Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Available now: The 2025 Canadian Writers’ Contest Calendar

Whether you're a beginner or an advanced writer, if you’re looking for places to send your work, you should put contests on your list. 

The Canadian Writers’ Contest Calendar is a book that gives a full listing of annual writing contests in Canada arranged by deadline date. It lists contests for short stories, poetry, children’s writing, novels, and nonfiction – contests for just about everyone. Note that because it lists contests that run every year, the Contest Calendar is useful for more than a single year. 

The 2025 edition is now available . Get your order in, and we'll ship it right out to you.

The Calendar costs just $29 by mail within Canada, all taxes & shipping included, or just $25 if you buy it at an in-person writing workshop, class or retreat.

To order, email: brianhenry@sympatico.ca 

See upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and four-day retreats here.

Note: You can get new postings from Quick Brown Fox delivered straight to your Inbox as I publish them. Subscribe to the new Quick Brown Fox page on Substack here:  https://brian999.substack.com/

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Friends and colleagues brought out a wealth of new books in 2024....

Mortified by Kristy Jackson, illustrated by Rhael McGregor (from HarperCollins)

Mortified was a finalist for a Governor General’s Award for best Canadian book for young people in 2024. The winner was Crash Landing by Li Charmaine Anne, but we were all ecstatic to see Kristy get into the finalist circle with her first novel – way to go Kristy!

(Not to mention everyone in the Friday morning class was tickled that she’d included all our names in her acknowledgements.)

So what’s Mortified about?

For fans of Remarkably Ruby and Diary of a Wimpy Kid, comedy and cringe come together in this sweet novel about facing your fears.

When someone secretly signs up Belinda Houle, the school’s shyest kid, to audition for a play, Belinda turns to her best friend, Sally, for help. Sally isn’t like the other kids. Unlike Belinda, she isn’t embarrassed by anything. Also, Sally thinks she’s a witch.

Belinda doesn’t believe in magic, but if Sally has a spell for confidence—well, it couldn’t hurt to try it. Could it?

Mortified is available from Chapters/Indigo here.

***

Kids Can senior editor Patricia Ocampo

And speaking of award winners and finalists, Yvonne Denomy won in the Picture Book category for the CANSCAIP contest this year with I am Cheetah, while Susan Wollison was a finalist with her picture book manuscript, A Monster's Guide to Children. Neither Yvonne’s or Susan’s books have been picked up yet by a publisher, but we have hopes!

***

By the way, if you’re interested in writing for kids, don’t miss “Writing for children and for young adults,  with Patricia Ocampo, senior editor with Kids Can Press, offered online, Saturday, March 1. Details here

 ***

"(Not so) Extreme" class doing well

Two participants in our “(Not so) Extreme Creative Writing” class on Thursday afternoons in Burlington brought out books this year:

Donna Kirk published her first novel, Death in the Suburbs:

Marshal Keene lost both his legs, his family, and then his job as a rookie police officer when a drunk driver crashed into Marsh’s car. Now, seven years later, that drunk driver’s gotten out of prison and someone’s murdered him. Naturally, the police are looking at Marsh as suspect #1.

To top that, Marsh’s father-in-law finds his law partner dead, and $200,000 meant to pay off the partner’s gambling debt gone from the office safe.

As if Marsh’s life weren’t already complicated enough, with him pursuing his new career as a reporter while trying to get around town on prosthetics and canes – though, truth to tell, solving a couple of murders feels to Marsh like something that might set him back on his feet.

Donna’s first book was a memoir, Finding Matthew. Doctors tld Donna that her newborn baby boy Matthew wouldn’t live through the night. They were wrong. Finding Matthew details the four decades of his productive and rewarding life.

Death in the Suburbs is available on Amazon here.  Finding Mathew is available here.

 

Dave Moores (also from the “Extreme” class) came out with his third novel: Sparkles and Karim 

Iraq, 2014. ISIS is on a roll and Sparkles and Karim need to find a dangerous cache of radioactive material before it's used to make some western city glow. Read a review here.

