Author Archives: Vera

The (Not so) Nice Italian Girls & Friends are at it again.

THE (Not so) NICE ITALIAN GIRLS & FRIENDS
Celebrate new and emerging writers …
Wednesday, May 16th, 2012. 7:30pm

ANNEX LIVE
296 BRUNSWICK AVE., south of Bloor St.

FEATURING:
WHITNEY FRENCH
SUZANNE ROBERTSON
LINDSAY SMAIL
DANE SWAN
LISA YOUNG
with emcees MICHELLE ALFANO & GIOVANNA RICCIO

Come early and enjoy the food and ambiance at Annex Live!

FOR MORE INFO PLEASE GO TO: notsoniceitaliangirls.blogspot.com
THE (Not so) NICE ITALIAN
GIRLS & FRIENDS Celebrate new and emerging writers …
Wednesday, May 16th, 2012. 7:30pm

NHT! Capybara Launch

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Descant Arts & Letters Foundation‘s NOW HEAR THIS! literacy program sends professional writers into schools to conduct writing workshops with students. These workshops help develop literacy skills, cultivate talent and creativity, encourage self-expression and foster analytical skills and critical thought.

After the program’s successful fifth year, we were proud to launch The CAPYBARA, our latest (and third) anthology of student-written stories, poems, and personal essays on March 23, 2011, at the Gardiner Museum in Toronto’s downtown core.

The event was a huge success, despite old man winter’s final attempt to snow us under and discourage anyone from venturing outside. Over 150 people traipsed through the blizzard from all over Toronto to be in attendance. In fact, it was standing room only! Program co-ordinator Rachel Hopwood MC’d the evening’s program, which included student readings, short speeches by Teresa Paoli of the Toronto Catholic District School Board, and Karen Mulhallen, editor-in-chief of Descant and president of the Foundation. Two writers-in-residence read from some of their work, as well. Many thanks were voiced, including a huge ‘thank you’ to the Ontario Trillium Foundation who provide the funding that makes the initiative possible. Gourmet fries and crudites by Jamie Kennedy Kitchens were enjoyed by all.

We thank everyone for coming out to support the program and the students, and for enjoying the evening with us!

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DESCANT 152/Ghosts and The Uncanny Launch

 

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Come out and help us celebrate the release of Descant 152: Ghosts and The Uncanny, which will hit store shelves on March 28th.

April 6th at 7:30 p.m.

George Brown House

(186 Beverley St., Toronto)

Enter – if you dare – the beautiful, historic and allegedly haunted George Brown House and be greeted by the eerie music of violinist Phoebe Tsang, of the National Ballet of Canada orchestra. Enjoy readings of fiction, non-fiction and poetry from Descant 152 contributors Richard Rosenbaum, Jennifer Oliver, Kate Cayley and Daniel Zuckerbrot. Help yourself to a drink at our cash bar and mingle with fellow literature and art lovers.

We received more submissions for Descant 152 than ever before in its forty-year history, and Guest Editors Alex Maeve Campbell and Tina Francisco bravely undertook to sift through all of them to bring us this outstanding collection of fiction, poetry, essay, memoir and visual art. The collection takes a daring look into the world of the dead, sometimes
beckoning to it, even daring to interact with it.

The line between life and death is a fine one, Douglas Curran shows us in his memoir, It Happens: The Death of John Kanjadza. Ghosts can be very friendly, as Katherine Hajer shows in her short story The Expected Ghost, or highly malicious, like the ghost in Jay Snodgrass’s poem My Ghost Made an Art Movie, Too. Most often, though, they seem too busy with their own affairs to mind about the living. Ben Rawluk brings the uncanny – a jingle-jangling man made up entirely of light bulbs – right to our doorsteps: “Don’t just stand there,” he writes, berating our open-mouthed shock, “Invite him inside.”

Don’t miss this ghostly gathering! Check out our website after March 18th, 2011 for a sneak peek at the issue.

