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Are you ready for Canada’s largest independent literary celebration?

By Clayton Andres

When his father Neil first came up with the idea of a writing festival in Ottawa, Sean Wilson thought his dad was insane. “At the time, I had been noticing that just about everyone I knew in the creative community had the sense that they had to move to Toronto or New York or somewhere like that because there was this common wisdom that everything was happening somewhere else,” Sean Wilson recalls.

But the more he thought about it, the more he realized that “Leaving town seemed like a cop-out,” and he and his father agreed that the city “needed a world-class celebration of ideas and creativity.”

Father and son decided that an Ottawa-based writing festival “seemed like a great way to put Gandhi’s advice to ’be the change you seek’ into practice” and to “build something exciting and new rather than bailing on the city.”

The Ottawa International Writers Festival was started in 1997, and has been going strong for 15 consecutive years.

Since its inaugural year, the festival has expanded far beyond the Wilsons’ original vision. The festival was started as an autumn event, but its growing popularity led to the need for expansion. In 2004, a Spring edition was added to extend the festivities. “It’s been amazing how supportive the community has been,” Neil Wilson said. “Audiences keep growing, feedback is glowing and the authors all want to come back.” He has also seen a real turnaround in the number of creative individuals who decide to remain in the nation’s capital. “More and more of our best and brightest are staying in Ottawa and finding ways to make it work here as musicians, actors, writers and poets.”

Amidst all this growth, the festival has remained true to its intended goal: “to get the world’s best thinkers and most creative talents together to share their enthusiasm with us and bring people together to explore our world.”

To Sean and Neil Wilson, the festival is “not academic,” but rather, “all about creativity and sharing in the excitement of talking with hugely talented people from all over the world. That means if we’ve done our job, there’s something here for everyone.”

The Ottawa International Writers Festival Fall Edition starts at 7:00pm on Friday, September 28 with Arnprior Expressions, “The Poetry of Place,” in the Arnprior Public Library, 21 Madawaska Street. The event will feature poets Phill Hall, David O’Meara and Sandra Ridley.

Ottawa Life Magazine will cover these and other events lined up for this year’s festivities.

For a complete list of events, visit http://www.writersfestival.org/events

If there is a specific event you want Ottawa Life Magazine to cover, let us know on our Facebook page or on Twitter.

 

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