Sparkles and Karim is available from Chapters/Indigo here, as are Dave’s earlier novels: a YA titled Attitude, and a sexy sailboat adventure titled Windward Legs.

 

Alumni of the “Extreme” class also had a good year 

Nancy Taber found an agent (Alice Speilburg) at one of my “How to Get Published” workshops, and Alice found  a publisher for Nancy’s first novel, A Sea of Spectres:

On the choppy coastline of Prince Edward Island, an ocean-phobic detective evades the deadly lure of a phantom ship by delving into her family’s history and harnessing her matrilineal powers of premonition.

A Sea of Spectres is available through Nimbus Publishing here or through Chapters/Indigo here.

 

And Hannah Mary Mckinnon (also an alumni) published her seventh thriller in 2024: Only One Survives (Mira Books).Jeneva Rose, a New York Times bestselling author calls it “Rock’n’roll with a dash or two of murder.”

See all of Hannah’s novels published under her own name at Chapters/Indigo here

Under her pen name, Holly Cassiday, Hannah also brought out her latest RomCom: The Christmas Countdown (Penguin Random House). This is Hannah’s follow-up to The Christmas Wager, published last year. Both available from Chapters/Indigo here.  

*** 

At this point, it looks like this winter’s Thursday afternoon “Extreme” class in Burlington is full. But sometimes people have to change their plans, so if you’re interested, email me: brianhenry@sympatico.ca

And for sure, we still have space available in our Thursday evening “Writing Personal Stories” class in Burlington. Details here

***

Two more of the many picture books friends & colleagues published this year

Chang Hong published her first picture book with Kids Can Press: Greetings Floof, illustrated by A.J. Smith.

An interactive adventure full of way-out-there fun starring an adorable alien named Floof!

Floof — from the planet Ploof — has just landed on Earth! Luckily, alien expert Dr. Greta Goodnote is here to guide readers on how to interact with him. She explains how to make Floof feel welcome by raising your arms and jiggling them, protect him from the rain by blowing clouds away, and most important of all: stop him from poofing up when he gets wet! There’s a whole lot to do and a whole lot of silliness to enjoy.

Available from Chapters / Indigo here.  

 

Robin Heald published The Light from My Menorah: Celebrating Holidays around the world, (Pajama Press) illustrated by Andrea Blinick:

The light from a menorah takes a young boy on a fantastical journey around the world to experience different festivals of light, and the people who celebrate them.

Also in 2024, Robin published the third book in her Sapphire Family Series (Robin Ray Books): Mason and Invincible Igor, illustrated by Alexandra Artigas:

Eight-year-old Mason writes and illustrates his own superhero series, “Invincible Igor.” Tonight, his goal is to finish book six in the series. But with all the interruptions, how can he?

The earlier two books in this early reader series were Jackson and Jillian and Alicia and Annie.

Check out all of Robin’s books here.

*** 

Plus, three YA novels

Jean Rae Baxter published her tenth book, Battle on the Ice (Crossfield Publishing):

It's December 1837, a winter of discontent, with Upper and Lower Canada on the verge of civil war. “Dory” Dickson, a farm boy, needs to leave home to find work. Despite his father’s warnings to stay away from the border towns, where rebels are recruiting for an invasion of Upper Canada from the United States, he walks straight into trouble at his first stop….

Battle on the Ice is available through Chapters/Indigo here as are Jean’s other titles here.

 

Susan Thomas also has a new YA novel out for 2024: Willow (BWL Publishing):

A teen stumbles out of a wheat field on a hot September afternoon, torn, battered, and in a state of shock—but who is she? Daniel calls her Willow and is determined to protect her from her past. Despite the horrific memories that plague her, Willow reluctantly allows Daniel and his cousin Zach to try and uncover her identity. 

The journey they undertake puts all three of their lives in danger. Deception and murder are in her past, what else will they discover? One thing is certain … Willow is not sure that she wants to know.

