Weekly Roundup of Writing Opportunities for Apri

2016
Class Schedule
Registration
for our classes and workshops continues. Description, details, and registration
on our 
website.
 Feel free to contact us at 49writers@gmail.com if you have any questions.
Anchorage
Forms
of Poetry taught by Alyse Knorr
April
6, 13, 20, and 27, 6-9pm
Effectively
Use Microsoft Word to Publish your Book to Kindle taught by Lara Madden
April
7, 6-9pm
Set
Your Fiction on Fire taught by Kim Heacox
April
13, 6-9pm
Homer
Confusing
the Censor: Nurturing Receptive Mind taught by Peter Kaufmann and Wendy Erd
April
8 6:30-8:30pm, April 9 9am-noon & 1-4pm
Juneau
Set
Your Fiction on Fire taught by Kim Heacox
April
18, 6-9pm
Online
Flashbacks
Without Whiplash: Managing Time in Fiction by Andromeda Romano-Lax
Asynchronous
online class
April
4-25
EVENTS
IN ANCHORAGE
Poetry Parley
Wednesday, April 20 at
6:30 pm at the Writer’s Block
April
is National Poetry Month and Poetry Parley participants will be reading poets
of the T’ang Dynasty.  Peter Porco and Judith Stoll will read as the
featured local poets.  The Parley is held on the third Wednesdays. 
Any who wish to read from the ancient Chinese poets, please email
poetryparley@gmail.com
We’ll assign some verse or aid you in finding poems by Tu-Fu and
others. 
Savor
the Rising Words Poetry Broadside Sale and Reading
Support
Poetry in Alaska! Buy a Broadside!
All
of the poets and artists featured in the exhibit have donated their work as a
fundraiser for 49 Writers, an organization that supports writing in Alaska
through  programs and educational opportunities across the
state. Each piece is for sale for $35.00 and may be purchased by
contacting Barbara at 301-5362.
Attend
the Reading
Several
of the featured poets will be reading their work at the Great Harvest Bread
Company on Thursday, April 16, from 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM. The program is
free, the public is welcome, and refreshments will be served. Please join us!
CROSSCURRENTS
EVENT
April
7 at 7pm
at
the Anchorage Museum
49
Writers is proud to present a Crosscurrents event entitled “It’s the End of
the World as We Know It”
featuring award-winning novelists Benjamin Percy
and Don Rearden.
Ben
Percy and Don Rearden will discuss writing fiction that tackles big subjects
without sacrificing high tension and compelling stories. Both Percy and Rearden
have written post-apocalyptic novels that speak to the underpinnings of culture
and humanity. They will discuss the notion that literary and genre fiction are
somehow mutually exclusive, as well as read from their work.
Benjamin
Percy is the author of three novels, The Wilding, winner of the Society
of Midland Authors Award for Fiction, and the psychological thriller Red
Moon, 
and The Dead Lands, a post-apocalyptic reimagining
of the Lewis and Clark saga. He is also the author of two books of
stories, Refresh, Refresh and The Language of Elk.
His honors include a National Endowment for the Arts, a Whiting Award, the
Plimpton Prize, a Pushcart Prize, and inclusion in Best American Short Stories.
Don
Rearden is the author of The Raven’s Gift and a produced screenwriter.
His films have aired on Showtime, TMC, and the Sci-FiNetwork. His novella Permafrost
Heart
, will be published in Weathered Edge II.
There
will be time for questions following the panel as well as an opportunity to
have books signed.
Events
at the UAA Bookstore
Saturday,
April 2 from 1:00pm-3:00pm

Soren
Wuerth presents Global and Local Climate Change and Adaptation: 
Lessons from Paris
Soren
Wuerth shares stories and photos from his visit to the Paris Climate Change
Conference in December.  The world of global politics and climate change
is discussed.
 Sören Wuerth is a teacher,
environmental activist, and writer living in Girdwood, Alaska.  As a
traveler on Spaceship Earth, he works to keep fellow passengers aware of
systemic problems that threaten the engines of our biosphere. He maintains a
blog at 
glacierwatch.wordpress.com
There
is free parking at UAA on Saturdays.
Tuesday,
April 5 from 5:00pm-7:00pm


