Cindy Stone

 Cindy Stone divides her time between writing and practicing as a registered psychotherapist /Ericksonian hypnotherapist and Reiki Master. She is an advanced student of Baguaquan, an internal martial art, Qi gong and meditation. Cindy has always been fascinated with transformational journeys and the incredible power of the mind. She is the author of, The Incidental Guru: Lessons in Healing from a Dog, published by Stewart House, and Fitzhenry & Whiteside. She co-wrote the screenplay for Expecting, a “Dram-edy” directed by Deborah Day with an ensemble cast including; Colin Mochrie, Deb McGrath, Barbara Radecki and Valeri Buhagiar. Cindy’s debut novel, SCORPION from The Myriad Series won Book of the Year, from Book Talk Radio in the UK and was chosen as one of 12 Best Book Picks for 2018 by Spirited Women Inc, in LA,; a global Women’s Empowerment Group.

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Grace Young

Meet Grace Young who has been blogging weekly at IntoFullBloom.net for over two years now.  She has self published one book The Crow and the Dove and is planning to release a second in the near future. Grace is 19 years old and trying to make her dreams come true by becoming a full-time author and spreading her message of hope and positivity.

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Ted Staunton

Ted Staunton has written more than 40 books for young children, middle grade readers and young adults and has received prizes for many of them. He was born in Toronto and studied at the University of Toronto. When he went back there to teachers’ college in 1981, he wrote a story called Puddleman for one of his courses and rather to his surprise it was published.  Puddleman was a picture book but he has since written many stories for older children and young adults. Some of the most recent are Who I’m Not which won him the John Spray Mystery Award, Jump Cut, and Power Chord. Ted speaks and performs at schools and libraries across Canada and frequently takes his banjo with him. He also teaches courses on Writing for Children at George Brown College and the Haliburton School of the Arts.

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Heather Chisvin

Heather Chisvin was born in Winnipeg to Jewish parents, whose own parents emigrated from Russia to escape the pogroms there. She studied at the University of Manitoba and worked as a print journalist in Winnipeg and then with CBC as producer. She moved to Toronto to become a researcher with W5, then moved back to CBC and produced radio documentaries. Later she went into advertising as an Associate Creative director and taught advertising copywriting at OCAD before going freelance. Ten years ago she moved to Port Hope with her partner, novelist Kurt Palka. Heather has just published her first novel.

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Reva Nelson

This week meet Reva Nelson, the author of Risk It!, Bounce Back! And, her latest book, ‘Hippie Chick Abroad’ which is her successful memoir of the last year of the Sixties. She has been an actress, a teacher-librarian and ESL teacher and was the owner of Words Worth: Keynotes & Seminarsfor over 20 years. Reva’s clients included several Government Ministries, the Human Resources Secretariat, IBM, CIBC and CIBC Mellon. She has delivered workshops and keynote speeches internationally. A couple of years ago Reva moved to Cobourg to enjoy the lake and small town life. She now facilitates groups and provides personal coaching on life changes and challenges. As wel as writing for local media.

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Vicki Delaney

Vicki Delany is one of Canada’s most prolific crime writers. Under the name of Eva Gates, she has published 3 Lighthouse Library mysteries with Berkley Prime Crime, and her fourth book in that series, The  Spook in the Stacks, was released this June.  Her newest cozy series, the Sherlock Holmes Bookshop Mysteries, began with Elementary She Read, the third in the successful series Cat of the Baskervilles was released in February 2018.  She writes in several different subgenres: cozies, standalone novels of suspense; traditional village/police procedurals and the lighthearted Klondike Gold Rush series.  Vicki began her writing career as a Sunday writer: a single mother of three high-spirited daughters with a full-time job as a computer programmer. But in the end the three daughters flew the coop, leaving Vicki more time to devote to her writing. She now lives in Prince Edward County and writes whenever she feels like it. And, this year, is one of the chief organisers of the second Women Killing It conference taking place in Picton on  Labour Day Weekend.

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Caroline Everson

Caroline Everson was born in England and came to Canada with her family as a young child. She lived near Ottawa until age 11, then moved to Port Hope where she still lives today. After graduating from the University of Western Ontario  she worked in banking, retail, and advertising & marketing for small businesses while raising three children. She also wrote. In the past, her work has been published in local newspapers and magazines, and she has won two writing contests with her short fiction. Some of her stories were included in “It Ain’t Shakespeare”, a collection published by Cobourg’s Pollard Writers Guild in 2004. Caroline’s first book sale came in 2007. “Ali Runs With the Pack” was part of an educational program from Scholastic Canada. Her picture book, “Song on the Wind”, was published at the end of 2017. It’s an end-of-the-day poem, beautifully illustrated by Anne Marie Bourgeois.

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Sharon Ramsay Curtis

Sharon Ramsay Curtis has lived a very varied and multi-faceted creative life. She has been a poet, a teacher, a potter, a painter in watercolours, a maker of drawings, collector of words and a raconteur.  Recently she has turned her attention to creating children’s stories. Her first book, Edward Covered is now in print and her second about Gladiola Groundhog is soon  to be released.

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Christopher Cameron

Christopher Cameron enjoyed a long and successful career as a professional opera singer. He says he was never famous but he worked steadily and made a good living at his craft, performing on opera and concert stages across Canada. In 1989, he left full-time singing and began a career in the world of finance and technology, from which he retired in 2013. He spent the final years of his singing career as a member of the Canadian Opera Company Chorus, leaving in 2009, thirty-three years after he first started with the company. Several years ago he began writing. His first book, a memoir of his singing years, Dr. Bartolo’s Umbella and Other Tales from my Surprising Operatic Life (Seraphim Editions) was published in 2017.
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Eric E Wright

Eric E. Wright grew up in Toronto, studied forestry at the University of Toronto then transferred to Columbia International University in South Carolina to receive training in overseas ministry. There he met and married Mary Helen, a nurse from SC. Together they served in Pakistan for 16 years where, as a teaching missionary, Eric co-founded the Open Theological Seminary, which now serves over 2500 students. Upon their return to Canada he pastored a church in Toronto for nine years and though he wrote text-books for his students, the passion to write fiction became too strong to deny. Eleven of  his books have been published. Eric & Mary Helen now live in Port Hope and have three married children and nine grandchildren.

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