Aug 01, 2016
RCLAS Board of Directors
Nasreen Pejvack; Janet Kvammen; Antonia Levi; Sonya Furst-Yuen; Aidan Chafe; Dominic DiCarlo; Alan Girling;
Marianne Janzen
RCLAS Board Advisors: Sylvia Taylor; Renée Sarojini Saklikar
RCLAS Board Assistants: Deborah L. Kelly; Lisa Strong
3rd ANNUAL FRED COGSWELL AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN POETRY
http://rclas.com/awards-contests/fred-cogswell-award/
"Fred Cogswell (1917-2004) was a prolific poet, editor, professor, life member of the League of Canadian Poets, and an Officer of the Order of Canada."
First Prize: $500
Second Prize: $250
Third Prize: $100
ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Book must be bound as a book, not a chapbook.
Book length must be a minimum of 50 pages in length.
Selected poetry must be written in English by a single author.
Book must be original work by the author (translations will not be considered at this time)
Original date of publication falls between January 1, 2015 and December 31, 2015.
Book must be published in Canada.
Book must be written by a Canadian citizen or permanent resident alive in submission year.
Electronic books are not eligible.
In case of dispute about the book’s eligibility, the Society’s decision will be final.
George Fetherling is the judge for our 2016 Fred Cogswell Award For Excellence In Poetry.
Reading Fee: $25 (all funds Canadian). Payment can be made through PayPal (there is a link
below) or by money order (payable to “Royal City Literary Arts Society”). If you pay with Paypal,
please include a copy of your receipt with the submission package.
Two copies* of the book must be submitted to the Royal City Literary Arts Society, along
with the reading fee (or proof thereof), and must be postmarked no later than October 1, 2016.
The society’s mailing address is:
Royal City Literary Arts Society
Fred Cogswell Award
Box #308 - 720 6th Street
New Westminster, BC V3L 3C5
Shortlist will be announced Oct 15, 2016.
Winners will be announced Nov 1, 2016.
Winning authors & titles will be included in the December issue of RCLAS’s Wordplay e-zine.
*Submitted books will not be returned; they become the property of the Royal City Literary Arts Society.
Write On! Contest 2016
Fiction Winners & Honourable Mentions
4rd Annual RCLAS Write On! Contest 2016
First Place Winner
Fiction
PUMPKINS
© Alvin Ens
“Checkers,” Grandpa advises, “Checkers will teach you all the really
important facts of life. When to be cautious, when to move in for the kill, when to
retreat, how to plan ahead. Really requires thinking, Boy. Sure, I wanna teach you.”
It is my mother’s idea. Visit my dying grandfather, talk to him, give him someone
to talk to. Play checkers with him.
Grandpa has come home to die—in his own house, he says. Surrounded by
family and familiarity—with enough care givers to administer the pain killers. And I
am co-opted to be a part of the care group.
Don ‘t get me wrong, I like my grandpa. But sitting with a dying man is not
my idea of fun.
I find the checker board and set it up beside him. “You play only on one
colour. Let’s choose the black. Ignore the red; half the world can be ignored.
“You win by being smarter than your opponent. Find a checker that got
ahead of the pack. Pounce on it. You know, I took a pumpkin once from Old
Florence like that. It grew on my side of the fence. I told her to keep her vines at
home. But she couldn’t be bothered. In midseason she discovered it among all the
greenery I’ve got around my compost box. But she couldn’t rescue it through the
page wire fence; would’ve meant cutting it from the vine early. So she left it.
About a week before the harvest festival I cut it and hid it. Was she ever mad that
I stole her pumpkin. Stole—nothing. I took what was growing on my side of the
fence. And that, after warning her. She hasn’t talked to me since. Florence, that’s
like the red squares. That’s half the world you can ignore. Play on the black
squares.”
It becomes my favourite time each day—come home from school and head
out to Grandpa’s. I learn to give up one to take two, to trade one for one and await
my chance. “Patience,” Grandpa advises, “Patience is what wins games.”
“Grandpa,” I ask one fine spring day when I have seen Florence in her
garden, “How about I make your garden for you this year?”
“Nah, better not. Might get in Old Flo’s hair. She’s already got a bee in her
bonnet.”
“Aw, Grandpa,” I declare, “She plays on the red squares; I’ll just play on the
black ones. Town’s having a pumpkin contest at the harvest festival, you know.”
