-for-writers/

 

·        The Ultra Short Poem Competition 2013 Open to Canadians and permanent residents of Canada only. Poems are to be no longer than 8 lines and no more than 8 words on a line. All themes and styles welcome. Every winner will receive one free copy of the book. Deadline: October 30, 2013. Entry fee: $10 for up to 5 poems. Prize: 1st prize: $100, 2nd prize: $75, 3rd prize: $50, 4th prize: $25 + all prize winning poems to be published in a chapbook anthology Details: www.theontariopoetrysociety.ca/Contests.html

 

·        2ND ANNUAL TWOWOLVZ PRESS POETRY CHAPBOOK CONTEST DEADLINE OCT. 31, 2013. Guidelines are located with our submissions manager https://therivermuse.submittable.com/submit/24225

 

·        The 2014 Lionel Gelber Prize. The prize is a literary award for the world’s best non-fiction book in English on foreign affairs that seeks to deepen public debate on significant international issues. To be eligible for the 2014 Lionel Gelber Prize, books must be published between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2013. Deadline: October 31, 2013. Entry fee: $50. Prize: $15,000 Details: www.utoronto.ca/munk/gelber/

·        The London Magazine Short Story Competition. The London Magazine, the UK’s oldest literary journal, is announcing their Short Story Competition to find fantastic new writers from around the world. We will consider short stories of up to 4000 words in length (no flash fiction), and this competition is not limited to those who live in the UK.   Deadline: October 31, 2013 Entry fee: £10 per story Prize: 1st prize: £500, 2nd prize: £300, 3rd prize: £200 Details: http://thelondonmagazine.org/tlm-competition/the-london-magazine-short-story-competition-2013/

 

 


·       Burt Award for Caribbean Literature. The Burt Award for Caribbean Literature is a new, annual Award that will be given to three English-language literary works for young adults (aged 12 through 18) written by Caribbean authors. Established by CODE – a Canadian charitable organization that has been supporting literacy and learning for over 50 years – in collaboration with William (Bill) Burt and the Literary Prizes Foundation and the Bocas Lit Fest, the Award aims to provide engaging and culturally-relevant books for young people across the Caribbean.  Deadline: October 31, 2013 Entry fee: none Prize: 1st prize: $10,000 , 2nd prize: $7000 , 3rd prize: $5000 Details: www.bocaslitfest.com/burt-award-for-caribbean-literature/

 

·       RANDOM HOUSE SPOOKY SHORT STORY CONTEST.Details: Stories must be between 1,200 and 1,500 words. And, to make it just a bit more challenging, your story has to include the following 10 words provided by John Boyne and Diane Setterfield: Shadow, Children, Fog, Mirror, Revenge, Black, Hidden, Sleep, Eye, Never.   The contest starts now and you have until October 24th at midnight (mua ha ha) to submit your story.  Submit your entry by emailing onlinemarketing@randomhouse.com with the subject line “Spooky Short Story Writing Contest”. In the body of the email, please include your submission and your name.   The three best stories as chosen by Retreat by Random House will be posted to this blog on October 31, 2013.  MORE INFO AT http://www.retreatbyrandomhouse.ca/2013/09/spooky-short-story-writing-contest/?Ref=Email_Canada_10/3/2013

 

·       The Black River Chapbook Competition (Fall) Awarded twice annually for a chapbook (16-36 pages) of poetry or short stories. Beginning with the Fall 2009 competition, winner receives $500 and 25 copies of chapbook. Entry Period: September 1 – October 31. Deadline: October 31, 2013.   http://www.blacklawrence.com/BRCCContestPage.html

 

NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER DEADLINES:

 

·        Ruminate Magazine (US) invites entries for the 2013 William Van Dyke Short Story Prize. Prize: $1500 and publication in Spring 2013 issue. Length: 5500 words max. Deadline: November 1, 2013. Entry fee: $18 (includes subscription).     Guidelines: ruminatemagazine.com/submit/contests/fiction

 

·        8th annual Writers Digest Poetry Awards. The prestigious prizes for top winners of the Writer’s Digest Poetry Awards include:    Up to $1,000 in cash. Your poem published in Writer’s Digest and promoted on WritersDigest.com.  A copy of the 2014 Poet’s Market.

·       Enter any poem 32 lines or fewer and you could receive all the recognition and rewards that come with winning this competition!  DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: NOVEMBER 1, 2013

 


·       carte blanche and the Creative Nonfiction Collective Society (CNFC) announce a creative nonfiction contest open to Canadian citizens and permanent residents. The prize is $500 and publication in carte blanche. Submit original, previously unpublished creative nonfiction of up to 3,000 words to https://carte-blanche.submittable.com/submit  by November 1 at midnight ET. Entry fee of $7 for CNFC members and $12 for non-members.

 

·       The Pat Lowther Memorial Award is given for a book of poetry by a Canadian woman published in the preceding year, and is in memory of the late Pat Lowther, whose career was cut short by her untimely death in 1975. The awards carry a $1,000 prize, and are presented each year at the annual LCP Poetry Festival and Conference in June, with the shortlist announced during National Poetry Month in April. The deadline for submission to these awards is November 1st, 2013. For books that are published after this date, but still within the calendar year, please e-mail me (readings@poets.ca) by Nov 1st, 2013 to arrange to have the deadline extended (to Dec 15th at the latest). For more information on these awards, and to download a submission form, please go to: http://poets.ca/wordpress/contests-awards/pat-lowther

 

·       The Gerald Lampert Memorial Award is given in the memory of Gerald Lampert, an arts administrator who organized authors’ tours and took a particular interest in the work of new writers. The award recognizes the best first book of poetry published by a Canadian in the preceding year. The awards carry a $1,000 prize, and are presented each year at the annual LCP Poetry Festival and Conference in June, with the shortlist announced during National Poetry Month in April. The deadline for submission to these awards is November 1st, 2013. For books that are published after this date, but still within the calendar year, please e-mail me (readings@poets.ca) by Nov 1st, 2013 to arrange to have the deadline extended (to Dec 15th at the latest). For more information on these awards, and to download a submission form, please go to: http://poets.ca/wordpress/contests-awards/gerald-lampert

 

·       The Raymond Souster Award is given for a book of poetry by a League of Canadian Poets member (all levels, dues paid) published in the preceding year. The award honours Raymond Souster, an early founder of the League of Canadian Poets. The award carries a $1,000 prize. It is presented each year at the LCP Annual Poetry Festival and Conference in June, with the shortlist announced in April. The deadline for submission to these awards is November 1st, 2013. For books that are published after this date, but still within the calendar year, please e-mail me (readings@poets.ca) by Nov 1st, 2013 to arrange to have the deadline extended (to Dec 15th at the latest). For more information on these awards, and to download a submission form, please go to: http://poets.ca/wordpress/contests-awards/raymond-souster

·       The Malahat Review’s Open Season Awards. Deadline is November 1. http://www.malahatreview.ca/contests/open_season/info.html.

