Archives for posts with tag: Festivals

Just one week left to go before The Word On The Street Lethbridge next Sunday September 23rd. There’s still a few odds and ends to take care of this week but overall we are in pretty good shape bcause of some dedicated help from several Lethbridge Public Library staff and a handful of volunteers helping with advance tasks.

Francophone rap artist Webster Agent performs live at WOTS Lethbridge

Francophone rap artist Webster Agent performs live at WOTS Lethbridge

There’s so much I am looking forward to seeing, with literally dozens of new exhibitors, vendors and community organizations. Check out the entire list of authors and exhibitors on the Lethbridge section of The Word On The Street national website, and watch for the program guide to be posted online Monday. (fingers crossed :-) )

Here is a sampling of the activities happening:

Webster Agent – Internationally known francophone rap /recording artist Webster performing live in the Teen Lounge
The Medieval Club – once again, dressed in period costumes with the woollen tunic under a chain mail vest club members will be doing sword fighting demonstrations and roasting meat on a traditional spit throughout the day.  I think their efforts were particularly heroic considering the 35°C temperatures last year.The Medievel Club in full period costume

The Fairy Tale photo booth in the Family Centre tent. Kids can have their picture taken against the magic fairyland backdrop wearing a choice of costumes including fairy wings, dragon costume, princess or knight in shining armor.

The Drop’nBeats display featuring information on their mobile recording studio where young people from our community can write lyrics and record their own original tracks, learn to add in a back beat and musical accompaniament, and even dub in layers of harmony while recording their own custom CD’s.

Haiku Magnet Poetry Death Match – watch the U of L compete against Lethbridge College in front of the Main Stage along with 4 other teams as they strain their brains to come up with instant, but brilliant, Haiku poetry under the pressure of a ticking clock while the audience cheers for their favorites…

Crazy Cakes…. real butter icing. Need I say more?

2012 WOTS Lethbridge Festival site mapThese are just a few of the fun and interesting activities planned for WOTS 2012 Lethbridge. Come visit the 53 exhibitors and vendors who will be joining us, along with 34 amazing authors featured on one of the five performance areas known as the TD General Tent Stage,  the Listen & Learn Theme Tent, Most Vocal Poets Tent, Children’s Tent and the Teen Lounge downstairs inside the Library, as we celebrate the second annual Word On The Street Lethbridge.

It’s going to be a big day…

Lethbridge Public Library Bookmobile

You too can drive the Lethbridge Public Library Bookmobile September 23rd at The Word On The Street Festival

Last year, this was one of many of my favorite WOTS memories, even if the construction was somewhat less than perfect. For 2012, Milestone Mazda and Lethbridge Volkswagen have partnered to sponsor the creation of a new Bookmobile ‘peek-a-boo bus’, and PixelWorks is creating the over-size graphic to make sure that we will have a beautiful new (pretend) Bookmobile for everyone to drive.

See you September 23rd!

Shaela Miller & Treeline at the 2011 The Word On The Street Festival

Shaela Miller & Treeline at the 2011 The Word On The Street Festival

Another amazing talent from right here in southern Alberta, Shaela Miller has been building a following of loyal fans who love the twangy ripples and rifs of her unique voice belting out an eclectic mix of covers and original tracks backed up by local band Treeline.  Together, they’ll be performing on the main stage on September 23rd. Take a listen to Shaela singing Lonely  http://www.myspace.com/shaelamiller/music and her album Love is Brave available on iTunes.

“For the past four years the Southern Albertan quartet has been marinating in the underbelly of the Western Canadian Music Scene. Drawing comparisons to successful prairie artists to come before them like the Corb Lund and Old Reliable, it’s no surprise that Treeline cites the pioneers of the country-roots tradition like Merle Haggard and Gram Parsons as primary influences. Joining Treeline for a forthcoming split album (a follow up to 2011’s “Prairie Sentimentalist” with Sean Brewer) is fellow Lethbridge artist Shaela Miller. Honed during nearly ten years in which she has defined her unique style, Miller’s voice is reminiscent of country greats like Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn. In the vein of her primary influences, Miller employs lyrical themes ranging from subtle overtones of heartbreak to candid observations of reality. But when asked to describe her music Miller simply replies “Honky Tonk.” 

To find out more, visit:

http://prairiesentimentalist.tumblr.com/
reverbnation.com/shaelamillerthreesome

Meet Megan Shapka, our guest blogger for WOTS 2012, writing the first in a series of featured author interviews. When I told her to look over the author’s list and pick one to start with, she was so excited to be able to talk with Kit Pearson that she almost fell off her chair.

