Member event

Events held by individual members of WFNS

The Tudor Prophecy book signing and reading

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Maritime Conservatory of Performing Arts, room 3, 6199 Chebucto Road
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Author Julie Strong invites you to a reading/signing for her debut novel, The Tudor Prophecy.
Q and A with Debora Pollock, actor and theatre person.
Live period music (performed by Peter Togni, celebrated Atlantic musician and composer) and refreshments.

RSVP appreciated juliestrong@eastlink.ca

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National Poetry Month Reading

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1256 Hollis Street, Halifax. More info
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Join local poets Clare Goulet, Nanci Lee, Annick MacAskill, Nolan Natasha, and Anna Quon for a National Poetry Month reading and celebration. Event supported by the League of Canadian Poets.

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Sweet Ride at Bluenose Lodge

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at - at
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10 Falkland Street, Lunenburg. More info
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Sweet Ride at Bluenose Lodge
A new play with music by Reid Campbell and Laurel Darnell

Bluenose Lodge, in partnership with Flying Fish Theatre, is pleased to announce eight performances of Sweet Ride.

Inspired by Ann Barry‘s 2017 book, Sweet Ride is the true story of a “grand adventure” taken in the summer of 1943. Four young women embark on a journey by bicycle from Blockhouse, Nova Scotia, to see their musical hero, Don Messer. They realize their dream, sitting in the studio audience during Mr. Messer’s live radio broadcast at the CFCY Studio, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.

Set during the height of World War Two, the adventure recounts 400 miles on one-speed bicycles, blistering heat, torrential rain, roadside aid provided by soldiers and the rides at the Bill Lynch Carnival. Two actors, two musicians, one period bicycle and eight songs tell this charming tale of perseverance in pursuit of a dream.

April 10th, 11th, 12th and 13th (5:45pm – roughly 9pm)
&
April 24th, 25th, 26th and 27th (5:45pm – roughly 9pm)

Dinner & show package includes three course meal & gratuities
$115.00 per person plus hst

 

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GET WRITING! workshop with Jan Fancy Hull and Pat Thomas

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Location:
60 Queen Street, Chester. More info
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Held on two Saturdays, April 5 and 12, 9am-12pm, this two-session course will get you off your duff and into the writing chair, on your way to achieving your writing goals. In 8 or more modules over the two mornings, participants can expect to explore:
1. The importance of knowing why you are embarking on your project/s
2. How to plan to begin and complete your writing project, no matter what genre you’re working on
3. Essential writing tips for any genre, including memoir, fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and mash-ups
4. How to think about editing; when and who can do it
5. Ways to publish your work
6. Resources for writing your best
All skill levels will benefit, from a first-time writer to a previously-published author who is stuck and needs a (gentle) push.

*BONUS: Participants will be encouraged to submit (electronically) a writing sample of up to 750 words on or before April 5, and will receive written comments on April 12; NO EXTRA CHARGE!

*Jan Fancy Hull* is author of eight published novels with four more to come in the Tim Brown Mystery series; two books of short fiction, one non-fiction book about living in Nova Scotia, and award-winning poetry.

*Pat Thomas* has been a book editor for eighteen years. Genres she has edited include historical, contemporary fiction and romance, paranormal, creative nonfiction, short stories, YA fiction and fantasy, anthologies, sagas, picture books, poetry and spoken-word poetry-to-print.

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Poets & Pints Celebrating National Poetry Month

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5136 Prince Street, Halifax. More info
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“The purpose of poetry is to restore to mankind the possibility to wonder.” — Octavio Paz

April is National Poetry Month!

Bookmark is pleased to host our first annual Poets and Pints event, a celebration of our local poets during poetry month, taking place in the An Seanchai Room at The Olde Triangle Irish Alehouse, 5136 Prince Street on Monday, April 3rd from 6:30 – 9 pm.

This year’s event will feature local poets Annick MacAskill, Claire Goulet and Cory Lavender reading from their new poetry collections followed by a moderated conversation between the poets and an audience Q&A hosted by Heather Jessup.

The event will conclude with an open mic where other poets and aspiring poets can read their poetry to the audience. The open mic is limited to 10 participants. Please register for the open mic by emailing halifax@bookmarkreads.ca.

Refreshments will be available as well as a cash bar. All are welcome! We hope you’ll join us.

