#localauthor — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #localauthor, aggregated by home.social.
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PAUL DROTOS’ GUIDE FOR YOUR IMPROV JOURNEY
Your Improv Journey is Paul Drotos’ treatise meant for beginners, veterans and randos. It is an easy read and is relevant even when considering teamwork, community and art in general.
Improv is an art form where actors create scenes on the spot. In a show, troupes will usually have games they play with varying levels of audience input.
When the scene ends, that is the end of […]
https://www.communityedition.ca/paul-drotos-guide-for-your-improv-journey/ -
PAUL DROTOS’ GUIDE FOR YOUR IMPROV JOURNEY
Your Improv Journey is Paul Drotos’ treatise meant for beginners, veterans and randos. It is an easy read and is relevant even when considering teamwork, community and art in general.
Improv is an art form where actors create scenes on the spot. In a show, troupes will usually have games they play with varying levels of audience input.
When the scene ends, that is the end of […]
https://www.communityedition.ca/paul-drotos-guide-for-your-improv-journey/ -
PAUL DROTOS’ GUIDE FOR YOUR IMPROV JOURNEY
Your Improv Journey is Paul Drotos’ treatise meant for beginners, veterans and randos. It is an easy read and is relevant even when considering teamwork, community and art in general.
Improv is an art form where actors create scenes on the spot. In a show, troupes will usually have games they play with varying levels of audience input.
When the scene ends, that is the end of […]
https://www.communityedition.ca/paul-drotos-guide-for-your-improv-journey/ -
PAUL DROTOS’ GUIDE FOR YOUR IMPROV JOURNEY
Your Improv Journey is Paul Drotos’ treatise meant for beginners, veterans and randos. It is an easy read and is relevant even when considering teamwork, community and art in general.
Improv is an art form where actors create scenes on the spot. In a show, troupes will usually have games they play with varying levels of audience input.
When the scene ends, that is the end of […]
https://www.communityedition.ca/paul-drotos-guide-for-your-improv-journey/ -
PAUL DROTOS’ GUIDE FOR YOUR IMPROV JOURNEY
Your Improv Journey is Paul Drotos’ treatise meant for beginners, veterans and randos. It is an easy read and is relevant even when considering teamwork, community and art in general.
Improv is an art form where actors create scenes on the spot. In a show, troupes will usually have games they play with varying levels of audience input.
When the scene ends, that is the end of […]
https://www.communityedition.ca/paul-drotos-guide-for-your-improv-journey/ -
A WALK AROUND BECHTEL PARK WITH EMILY URQHART
It was author Emily Urquhart’s pup June that brought us out to the Bechtel Dog Park on a grey Saturday afternoon. We were greeted by a well-dressed poodle in boots and an orange jacket, and June and her new friend ran off while Urquhart and I opted for a slower pace.
“Walking is one hundred per cent part of my writing process,” Urquhart said as we followed the path on a loop around a cluster of trees. “[O]ften, when I’m walking, I’m working something out…something about the movement of walking forwards can sometimes shake things out in a way that, if I was sitting at a desk and trying to write, it just doesn’t work.”
Urquhart was born in Kitchener and lived in Waterloo until she was seven, when her family moved to Wellesley. After high school she studied art history and journalism, then ended up at Memorial University in Newfoundland where she completed a PhD in Folklore Studies and also met her future husband. It was his job at the University of Waterloo that brought them back to Ontario to settle with their family in Kitchener.
“I was always interested in folklore,” Urquhart said. “I had this huge Brothers Grimm silver-coloured book that I used to read as a kid a lot. And I was interested in my Irish culture and heritage, and that kind of naturally coincides with folklore.”
Urquhart’s understanding and exploration of folklore goes beyond the written stories of her youth, and includes visual art, gossip, rumours and even home decor and bumper stickers.
“[Folklore is] the way you’re signifying who you are to the world and the story you’re telling about yourself and your place in it,” Urquhart said. “Once you’ve got [folklore] under your belt, it kind of changes your worldview.”
Urquhart explored folklore in her third book, Ordinary Wonder Tales, published in 2022 and shortlisted for the 2023 Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction. She drew on her journalism background for her second book, The Age Of Creativity, published in 2020, in which she examined late-in-life creativity using her father, acclaimed painter Tony Urquhart, as the subject and inspiration.
Her mother, award-winning novelist and poet Jane Urquhart, is also an artistic presence in Urquhart’s life. She was in high school when her mother gained wide-spread notoriety for her novel Away, and people became interested in her last name and family.
“There was a rumour at university that my mom was Jan Arden because there was a broken telephone situation…someone said ‘Jane Urquhart,’ but [someone else] heard Jan Arden,” Urquhart said. “So, I’ve always had a kind of kinship with Jan Arden.”
From an early age, Urquhart was an avid reader and was also drawn to writing.
“I had teachers who [said] ‘oh, you’re such a good writer’…But I’d feel like, is that because my mom’s a writer, or is it coming from an authentic place?” she said. “But I knew I liked to do it, and I also knew that it didn’t pay any money.”
Pursuing a PhD allowed Urquhart to continue reading and writing, and also to have some security in the form of teaching. In addition to being a published author and a non-fiction editor at The New Quarterly, Urquhart is also a Professor of Creative Writing at Laurier where she coordinates the Edna Staebler Awards.
It was through The New Quarterly that Urquhart connected with other writers in the area. At the Wild Writers’ Festival in 2019, Urquhart was approached by novelist Carrie Snyder about forming a writer’s group along with author Tasneem Jamal. Urquhart agreed, and they have been writing and workshopping ever since.