“Florence’ll enter. You think you can beat her?” he offers. “Mighty big
pumpkin I took from her. Time to dig up the soil and turn in the compost. Use a
spade, not a garden fork, like Old Florence.”
I find the spade in his garden shed and begin my work. True to form, Florence
comes to her side with a fork and begins loosening her soil. I say, “Hi there. How
are you doing?”
“The old buzzard sent you to spy on me? How come he’s not out here?”
I tell her my grandpa has cancer and I’m filling in for him.
“Your granddaddy grows a mighty fine garden every year. Cancer of what? ”
“Stomach,” I answer. “How come you’re using a fork, not a spade?”
“Oh, that’s curable. Isn’t it? Lost my spade two, three years ago.”
I volunteer, “I’ll let you use Grandpa’s. Turns the compost under, you know.”
“I don’t need nothin’” She retorts.
“I’ll just set it by the fence here then.” I offer.
“How much is the old coot paying you?” Florence asks.
“We’re doing it together,” I reveal to her. “He provides the brains; I supply
the muscles.”
“Ought to be the other way around,” she retorts. “His brain ain’t too good.”
“Sometimes you give up one to take two.” Grandpa advises me. “Make two
hills for the pumpkins,” he instructs. “Then on each hill, place the black sheathing
of the planter buckets. Face them away from Florence’s view. Makes her wonder
what you’re up to. She thinks I’ve been planting seeds, and I’m protecting ‘em.
Then nip down to Early’s Nursery and buy bedding stock... Lazy Susan or Golden
Boy or some such variety... plant ‘em when she’s not lookin’ ... and store the
sheathing for another year. Voila, you’ve grown plants, she thinks.”
“What kind you going with? How’s your granddaddy doing?” Florence fires.
“Them fences make any difference?”
“I stutter, “He’s dying . Just seeds. Warms the soil.”
One day she asks, “Your seeds up yet?”
“No.” I attest, “I’ve been wondering if it’s time.”
“Mine all came up. Got a few extra. Care to have em? Got a second prize
with em last year. Red Delilahs,“ she volunteers.
I take two and crown each hill.
From his bed, Grandpa asks, “What kind of pumpkins we going with this
year?”
I scurry to the end zone to crown my king. “Red Delilahs,” I answer.
“Never heard of ‘em,” he states, “They grow big?”
“Yep. They’re prize winners.”
“Well, don’t let the old biddy know,” he rejoins. “How’s her pumpkins
doing?”
“About as big as ours,” I answer.
“Lots of time yet,” he advises. “Just watch who gets the first blossom.”
One fine June day I announce, “Gramps, our pumpkins are blooming. Got
one huge orange blossom and several big knots ready to open.”
“At a boy, Julian. Bet Old Flo is jealous. Tell her it’s Red Delilahs. That
you’ll give her a couple of seeds come fall.”
One day I ask Florence, “What’re you doing?”
“Weed wacking,” she says. “This is a grass whip. You ought to whip around
your compost box. I can lend you my whip.”
“I don’t need nothin,” I say, trying desperately to pull the thick growth of
grass and weeds.
“I’ll just set it by the fence here then.” She answers.
“What you been doing, Boy?” Grandpa asks.
“Oh, cleaning up the weeds along the compost box. Why do they call it
compost anyway?”
“Never thought about it. Weeds decomposes, turn back to soil. Decompose
equals compost. Makes something good of the weeds. That’s your job, Boy. Keep
weeding the garden. Florences’s vines sticking through the fence? Tell her it’s okay
to let her vines grow.”
One summer’s day finds me composting mopishly.
“What’s the matter, Boy?” inquires Florence. “Look at the size of my
pumpkins. You tell Old Grumps you can’t possibly win the harvest festival. Look
at this fella, must be four inches in diameter.”
“I was just thinking I never did show Gramps the blossoms and now they ‘re
all gone. And he won’t live to see ‘em next year.”
The blossom in the drinking glass that you see on his night-table—it came
from Florence’s garden. She thought it wouldn’t likely win a prize. He might as well
see it. I am to say it is a Red Delilah. That I picked it myself.
When I’m a grandpa, I’ll teach my grandchildren to grow pumpkins. You
learn all the important facts of life from pumpkins, to play on the blacks and the
reds.
