Showing posts with label 2024 Q3 CNF Contest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2024 Q3 CNF Contest. Show all posts

Interview with Tina Engelfried: 2024 Q3 CNF Contest Runner Up

Sunday, September 08, 2024
Tina’s Bio:
Tina Engelfried has spent 53 of her 63 years playing with words. Because of WOW and the classes and contests they offer, she has gained enough confidence to find her writing identity. It will be a long time before she gets comma use done correctly. She unschooled her two children until they were ready for college and considers that time as the best years of her life. Her partner in all of her endeavors is her husband, Steven. 

If you haven't done so already, check out Tina's award winning essay "We Started with Walnuts" and then return here for a chat with the author. 

WOW: Congratulations on placing in the Q3 2024 Creative Nonfiction Contest! How did you begin writing your essay and how did it and your writing processes evolve as you wrote? 

Tina: I began to seriously consider writing about the subject of unschooling while taking classes through WOW. The guidance I received helped me to organize my scattered thoughts. Chelsey Clammer laughed in all the right places in the assignments for her class and made me realize that I don’t have to write in a straight line. Learning to take the time to write is a big hurdle that Kelly L. Stone helped me jump. The classes I took with Kimberly Lee and Kandace Chapple showed me how to recognize the beginning of a good idea. 

WOW: That’s fabulous that you learned so much from WOW’s instructors and used that to craft an award-winning piece! What did you learn about yourself or your writing by creating this essay? 

Tina: I always thought that when I sat down to write about unschooling it would be easy. I had so much to say, I had learned from trial and error and had buckets of information. But it wasn’t easy; it was too close to my grieving process over that time in my life being over. I knew I needed to approach this subject with a little distance. 

WOW: I love the style of your essay. Can you tell us more about your decisions to use this style and challenges and/or successes you experienced with it? 

Tina: I have written poetry since the age of 10 when my 5th grade teacher paid me a compliment and posted my poem on the class bulletin board. When I was having a hard time expressing myself through an essay, I went back to my old friend, poetry. Poetry welcomes random thoughts and I do best without structure. Once I had a poem, I could take it apart and present those thoughts as an essay. 

WOW: I find it fascinating – and helpful – to hear how writers use multiple genres to craft their work. Thank you for sharing your innovative process. Which creative nonfiction essays or writers have inspired you most, and in what ways did they inspire you? 

Tina: I am one of the many millions of fans who love Anne Lamont. Her sentences take a sudden turn and become poetry when the reader least expects it. She exemplifies how to be funny and serious at the same time. 

WOW: Oh yes, her writing is well-loved for good reasons. If you could tell your younger self anything about writing, what would it be? 

Tina: If I could go back in time to that 5th grade girl, I would tell her to read her poetry to anyone who will listen and to have faith in her ability to write stories. I would let her know that even garbage writing is valuable; getting the garbage thoughts out the door leaves behind shiny thoughts. I would use this analogy so that I could clean my room. 

WOW: Anything else you’d like to add? 

Tina: I have been entering contests through WOW and NYC Midnight for just a year and have now written something worthy of an honorable mention. So maybe the future me told the present me to keep writing. 

WOW: Thank you for sharing your writing with us and for your thoughtful responses. Happy writing! 


Interviewed by Anne Greenawalt, editor-in-chief of Sport Stories Press, which publishes sports books by, for, and about sportswomen and amateur athletes. Engage on Twitter or Instagram @GreenMachine459.
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Interview with 2024 Q3 Creative Nonfiction Essay 3rd Place Winner, Carol Ovenburg

Sunday, August 11, 2024
Carol Ovenburg—A visual artist. A writer. An Argentine tango social dancer. Her habits: 1) timed writing every morning perched in her favorite chair, sipping a cup of mushroom blend “coffee.” 2) searching through recipe books and preparing delicious hot lunches (She’s a real foodie); 3) Traveling to other U.S. cities for social tango dancing festivals; 4) searching for great fabric to make her own flashy tango dresses. 5) Painting and creating digital art.

When Carol is not writing, cooking, sewing, dancing, or making art, she and her long time partner enjoy good books and foreign films in their Talent, Oregon home, rebuilt after a devastating fire that leveled 2,600 homes. Her biggest desire is to find more time in the day to do it all without wearing herself out.

Her memoir is currently going out to publishers—small presses—for consideration, even though she’s still tweaking and changing the title—more titles than she can count.

Carol has had four CNF essays in the top ten of WOW-Women on Writing, two of which have been in the top three. She’s excited to have her latest CNF essay published in this year’s Q3.

Visit Carol’s website at carolovenburg.com.

Facebook: Carol Ovenburg
Linkedin: Carol Ovenburg

---interview by Marcia Peterson

WOW: Congratulations on winning third place in our Q3 2024 Creative Nonfiction essay competition! What prompted you to enter the contest?

Carol: Thanks, Marcia.