“It’s so wonderful to have that community,” Urquhart said. “We write together, which I’d never done…I’ve been through two books with them now.”
Urquhart’s experience of community is one done directly with other people as she is not on any social media. In 2016 she made the decision to leave Facebook when she found the platform to be full of vitriol and in-fighting. She left Twitter not long after.
“It was getting me down,” Urquhart said. “Finally, I was like, no one’s inviting you to this party. You have to stop showing up.”
While she reads poetry daily and cites short stories as a favourite genre, Urquhart is also drawn to some less-expected media.
“I like to watch really trashy documentaries,” Urquhart said. “When I say documentary, people think, ‘Oh, that sounds smart.’ No, I like anything to do with catfishing…I’m really into cults. I just find it fascinating.”
Urquhart’s dog June came over to say a quick hello before going to greet a new arrival. Before adopting June from the Humane Society a year ago, Urquhart and her family rescued a dog from another agency; however, they were unable to keep him because of an aggressive response to walks.
“He was sweet, actually, in the house, but…he wouldn’t go in our yard, so he had to be walked…whenever I walked him, he attacked me,” Urquhart said. “I had leather gloves, they were split open, my parka was split open. I was on the ground trying to shield my face and he had my hand and he didn’t let go.”
The experience did not deter Urquhart from dogs, however.
“I just got obsessed or something after that,” Urquhart said. “I was thinking about dogs, I only watched things about dogs, and then I started writing about it.”
Part of that writing process included painting a watercolour of the destroyed gloves and using visual art as research. What started as memoir turned into a fairy tale.
“I don’t know if the stories I’ve been writing connect as one piece or if they’re connected stories,” Urquhart said.
“But they all have some sort of supernatural…element threaded through them.”
While the move to writing fiction might be new for Urquhart, her background in folklore and careful powers of observation honed through journalism will no doubt mean she is right at home navigating these creative waters.
#AmyNeufeld #bechtelDogPark #Column #CraigBecker #EmilyUrquhart #folkloreStudies #janArden #journalism #LocalAuthor #memorialUniversity #Newfoundland #orangeJacket #pet #petOwner #TheNewQuarterly #universityOfWaterloo #walkInThePark #wildWriterSFestival -
A WALK AROUND BECHTEL PARK WITH EMILY URQHART
It was author Emily Urquhart’s pup June that brought us out to the Bechtel Dog Park on a grey Saturday afternoon. We were greeted by a well-dressed poodle in boots and an orange jacket, and June and her new friend ran off while Urquhart and I opted for a slower pace.
“Walking is one hundred per cent part of my writing process,” Urquhart said as we followed the path on a loop around a cluster of trees. “[O]ften, when I’m walking, I’m working something out…something about the movement of walking forwards can sometimes shake things out in a way that, if I was sitting at a desk and trying to write, it just doesn’t work.”
Urquhart was born in Kitchener and lived in Waterloo until she was seven, when her family moved to Wellesley. After high school she studied art history and journalism, then ended up at Memorial University in Newfoundland where she completed a PhD in Folklore Studies and also met her future husband. It was his job at the University of Waterloo that brought them back to Ontario to settle with their family in Kitchener.
“I was always interested in folklore,” Urquhart said. “I had this huge Brothers Grimm silver-coloured book that I used to read as a kid a lot. And I was interested in my Irish culture and heritage, and that kind of naturally coincides with folklore.”
Urquhart’s understanding and exploration of folklore goes beyond the written stories of her youth, and includes visual art, gossip, rumours and even home decor and bumper stickers.
“[Folklore is] the way you’re signifying who you are to the world and the story you’re telling about yourself and your place in it,” Urquhart said. “Once you’ve got [folklore] under your belt, it kind of changes your worldview.”
Urquhart explored folklore in her third book, Ordinary Wonder Tales, published in 2022 and shortlisted for the 2023 Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction. She drew on her journalism background for her second book, The Age Of Creativity, published in 2020, in which she examined late-in-life creativity using her father, acclaimed painter Tony Urquhart, as the subject and inspiration.
Her mother, award-winning novelist and poet Jane Urquhart, is also an artistic presence in Urquhart’s life. She was in high school when her mother gained wide-spread notoriety for her novel Away, and people became interested in her last name and family.
“There was a rumour at university that my mom was Jan Arden because there was a broken telephone situation…someone said ‘Jane Urquhart,’ but [someone else] heard Jan Arden,” Urquhart said. “So, I’ve always had a kind of kinship with Jan Arden.”
From an early age, Urquhart was an avid reader and was also drawn to writing.
“I had teachers who [said] ‘oh, you’re such a good writer’…But I’d feel like, is that because my mom’s a writer, or is it coming from an authentic place?” she said. “But I knew I liked to do it, and I also knew that it didn’t pay any money.”
Pursuing a PhD allowed Urquhart to continue reading and writing, and also to have some security in the form of teaching. In addition to being a published author and a non-fiction editor at The New Quarterly, Urquhart is also a Professor of Creative Writing at Laurier where she coordinates the Edna Staebler Awards.
It was through The New Quarterly that Urquhart connected with other writers in the area. At the Wild Writers’ Festival in 2019, Urquhart was approached by novelist Carrie Snyder about forming a writer’s group along with author Tasneem Jamal. Urquhart agreed, and they have been writing and workshopping ever since.
“It’s so wonderful to have that community,” Urquhart said. “We write together, which I’d never done…I’ve been through two books with them now.”
