Monday 21 October 2013


Janice
McCachen

29 October, 2013

VIU Cowichan
2011 University Way
Room 135
6:00 pm




Janice McCachen  is a writer and teacher from Victoria, BC.  Her work has been published in Canadian and international magazines.  In 2004, she won second in the CBC Short Story Competition.  Her story, “Cover Your Eyes”  won The New Quarterly’s `A Summer Place’ contest and “Moonwalk” won her a residency at the Limnisa Writers’ Retreat in Agios Georgios, Greece.  
    She is currently working on a novel about France, the resistance movement and bicycles. 

Thursday 26 September 2013

Writers on Campus Presents:

 Matthew Hooton

 

At the Cowichan Campus of Vancouver Island University








Join local writer Matthew Hooton for a reading and Q&A Tuesday morning at the Cowichan Campus.

Matthew Hooton grew up on Vancouver Island and obtained a BA in Writing from the University of Victoria. He went on to publish non-fiction in several Canadian newspapers and magazines, before moving to England and completing an MA in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University,where Deloume Road was awarded the inaugural Greene & Heaton Prize for the best novel to emerge from the Bath Spa MA in Creative Writing. He has read at the Bath Literature Festival, and has worked as an editor and teacher in several cities in South Korea. He now lives with his wife in Victoria, British Columbia.


  • Date:  Tue Oct 08, 2013
  • Time:  10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
  • Campus/site:  Cowichan
  • Building or Location:  Main Building
  • Room:  225
  • Cost:  Free and Open to the Public
  • Contact:  Jay Ruzesky
  • Phone:  250-746-3566
  • Email:  jay.ruzesky@viu.ca

Thursday 29 August 2013

Writers on Campus Presents:


Readings from the faculty in the 
Creative Writing and Journalism Program






Join Faculty from VIU's Department of Creative Writing and Journalism for an evening of readings from their recent work.  Featuring:








Susan Juby * Marilyn Bowering * Kathy Page * Rich Dunstan * Jay Ruzesky * Joy Gugeler *           Robert Hilles






VIU Cowichan Campus - Room 135
Tuesday, September 24th at 6:00pm

Free and Open to the public


Contact: jay.ruzesky@viu.ca








Monday 21 January 2013


Writers on Campus at VIU Cowichan presents an exciting week of guest writers visiting the Cowichan Valley to share their wisdom and their words.  From as far away as Whitehorse, we will be joined by eight internationally respected authors.   All readings are free and open to the public.  


___________________________________________________________________________________



Tuesday, February 12th  7pm  Room 135
(This reading will also be available via Video Conference to VIU Powell River)


Yvonne Blomer envisages a world restored by poetry.  Her first book, a broken mirror, fallen leaf, poems based on her experiences in Japan, was shortlisted for the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award in 2007.  Landscapes and Home, ghazals drawn from memories of Zimbabwe and BC’s coast, were published by Leaf Press in 2011. The Book of Places is her new book with Black Moss Press in 2012, as is Bicycle Brand Journey with Jack Pine Press. Her work has won awards and been published in Canada, the UK and Japan.  Her reading at the Cowichan Campus will be the launch of her new books.


And


Patrick Friesen, a resident of Winnipeg for 30 years and Vancouver for a dozen years, now lives in Brentwood Bay, Vancouver Island. He has published numerous books of poetry and has written several stage and radio plays. Friesen has also collaborated with choreographers, dancers, musicians and composers. He tours on a regular basis, giving readings and workshops all over the country. His book, A Broken Bowl, was a finalist for the 1997 Governor-General’s Award.

__________


Wednesday, February 13th  9am  Room 225

Patricia Young, born in Victoria, BC where she still lives, is the author of nine collections of poetry and one of short fiction. She has two grown children and is married to the writer, Terence Young.  She has taught at the University of Victoria, served as Editorial Assistant of the Malahat Review, on the board of the Victoria School of Writing, and also as writer in residence at various universities, most recently in 2008 where she was the WIR at the University of New Brunswick. She received the Arc Poem of the Year Award in 2009 and 2010. Selections of her poetry were also short-listed for the CBC Literary Competition in 2009 and 2010.

And

Eve Joseph was born in 1953 and raised in North Vancouver. She worked on freighters as a young woman and traveled extensively before moving to Victoria. She has her M.A. in Counseling Psychology. Her work has been published in numerous Canadian and American Journals and in a number of anthologies, including "The Contemporary Northwest Coast Anthology" published in 2006. Her book The Startled Heart was nominated for the Dorothy Livesay Award. The Secret Signature of Things was shortlisted for the 2010 City of Victoria Butler Book Prize and the 2011 Dorothy Livesay Award.
__________

Wednesday, February 13th  12 noon  Room 215



Alison Watt's poems have appeared in a number of Canadian literary journals. She has placed second in Prairie Fire's Poem of the year and won SubTerrain Magazine's Lush Triumphant poetry prize. Her book of poetry, Circadia, was published by Pedlar Press. Her non-fiction book, The Last Island – a Naturalist’s Sojourn on Triangle Island, won the Edna Staebler Award. She is also a visual artist who works and teaches out of her studio on Protection Island, near Nanaimo. Her painting and her writing reflect her background as a biologist and her ongoing preoccupation with the natural world.

And

Carol Matthews is the author of several books (essays, memoirs and short stories) including Questions for Ariadne, Incidental Music, and Dog Days. Her short stories have appeared in many literary journals, e.g. The New Quarterly, Room of One's Own, The Canadian Journal of Fiction, Border Crossings, and in anthologies such as The BCFed Anthology.

__________

Monday, February 18th 9am Room 225

Patricia Robertson grew up in British Columbia and received her MA in Creative Writing from Boston University. A poet and essayist as well as a fiction writer, her most recent book is The Goldfish Dancer: Stories and Novellas. Her first collection of fiction, City of Orphans, was shortlisted for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize. Her work has been chosen for the Journey Prize Anthology and has been nominated for the CBC Literary Awards, the Pushcart Prize, and the National Magazine Awards (three times). She has been writer-in-residence at Green College, University of B.C., and last winter was writer-in-residence at Haig-Brown House in Campbell River, BC. Currently she is a creative writing instructor at Yukon College in Whitehorse, a freelance writer/editor, and a contributing editor for CNQ: Canadian Notes and Queries.

And

Erling Friis-Baastad grew up in the United States, emigrated to Toronto in 1969, and moved to the Yukon in 1974. His collection, The Exile House, was published by Ireland’s Salmon Publishing in 2001 and Wood Spoken: New and Selected Poems was published by Harbour. His poems have appeared in a number of chapbooks as well as in many literary journals and anthologies, including The Malahat Review, Grain, Poetry Canada and Canadian Forum. A longtime book reviewer and journalist, he currently works as an editor with the Yukon News in Whitehorse.