4rd Annual RCLAS Write On! Contest 2016
Second Place Winner
Fiction
METAPHOR FOR AN APPLE
© Susan Cormier
Eve didn’t want to share the apple. Adam just walked in on her at the wrong
time.
Adam was a great guy, as far as guys went -- when he was the only guy in
existence. But Adam was either overwhelmed or under-motivated or deadlines had
not yet been created, because Adam did everything – later. And God saw
everything.
So God created sleep and while Adam rested He pulled from Adam’s side a
bloodied rib, wrapped it in stardust and palm leaves, and He created Eve.
And when Adam awoke, he said, “My God! You have created such beauty!”
And he kissed Eve and thanked her for existing, then turned on the television. And
God saw everything.
And God said, “Adam, I give you this world and all the creatures in it. Your
job is to name them.”
And Adam named the stallion, the cock (you know, the rooster), the beaver
– then sat down to watch TSN, citing plenty of time in tomorrow’s schedule. And
God saw everything.
Eve rolled her eyes, sighed, stirred some leaves in a teacup, analyzed the
layout of the stars, and systematically created a lexicon of all the animal’s names.
She gave them each a scientific name of Latin origin, a common name for daily
reference, and a nickname to keep herself amused. She named jackrabbit, unicorn,
eagle; she named hyena, bullfrog, earthworm. When she grew tired and uninspired,
she named white-tailed deer, red-winged blackbird, and duckbilled platypus.
When she took a break and saw that all the dishes were stacked dirty in the
sink while the television was blaring sports stats and scores so loud it had knocked
all the unopened bills onto the unvacuumed floor, she slammed the door and
named three-toed sloth, yellow-bellied sapsucker, and dung beetle. And after three
years, two months, and a day-and-a-half of naming things, even though God saw
everything, given the current world population of two not one person said thank
you or offered to brush her hair, so she named the weeping willow and sat down at
its feet.
And God saw her solitude and He plucked a knot of muscle from her back
and three hairs from her head and mixed them with some water from last night’s
rain, and created a green-skinned man with oddly-shaped eyes.
The green man sat down at the foot of the willow tree just a little too close
to Eve, and he smiled.
“Have I named you yet?” she asked. “You are so beautiful.”
The green man shook the last of the rainwater from his ears just in time to
hear the last word. He stared hard at her and repeated, “Beautiful.”
“You look so familiar,” Eve said. “Are you Mustang?”
The green man replied, “Beautiful.”
“Are you Eagle?” Eve asked.
The green man glanced at her broken fingernails, calloused hands, bruised
knees, and dirty feet, and he looked her hard in the eye and said, “Beautiful.”
“I knew you well," Eve said, “In another religion. You were Osiris, I was
Isis. You were busy burning cities, I was busy burning bridges. You were Janus, I
was Janis: two halves of the same coin looking in opposite directions. How dare
you bring your pagan influence into this new mythology?”
And the green man smiled and said nothing. He was the last creature left to
be named, so Eve named him Serpent, for that was the last name left. And God
saw everything.
And God caused an apple to be grown on the branch above their heads.
And Serpent climbed the tree with still-moist legs and hands that knew no remote
control. He offered the apple to Eve.
And Eve knew that the apple held all the answers to all the questions she’d
left unasked. Like, “How many dishes must I wash before my hands are clean
enough for someone to hold? If my body was pulled from someone’s ribcage, does
that mean my heart must belong to them? How many names must I give away
before someone gives me one of my own?”
Eve held the apple in both hands, pressed it to her lips, touched its skin with
the tip of her tongue, opened her mouth –
And said, “Adam! I got this for” – she held the apple out to him – “you.”
Adam took the apple from her hand, polished it against his arm, and sank
his teeth into its skin. Looked at Eve. Looked at Serpent. Looked at Eve again. He
knew.
And we all know how this story ends.
Serpent was torn limb from limb – or rather, his limbs were torn from him –
and his tongue was split like Satan so that whenever a woman walked by all he
could say was a low moaning hiss.
And God said, “Eve, for your transgression I condemn you to a life of anger
and mediocrity. Your household will be silence, and dust, and misery. All the evil of
the world will be blamed on you. You sons will create murder, and lies, and war.
