What can you get out of a writing retreat? Past CBC Nonfiction Prize winner Leslie A. Davidson explains | CBC Books - Action News
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Literary Prizes

What can you get out of a writing retreat? Past CBC Nonfiction Prize winner Leslie A. Davidson explains

The 2024 CBC Short Story Prize is open now for submissions and the winner will receive a writing residency at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity.

The 2024 CBC Short Story Prize is currently open for submissions

Leslie A. Davidson won the 2016 CBC Nonfiction Prize. (Sarah Mickel)

In 2016, Leslie A. Davidson won the CBC Nonfiction Prize for her essay Adaptation.As the winner she received$6,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts. She also received a writing residency at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, which she completed the following year.

A middle-aged white man with a moustache and a jean collared shirt hugs a woman with short brown hair and bangs. He looks off to the left while her eyes are closed. In the background, out of focus, there is a tree with orange leaves.

Davidson's memoirDancing in Small Spaces was published in 2022. Both her winning essay and her memoir were inspired by her relationship with her husband, and the health challenges they faced together.

The 2024 CBC Short Story Prize is now open!The winner will receive $6,000 from theCanada Council for the Arts, have the opportunity to attend a two-week writing residency atThe Banff Centre, and have their work published onCBC Books.

You can submit original, unpublished fiction that is up to 2,500 words.The deadline isNov. 1 at 4:59 p.m. ET.

CBC Books talked to Davidson abouther writing residency and why such experiences are important for writers.

1. It's adefining moment

"I've even been very reluctant to identify myself as a writer until now. As I walked to my studio, there was a sign saying, 'No visitors beyond this point.'I thought, 'Oh my goodness!' It felt a bitlike I was here under false pretenses. But no, I really am doing this.

Being able to go off and do a 'writerlything,' where you're in the company of other writers, is supportive and empowering.

"Being able to go off and do a 'writerlything,' where you're in the company of other writers, is supportive and empowering.It's a way of acknowledging the work that we're all trying to do wherever we are in in that and however we define ourselves."

2. It's a chance to build community

"A retreat isone of the few opportunities we get to let down the guard a little bit. I didn't have a community of writers, having always lived in small towns.At lunch, there were writers with the Writers' Guild of Alberta. There were people of all varying degrees or at varying places in their career young and successful, older like me andjust beginning, and the range in between. Everybody's so committed and working so hard."

3. It gives youtime to write

"It is an un-conflicted time to devote yourself to your writing. That was what I went for. Having been given such an incredible space to go is such an honouring gift. You leave your room, walk over to the studio and there is the space, you and the view which was the big distraction.

It is an un-conflicted time to devote yourself to your writing.

"But it's quiet and that's what it's for. Even if all I did was makenotes and ponder time, I did more work in 10 days than I probably do in months."

4. You'll come home inspired

"My visit let me recommitto trying to carve out pieces of time in my life for writing. Icame home thinking, 'How do I do that at home?'It's so easy for the writing time to slip away.But Icame home with a project thatI now think is possible. That was the big deal from Banff."

Leslie A. Davidson'scomments have been edited and condensed.

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