Urquhart’s experience of community is one done directly with other people as she is not on any social media. In 2016 she made the decision to leave Facebook when she found the platform to be full of vitriol and in-fighting. She left Twitter not long after.
“It was getting me down,” Urquhart said. “Finally, I was like, no one’s inviting you to this party. You have to stop showing up.”
While she reads poetry daily and cites short stories as a favourite genre, Urquhart is also drawn to some less-expected media.
“I like to watch really trashy documentaries,” Urquhart said. “When I say documentary, people think, ‘Oh, that sounds smart.’ No, I like anything to do with catfishing…I’m really into cults. I just find it fascinating.”
Urquhart’s dog June came over to say a quick hello before going to greet a new arrival. Before adopting June from the Humane Society a year ago, Urquhart and her family rescued a dog from another agency; however, they were unable to keep him because of an aggressive response to walks.
“He was sweet, actually, in the house, but…he wouldn’t go in our yard, so he had to be walked…whenever I walked him, he attacked me,” Urquhart said. “I had leather gloves, they were split open, my parka was split open. I was on the ground trying to shield my face and he had my hand and he didn’t let go.”
The experience did not deter Urquhart from dogs, however.
“I just got obsessed or something after that,” Urquhart said. “I was thinking about dogs, I only watched things about dogs, and then I started writing about it.”
Part of that writing process included painting a watercolour of the destroyed gloves and using visual art as research. What started as memoir turned into a fairy tale.
“I don’t know if the stories I’ve been writing connect as one piece or if they’re connected stories,” Urquhart said.
“But they all have some sort of supernatural…element threaded through them.”
While the move to writing fiction might be new for Urquhart, her background in folklore and careful powers of observation honed through journalism will no doubt mean she is right at home navigating these creative waters.
#AmyNeufeld #bechtelDogPark #Column #CraigBecker #EmilyUrquhart #folkloreStudies #janArden #journalism #LocalAuthor #memorialUniversity #Newfoundland #orangeJacket #pet #petOwner #TheNewQuarterly #universityOfWaterloo #walkInThePark #wildWriterSFestival -
A WALK AROUND BECHTEL PARK WITH EMILY URQUHART
It was author Emily Urquhart’s pup June that brought us out to the Bechtel Dog Park on a grey Saturday afternoon. We were greeted by a well-dressed poodle in boots and an orange jacket, and June and her new friend ran off while Urquhart and I opted for a slower pace.
“Walking is one hundred per cent part of my writing process,” Urquhart said as we followed the path on a loop around a cluster of trees. “[O]ften, when I’m walking, I’m working something out…something about the movement of walking forwards can sometimes shake things out in a way that, if I was sitting at a desk and trying to write, it just doesn’t work.”
Urquhart was born in Kitchener and lived in Waterloo until she was seven, when her family moved to Wellesley. After high school she studied art history and journalism, then ended up at Memorial University in Newfoundland where she completed a PhD in Folklore Studies and also met her future husband. It was his job at the University of Waterloo that brought them back to Ontario to settle with their family in Kitchener.
“I was always interested in folklore,” Urquhart said. “I had this huge Brothers Grimm silver-coloured book that I used to read as a kid a lot. And I was interested in my Irish culture and heritage, and that kind of naturally coincides with folklore.”
Urquhart’s understanding and exploration of folklore goes beyond the written stories of her youth, and includes visual art, gossip, rumours and even home decor and bumper stickers.
“[Folklore is] the way you’re signifying who you are to the world and the story you’re telling about yourself and your place in it,” Urquhart said. “Once you’ve got [folklore] under your belt, it kind of changes your worldview.”
Urquhart explored folklore in her third book, Ordinary Wonder Tales, published in 2022 and shortlisted for the 2023 Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction. She drew on her journalism background for her second book, The Age Of Creativity, published in 2020, in which she examined late-in-life creativity using her father, acclaimed painter Tony Urquhart, as the subject and inspiration.
Her mother, award-winning novelist and poet Jane Urquhart, is also an artistic presence in Urquhart’s life. She was in high school when her mother gained wide-spread notoriety for her novel Away, and people became interested in her last name and family.
“There was a rumour at university that my mom was Jan Arden because there was a broken telephone situation…someone said ‘Jane Urquhart,’ but [someone else] heard Jan Arden,” Urquhart said. “So, I’ve always had a kind of kinship with Jan Arden.”
From an early age, Urquhart was an avid reader and was also drawn to writing.
“I had teachers who [said] ‘oh, you’re such a good writer’…But I’d feel like, is that because my mom’s a writer, or is it coming from an authentic place?” she said. “But I knew I liked to do it, and I also knew that it didn’t pay any money.”
Pursuing a PhD allowed Urquhart to continue reading and writing, and also to have some security in the form of teaching. In addition to being a published author and a non-fiction editor at The New Quarterly, Urquhart is also a Professor of Creative Writing at Laurier where she coordinates the Edna Staebler Awards.
It was through The New Quarterly that Urquhart connected with other writers in the area. At the Wild Writers’ Festival in 2019, Urquhart was approached by novelist Carrie Snyder about forming a writer’s group along with author Tasneem Jamal. Urquhart agreed, and they have been writing and workshopping ever since.
“It’s so wonderful to have that community,” Urquhart said. “We write together, which I’d never done…I’ve been through two books with them now.”
Urquhart’s experience of community is one done directly with other people as she is not on any social media. In 2016 she made the decision to leave Facebook when she found the platform to be full of vitriol and in-fighting. She left Twitter not long after.
“It was getting me down,” Urquhart said. “Finally, I was like, no one’s inviting you to this party. You have to stop showing up.”