What prompted me to enter the WOW contest is simple—I feel my writing has a home with Women on Writing. I love the opportunity for critiques whether I make it to the top ten or not. The critiques keep me inspired to write better. And I love to be in the company of other wonderful women writers.

WOW: Your entry, “Borrowed,” is a compelling look at what it’s really like after a catastrophic wildfire destroys your home. What inspired you to write this essay?

Carol: To heal from the trauma, I wrote about the Almeda Fire of September 8, 2020 in several longer essays but nothing much happened with the essays. Writing gave me distance from the devastation. Still, during the summer months, the constant threat of fire keeps me anxious.

Through WOW, I enrolled in Chelsey Clammer’s course on writing about trauma. For me that meant write about the fire. For inspiration, I pulled up the previous essays I had written. I saw them as overwritten—too much unnecessary detail—too many words to resurrect for Chelsey’s assignment. I decided I wanted to write about the one aspect of the fire trauma that lingered—the seventeen months of displacement waiting for a home of our own again. The content of this new essay unfolded in one complete package. But the re-writes along with Chelsey’s deftness, helped me create a piece of writing worth submitting to WOW.

WOW: Do you have any thoughts or advice for writing about difficult things?

Carol: Yes. First, don’t be afraid to write from your gut. Go deep. Get it out and on the page. Bleed. Read it aloud to yourself. If you cry while you’re reading, you’ve hit pay dirt. Don’t judge yourself. You’ll re-shape your writing in the re-writes. Take breaks. Long breaks if necessary. Pamper yourself. Eat chocolate. Walk in nature. Swim. When you’re soaked in self-love, go back to the page and write from your gut again.

WOW: Great advice! You’ve also completed a memoir that’s going out to publishers. Can you tell us anything about it? What was your writing journey like with this project?

Carol: Yes. The new working title (was Pearls, then Ruptured, other titles before those) is 
CHASING BLISS: An Artist’s Quest to Break Free of Mother and Mythical Daddies. It’s the story of an artist who grew up under the narcissistic thumb of a mother who expected perfection from her daughter—beauty as well as talent. It’s also the story of an absent alcoholic father who became a fantasy figure, a mythical daddy—the measure all future relationships including three marriages and a child—this artist’s third marriage came together and held together through the glue of meditation. It was the perfect marriage until it wasn’t. This is the story of an artist’s desperate journey of survival from loss and eventual liberation through meditation, creativity, and dance as told through her artist eyes.

My writing journey is still evolving This memoir project was long in the making. Finding my voice, finding the right structure, learning how to write. In the beginning, this story was all “poor me and you bastard.” But over time as I learned to write scenes, use active voice, get rid of all my clichés and “little darlings,” rid myself of “ly” adverbs, use concrete nouns, let go of traditional syntax, and find rhythm, the memoir took shape to tell the story that needed to be told.

WOW: Thanks so much for chatting with us today, Carol. Before you go, can you share a favorite writing tip or piece of advice?

Carol: You’re welcome. And yes, my favorite writing tip or piece of advice: Sit down every day (I like mornings) with a pen and a tablet. Give yourself a prompt. Set a timer for 15 or 20 minutes and write without punctuation, without lifting your pen, without editing, without thinking. Read Natalie Goldberg’s Writing Down the Bones. I find the best writing starts out this way. I write to learn what it is I’m writing about. Sometimes I write word associations—let the words lead the writing. When the timer goes off, I read it aloud, then “type” it up. Then I re-write. Do not edit your work until you’ve re-written it several times. The art is in the re-write.

***  



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Interview with Anita Allen: Q3 2024 CNF Contest Second Place Winner

Sunday, August 04, 2024
Anita’s Bio:
Although neurotypical, Anita is part of a vibrant neurodiverse family, a trait shared by at least one of the family pets. Her writing explores the intersections of neurodiversity and mental health, intergenerational trauma and breaking cycles. Anita is a Physiotherapist, Certified Coach, Amherst Writers & Artists (AWA) facilitator and graduate of The Humber School for Writers, The Sarah Selecky Writing School, and Spark Your Story Intensive. Anita offers writing workshops and retreats, merging her passions for wellness and creativity. You can find out more about her upcoming offerings at www.anitaallen.ca

If you haven't done so already, check out Anita's award-winning story "Funhouse" and then return here for a chat with the author. 

WOW: Congratulations on placing second in the Q3 2024 Creative Nonfiction Contest! How did you begin writing your essay and how did it and your writing processes evolve as you wrote? 

Anita: Funhouse began as a traditionally structured essay that just wasn’t working. It felt clunky, vague, and fragmented in early attempts. The subject matter is difficult, and I was avoiding confronting it directly. 

