And the People’s Choice Award goes to…

I made my first foray into the world of open mic speaking today, at the People’s Choice and Poetry Night of the Williamstown Literary Festival, which kicks off it’s event program on Saturday. They event turned out to be a combination of the People’s Choice Prose event and the Poetry in the Pub event that was started last year, and they held it at the Pirate’s Tavern, which turned out to be very hard to find. It was hidden away behind Seaworks, which is a community based corporation which aims to retain and restore our maritime history. Even showing up for a 7 PM start (and arriving around 6:40), this is Australia in winter, and the sun had been down for a good forty five minutes at least. I remember being on Nelson Place, but I knew to actually get there we had to go down a side street because the Tavern was around the back. So I turned down Ann Street, which was dark, and virtually unlit, and found a sign pointing in behind Seaworks, and drove in. And couldn’t see anything but an almost empty parking lot. I was wondering if I was in the wrong place when another car pulled in an a little old lady stepped out. So I would down the window and asked her if it was the right place–and it was.

We just had to go through another gate into a different unlit carpark and turn left.

Despite the difficulties getting there (which I assume a lot of other people faced as well), there was probably fifty or sixty people there, including eighteen writers performing their work (ten poets and eight prose writers). It was fantastic to be able to listen to some great writing, and see some old friends (and as it turns out, some new ones), perform their work.

We were given a time limit of 3 minutes, so I performed a little piece called Raisins and Cheese, which is basically a retelling of a conversation I overheard years ago going on at the back of a double decker bus in Hong Kong, at a time before everyone had a mobile phone. It’s fairy accurate retelling of the original conversation (complete with a valley girl accent), and naturally fell into the style of Dr. Seuss.

Once all the writers had read their work, the audience cast one vote for their favourite author or work. Then the votes were tallied and the winner (and runner up) announced, along with their cash prizes. For prose, it was announced that only one vote separated the two frontrunners.

Turns out raisins and cheese is more popular than you’d first think. And no, I didn’t vote for myself.

I want to say thank you to everyone who came along to present their work and everyone who voted. I’d also like to extend my thanks to the board of the Williamstown Literary Festival for creating the event. . . . → Read More: And the People’s Choice Award goes to…

2011 Rainbow Awards: Call for Jury Members

images rainbow

Elisa is looking for approximately 50 people to be on the jury for the 2011 Rainbow Awards. At present the criteria are:

a) To be willing to read in 1 or more of the LGBT categories: Lesbian, Gay or/and Bisexual/Transgender b) To be willing to read in 1 or more of the following genres: Coming of Age / Young Adult, Contemporary General Fiction, Contemporary Erotica, Contemporary Romance, Fantasy, Historical, Mystery / Thriller, Non Fiction, Paranormal / Horror and/or Sci-Fic / Futuristic c) To be willing to read at least 5 books in 7 months–from May to November (inclusive).

- Judges will start to read books in May; reading period will finish in November (inclusive). – Each judge will read a minimum of 5 books. Authors/Publishers/Editors will not read books in categories where a their own book is submitted. – Each book will be judge using 4 different criteria: Plot Development, Setting Development, Characters Development and Writing Style. From 1 to 10 points for each criteria. – Judges will receive only the ebooks they have to read. (PDF files) – Judges will have to indicate what categories they are not comfortable to read. – To be a judge, please contact Elisa; Authors/Publishers/Editors/Reviewers/Readers are welcomed, if Elisa doesn’t know you, please provide an introduction and some sort of reference for being eligible to judge a LGBT themed book.

If you are interested, please contact Elisa via the contact details at her livejournal. If you are an author, submission information is also available there.

Join Matthew’s mailing list

Name
E-mail