PEI WRITERS’ GUILD NEWSLETTER November 2014 A splendid time was had by all in attendance at the two Cox & Palmer Island Literary Award ceremonies on November 1st. This, despite a prolonged power outage before and during the Rotary Club of Charlottetown Royalty Creative Writing Awards for Young People. All in attendance were great sports as our special guests – His Honour, the Lieutenant Governor Frank H. Lewis, the Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development J. Alan McIsaac, and MP for Charlottetown Sean Casey – offered torchlit greetings to award recipients, their families, and our donors and partners. The results for the Rotary Club of Charlottetown Royalty Creative Writing for Youth awards are as follows: Early Elementary: First prize Abbi Melvin and Shanelle Jadis, and second prize Hope Affleck. Late Elementary: First: Keridwen Campbell, Second: Seth Dockendorff, Third: Milla MacVicar, and Honourable Mentions to Julia Doucette, Emma McQuaid, and Rebecca Ford. Junior High School: First: Grace Hickey, Second (tie): Meghan Morrell, Jaden Nantes, Third: Olivia Mullins, and Honourable Mentions: Eliza Weatherbie, Nicole Lukeman, and Shannon Murphy. Senior High School: First: Hayley VanIderstine, Second: Emily Pass, Third: Emily McClean, and Honourable Mentions: Petra Larsen, Sarah A. MacDonald, and Maddie Harding. At the gala evening event, attendees were greeted by jazz music from Ken Fornetran, Patrick LeClaire, and Isaac Williams, who was also our photographer. The session was MC’d by CBC host Karen Mair. Charlie G. Sark was the special guest reader. The results for the Adult Island Literary Awards are as follows: Milton Acorn Poetry Award: First: Ann Howatt, Second: Ashley Prince, Third: Charity Becker, and Honourable Mentions: Margot MaddisonMacFadyen, Margo Connors, and Olivia Robinson. Maritime Electric Short Story Award: First: Adam St. Pierre, Second: Margot MaddisonMacFadyen, Third: Chris Bailey, and Honourable Mentions: Stephanie Halldorson, Paul Barton, and Philip Macdonald. L.M. Montgomery Writing for Children Award: First: Tanya Nicolle MacCallum, Second: Sarah Elvidge, and Third: Michael Conway. Clary Pottie Creative NonFiction Award: First: Stephanie Halldorson, Second: Margo Connors, Third: Anna Karpinski, and Honourable Mentions: Ruby Madigan and George Curtis. Special awards were also given to the following: The School Participation Award for the most student entries was given to teacher Allison Giggy and Queen Charlotte Intermediate School; The UPEI Réshard Gool Award for Creative Writing was presented to Ruby Madigan; and The Distinguished Contribution to the Literary Arts of Prince Edward Island was awarded to Orysia Dawydiak. We extend our sincere thanks to our sponsors, partners, and donors: Cox & Palmer, Rotary Club of Charlottetown Royalty; Maritime Electric; Clary Pottie Family; Acorn Family; *Heirs of L.M. Montgomery; Department of Education and Early Childhood Development; City of Charlottetown; The Investors Group; The Guardian; The Buzz; P.E.I. Literacy Alliance; Provincial Credit Union; The Acorn Press; The Bookmark; P.E.I. Teacher’s Federation; P.E.I. Public Library Service; Dunes Studio and Gallery and Peter Janzen; Home Hardware Charlottetown; Hearts and Flowers; KKP Charlottetown; Orysia Dawydiak and David Sims; John Smith; Ed MacDonald; Wendy Shilton; Geoffrey Lindsay and Joy Tremblay; George Curtis; and our anonymous community donor. We also thank the folks who participated in concretizing the 2014 Awards: MCs Karen Mair and Lee Ellen Pottie; Judges: Valerie Compton, Sheree Fitch, Don Gayton, Susan Glickman, Allyson Trainor, and George Curtis; volunteers, and all those who submitted their work or contributed their time and effort to the 27th Cox & Palmer Island Literary Awards. Don’t forget the contest to win a free year’s membership with the PEIWG. See next page for details. L-R Robert Acorn, Mary Hooper, Dep. Mayor Stu MacFadyen, and st 1 place Milton Acorn Poetry winner Anne Howatt PEI WRITERS’ GUILD NEWSLETTER Upcoming Events/Workshops/Calls • NOVEMBER 25: Carriage House, Beaconsfield, 7 pm. Judy Gaudet will be launching her new book of poetry, Conversation with Crows, published by Oberon Press. Everyone welcome. • NOVEMBER 27: Newfoundland author Michael Crummey, who has just been nominated for the Governor General’s 2014 Literary Award for fiction, will be reading from his new novel Sweetland. Venue is the Confed Centre Gallery of Art, time is 7:30pm. Hosted by UPEI’s English Department and supported by the CCA and CCAG. • DECEMBER 1: Briarpatch is now accepting submissions of original, unpublished writing for their creative writing contest in the areas of creative non-fiction and