All posts by Maurus Cappa

Breakfast Meeting June 17, 2017

Bertram Ellis and his wife, Karen, emigrated to Canada in 1957.

He joined the de Havilland aircraft of Canada company, engineering department and retired in 1990 as the manager of Aero Services. 

He was a pilot until he lost his licence due to deteriorating vision.

He has travelled the world, Europe, Africa, Middle East, Far East, and South America. Among his adventures, he has been lost in the Sudanese desert south of Omdurman, blown up, shot at, and fished the mighty Zambezi and been on safaris, day and night.

During his travels he never lost his belief in the essential goodness of people.

After he retired he started writing and presenting seminars on memoir writing.

He has presented seminars on memoir writing for 25 years in the USA and Canada. He wrote a book, ‘A century of memories’ which was published by a seniors magazine. A ten article series on the subject was published by several senior magazines and newspapers in America.

The Florida newspaper that published the series in a weekly column, received requests  for the complete set from places as far away as Australia. Visitors had read one or two articles while on holiday in Florida and wanted to read the complete set. 

Bert has written novels, short stories and articles on various topics. His novel ‘The GINA Mirage’ ( German intelligence north Afrika) is partly based on his two years in the Egyptian desert while serving in the RAF just after WWII.

 

Breakfast Meeting July 15, 2017


This is our semi-annual members readings. Please come out to support your fellow members and marvel at all of the talent we have in our organization. If you wish to read please send your entry and request to Jasmine Jackman at jasminejackman@gmail.com . Readings are limited to five minutes in order to accommodate all of the participants.

Breakfast Meeting September 16, 2017

Marnie Grundman is the author of MISSING: A True Story of a Childhood Lost. Marnie has been featured on major Television and radio shows such as Breakfast Television, Young Justice with Zach Rhoads, Wise Women Canada, CJAD, Experience 50, Lifeology with James Miller and the National Association of Adult Survivors of Child Abuse. A child who belonged to no one, missing at the tender age of 13, she experienced the worst of humanity firsthand. However, she didn’t just make it through; she rose above the darkness, becoming a beacon of light, of empowerment, for others to do the same.

What began as a story of healing led to one of triumph, of the power of the human spirit, of one woman’s surthrival against all odds. Marnie has since become an advocate for the missing, working to change the perception of runaway children so they might finally get the help they desperately need. Her compelling book, engaging talks, and insightful articles have become a shining light to the lost and the struggling. Marnie guides and teaches how not to live their damage, how to heal and overcome, how to rise up and reclaim a life of happiness.

Her typical audiences are Adult Survivors of Abuse/Trauma, Social Workers, Child Advocates, Homeless Youth Organizations and Advocates, Recovering Runaways, Families of Missing and Runaway Children, Missing Children Organizations, Educators, and those who are looking for ways to help recovering runaways.

SPECIALTIES: Understanding the impact of child abuse: emotional, physical and sexual. How to heal from trauma and child abuse. Runaways/homeless youth: What they face, why they run, and how to serve them when they return.

Breakfast Meeting October 21, 2017

sharonacrawford-smallSharon A. Crawford, a former journalist, is a freelance memoir and fiction writer, writing consultant and instructor, blogger, book reviewer, editor and sometime actor. Sharon is the author of the Beyond mystery series, the short story collection Beyond the Tripping Point (Blue Denim Press, 2012), and her latest novel Beyond Blood (Blue Denim Press, Fall 2014). In the May 2013 issue of Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Jon L. Breen in his “Jury Box” review of Beyond the Tripping Point called Sharon A. Crawford “a Canadian writer of promise.”Sharon has appeared with her Beyond mystery books along with other Crime Writers of Canada authors in libraries, cafés and Word on the Street. Her main Beyond character, private investigator Dana Bowman, has shown up at book launches, fundraisers and other presentations. Sharon also belongs to Toronto Sisters in Crime, The Toronto Heliconian Club, and runs the East End Writers’ Group. She was Writer in Residence for the Canadian Authors Association, Toronto branch, 2009-2014. Her hobbies: reading, walking and gardening act as catalysts for her next novel. Check her website at www.samcraw.com and her author blog www.sharonacrawfordauthor.com

 

Breakfast Meeting November 18, 2017

Eva Stachniak is the award-winning and internationally bestselling author of The Winter Palace and Empress of the Night, two novels inspired by Catherine the Great The Winter Palace was a Globe and Mail Best Book of the Year and made The Washington Post’s most notable fiction list. She holds a PhD in literature from McGill University.