 

·       CANADA WRITES CBC SHORT STORY PRIZE DEADLINE NOV. 1 2013  Submit your original, unpublished stories stories between 1200 and 1500 words.  Competition opens: September 1, 2013. Deadline to submit: November 1, 2013 at 11:59 p.m. ET OPEN TO  All Canadian citizens and permanent residents of Canada can submit.  MORE INFO HERE http://www.cbc.ca/books/canadawrites/literaryprizes/shortstory/

 

·       FRIENDS of Canadian Broadcasting is pleased to announce the 2013 Dalton Camp Award. The winner will receive a $10,000 prize for excellence in creative, original essay-writing on the link between democracy and the media in Canada. New for 2013, a discretionary second prize of $2,500 may be awarded for the best essay by a post-secondary student. The 2013 Award is open to both students and other Canadians. The deadline for entries is November 15, 2013. Download the 2013 Dalton Camp Award PosterThe official rules, past winning essays, a video biography on Dalton Camp, and other details about the Award are available from the Dalton Camp Award website:   www.daltoncampaward.ca

 

·        InkTears Short Story Competition 2013. The Ink Tears Short Story Competition is now open for entries. All prize-winners will have their story published to the InkTears Readers and consideration for a short story collection/anthology publication.  Length 1000 – 3000 words, any theme and open to age 18+. Stories may have been previously published or unpublished.  Deadline: November 30, 2013 Entry fee: £6.00 Prize: Winner:  £1000; Runner-up:  £100; 4 x Highly Commended £25.00 Details: www.inktears.com

 

·       LOTR 100-Word Story Contest. Submit a 100-word story about love and travel and you could have it published online and win a free copy of the forthcoming book Love on the Road 2013. Love on the Road 2013 is an anthology of 12 stories about love and travel from a dozen different writers, some very accomplished, others just starting out. It’s scheduled for publication in early December. We’ll take submissions until November 30 and then declare three winners and send them (for free) paperback copies of Love on the Road 2013. There’s more information at loveontheroad2013.com.  Best, Sam Tranum Dublin, Ireland

·       Prairie Fire’s Banff Centre Bliss Carman Poetry Award, Short Fiction and Creative Non-Fiction Contests. Deadline is November 30, (postmarked). http://www.prairiefire.ca/contests.

 

·       Bottle Tree Productions One Act Play Competition for Writers 2013. DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 30, 2013. Go online at http://www.bottletreeinc.com/script_contest.html.  First Prize $1,000, Second Prize $250, Third Prize $100. The entry fee for each submission is $25. One Act Plays of from 10 minutes to 70 minutes may be submitted by mail or email. By mail to Bottle Tree Productions, 445 Southwood Drive, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7M-5P8. Please make cheque payable to Bottle Tree Productions. For environmental and storage reasons email submissions are preferred. By email to contest (at) bottletreeinc (dot) com. Go online at http://www.bottletreeinc.com/script_contest.html

 

·        RopeWalk Press (US) invites entries for the The Nobody Series AWP Postcard Contest. Seeking short-short stories “destined for immediate celebrity.” Winning story printed on art postcards displayed for sale among postcards of RopeWalk Press fiction covers. Prize: a signing, 10 copies of the postcard, and a $25 gift certificate to your favorite bookstore or $50 in RopeWalk Press titles .Entry fee: $5. Deadline: December 1, 2013.    Guidelines: http://ropewalk.org

 

·       Briarpatch Magazine is accepting entries for their third annual writing contest, Writing in the Margins. Seeking fresh, fiction and creative non-fiction “that brings to life issues of political, social, and environmental justice.” Cash prizes totalling $750. Length: 2000 words max. Entry fee: $25 (includes subscription). Deadline: December 1, 2013.  Guidelines: briarpatchmagazine.com/announcements/view/creative-writing-contest

 

·        FREEFALL MAGAZINE Just for fun we’ve added a new contest: “The Corner of 13th and 13th” Flash Fiction. Write a story in 500 words or less about what happened on Friday September the 13th 2013 at one of the 13th Avenue and 13th Street intersections in the photos found at: http://www.freefallmagazine.ca/flash-fiction-contest.html. Entry Fee: $13.00. First Prize: $130.00. Deadline to enter is: Friday Dec 13th 2013

 

·       Red Tuque Books 2013 Canadian Tales of the Fantastic Short Story Competition. Deadline is December 31: http://www.redtuquebooks.ca/contest.htm.

 

·       2013 annual FreeFall Prose and Poetry Contest is now open! Contain your joy as we let you know that we’ve doubled the first place prize money from $300 to $600. Deadline to enter is: December 31, 2013. For current contest info visit: http://www.freefallmagazine.ca/contest.html.

 

2014 CONTESTS

 

·        Gemini MAGAZINE  is now accepting entries for its fourth annual Poetry Open competition. The grand prize is $1,000. Second place wins $100 and four honorable mentions will each receive $25. All six finalists will be published online in the March 2014 issue of Gemini. The entry fee is $5 for each batch of three poems. Deadline: January 2, 2014. We are open to any type of poetry, any subject matter, any length. Scroll down the Poetry Open page http://gemini-magazine.com/poetryopen.html to see the broad range of work from previous winners and finalists.

 

·        League of Canadian Poets announces: Submissions are now open for the Jessamy Stursburg Poetry Contest for Canadian Youth. There are two age categories, junior (grades 7-9) and senior (grades 10-12). First place poems in each category will receive a cash prize: Winners: $350 Second Place: $300 Third Place: $250 All winning poems will be published in the LCP’s e-zine, Re:verse at www.youngpoets.ca. All winners will receive Jessamy Stursberg Poetry Contest for Canadian Youth certificates and student membership in the League of Canadian Poets for one year. Deadline: January 15, 2014. http://poets.ca/jessamy-stursberg-poetry-contest-for-canadian-youth/

 

·        Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry. Awarded annually to the best poetry manuscript by an emerging Canadian writer (a writer who has published fewer than two books). Each year the winning manuscript will be selected by an established poet in co-operation with Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint. The winner receives a trade paperback contract with Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint which will include the publication of the manuscript and a $500 advance. DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: January 31, 2014 Info here: http://matrixmagazine.org/rkaward/ Each entry must be accompanied with a business size SASE and an entry fee for $30.00 Canadian. Please make all cheques and money orders payable to “Matrix Publications.” No cash please. Send manuscripts to: The Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry, Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint, c/o Matrix, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. LB 658, Montreal QC H3G 1M8  Or via Submittable:  https://matrixmagazine.submittable.com/submit Alternatively, you may send you manuscript electronically to Kroetsch2014@gmail.com and send your payment via PAYPAL: RK Award Entry Fee $30

 

·         Waxing PressWaxing Press (Ohio, US) invites entries for its inaugural contest for works of fiction, the Tide Lock Prize. Seeks new work in the form of a novel, novella, or collection of short stories. Length: 150 pages minimum. Prize: Publication in the journal’s print and digital editions. Entry fee: $5. Deadline: February 1, 2014.     Guidelines: http://waxingpress.submittable.com

              

·        Lynn Manuel Children’s Fiction ContestGrasmere Publishing (BC) invites entries for the Lynn Manuel Children’s Fiction Contest. Prize: $500 cash, $1000 advance against royalties, and publication. Open to novels suitable for children aged 7-16 years old. Looking for an engaging voice, well-developed characters, and a strong storyline. Length: 25,000-75,000 words. No theme, but no violence. Open to Canadian and US residents who have not previously published a novel for children. Deadline: March 1, 2014 (first chapter only). Entry fee: $30.     Guidelines: grasmerepublishing.com

******

CAA-NCR Literary Notices for Oct. 16 – 20, 2013

CAA LOGO

NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION BRANCH (NCR)

 Weekly Notices for  Oct. 16 to Oct. 20, 2013

20 ITEMS 12 NEW EVENTS 2 NEW CONTESTS

 Please send all submission & event notices to Carol Stephen at cstephen0@gmail.com 

####Find writing-related services offered by our members at our CAA-NCR website   http://www.canauthors-ottawa.org/hire-a-member.shtml

  CAA NATIONAL ANNOUNCEMENTS:              NEW!

 CANADIAN AUTHORS MEMBER BOOK CATALOGUE – DEADLINE EXTENDED!

 The Canadian Authors Association member book catalogue is scheduled to be launched at the end of October 2013. As it is a pilot project at this time, we will initially be launching it as an electronic publication and distributing it across a variety of platforms, with an international target audience of over 10,000 readers. Our hope is to also produce a print version, but this will depend on the number of paid titles submitted. Deadline: extended to October 16 , 2013  Details: For further information, please email us at admin@canauthors.org or call us at 705 325 3926 or 1 866 216 6222.