Ann
Fienup-Riordan, Alice Rearden and Marie Meade present Anguyiim Nalliin:
The History of Bow-and-Arrow Warfare in Southwest Alaska
, recently
published by University of Alaska Press.  Anguyiim Nalliini/Time of
Warring
draws on little-known oral histories from the Yup’ik people of
southwest Alaska to detail a period of bow-and-arrow warfare that took place in
the region between 1300 and 1800. The result of more than thirty years of
research, discussion, and field recordings involving more than one hundred
Yup’ik men and women, Anguyiim Nalliini tells a story not just of war and
violence, but also of its cultural context—the origins of place names, the
growth of indigenous architectural practices, the personalities of prominent
warriors and leaders, and the eventual establishment of peaceful coexistence.
The
book is presented in bilingual format, with facing-page translations, and it
will be hailed as a landmark work in the study of Alaska Native history and
anthropology.
Ann
Fienup-Riordan is an anthropologist who has lived and worked in Alaska for more
than forty years. She has written and edited more than twenty books on Yup’ik
history and oral traditions. Alice Rearden is an Alaska-based translator and
oral historian. Marie Meade teaches at UAA in Alaska Native Studies.
There
is free parking for this event in the South Lot, Sports Complex NW Lot, West
Campus Central Lot  Sports Campus West Lot. 
Friday,
April 8 from 6:00pm-8:00pm at the UAA/APU Consortium Library room 307
Book Launch of David Stevenson’s Warnings
Against Myself: Memoirs of a Superstitious Mountaineer
David
Stevenson discusses and reads from his recently published memoir, Warnings
Against Myself.
“With
this book, Stevenson has joined the ranks of that rare breed: an excellent
mountaineering writer…. His essays show a remarkable awareness not only of the
physical world but of the innermost turmoil that can occur during moments of
stress.”  –author Steve Roper.
David
Stevenson is the director of the Creative Writing and Literary Arts
Department at the University of Alaska Anchorage. He is the author of the short
fiction collection
 Letters from Chamonix, winner of the Banff Mountain Festival
Fiction Prize. Since 1995 he has s been the book reviews editor at The
American Alpine Journal
.
There
is free parking at UAA on Fridays.
Saturday,
April 9 from 1:00pm-3:00pm
Ishmael Hope presents Courtesans of Flounder Hill
Ishmael
Hope is a storyteller, poet and writer who explores his Inupiaq and Tlingit
heritages. His Inupiaq name is Angaluuk and his Tlingit name is Khaagwaask’.
Courtesans
of Flounder Hill
is his first collection of poetry and is published by Ishmael Reed Publishing
Company.
According
to the late Richard Dauenhauer, Ishmael Hope “ reminds us how each of us is
central in a multigenerational relationship involving ancestry, self, and
descendants; heritage, contemporary culture, and legacy; an unbroken chain of
storytellers, daily life, and dreams, always negotiating, in the words of T. S.
Eliot, between tradition and the individual talent.”
Ishmael
Hope is also author of the comic book Strong Man and was the lead writer
for the highly acclaimed video game Kisima Ingitchuna: Never Alone.
This
event is sponsored by Alaska Center for the Book and is made possible by the
generous support of Lila Vogt.
There
is free parking at UAA on Saturdays.
Monday,
April 11 from 5:30pm-6:30pm

Kathryn Ohle presents Unite for Literacy: Bringing Books in
Cup’ik, Tlingit, and Inupiaq to Kids Everywhere
Kathryn
Ohle discusses her research in early childhood education and her work with
Unite for Literacy. Her
project, to promote early literacy and language preservation,
seeks to provide bilingual children’s books in Alaska Native languages, online
and in print, to families, children, and teachers.
Kathryn
Ohle is associate professor in Early Childhood Education, COE at UAA. She is
the recipient of a
Selkregg Award, a CCEL grant, and receives support from Kawarek,
Inc.
for her
work in literacy.
There
is free parking for this event in the South Lot, Sports Complex NW Lot, West
Campus Central Lot , Sports Campus West Lot. 
Thursday,
April 14 from 5:00pm-7:00pm

