September Newsletter
Powell River Writers Conference
September, 2010 Newsletter
Free For Members
Would you like more exposure for FREE at your next book reading or book launch? Read online about this new benefit just for being a PRWC member. Membership is $10.
Writing Contest
Are you itching to enter a contest and win cash? For the second year in a row we are holding a fall writing contest. Guidelines on the site.
For all this and more go to: www.prwriters.org
Please pass this on to all your writer friends where ever they live in the world. They all can benefit from belonging to Powell River Writers Conference.
Thank You PRCACH
We are very pleased to announce that after applying to Powell River Council for Arts, Culture and Heritage to cover the cost of Dwight Hall for the 2011 conference, we were accepted. Sept.12 Barb and Dave Rees attended the AGM and were presented with the letter saying: ” We wish to inform you that your application for in-kind assistance in producing the next Writers Conference at Dwight Hall in April 2011, has been approved in the amount of $600.” Thank you PRCACH.
Writer Looking for Cranberry Tales
What on earth are Tales of the Cranberryites? My home town of Powell River just celebrated its 100th anniversary. Powell River has had several books written about it and boasts many home grown artists that are renowned for their works. What was missing? There were many well written narratives about Powell River, as well as heritage tours and buildings. Therefore I decided to dive into a smaller, often hidden area of both time and space.
Growing up in a coastal village that became a municipality, and then a city was unique for several reasons. We grew up in a bubble of isolation both physical and emotional. The people I speak of are the baby boomers, those of us born shortly after world war two. Why are we unique? The world had just gone through a massive depression of the 30’s followed by a horrific world war that brought to us genocide on an organized scale. In addition to this, we were raised in a coastal one industry community accessible only by boat or air. These stories are about the average teenagers of our time. That is, the late 1950’s to the early 70’s.
Teenagers nowadays live in an environment that is symbiotically attached to high technology. This includes the prevalent access to the Internet, the use of special gadgets such as the cell phone, palm top computers, electrical organizers, and the like. We lived in a world that had the peacefulness and simplistic reality which is a bygone era. Some from the here and now would like to think we were naïve, simplistic and led boring life styles. Nothing could be further from the truth. Those I write about in this book were the real Jimmy Dean’s. Stories from the generation that broke with social conventions marched against war and protested the growing globalization of ethics and jobs. These stories are well documented, sometimes by those that never saw a protest march in their life. My book does not challenge or contest this; rather I fill the pages with real stories from real people.
Come with me back to an era that not only is gone, but should never be forgotten. Read about the honest self-assured independence of youth, which existed within a code of social ethics which to some is outdated. I am not Mark Twain, but in some ways I travel back to the Huckleberry Finns and Tom Sawyers of Powell River’s past.
If you have any stories to share about growing up in the Powell River area, please feel free to contact me. The names of the people in my stories are not revealed.
Bud Gilham
Buddy’s World of Books: Telephone or Fax 604-487-4172
E-Mail:Tyco_pen@hotmail.com.
Rules for Writers - Just for chuckles
1. Avoid alliteration. Always.
2. Prepositions are not words to end sentences with.
3. Avoid cliches like the plague. (They’re old hat.)
4. Employ the vernacular.
5. Eschew ampersands & abbreviations, etc.
6. Parenthetical remarks (however relevant) are unnecessary.
7. It is wrong to ever split an infinitive.
8. Contractions aren’t necessary.
9. Foreign words and phrases are not apropos.
10. One should never generalize.
11. Eliminate quotations. As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said: “I hate quotations. Tell me what you know.”
12. Comparisons are as bad as cliches.
13. Don’t be redundant; don’t use more words than necessary; it’s highly superfluous.
14. Profanity stinks.
15. Be more or less specific.
16. Understatement is always best.
17. Exaggeration is a billion times worse than understatement.
18. One-word sentences? Eliminate.
19. Analogies in writing are like feathers on a snake.
20. The passive voice is to be avoided.
21. Go around the barn at high noon to avoid colloquialisms.
22. Even if a mixed metaphor sings, it should be derailed.
23. Who needs rhetorical questions?
