SUBMISSIONS

Submissions are accepted on a regular basis, year-round.
Can include, short stories, essays, poetry and prose.
Must not exceed 3,000 words.
Must be written by a current ESA student, or alumni.
Submissions are accepted: e.s.say.says@gmail.com

Monday, 31 October 2016

NaNoWriMo

November is Na(tional)No(vel)Wri(ting)Mo(nth)… NaNoWriMo.

Not ready to write an entire novel yet?  No worry…  Each school day throughout November we will be posting a writing prompt on both the ESA Library Daily Blog, and the ESsays Creative Writing Blog (they will be the same prompt).  Access the prompt from either blog, and get writing.

The writing prompt for November 1st is:

We all stare at our phones, laptops and televisions more than we probably should. But what happens when the screens have made us go blind? Describe a morning where you’ve lost your sight and are forced to find your way to school without your eyesight. Don’t forget: everyone else is blind, too!

Submit any of your written work to the ESsays Creative Writing Blog via e-mail to: e.s.say.says@gmail.com

Friday, 21 October 2016

ESA ComiCon: All About Telling Stories



Hello. Here's to hoping that you will all be able to join us for our (first) ComiCon event: 

  • Wednesday, October 26th
  • 3:30pm to 8:30pm
  • ESA Library and Mini-Theatre
If you are planning to attend ComiCon, please do pre-register. 
  • We need to have a pretty good idea of our numbers ahead of time so we can plan appropriately. 
  • You can access the form here: https://goo.gl/forms/y3RUyqDrdSk7MBkg1
  • Or use the QR code posted below.
Please do invite your friends.  Bring one or two along with you to ComiCon.  They do not need to be ESA students.

This event is free to all, and a light pizza dinner will be provided.

Cheers

Ms. Wray



Participating authors:

Willow Dawson
  • Multiple award winning author of titles including The Wolf-Birds and Hyena in Petticoats.  
  • Willow will lead a workshop in which she discusses the challenges and joys of writing biography, autobiography and memoir graphic novels. 
  • This presentation includes personal stories and anecdotes, including how she found her voice and became an author and illustrator.
Brian McLachlan
  • Multiple award winning author of Draw Out The Story: Ten Secrets To Creating Your Own Comics.  
  • Brian's workshop will begin with a quick intro to how comics are a combination of showing + telling, and then delve more deeply into character design.
  • There will be lots of audience interaction in this workshop.
Kean Soo
  • Author and illustrator of Jellaby and March Grand Prix.  
  • Kean will be leading a workshop about the process of making comics, with a focus on storytelling techniques.  
  • There's will be lots of audience interaction in this workshop.
Tory Woolcott
  • Author of the graphic novel memoir Mirror Mind, which recounts her experiences growing up with dyslexia.  
  • Tory will conduct a writing workshop that builds a story (that can be used for comics, prose, video games, film, etc.) from the ground up, creating a protagonist and antagonist and a 5-act structure.


Sunday, 25 September 2016

What's Your Story: Etobicoke


Arts Etobicoke is thrilled to partner with The Ontario Book Publishers Organization (OBPO) on their new 3- year initiative with the Toronto Arts CouncilWhat’s Your Story?, a series of literary events taking place in the inner suburbs of Toronto: Etobicoke, North York, East York, and Scarborough.

A writing contest earlier this summer selected four writers from each neighbourhood – three established and one emerging, unpublished writer – who the OBPO commissioned to write a short piece about their neighbourhood. Join us on September 29 to hear the Etobicoke writers give a public reading of their pieces.

What’s Your Story Etobicoke? is an exciting evening hosted by award-winning novelist, critic and Director of The Humber School for Writers, Antanas Sileika.
  • The evening starts at 6:00pm with a workshop “Getting it Right” led by Antanas.
  • After a short break there will be a second workshop “How to Read a Poem” led by Iranian Canadian poet Bardia Sinaee.
  • The evening will be rounded out by the readings of our Etobicoke contest winners: Farzana Doctor (who is coming to ESA in October), Catherine Graham, Maria Coletta McLean, and Transient. Read below for a detailed schedule of events.
The ESA Library has two (2) pairs of tickets to give away to attend this event.  Fill out this Google Form if you'd like to claim a pair of these tickets.  Priority will be given to ESA students, but all are welcome to put in a request.

Reminder that the ESA Library also has tickets available for the Toronto Book Awards bash at the Toronto Reference Library on October 11th.  Put in a request for a pair of those tickets here.

Sunday, 11 September 2016

It is with great pleasure and delight that I announce the appointment of Will Graham and Elyse Robinson as our new student editors and creative directors for the 2016-17 school year.

Looking forward to a great year of student writing...  culminating in the publication of ESA Letters Vol III in the spring of 2017.

Pick up your pens and start writing...

