EVADNE MACEDO ON WRITING

FICTION – FOR A CHANGE

Upcoming interview: Priscila Uppal on March 17, 2010 / Great news: “Underground” by June Hutton shortlisted for Evergreen Award!

March10

Priscila Uppal interview coming on March 17, 2010

Visit http://books.macedo.ca on March 17, 2010 for Evadne Macedo’s interview with Priscila Uppal (poet, professor and novelist). Priscila Uppal was poet-in-residence for Canadian Athletes Now for the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Priscila Uppal recently published her sixth and seventh collections of poetry, Successful Tragedies: Poems 1998 – 2010, and Traumatology. Priscila Uppal has written two novels (The Divine Economy of Salvation and To Whom it May Concern) and five other collections of poetry (Ontological Necessities, Live Coverage, Pretending to Die, Confessions of a Fertility Expert, and How to Draw Blood from a Stone). Priscila Uppal is a professor at York University and her academic book, We Are What We Mourn: The Contemporary English-Canadian Elegy, was published by McGill-Queen’s University Press in 2009.

June Hutton Shortlisted for Evergreen Award

I was really excited to hear from June Hutton, founding member of the SPIN writing group, who I interviewed on January 6, 2010. Her novel, Underground, was recently shortlisted for Ontario’s 2010 Evergreen Award. Librarians came up with the nominations and the short list but as of April 2010, it will be a people’s choice award. Readers get a chance to vote on their favourite among the shortlisted titles in October. If you look back at my interview with June, you will note that many of my questions related to her writing. I studied her novel as part of refining my own approach to writing and have made progress in paring down my language, aiming for the sort of economy of words June Hutton achieved in Underground. Whether you are a writer or a reader (or both), it is worth reading this book.

I also wanted to mention a couple of points I found out about the Ontario Library Association (OLA) when I checked into this award. You may not know (and I confess that I did not until I prepared this posting) that the OLA runs a reading program called a Forest of Trees for all ages. The program celebrates Canadian authors (the books must be written by a Canadian citizen or landed immigrant and commercially available in Canada).

For younger readers:
Blue Spruce™Awards Reading Program (primary–grade 2 picture books)
Silver Birch® Awards Reading Program (grades 3–6 fiction, non-fiction)
Silver Birch Express™ Awards Reading Program (grades 3–4 fiction, non-fiction)
Red Maple™ Awards Reading Program (grades 7–8 fiction, non-fiction)
White Pine™ Awards Reading Program (high school fiction)
Le Prix Tamarack™ (french fiction, non-fiction grades 3–6)

For Adults:
Golden Oak™ Awards Reading Program (adults learning to read; ESL, fiction)
Evergreen™ Award Reading Program (adults of any age, fiction)

Canada Also Reads – Vote!

Finally, I have to mention that we have until 1 pm on Monday March 15, 2010 to vote for The Best Laid Plans on Canada Also Reads (a competition to choose the book that Canada should also read. This competition is running parallel to Canada Reads [the results for that competition will announced on March 15, 2010 and I am hoping that either Wayson Choy's The Jade Peony or Ann-Marie MacDonald's Fall on Your Knees will win ... like Terry, Wayson Choy has been a fantastic mentor to many unpublished writers]). I previously wrote about my sentimental connection to The Best Laid Plans, but I think that anyone who has read it would agree with me that it is a great book. It still astounds me that a book that ultimately won the Leacock Medal (2008) had such a hard time finding a willing publisher. Luckily, Terry persevered and is now finding an enthusiastic audience for his podcasts (the number of listeners is still growing three years after he first posted them). There is also an expanding readership for The Best Laid Plans and Terry Fallis’s second novel, The High Road (which will be blurbed by Ian Ferguson). If you enjoy reading my author interviews and hearding about my novels, I hope that you will vote for The Best Laid Plans because that that book is the one that made me a writer (my novels are the by-products of that process … weird but true). Vote for The Best Laid Plans if you read the book and loved it, or if you like Canadian politics, the idea of self-published writers being successful, well-written satires, nice guys who mentor unpublished writers or the essay Andy Maize wrote defending The Best Laid Plans. The winner will be announced on March 16, 2010.

Upcoming author interviews

  • Anar Ali (Baby Khaki’s Wings)
  • Kristen den Hartog, author of three novels (Water WingsOrigin of Haloes, The Perpetual Ending), and a non-fiction book (The Occupied Garden which was co-written with Tracy Kasaboski))
  • Sarah Sheard, psychotherapist and author of three novels (Almost Japanese, The Swing Era: a Novel, The Hypnotist: a Novel) 
  • List of Evadne Macedo’s previous author interviews and profiles

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