Dr. Kristin Hanson presents Iñupiaq Translations and
Transformations of Protestant Beliefs and Practices
Dr.
Kristin Hanson’s book Alaska Native (Iñupiaq) Translations and
Transformations of Protestant Beliefs and Practices: A Case Study of How
Religions Interact,
has recently been published by Edwin Mellen Press.
It explores how has and how
can Inupiaq spirituality-culture inform and shape the immigrant Christian
system, as well as the lives of Inupiat who have embraced Protestant beliefs.
The
book is based on an ethnographic study of two Anchorage congregations that have
notable Seward Peninsula-Norton Sound Inupiaq representation within them. And
includes an introduction to the early missionary history of the Seward
Peninsula-Norton Sound region, including first-person glimpses of village life,
difficult urban transitions, and multi-faceted racism.
Dr.
Kristin Hanson teaches
world philosophies and religions at UAA. She earned her Ph.D. in
Religion and a Certificate of Women’s Studies at Emory University.
There
is free parking for this event in the South Lot, Sports Complex NW Lot, West
Campus Central Lot, Sports Campus West Lot. 
Local
Library Events
Book
Signings
EVENTS
AROUND ALASKA
SOUTHCENTRAL,
MAT-SU, KENAI PENINSULA
The Copper Basin will welcome State Writer Laureate Frank Soos to our
communities at the end of April. Frank will meet with a local bookclub and
students at Kenny Lake and Glennallen Schools. Local writers are invited to
Writers’ Workshops at the Kenny Lake
Library on Thursday, April 28, from 1 to 4 pm
and at the Copper Basin Senior Citizen log cabin in
Glennallen on Friday, April 29
from
1 to 4
. Frank will present a program,
“An Alaska
Writers Sampler
,” at the Kenny Lake
Community Hall on Thursday evening, April 28, at 6 pm
. The public is also
invited to a reading of Frank Soos’
work on Friday night, April 29, at the
Carriage House in Gakona.
Local musicians will chime in for the reading
event, and snacks and coffee and tea will be provided. Come join us! For more
information, contact Mary Odden 822-3727 or
fiddletunes@hotmail.com
As
part of the
Machetanz Arts Festival at the
Mat-Su College

on June 4 and 5, writing workshops will be offered.
To
learn more about the classes and to register:
http://register.asapconnected.com/Courses.aspx?CourseGroupID=14213
Saturday, June 4
How
Shall I Begin?: Starting Your Piece with a Bang taught by Alyse Knorr
Finding
Yourself in a Poem taught by Julie LeMay
The
Sphere of Writing taught by Don Rearden
Sunday, June 5
Capturing
Character The Mechanics of Writing Great Characters in Fiction and Non-Fiction taught
by Martha Amore
Playing
with Description taught by Lynn Lovegreen
Walking
the Line taught by Susanna Mishler
There
is also a panel discussion at the end of each day, featuring the writers who’ve
taught during that day.
Murderers’ Row
Saturday, April 2, 1-3 pm,
Fireside Books
is hosting a panel discussion with three successfully published
Alaskan authors of crime. Its topic is “MURDERERS’ ROW.” Indeed, it
will be a discussion by writers of Alaskan crime. What is different about
Alaska as a character in crime narratives and descriptions of place? How to
best write Alaska into description of crime?
Our
three participant-authors are Stan Jones (the Nathan Active mystery series),
Tom Brennan (Alaska’s premier author of true crime, most recently, “Dead
Man’s Dancer: The Mechele Linehan Story”) and Mary Wasche (“Murder in
Wasilla.”)
Contact:
Barbara L. Hecker Fireside Books / Event Coordinator 745-2665
barbara@goodbooksbadcoffee.com
The
Living Room: Stories for Grownup
s, to be held April 8, 2016, in the back room at Jitters
coffee house in Eagle River
. Come hear stories and poems from people in our
community who love all things literary. The program runs from 7-9 pm.
Refreshments served. Mingle with other writers and readers at this free event.
See our Facebook page at: The Living Room. Sign up to read or just come and
listen.
SOUTHEAST
OPPORTUNITIES
FOR WRITERS
CONFERENCES,
AWARDS, RETREATS & RESIDENCIES
The
fifteenth 
Kachemak
Bay Writers’ Conference
 will
be held on 
June 10-14 in Homer. This year’s keynote
is Pulitzer Prize winning, National Poet Laureate Natasha Trethewey, who will
be joined by Miriam Altshuler (agent), Dan Beachy-Quick, Richard
Chiappone, Jennine Capó Crucet, Alison Hawthorne Deming, Forrest Gander, Lee
Goodman, Richard Hoffman, Erin Coughlin Hollowell, Sarah Leavitt, Nancy
Lord, Jane Rosenman (editor), Peggy Shumaker, Sherry Simpson, Frank Soos,
and David Stevenson. For more information and to register go to
the 
website
Registration now open to the
2016 
Tutka
Bay Writers Retreat,
 which will take place on September 9-11, 2016 at
the Tutka Bay Lodge. Faculty instructor award-winning novelist and short story
writer Rick Moody will lead fiction writers in a workshop will focus on
experiment, imagination, and revision, techniques for each, with an emphasis on
writing prompts, close reading of sentences, and ideas about structure. There
will be much in-class writing, and the overall atmosphere will stick close to
supportiveness, collegiality, and constructive improvement. The engaged student
will emerge with improved techniques for further work. Early registration fee
is $600 for members and $650 for nonmembers. For more information or to
register, go to: 
http://www.49writingcenter.org/Retreats%26Events/retreats.php.
The
sixth annual 
North Words Writers Symposium will be held May 25-28 in
Skagway. Novelist/essayist/editor and storyteller supreme Brian Doyle of
Portland, Oregon (Mink RiverThe PloverMartin
Marten,
 and the forthcoming Chicago) will be the 2016
keynote author. He will be joined by Alaskan authors Kim Heacox, Eowyn Ivey,
Heather Lende, Lynn Schooler, John Straley, and Emily Wall. For more
information and to register go to 
http://nwwriterss.com/
360
North
 will
start the 2015-16 season of Writers’ Showcase. All Alaska writers are invited
to submit fiction and nonfiction pieces. Stories are read before a live studio
audience by professional actors, and later broadcast throughout Alaska on
statewide public TV and radio. Stories should be about 10 minutes long when
read aloud. Profanity will need to be edited for broadcast.
SUBMISSION
DEADLINE
            