While she reads poetry daily and cites short stories as a favourite genre, Urquhart is also drawn to some less-expected media.
“I like to watch really trashy documentaries,” Urquhart said. “When I say documentary, people think, ‘Oh, that sounds smart.’ No, I like anything to do with catfishing…I’m really into cults. I just find it fascinating.”
Urquhart’s dog June came over to say a quick hello before going to greet a new arrival. Before adopting June from the Humane Society a year ago, Urquhart and her family rescued a dog from another agency; however, they were unable to keep him because of an aggressive response to walks.
“He was sweet, actually, in the house, but…he wouldn’t go in our yard, so he had to be walked…whenever I walked him, he attacked me,” Urquhart said. “I had leather gloves, they were split open, my parka was split open. I was on the ground trying to shield my face and he had my hand and he didn’t let go.”
The experience did not deter Urquhart from dogs, however.
“I just got obsessed or something after that,” Urquhart said. “I was thinking about dogs, I only watched things about dogs, and then I started writing about it.”
Part of that writing process included painting a watercolour of the destroyed gloves and using visual art as research. What started as memoir turned into a fairy tale.
“I don’t know if the stories I’ve been writing connect as one piece or if they’re connected stories,” Urquhart said.
“But they all have some sort of supernatural…element threaded through them.”
While the move to writing fiction might be new for Urquhart, her background in folklore and careful powers of observation honed through journalism will no doubt mean she is right at home navigating these creative waters.
#AmyNeufeld #bechtelDogPark #Column #CraigBecker #EmilyUrquhart #folkloreStudies #janArden #journalism #LocalAuthor #memorialUniversity #Newfoundland #orangeJacket #pet #petOwner #TheNewQuarterly #universityOfWaterloo #walkInThePark #wildWriterSFestival -
A WALK AROUND BECHTEL PARK WITH EMILY URQHART
It was author Emily Urquhart’s pup June that brought us out to the Bechtel Dog Park on a grey Saturday afternoon. We were greeted by a well-dressed poodle in boots and an orange jacket, and June and her new friend ran off while Urquhart and I opted for a slower pace.
“Walking is one hundred per cent part of my writing process,” Urquhart said as we followed the path on a loop around a cluster of trees. “[O]ften, when I’m walking, I’m working something out…something about the movement of walking forwards can sometimes shake things out in a way that, if I was sitting at a desk and trying to write, it just doesn’t work.”
Urquhart was born in Kitchener and lived in Waterloo until she was seven, when her family moved to Wellesley. After high school she studied art history and journalism, then ended up at Memorial University in Newfoundland where she completed a PhD in Folklore Studies and also met her future husband. It was his job at the University of Waterloo that brought them back to Ontario to settle with their family in Kitchener.
“I was always interested in folklore,” Urquhart said. “I had this huge Brothers Grimm silver-coloured book that I used to read as a kid a lot. And I was interested in my Irish culture and heritage, and that kind of naturally coincides with folklore.”
Urquhart’s understanding and exploration of folklore goes beyond the written stories of her youth, and includes visual art, gossip, rumours and even home decor and bumper stickers.
“[Folklore is] the way you’re signifying who you are to the world and the story you’re telling about yourself and your place in it,” Urquhart said. “Once you’ve got [folklore] under your belt, it kind of changes your worldview.”
Urquhart explored folklore in her third book, Ordinary Wonder Tales, published in 2022 and shortlisted for the 2023 Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction. She drew on her journalism background for her second book, The Age Of Creativity, published in 2020, in which she examined late-in-life creativity using her father, acclaimed painter Tony Urquhart, as the subject and inspiration.
Her mother, award-winning novelist and poet Jane Urquhart, is also an artistic presence in Urquhart’s life. She was in high school when her mother gained wide-spread notoriety for her novel Away, and people became interested in her last name and family.
“There was a rumour at university that my mom was Jan Arden because there was a broken telephone situation…someone said ‘Jane Urquhart,’ but [someone else] heard Jan Arden,” Urquhart said. “So, I’ve always had a kind of kinship with Jan Arden.”
From an early age, Urquhart was an avid reader and was also drawn to writing.
“I had teachers who [said] ‘oh, you’re such a good writer’…But I’d feel like, is that because my mom’s a writer, or is it coming from an authentic place?” she said. “But I knew I liked to do it, and I also knew that it didn’t pay any money.”
Pursuing a PhD allowed Urquhart to continue reading and writing, and also to have some security in the form of teaching. In addition to being a published author and a non-fiction editor at The New Quarterly, Urquhart is also a Professor of Creative Writing at Laurier where she coordinates the Edna Staebler Awards.
It was through The New Quarterly that Urquhart connected with other writers in the area. At the Wild Writers’ Festival in 2019, Urquhart was approached by novelist Carrie Snyder about forming a writer’s group along with author Tasneem Jamal. Urquhart agreed, and they have been writing and workshopping ever since.
“It’s so wonderful to have that community,” Urquhart said. “We write together, which I’d never done…I’ve been through two books with them now.”
Urquhart’s experience of community is one done directly with other people as she is not on any social media. In 2016 she made the decision to leave Facebook when she found the platform to be full of vitriol and in-fighting. She left Twitter not long after.
“It was getting me down,” Urquhart said. “Finally, I was like, no one’s inviting you to this party. You have to stop showing up.”
While she reads poetry daily and cites short stories as a favourite genre, Urquhart is also drawn to some less-expected media.
“I like to watch really trashy documentaries,” Urquhart said. “When I say documentary, people think, ‘Oh, that sounds smart.’ No, I like anything to do with catfishing…I’m really into cults. I just find it fascinating.”
