Saturday, October 26, 2024

Congratulations to Pawan, Joan, Natalie, and Evelyn!

Hi, Brian.

You have always inspired me in my writing.  Guess who is on the CBC Nonfiction longlist for the short story: “Is Life a Tossed Salad?” 😄

I am thrilled and honoured to have my story longlisted. There were over 1,400 submissions. 30 stories were selected for the longlist. 

Warmest regards,

Evelyn N. Pollock

Update: Evelyn’s not just on the longlist – she’s now a finalist! Which means she’s already won a $1,000 prize, and her story has been published on the CBC website. Read about Evelyn’s prize, her bio, and her essay, “Is Life a Tossed Salad?” here.

Also, if you’re interested in entering the CBC Short Story Contest, you still have time. You’ll find details of the CBC contest and a few other great places to send your short pieces here.

 

Hi, Brian.

I hope you had a great summer and all is well. I wanted to share with you that another short fiction piece of mine is published! I started writing A Long Walk Through the Tall Dry Grass in one of your classes. It went by a different title then and the story wasn't as developed, but with some further work, I was quite happy with the outcome. 

It has found the perfect home with NüVoices, an international editorial collective supporting women and other underrepresented voices on the subject of China. 

Once again, thanks for providing such great classes for writers.

Natalie

P.S. I write under the name N.J. Chan now. I thought Natalie J. Chan was a bit too much of a mouthful! 

You can read Natalie’s story on NüVoices here, but even better, I’ve republished it with fabulous images on Quick Brown Fox here.

For information about submitting to NüVoices and a few other great places to send your short pieces (including the CBC Short Story Contest), see here.

And for information about upcoming writing classes, see here.

 

Hi, Brian.

In a Woman's Voice blog is posting two of my poems: “Breath of Another Body” and “I’ll see you Again.”

Thanks,

Joan MacIntosh

Check out Joan’s poems here.

 

Hi, Brian.

Just wanted to reach out to you and thank you for all your teachings and help!! My story was published in the Globe and Mail. The one about the Peony. Thank you for helping me with the editing process.

Take care.

Pawan Kauer

You can read Pawan’s essay on the Globe and Mail here

For information on submitting a First Person essay to the Globe and Mail {and a few other great places to submit}, see here.

 ***

See all my upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and four-day  retreats here. ~Brian

See more good news from your fellow writers here (and scroll down).
And if you’ve had any good news, send me an email so I can share your success. As writers, we’re all in this together, and your success gives us all a boost. Email me at: brianhenry@sympatico.ca

Note: You can now get new postings on 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/

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Tolka pays €500 for personal stories & other nonfiction, plus other great places to submit your short pieces

Note: You can now get new postings on 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/

The deadline for the CBC Short Story Prize is coming up soon!

The winner receives $6,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts, a two-week writing residency at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity and their work will be published on CBC Books.

Four finalists each receive $1,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts and their work is also published on CBC Books. 

The prize is open to all Canadian citizens and permanent residents of Canada who have reached the age of majority in their province or territory of residence, whether living in Canada or abroad.

The prize is open to all Canadian citizens and permanent residents of Canada who have reached the age of majority in their province or territory of residence, whether living in Canada or abroad.

Deadline: November 1, 2024. Full details here.

 

Tolka is a biannual literary journal of nonfiction: publishing personal essays, memoir, reportage, travel writing, auto-fiction, individual stories and the writing that flows in between. Submissions should be 1,000–3,000 words.

Pays a flat fee of ‎‎500 (about $746 Canadian).

They will be open for submissions October 31 – November 17, 2024. Guidelines here.  

 

NüVoices is an international editorial collective gathering veteran and emerging writers, journalists, translators and artists to celebrate and support the diverse creative work of women and other underrepresented voices/communities working on the subject of China. 

Their online magazine, NüStories, regularly publishes both fiction and nonfiction, including narrative essays, event reviews, articles, multimedia projects and other original content — reaching audiences all around the world.    

They pay an honorarium for accepted submissions. 

They’re looking for a variety of text content including reportedfeaturesnarrativeessaysop-edstutorialsQ&Asfictiontranslations and listicles.

Since they don’t have the resources to edit more ambitious reportage, they ask that reported pieces be succinct, with links to sources included. In your pitch, please also include one or two ideas on what visuals can be used to accompany your piece. Text pieces should aim to be no more than 1,400 words.

