Interesting reading!

The contest in Books and Writers Community is up and running and it is so interesting to read the submissions and Ann Featherstone’s responses.

You don’t have to join to read the various threads. Here’s a link to the posts.

Anything that begins with BP is a blue pencil submission for Ann Featherstone. Anything that begins with AF is a question.

Guest editor and a contest!

Ann Featherstone, longtime editor with Fitzhenry & Whiteside and formerly with Orca, will be the guess editor on Compuserve’s Books and Writers Community forum for two weeks, starting April 13. In the first week, she’ll answer questions. In the second week, she’ll give virtual blue pencil sessions to a number of submissions. Here’s what she’ll give feedback on:

The first page of a children’s or YA novel, or the first page of a picture book text
or
A query letter
or
A pitch

She will select from those submitted, not necessarily the best, but the ones that exemplify something in particular. She will also select the three best submissions and award prizes to those three.

Second and third prize will be an editorial critique of an entire first chapter and outline. First prize will be that too, plus a phone conversation with Ann so that she can go into more depth with her comments.

In order to participate, go here.

You will have to sign up, but it’s free. Once you get there, scroll down to the YA/Children’s section for complete instructions.

 

Globe & Mail review for Call Me Aram!

I was THRILLED to see this Susan Perrin review today in the Globe & Mail:

CALL ME ARAM

By Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch, illustrated by Muriel Woods, Fitzhenry & Whiteside, 88 pages, $18.95, ages 8 to 11

A sequel to Aram’s Choice (2006), Skrypuch’s Call Me Aram takes up Aram’s story, based on a true one, as he and a group of Armenian boys, survivors of the genocide that occurred in Turkey in 1915, arrive in Georgetown, Ont., to begin a new life.

After the murder of his parents in Turkey, Aram and his grandmother had scrounged a living by begging on the streets of Ankara. He and thousands of other children were then moved from Turkey to an orphanage on Corfu.

Sponsored by the newly formed Armenian Relief Association of Canada, 100 boys, among them Aram, travelled to Canada in 1923, their destination a farm where they would be cared for, educated and trained to be farm helpers. These boys came to be known as the Georgetown Boys.

Skrypuch’s tale is an affecting one, made even more so by artist Woods’s limpid paintings of the bucolic Canadian farmland. The boys’ experiences in and their reactions to their new country and home are revealed via Aram’s eyes and voice: the disgust with which they greet the gooey mess of porridge, their breakfast; their disbelief when they are given new, Canadian names – those of individuals who have sponsored them; their bewilderment about new customs like bed-making; and their relief when a kind Canadian of Armenian descent comes to stay with them and explicates their new world for them.

As this book ends, Aram declares, ” ‘My name is Aram Davidian. And I am a Canadian.’ He would never get tired of saying that.”

Appended are archival photographs of the Georgetown Boys, a historical note and lists of suggested reading, Internet sites and films.

The Freckled Lion’s awesome launch of Call Me Aram!

In the afternoon, Kate Murray of the Freckled Lion rented the building that had been the dorm for the Georgetown Boys. The kids arrived:

And they got their books signed:

After the student presentation, we went to the Freckled Lion. Here’s a photo of me with Philippe, who played Aram in the play,

and Kate Murray, bookseller extraordinaire:

And here’s a photo of me holding Rob Weston’s AMAZING Zorgamazoo, and Rob holding my Call Me Aram:

Note the crutches in the corner. I don’t recommend doing a book launch while on crutches, but authors will launch despite sleet and rain and snow and torn cartilage….

School for Young Writers opens its virtual doors

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Adrian Hoad-Reddick
The School for Young Writers
519-831-0035
519-846-5259 (fax)
hoad@hoadworks.com
www.sschoolforyoungwriters.com

The School for Young Writers, with an Award-Winning Faculty, Opens Its Virtual Doors to Aspiring Writers

February 3, 2009 The School for Young Writers launches March 1, 2009 with seven exciting 12-week online courses. Each project-based course provides students with one-on-one attention of a writing mentor, a supportive community of peers and authentic publishing opportunities.

Teacher and New Media CEO Adrian Hoad-Reddick has united leading edge web technology, the very best writing mentors and strategic publishing partners to nurture the talents of young writers, ages 10-21. Hoad-Reddick has assembled an award-winning faculty with proven teaching credentials. The faculty includes Governor-General award winning playwright Vern Thiessen, acclaimed novelist Edeet Ravel, YA novelists Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch and Jean Mills, freelance writer and editor, Heather Wright, screenwriter and film-maker Rob Santaguida and Mike Leslie, Managing Editor of What If? Canada’s Creative Magazine for Teens. Hoad-Reddick hopes to build a truly international faculty and vows that “The School for Young Writers will be flexible and work around the busy lives of its aspiring and professional writers. It’s anytime, anywhere learning in a medium that places high value on the written word.”

Screenwriting Mentor Ron Santaguida captures well the mission of the School: “One of our main goals is for the students to love writing more than when they started the course. We will guide them. But gently. When you’re that young the world just seems to swirl around you and discourage you, the opportunities to express oneself are limited and generally regarded with disapproval. We want to offer the students a chance to do something incredible.”

To apply for courses, or for more information about The School for Young Writers’ visit www.schoolforyoungwriters.com.

Adrian Hoad-Reddick has made creativity and literacy mainstays of his 23-year teaching career. He hosts a weekly live literary radio show with his students, he developed and maintains a website that allows young readers around the world to publish illustrated book reports, and he created a vocabulary series with his students. The School for Young Writers was inspired in part by a visit to Dave Eggers’ 826Valencia tutoring centre in San Francisco, where Hoad-Reddick witnessed the powerful influence of one-on-one attention on student achievement in a highly creative setting.

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