Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Summer Fiction Issue Launch Reminder and Some Fiddlehead News

Don't forget that our summer fiction issue launch happens tomorrow, August 1 at 7pm. Come down to Gallery 78 in downtown Fredericton (796 Queen Street) and celebrate this strong issue. The launch coincides with Fredericton's culture crawl, a walking tour of downtown galleries and museums.

The Fiddlehead would also like to congratulate a long-time friend of the magazine, Shane Rhodes, who completed his MA in creative writing at UNB and worked on the editorial board of the magazine while completing his studies. Shane has just begun a stint as the 2013 Arts Queensland Poet in Residence down under in Australia. According to the press release, the director of the Queensland Poetry Festival Sara Gory says that it was "Rhodes' thought-provoking project, one exploring textual histories of colonisation, as well as his experimental style that made him stand out as an artist whose contribution to Australia’s poetry culture would be unique and invaluable." The Fiddlehead is proud to have published two poems from this project in the Winter 2013 issue.

Here's a link to the Queensland Poetry Festival.

The Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP) recently interviewed The Fiddlehead's editor Ross Leckie about the magazine's history and Canadian writing in general. Go read their "Moveable Type" interview with Ross here.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Summer Fiction Issue Launch!

When? 7pm on August 1, 2013 (as part of Downtown Fredericton's Culture Crawl)

Where? Gallery 78, 796 Queen St., Fredericton

Please drop by Gallery 78 August 1 for a launch and celebration of a very special Summer Fiction Issue of The Fiddlehead, an issue which boasts new stories from Dan Woodrell (writer of Oscar winner Winter’s Bone), Craig Davidson (writer of the film Rust and Bone and a UNB grad), local author Raymond Fraser, and three accomplished Irish writers, Mary O’Donnell, Mike McCormack and Eoin McNamee, the latter a Man Booker Prize nominee. There is a tense tale by Lt. Col. Wick Walker, who writes about stealth dealings with warlords and Saudis in Afghanistan just as the Russians are leaving, based on his own hair-raising experiences, and there are stories from newer young Canadian writers Amy Jones and Clea Young.

Please join us for brief readings from the Summer Fiction Issue to celebrate this very strong issue of The Fiddlehead.

Monday, July 22, 2013

The Fiddlehead's Summer Fiction Issue

Contributors and subscribers should be finding our summer fiction issue in their mailboxes across the country (and internationally) very soon.

This issue features stories by F.W. Birt, Craig Davidson, Jann Everard, Raymond Fraser, Hugh Graham, R.W Gray, Amy Jones, Mike McCormack, Eoin McNamee, Mary O'Donnell, Margaret Sweatman, Celia Thompson, J.M. Villaverde, Wickliffe Walker, Daniel Woodrell, and Clea Young.

Look for details soon about a launch here in Fredericton.

And while we're on the topic of fiction, our fiction editors have been very busy. Not only did fiction editor Mark Anthony Jarman provide the photograph that graces the cover of our summer issue, but earlier this year, he read a few times while over in Europe. He read at the Crescent Arts Centre while staying at the Seamus Heaney Centre in Belfast. And he gave a reading at the UCD Centre for Canadian Studies as part of their Distinguished Lecture Series. Here are those details along with a photo:

"The UCD Centre for Canadian Studies’ fortnightly Distinguished Lecture Series for 2013, funded by an award from the UCD College of Arts and Celtic Studies, has been showcasing the wealth of expertise among UCD’s academic staff in the subject area. With active support from the Canadian Embassy in Ireland, an array of visiting Canadian speakers have also contributed to this successful lecture series, the first part of which culminated on 22 April with the Canadian author, Mark A Jarman, reading from his most recent book of short stories, My White Planet, and his earlier travel book, Ireland’s Eye, which reflects upon contemporary Irish society and culture from the visitor’s perspective."

Pictured at the UCD Centre for Canadian Studies Distinguished Lecture Series in April 2013 were His Excellency Loyola Hearn, Ambassador of Canada to Ireland; Professor Maeve Conrick, Principal, UCD College of Arts and Celtic Studies; Mark A Jarman, Canadian author and academic, University of New Brunswick, Canada; and Professor Margaret Kelleher, Chair of Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama, UCD School of English, Drama and Film.
Jarman also has pieces published in three other current equally fine magazines, including Prairie Fire (placing second in their fiction contest), CNQ, and Descant.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Maritime Writers' Workshop Happens Next Week

UNB's Fredericton campus will be alive with words next week (July 8-12) as the 38th annual Maritime Writers' Workshops takes place. Participants can choose from a wide array of one-day or -evening workshops from many accomplished New Brunswick authors and publishers. Included among this year's instructors are two of The Fiddlehead's editors: fiction co-editor Gerard Beirne is leading "The Long and Short of Fiction Writing" on July 10 and poetry co-editor Ian LeTourneau is offering "Approaches to Nature Poetry" on July 12.