Here’s what came out of that conversation…

Kit Pearson, author, The Sky Is Falling

Meet The Sky IS Falling author Kit Pearson at WOTS Lethbridge September 23rd, 2012

“I don’t remember how old I was when I found The Sky Is Falling, Looking at the Moon, and The Lights Go On Again in my school library, but I do remember an instant attachment to young Norah and Gavin and the way Kit Pearson told their story. I read a lot as a child and I had a passion for stories about children in historical settings. As Norah and Gavin made their journey from danger in England to safety in Canada during World War II, I rooted for them, cried with them, and tried to imagine life in their shoes as guests of war. I grew up with them as they navigated life with a host family while dealing with the typical trials of childhood and adolescence. For me, one book led to the next and I read the trilogy over and over again, borrowing them from the library and then buying my own copies. I still have them. Those worn pages document the birth of my lifelong love for the written word.

Looking At The Moon written by Kit PearsonKit Pearson, children’s author and former children’s librarian, knows the value of writing stories that kids connect with. “If you learn to love a book when you’re young, then you have a positive association and you’ll go on to find other books,” she says. “I read a lot as a child, so reading just seemed a very natural thing to me. I guess when children find books they love, especially if they are not forced to read them, but just discover them, then I think it becomes a part of their life.”

Norah and Gavin are fictional characters, but many children actually found themselves making the journey from England to Canada during WWII. Even though the story takes place in a time very different from today’s society, children still relate to the characters on many levels. Pearson believes they identify with what hasn’t changed about childhood. “I think that on the surface children are very different. They are also different because they are much closer to the adults in their life, they are more aware of the adult world, but I also believe they are just children. I think the essence of childhood has not changed at all.”

Pearson says her young readers have told her they appreciate a book where children have a separate life from adults. “I think they love it because it’s about children as victims of adult society and even though times have changed and we are much nicer to children and more respectful of children than they used to be, children are still at our mercy in a way: they have to go to school, we tell them they are still young. They feel that very keenly. So I think they identify with characters that are picked up like parcels and just shipped across the ocean out of the country.”

Kit Pearson, author; Nothing But The TruthPearson’s Guests of War trilogy had a lasting effect on me. I don’t remember all the books I have read over the course of my life, but to this day I can still clearly recall the story of Norah and Gavin. This positive association fueled my love of reading and writing, and now, my dog-eared copies are tucked safely in my bookshelf waiting for my daughter to be old enough to read them.” – Megan Shapka

—–

Kit Pearson will be at the Word On The Street Festival in Lethbridge on September 23, 2012 sharing two of her new books: The Whole Truth, which was released last fall, and Nothing But The Truth, which was released this week. The books follow a young girl named Polly during the Depression in the ‘30s and they each contain a big secret, which will surely delight children and inspire a new generation of readers.

 

Megan interviewed Kit Pearson as the first in a series of author profiles for The Word On The Street Lethbridge

Megan Shapka is a freelance writer and editor with a background in journalism and post-secondary education support. Megan provides professional and efficient writing and editing services, meeting the needs of customers in diverse industries, genres and styles. Many of her contracts are with Lethbridge College, where she writes and edits online curriculum and writes for Wider Horizons magazine. Megan has edited books for self-published authors and is writing two books. Contact her at http://www.meganshapka.com/

Teacher, speaker and author Denise Gagne Williamson will be in the self-published author section at The Word On The Street Festival

Denise Gagne Williamson is a teacher, author, conference speaker and marketer of 7 successful teacher’s resource books! She is an example of how self publishing can sometimes be the most effective way to satisfy a niche market, and that’s a great lesson for many aspiring writers!

Based on her expertise as a fully bilingual kindergarten teacher combined with her second love of music and singing, Denise has created a series of CD and book combos that give teachers practical tools for getting kids hooked on learning. Denise says “Over the years, I have seen firsthand how much easier it is for children to learn a second language when vocabulary is presented through song and rhyme.” By using the songs and activities in these books you will:
- foster greater student participation
- enhance student knowledge & practice of
the French language
- promote student participation and creative thinking
- organize & lead musical presentations with greater
confidence
- improve your own singing voice

“More than anything, I believe that singing builds self-esteem, is a source of joy and brings us closer to our true selves. Each of you, every one, were meant to sing. Begin to find your song today.”

Make sure you stop by and say hi to Denise at the Festival Sept 23rd. Maybe even sing a little…

Once again this year we thank the BikeBridge Cycling Association for volunteering to provide bike valet service at no charge for The 2012 Word On The Street Festival in Lethbridge.

By providing a safe, secure area where festival goers can park their bicycles on the Festival site, BikeBridge is helping to reduce the demand on parking spots for Festival day.

Here’s more on BikeBridge from their website and Facebook page.

It’s simple: the bicycle offers us all opportunities at improved well-being.  Riding a bike is exhilarating; it slows us down and awakens our awareness of our connection to the earth and each other.  From a bicycle’s more human scale we see, smell, hear and feel the neighbourhood’s real beauty.  Cycling builds and maintains fitness, for the cyclist and the community.

