FASS News
間眅埶AV English hosts reading and launch event with writer-in-residence Sam Wiebe
間眅埶AVs Department of English officially welcomes alumnus and award-winning author of the Wakeland novels, Sam Wiebe, as its writer-in-residence on Friday, October 13th. Everyone is invited to 間眅埶AVs Harbour Centre campus at 7 p.m. for a reading and reception.
Wiebe is already offering writing consultations, which are open to the 間眅埶AV community and the public. He provides feedback on creative work and advice about how to get published.
Ive worked with big presses and small presses, says Wiebe. Ive edited an anthology. I continue to submit stories and get rejections and acceptances, so I have a good sense of what the publishing world is like. I hope that people will avail themselves of that匈 can advise them how to write a query letter, submit stories, and more.
While still an 間眅埶AV English graduate student, Wiebe decided to write his first novel. He admits that embarking on such a big project during this busy time in his life was not ideal, but he felt compelled to do it anyway.
I had this feeling that if I didnt write a novel now, it would never get donethat Id be 50 and writing manuals for IBM or something, never having done it, says Wiebe.
Though his first novel didnt sell, Wiebe didnt give up and his subsequent books, including the popular Wakeland detective series, have done well. He draws inspiration from the detective fiction and mystery novels he grew up reading, as well as from Vancouver itself. Born and raised in the city, Wiebe feels a deep connection to it.
I couldnt imagine not writing about Vancouver, he says. I find it so deeply fascinating. Its on the cutting edge of harm-reduction, foreign capital and ownership, housing and land questions, the fact that its on unceded territory夷t opens up so many interesting questions of who gets to live here and what a city should be and how it should function.
In Wiebes latest book, , Vancouvers housing crisis is front and center. In this fourth installment of his popular detective series, Dave Wakeland and all the other characters in the novel are motivated by the grinding feeling of never being able to get ahead, never being able to own a home, the sense that at any minute your life can be ripped out from under you, says Wiebe.
During his residency, Wiebe will be working on a historical novel about Vancouver. Hell be looking at the city in the 1970s and 80s, as well as his own family history. Hes already discovered an interesting episode in his grandfathers life.
A couple of months ago, I learned that my grandfather was one of the WWII veterans who took over the old Hotel Vancouver when the government wouldnt build housing for veterans, he says. Basically, this was an armed occupation of a building that led to social housing being built. I thought that was just the coolest thing to find out about your family.
To attend the writer-in-residence reading and launch event on October 13th, click .