RECORDING DATE
April
25, 2016
                                  
June 2, 2016
Submit
to arts [at] ktoo [dot] org.
For
questions contact Scott Burton
Arts, Culture and Music Producer at 907.463.6473
2016
Statewide Arts and Culture Conference
 will take place in Anchorage, Thursday, April
28th through Saturday, April 30th
. We are in the process of
exploring compelling themes, topics and national speakers for the convening.
Like our last conference, we will be engaging Alaskan artists in the planning
and production of the event. Be on the lookout for the opportunity to apply to
be a conference Partner Artist, which will open in the fall. If you have any
ideas to share with us, please send them our way by emailing 
aksca.info@alaska.gov
Alaska
magazine
 is
seeking pitches from new and established writers. We are a publication for
Alaska enthusiasts and need a wide variety of articles. The best section to
break into the magazine is KtoB (formerly Ketchikan to Barrow), and includes
everything from cool job profiles to End of the Trail obituaries to a short
write up about an Alaska-made product. We’d also like to see queries about
culture, history, nature, interviews with Alaskans and feature articles ideas.
Review recent hard copy issues of Alaska magazine and visit 
www.alaskamagazine.com for
more about us, and then send short, descriptive pitches to freelance
contributing editor Susan Sommer at 
sbsommer@mtaonline.net.
13
Chairs Literary Journal
, a new literary journal publishing short stories and poetry
from new and emerging authors, seeks submissions and volunteers. They are
currently composing their flagship issue, straight out of JBER, AK. To learn
more, and to submit, email info@13chairs.com or 
visit 13chairs.com.
Thank
You for Your Support!
Over
1,000 people receive these newsletters. Many of them are members of 49 Writers,
knowing that their membership helps support all of the workshops, author tours,
CrossCurrents events, readings, blog posts, and craft talks. Won’t you join
them by becoming a member?
We
hope that you’ll remember 49 Writers when you file for your Permanent
Fund Dividend and become part of the movement to support organizations you
believe in through Pick Click Give.
49
Writers Volunteer Seta

Have
news or events you’d like to see listed here? Email details to 49roundup (at) gmail.com.
Your message must be received by noon on the Thursday before the roundup is
scheduled to run. Unless your event falls in the “Opportunities”
category, it should occur no more than 30 days from when we receive your email.
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