    CAA Welcomes New Branch President!

Phyllis Bohonis2  We would like to take this opportunity to welcome the newest National Capital Region branch president, Phyllis Bohonis, as she assumes the role of Branch president.

sharyn We’re sure the NCR Branch joins us in extending a huge thank you to outgoing branch president, Sharyn Heagle, for seven years of hard work, perseverance and invaluable volunteer work.

CAA-NCR EVENTS

NOTE TO CAA MEMBERS:  Have you recently published a novel, won a writing award, had a spectacular book signing or in some other way been recognized within the writing community? If so, write up a little blurb about your accomplishment and we’ll publish it in Byline, the CAA-NCR branch Magazine. We are all excited, and encouraged, when someone in our writing family shines. Send your note to Sharyn Heagle, Editor, Byline at <sharyn_40@yahoo.com>

 

ITEM 1: CAA – NCR WORKSHOP NOV. 2 2013  NEW!

SOCIAL MEDIA FOR AUTHORSTaking Your Online Presence to the Next Level

DATE: Saturday, November 2, 2013, 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.

LOCATION: Algonquin College, 1385 Woodroffe Avenue, Ottawa. Building T & Room 230

English: Taken by SimonP

English: Taken by SimonP (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

Cost: $45 for members; $75 for non-members

Registration: Contact Arlene Smith somertonsmith@yahoo.com

 

The web has created some amazing new opportunities for authors to publish and promote their work. Self-publishing is becoming increasingly easier, and social media tools have enabled authors to find and engage directly with a passionate audience.

This one-day workshop will teach you to navigate the tools of the social web, so you can determine how you can best use them to develop an online presence, or enhance an existing one that will help you to build your audience and promote your work. More than just a “how-to” for tools like Twitter and Facebook, this session will go in-depth around how to use social media to share your message, as well as help you to find ways to maximize your effectiveness in the online world, and still have time to do what you do best — write!

SusanMurphySusan Murphy has been working in media and communications for 24 years. Susan is also a part time professor at Algonquin College in the Interactive Multimedia Developer program, where she teaches Video Production and Web Media. Suze’s experience in social media is extensive. She has been blogging since 2006 at suzemuse.com, and has participated in social media actively since 2007. Susan also co-hosts I Can Haz Podcast, a weekly social media marketing show.

 

CAA-NCR MEMBER NEWS

 ITEM 2: MEMBER PHYLLIS BOHONIS BOOK LAUNCH  

 DATE: FRIDAY, OCT. 18 2013 from 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. & 3:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.

LOCATION: THE WINE CELLAR, 10471 HWY 7 UNIT A CARLETON PLACEPhyllis Bohonis

Phyllis Bohonis, Ottawa author, and President, CAA-NCR branch,  invites you to a BOOK SIGNING of her debut novel Fire in the Foothills, at THE WINE CELLAR, 10471 Hwy 7, Unit A, in Carleton Place, on FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18th 2013, from 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. & 3:00 p.m. – 7 pm.

Listen to a reading or two, enjoy some cheese and apple cider, have your book signed. Books will be available for purchase. For further information www.phyllisbohonis.com or phyllis.bohonis@sympatico.ca 

 OTHER WORKSHOPS

 ITEM 3: GAIL TAYLOR PRESENTS…CREATIVE NON-FICTION    NEW!

A 6-week Fall Writing Workshop For writers of memoir, personal narrative, essays, travel writing, journals . . . & more

DATES: Saturdays October 26 – November 30, 2013  2pm – 4:30 pm,

LOCATION: Where: Overbrook Community Centre, 33 Quill Street, Ottawa

Register: By October 15th (space limited to 12)

How: Phone or email: Gail Taylor Telephone: 613–421–6629 Email: abigael@rogers.com

Cost: $ 150

The class:

  • Using elements of fiction and non-fiction alike, creative non-fiction gives shape and voice to accounts from the rich resources of real life.
  • If you are interested in making narrative meaning from your life world, this workshop is for you!

 Gail Taylor, M.Ed., M.A., is a published writer of creative non-fiction and poetry and

an educator and editor with years of experience teaching writing. Well-honed

strategies and exercises for creative discovery and productiveness are hallmarks of

her workshops.

ITEM 4: THE BANFF CENTRE LITERARY ARTS  CALL FOR APPLICATIONS                                                                                                 NEW! Banffcentre

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS! SPOKEN WORD

Program dates: March 31 – April 11, 2014

Application deadline: November 15, 2013

Faculty: Tanya Evanson (director), Emilie Zoey Baker, Jean-Pierre Makosso

Guest: George Elliott Clarke

Lift your poetry off the page and deliver it with passion and precision in a public performance! Spoken Word offers space to write and time to develop strong performance dynamics with a specific piece or broader project in mind.

The Banff Centre’s Spoken Word program is the first program of its kind, offering a unique milieu for artists to explore and develop their voices and career paths. Also included in the program are workshops, special events, and one-on-one mentorship. You’ll have the opportunity to engage with a vibrant network of spoken word artists. Cultivate your craft with the language, rhythm, music, and beat of spoken word. To apply:

http://www.banffcentre.ca/programs/program.aspx?id=1398

 ITEM 5: OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARY PRESENTS AUTHOR SERIES THIS FALL                                                                                                     

Ottawa Public Library's Main Branch, designed ...

Ottawa Public Library’s Main Branch, designed by Bemi & Associates Architects (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Ottawa Public Library is hosting a series of 13 author visits this Fall. Authors will discuss their most recent work, or a combination of their work, personal experience or research.

  • Richard B. Wright: Mr. Shakespeare’s Bastard, Sunnyside, October 19, 2-3 p.m.
  • Elizabeth Hay: Alone in the Classroom, Nepean Centrepointe, October 23, 7-8:30 p.m.
  • Charles de Lint: Over My Head, Alta Vista, October 28, 7-8 p.m.
  • Michael Redhill, Inger Ash Wolfe: The Calling, Alta Vista, November 2, 2-3 p.m.
  • Robert Douglas: That Line of Darkness: The Gothic from Lenin to Bin Laden, Main Library, November 9, 2-3 p.m.
  • Mark Frutkin: A Message for the Emperor, Carlingwood, November 16, 2-3 p.m.
  • Denise Chong: Lives of the Family, Carp, November 12, 2-3 p.m., * offered in partnership with Multicultural Arts for Schools and Communities (MASC)
  • Carolyn Abraham: The Juggler´s Children, Nepean Centrepointe, November 16, 2-3 p.m.
  • Veena Gokhale: Bombay Wali and Other Stories, Rosemount, November 23, 2-3 p.m.
  • Tamara Levine: But Hope is Longer: Navigating the Country of Breast Cancer, Sunnyside, November 23, 2-3 p.m.

Online registration is required to attend these free programs. This series is offered with the assistance of the Canada Council for the Arts. For a complete list of programs, visit

http://www.BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca/programs

For more information, contact InfoService at 613-580-2940 or InfoService@BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca

ITEM 6: THE OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARY (OPL) IS HOLDING ITS 4TH ANNUAL TEEN AUTHOR FEST                                               NEW!

 

DATES: September 24 to November 29.

LOCATIONS: Various branches of OPL

This year´s line-up is better than ever with author readings for both teens and tweens.

Check out the full program listing below. Big names to look out for later in the

Fall include Lemony Snicket and Lauren Oliver. All programs are free and open to

teens and tweens across the city.

