Kathy Stinson ~ Turning the Pages
Canadian Author of Books for Young People
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Archive for Workshop

Our 7th Seaside Workshop/Retreat

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, February 6th, 2013

Word is spreading across the country that the place to be in September is at the Seaside Workshop/Retreat that Peter Carver and I have been offering for several years now. Thanks to all participants who have shared their enthusiasm for the experience.

Port Joli, Nova Scotia

We offer time to write free of interruptions, feedback on your current writing project, and opportunities for solitude and hanging out with fellow writers. All in a beautiful setting on the south shore of Nova Scotia.

We are now accepting applications. Deadline April 30, 2013.

Want to know more?

Comments (0)
Categories : Professional Development, Retreat, Workshop, Writing
Tags : Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Writing Workshop, Peter Carver, support for writers, writing retreat, writing workshops

A Place for Group Creativity and Solitude

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

Groupthink: the brainstorming myth, an article in the New Yorker, got me thinking recently about my writing group and how we’ve benefited from occasionally inviting guest fellow writers to participate in discussions of our projects and to share their work for feedback. It also helped me understand better why the Seaside Writing Workshop/Retreat works so well for the six writers lucky enough to attend each year.

seashells

Is it time to give your current writing project the benefit of ‘groupthink’ (as opposed to ‘brainstorming’ as we’ve long been told is effective) – and the benefit of hours of quiet solitude in which to take advantage of the possibilities that great discussion of your work can open up for you? Deadline for applications is April 30.

Comments (0)
Categories : Retreat, Workshop, Writing
Tags : groupthink, writing workshop

Photo of the Month #2

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

This month’s photo, like last month’s, was taken in Nova Scotia – this time on the beach at the Kejimkukik Seaside Adjunct. We’ve taken our Seaside Writing Workshop Retreat participants there each year, and hope to again this year, but in this photo it’s my lovely daughter enjoying the enormous sky and exploring one of the the massive rocky outcrops there.

on the beach at the Kejimkukik Seaside Adjunct

Comments (0)
Categories : Life in General, Photography, Workshop
Tags : Nova Scotia, photos

Writing by the Sea

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

Picture yourself writing on the beautiful south shore of Nova Scotia in September. (The best month to be there, say the locals.) Imagine getting expert feedback there from one of Canada’s leading editors and one of Canada’s leading writers for young people that will help you take your current project to new heights of brilliance.

Sunset on the South Shore of Nova Scotia

The good news is: you may not have to just imagine. Peter Carver and I are offering our Seaside Writing Workshop/Retreat again this year – to six lucky writers dedicated to their craft. We welcome applications from novices and veterans alike.

Find out all you need to know about how to apply, where you’ll stay, the setting, and what former participants in the experience have to say about it. You can also read more and see more photos in other blog postings about the workshop/retreat.

Comments (0)
Categories : Professional Development, Retreat, Workshop
Tags : Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Writing Workshop, Peter Carver, support for writers, writing retreat, writing workshops

Do you write full-time now, or do you have another job, too?

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

I do my best to write full-time, but I don’t earn enough money from book sales to make a full income, so I do other things – related to writing – to make up what I need.

I work as an editor.

I lead writing workshops for adults and for children.

I speak at conferences.

I do author visits at schools and libraries.

I also teach writing classes and have worked as a Writer in Residence for public libraries in East York, Toronto, Kitchener and Vaughan, and for the Writer In Electronic Residence program which linked me via computer to student and professional writers all across Canada.

Now you know why I say I ‘do my best’ to write full-time. It’s not easy to make a living by writing alone!

Find answers to other FAQs here.

Comments (0)
Categories : Author Visits, FAQs, Life in General, Workshop
Tags : career, profession, writing

Can you help me get published?

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

I have no ins with any of the publishers I’ve worked with as a writer or as an editor, so beyond encouraging you to continue honing your craft (by writing lots and perhaps attending classes or workshops), there’s nothing else I can do to help you get published.

However, there are lots of websites that offer guidance about various aspects of the business of publishing. Here’s one to get you started.

Highspot Inc. – free resources for writers includes one about using social media to promote your books

For a light-hearted answer to this question, watch this video:


Find answers to other FAQs here.

Comments (0)
Categories : FAQs, Workshop, Writing
Tags : how to get published

More Books (and Almost Books) by Seaside Retreat/Workshop Alumni

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

The Mealworm Diaries by Anna Kerz Having described the development of Jan Coates’s A Hare in the Elephant’s Trunk in a previous post, I want to give a plug to three other writers whose work has benefited from participation in the seaside workshop/retreat that Peter Carver and I offer each summer.