Your daughters will avoid snakes and be taught without explanation to fear strange
men with beautiful eyes, and you and your girls will bleed, and bleed, and bleed.”
Because God sees everything. And God apologizes for nothing.
4rd Annual RCLAS Write On! Contest 2016
Third Place Winner
Fiction
THEY’RE ALL UP IN THE HILLS
© Marion Iberg
Marlene set her drink down on the picnic table and eyed the thin trail to the
outhouse. She furrowed her brows. The small building sat on top of a knoll, a
distance too far away for her liking.
Marlene and her husband Dal were visiting their Kelowna friends, Rob and
Janet. That morning the four left in Rob’s boat. After an invigorating ride on
Okanagan Lake, they stopped for a relaxing picnic at Halfway Point, a remote area
accessible only by boat and large 4-wheel drive vehicles.
Marlene noticed the little green building when they first came ashore. “I’m
going to the outhouse,” she said, looking across the table at Rob. “There are no
rattlesnakes around here, are there?”
“No. They’re all up in the hills,” Rob said.
“You sure?”
“Yup, I’m sure. Won’t be any here.”
Marlene studied her friend’s face. Rob always joked around, but this time he
looked serious. Relieved, she hurried toward the path. She slowed down when she
overheard her husband.
“Hey Rob!” Dal chuckled. “Did I tell you about the time I had to rescue
Marlene from a tiny garter snake?”
“Nope, haven’t heard that one yet.”
“Well, she was on her way to the garden and this harmless little fellow
slithered across her foot…ha, ha, ha—”
Not that story again. Marlene’s eyes darkened when she glanced over her
shoulder. Her husband leaned back in his lawn chair, laughing. “It’s not funny,
Dal,” she yelled. “If I wasn’t in such a hurry I’d come back and clobber you.” I’ll
have to let that one go…for now.
Marlene glanced at the green building and started up the path, making sure
she stepped exactly in the centre of the narrow trail— just in case. Her eyes darted
from side-to-side, scanning the ground around the grasses and desert plants all the
way up the hill.
Finally. I made it. Marlene blew out a big breath as she pushed the door
open and stepped in. Moving to the right to make way for the door, she swung it
shut and latched it. She took a short step to the toilet and flipped up the lid. A
sound came from behind her.
Ta-ta-ta-ta…ta-ta-ta-ta- ta-ta-ta-ta…
Marlene stopped dead. Oh, no. A rattlesnake!
Eyes wide, she listened.
Ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta. The rattling kept on and on.
Marlene’s ears pounded. She struggled to breathe. She didn’t dare move, but
needed to know the exact location of the snake. A lump caught in her throat. I
have no choice but to turn around. Over the next minutes, in excruciatingly slow
motion, she turned to face the opposite direction.
Oh my god! Marlene sucked in some air to keep from passing out.
The rattlesnake lay coiled in the corner, barely two and a half feet from her
grey Sketchers. Its head hovered a foot above its thick body. Black eyes glared at
her. A dark red, forked tongue flashed in and out. The vibrating rattler poked
straight up.
Ta-ta-ta-t ta-ta-ta-ta.
Marlene needed to put distance between her and the rattlesnake. No use
climbing onto the toilet; the snake would still be within striking range. Keeping the
bobbing head in sight, she backed up. Inch by inch, she made her way alongside
the toilet and into the far corner. She crammed the back of her body into the
uncomfortable spot and waited.
Ta-ta-ta-ta…
Marlene drew in slow, silent breaths to calm her wild heartbeats and bring
strength to her shaking knees. She must not faint. Breathe. Breathe. Breathe. At
least she had the corner to lean into for support. Please God, don’t let me pass out.
One minute… two minutes … The tongue slowed. The snake’s head and rattler
began to sink. Then at last, the head and tail dropped.
Marlene focused on her options. The door would make the most logical
escape route but a good portion of the reptile’s body lay beneath the latch side. A
metal post joined the concrete floor to the wooden wall at each corner, creating a
six inch space around the bottom of the outhouse. Part of the snake draped
through the gap, but there wasn’t a chance she’d fit under the wall. She could climb
through the window, an arm’s length away, if there was no screen. Her nail scissors
would be useful now, but they were in her purse on the picnic table. Marlene
looked up. There was no way to escape through the roof. She was trapped.