  • Paul Blackwell Tuesday, October 29, 1:00 p.m., St-Laurent branch, 515 Côté
  • Lemony Snickett Tuesday, November 12, 6:30 p.m., Nepean Centrepointe branch, 101 Centrepointe
  • Teresa Toten Tuesday, November 12, 2:00 p.m., Metcalfe branch, 2782 8th Line, Wednesday, November 13, 10:00 a.m., Cumberland branch, 1599 Tenth Line, Wednesday, November 13, 1:00 p.m., Carlingwood branch, 281 Woodroffe
  • Lauren Oliver Monday, November 18, 7:00 p.m., Nepean Centrepointe branch, 101 Centrepointe
  • Eric Walters Friday, November 29, 1:00 p.m., Alta Vista branch, 2516 Alta Vista

For more information, visit http://biblioottawalibrary.ca/en/TAF

or contact InfoService at 613-580-2940 or InfoService@BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca

 

ITEM 7: THE OTTAWA PUBLIC LIBRARY IS HOSTING A SERIES OF SIX POETRY PROGRAMS THIS FALL                                                     

 

  • Poetry Workshop with rob mclennan, Rosemount, October 19, 1:00-3:00 p.m.
  • Poetry Workshop with Chris Jennings, Carlingwood, October 26, 2:00-4:00 p.m.

Online registration is required to attend these free programs. For a complete

list of programs, visit http://www.BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca/programs . For more information, contact InfoService at 613-580-2940 or InfoService@BiblioOttawaLibrary.ca


ITEM 8:  WRITESCAPE WORKSHOPS THIS FALL

 Turning Leaves 2013

 DATES: November 22-24 at Fern Resort in Orillia Fern Resort

LOCATION: FERN RESORT, ON LAKE COUCHICHING

 

Three-day all-inclusive writing retreat at the fabulous Fern Resort, just 2 hours north of Toronto on Lake Couchiching. Our guest author is Bill Swan, winner of the 2012 Red Maple Award.

Professional writing instructors

Inspiring writer’s craft workshops

Plenty of time to exercise your pen

Private setting and first-class amenities

Autumn Reflections  Oct. 20 Havelock, ON.

Glentula in the Kawarthas

If you can’t get away for a full weekend retreat, spend Sunday, October 20 at Gwynn’s scenic lakefront home in Havelock. This one-day getaway is filled with inspirational writing activities to get you writing.

We’ll draw inspiration from the woods brilliant with fall colour, the rich smells of harvest time, the camp fire, the lake and streams as well as the energy of writing in a community of other writers.

For more information or to register: Visit Writescape at www.writescape.ca, email info@writescape.ca or call 905-728-7823.

 SUBMISSION CALLS AND OPPORTUNITIES

 ITEM 9: BYWORDS.CA SUBMISSION CALL    

DEADLINE:  The 15th of every month for the following month’s issue

Bywords.ca considers previously unpublished poetry from emerging and established poets for our online monthly magazine. We consider work by current and former residents, students and workers of Ottawa. We also publish poems by contributors to our predecessor, the Bywords Monthly Magazine.  FOR SUBMISSION INFORMATION VISIT www.bywords.ca and click on Guidelines.  Amanda Earl, Managing Editor.  Check out Bywords.ca’s literary events calendar here: http://www.bywords.ca/calendar/index.php, with up-to-date info on NCR readings, book signings, writers’ circles, literary festivals, spoken word showcases & slams. Event submissions can be sent to events@bywords.ca.

ITEM 10: CALL FOR APPLICATIONS FOR A WRITER AND/OR STORYTELLER-IN-RESIDENCE IN MANITOBA                     NEW!

 A professional writer and/or storyteller is sought for the position of Writer/Storyteller-in-Residence at the University of Manitoba’s Centre for Creative Writing and Oral Culture. The three-month residency, from September 8 to December 8, 2014

, will require the successful candidate to spend approximately 16 hours per week providing mentorship and practical artistic advice to developing writers and storytellers at the University of Manitoba, to give a limited number of readings and/or performances on campus, and to lead an informal non-credit workshop. The remaining time is to be devoted to the writer or storytellers own artistic projects.

The successful candidate will receive a salary of $15,000.00 CAD, plus rent-free accommodation and return transportation to Winnipeg. Candidates of all nationalities are encouraged to apply; however, full proficiency in English is required, and publications or performance credits in English would be an asset. The Centre for Creative Writing and Oral Culture is committed to principles of employment equity. The application deadline is Friday, October 25, 2013.

 

Please see http://umanitoba.ca/centres/creative_culture/media/2014_Residency_Call.htm for full instructions on how to apply.

 

IN THE INTEREST OF WRITERS HELPING WRITERS

 

ITEM 11:  OTTAWA INTERNATIONAL WRITERS FESTIVAL       

 

FALL 2013 TICKETS ARE GOING FAST and WE’RE JUST GETTING STARTED!

in early October, Canadians of all political stripes won’t want to miss CTV News Host CRAIG OLIVER in conversation about the role of the citizen,  the personal lessons of defeat and a compelling tell-all account of modern politics from renowned author and former Liberal Party of Canada leader MICHAEL IGNATIEFF

Later in October, just before our 2013 Fall Edition begins, we’ll talk about our relationship with the foods we eat at home, learn secret flavours and taste some favourite recipes from the kitchen of Celebrity Chef and bestselling author CHEF LYNN CRAWFORD

  • Tuesday October  22nd  7 pm   At Home with CHEF LYNN CRAWFORD A Special  Food Tasting Event and Book Launch Sample her favourite home recipes.

Click here for ticket and event details. http://www.writersfestival.org/events

ITEM 12: CANADIAN WRITERS’ CONTEST CALENDAR EARLY BIRD ORDERS                                                                                              

There’s only a week left for your members to save money by advance order for the 2014 Canadian Writers’ Contest Calendar. Full details at http://www.wmpub.ca/cwcc-2014.htm

 — Deborah Ranchuk White Mountain Publications

ITEM 13: THE POETRY SHOW FEAT. THE P.O.E.                          NEW!

 DATE Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2013  7:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m.

LOCATION: The Observatory Bar Algonquin College, 1385 Woodroffe Ave., Ottawa

Free entry to Algonquin College Students and to the general public ($10 entry)

It’s back! Algonquin SA (Students’ Association) and Make SpokenWord Go Viral brings you for the third season in a row the only poetry slam series on Algonquin College campus. This show is unique and stands out as a slam that encourages the artists to bring their best and the audience to give the performers their support.

This event is a FULL Audience participation show. By using a ballot voting system, listeners will vote their top four poets into the semi-final round, and after vote their top two poets to make it into the Final round. Once the two finalists square off, audience will again vote for a winner.

EXCITING ENOUGH? Well there is more! Poets and audience members will not know who is in the show until showtime! That’s right. A BLIND SLAM!

This means poets can’t really prepare certain pieces to slam against another style of poet because they don’t know who is on the list. They are all sworn to secrecy and will only find out who their fellow competitors are at showtime. Want to know who is performing? Want to see what talent The Poetry Show has once again brought for you?

STILL NOT EXCITING ENOUGH! Well how about we throw in a feature of volcanic proportions!

From Hamilton, Ontario, but known across Canada as The P.O.E, this Poet and MC extraordinaire will grace our stage and deliver his high energy set of rhymes and flow!

There’s only one way to find out who will take home $300 and title of SLAM CHAMPION.

Come be part of the action. See you at The Poetry Show!

ITEM 14: THE ARTISTIC SHOWCASE WITH IAN KETEKU, LISHAI, SARAH BRADLEY, WITH KETURAH JOHNSON AND AMANDA LOWE     NEW!

 DATE: Thursday, October 17, 2013    7:00 p.m.

LOCATION: PRESSED, 750 Gladstone, Ottawa

$10 cover

 The Artistic Showcase will welcome the coming of autumn with another show that blends the power of spoken word poetry, story-telling and music with the power of love and community.

The show will once again take place at the home of Ottawa’s best sandwiches and loveliest staff, Pressed. This month’s performers will include artists of local, national and international renown. The features will be:

The Artistic Showcase is a celebration of the combined powers of love, creativity and vision. It is a meeting place for those who want to be inspired to live passionate, creative, non-violent and spirited lives in the city of Ottawa. It is also a celebration and an exhibition of the artistic diversity that exists all over the country. This month’s showcase will be fire, it will be electricity, it will be thoughtful, political and emotionally charged, it will be gritty and healing and full of power. Be there to witness it all unfold on October 17th.