Heather Jessup: Heather Jessup teaches fiction in the creative writing program at Dalhousie University. She is the author of the novel The Lightning Field, and a book on truth, lies, and art called This Is Not a Hoax: Unsettling Truth in Canadian Culture. She is the co-curator of the national exhibition Make Believe: The Secret Library of M. Prud’homme – A Rare Collection of Fakes, which toured across Canada in 2019. Her work has been nominated for the Journey Prize, New American Voices, two Atlantic Book Awards and the Dublin Literary Award. She lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia on the unceded territories of Mi’kma’ki.

Annick MacAskill: Annick MacAskill is a poet, editor, translator, and educator based in Kjipuktuk (Halifax), Nova Scotia, the traditional and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq. She is an Assistant Professor (limited term) of French in the Department of Languages and Cultures at Saint Mary’s University. MacAskill is the author of four full-length poetry collections, including Shadow Blight (Gaspereau Press, 2022), winner of the Governor General’s Award for Poetry, and Votive (Gaspereau Press, 2024). Her poems have appeared in journals and
anthologies across Canada and abroad and in the Best Canadian Poetry anthology series.

Clare Goulet: Clare Goulet is a poet, essayist, editor, and instructor and the coordinator of the Writing Center at MSVU. Her interests include interdisciplinary writing, poetics, metaphor and the work of Jan Zwicky, especially applications of her notion of ‘lyric philosophy.’ Graphis scripta / writing lichen (Gaspereau Press, 2024) is her first collection of poems. Her writing has appeared in The Fiddlehead, Grain, Room, Collateral, Poetry Canada Review, and The Dalhousie Review. She lives and teaches in Kjipuktuk/Halifax, NS.

Cory Lavender: Cory Lavender is a poet of African Nova Scotian and European descent living in the Kespukwitk district of Mi’kma’ki (Southwest Nova Scotia). His chapbooks are Lawson Roy’s Revelation (Gaspereau Press, 2018) and Ballad of Bernie “Bear” Roy (knife | fork | book, 2020). His work has appeared in journals such as Grain, Prairie Fire, Riddle Fence, and The Fiddlehead, and in Watch Your Head: Writers and Artists Respond to the Climate Crisis (Coach House Press, 2020). His full-length collection of poems, Come One Thing Another, was published by Gaspereau Press in 2024.

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Open Heart Forgery Poetry Open Mic

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5440 Spring Garden Road, Halifax. More info
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Join community poetry journal Open Heart Forgery at Halifax Central Library in the RBC Room (3rd floor) for an afternoon of poetry! You’re invited to bring your own poetry to share (max. 5 minutes at the mic per person), or simply come to listen and enjoy.

Face masks are welcome but not required, and you may also bring a drink or snack if you wish. Copies of the April 2025 issue of Open Heart Forgery will be available to take home.

If you plan on reading/performing your work, please aim to arrive a few minutes early to add your name to the sign-up sheet — just look for our MC, Janet Brush, who will have a clipboard and list on hand.

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Acclaimed comic artist Kate Beaton speaks at SMU

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We in SMU’s Dept. of English & the Irish Studies Program warmly invite you to join us for the 2025 Cyril J. Byrne Memorial lecture, to be delivered by acclaimed comic artist Kate Beaton (author of the award-winning graphic memoir Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands).

What is the relationship between the arts and the economy? How do we value the ‘work’ of art and the business of creativity in our daily lives?

Spend an evening with Beaton as she revisits her earliest work – some never seen in public – and discusses her artistic journey so far.

“We Were Always Working and Making Art: Rethinking the Economics and Value of Creativity”

Friday, March 21 at 7 p.m. Scotiabank Conference Theatre (Sobey Building 201), Saint Mary’s University

Join us in celebrating one of Atlantic Canada’s greatest artists as she charts her journey from Mabou, Inverness County out to the world and back home again.

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Perpetual Astonishment: A Reading for the Equinox

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1113 Marginal Rd, Halifax. More info
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Join Elliott Gish, Lorri Neilsen GlennClare Goulet, and Margo Wheaton for a celebration of the dawn of spring with poetry and prose.

Elliott Gish is a writer and librarian from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Her work has appeared in the Dalhousie ReviewGrain MagazineThe New Quarterly, and many others. Her debut novel, Grey Dog, was published by ECW Press in 2024. Elliott lives in the North End with her partner and the world’s silliest black cat.