Visual submissions such as illustrations, photography, and videos should be accompanied by a short text component providing context. Visual submissions should be of high digital quality but smaller than 1.5 MB jpg.

Full submission guidelines here.

 

White Wall Review is the Journal of Creative Writing in the Department of English at Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University).

“Since 1976,we have published exciting and necessary fiction, poetry, and nonfiction by emerging and established writers from across North America. We are generously supported by The Department of English and the Faculty of Arts.”

They’re seeking:

Short stories and novel excerpts from 300–6.000 words. Please submit only one piece at a time (unless you are submitting flash fiction, in which case you may submit up to three short pieces). For excerpts of forthcoming works, please make note of the publication date in your cover letter.

Poetry: Please submit up to five poems at a time (totalling no more than eight pages). Long poems and excerpts of unpublished works will also be considered. For excerpts of forthcoming works, please make note of the publication date in your cover letter.

Nonfiction, including personal essays, literary essays, and experimental hybrid forms, from 600 – 6,000 words. For excerpts of forthcoming works, please make note of the publication date in your cover letter.

Reviews of new fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and graphic novels. Their focus is on reviewing Canadian works, but will consider works from around the world.

Interviews with writers and visual artists. The format is Q&A with an analytical/literary introduction to the artist’s work.

Visual art & photography, including illustrations, paintings, collages, digital art, etc., in both colour and black and white.

Full submission guidelines here.

 

See information about all our upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.

Navigation tips: For information about other places to send your short works, see here (and scroll down). 

Also, always check out Labels below posts to find collections of postings. For example, if you’re looking for places to send personal essays, click on “essay markets” below (and scroll down).

Friday, October 18, 2024

Your'e invited to a “Writing Personal Stories” online course


“Writing Personal Stories”

Online: Tuesday afternoons, 1 – 3 p.m.
January 14 – March 4
Offered on Zoom and accessible from wherever there's internet 

If you've ever considered writing your personal stories, this course is for you. We’ll look at memoirs, travel writing, personal essays, family history – personal stories of all kinds. Plus, of course, we’ll work on creativity and writing technique and have fun doing it. 

Whether you want to write a book or just get your thoughts down on paper, this weekly course will get you going. We'll reveal the tricks and conventions of telling true stories, and we’ll show you how to use the techniques of the novel to recount actual events. Weekly writing exercises and friendly feedback from the instructor will help you move forward on this writing adventure. Whether you want to write for your family and friends or for a wider public, don't miss this course.

We’ll also have a published author as a guest speaker for this course.

Instructor Brian Henry has been a book editor and creative writing instructor for more than 25 years. He publishes Quick Brown Fox, Canada's most popular blog for writers, taught creative writing at Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) and has led workshops everywhere from Boston to Buffalo and from Sarnia to Saint John. But his proudest boast is that he has helped many of his students get published.  

Read reviews and other pieces about or inspired by Brian's courses, workshops, and retreats here (and scroll down).

Fee: $220.35 plus 13% hst = $259

To reserve your spot, email: brianhenry@sympatico.ca

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

Note: To get new postings from Quick Brown fox delivered to your Inbox as soon as they go up, subscribe to the Quick Brown Fox on Substack here.


Thursday, October 17, 2024

A new course, never offered before: “Writing Picture Books – Intensive”

“Writing Picture Books – Intensive”

Online: Wednesdays, 6:30 – 9:00 p.m.
January 15 – February 26, 2025 (or to March 5 if the class fills up). 

Be sure to sign up early. I'll email the first pieces for critiquing January 8, and I'll start making the schedule of when your pieces will be due weeks before that.

This Intensive course will be organized like my other Intensive courses, but it’s for people writing picture books. It’s for people who are working on their own writing projects, not for beginners. 

You’ll be asked to bring in four pieces of your writing for detailed feedback. This may be four separate picture book manuscripts or, possibly, just one, reworked four times. You bring whatever you want to work on. 

Besides critiquing pieces, we’ll have discussions and I’ll give short talks addressing the needs of the group. You’ll receive constructive suggestions about your writing, learn how to critique your own work, ands you’ll discover that the greatest benefits come from seeing how your classmates approach and critique a piece of writing and how they write and re-write.

I expect you’ll find this course extremely rewarding – and fun. After all, we’re working on picture books! ~Brian

Instructor Brian Henry has been a book editor and creative writing instructor for more than 25 years. He publishes Quick Brown Fox, Canada's most popular blog for writers, taught creative writing at Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) and has led workshops everywhere from Boston to Buffalo and from Sarnia to Saint John. Brian is the author of a children's version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Tribute Publishing). But his proudest boast is that he has helped many of his students get published.   