As always, The Artistic Showcase will be hosted by local spoken word poet and organizer Brandon Wint (www.brandonwint.ca)

 ITEM 15: CELEBRATE OTTAWA POETS WITH ARC NEW!

 DATE:  Thursday, October 17, 2013  7:30 p.m.

LOCATION:  Raw Sugar Café, 692 Somerset St. W.

 Come join us in celebrating the Diana Brebner Prize winner and the Archibald Lampman Award shortlist poets: Christine McNair for Conflict, Nina Berkhout for elseworlds, and E. Russell Smith for Petroglyph Beach.

 The 2013 Archibald Lampman Award will be presented on October 22, at the Shenkman Arts Centre, in conjunction with the City of Ottawa Book Awards.

ITEM 16: APT. 9 PRESS PRESENTS: RHONDA DOUGLAS, SPENCER GORDON, jesslyn delia smith                                                        NEW!

 DATE:    Friday, October 18, 2013  6:30 p.m. Readings at 7:00 p.m.

LOCATION: Raw Sugar Cafe (692 Somerset St. W.) No Cover

         

Poetry Chapbooks & Readings from

  • jesslyn delia smith | the grass is yard now, again
  • Spencer Gordon | CONSERVATIVE MAJORITY
  • Rhonda Douglas | How to Love a Lonely Man

Apt. 9 Press is thrilled to announce three new titles! jesslyn delia smith, Spencer Gordon, and Rhonda Douglas will be present to read from their brand-new chapbooks and to sign the copies you buy for yourselves and your loved ones. It has been a great joy working with these three poets over the past few months getting ready for this event, and I can’t wait for the community to have a chance to read these poems. It is a privilege to publish this work.

We’re spoiled to once again be hosted by the best literary venue in town, Raw Sugar Cafe. Get there early, have a pint or a coffee, and be ready for the readings to start at 7:00 p.m.

jesslyn delia smith lives in Ottawa. She can be reached at jesslyn.delia@gmail.com, and more poems can be found on her blog at jesslyndelia.com.

Spencer Gordon is a Canadian actor, writer, and retired professional wrestler. He is the author of Cosmo (Coach House Books, 2012), a collection of short stories called “startling and invigorating” by Quill and Quire, “rare [and] brave” by the National Post, “poignant and hilarious” by This Magazine, and “both heartwarming and heartbreaking” by The Winnipeg Review. He has taught at Humber College and OCAD U. His poetry chapbook, Feel Good! Look Great! Have a Blast! (Ferno House, 2011), was shortlisted for the 2012 bpNichol Chapbook Award. He is co-editor of The Puritan, the near-seven-year-old online literary journal, and of Ferno House, the Toronto-based micro-press. See www.spencer-gordon.com for more information. Follow him on Twitter @spencergordon.

Rhonda Douglas is originally from Newfoundland but has lived in Ottawa with her daughter Emma since time out-of-Memorial. She is the author of Some Days I Think I Know Things: The Cassandra Poems. Her poetry has won awards in the Newfoundland and Labrador Arts and Letters Competition, the Far Horizons award from The Malahat Review and the Diana Brebner prize from Arc Poetry Magazine. Her short fiction has been published in literary journals across Canada and won first prizes from both Room Magazine and Prairie Fire. Rhonda completed her MFA in Creative Writing from UBC in 2012. She spends too much time on airplanes and always intends to change that, right after she obtains SuperElite status again.

 

ITEM 17: STEVE McCAFFERY in A B SERIES                        NEW!

 DATE: Saturday, October 19, 2013     8:00 p.m. until 9:30 p.m.

 LOCATION: Courtroom, 2nd Floor, Arts Court 2 Daly Avenue Ottawa, Ont.

Free: A hat will be passed.

The Ottawa Arts Court. Formerly the Carleton C...

The Ottawa Arts Court. Formerly the Carleton County Courthouse, the building now serves as Ottawa’s municipal arts centre. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

 

Steve McCaffery is the author of more than 35 books and chapbooks of poetry and criticism, most recently The Darkness of the Present (University of Alabama Press, 2012). Twice nominated for the Governor General’s Award, his many titles include: Paradigm of the Tinctures (with illustrations by Alan Halsey) New York: Granary Books and Slightly Left of Thinking. Poems and Postcognitions, Tucson: Chax Press. He teaches at the State University of New York at Buffalo where he is David Gray Professor of Poetry and Letters and Director of the UB Poetics Program.

 

ITEM 18:  CAPITAL SLAM FEATURING THE 2013 SLAM TEAM   NEW!

 Date: Saturday, October 19, 2013 6:30 P.M. To 10:00 P.M. Doors and sign-up are at 6:30

Location: The Mercury Lounge, 56 Byward Market Square, Ottawa

$8 and free for performers

This season has been like camping in the woods… It has been IN TENTS! Three slams and three winners. Three slams and 29 different slammers.  SO WHAT GOES DOWN IN SLAM #4? Will we see another newcomer storming the stage like P-RIME? Will we see the return of touring vet PrufRock? One thing we KNOW we will see its a feature with the five poets who will be competing at the Canadian Festival of Spoken Word in Montreal this November, trying to bring Capital Slam its THIRD National Championship.

  • BRUCE NARBAITZ: 2013 CapSlam Champ and member of the 2011 CapSlam team. V: member of the 2012 & 2013 CapSlam teams
  • GAVIN RUSSELL: 2012 OYPS Champ and first time CapSlam member
  • RUSTY PRISKE: FIVE time CapSlam team member, including the Championship winning 2009 team.
  • BRAD MORDEN: 2010 Wild Card team member, 2011 & 2012 Urban Legends team member & first time CapSlam team member.

What are they bringing to Montreal? First… what are the bringing to Capital Slam on Oct. 19th?

Come out and see a great slam and see what are team has to show you! Thanks to the City of Ottawa for helping to make this possible! See you at the Merc!

ITEM 19: THE MEDIA CLUB OF OTTAWA PRESENTS : TWITTER 101: A QUICK TUTORIAL FOR FIRST TIME USERS                                   NEW!

Featuring Joe Banks, Journalism professor, Algonquin College

 DATE: Monday October 21 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

LOCATION: Algonquin College, Woodroffe campus, Room 216, building P

 Journalism students with ID free, Media Club members $15, Non-members $20

Sandwiches, fresh fruit cheese and crackers provided

 RSVP 613-521-4855 by October 18

www.mediaclubofottawa.ca

 ITEM 20: OTTAWA INDEPENDENT WRITERS BOOK FAIR 2013    

 Date: Sat. Oct. 26 & Sun. Oct. 27 Time: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

 Location: RA Centre, Bytown Room B, 2nd floor on Riverside Drive next to Billings Bridge Shopping Centre

 Admission & Parking: FREE

Authors:  Approximately 30 Local Authors will display and sell their books

 

OIW is holding its annual Ottawa Authors & Artisans Fair again this year.  We are excited to report that it will take place on the same weekend as a large pottery show at the RA Centre. As usual, a basket of books will be raffled off, with all proceeds donated to CHEO.