The Chosen Maiden, set in the world of Ballets Russes, was published by Doubleday in January of 2017. The Chosen Maiden is like entering Aladdin’s Cave, where a vivid, strange and enchanting world awaits. This is the world Stachniak paints of the Ballets Russes, replete with firebirds and fauns, love affairs and bitter artistic rivalries. Most of all, it is the thrilling world of the Great Nijinsky and his passionate and unforgettable sister Bronia, whose discipline and talent rival her famous brother’s, but whose greatest genius may be her will to survive. Spanning two world wars and the Russian Revolution, Eva Stachniak’s sumptuous and evocative dance of the Chosen Maiden is the dance of 20th century history.

Born and raised in Poland, she moved to Canada in 1981, and lives in Toronto.

Breakfast Meeting December 9, 2017

Annual Holiday Party and Members Reading. As is customary this Holiday Party will feature a deluxe menu which includes eggs Benedict, pasta, and salmon. This is always a fun event and we encourage you to bring family and friends. Come out to enjoy some Christmas music and hear our talented members read. There will be a 50-50 draw. If you wish to read, please send your name to Jasmine Jackman at jasminejackman13@gmail.com  or simply reply to this email. At this time, there are still spots available but don’t delay since they fill up quickly. Preference will be given to those reading from the anthology.

“From Mind to Keyboard” with Contributions from Ben Antao

mindtokeyboardA Writer’s Journey

From Mind to Keyboard: A Review

Iris C F Gomes
Being a writer is a hard work and anybody who has dabbled in writing, albeit occasionally, will bear testimony to the fact. Imagine having the gumption to carry on with it alongside your primary source of income, or even adopting it as your only means of livelihood. Only the madness and passion that fuels the tenacity of writers presents us with a plausible answer to why there are people who have chosen to enter into writing professionally.

From Mind to Keyboard, edited by Sheela Jaywant and published by Goa, 1556, is a book of stories from different writers living in Goa about their journeys as writers: what set off the spark and what kept them going despite any odds that presented themselves against their choice. The contributors are not all of Goan origin, and so they provide us with an insight into a writing world and its struggles that goes beyond the narrow confines of our State. It is, nevertheless, heartening to acknowledge the number of prominent writers Goa has produced.

The book has journalist Ben Antao transporting us to a pre-liberation Goa, documenting his balancing act of working for the Bombay Port Trust, writing for the Indian Express and the Goan Tribune, and commencing his MA studies, before finally coming to work for the Navhind Times in Goa under Lambert Mascarenhas. Antao talks about the requirements of being a journalist, namely the possession of knowledge that covers many areas as well as the knowledge of the specific details of a particular sphere or discipline: something that makes journalism an incredibly challenging field. He is candid about the very human limitations of journalism in presenting the absolute truth.

Award winning writer and food historian Odette Mascarenhas talks about publishing woes with regard to the first book she wrote, which was about her father-in-law Miguel Arcanjo Mascarenhas, a noted Goan chef. She describes how she learnt to handle praise and criticism, moving on to write children’s books and a Goan recipe book among others in the story titled Rocky Roads Bring Out the Best in Me.

An ardent lover of books since childhood, internationally and nationally acclaimed Konkani writer Damodar Mauzo confides that he once believed that Konkani could not be used as a medium for expressing prose. This fallacy was destroyed when he absorbed the writing of Shenoy Goem-Bab, eventually leading Mauzo along a path of fame.

Goa Streets’ Steve Gutkin leads us through an interesting journalistic career with not a dull moment. In one of the livelier reads in the book, he recounts being stranded with the Yanomami tribesmen of the Amazon jungle, covering drug cartels in Columbia, travelling with Hugo Chavez, writing about suicide bombings and the death of Yasser Arafat in Israel and so on. The man could write a book on his own experiences as a journalist.

Author Anita Pinto’s verses are a fun and refreshing way of telling her story, I Write, In Verse, as she departs from the monotony of prose.

The rest of the writers come from varied backgrounds including soldiers, teachers and engineers, but the commonalities in their histories are their ravenous appetite for reading, their determined focus on writing, no matter the financial repercussions, and their insatiable thirst for learning.

Apart from the obvious prowess of the writers involved, Bina Nayak’s illustrations, which capture the essence of every tale told, must be commended. The book offers its readers a closer look at personalities they know only through their writing. From Mind to Keyboard makes an excellent read for young people starting out in the business of writing as it advises on pitfalls to avoid and enthuses with tales of dogged dedication to the craft. It can be recommended as a necessary addition to the reading list of students of literature and journalism.

September 24, 2016 WEN at Word on the Street 2016

wots1This year WEN participated in the Word on the Street Festival at Harbourfront. Marianne Funny did a great job at organizing the event and many thanks to her and to the volunteers who manned the booth. Everyone said it was successful with many festival attendees saying they are interested in WEN. Everyone said we should do it again next year.