Urquhart’s dog June came over to say a quick hello before going to greet a new arrival. Before adopting June from the Humane Society a year ago, Urquhart and her family rescued a dog from another agency; however, they were unable to keep him because of an aggressive response to walks.
“He was sweet, actually, in the house, but…he wouldn’t go in our yard, so he had to be walked…whenever I walked him, he attacked me,” Urquhart said. “I had leather gloves, they were split open, my parka was split open. I was on the ground trying to shield my face and he had my hand and he didn’t let go.”
The experience did not deter Urquhart from dogs, however.
“I just got obsessed or something after that,” Urquhart said. “I was thinking about dogs, I only watched things about dogs, and then I started writing about it.”
Part of that writing process included painting a watercolour of the destroyed gloves and using visual art as research. What started as memoir turned into a fairy tale.
“I don’t know if the stories I’ve been writing connect as one piece or if they’re connected stories,” Urquhart said.
“But they all have some sort of supernatural…element threaded through them.”
While the move to writing fiction might be new for Urquhart, her background in folklore and careful powers of observation honed through journalism will no doubt mean she is right at home navigating these creative waters.
#AmyNeufeld #bechtelDogPark #Column #CraigBecker #EmilyUrquhart #folkloreStudies #janArden #journalism #LocalAuthor #memorialUniversity #Newfoundland #orangeJacket #pet #petOwner #TheNewQuarterly #universityOfWaterloo #walkInThePark #wildWriterSFestival -
A WALK AROUND BECHTEL PARK WITH EMILY URQHART
It was author Emily Urquhart’s pup June that brought us out to the Bechtel Dog Park on a grey Saturday afternoon. We were greeted by a well-dressed poodle in boots and an orange jacket, and June and her new friend ran off while Urquhart and I opted for a slower pace.
“Walking is one hundred per cent part of my writing process,” Urquhart said as we followed the path on a loop around a cluster of trees. “[O]ften, when I’m walking, I’m working something out…something about the movement of walking forwards can sometimes shake things out in a way that, if I was sitting at a desk and trying to write, it just doesn’t work.”
Urquhart was born in Kitchener and lived in Waterloo until she was seven, when her family moved to Wellesley. After high school she studied art history and journalism, then ended up at Memorial University in Newfoundland where she completed a PhD in Folklore Studies and also met her future husband. It was his job at the University of Waterloo that brought them back to Ontario to settle with their family in Kitchener.
“I was always interested in folklore,” Urquhart said. “I had this huge Brothers Grimm silver-coloured book that I used to read as a kid a lot. And I was interested in my Irish culture and heritage, and that kind of naturally coincides with folklore.”
Urquhart’s understanding and exploration of folklore goes beyond the written stories of her youth, and includes visual art, gossip, rumours and even home decor and bumper stickers.
“[Folklore is] the way you’re signifying who you are to the world and the story you’re telling about yourself and your place in it,” Urquhart said. “Once you’ve got [folklore] under your belt, it kind of changes your worldview.”
Urquhart explored folklore in her third book, Ordinary Wonder Tales, published in 2022 and shortlisted for the 2023 Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction. She drew on her journalism background for her second book, The Age Of Creativity, published in 2020, in which she examined late-in-life creativity using her father, acclaimed painter Tony Urquhart, as the subject and inspiration.
Her mother, award-winning novelist and poet Jane Urquhart, is also an artistic presence in Urquhart’s life. She was in high school when her mother gained wide-spread notoriety for her novel Away, and people became interested in her last name and family.
“There was a rumour at university that my mom was Jan Arden because there was a broken telephone situation…someone said ‘Jane Urquhart,’ but [someone else] heard Jan Arden,” Urquhart said. “So, I’ve always had a kind of kinship with Jan Arden.”
From an early age, Urquhart was an avid reader and was also drawn to writing.
“I had teachers who [said] ‘oh, you’re such a good writer’…But I’d feel like, is that because my mom’s a writer, or is it coming from an authentic place?” she said. “But I knew I liked to do it, and I also knew that it didn’t pay any money.”
Pursuing a PhD allowed Urquhart to continue reading and writing, and also to have some security in the form of teaching. In addition to being a published author and a non-fiction editor at The New Quarterly, Urquhart is also a Professor of Creative Writing at Laurier where she coordinates the Edna Staebler Awards.
It was through The New Quarterly that Urquhart connected with other writers in the area. At the Wild Writers’ Festival in 2019, Urquhart was approached by novelist Carrie Snyder about forming a writer’s group along with author Tasneem Jamal. Urquhart agreed, and they have been writing and workshopping ever since.
“It’s so wonderful to have that community,” Urquhart said. “We write together, which I’d never done…I’ve been through two books with them now.”
Urquhart’s experience of community is one done directly with other people as she is not on any social media. In 2016 she made the decision to leave Facebook when she found the platform to be full of vitriol and in-fighting. She left Twitter not long after.
“It was getting me down,” Urquhart said. “Finally, I was like, no one’s inviting you to this party. You have to stop showing up.”
While she reads poetry daily and cites short stories as a favourite genre, Urquhart is also drawn to some less-expected media.
“I like to watch really trashy documentaries,” Urquhart said. “When I say documentary, people think, ‘Oh, that sounds smart.’ No, I like anything to do with catfishing…I’m really into cults. I just find it fascinating.”
Urquhart’s dog June came over to say a quick hello before going to greet a new arrival. Before adopting June from the Humane Society a year ago, Urquhart and her family rescued a dog from another agency; however, they were unable to keep him because of an aggressive response to walks.