Contact: George Laidlaw:  gwjlaidlaw@gmail.com or (613) 831-2505

 

MAGAZINE SUBMISSION CALLS:

 

NO DEADLINES SPECIFIED:

The Mackinac (Canada/US) seeks poetry that “bridges the strait between nostalgia and the immediate, the wilds seen and unseen, the best of emerging and established voices.” Submit up to 5 poems for consideration. Deadline: Ongoing.   Guidelines: themackinacmagazine.com/submit.html

 

Dentists on the Frontier (Canada) seeks short, pithy, provocative and even happy stories of dentists and dental procedures from practitioners and patients of dentistry. Filed under the title “Writing Home Again,” stories should be in the form of an anonymous open letter (Dear Dentist or Dear Patient). Accepting nonfiction and creative nonfiction only. Length: 600 words max. Deadline: ongoing.  Guidelines: dentistsonthefrontier.com/submissions/

 Featured Fifty Poetry: We’re Seeking Your Best Poems for writers age 50 and older.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/24/featured-fifty-poetry_n_3489074.html

 

Ploughshares’ reading period is now open! We’re accepting submissions for Ploughshares literary magazine and for our Ploughshares Solos series of long stories and essays. You can now submit all those poems, essays, and stories that you’ve been working on and saving up since January. For guidelines and to submit, visit our website. http://www.pshares.org/submit/index.cfm

 

Dead Beats (Sheffield, UK), a student-run publishing and live poetry organization, seeks submissions. Accepting poems, short stories (max. 2000 words) and experimental pieces from everyone, regardless of experience. Seeks to “share inspired and inspiring works from around the globe.” No deadline. Guidelines: http://www.deadbeats.eu/submission

 

Independent hybrid lit mag The Holler Box accepts submissions of poetry, fiction, lyric essays, nonfiction, and artwork year-round. Each issue is published online and in the form of a limited release handmade chapbook. Welcomes the alternative and experimental, as well as new and unpublished writers. Length: 5000 words max (prose) and poetry (up to 3). Guidelines: https://thehollerbox.submittable.com/submit

Online arts review magazine The Coastal Spectator (Victoria, BC) seeks reviews of theatre, books, music, film, visual arts, and other cultural happenings around coastal BC specifically (but not exclusively). Submit pieces that are “short and sharp.” Length: 300-500 words. Payment: stipend of $25. Partial to views that reflect a coastal slant on things. Query the editor at lvluven@uvic.ca.

 

 

Quarterly journal Squalorly (US) welcomes submissions of fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, illustration, and photography. Submit story/essay (5000 words max), flash pieces (up to 3), and poems (up to 5). Appreciates work with emphasis on emotion: “Move, amaze, horrify, and educate.” http://www.squalorly.com/submit

 

Gervais Advertising is looking for short articles on a wide variety of subjects for their small shopping/tourism guides available at locations throughout central Ontario. Articles do not need to be location-specific and should have a casual slant based on fun, personal experience. Payment: $0.12 per word for accepted articles/stories. Contact Editor, Cyndy Gervais: syndy@bmts.com.

The Mackinac is accepting poetry submissions. Details at: http://www.themackinacmagazine.com/submit.html.

 

Running out of Ink, a new webzine, is accepting short stories of all genres. For more information, visit: www.runningoutofink.com.

Riddle Fence is currently accepting submissions for its spring issue. The publisher is looking for poetry, fiction, non-fiction and visual art. Info please visit http://www.riddlefence.com.

Fierce Ink Press Co-op Ltd. is currently open for submissions. The publisher is looking for books between 50,000 and 80,000 words long in all young adult genres.  For more information, please visit http://fierceinkpress.com/submissions/.

Decoded Past is looking for writers with expertise in history and/or prehistory. This internet site will showcase articles written by experts for the general reader: new interpretations of past events, new developments or theories, the past in the context of the present. Writers must hold a degree in the social sciences or historical sciences and be writing in an area of personal expertise, or have an established platform in professional historical writing. Contact Rosemary Drisdelle at info@rosemarydrisdelle.com.

CIRCA: A Journal of Historical Fiction is accepting submissions. Details are available at: http://circajournal.com/submissions/.

Dragon Ink Press is accepting submissions from comic artists, fantasy writers and poets for their new comics and literary anthology. Guidelines: http://dragoninkpress.tumblr.com/.

From the Well House is accepting fiction, scholarly essays and poetry. Details can be found at: http://fromthewellhouse.org/?bu0Dd7M9.

Ruminate Magazine is now accepting submissions. Guidelines and deadlines are available at: http://www.ruminatemagazine.com/submit/submission-guidelines/.

Carousel is accepting submissions. Info: http://www.carouselmagazine.ca/submit.html.

Antiphon: accepting poetry submissions. Info: http://antiphon.org.uk/index.php/submissions.

Convert Publishing, a new digital publisher, is accepting manuscript submissions. For more details, visit: http://convertpublishing.com/?page_id=19.

 

Neon: A Literary Magazine accepting submissions, info: http://www.neonmagazine.co.uk/

Queen’s Quarterly is accepting articles, reviews, short stories and poetry. Details can be found here: http://www.queensu.ca/quarterly/correspondencesubmissions.html.

Event Poetry and Prose is accepting submissions. Guidelines are available at: http://eventmags.com/about-2/submission-guidelines/fiction-poetry/.

The Ottawa Arts Review seeks prose submissions (including short fiction, personal essays, reviews, and interviews) relating to literary and visual arts, poetry, drama, and visual art. oar.uesa.ca/submissions/submission-guidelines/

 

Sweptmedia.ca, an online youth-culture magazine based in Toronto/GTA, is looking for original contributions in all print mediums: journalism, short fiction, poetry, etc. Also willing to consider other forms of visual communication modes: photography, painting, comic strips, etc. info: sweptmedia.ca/index.php/contact-us

 

New online magazine The Island Review (international) seeks submissions of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, photography and art from islanders, island-lovers, and those whose work is influenced by islands, or explores ideas of islandness. http://www.theislandreview.com/submissions/ 

 

The recently-launched Northern Cardinal Review (Canada) is seeking creative and vivid poetry, non-fiction essays, and book reviews. Open to writers living in Canada, Alaska, or the northern border states of the U.S. http://northerncardinalreview.wordpress.com/submissions/

Comedy website The Higgs Weldon (US) seeks forms of writing (1000 words max.) and cartoons. Deadline: Ongoing: http://thehiggsweldon.com/submit/

Kolaj (Montreal, QC) is a quarterly, print magazine about contemporary collage. Seeks critical reviews and essays, artist profiles, event highlights, articles on collage making, collecting, and exhibiting, and other contributions. Pays. kolajmagazine.com/content/submissions

 

Formalist poetry review The Rotary Dial (Canada) seeks poetry from Canadian and international writers. Looking for work that rhymes and/or scans but isn’t too versey: blank verse, syllabic verse, etc. Response within two weeks. http://therotarydial.ca/submissions/

 

Garbanzo Literary Journal (US) is published in limited-run copies as part of a hand-created series of chapbooks. Seeks stories (1172 words max.) poems (43 lines max.), micro-fiction, macro-faction, creative nonfiction, and a variety of verse forms. Appreciates writing that disregards the rules: http://www.garbanzoliteraryjournal.org/Submission_Guidelines.html

 

BareBacklit is an online bi-monthly magazine seeking poetry, prose, and visual art. Accepts poetry (4 poems max.), fiction (2500 words max.), and flash fiction (1000 words max.). Prefers work that is “unpretentious, minimalist… entertains first, and provokes thought later.” http://www.barebacklit.com/Submissions.html

 

LWOT (Lies With Occasional Truth) seeks fiction from writers in Canada “(and sometimes by Americans who pretend, in their cover letters, to be Canadian)”. The term fiction is open to interpretation.  : http://lwot.net/submission.htm

 

Online journal Pithead Chapel seeks fiction (short and flash) and nonfiction (experimental, personal, lyric essays) “that moves toward something bigger… takes chances.” Accepts stories and essays 4000 words max. Reads year-round.  : http://pitheadchapel.com/submission-guidelines/

 

The New Inquiry welcomes short- and long-form pieces “from anyone who wants to write.” Looks for well-written, original posts on ideas, books, art, culture, and more. No fiction or poetry.  : http://thenewinquiry.com/submit-to-tni/

 

