Monday, November 5, 2007


The Ridgefield Writer's Guild would like to thank

every one who participated in or attended our public

reading, "An evening of Literary Latte," at Starbuck's

last Thursday, October 4th.

Event photos can be viewed at

http://picasaweb.google.com/lasalk/Starbucks


The event was emceed by actor and award-winning writer Jack Schmidt

Special guest readers included …

Peter Selgin

Peter's stories and essays have appeared in dozens of literary magazines, and he is the author of By Cunning & Craft: Sound Advice and Practical Wisdom for Fiction Writers, and articles for Poets & Writers Magazine.

Cortney Davis

Cortney's poetry collection Leopold’s Maneuvers won the Prairie Schooner Book Prize. Her poems appear in various literary journals, and she is a three-time Pushcart Prize nominee.

Doris Henderson

Doris' poems have appeared in various literary journals, and she is a Pushcart Prize nominee. Doris is also president of the Danbury area chapter of the Connecticut Poetry Society.

Patricia D'Ascoli

Patricia is an author, and the writer and publisher of the prestigious "Connecticut Muse." She is also a feature writer for area newspapers.

Shawn M. Casey

Shawn is an award-winning author of mainstream fiction and mystery.

Selections from the Ridgefield Writer’s Guild, included:

Belly of the Whale by novelist Linda Merlino

"Novel Fatigue" by essayist Lauren Salkin

Gwenllian's Keep by writer Eileen Hackett

"It's a Buyer's Market" by playwright Mariana Corrado

Where Do the Colors Go at Night by children's writer Dawn Buthorn

The Far Side of the Sound by award-winning writer Adele M. Annesi

"Tina and the Drunken Giants" by award-winning actor and writer Jack Schmidt

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Children's Author/Illustrator Jamison Odone to Speak at Nov. 20th Meeting

The Ridgefield Writer's Guild welcomes guest speaker and Ridgefield resident, Jamison Odone, to the History Room of The Ridgefield Library on Tuesday, November 20th at 7:00p.m, where Mr. Odone will talk about the creative process of writing and illustrating his children's picture book, "Honey Badgers."

"Honey Badgers" received a wonderful review in Publishers Weekly.
(text version included below)

Publishers Weekly Review

(scroll down PW web page to view)

February 19th, 2007:

Odone's debut book makes a deep bow to Maurice Sendak, with its somber palette and heavily crosshatched, pen-and-ink and watercolor wash illustrations. But the affectionate, dreamy text is his own.

"I get along well with honey badgers," the boy narrator begins. "In fact, I was raised by a pair-Maurice and June. They are good parents," he adds. On the opposite page June, in a warm red overcoat, holds out her arms to a naked, Sendak-style foundling. (Honey badgers are carnivorous African mammals, making Maurice and June's solicitousness particularly heartwarming.)

Telegraphic sentences on the left-hand pages ("We have a small stream nearby to sip from") accompany framed pictures on the right; here, the boy and Maurice, sporting warm sweaters to ward off the chill, drink on hands and knees, surrounded by a forest of gnarled trees. Visual references to myth (empty boats), fallen civilizations (Mayan stone sculptures), and wealth and education (velvet drapes and leather-bound books) give the story elegant resonance without weighing it down. "It is late now," the boy says. "I think I'll go to bed."

Maurice and June stand guard as he sleeps under an enormous canopy. Odone, tapping into a powerful vein of fantasy (what child would not rush to move into a cozy den with two gentle, furry parents-) has created the kind of book certain children will cling to, years after they abandon the rest of their picture book collections.

Ages 4-up.(Apr.) Copyright © 1997-2005
Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved.
For further information concerning the event, please e-mail: rwg.info@yahoo.com.

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