I abandoned this project many times over the years for different reasons. Sometimes it was just too painful to spend time in my memories and I’d pull back. I also thought it would be unfair to unload my partially processed trauma on a reader, so I invested time in journaling and unpacking memories in a slow, steady way. At the same time, I was busy raising my family and building my business, so my writing often took a backseat. Then, one day in a writing group, I wrote the opening line describing the crooked hallway in my childhood home and I knew I had a way into this piece. It felt like an epiphany, but the material was actually swirling away in my subconscious for quite a while before floating to the surface. 

WOW: Your story has had an amazing journey! We’re so glad you persisted and chose to share it with us. What did you learn about yourself or your writing by creating this essay? 

Anita: While writing this essay was challenging, I leaned into the things that I’ve learned about taking care of my nervous system. When I write about difficult topics, I make time to rest, walk and do things that keep me centred. It took me awhile to learn self-compassion. 

This essay is part of a collection that I’m in the process of writing about intergenerational trauma and neurodiversity. When my three sons were identified as Autistic, I realized that many of my father’s characteristics and behaviours were those of a dysregulated Autistic person. As an adult looking back, I understood in a visceral way that I was not to blame for the chaos of my childhood. Therapists and self-help books tell us this so often that it feels cliché. It was making the link about the shared neurology between my father and my children that completely shifted my perspective and added depth to my writing. I learned that there was more to the story than just my pain. 

By the time my father passed away in 2021, we had repaired our relationship. I was ready to write these essays because I knew the arc. I wasn’t in the middle of living it anymore. I learned that some things can’t be rushed. 

This stand-alone lyric essay was challenging to put out into the public because it tells only one small part of my complicated relationship with my family. Honestly, whose family isn’t complicated? I think many CNF writers are afraid of their loved one’s reactions to their writing. I was. However, I also had enough distance and healing that I felt I was ready to put my work out into the public domain. I learned that it was safe to express myself. 

WOW: Thank you for sharing this about your learning process. And I believe that many CNF writers can relate to that fear of their loved one’s reactions to their writing. It’s wonderful that you found the right time to put the piece together and share it with the public. I love the fragmented style of your essay. Can you tell us more about your decisions to use this style and any challenges and/or successes you experienced with it? 

Anita: Thank you! I owe a debt of gratitude to Rowan McCandless and Nicole Breit for this essay. I wrote it during a Spark Your Story Intensive that they led, and their feedback was incredibly helpful. The course explored a number of hybrid forms, but lyric and hermit crab essays really captured my heart and imagination. 

I love the brevity of hybrid forms, especially when the subject matter is emotionally challenging. Traumatic memories are often fragments without much context attached. When writing this lyric essay, I was able to capture the key moments without having to write a lot of exposition. Before switching to a lyric form, extra language diluted the experience I was writing about and left me questioning the veracity of the details I added to make a traditional essay readable. Embracing hybrid forms unlocked my writing. 

I think of a lyric essay as a verbal collage. Every phrase is true to my experience. The braiding and lyric form was the perfect way to juxtapose what was happening in my childhood home with what was expected by the church. As a child I didn’t know the words ‘hypocrisy’ or ‘capricious’ but I felt them in my cells. 

WOW: I love your term “verbal collage” to describe this form because it provides such an apt image of what it is and how it works. Which creative nonfiction essays or writers have inspired you most, and in what ways did they inspire you? 

Anita: There are so many amazing CNF writers out there that I admire it’s going to be hard to keep this list concise! 

Chelene Knight taught an Introduction to Poetry Course at University of Toronto, and she was the first person to introduce me to hybrid forms of CNF. Her book, “Dear Current Occupant” is an inspiration. 

Nicole Breit’s award winning essay, “Spectrum” and the incredible curriculum she created for her Spark Your Story course was a game changer for my writing. 

Rowan McCandless’ award winning, “Persephone’s Children – A Life in Fragments” is a beautiful memoir and an endless source of fresh ideas about how to make art while telling a difficult story. I’m deeply grateful for her mentorship. 

Abigail Thomas is another writer that inspires me. I’m continually amazed by her ability to convey both emotional depth and insight with so few words. 

WOW: If you could tell your younger self anything about writing, what would it be? 

Anita: Keep going! Write as often as you can just for the joy of it. Find a community of writers that cheer you on, keep you accountable and help you develop your craft. Sometimes a piece will arrive with ease and other times you will circle it for years before it becomes fully formed – both are just a part of the process of making art. 

WOW: Excellent! Thank you for sharing those pieces of advice. Anything else you’d like to add? 

Anita: Thank you to Women on Writing for these contests that support female writers. I have really benefitted from the critiques I’ve received from the panel in the past and I’m delighted to have made it to second place. 

WOW: Thank you for sharing your writing with us and for your thoughtful responses. Happy writing! 


Interviewed by Anne Greenawalt, founder and editor-in-chief of Sport Stories Press, which publishes sports books by, for, and about sportswomen and amateur athletes. Engage on Twitter or Instagram @GreenMachine459.
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