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Sharing the stories that need to be told

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to write, you have to read.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to write, you have to read.鈥滾arry Warwaruk, The Outlook feature story by John McPhail October 2011

The road to becoming a writer is not an easy one but Tony Peter, local author, playwright and poet, says the end result is definitely worth the effort and he is inviting other aspiring writers to join him on the journey.

Peter, the author of several published works including Bones of the Holy Man, Genome, and four volumes of The Crystals of Goern, began writing as a child in about the sixth grade. 鈥淭he first thing I remember writing was drawing some comics. There was always some sort of science fiction or science basis to it,鈥 he explained.

English was not his strength in high school and admits he 鈥渟kimmed through first year English鈥 at university, but even then he enjoyed the writing component of the course, and his creativity was already becoming well formed. 鈥淚 remember writing an alternate history from about 800 BC to the birth of Christ, set in an imaginary country.鈥

Peter went on to become a teacher and found little time to devote to writing. But it was while teaching in Rama in 1987 that the spark was rekindled a bit when a fellow teacher asked him to cover her grade 5 & 6 English class. They were reading Fantasy literature so he asked what selection they were studying. In what turned out to be a significant request, the teacher asked, 鈥淲ould you write a story for them for Monday?鈥

Peter protested saying, 鈥淚t鈥檚 Friday. I can鈥檛 have something ready for Monday.鈥 But his colleague assured him, 鈥淥h, I think you probably can.鈥 Despite warning her she better have something prepared for him, he sat down that night and wrote a short story which he called The Crystals of Goern.

In the years that followed he spent more time thinking about what he had written. 鈥淚 did a little bit of a prelude to the short story, wrote a little bit after, but it just didn鈥檛 seem to come together.鈥 He couldn鈥檛 see yet where it was going, but he knew there was more to tell.

A move to Quill Lake got the creative juices flowing. 鈥淲e were living on a farm and I got the urge to write. Everybody would go to bed and at about 11:00 at night I鈥檇 sit down at the computer and honestly there were times an hour and a half or two hours later I would look back and say, 鈥榳here did this come from?鈥 It was just flowing. It was exhilarating and so much fun,鈥 he shared. The Crystals of Goern was now a novel.

Another move brought Peter and his family to Outlook where he became principal at LCBI and had no time for story writing. But upon retirement he felt he should try and do something with his story. So he wrote a sequel! Eager to get some feedback, he reached out to well-known local author Larry Warwaruk. 鈥淗e was hesitant,鈥 Peter shared, 鈥渁nd I understand why. He could be inundated with people wanting him to read stuff.鈥 But Warwaruk agreed to read one chapter.

They met at a local coffee shop for a chat, and that conversation put Peter鈥檚 writing on a new trajectory. 鈥淚 got the paper back and it鈥檚 got red marks all over it,鈥 he said with a laugh, including a very exciting statement Warwaruk wrote at the end: 鈥淵ou must get this published.鈥澛 That was thrilling, since it was an assessment based on a single chapter and it gave Peter the encouragement to keep writing. But there was more.聽 Warwaruk invited him to join a writer鈥檚 group in Beechy.

Peter became part of that group and has been deeply appreciative of the experience for the past 15 years where he received help with all aspects of writing including editing and finding character鈥檚 voices. But with changes occurring as members moved from the community, or sadly, passed away, including Warwaruk who played such an influential role, the time has come to look at a new opportunity.

Peter is determined to keep a writer鈥檚 group going and is looking to Outlook as the place to make that happen. 鈥淲e need to increase our numbers,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 just a few active members in Beechy but there are people around here interested in writing and it would be good for us to get together, to form a group, and read each other鈥檚 writing.鈥

A writer鈥檚 group would meet about once a month to read what others are working on. 鈥淓verybody gets a copy of what is going to be shared,鈥 Peter explained. 鈥淧eople read through it and then there鈥檚 a critique. We鈥檙e very careful that it鈥檚 style and grammar, not the material that鈥檚 up for critique, because that鈥檚 the writer鈥檚 own material.鈥

Joining the Outlook Writer鈥檚 group also means joining the Saskatchewan Writer鈥檚 Guild. There is a fee involved which opens doors not only to membership in a local group, but wider opportunities as well. 鈥淭he benefit of that writer鈥檚 guild fee is that a portion comes back to the local writer鈥檚 group and then we can use it to put on workshops or attend workshops elsewhere. In the past we鈥檝e held several workshops or we go on a retreat,鈥 Peter remarked.

If joining a writer鈥檚 group is something you might consider, you are encouraged to contact [email protected] to find out more. The group is gauging interest and recruiting potential members, hoping to get going in the near future. All genres and styles are welcome. Peter himself has presented poetry, plays, and fiction to the group and says they鈥檝e had all kinds of writers including a very technical writer. 鈥淲e welcome new people that may not have a big portfolio behind them but that are willing to put something down and let it be shared,鈥 he said.

Peter will be taking part in the River and Rail ArtVenture June 26 & 27 and would enjoy talking with anyone wanting to learn more about the group, whether you are a seasoned writer or just starting out. His words for all are, 鈥渨rite from the heart. I think Shakespeare was right when he said 鈥榯o thine own self be true.鈥 As a writer I think that鈥檚 really important.鈥

When it comes to opening yourself up to critique, American novelist Harper Lee once noted, 鈥淚 would advise anyone who aspires to a writing career that before developing his talent he would be wise to develop a thick hide.鈥 Peter said his experience in the writing group hasn鈥檛 required a thick skin but instead has given him confidence in his content. He recalls presenting a story to the group who told him it should have ended at an earlier point and didn鈥檛 need the last chapter. Driving home that night he asked one of the writers if she agreed with that assessment. She assured him the story belonged to him and that he could end it wherever he wanted to end it. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the best piece of advice I鈥檝e gotten,鈥 he remarked. 鈥淲hatever you write, it鈥檚 yours.鈥

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