Writing Personal Stories
~ A weekly
class dedicated to the pleasures of writing your stories & thoughts
Online: Tuesday
afternoons, 1 – 3 p.m.
April 14 – June
16, or to June 23 if the class fills up. No class April 28 or June 9
Offered on Zoom and accessible from anywhere 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.
Our guest speaker will be Tanya Bellehumeur-Allatt, author of the critically acclaimed
memoir Peacekeeper’s Daughter.
Tanya holds an MA in English Literature from McGill University and an MFA in Creative Writing from UBC. These days, she lives in Quebec’s Eastern Townships with her husband and four children. She was born in Germany to French-Canadian parents and grew up on various army bases across Canada, from Quebec’s North Shore to Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.
When she was twelve, her family moved to Tiberius,
Israel, where her father served as a United Nations peacekeeper on the Golan
Heights. When war broke out with Lebanon, Tanya and her family moved to Beirut,
where they lived for seven months, at the height of the Lebanese civil war.
Tanya’s journal from 1982-1983 became the seeds of
her memoir, Peacekeeper’s Daughter
Peacekeeper’s Daughter is both a
coming-of-age story and an exploration of family dynamics, the shattering
effects of violence and war, and the power of memory itself to reconcile us to
our past selves, to the extraordinary places we have been and sights we have
seen.
You can read an excerpt from Peacekeeper’s
Daughter here, It’s
available through the publisher, Thistledown Press here or order it through your local bookstore –
see here.
Tanya has also published two volumes of poetry
with Shoreline Press: Chaos Theories of
Goodness (here) and The Hospitality of Trees (here). Her collection of short memoir
pieces, Carrying War, will be published by Dundurn Press in August
2026 (here).
Tanya’s also published numerous poems, stories,
and essays and has been nominated for many, many awards. A partial list
includes:
2025
– Finalist, Fiddlehead Creative NonFiction Contest for “Sabra
Chronicles”
2024
– Winner, Vita Poetica Writing and Art Contest for “Maria
Lactans”
2022
– Runner-up, McNally Rand Booksellers/Prairie Firs CNF Contest for
“5972, 12th Avenue, Rosemont”
2021
– Finalist, Quebec Writers’ Federation Mavis Gallant Prize for Non-Fiction
for Peacekeeper’s Daughter: A Middle East Memoir (Thistledown
Press, 2021)
2021 – Winner, 2021 Doula Support Foundation’s
Birth Story Contest (2nd place) for “Winter Rose”
2020 – Winner, The New Quarterly’s Edna Staebler
Award for Personal Essay (2nd place) for “Terrorist Mythologies”
2019 – “Terrorist Narratives” (first
published in Malahat Review) selected and published in Best
Canadian Essays of 2019 (forthcoming)
2018 – Finalist in CANSCAIP’s 2018 Writing
for Children Awards for “All Alone, War Pigeon” (picture book category)
Currently, Tanya is working on
some books for children and a novel for adults about American expats in Beirut
called Birdsong Hollow.
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 called Toronto Metropolitan University) and has led
workshops everywhere from Boston to Buffalo and from Saskatoon to Toronto to
Saint John. But his proudest boast is that he’s has helped many of his
students get published.
Read reviews
and other pieces about or inspired by Brian's writing courses, workshops, and
retreats here (and scroll down).
Fee: $257.52 plus 13% hst = $291
To reserve
your spot, email: brianhenry@sympatico.ca
See all of Brian’s upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.