“He was sweet, actually, in the house, but…he wouldn’t go in our yard, so he had to be walked…whenever I walked him, he attacked me,” Urquhart said. “I had leather gloves, they were split open, my parka was split open. I was on the ground trying to shield my face and he had my hand and he didn’t let go.”
The experience did not deter Urquhart from dogs, however.
“I just got obsessed or something after that,” Urquhart said. “I was thinking about dogs, I only watched things about dogs, and then I started writing about it.”
Part of that writing process included painting a watercolour of the destroyed gloves and using visual art as research. What started as memoir turned into a fairy tale.
“I don’t know if the stories I’ve been writing connect as one piece or if they’re connected stories,” Urquhart said.
“But they all have some sort of supernatural…element threaded through them.”
While the move to writing fiction might be new for Urquhart, her background in folklore and careful powers of observation honed through journalism will no doubt mean she is right at home navigating these creative waters.
#AmyNeufeld #bechtelDogPark #Column #CraigBecker #EmilyUrquhart #folkloreStudies #janArden #journalism #LocalAuthor #memorialUniversity #Newfoundland #orangeJacket #pet #petOwner #TheNewQuarterly #universityOfWaterloo #walkInThePark #wildWriterSFestival -
Delighted to announce the launch party for my book Well Housed. Come and celebrate with me at my new co-work home @boncowork. Use the QR code to RSVP if you want to be sure I get enough drinks and snacks!
#booklaunch #optimisticfuture #solarpunk #sciencefiction #localauthor #coworking -
Delighted to announce the launch party for my book Well Housed. Come and celebrate with me at my new co-work home @boncowork. Use the QR code to RSVP if you want to be sure I get enough drinks and snacks!
#booklaunch #optimisticfuture #solarpunk #sciencefiction #localauthor #coworking -
Delighted to announce the launch party for my book Well Housed. Come and celebrate with me at my new co-work home @boncowork. Use the QR code to RSVP if you want to be sure I get enough drinks and snacks!
#booklaunch #optimisticfuture #solarpunk #sciencefiction #localauthor #coworking -
Delighted to announce the launch party for my book Well Housed. Come and celebrate with me at my new co-work home @boncowork. Use the QR code to RSVP if you want to be sure I get enough drinks and snacks!
#booklaunch #optimisticfuture #solarpunk #sciencefiction #localauthor #coworking -
I had three copies of The Way of the Wielder in a local bookstore. When I stopped by recently, I noticed all had sold, which made me very happy.
Long story short, I just heard back from them with next steps. Turns out, they want five more copies of book 1, plus two copies each of books 2 and 3!
I'm very happy about that (despite the somber mood I'm in today)! 🥹 🥳
#WritingCommunity #Writer #Author #SelfPublishedAuthor #LocalAuthor
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LOCAL AUTHOR REFLECTS ON FOURTH BOOK FOR CHILDREN
On June 24, Waterloo-based author, Jennifer Harris, released The Witching Hour, a new picture book about a family of witches. This is Harris’ fourth children’s book.
Harris said her inspiration for the book was twofold.
“Like many parents, I had a child who was not the best sleeper. We all have those moments of walking around feeling a bit like a zombie when you have one of those children. So that kind of stayed with me quite deeply,” Harris said.
What brought the story to life was when the line, ‘In the witching hour, the sun slides down’ came to Harris one morning.
“I started to think about a family of witches and what they would do if they had this kind of fussy child, what kind of magic would they use to calm a baby,” Harris said.
“Because of that initial line, [it became] this very rhythmic story that had a lulling quality to it, even as things became more and more out of control,” she said.
For Harris, this is often how her creative process begins.
“It feels very organic that once I have a line that I really love, that I think would resonate with a child, create a mystery, or be a good hook, then it kind of unspools logically that there’s a story that’s going to follow from that,” Harris said.
Harris always knew she wanted to write creatively; however, it took some time to find a genre that worked best.
“I had come across this reference to a woman who had stitched a quilt of the solar system in the nineteenth century, and the idea where she wanted to use it to educate people about science,” she said.
While Harris originally considered writing an academic paper about the woman, she quickly realized that a picture book would be a more effective way to capture the attention of a larger audience.
“As soon as I thought that it clicked in my head, and the first few lines came to me, and I knew that this was the right way to tell this story,” Harris said.
Outside of writing children’s books, Harris is an English Language and Literature professor at the University of Waterloo.
Harris began teaching nineteenth-century American literature and transitioned into children’s literature courses based on increasing student interest.
“People tend to think of children’s literature as simplistic, but, in fact, it’s an incredibly sophisticated medium. Picture books aren’t that different from poetry, and then they have to do this additional work of capturing the interest of a child,” Harris said.
Harris noted a key component of her courses is working with students to understand how the books they read as children shaped how they see the world.
“Writing and reading for children is so crucial. We know that the number of books in a child’s house will predict their academic outcome. We know that the number of hours children spend reading a week directly translates to academic outcomes,” Harris said.
“Looking at the content of those books and thinking what that means for the child in terms of how they understand their world is incredibly powerful,” she said.