Willow is available from Amazon here. And you can find Susan’s earlier YA novel, Missing, here.

 

And Laurie Ness Gordon self-published Finding Home. This novel follows two characters in early Canada. Sarah, a servant orphaned in London in 1869, desperately seeks family. Richard, the disgraced son of an Ontario sawmill owner, must redeem himself, then make his own way. Their journeys are brought together by a group of Home Children.

Finding Home is available at Novel Idea in Kingston, Books on Main in Bath, Trousdales General Store in Sydenham, and Spark Books and Curios in Perth as well as in local libraries. 

 

*** 

Susan Garrod-Schuster and Giang-Chau Ghent published Biography of a Woman 

This, the true story of Giang-Chau’s life, has never been told before. Giang-Chau’s mother was brought to the royal palace to be raised by her aunt, the dowager empress of Vietnam. But Chau did not live the life of a princess; her story is one of harrowing persecution in the years after Saigon fell to the Communists.

Then in 1979, Chau escaped her homeland aboard a small boat that was easy prey for pirates. The courage she found to endure her perilous voyage and final journey to freedom in Canada were shaped by the wisdom passed down from her female ancestors and the strength of her Buddhist faith

Biography of a Woman is available here.

*** 

Friends and colleagues also published a number of novels strictly for adults in 2024

Karen Barrow’s novel Palmyra comes with this tag line: I used to think the past was dead and gone, that time erased memories....”

Rich in historical and geographical detail, Palmyra chronicles a time when an educated elite rose from the ashes of slavery and indentureship to challenge the ruling white plantocracy and create an independent nation.

A finalist for the Guernica Prize for Literary Fiction and winner of the Whistler Independent Book Award for Fiction, Palmyra is part coming-of-age story, part Gothic mystery, and thoroughly conjures a world teaming with divided loyalties, family secrets, and ambition.

Palmyra is available from Chapters/Indigo here.

 

Benjamin Rempel published Infect: 

As their community unravels, estranged half-brothers, Andrew and Xavier Stone, must uncover the terrifying truth about a virus ravaging their town if they are to find their parents and survive one more night from the things that hunt them. 

Hailed as “violent, mysterious, and powerfully empathetic,"  Infect explores human behaviour in a high-stress environment where nothing is sacred and survival is the highest priority!

Infect is available from Chapters/Indigo here.

 

Finally, Emily A. Weedon published her first novel, Autokrator (Cormorant Books):

Autokrator brings to life a deeply-etched, speculative world in which two women, born nameless, fight against their tyrannical society.

And coming in 2025: Hemo Sapiens (from Dundurn Press) is an audacious and bloodthirsty fairy tale, pitting one man against a community beyond good and evil, in a modern tale of intrigue and female sexuality.

Read more about Emily’s novels at Chapters/Indigo here.

 ***

And is that it for books in 2024? Not at all! Stay tuned for Books from Friends and Colleagues Part 2.

See upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and four-day retreats here

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

“The Leap of Faith” by Aldona Barysas

A friend insisted that I go on a blind date with a guy visiting from Lithuania. 

“He’s tall, blue eyes, athletic. He’s a good guy,” she told me.

I wasn’t interested.

“He saw you at the Lithuanian Hall this past Sunday. He thinks your beautiful.”

Yeah, that didn’t do much for me either because there were a lot of young men arriving from the Soviet Union who were suddenly struck by love, would offer several thousand dollars as a dowry payment to get married and help them get their paperwork to stay in Canada – lawfully.

I asked her how she met him. “He’s friends with my husband from the old country. They met up at The Bear.” I didn’t need to hear anymore. The Bear was a private, member’s only (meaning Lithuanian only) bar in the basement of our community centre.

I replied with a firm “no” and went off to visit my aunt, a woman who had been married three times. She’d also buried three husbands. She adored men of all ages, ethnic backgrounds and job descriptions. Her opening line with any man that she met was “Do you have a driver’s license?”  

