Author Archives: scottwilliamcampbell

Random House Canada Student Award for Writing

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Michelle Berry and me at the Random House Canada Student Award in Writing held at the Faculty Club at the University of Toronto.

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Lee Gowan and me at the Random House Canada Student Award in Writing at the Faculty Club at the University of Toronto.

On November 21, 2012, Mike and I went to Toronto. We stayed at the Toronto Thompson Hotel and on November 22 we arrived at the Faculty Club at the University of Toronto for the Awards Ceremony for the Random House Canada Student Award for Writing. I was a finalist in this competition and invited to do a reading from the story I had submitted. It was pretty nerve-wracking reading in front of a room full of writing talent like that but I got through it and managed to do some great networking. I got to meet Michelle Berry – an award winning author and my online instructor. She was a great motivator in getting me to submit a story to the competition in the first place. I also got to meet Lee Gowan, who heads the creative writing program at the School of Continuing Studies at the U of T (and is also an award winning author).

Great News

The Calico Lady is a strange little story of a lonely woman who sets out to find her heart’s desire and, unfortunately, gets exactly what she asked for.

I got some fantastic news. One of my short stories –The Calico Lady  – was selected as a finalist in a writing competition sponsored by the University of Toronto and Random House Canada Publishing. The ten finalists were invited to Toronto in November to do a reading of their winning entry at the awards celebration.  I was told that I am the first online student to be a finalist in the annual competition. So, I’m off to Toronto on November 22 to attend the celebration and do a short reading from The Calico Lady. I’m really looking forward to meeting Lee Gowan – author and Program Head, Creative Writing at University of Toronto, School of Continuing Studies – as well as Michelle Berry – author and my instructor in my creative writing courses I took through the University of Toronto’s School of Continuing Studies. I may also get an opportunity to meet Joy Fielding (New York Times and Globe and Mail best-selling author of many thrillers and mysteries) who will be attending the celebration as well as Anne Collins – VP Random House Canada.

International Day of Literacy

This Saturday, September 8, is the International Day of Literacy. I’ll be doing a reading for a group of students and faculty at the Kingstec Campus of the Nova Scotia Community College on Friday, Sept 7, as part of the college’s event to commemorate this great recognition of literacy.

Publicity Shots Gallery

Here is a collection of candid and studio shots that you’ll find throughout the blog and elsewhere.

Nate Crawford, Executive Director of the Nova Scotia Writers’ Federation and me at the launch of Salt Lines at the Gaspereau Winery in Nova Scotia’s beautiful Annapolis Valley.

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Looking a little lost as we leave the hotel in New York City on our way to 54 Below (a cabaret in the basement of what used to be Studio 54) to see Patti Lupone’s show.

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photo by Bruce Dienes

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photo by Bruce Dienes

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photo by Bruce Dienes

Competitions

I feel like I’ve been fortunate when I see how many competitions there have been where I’ve had my work recognized. But then, I look at the list I keep of how many places I’ve sent material. The ratio of stories submitted to stories rejected is testament to the thick skin a writer needs to have. However, my mentor, Christy Ann Conlin, offered a great analogy to me one day when I was lamenting my latest rejection. She asked me if I liked every book in a bookstore. I said of course not. So then, she asked, why would you expect every publisher to like what you write. This made sense and keeps me submitting.

So far I’ve been recognized with:

On the Head of a Pin (runner up) – We Are Many Festival, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, 2008

Rita’s Wish (runner up) – Atlantic Writing Competition, Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2010

Calico Lady (runner up) – Random House and University of Toronto Short Story Competition, Toronto, Ontario, 2012 (*)

(*) Watch for updates on the blog about this competition. I have been invited to Toronto in November, 2012, to do a reading of The Calico Lady. We’ll have to see if this will be a manageable trip as the date approaches.

Publications

As of right now – I’ve been published in Backalong Book’s anthology – Saltlines and in Montreal-based, horror-sci fi magazine, The Gloaming.

In January of 2012 I heard about a call for submissions for Salt Lines – an anthology of advice and motivational stories from Nova Scotia writers. The anthology would be marketed and sold as a fund raiser for the Elizabeth Venart Emergency Fund for Writers. It was published by Backalong Books and edited by Lorri Neilson-Glenn and Carsten Knox.  I submitted a story about how I’d met a real writer when I was nine years old and how that experience had molded the person and writer that I would eventually become. In June I was informed that my story had been selected to be included in the anthology. In July we had a book launch at the lovely Gaspereau Winery in the Annapolis Valley.

