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Monday, 11 January 2010
A poem about practice

I came across this poem today, and was reminded not of any muscians I know, but of a novelist friend of mine who gets up at an hour in the morning that most of us would call ungodly so she can write for at least an hour in a coffee shop before starting her day job. She spends whole weekends and vacations sequestered with the laptop, in her house or at a convent (yes, a convent) ... and this spring she is publishing her third novel in something like two years. This poem reminds me of her.

Grace

by Frannie Lindsay

Praise my plain young mother for leaving
her husband's bed at four in the morning
fumbling around for her bifocals
carting her stained velour slippers
down the raw-grained stairs not tying
her robe sliding her violin from between
the magazine rack and the firewood
easing past the mantelpiece scattered
with wedding portraits

praise the caked galoshes drying beside
the basement door swollen away
from its frame and the top step's narrow slat
praise her large bare feet
their tough and knotty bunions
the cool of her hand on her sheet music
praise the scotch tape on the spine
of her Bach and its weakening glue
her penciled maiden name

praise the steadfast ladderback chair
and the music stand there in the basement
the set tubs the damp socks
and undershirts draped too close
to her shoulders praise her shoulders
limber and painless for three brief hours
praise the rosin's glide down her bow
the throaty fifths the sacrament
of her tuning

praise the measure she counted aloud
and the downbeat's breath-lunge
praise her calloused and lovely fingerpads
the noteprints the sixty-watt bulb
the mud-plashed screen through which
the unsorrowing ends of the night slipped in
and although she did not ask to be touched
praise how they lifted up the brittle
wisps of her perm.

"Grace" by Frannie Lindsay, from Mayweed. © The Word Works, 2009.

 


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 3:47 PM EST
Updated: Monday, 11 January 2010 3:53 PM EST
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Friday, 8 January 2010
I wanna win a trip to Kenya!
Summer Literary Seminars is announcing its annual unified (Montreal, Lithuania and Kenya) literary contest, held this year in affiliation with Fence Magazine. We are thrilled this year to have Mary Gaitskill judging the fiction, and Mary Jo Bang judging the poetry.

Contest winners in the categories of fiction and poetry will have their work published in Fence, as well as the participating literary journals in Canada, Lithuania and Kenya. Additionally, they will have the choice of attending (airfare, tuition, and housing included) any one of the SLS-2010 programs – in Montreal, Quebec (June 13 - 27); Vilnius, Lithuania (August 1 - 14); or Nairobi-Lamu, Kenya (December).

Second-place winners will receive a full tuition waiver for the program of their choice, and third-place winners will receive a 50% tuition discount.

A number of select contest participants, based on the overall strength of their work, will be offered tuition scholarships, as well, applicable to the SLS-2010 programs.

Full details: http://www.sumlitsem.org/slscontest.html

Contest Deadline: February 28, 2010.

Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 1:29 PM EST
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Sunday, 27 December 2009
Happy New Year - now let's list things!
Just came across these two articles... ah, lists. New Year's is always about lists, right? Top tens and hot-or-nots. So, here's a hot-or-not for Ottawa (I love that Guerilla Magazine kicks the ass of the embarrassing XPress, ditto the Elmdale Tavern wiping the foor with Barrymore's - nice to see new stuff coming up and supplanting the stalwarts. Ottawa's too much in love with tradition) and a list of the top ten literary feuds of the decade because hey, what's a literary community without vitriol, bile, and hurled insults?

Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 10:19 AM EST
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Tuesday, 15 December 2009
Random House's e-grab

The American Authors Guild has been reacting strongly to Random House's misguided attempt to assert e-rights over older titles whose contracts pre-date the e-book.

I love the Authors Guild's response: "A fundamental principle of book contracts is that the grant of rights is limited.  Publishers acquire only the rights that they bargain for; authors retain rights they have not expressly granted to publishers.  E-book rights, under older book contracts, were retained by the authors."