To her, a potential suitor’s age or race or religion didn’t matter. All that mattered was that he had a car and driver’s license to drive her to places like Goodwill – or God’s Will as she renamed it – and the cemetery where her second and third husbands were buried. Her space had been reserved and paid for. She’d be sleeping in eternity between No. 2 and No. 3 as she called them.

During dinner, I told her about the offer of a blind date with someone from the old county. 

She told me that I was an idiot. “Go out with him. You don’t have to sleep with him but get him to buy you a glass of champagne and dinner. You don’t know how to have fun.”

After a couple of more shots of vodka, she told me that she had sex with No. 3 in the garage and that’s when he proposed to her. After that, every time I went into that garage to get the lawnmower, I felt like a voyeur. “That’s how to have fun,” she told me.

That hurt. A lot. But she was correct. I had lost my sense of fun and adventure. Any ability to flirt, dance the night away, sit in a movie theatre and hold hands and kiss – all of that had disappeared from my life as I started to climb the corporate ladder and purchased my first home and car. 

Additionally, I was earning extra income as a translator for the federal government. After hours, I often attended an immigration lawyer’s office to translate for someone seeking refugee status in Canada. Occasionally, I’d be asked to translate for a politician who was meeting with Very Important Persons from the old country who were seeking support for an independent Lithuania.

In hindsight, I was grateful that my parents insisted on raising me bilingual. At home, we spoke only Lithuanian, although my parents spoke Russian or German to one another when we weren’t supposed to understand the conversation. My father also swore in Russian. I was my father’s shadow, and unwittingly acquired the talent to swear in Russian as well.

My aunt continued to berate me as we ate Chinese food and drank shot after shot of vodka, straight out of the freezer.

I relented and called my friend. Agreed, reluctantly, that I’d go on this blind date on the condition that she and her husband join us for our coffee date. I wanted a chaperone and an escape route in case my blind date turned out to be the ultimate creep.

I was nervous, my mind blank because my friend had failed to mention how handsome my blind date was. Taller than me (a big plus for a tall woman), blond, blue-eyed, a retired professional basketball player with big biceps, witty and funny and charming. He’d served in the Russian Army, as a parachutist, and was very meticulous.

Somehow, we managed to sit in a coffee shop for five hours and talk about everything from politics to family, to travel to sports. Neither of us noticed that my friend and her husband said their good-byes.

We were on our own. I was entirely myself, without pretense or worrying about what will he will think of me. I think the knowledge that he was on a visitor’s visa made it easier for me to just be myself. I wasn’t interested in pleasing him. I was only interested in being who I was.

He walked me home, and asked if he could call on me the following day.

I agreed.

In the morning, when I arrived at work, I went to my boss’ office to plan our schedule for the day. He was a kind, older gentleman who knew that I had reluctantly gone on a blind date the previous evening.

“How was your big date?” he asked with a wink and grin.

“I’m going to marry him,” I replied. 

“Does he know that he’s getting married?”

“Not yet.”

Even though my future husband wasn’t yet aware of my intentions, somewhere deep in my bones, I knew that we fit together like two puzzle pieces with slightly worn and torn edges. We had much in common: language, culture, food, a love of history and animals, a desire to travel. We both looked after our mothers.

On the other hand, he was funny, while I had a difficult time understanding “Knock, Knock” jokes. He was optimistic while I was a pessimist. Ah, well, half full, half empty, together we made a full glass.

For the next three weeks, Vik and I were inseparable. He waited for me every day outside my office to go home with me. We had dinner together, took long walks with my dog, talked about everything and anything, neither of us hiding any part of ourselves from the other.  I put aside my Catholic sensibilities and slept with him and felt free and reckless. 

His visa to remain in Canada was set to expire in about a week’s time. A cousin in Kitchener had sponsored him for his trip to Canada for a month-long visit, but he’d spent very little time with her and her husband.