Anna Kerz brought the manuscript for The Mealworm Diaries to Nova Scotia in 2006. After workshopping it with the group and a one-on-one feedback session with me, the book (Anna’s first; she now has 3) was published by Orca Books in 2009.

Caroline Pignat brought a manuscript to PJ (the first time she came) that became a series of novels eventually published by Red Deer Press.

Caroline says:

The first time at PJ I worked on Greener Grass. My one-on-one was with you and you gave me great direction with the main character. Most of the exciting stuff was happening to her older sister Moira. After your insight, I got rid of Moira and made it happen to Kit. Another great help was our discussion on how to write about difficult subjects like famine, death, disease when writing for kids, or any audience for that matter. I’d read your Marie Claire books and your insight on that really helped me see that it’s about the character, and if we care about the character we can see them go through all kinds of trials as long as there’s a ray of hope. You also showed me that we don’t need to sugar coat the facts for young readers… Both you and Peter helped me to see that the idea might be larger than one novel.

The second time I went I brought [another project] for group critiques. It’s a free verse YA that had two versions (one with a 9 year-old mc and one with a teen-angsty 17 year-old mc) and the group gave me insight into which age worked best. My writing time and one-on-one with Peter was used for Wild Geese (book#2) and I’ve just finished Timber Wolf (book#3) due out this fall.

Caroline will be speaking about writing historical fiction at CANSCAIP’s Packaging Your Imagination conference in November.

Erin Thomas has had books published since participating in the workshop/retreat, but not yet what she worked on there. She has, however, been awarded an Ontario Works in Progress grant to continue work on the manuscript she entertained us with last summer. (The segment she submitted with her application came almost directly out of PJ, she says.)

Here’s what else Erin (another repeat participant) has to say about her experience:

The stuff I learned at PJ (each time) helped me with the manuscripts I wrote after that. I haven’t gone back to work on ‘DN’ in years, but sometimes when I’m setting a scene, I hear a little Kathy-voice in my head reminding me to put things in the right order for the point of view.

And I still swear that someday I’m getting “what doesn’t add subtracts” tattooed across my knuckles so I can look at it while typing. Except that I don’t have enough knuckles. They’d have to share letters, and that might look funny.

Some of the things that Peter told me about dialogue and character and so on for ‘TISS’ were in my head when I was drafting the thing I wrote next (a juvenile historical), and I think that because of that, the draft came out better. In a lot of ways, it feels closer to being done than ‘TISS’ does, even though I haven’t done as many drafts of it yet. Maybe you guys are helping me make my drafts more efficient! (And wouldn’t that be lovely.)

The workshopping doesn’t help only the book that a participant brings to the retreat. It helps all the books that come after that one, too… It remains one of the best experiences of my writing career.

Do you have a manuscript in need of a fresh eye to read it and some quiet time to work on it? There’s still time to apply for this year’s workshop/retreat (but you only have till April 30!) Be sure to click on “Applications” for full details on what’s required.

Comments (0)
Categories : Workshop
Tags : Anna Kerz, Canadian authors, Caroline Pignat, Erin Thomas, Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Writing Workshop, Peter Carver, writing retreat

Jan Coates, An Alumnus of the Seaside Writing Workshop

By Kathy · Comments (3)
Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Jan Coates first came to our Seaside Writing Workshop/Retreat in 2008 to work on several picture book manuscripts she needed help with. Second Story Press had published Rainbows in the Dark in 2005, but since then, Jan had collected only rejection letters in response to her submissions.

During sessions focused on her work, she got feedback from me, Peter Carver, and the other workshops participants. During the hours of quiet writing time on Nova Scotia’s south shore, Jan worked on her picture books – and she responded to a writing exercise we’d assigned at the beginning of the week.

A Hare in the Elephant's Trunk On Friday evening, the six writers who’d been living and working, walking beaches and playing together since the previous Sunday gathered to read aloud to the group their writing assignments. What Jan wrote began to explore an idea that had been percolating for a new project, a novel this time.

You can read what Jan has said about her experience at Port Joli on the web page about the workshop/retreat on my website.

But the story doesn’t end there.

Jan applied to attend the workshop/retreat again the following year, and was accepted. This time she brought an early draft of her new novel, a story based on the experiences of Jacob Deng, one of the “Lost Boys of the Sudan”, whom she had been given the opportunity to interview in 2007. Jan had barely begun to scratch the surface of her novel’s enormous potential, but she was open to the feedback she got and used every moment of the quiet mornings to further develop what she’d begun.

Cut through many many more hours invested in research and writing and rewriting, and the manuscript is accepted for publication by Red Deer Press in the fall of 2010.