I'm interested by the developments here, just because it's kind of fascinating to watch a whole new species evolve. (Is this what linguists felt watching Hawaiian Creole develop over the course of a generation?) And because in the industry I work in, whatever happens in the foggy world between digital and paper is going to have inevitable repurcussions.

It seems like no one knows what the rules are, and they're bashing them out as they go. Unfortunately, publishers sometimes emply people who make less-than-thought-through blanket assumptions, like, "losing copyright is bad, therefore we should just jump on and assert copyright we don't legally have because you just never know." 

How will it all shake out? It won't. A vivid line I have heard a couple of times from Cory Doctorow: "We're in a period of perpetual, wrenching technological change, and it's never gonna level out and settle into something stable." 

Hey, if you're me, that just sounds kinda exciting. If also a bit 'interesting' in the Chinese Curse sense. 


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 3:35 PM EST
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Monday, 14 December 2009
Weird what pops up.

Just spotted a clip from the September Nick Cave reading on a 'listen online' site: it's weird seeing this kind of thing cropping up. Things on the web have lives of their own.

(It makes me smile that it's the "Gladiator II" clip, too.)


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 11:11 AM EST
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Friday, 11 December 2009
Rally for Arts and Culture

There's a rally in support of arts and culture and taking a stand against the Harper government's attacks on the sector taking shape - it was on the down low till today but I've got a date now... 

The rally is on Sunday 13th. That's THIS Sunday.
At the Bronson Centre, 211 Bronson Avenue.
Doors open at 1:45: Concert at 2 pm.
 
Featuring performances by Canadian musicians and artists, speeches from politicians,  cultural organizations and union representatives
 
Join us for this free event of solidarity and show your support for culture & heritage!

I got the word on the rally from a friend on strike at the Museum of Civilization. More than two months they've been on strike, and nothing's happened so far. This rally's bound to have some effect.  


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 9:51 PM EST
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Monday, 7 December 2009
Oh joy!

The Writers Festival toques are in! We got them ordered for our upcoming volunteer appreciation party in the New Year as a thank you present for their guts and dedication in sticking by us even through the broken boiler and the onslaught of "Saint Frigid's." And they're here! Jubilation!

I can't wait to see if mine fits under my bike helmet.

 


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 11:55 AM EST
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Friday, 4 December 2009
... and rob's workshop is back

rob mclennan says:

"If anyone is interested, I've just booked a series of dates for my new
seasonal poetry workshops at Collected Works Bookstore, Wellington &
Holland, Ottawa, happening on Wednesday nights: January 6, 13 and 27;
February 3, 10 and 24; March 3, 10.

$250 for 8 sessions.
7pm to 9pm.

for information, contact rob mclennan at az421@freenet.carleton.ca or 613
239 0337;

an eight week poetry workshop (spread out a little, for the sake of
scheduling), the course will focus on workshopping writing of the
participants, as well as reading various works by contemporary writers,
both Canadian & American. participants should be prepared to have a
handful of work completed before the beginning of the first class, to be
workshopped (roughly ten pages)."


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 11:03 AM EST
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The Malahat Review Novella Contest

The Malahat Review's just announced its 2010 Novella Contest. They say:

"The Malahat Review, Canada’s premier literary magazine, invites entries from Canada, the United States, and elsewhere for the Novella Prize. One prize of $500 CAD is awarded, plus payment at the rate of $40 CAD per printed page upon publication. Previous winning entries have also won or been nominated for National Magazine Awards for Fiction and the O. Henry Prize. The Novella Prize is offered every second year, alternating with The Malahat Review’s Long Poem Prize."

The deadline is February 1, 2010. So dig that novella out of the back of your files and dust it off! How often do novellas get to shine?


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 10:47 AM EST
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Wednesday, 2 December 2009
Awesome grafitti

This is outside Saint Brigid's, on the side of what used to be Our Lady School on Cumberland (and is now an abandoned hulk.) Something about it just makes me smile. Maybe it's the period after 'dang it.' Maybe it's the Canadian flag. I don't know. It's awesome. 

 


 


 


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 9:47 PM EST
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