Literary journal Revolver (US) seeks “short range” (up to 1000 words), “long range” (1000-5000 words), and art for its next issue. Welcomes fiction, poetry, essays, lists, and art. Also accepting bar stories for “Shots with Strangers”.  : http://www.around-around.com/submit/

 

Website strange bOUnce accepts short stories, satire, and poetry, that have been “lightly brushed with sport.” Send work to IWantToWrite@strangebOUnce.com. No payment. http://strangebounce.com/

 

 Small circulation literary publication Cant Journal (US) seeks poetry and prose for Issue #5. Accepts poetry, short inventive prose (micro fiction, flash fiction, etc.; 300-1000 words), poetry book reviews, essays on poetry, and interviews with poets. Submit 3-7 poems, 1-3 short prose pieces, or 1 poetry book review or essay on poetry. Journal is small (5 x 11); writers are encouraged to keep this in mind when submitting. Publishes annually in April. Payment: Three copies.   Guidelines: cantjournal.com/submission-guidelines

 

Red Kitty is a webzine and limited run print zine based out of Austin, TX. Accepting poetry, prose, short fiction, personal narrative, humor, and experimental journalism; illustration, photography, and doodles; and sound portraits, video art, and spoken word. Prefers works that takes risks and gets messy, including the “strange, thought-provoking, funny, demented.” Deadline: rolling. Guidelines: redkittyzine.weebly.com/submit.html

 

Independent magazine Bitterzoet (US) is now looking for new poetry, fiction, and artwork for their monthly online zine and bi-annual print editions, and mini chapbooks. Publishes work that engages in the “interplay between bitterness and sweetness, light and darkness, salvation and damnation.” Accepts poetry (3-8) prose (6 pages max), and artwork. Also looking for shorter pieces (“bonbons”) of poetry (10 lines max) and prose (150 words max.). Deadline: rolling. Guidelines: bitterzoetmag.submittable.com

 

Independent online journal Black Heart Magazine (U.S) seeks short fiction for its weekday (M-F) publication cycle. Length: 1500 words max. All genres accepted, with a literary angle preferred. Appreciates ‘short-form modern literature, from pulp to literary fiction and everything in-between.’ Deadline: Ongoing. Guidelines: blackheartmagazine.com/submission-guidelines

 

GlassFire Magazine (US) seeks submissions of fiction and non-fiction (3000 words max.), poetry, and artwork for the Winter 2013 issue. Pays $5 per poem/artwork/photography and $10 per story/nonfiction Deadline: Rolling. http://www.peglegpublishing.com/glassfire.htm

 

OCTOBER DEADLINES

 

The Antioch University Los Angeles Creative Writing MFA program’s biannual publication, Lunch Ticket, is accepting submissions for its next issue. Submit fiction, creative non-fiction, YA fiction, poetry, and art/imagery. Theme/genre: Open. Deadline: October 31, 2013.     Guidelines: http://www.lunchticket.org/about/submission-guidelines

Bones – a journal for contemporary haiku: Send a maximum of 5 single haiku and/or 1 series/sequence of maximum 10 haiku. Submission deadlines are October 15 – November 15 for the December issue & April 15 – May 15 for the June issue. Submissions: submission (at) bonesjournal (dot) com. with “Submission to bones” in the subject line. Please include the works in the body of the email AND as an attached file (doc, docx, odt, rtf)

ROOM MAGAZINE Call for Submissions: 37.2: Contest issue.  Room would love to add a bit of your literary brilliance to our already sparkling lineup for issue 37.2, to be published in June 2014. In this open-themed issue we will showcase our 2013 contest winners, feature an interview with Canadian poet Sandra Ridley, and have commissioned short fiction by another Canadian, Jessica Westhead. If you see your work—whether it is poetry, fiction, or creative non-fiction—fitting into that mix, send it our way. Check out our guidelines for full details. http://www.roommagazine.com/submit Deadline: October 31, 2013

 

AND LATER:

 

Creative Nonfiction (US) is seeking new essays about mistakes — major or minor, tragic or serendipitous, funny or painful — for an upcoming issue. Looking for true stories about poor decisions, missteps, miscalculations, embarrassing boo-boos, dangerous misjudgments, or fortuitous faux pas that explore the nature and outcomes of human fallibility. First prize: $1000. Length: 4000 words max. Entry fee: $20 (or $25 for a subscription to Creative Nonfiction — US only). All essays will be considered for publication in a special “Mistakes” issue. Deadline: November 1, 2013 Guidelines: http://www.creativenonficction.org/submissions/mistakes

The Muse, An International Journal of Poetry, an online bi-annual journal of poetry from India, is seeking submissions for their next issue. Accept poems (send 1-5 poems), and essays and research papers (3000 words minimum). Deadline: November 10, 2013. http://themuse.webs.com/

Online literature/arts magazine The Broken City (Toronto, ON) is currently accepting submissions for its winter 2013 edition: “Turn on, tune in.” Looking for music-related poetry, fiction, essays, comics, illustrations, photography, reviews as well as mp3 submissions for a mixtape. Deadline: December 1, 2013. Non-paying. Guidelines: thebrokencitymag.com/submissions.html

 

UPCOMING WRITING CONTESTS

 

 

OCTOBER DEADLINES:

 

 

  • SAMUEL De CHAMPLAIN LITERARY ARTS COMPETITION FOR YOUTH DEADLINE: OCT. 21, 2013 To celebrate the 400th anniversary of Champlain’s voyage, the City of Ottawa will hold a literary competition for young writers – a citywide, bilingual contest seeking works that relate to Champlain’s explorations and the welcome he received from the Algonquin inhabitants.  The contest is open to Ottawa students in two age groups: junior writers (grades 3 to 5) and senior writers (grades 6 to 8). Five categories of literary arts will be judged: First person narratives (including letters and journal entries), essays or opinion pieces, fictional stories about Champlain’s adventures and discoveries, poems (including original ballads), and dramatic monologues. Awards will be presented at a celebratory evening on December 10, 2013. All entries must be submitted by teachers by October 21, 2013. Application forms and entry requirements are available online: http://ottawa.ca/en/residents/arts-culture-and-community/arts-theatre-music/samuel-de-champlain-literary-arts  Contact Tina.Haji-Esmaeili@ottawa.ca for more information.

 

  • RANDOM HOUSE SPOOKY SHORT STORY CONTEST.Details: Stories must be between 1,200 and 1,500 words. And, to make it just a bit more challenging, your story has to include the following 10 words provided by John Boyne and Diane Setterfield: Shadow, Children, Fog, Mirror, Revenge, Black, Hidden, Sleep, Eye, Never.   The contest starts now and you have until October 24th at midnight (mua ha ha) to submit your story.  Submit your entry by emailing onlinemarketing@randomhouse.com with the subject line “Spooky Short Story Writing Contest”. In the body of the email, please include your submission and your name.   The three best stories as chosen by Retreat by Random House will be posted to this blog on October 31, 2013.  MORE INFO AT http://www.retreatbyrandomhouse.ca/2013/09/spooky-short-story-writing-contest/?Ref=Email_Canada_10/3/2013
  •  
  • The Black River Chapbook Competition (Fall) Awarded twice annually for a chapbook (16-36 pages) of poetry or short stories. Beginning with the Fall 2009 competition, winner receives $500 and 25 copies of chapbook. Entry Period: September 1 – October 31. Deadline: October 31, 2013.   http://www.blacklawrence.com/BRCCContestPage.html

 

NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER DEADLINES:

 

  • carte blanche and the Creative Nonfiction Collective Society (CNFC) announce a creative nonfiction contest open to Canadian citizens and permanent residents. The prize is $500 and publication in carte blanche. Submit original, previously unpublished creative nonfiction of up to 3,000 words to https://carte-blanche.submittable.com/submit  by November 1 at midnight ET. Entry fee of $7 for CNFC members and $12 for non-members.