Bikebridge believes that if, as a community, we can reduce the barriers that keep us from using a bicycle, we can improve our lives and those of our neighbours.  We think that is what community is all about.

We believe the barriers to cycling in Lethbridge relate primarily to safety, security and demands on fitness.   When considering a trip by bike a first consideration is probably:  Is it a safe route to and from my destination? Secondly:  do I have the ability to physically make the trip? Is it an easy or difficult route?  And finally: once I arrive, will there be a place to secure my bike and the things I take with me or acquire en route?

BikeBridge Cycling Association - Lethbridge AlbertaBikeBridge is dedicated to removing the main barriers that keep citizens in Lethbridge from using a bicycle for at least some of their transportation requirements.

Our purpose is to inspire, facilitate, and celebrate cycling as a means of transportation in Lethbridge

In addition to the many national authors who will be speaking at the 2012 Word On The Street Festival in Lethbridge, we also have the opportunity to support several local authors in launching their works, each with an important and unique perspective to share.

Lavinia Thompson will be at The Word On The Street Festival Sept 23rd hosted on the streets around the Lethbridge Public Library Main Branch.

Lavinia Thompson is a 23-year old journalism grad. She emerged from an environment of domestic violence and abuse from her childhood to discover her voice in writing and find a light at the end of that dark tunnel. With that voice, she dedicates her passion for writing into raising awareness about domestic violence. Her poetry book, “She Wasn’t Allowed to Giggle” released Sept. 28, 2011, is a collection of poetry and prose based on what she experienced as a child. “She Wasn’t Allowed to Giggle” has been used in poetry workshops by the Girls Education and Mentoring System (GEMS) for victims of human trafficking and sexual abuse.

Ms. Thompson also has a dark fantasy novel called “Legend of Kawilara, Part1: Fire,” the first in a series based on the theme of preventing and stopping violence against women.  The sequel, “Legend of Kawilara, Part 2: Swords” will be released in fall 2012.

Through her writing, Lavinia wants to spread the message to domestic violence victims and survivors that there is hope, help and that someday there will come a time when the words “never again” really mean, never again. She wants to be a part of making sure everyone sees that day.

Lavinia’s books are available in paperback and ebook on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Lavinia-Thompson/e/B005S4U47W/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1344015772&sr=8-1

The ebooks can also be found on Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/LaviniaThompson   and her blog

at: http://laviniathompsonauthor.wordpress.com/

Come see Curious George at the Festival!

Hmmmm…. I’m coming to the conclusion that building a new festival is a lot like gardening… plant a few seeds, pour a little water on them, pray a little… and then stand back to watch the magic!

2012 is starting to look pretty awesome! Check out the list of confirmed authors here http://www.thewordonthestreet.ca/wots/lethbridge/authors/all

Come September 23rd, you can have your picture taken with Clifford the Big Red Dog  and Curious George while snacking on Crazy Cakes Cupcakes!

For more information visit our facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/LethbridgeWOTS and don’t forget to get your raffle tickets for the Quidam group package online at http://www.lethlibfriends.ca/#!raffle-tickets or at any of the Customer Service desks at both Lethbridge Public Library branches. All the money raised goes to support The Lethbridge Word On The Street Festival.

 

Ali Riley to perform at The Word On The Street

Ali Riley’s first book, Wayward, was shortlisted for the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award. She has since released another book of poetry Tear Down.

She was born in Calgary, and was the singer/songwriter of the seminal psycho-country band Sacred Heart of Elvis. In Toronto, she acted in several theatre productions, including The Lorca Play, for which the company won a Dora Mavor Moore award for best performance by a female. Her produced plays include dog dream, Philosophy in the Bedroom and Hole in my Heart the Size of My Heart. Her poetry has appeared in Geist, The nth Position Anthology, Matrix, This Magazine, Event and the Moosehead Review, and she has performed at festivals, schools, and hootennannies across the country. She currently lives on a farm between Nanton and Vulcan, Alberta.

A big shout out to Blaine Greenwood and Most Vocal Poets for bringing in some stellar performers for The Word On The Street Festival!

http://frontenachouse.com/authors/single/ali_riley/

aerial view of festival siteWelcome to the The Word On The Street Festival in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada!

The Word On The Street is a national festival hosted annually for the last 21 years in cities across Canada, including Toronto, Vancouver, Halifax, Kitchener, Saskatoon and now Lethbridge.

It’s a lot of work organizing a big outdoor street festival! We are so excited to be booking a variety of live music acts and other performers along with author readings, interactive displays and activities, and of course the food!!!  If you would like to volunteer or want to suggest ideas for programs, authors, musicians or food vendors, please send me an email below or call me at 403-320-4967.

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