My aunt wanted to meet the mysterious man from Lithuania. She thought it was in my best interests to interrogate him over our favourite dinner of Chinese food. The questions flowed quickly. She thought of asking questions that had never occurred to me.  

Did he have any children? Did anyone in his family ever commit suicide? Was he close to his siblings? What town was he from? Could she see his passport to verify his name and date of birth? Did he have any debts? How much money did he have? And the big question for people of my aunt’s generation: Was he a member of the Communist Party?

I was embarrassed by the questioning. Vik was not. He’d bought a bottle of Canadian whiskey to the dinner with my aunt, and steadily the two of them drank shot after shot. He politely answered her questions, thanked her for dinner, cleared the table, and continued to answer questions.

Unbeknownst to me, my aunt had a plan. She telephoned a relative in Lithuania and asked if they knew someone from Ukmerge, the town where my future husband lived. After several phone calls, she was able to verify that there was no sign of mental instability in his family tree, that he was good to his mother, that he was an important basketball player, disciplined and a hard worker.

My aunt’s advice, “Marry him. You can get to know him later.”

Perhaps I should mention that while I wanted to get married, Vik had made no mention of what would happen when his visa expired.  We’d both had a brief, first marriage that ended quickly and not amicably. Each of us had been single for almost a decade and had carved out our lives successfully as being “not part of a couple.”

I’d traveled to Europe, alone, and he’d traveled to Canada and other places, alone. We were both very independent, a character trait that was later to cause some strain in the marriage until we learned how to compromise.

One day, he casually mentioned that his visa was going to expire. He offered to ask for an extension if I was interested in seeing him for another month or two, and to see what the future could hold for us.

I made it clear that I was very interested in him staying for as long as possible, but secretly wondered why the word “marriage” wasn’t part of his vocabulary.

Vik suggested that he move in with me until we figured out the future. He had a business in Lithuania, but his brother could take care of things for another month or two. He couldn’t work in Canada legally, so he’d get a cash job as a pizza driver, like some of his friends.

His grand scheme was that we’d live together and find out whether we liked each other enough to get married.

My response to his offer to live with me was this: I told him that in Canada we have a saying – “Once you own the cow, you don’t have to buy the milk.” He was confused and asked for an explanation.

I replied, as politely as I could, my heart cracking a bit, that I was not prepared to live with a man.  I wasn’t prepared to cook and clean, warm his bed, bring in a pay cheque, help with his immigration papers, all in the hope that somehow, I would be good enough for him.

I wanted a ring and a priest and the words that mean something when said in front of an altar. I wanted vows that we would both honour, and a commitment.

His response was not positive. “It’s crazy. We’ve only known each other for three weeks. I don’t know this country. I don’t speak the language. I have no job.” All of which was true.

“Do you want to live in Soviet Lithuania?” he asked.

I shook my head, no.

Although I had visited many times, I didn’t want to live in a small, concrete apartment and wait in line to buy anything. I couldn’t move and be bound by rules and a societal structure that was completely foreign to me. So, reluctantly, I agreed with him, “Yes, it’s too soon to marry.” 

He thanked me for dinner and told me that he would remember the past three weeks with a great deal of fond memories.  I tried to remain stoic and dignified as possible, wished him well, and walked him to the door.  He drove off in his cousin’s car.

I went to bed to cry my eyes out.

Some four hours later, past midnight, the doorbell was ringing.  I was frightened because bad news usually comes in the darkest of hours.  I looked through the front window and realized that Vik was standing outside my door.

My heart soared. I told my heart not to be silly. Perhaps he had forgotten something and returned to pick it up.

It turned out that it was me that he had forgotten.

He had made it to Kitchener where his cousin lived, realized that he was willing to take a risk if I was, turned the car around and drove back to Toronto.

There was no proposal. My husband is no Mr. Romance – not even a bit. He said, “Ok. Let’s do it.” That was the extent of the marriage proposal. Not a Hallmark moment in sight. Some fifteen years into the marriage, and at the urging of my mother-in-law, I received an engagement ring.