Nate Crawford, former Executive Director of the Nova Scotia Writers’ Federation and Scott Campbell at the book launch for Salt Lines at the Gaspereau Winery in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley.

In October, 2010, my story The Red Shed appeared in The Gloaming magazine. If you’d like to read the story you can find it in the back issues section of the online version of the magazine at www.thegloaming.com.

Back in the Saddle

In 2008 – after a very long hiatus from creative writing – I decided I was going to take my writing more seriously. I reactivated my membership with the Nova Scotia Writers’ Federation and I began to write. Through the Federation I heard about a creative writing competition in Saskatoon. It was part of the We Are Many Arts Festival. I was intrigued when I heard that one of the judges was Yan Martel. Life of Pi had been one of my favourite books and the idea that Yan Martel would read one of my stories really inspired me to write something and send it off. Months later I was thrilled to receive an email from Yan Martel himself telling me that I was a runner up in the competition with my short story – On the Head of a Pin.

I was now incredibly motivated to write more so I again turned to the Nova Scotia Writers’ Federation to investigate writing courses that were being offered in my area. I was happy to hear that there was one being offered in the nearby community of Berwick. Best-selling author, Christy Ann Conlin, was offering a creative writing workshop at the Berwick Fire Hall. I enrolled and began classes with a diverse group of fellow writers. Not only did I learn a great deal in this workshop but it turned out to be the beginning of a friendship between Christy Ann and I that has lasted ever since. She is not only my friend, but a trusted mentor and a gifted editor. From the point in my writing journey where I met Christy Ann until now I can honestly say that my debt to her cannot be overstated. When I needed a gentle nudge or some subtle advice of what to do with  a story, she would offer it. When I needed to be kicked in the butt to get writing, she’d be wearing the boot.  I know my talent is my own and I know the time I spend on it is mine to spend but the best advice I think I could ever give an emerging writer is to find a mentor that is a talented as mine and carefully watch every move they make.

Best selling author of Heave and The Memento as well as the host of CBC Radio’s summer hit, Fear Itself,
Christy Ann Conlin

The Early Years

As I mentioned on my About page, I’ve been writing for years.

I’d had some teachers through school who were very encouraging and my Aunt Doreen (a teacher herself) had always been an avid fan of my blossoming skills. However I think my first memory of writing was when, as a struggling nine year old writer, I had an opportunity to meet another writer – a real one – someone who did it as a job. The story of my meeting with this guy and the subsequent literary fire in my belly can be found in Saltlines – an anthology of writerly advice and stories from over 50 Nova Scotian writers. The anthology was a fund raising project organized by the Nova Scotia Writers’ Federation. If you’re a writer looking for inspiration or know one, pick up a copy and check out my story and many others.

Many years later I got my first job as a staff writer with the Annapolis Royal Spectator – a local, weekly newspaper published in my old home town of Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia. The opportunity to write full time and work with a great editor – Sandra Meers – helped to develop a more concise writing style that would certainly serve me well in the years to come.

L-R – Ryan Matthew Kennedy as Maurian, Angie Campbell as Ettina and Donna Holmes as Auntie Doloris. The girl in the background (long blond hair with her hand over her face) played a customer in the restaurant where this scene took place and her name escapes me. If you know who she is, leave a comment and I’ll add it.

A few years later, I became involved in theatre and began writing plays that were produced by our theatre company – The Original Cast Theatre Company Co-op. Although our first play was This Old Stage (a fund raiser for Kings Theatre in Annapolis Royal staged in 1989), our first real success was in the summer of 1990 with a musical comedy called Auntie Doloris. What this play might have lacked in complexity or dramatic depth, it more than made up for as a magical, musical romp with a story full of amorous witches and unsuspecting warlocks.

In 1993 I left the theatre company to pursue higher education and enrolled in Acadia University’s BA English program. In 1995 I wrote a one-act play called The Telling and submitted it as my entry in the Acadia University Mini-Festival of Plays. My play, along with five others, was selected to be produced by the Acadia Theatre Company that year. The following year I wrote another one act play – this one called Two Toots Past Moose River. That was also selected and produced in the 1996 festival.

A page from the program for the 1995 Mini Festival of Plays at Acadia University.

Following my graduation with my BA in English I stayed on at Acadia and completed a Master’s Degree in Education (specialization in Counselling). My writing was predominantly academic for many years to come however my training as a counselor has afforded me a very focused insight into the workings of the human mind. This insight, combined with my experiences working as a counselor, has helped me develop the skills a writer needs to accurately and believably create the human condition.