There are also a few free events that are open to the public. On July 10 (4 - 5:30 pm), Carolyn Gammon and Israel Unger launch their book The Unwritten Diary of Israel Unger in the Milham Room at the Harriet Irving Library. And then to wrap up the week, there will be an open mic at Windsor Castle Bar at the Alden Nowlan House at 676 Windsor Street. This event begins at 4:30 and all are welcome to come hear what the participants have been working on all week.

And if you hurry, you still have a few days left to register: the deadline is this Friday, July 5!

Click on Poster for more details!

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Whitehorse Poetry Festival 2013

The Fiddlehead's poetry co-editor Ian LeTourneau was one of the invited guests of the Whitehorse Poetry Festival this past weekend, and he reports that it was a fabulous time reading poetry under the midnight sun. This year's festival had a publishing and editing theme, and in addition to reading his own work, LeTourneau was there to talk about his experiences editing for The Fiddlehead and Goose Lane Editions.

The schedule also included Noelle Allen (publisher Wolsak and Wynn), Stephanie Bolster, Brad Cran, Dina Del Bucchia, Jamella Hagen, Kitty Lewis (general manager of Brick Books), Bren Simmers, Garry Thomas Morse and Jo Shapcott.

The very poetic and swift-moving Yukon River.
British poet Jo Shapcott.


Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Fiddlehead Contributors in the News

Photo courtesy of Malahat Review
This year's winner of The Fiddlehead's Ralph Gustafson Prize for Best Poem Kim Trainor has also won The Malahat Review's 2013 Long Poem Prize! Of her poem and of poetry in general, she says in an interview on The Malahat's website, "I like the idea of a poem as an artifact that goes out into the world like a coat or a bicycle or a lens that helps us to transform the material world and influences our interactions with others." You can read the full interview here.

Trainor certainly has had an excellent spring, which has also seen her place in The Antigonish Review's Great Blue Heron contest as well. Congratulations Kim!

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Previous Fiddlehead contributors Linda Besner, Stewart Cole, and David Seymour (who was also most recently one of our contest judges) are embarking on the 4th annual Fish Quill Poetry Boat Tour, a ten day poetry and music tour down the Grand River in southwestern Ontario. This year's tour takes place June 13-23 and will see the poetic paddlers travel from Elora to Six Nations of the Grand River Territory, camping along the river and performing in several small communities along the way.

More information can be found on the indiegogo campaign they've set up to help fund their travel, camping, food, and promotion costs.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Past Fiddlehead Contest Winner Announced as Regional Winner (Canada and Europe) of 2013 Commonwealth Short Story Prize

Photo credit: The Malahat Review
Eliza Robertson, winner of The Fiddlehead's short fiction contest in 2010 (published in no. 243) for her story "Worried Woman's Guide," has just been announced as the regional winner (Canada and Europe) of the prestigious 2013 Commonwealth Short Story Prize for "We Walked on Water."

In the press release, chair of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize Razia Iqbal said, “The short story is among the hardest forms to master. The five stories we chose as regional winners all pass the judges' tests of capturing a distinctive tone; creating fulsome characters; always deft in showing, not telling; subject matter both intimate and personal, as well as ranging across political landscapes. Reading them will transport you, as all good literature does, and introduce you to voices we are sure you will hear again.”

Recently, Eliza was also shortlisted for CBC's Canada Writes short fiction prize. You can read CBC's online interview with her here, where she names Fiddlehead fiction editor Mark Jarman as one of her favourite writers.

The winner of the Commonwealth Prize will be announced on May 31. Good luck, Eliza!

UPDATE! Eliza Robertson has been chosen as one of two winners of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize! The judges said that her story "We Walked on Water" is "an exhilarating story about the relationship between a brother and sister, both competitive swimmers. The descriptive writing is nothing short of strikingly beautiful, in terms of emotions felt, the natural environment and the structure." Congratulations from us at The Fiddlehead!