Weekly Roundup of Writing Opportunities for December 18

As the second wave of holidays approach, we slow down just a little bit
to pick up speed with writers’ salons after New Year and very exciting
workshops to follow in the coming months.
Resolve To Write!
There will be member’s only salon Resolve to Write events in January in Anchorage, Fairbanks,
Homer, and Juneau. These popular salons in members homes are a
chance to share your goals; talk about what went wrong and what went right in
2015; and make the writing connections that will carry your writing practice
through the year. Invitations will be sent out mid-December to current members.
If you are concerned that your membership might not be up-to-date, or you just
want to check, please feel free to email 49writers@gmail.com. 
2016
Class Schedule
Registration for 2016 classes and workshops will begin at the
end of December. Please make sure that you watch our website for more
information. Feel free to contact us at 49writers@gmail.com if you have any
questions.
Danger Close: Alaska
On
Saturday and Sunday, February 6th
and 7th, Sherry Simpson, Benjamin Busch, Elliott
Ackerman, and Lea Carpenter
will lead a two-day multi-genre workshop
for 24 evenly-apportioned civilian and veteran writers. Students will learn
about journalism in unsafe places, discuss why storytelling exists, view multimedia
explorations of war narrative, and question what it takes to “make it” as a
writer. Most importantly, students will participate in workshops featuring
their own writing, in addition to generating new material.
Danger
Close: Alaska will run from 9am-4pm,
with an hour for lunch, on both days. Cost is $150 total and registration opened on December 14 on
www.49writingcenter.org Participants are required to submit a 3-5 page double-spaced
manuscript by January 11, 2016.
EVENTS
IN ANCHORAGE
Events
at the UAA Bookstore
Saturday, December 19 from 1:00pm
-3:00pm
at the UAA/APU Consortium Library, room 307
Author Jana Meador
Jana
Meador’s Seven Lucky Stars is a book for all ages.  It tells the
true story of a sled dog left to defend for himself only to find his second
chance in life. His journey takes him on an unexpected 2000 mile adventure,
where he meets his seven lucky stars.
There is free parking at UAA!.
All
UAA Campus Bookstore events are informal, free and open to the public. For more
information contact Rachel Epstein at
repstein2@uaa.alaska.edu or 786-4782. For a look at future events visit
https://www.uaa.alaska.edu/bookstore/events/special-events-calendar.cfm
Local
Library Events
Book
Signings
EVENTS
AROUND ALASKA
SOUTHCENTRAL,
MAT-SU, KENAI PENINSULA
SOUTHEAST
The Alaska Marine Conservation
Council
is
in search of volunteer storytellers to help lead a 3-hour storytelling workshop
for young fishermen. The workshop will take place Saturday, Jan. 30, 2016 in Juneau, and will
focus on how narrative — expressed through a variety of mediums — can be used at
many levels of personal and professional communication. The workshop will offer
strategies for fishermen to access and tell their unique story. We believe that
strong personal and collective narratives are key factors in advocating for
healthy communities and ecosystems, and hope to share useful tools for
developing those narratives through this workshop. Ideally, our guest
storyteller would also have a connection to Alaskan fisheries, past or present.
If interested, please contact Hannah Heimbuch at 
hannah@akmarine.org, or (907) 299-4018
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. She 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
The Alaska Historical Society has a new project, the Alaska Historic Canneries Initiative,
and a small grant program intended to jump start projects across the state.
Grants of up to $1000 are available to individuals, organizations, and
businesses to advance seafood history projects around the state. Applications
are due on January 1, 2016 and available at 
AHS’s website.
There
is also an annotated bibliography with hundreds of entries that chart the
history of Alaska’s seafood industry. This is a must-have reference for
anyone engaged in fisheries or the study of Alaska history. Check out 
Alaska Fisheries: A Guide
to HistoryResources
on the website. Also visit the Alaska’s Historic Canneries
blog, a meeting-ground for fish heads. The organization is seeking
guest bloggers
to share not just historical information, but also stories.
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 River, The Plover, Martin 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
January 18,
2016                                February
25, 2016
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
The
2016 Governor’s Awards
 ceremony will be held in Juneau on Thursday,
January 28th
. We will also continue the tradition of scheduling CHAMP Day
(Culture, Humanities, Arts & Museums Partners), a legislative fly-in day,
on Wednesday, January 27th. Please start brainstorming ideas
for nominees and consider submitting a nomination! The nomination process will
open in August. This year’s Arts categories will be: Margaret Nick
Cooke Award for Alaska Native Arts & Languages, Business Leadership, Arts
Advocacy and Individual Artist. A list of previous awardees can be found
at 
https://education.alaska.gov/aksca/pdf/Past_Recipients_GAAH.pdf.
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.
Alderworks Alaska
Writers
and Artists Retreat
will be accepting residency applications
November 15,
2015 – January15, 2016
. For more information visit http://alderworksalaska.com
MEMBER
PUBLICATIONS
49
Writers member, Lucian Childs, has three short stories appearing in literary
magazines this fall. Currently in print are “In Your Beautiful Country”
in 
Grain Magazine 43.1 and
“Letters from His Wife Regarding the Progress of Her Enlightenment” in 
Jelly Bucket No. 6. The short short,
“Pressure,” is forthcoming at 
Fiction Attic.
Thank
You for Your Support and Happy Holidays!
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?
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hope that you’ll remember 49 Writers
when you file for your Permanent Fund Dividend and become part of the
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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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