Saturday, March 24, 2012

David Sealy Wins 2012 Regina Writing Award

David Sealy - photo by Shelley Banks
Dave Sealy reading in Regina,
Summer 2011 © SB
Congrats to Regina writer, David Sealy, who has won the 2012 City of Regina Writing Award —  and also to runners-up BD Miller and Katherine Lawrence.

There will be a reception in honour of Sealy, Miller and Lawrence on Tuesday May 29, 2012, 7:30 pm at Wascana Centre 2900 Wascana Drive, main floor theatre.

The event is free and open to the public. 

All welcome*. 

Refreshments will be served and there will be a cash bar. 

The award is sponsored by the City of Regina and administered by the Saskatchewan Writers’ Guild.

Congrats, David Sealy!  

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 Take note, members of Dave's and BD's (and mine, too...) Friday Night Writers and Others Floor Hockey and Bushwakkers crew! Please join us! 

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Sunday, March 4, 2012

Talking Fresh 10: The Novel to Film

Talking Fresh poster, 2012
Talking Fresh Poster
Regina, Saskatchewan: I spent my weekend at Talking Fresh 10, the tenth annual celebration of writing organized by the Saskatchewan Writers Guild. This year, the theme was Projecting the Novel: Books and Film, and the speakers were novelists and screenwriters.

It was a great event, live-tweeted by Kelly-Ann Reiss (check Twitter for #talkingfresh), featuring local Regina mystery writer Gail Bowen (Kaleidoscope), along with poet and novelist Alison Pick (Far to Go), novelist Nino Ricci (Lives of Saints), and dramatist/ screenwriter, Karen Walton (Ginger Snaps).

And yes, I know that each has written far more than the books in brackets!

Alison Pick  © SB
Gail Bowen  © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved
Gail Bowen  © SB
Karen Walton © Shelley Banks, All Rights Reserved.
Karen Walton  © SB
Nino Ricci  © SB

As a writer, I was interested to hear the experiences of authors who've been approached by offers to option their books. The following were repeatedly stressed: 

  1. Stories may have a life of their own — and may be best told in other media by writers expert in that medium. 
  2. Emotions and other potentially interior factors need to be dramatized, once a novel is moved to film. This may lead to completely new scenes and characterization, which may completely startle the work's original author. 
  3. Screenwriters do pay attention to poetic language, images and metaphors that run through work. (This one, I liked.) 

I enjoyed their individual presentation styles, too, from valiantly jet-lagged Alison Pick to Nino Ricci, with his stories of selling his soul to Sophia Lauren, and Karen Walton, with her collection of coloured sticky notes.

I introduced Gail Bowen, and asked her to explain how she learned to read at age three from the tombstones in a local cemetery... (How fitting for an author with titles about blood, coffins, and death.) And yes, it's true. You can read the story on her blog.)

Thanks to SWG, SMPIA, with assistance from SaskCulture, Saskatchewan Arts Board, Sask Lotteries, MacKenzie Art Gallery, Saskatchewan Film Pool Cooperative (Reception), City of Regina and the Canada Council for the Arts, for producing this event.

Talking Fresh speakers, 2012 - photo by Shelley Banks
The authors on stage at Regina's MacKenzie Art Gallery
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