Memory
BY Florence Button
Shining dully from the coffers of the soul Leaning hard against the heart. Mute testimony. Memories from the moulds of yesterday. A silent, siren call Glimpses of sacred…
Q and A (Woody Point Edition) with Jamie Fitzpatrick
BY Joan Sullivan
I’d gladly read to the rats at the town dump if they asked me, because I love being at Woody Point. And I think the rats would get my stuff.
Q and A (Woody Point Edition) with Elizabeth Hay
BY Joan Sullivan
Elizabeth Hay is a novelist and short-story writer whose works has been nominated for the Governor- General’s Award and the Giller Prize; she lives in Ottawa. The Writers at Woody…
Q & A (Woody Point Edition) with David Ferry
BY Joan Sullivan
David Ferry is an actor and Dora Award-winning theatre director. He’ll present Short Waves/Short Stories a radiophonic adaptation of a short story on Sunday August 19, 10:30am an 11:30am, at the Heritage…
Q & A with Michelle Myrick-Olsen
BY Joan Sullivan
Michelle Myrick-Olsen was born and raised at Cape Pine Lighthouse in St Shott’s. A self-taught musician and visual artist, Michelle has visited over 40 countries, living and working in Saudi…
A Grand Time: NL Music at the Irish Traditional Music Archive in Dublin
BY Marie Stamp
“O’Hara would eventually make hundreds of recordings of the stories and songs of the people he met in Newfoundland. He did not have to insist too much to coax them to take the mic. “Sing a song or hum a tune, do a dance or leave the room! That’s what they used to say,” he remembers of his time in Branch.”