Read reviews and other pieces about or inspired by Brian's courses, workshops, and retreats, see here (and scroll down).

Fee: $247.79 + hst = $280

To reserve your spot, email: brianhenry@sympatico.ca

See all of my upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and four-day retreats here. ~Brian

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

“Fred Has Left” by Jill Fortney

Fred’s talking while working on my legs

I’m in a slight daze, as always, with any of his massages

I begin to suspect he’s talking about retirement

You’re not retiring, are you?

Yes

No, no, no I say

When?

September

This September?

It was the beginning of August

Well, I am 80 years old

 

I never knew his age; I could only guess based on his many stories

Of his hippie days, of drugs and whatever

I told him that as a teen I was a goody-two-shoes - a Sandra Dee type if you know that era – and I didn’t have any experience in what he was talking about

But 80?

I guess I never wanted to realize his age

 

Did I know you were retiring?

I told you a few months ago

Are you sure?

I’m sure

I have no recollection

 

How did I react?

Just as you are now

I still have no recollection

How can that be, I think

How can I not remember?

One of us is losing our mind and I don’t want it to be me

 

Fred says the mind has a way of blocking out what we don’t want to hear

I did not want to hear I was losing him

My Obi-Wan

My guide, my guru

 

He spoke of the transcendent in ways that left me mute, able to simply murmur an awed “wow”

He offered me coping strategies, meditation techniques and constant reminders of the power of shifting perspective

His stories were teachings on the power of love to heal all wounds

Just love it he would say

I’m trying

We laughed at the absurdities of The Far Side comics, searching our memories for our favourites with a “do you remember the one?”

He celebrated and encouraged my creativity

Gazed on each photo, artwork and jewelry piece as if they were precious gifts

His reactions thoughtful and genuine from having really looked

After all, he was an artist back in the day

 

And my bewildered heart

Mournfully and selfishly cries

What will I do without you?

 

I manage the grief of every Thursday without Fred

And search for a stand-in

I want to be happy for him – he’s finally got time to himself

We talk on the phone a few times; we meet for coffee and a walk

He has another eye surgery

I text, then call to check in on him but there’s no response

We were to set up another walk

I wait, then finally call his friend

I get news I can’t absorb

Fred has passed

No, no, no

That can’t be – I can hear his voice, his laugh

I see him – I see his smile

I feel his warm hug when we last parted

 

And once again

My bewildered heart

Mournfully cries

What will I do without you?

***

Jill Fortney has had a fulfilling career working with children and on behalf of children. Now she’s playing with her lifelong love of words, language and story to write of life: a humble and humorous attempt to learn what it is to live with compassion, love, curiosity, joy and awe. An amateur artist, jewelry-maker and writer, she is a work in progress, as are all her creations!

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

Read more short stories, essays, and reviews by your fellow writers here (and scroll down).

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

“Jew-haters roam the streets but we’re not alone,” by Brian Henry

Vigil for October 7, 2023, terrorist atrocities, Toronto, Oct 7, 2024

Part two of: One Year On

October 7, 2024

Regarding the situation here in Canada, the most important thing to say is that Canadians support Canada’s Jewish community.

Yes, we witnessed the glee with which Israel-haters here in Canada greeted the news that 1,200 Jews had been murdered. We saw their jubilation at hearing 250 men, women, and children had been taken hostage. We saw their smug dismissal of reports of mass rape, of mutilations, of torture.

Sure, we knew the anti-Israel crowd was a vile bunch. But we were shocked – even those of us who have followed this closely for decades – we were shocked at the depth of the hatred. Jew-haters literally danced in the streets.

But we’re not alone. The large majority of Canadians have also been shocked.

By celebrating or at least excusing Hamas’s barbarism, much of the self-styled “progressive left” revealed itself as avatars of bigotry and hatred. As Jen Gerson put it in a widely read and widely shared column, it was “a real mask-off moment for the left, eh?” (here). 

But normal Canadians don’t celebrate Hamas or Hezbollah or any other terrorist group. For example, the Abraham Global Peace Initiative recently completed a study on antisemitism in Ontario. Almost 80% of Ontarians “are concerned about attacks – including gunfire and firebombs – targeting synagogues, Jewish schools, and businesses (here).”