We married a couple of weeks later, with the wedding reception in my aunt’s home, my brother as my man-of-honour, and my boss standing as witness for my husband.

The wedding was hurriedly put together. The priest asked me if I was getting married for money or because I was pregnant. I responded “no” to both questions. On a Friday evening, we showed up at the Church, with a handful of friends in attendance who I had telephoned the day before to surprise them with the announcement of my wedding.

There was only one vow that we made that was important to both of us and it was simply this: neither one of us would ever use the words “I want a separation” or “I want a divorce.” Never.

We both understood that if you say it once, it becomes easier to say it again and again until it becomes true. That no matter what we fought about, the idea of a divorce was not part of our future. We were in it for the long haul, for better or worse.

My aunt’s advice to marry first, get to know him later worked out.

We’ve had decades to get to know each other.

Some things I like. Some I don’t. He feels the same.

But I’m grateful that most of our life’s journey together has been for the better.

Gigi

Aldona Barysas resides in Ontario by a lake surrounded by woods and wild animals, with her husband and her dog, Gigi. Her favourite things include books and writing (obviously), Agatha Christie novels and movies, any foreign accent, hamburgers and tequila, beach life and cold-water swimming. Life is an adventure.

Here’s something new: If you’d like to get the latest postings from Quick Brown Fox delivered to your In Box as they go up, go to my Substack and subscribe: https://brian999.substack.com/

See my upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.

 

Saturday, December 28, 2024

Evolving schedule of writing classes, workshops, and retreats

2025

Winter Classes (Details of all classes starting this January here.):

“Writing Personal Stories”
Online: Tuesday afternoons, 1 – 3 p.m.
January 14 – March 4. Details here.

“Writing Picture Books – Intensive”
Online: Wednesday evenings, 6:30 – 9:00 p.m.
January 15 – February 26 (or to March 5 if the class fills up). First pieces emailed Jan 8. Details here.

“Writing Personal Stories & Other Nonfiction”
In person: Thursday evenings, 7 – 9 p.m., in Burlington
Jan 23 – Feb 27 (or to March 6 if the class is full. Details here.

“(Not so) Extreme Creative Writing”

In person: Thursday afternoons 12:30 – 3:00 p.m.
Jan 16 – Feb 27 (or to March 6 if the class fills up). First readings emailed Jan 9.

Burlington Anglican Lutheran Church, in Burlington, Ontario. Details here.

“Intensive Creative Writing”

Offered online at 3 different times:

Tuesday evenings 6:30 – 9:00
Jan 14 – Feb 25 (or to March 4 if the class fills up). First readings emailed Jan 7.

Wednesday afternoons, 12:30 – 3:00
Jan 15 – Feb 26 (or to March 5 if the class fills up). First readings emailed Jan 8.

Friday mornings 10:00 – 12:30
Jan 17 – Feb 28 (or to March 7 if the class fills up). First readings emailed Jan 10.

     Details of all three Intensive offerings here.

     Details of all weekly classes starting this January here

***

Writing Retreats

Spring Writers’ Retreat at Elm Hurst Inn & Spa

Friday, April 25 – Monday, April 28. Details here.

June in Algonquin Writers' Retreat at Arowhon Pines Resort in Algonquin Park

Friday, June 13 – Monday, June 16. Details here.

***

Writing Workshops

Online: “Writing for children and for young adults,” with Patricia Ocampo, senior editor with Kids Can Press, Saturday, March 1. Details here. 

Online: “How to Get Published,” with a literary agent as a guest speaker. Probably in March or April. Details to come.   

In-person: “Writing Your Life & Other True Stories,” Saturday, May 3, Niagara-on-the Lake, Ontario. Details here.

Online: “How to Build Your Novel” with guest New York Times bestselling author Kelley Armstrong, Sunday, July 20. Details here.

***

To reserve a spot or for more details about any course, workshop or retreat, email brianhenry@sympatico.ca