According to the starred review of A Hare in the Elephant’s Trunk in Kirkus (a most prestigous children’s literature journal), “Coates writes vividly and poetically, establishing a clear historical context for her inspirational tale.” This is just one of many fine reviews and honours the book has already attracted.

Of course, behind this entire story is a remarkable man. The boy-Jacob in A Hare in the Elephant’s Trunk is now a grown man living in Nova Scotia with his wife and two sons. A share of proceeds from the sale of A Hare… are donated to Wadeng Wings of Hope, a registered charitable society that Jacob has set up. ‘Wadeng’ means ‘look always to tomorrow; it will be better’. It’s one of the last words 7-year-old Jacob heard his mother say to him before war came to their village. She believed strongly in education as the key to escaping the cycle of violence that tears apart communities and whole nations.

Working in co-operation with UNICEF and other NGOs, ‘Wadeng Wings of Hope’ is dedicated to raising funds for children’s education in Southern Sudan, and giving hope to the people of his home and the surrounding area. Read Jan’s book and visit the moving Wadeng Wings of Hope website to find out more about the story behind it and what has followed the story it tells.

Wadeng Wings of Hope

Comments (3)
Categories : Causes, Workshop
Tags : A Hare in the Elephant's Trunk, Jan Coates, Lost Boys of the Sudan, Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Writing Workshop, Peter Carver, Rainbows in the Dark, Wadeng Wings of Hope, writing retreat

Do you offer writing workshops?

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Friday, April 8th, 2011

I offer a number of workshop options – for children, teens, and adults; single sessions or a series of sessions; and in a variety of settings including libraries, bookstores, schools, and private homes. I’ve even conducted workshops in Liberia. (If you want me to travel that far to do a workshop, somebody (besides me) has to cover the costs!)

Writing workshop participant enjoying the Nova Scotia seashore

I also offer, together with my partner Peter Carver (editor and writing teacher extraordinaire), a week-long seaside workshop on the south shore of Nova Scotia each year.

I’m happy to work with interested groups (including your writing group if you’re within easy range of Guelph) to determine an appropriate format and fee.

Please contact me for more information or to discuss your group’s or students’ needs.

Find answers to other FAQs here.

Comments (0)
Categories : FAQs, Professional Development, Retreat, Workshop
Tags : Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Writing Workshop, Peter Carver, support for writers, writing retreat, writing workshops

Writing Communities

By Kathy · Comments (0)
Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

At this month’s CANSCAIP meeting, a former participant at the Seaside Writing Workshop/Retreat that my partner and I offer in Nova Scotia each summer announced that we are now accepting applications for this years workshop/retreat. Since it involves living and working with five other participants (plus Peter and me), a lovely sense of community tends to develop in the five days and six nights that writers spend with us. (Of course, within the context of this community, there’s ample time for quiet writing, walks on the beach, and quiet reflection along the shore and in various outbuildings too.)

Seaside Writing Workshop/Retreat
It’s probably because writing is such a solitary activity that many writers seek out such opportunities to meet with fellow writers – to share stories of the joys and challenges of writing and to get the objective feedback that’s often necessary to take a writing project another step toward completion. This can be true whether it’s a first draft or a draft just prior to submission to a publisher that a writer is working on, or something in between.

The solitary nature of a writer’s work also lies behind why many writers like to belong to writers’ organizations. For those writing for young people (or just thinking about it, or who simply appreciate the results), there’s no better organization to belong to (in my opinion) than CANSCAIP – the Canadian Society of Children’s Authors, Illustrators and Performers. I’ve been a member since 1983!

One great thing about CANSCAIP is that memberships are available for professionals in the field, for those aspiring to be, and for those who simply want to support those involved in the industry and get the inside scoop on what’s going on there. Another is that as the organization has grown, groups of members have begun meeting in various provinces across the country.

Even if you don’t live somewhere within reach of meetings or conferences, you can still get access to meeting minutes, which include not only important announcements about residency programs, markets, new books — and the Seaside Writing Workshop/Retreat! — but excellent notes on programs featuring great speakers, too – authors, illustrators, performers, editors, publishers, etc.

Members also receive the quarterly Newsletter. Each issue includes an in-depth profile of a prominent Canadian author or illustrator, news about recent book releases, awards, writing programs and conferences, and publishing opportunities.The current Winter issue even included an excerpt from Marthe Jocelyn‘s Packaging Your Imagination keynote address, “Prophecies, Lies and Pearls of Wisdom”, as well as practical highlights from other PYI speakers’ presentations.

If you’re feeling the need to become part of a writing community, one way or another, check out CANSCAIP and the Seaside Writing Workshop/Retreat, and if you have questions about either, let me know.

Comments (0)
Categories : Professional Development, Retreat, Workshop
Tags : CANSCAIP, writers, writing
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