The SWG is pleased to announce Bev Brenna as our Winter 2024 Virtual Writer-in-Residence for February 1 to April 30, 2024.

Bev Brenna is a freelance writer and editor. She is the author of 14 books for young people (including picture books, middle grade and young adult novels, poetry and short story collections), earning a Printz Honor, a Dolly Gray Award, and a Stuchner Award for humour; her work has also been shortlisted for a Governor General’s Literary Award and listed on CBC’s Young Adult Books That Make You Proud To Be Canadian. Bev has also published 2 non-fiction titles on children’s literature, and her adult poetry, prose, and academic writing has been published in a variety of anthologies, journals, magazines, and newspapers. For more info, please see http://www.beverleybrenna.com

The Virtual Writer-in-Residence (VWiR) program provides opportunities for SWG members writing at all levels of development and in all genres to receive guidance and advice on a specific writing project from an established writer. Eligible members must live in Saskatchewan outside of Regina and Saskatoon – members in those cities can access their Public Library’s Writer-in-Residence programs. Members can submit up to 15 pages to the VWIR and meet one-on-one through Zoom up to three times to talk about the individual’s writing.

This service will open February 1, 2024. For more information and to register, visit https://skwriter.com/programs-and-services/virtual-writer-in-residence.

Hello I’m Bev Brenna and I’m delighted to be the new  virtual writer in residence for the Saskatchewan   Writers Guild this term I live in Saskatoon now  but I spent 18 years living in rural Saskatchewan   and I know the difference distance makes to access  to writing programs and events and I’m really glad  

That technology will help us get together this  semester as part of this welcome I’m going   to share three passages from some of my published  work it’s writing for quite different audiences   and purposes but each of these pieces connects I  think to some of my thoughts about writing and the  

Writing process first I’m going to share some  excerpts from my poem survival which is in the   Anthology Life of Pie p i e Prairie poems and  prose edited by Ivan Sundal and Myrna Garanis this  

Was published in 2020 by Rolling Pins Press and the poem I’m about to read from is related to   meeting an elderly relative with dementia and how  she recalls being in a prairie blizzard survival   part one remembering how Auntie Joan liked Goodland  apples I fill a bowl and put it on her dresser  

Then a door is open and she’s there the time  it snowed 45 below she ties a rope from house   to barn and gropes along it toward the animals its  days past feeding time part five from this same  

Poem when it finally happens it’s not the the way  they tell it when you’re there it’s not the cold   at all but something in your soul just steps aside  a letter in an envelope unanswered rushing in  

The ears like water rising softness takes you by  surprise the warmth arms reaching as a child would   reach you bend then straighten thinking of the  cream white flesh the pies that simmer in the oven   and you lift your head trying to remember where  you left that rope and rolling out the pastry and  

Its velvet scent hunger driving you toward the  house and just where you suspected it would be   the cook stove melts a bright warm path so what  does this have to do with the writing process   well I think as writers we all need something to  hang on to a clothesline stretched from host to  

Barn and back something to grip until we see the  lights melting their bright warm path for some   of us this might be encouragement or feedback for  others deadlines or it might be suggestions of  

Something to read to read like a writer to lead us  back onto the path of where we want to go with our work so next a few pages from my  picture book the girl with the cat   Illustrated beautifully by Brooke Kerrigan  this was published in 2020 by Red Deer

Press and it’s based on the true story of  a young girl who fell in love with a piece   of art a piece of art that didn’t plan  to remain in Saskatoon but was headed back   to Ottawa a nine-year-old Caroline didn’t  want that to happen and here is what she

Did suddenly I think of some words that might  help I print the words on a sheet of paper Dear   Mr Climber I am sending this money that my brother  and I saved for the sculpture I hope very much  

That we can keep it here in Saskatoon where it  belongs sincerely yours Caroline Markham age nine   when I’m done I get my piggy bank and my brother  digs out some coins from the bottom of his drawer  

It’s all the money we have I get a white envelope  the kind my parents use for business and then I   put everything into my school bag all day long I  think about the letter will I be brave enough to  

Deliver it I walk to the gallery after school and  the wooden door seems heavier than ever I finally   go inside Mr Climber’s office door is shut I knock  on it and at first no one answers then I hear  

A voice come in it says I open the door and see a  big man behind a big desk I hand him the envelope   when Mr Climber opens my letter he looks at it  for a long time I can feel sweat trickling down  

The back of my neck then he shakes his head  I’m sorry little girl he says and shakes his   head again I run outside and when I look back I  can see Mr Climber through his office window he  

Still has my letter in one hand but he’s picking  up the phone we’re going to be late for supper   yells my brother I run down the hill faster and  faster until it feels as if I’m flying but I’m not  

Flying I’m falling in the gravel where the snow  has blown away Caroline says my brother catching   up to me you tore your pant leg mom will be mad I  don’t care I say rubbing my knee where there’s a  

Hole in my pants and blood I don’t care if we’re  late either but after a few minutes I follow him   up the hill it takes a lot longer going up  than down and Caroline was successful in  

Her campaign to save that statue and keep it  in Saskatoon it is here today in the Remai Art   Gallery and so what does this passage help us  think about related to writing I think it tells us   some things about the power of art the power  of art to create change Carolyn’s writing in  

This story certainly created change in her world  and I think also it it helps us think about   bravery and the courage it takes to put our work  out there putting pen to paper does take bravery  

What if it’s not good what if no one likes it  I want you to know that I still have these same   same qualms every time I sit at the computer so  let’s be brave together and the third and last  

Selection I’ll read from today is from my young  adult novel The White Bicycle our narrator   here is Taylor Jane Simon a 19-year-old on the  autism spectrum this book and the trilogy   it comes from relates to Taylor’s search  for independence so here she’s meeting  

With a a visual artist an elderly artist named  Adelaide and they are in France in Lourmarin France nature is like a dictionary for artists  says Adelaide not only in art but in life nature   is a good teacher it teaches us patience to wait  everything has to grow in heart heart and mind I  

Do not like waiting I say waiting has its purpose  answers Adelaide she goes over and turns on a   record player and soon there is music Franz Liszt  list a good choice for clouds don’t you think  

I always draw or paint to music you draw and  paint to music I repeat my last exhibition was   Mozart she says I chose the music and Illustrated  passages is in watercolor I always work with music  

Classical it opens the mind and it opens the  heart I draw for a while and when I turn around   Adelaide is sitting on the couch with her eyes  shut are you tired I ask she waves her arms keep  

Working I am just listening to the Liszt she pulls  a patchwork quilt onto herself from the back of   the couch heels again on the stairs and Francine  comes in mother should have dinner soon she snaps   stop interrupting my lessons says Adelaide go and  find something else to do feed the fish Francine  

Francine wants to be the boss of you I say it’s a  pleasant idea in which a daughter bosses a mother   I think about this for a while I take a quick look  out the window and then I shade a few more of the  

Clouds being the boss of my mother would take  some practice but I think I could get used to   it I know someone who hears only jazz I could  never work with jazz says Adelaide I sketch a  

Little longer art is liberty she says when I turn  around her eyes are shut and after a moment I hear   a snuffling sound Adelaide is sleeping with her  mouth open the patchwork quilt is pulled right  

Up to her chin so connections to writing there’s  some lines in here nature is a studio for artists   I think nature is a studio for all types of  artists look at the world listen be patient   be patient with your work be patient with yourself  these are good lessons I think and they’re lessons  

I’m still trying I’m still trying to learn  we will work on them together thanks again   for being interested in the virtual writer in residence program I look forward to working with you

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