DESCANT Congratulates 23 Poets

Further to our blog entry of February 16th, we would like to confirm the names of each poet short listed for this year’s Winston Collins Prize for Best Canadian Poem.*

For 2011, our ‘short list’ includes the names of 23 individuals. Their names and poems are as follows:

Wendy Brandts                         Ardent Awakenings

Roger Bell                                Oh Wendy

Barry Butson                            Things I Touch

Terry Ann Carter                       The Call

Joan Crate                                Cherry Jam

Barry Dempster                        A Circle Of White Deck Chairs

Kildare Dobbs                          September 1939

Kate Marshall-Flaherty             Apocalypse of Bees

Susan Glickman                      Things From Which One Never Recovers

Elizabeth Greene                     Planet of the Lost Things

Gillian Harding-Russell             Gerontian Thoughts

Margaret Hollingsworth            Some Sage Said

Sheldon Inkol                          She Does Not Want

Ellen S. Jaffe                           Remembering September Tenth

Ellen S. Jaffe                           Continental Drift

Donna Langevin                      In Lieu of an Obit

Kathy Mac                              Lachesis Descends from the Mountain Alone

Anna Mamcini                        The Treeplanters

Talya Rubin                            Leaving the Island

Renee Sarojini-Saklikar           June 1981

Karen Schnidler                      Brief History

Susan Stenson                       Romantic Poetry

Josh Stewart                          Skeleton Beach

Myna Wallin                          The Self As Both Object And Subject

Descant congratulates each of these poets for their fine contributions to Canadian culture and contemporary literature.

We would also like to thank everyone who participated this year. We invite you all to consider entering our 2012 competition this fall. More details about next year’s event can be found at: http://www.descant.ca/contest.html

* We wish to confirm that all short listed entries will be clearly cited on our blog and website in the future. This information was not included in our previous blog entry, for which we apologize. Staffing changes this January led, regretfully, to a few items ‘slipping through the cracks.’ Again, we apologize for this temporary oversight.

Winston Collins Winner and Honourable Mentions of 2011

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On February 8, 2011 Descant announced the winner and two honourable mentions for this year’s 2011 Winston Collins/Descant Prize for Best Canadian Poem at Supermarket, Toronto. The night went off wonderfully with a speech from Descant’s editor-in-chief, Karen Mulhallen. We were lucky enough to have readings from Linda Woolven, Elisabeth de Mariaffi, Giovanna Riccio and R. Brian Rigg, as well as our three finalists who also read their winning poems (Pamela Porter read via a uTube video).

The winner of the Winston Collins Prize and $1,000 in prize money was Barbara Schott, with her poem Thin Ice. The judges described this winning poem: “This poet has turned a winter drowning into a rumination on our own personal descent into a cold wet world…’Thin Ice’ works on the surface as an accounting of failure, of childhood promise that is doused and expectations disappointed. Yet the beauty of the world surrounds us, our final breath is full of the sight of it…It is a humble poem about the ego and about ego’s loss, and while we submerge into the icy depths we read the poem – it is about us! – scrawled on the bridge above.”

Honourable mention, winning $250 in prize money, was Carla Hartenberger, with Naked in the Sun. The judges spoke highly of this poem, “By the last words of this poem the reader may be filled with such a sense of loss and heartbreak that they may not be sure whether it was the poem that effected them so… That is because the summer that the poet recalls having spent in her youth with a sweetheart resonates so strongly that it will undoubtedly remind the reader of a summer they too had at some time. The poet uses a breathless, frolicking stream of consciousness to achieve this.”

Honourable mention, also winning $250 prize money, Pamela Porter with The Place of Feathers. The judges said this about her poem: “The author sees a landscape covered in feathers and allows herself to come to the conclusion that it was a multitude of angels that passed this way. This short poem describes the way that the natural world can transport us into the realm of myth and narrative. ‘The Place of Feathers’ takes an arresting moment and essentially arrests it, holding us there to feel that moment over and over again.”