Cheers

Ms. Wray

Thursday, 9 June 2016

La Cigarette by Sauvanne Margaux


I like the smell of cigarettes and autumn leaves in my hair. There is something terribly romantic about it. It reminds me of spices and rebel urges. I hate smoking but I love the smell of cigarettes embedded in my pores, threaded into my coat and mixed up in my hair. So I do it as a treat. A drag here and a drag there. Never enough to make me cough, just enough to make me feel a tad dizzy and get a mildly itchy throat. I once vowed I would never do it. Smoking seemed so out of line for me. I was the girl who dabbled in drugs, drank when she felt like it but NEVER smoked a cig… until I did. I didn’t choke and weaze the first time like most do. I just inhaled and exhaled in one smooth movement. ‘Godammit, why am I good at this?’’ I thought. ‘‘This is the last thing I need to be good at. I’d be better off being good at writing tests or answering trivia or saying the alphabet backwards. But smokin cigs? This is not what I want to be good at.’’ It was a confidence booster I did not need. This is what started my flirtatious relationships with cigarettes. Even the word is sexy. It’s french. Saying it slowly, letting it roll off your tongue is almost as seductive as the exhale you release when you have one in between your keen little fingers. La cigarette. I don’t crave one until it is in front of me. And even then not often. But when the desire overwhelms me I cannot ignore it. A cigarette is my secret lover. I know I should not be seeing her but every so often I simply cannot hold myself back. She is a terrible seductress, ask anyone who’s placed their lips to hers. She is acrid and addictive. A deadly combination, but a seductive one nonetheless. I always tell myself that I won’t ever have another but I have stopped caring. It is an indulgence I allow myself after a long week of school, or just a bloody bad day. What doesn’t kill you makes you…calmer? I don’t actually know if cigarettes make me calmer. But they make me forget. They make me lose perspective which I find I have too much of most of the time. Damn…I’d like a cigarette.

Spacecraft by Simon Van Heyst


The neighbour's lights are still on when I zip up the tent. Linda Robertson on channel four lied, it's raining. I wonder how many people she disappoints every day. A window is open, I can hear people talking. I wonder if they can see the tent over the fence. I feel like I'm in my space pod from a distant galaxy. I'm an alien that has landed on a strange planet. There is the sound of distant thunder: I get goosebumps, why? I think my body envisions that I'm in the climatic fight scene of an action movie: Linda is winning throughout but I ultimately triumph. I hear people having sex, probably the ones that were talking before. Music is still playing from the big house on the corner. The pretty boys and girls dress up and frame their bright faces with make up and alcohol. People look louder at night. He comes. What would my alien parents look like? Do they speak english? Do I subconsciously know an intergalactic dialect? A dog is barking. There are sirens in the distance. Dogs probably know the language too. The smell of weed: probably from the lips of the pretty boys and girls. A door opens, the same two. "Let's go somewhere but not with me, introduce me to your insides please." My space pod is not water proof. How will I ever make it back home. I have the undeniable urge to leave and never come back. 

Untitled by Rachel C Campbell

Three of us got off the bus at one stop. The announcer was broken so the driver had to yell out the names of the stops, but he couldn’t pronounce them very well. Kept tripping over the consonants surrounding the vowels, kept forgetting if it was a ‘Street’ or a ‘Road’, ‘Lane’ or otherwise. 
“Alright, Hibben Str-Road.” He sighs, “Sorry, folks. Hibben Boulevard.”
The man got off first. Shiny black hair caught the light, the wind entering the bus didn’t even ruffle the slicked back strands. I was about to leave the top seats but the other woman got in my way. She rushed towards the door, slapping her pockets, and turning back for a chrome device left on the seat. As she returns to her seat, I slip in front of her and she hardly notices, oblivious to my movements, caught in her own waves. Three of us got off the bus at one stop, leaving four or more people with the bus driver with halting speech. 
We turn left at the corner, not having to wait for the light. After crossing the empty road, we turn left, passing the bars full of old men with nothing better to do than chain-smoke and drink on a Thursday night. They litter the street with white flecks of butts, and I think of the small animals who will be tricked into eating them. The salon lights are out, but the photos of tight curls and styles that wouldn’t survive past the front door illuminate the windows well enough. Passing the entrance to the cemetery, and the tall mausoleum, black gates and railing line the pavement, behind it shadowed gravestones line the grass. The final building is an optician’s store. It opened up about a week ago, the white space is filled with empty glass cabinets, with no eye glasses. At this, the man turns left. So do I, I’m surprised. I’ve never seen him before, but I’m normally home at this point in the evening. The click of the woman’s heels behind me don’t fade as I had expected them to, but follow me down the road. 
The moon is above us in the sky but always appears slightly ahead, the mix of houses on the street seem more pushed back than they were before, shaded more darkly by the trees than usual. Looking once more at the moon, I notice that the telephone wires are higher than normal. Or I am lower than normal. Feeling my heart in my shrinking body, I get the funny image that the three of us; the man, the woman and I, are little ducklings. Following our mother moon home. The man’s black hair turns yellow under a streetlight, his face’s shadow is intercepted by a branch and I see him as a fluffy yellow brother. The woman trips. She doesn’t fall, but the noise shocks me. Looking up again, I see the man, hair black as before. You could have been my brother, I want to tell him. His lighter flicks, head bowed, smoke exhaled, I could have loved you. Behind me, my could-be sister’s steps are quick. She is worried, her nervous walk following me, but keeping the same pace and distance all the while. What would help you? I want to ask her, If I knew you, if you trusted me, what could I do? Would she need a cup of tea, a nice talk, a good night out? Does she keep a journal, or have a best friend on speed dial, does she need anyone? My bag is heavy on my back, pushing me down and forward, to talk to the man and ask why his hair is so thickly covered in gel, ask what kind of person he is and would like to be. My thoughts overbalance and my mind topples back to the woman and how she could let me help her, how I could slow her pace and make her relax. 
I become frustrated. Awkward. We all know the other exists. We know that we each have a reason to be walking up this long road, had a reason we were on that particular bus, knew that we passed drunk old men, obnoxious posters of hair, a shadowy cemetery and an optician’s with no glasses but too many glass cases. I wanted so badly to talk to them, yell at them. We were breathing the same air, passed down our silent line, we knew each other existed and we did nothing. Ready to shake them, I looked up at the power lines flying higher, the moon edging away from us, ashamedly hiding behind a cloud from her quiet children. Feeling smaller and smaller, blood vessels shrinking, thoughts growing quieter, fingers tingling, toes buzzing. 


I cross the road.