That doesn’t mean the remaining 20% approve of attacks on Jews. A few do – obviously – and many more will make excuses for those attacks, but some of that 20% simply regard anything short of a nuclear war as no big deal. So, they can go back to sleep now – at least for the time being.

Moreover, more than 60% of people in Ontario “are alarmed by aggressive behavior from pro-Palestinian protesters.” And that’s despite most media doing its best to downplay how aggressive and hate-filled these protests are.

How hate-filled are these protesters? Well, if you haven’t been watching, perhaps start your reading here.

And if anything, the anti-Israel protests continue to become more radical.

On October 1, “pro-Palestinian” protesters (as the media likes to call them) ran amok in downtown Montreal, breaking windows, spray painting graffiti on store fronts, and throwing homemade firebombs at the police. 

And on October 7, they smashed windows at McGill University.

In Toronto, protesters carried signs calling for “armed resistance” and a speaker called for demonstrators to teach their children that the “Zionist entity is an enemy.”

Iran’s Press TV carried the Toronto protest live, to show how much support terrorism (supposedly) has in Canada. Correspondent Firas Al-Najim stood in front of a masked man waving a Hezbollah flag who said that Hezbollah is considered a terrorist group only because of the “Zionist lobby’s” influence. “We’re here to stand in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance,” he said, adding “we’re not going to be quiet anymore.”

I hadn’t noticed them ever being quiet.

There have been a lot of Hezbollah flags at anti-Israel protests of late and also people carrying photos of the Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, to mourn his recent death.

On the upside, Toronto police charged two men with public incitement of hatred for waving Hezbollah flags (here). After all, Canada does list Hezbollah as an illegal terrorist group. Like Hamas, Hezbollah’s whole reason for being is to destroy Israel and kill Jews – which they have always done to the best of their ability. You can see how the police feel that enthusiastic support for this bunch crosses the line.

In Ottawa, protesters gathered outside a Jewish community centre housing a nursery among other services and blocked all the entrances. They claimed to be protesting an event by Sar-El, the volunteers for Israel program (here), but in Arabic, speakers praised shaheeds (martyrs), jihad (holy war) and mujahedeen (holy warriors) (here).

They screamed a chant: “We want bullets and missiles … we do not negotiate with Israel except with the gun (here).”  

A Jewish long-term care home sits across from the community centre, and police warned the seniors it wasn’t safe for them to go outside. Indeed, several Jews leaving the community centre were assaulted.

But the police didn’t make the streets safe for the seniors to leave their building. They didn’t clear the screaming Israel-haters away from the doors to the community centre. And as of yet, no arrests have been made for assaulting people leaving the community centre (here).

At a Parliament Hill protest, a speaker proclaimed: “We will continue fighting until the Zionist entity crumbles, along with its accomplice the United States, and this country [Canada] crumbles to the ground.”

Samidoun's ad for its celebration of al-Aqsa Flood,
which was Hamas's official name for its mass
terror attack of Oct 7, 2023

And of course, all the pro-Palestinian terrorism fan clubs are marking the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s attack on Israel with events celebrating Palestinian “resistance,” which is the word they use to describe mass murder, rape, and kidnapping. 

In Vancouver, a speaker at a Samidoun rally shouted: “We are Hezbollah and we are Hamas,” and led a crowd of hundreds calling for “death to Canada, death to the United States and death to Israel.”

Jews are also marking the October 7 anniversary. One year on, Hamas continues to hold 101 hostages. Hamas continues to fire a few missiles into Israel, though nothing like the thousands of missiles it attacked with last October 7. And Hamas remains as committed as ever to its central purpose of destroying Israel and killing Jews.

But one year on, Hamas no longer has an army. Never again will it be able to commit an atrocity such as October 7.

And the people of Israel still live. Am Yisrael Chai. עַם יִשְׂרָאֵל חַי

***

Update, Oct 14: Samidoun has confirmed that “Death to Canada accurately describes their goal (here). Samidoun and its arm for young people, the Palestinian Youth Movement, are responsible for organizing many of the “pro-Palestinian” protests across Canada. For a rundown of the main anti-Israel groups in Canada and how they’ve been trying to incite violence, see here.

Further update, Oct 15: After years of the Jewish community and friends (special thanks to Terry Glavin!) pointing out Samidoun's connection to terrorist organizations, the Canadian government has at last designated Samidoun as a terrorist group here.

***

This piece was originally published on the Canadian Zionist Forum.

Read Part One of One Year On: “Iran escalates the war, but Israel has a lot of friends” here (and scroll down for more of my pieces).