Lorri Neilsen Glenn is the author and editor of fourteen books of poetry, essays and scholarly work, most recently The Old Moon in Her Arms: Women I Have Known and Been (Nimbus) and Following the River: Traces of Red River Women (Wolsak and Wynn). Her poetry has appeared in The Malahat Review, CV2, Prairie Fire, Sweetwater, and Juniper, among other publications. Former Halifax Poet Laureate, Lorri is Professor Emerita at Mount Saint Vincent University and a mentor in the University of King’s College MFA program in creative nonfiction.

Clare Goulet is a poet, essayist, editor, and instructor and the coordinator of the Writing Center at MSVU. Her interests include interdisciplinary writing, poetics, metaphor and the work of Jan Zwicky, especially applications of her notion of ‘lyric philosophy.’ Graphis scripta / writing lichen (Gaspereau Press, 2024) is her first collection of poems. Her writing has appeared in The FiddleheadGrainRoomCollateralPoetry Canada Review, and The Dalhousie Review. She lives and teaches in Kjipuktuk/Halifax, NS.

Margo Wheaton is the author of Rags of Night in Our Mouths (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2022) and Wild Green Light (Pottersfield Press, 2021), co-authored with David Adams Richards. Her debut collection, The Unlit Path Behind the House, received the Fred Kerner Award from the Canadian Authors Association and was shortlisted for the J.M. Abraham Award, The Gerald Lampert Award, the Fred Cogswell Award, and the Relit Award. Margo is an associate editor at The Dalhousie Review and currently works as a writing consultant, mentor, and workshop facilitator.


The Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia office is a wheelchair-accessible venue with a wheelchair-accessible, non-gendered washroom. For assistance finding the WFNS office door, see our map of the area.

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Ted Leighton launches People of Cove and Woodlot

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213 St George Street, Annapolis Royal. More info
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Author Ted Leighton will make a presentation and sign copies of his newest book: People of Cove and Woodlot, Stories Across 100 Years of Memories.

This is a book of memoir stories of real people and events in Digby County, spanning 1920 to 1970, co-authored posthumously by his father Alexander Leighton, and illustrated by artist Eva McCauley. The book was released for distribution on 1 March 2025.

“Mirroring the 1950s sociological study of Digby County, People of Cove and Woodlot, this modern classic of the same name showcases “a living portrait of individuals” like Innocent Comeau, an Acadian who could farm, blacksmith, saw lumber, and build his own four-masted schooner to sail the Atlantic. With powerful writing, the Leightons have created an affectionate and indispensable record of the ancestral home we southwest Nova Scotians share and love.”
– Harry Thurston, author of Tidal Life, A Natural History of the Bay of Fundy and Lost River, The Waters of Remembrance

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Experience Levels

The Writers’ Federation of Nova Scotia (WFNS) uses the following terms to describe writers’ experience levels:

  • New writers: those with less than two years’ creative writing experience and/or no short-form publications (e.g., short stories, personal essays, or poems in literary magazines, journals, anthologies, or chapbooks).
  • Emerging writers: those with more than two years’ creative writing experience and/or numerous short-form publications.
  • Early-career authors: those with 1 or 2 book-length publications or the equivalent in book-length and short-form publications.
  • Established authors: those with 3 or 4 book-length publications.
  • Professional authors: those with 5 or more book-length publications.

Please keep in mind that each form of creative writing (fiction, nonfiction, poetry, writing for children and young adults, and others) provides you with a unique set of experiences and skills, so you might consider yourself an ‘established author’ in one form but a ‘new writer’ in another.

The “Recommended experience level” section of each workshop description refers to the above definitions. A workshop’s participants should usually have similar levels of creative writing and / or publication experience. This ensures that each participant gets value from the workshop⁠ and is presented with information, strategies, and skills that suit their career stage. 

For “intensive” and “masterclass” workshops, which provide more opportunities for peer-to-peer feedback, the recommended experience level should be followed closely.

For all other workshops, the recommended experience level is just that—a recommendation—and we encourage potential participants to follow their own judgment when registering.

If you’re uncertain of your experience level with regard to any particular workshop, please feel free to contact us at communications@writers.ns.ca