poetry. Award-winning writers Candace Savage and John K. Samson are judging and there’s $750 in cash prizes. Check out: http://briarpatchmagazine.com/an nouncements/view/creativewriting-contest. • DECEMBER 6: Deirdre Kessler will be launching her new book, Mother Country (published by Oberon Press) at the Confederation Centre Public Library from 2:30 to 3:30. Deirdre Kessler is from an American family for whom home was a set of ideals: socialism, union solidarity. Her grandfather was buried in unconsecrated ground. Her mother was put in jail. Long ago Deirdre made a home on Prince Edward Island, where she found a new world of old ways and long memories. This book tells her story. • DECEMBER 13: Stratford author Roger Gordon will be signing copies of his new book, Starting to Frame a Memoir at The Bookmark, Charlottetown, 11 am to 1 pm. The book describes the author's life growing up in a working class home in Sheffield, England, during the 1940s to 60s, and being forced to deal with social stigmas of the era such as divorce, marital infidelity, and mental illness. It conveys messages of inspiration and resiliency. • JANUARY 15: (deadline extended) Nova Scotia has Eastword and we have Newsletter. With all the creative folk out there, someone must have a catchier name for this monthly sheet. Send your nominations to [email protected] and, by mid-December, the Executive (not eligible to enter) will have voted on a name. Winning entry will receive a free one-year membership in the PEIWG. JANUARY 22, 2014: The Port Bickerton and Area Planning Association is pleased to announce they are currently accepting applications for the annual artist in residence programme at the lightkeeper's house in Port Bickerton, Nova Scotia. For details, check out: http://www.portbickertonlighthou se.ca/artist-in-residence-program/ • MARCH 1, 2015: The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB, England and Wales) is holding the 2014 Rialto Nature Poetry Competition. For a look at the lovely cash prizes and to see more contest details, visit: http://www.therialto.co.uk/pages/ nature-poetry-competition-2014/ APRIL 15, 2015: Get your unpublished student writing, short fiction, poetry, children’s writing, creative non-fiction ready, or start writing now. The 28th Cox & Palmer Island Literary Awards are moving back to the spring. Details on our website soon. ONGOING: Are you looking for a writing group or a book club? Are you looking for members for your writing group or book club? If yes, get in touch with us at [email protected] and we’ll try to match you up. We have someone currently looking for a writing group – are you interested? PEI WRITERS’ GUILD NEWSLETTER 2014 Winner of Maritime Electric Short Story Category 27th Cox & Palmer Island Literary Awards The Old Sadogue By Adam St. Pierre I could barely read then but even I knew how the story of the Old Sadogue began. "Wherever he goes, the fish follow in his wake." They said he was fat like a walrus and had tusks like them too, hidden beneath a great white beard that put every other beard to shame. He sailed in a dinghy along the coast, stopping in each harbour only a few days. He would drink with the sailors, dance with their wives, settle disputes, and recite poetry of the north, where men fought bears and people lived in the ice itself. In his absence those comforting words were often repeated by everyone in the outport, a little prayer to our neighbour deity, filling a ll otherwise caked with worry. I looked up from the book of black leather and yellow paper and asked if the thing about the tusks was true. Da said words that had a way of shiftin' shape as they went from mouth to ear, but if it was written on the page it was the truth. I was only eight then and I believed him. We were sitting on a wet shore just after dusk, the cold wind coming in off the water and following the river inland. Down a ways I could see the glow of the outport over a hill, silhouettes of the tall, empty trees winding like cracks in the sky. It would be my first time meeting the Old Sadogue and something wild and delirious beat within my chest. "You think he'll come?" I asked. "We're in need." "We needed last year too." "Not as much." I believed him. Da said he planted me in mum when the Old Sadogue last passed through because he knew the fishing would be good for that season and the next. When families could eat, families grew, and there were lots of boys and girls my age around the outport. But for the last three seasons the boats were coming back hollow and the sailors grew ever more sour. By the time the leaves turned and the ice collected in the harbour that year, they had spent more time in the pub than at sea, drowning