#childrensLiterature #englishLanguage #englishLiterature #jenniferHarris #literacy #localAuthor #safinaJennah #theWithcingHour #universityOfWaterloo
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Rhinos Are Winos book reading at the Pend d’Oreille Winery » Sandpoint Reader
By Reader Staff Spokane author Kevin Capuchin wants to take readers on a “booze cruise” through the zoo…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Books #Entertainment #firstABCadventure #Kevincapuchin #localauthor #localbook #pendd'oreillewinery #rhinosarewinos #Rileyhelal #wine #winebook #wineeducation
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/211098/ -
Rhinos Are Winos book reading at the Pend d’Oreille Winery » Sandpoint Reader
By Reader Staff Spokane author Kevin Capuchin wants to take readers on a “booze cruise” through the zoo…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Books #Entertainment #firstABCadventure #Kevincapuchin #localauthor #localbook #pendd'oreillewinery #rhinosarewinos #Rileyhelal #wine #winebook #wineeducation
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/211098/ -
How Authors Can Get More Media Coverage by Sarah Ramsey
Sarah Ramsey shares tips on how to get more media coverage. It all starts in your local area, try reaching out to the community and see what happens!
https://writersfunzone.com/blog/2025/05/09/how-authors-can-get-more-media-coverage-by-sarah-ramsey#WritingTips #journalism #journalist #localauthor #localpress
@indieauthors -
How Authors Can Get More Media Coverage by Sarah Ramsey
Sarah Ramsey shares tips on how to get more media coverage. It all starts in your local area, try reaching out to the community and see what happens!
https://writersfunzone.com/blog/2025/05/09/how-authors-can-get-more-media-coverage-by-sarah-ramsey#WritingTips #journalism #journalist #localauthor #localpress
@indieauthors -
How Authors Can Get More Media Coverage by Sarah Ramsey
Sarah Ramsey shares tips on how to get more media coverage. It all starts in your local area, try reaching out to the community and see what happens!
https://writersfunzone.com/blog/2025/05/09/how-authors-can-get-more-media-coverage-by-sarah-ramsey#WritingTips #journalism #journalist #localauthor #localpress
@indieauthors -
How Authors Can Get More Media Coverage by Sarah Ramsey
Sarah Ramsey shares tips on how to get more media coverage. It all starts in your local area, try reaching out to the community and see what happens!
https://writersfunzone.com/blog/2025/05/09/how-authors-can-get-more-media-coverage-by-sarah-ramsey#WritingTips #journalism #journalist #localauthor #localpress
@indieauthors -
When making candles, one of the most important parts is #testing Test burns tell me whether the wick is too big or too small and how the scent throw (hot throw) is doing. Here's some test burns of the Slip #candles #fantasy #scribblinquill #slip #localauthor
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Pst! Baby boi says you should go to @fireflybookstore today to visit @LRyan_Storms with her new book Slip and the three new candle scents made especially for the book! #fantasy #candles #scribblinquill #fireflybookstore #localauthor #cats
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Pst! Come to @fireflybookstore on Saturday, April 19 and you'll get to meet @LRyan_Storms with her newest book Slip. And guess what?! There are candles especially for the book! #fantasy #candles #scribblinquill #localauthor #indiebookstore
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There's something GREAT happening soon in this local corner in Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ Stay tuned! (Picture from the internet because I was too excited and forgot to take one).
Pronto habrá algo GENIAL en este rincón de Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ ¡No se lo pierdan! (Foto de internet porque me emocione demasiado y se me olvidó tomar una).
#LocalBookstore #SaltLakeCity #UtahBookstagrammers #SLCBookstores #LocalAuthor #SLCWriter #UtahWriter #SugarHouse #SaltLakeCity
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There's something GREAT happening soon in this local corner in Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ Stay tuned! (Picture from the internet because I was too excited and forgot to take one).
Pronto habrá algo GENIAL en este rincón de Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ ¡No se lo pierdan! (Foto de internet porque me emocione demasiado y se me olvidó tomar una).
#LocalBookstore #SaltLakeCity #UtahBookstagrammers #SLCBookstores #LocalAuthor #SLCWriter #UtahWriter #SugarHouse #SaltLakeCity
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There's something GREAT happening soon in this local corner in Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ Stay tuned! (Picture from the internet because I was too excited and forgot to take one).
Pronto habrá algo GENIAL en este rincón de Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ ¡No se lo pierdan! (Foto de internet porque me emocione demasiado y se me olvidó tomar una).
#LocalBookstore #SaltLakeCity #UtahBookstagrammers #SLCBookstores #LocalAuthor #SLCWriter #UtahWriter #SugarHouse #SaltLakeCity
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There's something GREAT happening soon in this local corner in Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ Stay tuned! (Picture from the internet because I was too excited and forgot to take one).
Pronto habrá algo GENIAL en este rincón de Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ ¡No se lo pierdan! (Foto de internet porque me emocione demasiado y se me olvidó tomar una).
#LocalBookstore #SaltLakeCity #UtahBookstagrammers #SLCBookstores #LocalAuthor #SLCWriter #UtahWriter #SugarHouse #SaltLakeCity
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There's something GREAT happening soon in this local corner in Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ Stay tuned! (Picture from the internet because I was too excited and forgot to take one).
Pronto habrá algo GENIAL en este rincón de Utah. ✨️🤩✨️ ¡No se lo pierdan! (Foto de internet porque me emocione demasiado y se me olvidó tomar una).