The competition was fierce in its fifth anniversary, approximately 100 submissions came in from across Canada—from Victoria, British Columbia to Chateau Guay, Quebec; from Whitehorse, Yukon to Goulds, Newfoundland; from Canadians living as far away as Australia. Two rounds of judging narrowed the list down to 27 contenders, then to the final three.

The event was also for the launch of D151: Winter Reader, which is available in stores now. Descant would like to congratulate Kathleen Painter on organizing a wonderful evening and producing an enchanting issue. If you would like to have one delivered to your home, then please subscribe today by clicking here

Descant would also like to congratulate the three winners, as well as all those who made it onto the short list. We would also like to thank those came to the event on Tuesday 8th, we hope you had an enjoyable evening.

Happy Holidays from DESCANT!

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Happy Holidays to friends and subscribers of DESCANT!

As 2010 draws to a close, we want to express our thanks to all who have supported us through another successful year. Your commitment to the literary and fine arts community is deeply valued: the generosity of a devoted readership makes the work of small publications like us possible (and gratifying).

DESCANT has enjoyed bringing you four volumes of the best in new writing and visual arts, from Canada and abroad; we hope that issues 148-151 have provided you with many hours of stimulating, satisfying reading — and that you look forward to curling up with more in 2011!

Warm wishes for a safe and happy holiday — from DESCANT.

DESCANT at Toronto Small Press Book Fair, Dec 11, 11am-4:30pm

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Toronto Small Press Book Fair
Saturday Dec 11, 11am-4:30pm
1087 Queen St W (at Dovercourt Rd. Some street parking. Public Transit: TTC Queen Streetcar).

Descant is inviting you to join us at this year’s winter Toronto Small Press Book Fair. From 11am to 4:30pm on Dec 11, publishers, writers, fans and friends of Canada’s smaller presses/publishers/publications will gather at the Great Hall.

Small to medium-sized presses will offer all kinds of books for sale, including chapbooks, graphic novels, audio books, magazines and comics, arts & crafts that offer different perspectives and opportunities to enjoy alternative literary experiences. The Fair is also offering readings from some of Toronto’s better known and emerging writing talents. As well there will be door prizes to be won and every opportunity to mingle. The Toronto Small Press Book Fair offers family-friendly fare, too.

Descant’s new D:151 “Winter Reader” will be available to purchase at this event!
Hope to see you there!

For more information on the Toronto Small Press Book Fair and link to their website, click here.

Hope to see you at the DESCANT/NHT! Winter Party!

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NOW HEAR THIS! and Descant are celebrating the holidays in style with our second annual Holiday Extravaganza. The festivities take place Wednesday, December 8 at the Free Times Cafe, Toronto, 7- 10 P.M.

All the cards are out for this party! There will be free hors d’oeuvres and drinks, plus we’ll be having our ever-exciting book raffle. And to switch it up, we’ll be ushering in an evening of special musical guests.

Come out and support NOW HEAR THIS! and Descant at the year-end bash. What else could you ask for this holiday season?

Please R.S.V.P. at the Facebook event page by clicking click here

See you there!

Review of DESCANT 150

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We are pleased to say that there has been a very positive review of Descant 150: Writers in Prison posted on newpages.com; to read the review click here

D150 is currently on newstands to purchase and see for yourself what the review is talking about.

If you wish to purchase this and any forthcoming Descant publication then subscribe here today to have them mailed to your home.

DESCANT Recommends: Pilot Project Book 7 Launch

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Descant would like to recommend Pilot Pocket Book 7. The launch will take place at Toronto’s Tequila Bookworm, on Sunday Nov 7 at 6pm. There will be live performances, readings and an art auction. It’s set to be a great night for all!

By the way, Descant’s own Managing Editor Mark Laliberte has a project in Pilot 7, so don’t forget to pick up a copy.
If you want to know more about The Pilot Project then head over to their website by clicking here