in something other than the waves. Every kid knew the Old Sadogue would soon return and our eagerness to see him never faded even as we starved. Outside the schoolhouse, while our teacher slept, we took turns as the fat fisher king, holding court in the barn around back. The boys would come to trade sticks or rocks for cod, while the girls sought blessings to marry their crush. The older kids hogged the stage but we didn't mind, for they said they had seen the Old Sadogue, and their excitement was something real and contagious. We knew we'd be older soon, our voices just as booming, our joy just as real. One time Little Eld McCoy said he didn't exist, that it was all a dumb secret the adults kept. A group of us trapped him in the loft and ran home, laughing all the way. Da was breaking down old lobster traps with his bare hands. He snapped the thin planks of wood over his knee and tossed them into a fire he lit with his lamp. He said the Old Sadogue would come in on a bout of fog, but when I squinted past the flame out on the ocean I could see the stars and the horizon and what mum called the Spilled Milk rushing over it. The fire grew tall as he added log and splint until it was our beacon on the shore. "Mr. Batt said he could bring the Old Sadogue back." I said. "Mmm?" "He said if I brought the older girls from class round his shack, the Old Sadogue would be here tomorrow." "Well," he tugged at a stubborn bit of rope stuck in a trap, "You forget bout Mr. Batt, he's a bad drunk and PEI WRITERS’ GUILD NEWSLETTER a liar too it sounds." "Oh." It was supposed to be a secret. I felt bad for mentioning it and even worse that it was a lie. "Mac said he could help us, said he knew a sure way to get 'im come around." "Maybe, but Mac don't know what we know." I wasn't sure what we knew and looked back down at the book in my hands. There was nothing on either cover save for years of scuffing and bend marks. It was thick, each page a torrent of loops and weaves spilling over each other and shoved in at all angles. I recognized a few capital letters, but others were written like waves, turning pages into storming seas of ink. Da wiped his hands and came around the fire to me. "You hungry?" It was the first thing he asked me all night. When I nodded he smiled and said, "Not for long." He gave me his salt crusted pea coat to brace against the cold and took the black leather book. You could number the ribs through his shirt and trace the muscles weaving down his arm but he stood tall and proud as I ever seen him. He dove between the covers, deft fingers dancing over pages, mumbling the words in a venerable tongue for ritual and guidance. When finished he handed the book back and lifted his lantern from the sand. He walked down to the tideline with his pants rolled up then waded out further and stood there with the water lapping over his knees. He swung his lantern three times, the reflection like a wisp of ghost light rippling around him, bathing him in yellow glow. We waited and the fire whipped with the wind, burning bright but slowly subsiding to the blowing cold. I watched Da just standing there, looking out on the water, until the fire was nothing more than a scab in the sand. I could hear dogs barking from the outport and the dark was creeping into my vision. He swung the lantern a few more times, just a speck now, and I could tell he was shivering and the tide was coming in. A curious moon peeked from behind some clouds overhead as he came plodding back up the beach. He was grumbling all the words he saved for sailors and bottles, the ones I wasn't allowed to say. He kicked sand over the humble embers that remained and swiped the book from my hands, gripping it between his finger and thumb. It was the same way he held any small cod or crab before tossing it back into the sea and I saw him look back out over the water, judging the distance. I wanted to say something to make him laugh, but knew better than to say anything at all when he was like that, and instead buried my face in his coat sleeves. I listened for a distant plunk but heard only the wind and a choking sigh taken with it. When I looked up Da was looking down at me, his face full of worry in the lantern light. "Lets head in." He said, the book stowed under his belt. "Not this season?" My stomach groaned like it knew. "Next season." He said. And I believed him. The Author: Originally from Charlottetown, Adam St. Pierre is a liar, a thief, and occasional writer. He blogs at thesaccade.com because that's the only place that will publish him. He currently lives in Halifax. (ed. This is the biography that Adam shared. We didn’t make it up.)
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