#LocalBookstore #SaltLakeCity #UtahBookstagrammers #SLCBookstores #LocalAuthor #SLCWriter #UtahWriter #SugarHouse #SaltLakeCity
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This just arrived in store! Join a young Ukrainian girl, Sophie and her sisters, as they paint Easter Eggs. It showcases #Ukrainian traditions and has beautiful illustrations. Written by Terese Waldron. #easter #localauthor #fireflybookstre #indiebookstore #childrensbook
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Just in! The 3rd book in Local Author Amy Impellizzeri's Riversedge Law Club series is out now! Firefly special: buy all 3 titles for $45.00, save $6.85! Available on our site. #fireflybookstore #newarrivals #amyimpellizzeri #riversedgelawclub #mysterythriller #localauthor
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Just in! The 3rd book in Local Author Amy Impellizzeri's Riversedge Law Club series is out now! Firefly special: buy all 3 titles for $45.00, save $6.85! Available on our site. #fireflybookstore #newarrivals #amyimpellizzeri #riversedgelawclub #mysterythriller #localauthor
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Just in! The 3rd book in Local Author Amy Impellizzeri's Riversedge Law Club series is out now! Firefly special: buy all 3 titles for $45.00, save $6.85! Available on our site. #fireflybookstore #newarrivals #amyimpellizzeri #riversedgelawclub #mysterythriller #localauthor
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Just in! The 3rd book in Local Author Amy Impellizzeri's Riversedge Law Club series is out now! Firefly special: buy all 3 titles for $45.00, save $6.85! Available on our site. #fireflybookstore #newarrivals #amyimpellizzeri #riversedgelawclub #mysterythriller #localauthor
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Just in! The 3rd book in Local Author Amy Impellizzeri's Riversedge Law Club series is out now! Firefly special: buy all 3 titles for $45.00, save $6.85! Available on our site. #fireflybookstore #newarrivals #amyimpellizzeri #riversedgelawclub #mysterythriller #localauthor
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This week's #LocalAuthorSpotlight goes
to Johnny Abboud, a new-to-our-store author!
His debut novel, "It Starts When You Stop" is now available at our store. Contact us or stop by to grab a copy!
#fireflybookstore #localauthor #indiebookstore #berkscountypa #lehighvalleypa #wehavethebestbooks -
This week's #LocalAuthorSpotlight goes
to Johnny Abboud, a new-to-our-store author!
His debut novel, "It Starts When You Stop" is now available at our store. Contact us or stop by to grab a copy!
#fireflybookstore #localauthor #indiebookstore #berkscountypa #lehighvalleypa #wehavethebestbooks -
This week's #LocalAuthorSpotlight goes
to Johnny Abboud, a new-to-our-store author!
His debut novel, "It Starts When You Stop" is now available at our store. Contact us or stop by to grab a copy!
#fireflybookstore #localauthor #indiebookstore #berkscountypa #lehighvalleypa #wehavethebestbooks -
This week's #LocalAuthorSpotlight goes
to Johnny Abboud, a new-to-our-store author!
His debut novel, "It Starts When You Stop" is now available at our store. Contact us or stop by to grab a copy!
#fireflybookstore #localauthor #indiebookstore #berkscountypa #lehighvalleypa #wehavethebestbooks -
This week's #LocalAuthorSpotlight goes
to Johnny Abboud, a new-to-our-store author!
His debut novel, "It Starts When You Stop" is now available at our store. Contact us or stop by to grab a copy!
#fireflybookstore #localauthor #indiebookstore #berkscountypa #lehighvalleypa #wehavethebestbooks -
So wonderful to have @LRyan_Storms here in the store! She was here with meeting customers and talking about her various fantasy titles, including The Tarrowburn Prophecies and her newest book "Marit Unsanctioned " #bestkeptsecrettour #kutztown #fireflybookstore #localauthor
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So wonderful to have @LRyan_Storms here in the store! She was here with meeting customers and talking about her various fantasy titles, including The Tarrowburn Prophecies and her newest book "Marit Unsanctioned " #bestkeptsecrettour #kutztown #fireflybookstore #localauthor
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My friend self publishes her own fiction. The most recent #book, Imperial Jade Dragon Pendant, has been released.
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Upcoming book and author events in and around #Boulder, #Colorado.
#bookstodon #amreading #indieauthor #localauthor #writingcommunity
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I’ll be there to support Colorado author and my friend, Juliet Wittman, as she launches her second novel. See you at Boulder Books!
Tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/juliet-wittman-again-and-again-tickets-596101233837
#bookstodon #boulder #colorado #amreading #boulderbookstore #coauthors #localauthor
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Book Signing Tomorrow at 2pm!
November 26, 2PM
Tattered Cover Book Store & Café Colfax
2526 E Colfax Ave,
Denver, CO 80206
Join us at one of the most atmospheric of the local bookstores for swag, shenanigans, and a little talk about hope in hard times.
#booksigning #queerbooks #booksandreading #localbookstore #localauthor #queerauthor
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Book Signing Tomorrow at 2pm!
November 26, 2PM
Tattered Cover Book Store & Café Colfax
2526 E Colfax Ave,
Denver, CO 80206
Join us at one of the most atmospheric of the local bookstores for swag, shenanigans, and a little talk about hope in hard times.
#booksigning #queerbooks #booksandreading #localbookstore #localauthor #queerauthor
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Book Signing Tomorrow at 2pm!
November 26, 2PM
Tattered Cover Book Store & Café Colfax
2526 E Colfax Ave,
Denver, CO 80206
Join us at one of the most atmospheric of the local bookstores for swag, shenanigans, and a little talk about hope in hard times.
#booksigning #queerbooks #booksandreading #localbookstore #localauthor #queerauthor
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Book Signing Tomorrow at 2pm!
November 26, 2PM
Tattered Cover Book Store & Café Colfax
2526 E Colfax Ave,
Denver, CO 80206
Join us at one of the most atmospheric of the local bookstores for swag, shenanigans, and a little talk about hope in hard times.
#booksigning #queerbooks #booksandreading #localbookstore #localauthor #queerauthor