 

  • The Pat Lowther Memorial Award is given for a book of poetry by a Canadian woman published in the preceding year, and is in memory of the late Pat Lowther, whose career was cut short by her untimely death in 1975. The awards carry a $1,000 prize, and are presented each year at the annual LCP Poetry Festival and Conference in June, with the shortlist announced during National Poetry Month in April. The deadline for submission to these awards is November 1st, 2013. For books that are published after this date, but still within the calendar year, please e-mail me (readings@poets.ca) by Nov 1st, 2013 to arrange to have the deadline extended (to Dec 15th at the latest). For more information on these awards, and to download a submission form, please go to: http://poets.ca/wordpress/contests-awards/pat-lowther

 

  • The Gerald Lampert Memorial Award is given in the memory of Gerald Lampert, an arts administrator who organized authors’ tours and took a particular interest in the work of new writers. The award recognizes the best first book of poetry published by a Canadian in the preceding year. The awards carry a $1,000 prize, and are presented each year at the annual LCP Poetry Festival and Conference in June, with the shortlist announced during National Poetry Month in April. The deadline for submission to these awards is November 1st, 2013. For books that are published after this date, but still within the calendar year, please e-mail me (readings@poets.ca) by Nov 1st, 2013 to arrange to have the deadline extended (to Dec 15th at the latest). For more information on these awards, and to download a submission form, please go to: http://poets.ca/wordpress/contests-awards/gerald-lampert
  • The Raymond Souster Award is given for a book of poetry by a League of Canadian Poets member (all levels, dues paid) published in the preceding year. The award honours Raymond Souster, an early founder of the League of Canadian Poets. The award carries a $1,000 prize. It is presented each year at the LCP Annual Poetry Festival and Conference in June, with the shortlist announced in April. The deadline for submission to these awards is November 1st, 2013. For books that are published after this date, but still within the calendar year, please e-mail me (readings@poets.ca) by Nov 1st, 2013 to arrange to have the deadline extended (to Dec 15th at the latest). For more information on these awards, and to download a submission form, please go to: http://poets.ca/wordpress/contests-awards/raymond-souster

 

  • CANADA WRITES CBC SHORT STORY PRIZE DEADLINE NOV. 1 2013  Submit your original, unpublished stories stories between 1200 and 1500 words.  Competition opens: September 1, 2013. Deadline to submit: November 1, 2013 at 11:59 p.m. ET OPEN TO  All Canadian citizens and permanent residents of Canada can submit.  MORE INFO HERE http://www.cbc.ca/books/canadawrites/literaryprizes/shortstory/

 

  • NEW! FRIENDS of Canadian Broadcasting is pleased to announce the 2013 Dalton Camp Award. The winner will receive a $10,000 prize for excellence in creative, original essay-writing on the link between democracy and the media in Canada. New for 2013, a discretionary second prize of $2,500 may be awarded for the best essay by a post-secondary student. The 2013 Award is open to both students and other Canadians. The deadline for entries is November 15, 2013. Download the 2013 Dalton Camp Award PosterThe official rules, past winning essays, a video biography on Dalton Camp, and other details about the Award are available from the Dalton Camp Award website:   www.daltoncampaward.ca

 

  • NEW! LOTR 100-Word Story Contest. Submit a 100-word story about love and travel and you could have it published online and win a free copy of the forthcoming book Love on
  • the Road 2013. Love on the Road 2013 is an anthology of 12 stories about love and
  • travel from a dozen different writers, some very accomplished, others just starting out. It’s scheduled for publication in early December.  In the lead-up to publication of the book, we’re running a tumblr (loveontheroad2013.tumblr.com/) featuring photos and 100-word stories about love and travel. We’ll take submissions until November 30 and
  • then declare three winners and send them (for free) paperback copies of Love on the Road 2013. There’s more information at loveontheroad2013.com.  Best, Sam Tranum Dublin, Ireland

 

  • Prairie Fire’s Banff Centre Bliss Carman Poetry Award, Short Fiction and Creative Non-Fiction Contests. Deadline is November 30, (postmarked). http://www.prairiefire.ca/contests.

 

  • Bottle Tree Productions One Act Play Competition for Writers 2013. DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 30, 2013. Go online at http://www.bottletreeinc.com/script_contest.html.  First Prize $1,000, Second Prize $250, Third Prize $100. The entry fee for each submission is $25. One Act Plays of from 10 minutes to 70 minutes may be submitted by mail or email. By mail to Bottle Tree Productions, 445 Southwood Drive, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7M-5P8. Please make cheque payable to Bottle Tree Productions. For environmental and storage reasons email submissions are preferred. By email to contest (at) bottletreeinc (dot) com. Go online at http://www.bottletreeinc.com/script_contest.html

 

  • Briarpatch Magazine is accepting entries for their third annual writing contest, Writing in the Margins. Seeking fresh, fiction and creative non-fiction “that brings to life issues of political, social, and environmental justice.” Cash prizes totalling $750. Length: 2000 words max. Entry fee: $25 (includes subscription). Deadline: December 1, 2013.  Guidelines: briarpatchmagazine.com/announcements/view/creative-writing-contest

 

  • FREEFALL MAGAZINE Just for fun we’ve added a new contest: “The Corner of 13th and 13th” Flash Fiction. Write a story in 500 words or less about what happened on Friday September the 13th 2013 at one of the 13th Avenue and 13th Street intersections in the photos found at: http://www.freefallmagazine.ca/flash-fiction-contest.html. Entry Fee: $13.00. First Prize: $130.00. Deadline to enter is: Friday Dec 13th 2013

 

 

  • 2013 annual FreeFall Prose and Poetry Contest is now open! Contain your joy as we let you know that we’ve doubled the first place prize money from $300 to $600. Deadline to enter is: December 31, 2013. For current contest info visit: http://www.freefallmagazine.ca/contest.html.

 

2014 CONTESTS

 

  • Gemini MAGAZINE  is now accepting entries for its fourth annual Poetry Open competition. The grand prize is $1,000. Second place wins $100 and four honorable mentions will each receive $25. All six finalists will be published online in the March 2014 issue of Gemini. The entry fee is $5 for each batch of three poems. Deadline: January 2, 2014. We are open to any type of poetry, any subject matter, any length. Scroll down the Poetry Open page http://gemini-magazine.com/poetryopen.html to see the broad range of work from previous winners and finalists.

 

  • League of Canadian Poets announces: Submissions are now open for the Jessamy Stursburg Poetry Contest for Canadian Youth. There are two age categories, junior (grades 7-9) and senior (grades 10-12). First place poems in each category will receive a cash prize: Winners: $350 Second Place: $300 Third Place: $250 All winning poems will be published in the LCP’s e-zine, Re:verse at www.youngpoets.ca. All winners will receive Jessamy Stursberg Poetry Contest for Canadian Youth certificates and student membership in the League of Canadian Poets for one year. Deadline: January 15, 2014. http://poets.ca/jessamy-stursberg-poetry-contest-for-canadian-youth/

 

  • The Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry. The prize is awarded annually to the best poetry manuscript by an emerging Canadian writer (a writer who has published fewer than two books). Each year the winning manuscript will be selected by an established poet in co-operation with Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint. The winner receives a trade paperback contract with Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint which will include the publication of the manuscript and a $500 advance. DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: January 31, 2014 Info here: http://matrixmagazine.org/rkaward/ Each entry must be accompanied with a business size SASE and an entry fee for $30.00 Canadian. Please make all cheques and money orders payable to “Matrix Publications.” No cash please. Send manuscripts to: The Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry, Invisible Publishing’s Snare Imprint, c/o Matrix, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W. LB 658, Montreal QC H3G 1M8  Or via Submittable:  https://matrixmagazine.submittable.com/submit Alternatively, you may send you manuscript electronically to Kroetsch2014@gmail.com and send your payment via PAYPAL: RK Award Entry Fee $30

 

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