Through the screen, the hostage watched her boating partners at the picnic
table, talking and laughing—totally unaware she was in danger. How could she let
them know? They were a distance away. She would have to yell…loud, to be heard.
She glanced at the snake. Too risky. Surely one of the gang will wonder why I’m
taking so long and come to check on me.
Marlene looked longingly out the window. They’re so close, yet so far away.
And here I am, at the mercy of this monster. Will I make it out of here alive? Will I
ever see my family again? I am so scared. She closed her eyes while she waited to be
saved.
No one came.
Marlene’s eyes shot open when she came to an unsettling realization. I have
to save myself. And there is only one way out of this prison—the door.
Arm high and jaw set, she leaned forward and slowly reached over the snake
for the latch. Little by little, she moved her feet ahead, keeping her eyes on her
hand. The reptile might mistake eye contact as a challenge.
A tiny bit more…more… At last Marlene felt cool metal on her fingertips.
Without a sound she opened the latch.
Gradually, she pulled the door toward her, opening it as far as it would go.
Clinging to the top of the open door to keep balance, she moved each foot a toe
length at a time toward the hinge side of the doorway. She must not nudge the
rattlesnake; it shared the exit like a grouchy partner sharing a bed.
Hardly breathing, feet barely moving, she inched through her side of the
doorway. Maneuvering off the concrete floor, Marlene pulled the door shut
without making a noise.
At first, she took small steps. Then she walked slowly down the trail, careful
not to fall; her legs shook like Jell-O. When she got to the picnic table she
collapsed in a lawn chair.
“Good! You’re back.” Rob licked his lips. “Time to—”
“Only by the Grace of God. I could have died up there. You said there were
no rattlesnakes around here. There is one in the outhouse.”
“Oh ya, sure, Marlene.” Rob chuckled. “That’s a good one—nearly as good
as the garter snake story.”
“I’m telling you, there’s a rattlesnake in the outhouse.”
Rob and Dal grinned at each other.
“You’re kidding, right?” Janet looked at Marlene, her eyebrows raised.
“I’m not kidding. Go see for yourself.”
A deathly quiet surrounded the picnic table.
Dal was the first to speak. “We should shoo that snake out of there. I’ll just
get a stick and push him out so someone else doesn’t run into him.”
“You do that, Dal…and take Rob with you. You might need a little help.”
Marlene rolled her eyes at Janet.
Within minutes, the men were back.
Marlene stifled a grin when she saw their red faces. “So, is the snake gone?”
“Oh my god, Marlene, that’s a big one.” Dal’s eyes bulged. “I’m not
touching it. We’ll fix up a sign and attach it to the door.” He got some paper towel
and wrote with a pen, RATTLESNAKE INSIDE, and off the men went to the
outhouse.
By the time Dal and Rob returned, not a trace of the picnic lunch remained.
The table had been cleared and everything packed away in the boat. Marlene and
Janet waited in the back of the vessel.
“Hey, we haven’t eaten lunch yet.” Rob stood with his mouth open and
pointed at the bare table.
Dal patted his belly. “We’re hungry.”
“Too bad!” Marlene jabbed a thumb over her shoulder at the town across
the lake. “We’re all going to Peachland. We can eat there…after I find a
washroom.”
4rd Annual RCLAS Write On! Contest 2016
Honourable Mention
Fiction
MASTERPIECE
© Valerie Adolph
My wife doesn’t know how I can see character in a piece of wood - how I
can look at a piece of rough rosewood and see the chess piece I can carve from it. I
can tell how it will look, its size and character and how I can make it match the
other pieces. It’s as plain as anything to me, like a language I understand. The
queen I’m starting to work on now, for instance. How could you not know that the
piece of rosewood I’m holding is feminine? I couldn’t possibly carve a knight or a
king from that.
It’s as if you were blindfolded and held someone’s hand. You would know if
it was a man or a woman, if they were tense or relaxed or hot or nervous. Wood is
alive with character, I think of it as being like human flesh. In my workshop I can
make wood look like flesh and blood, fully-clothed people and I can even show
their character. If you were to ask me what makes a piece of rosewood feminine I
would tell you it’s the feel of it, the colour, the grain. That other piece, over there
on your left, that’s masculine. It’s not only masculine, that piece, it’s regal. I’ll make
him the king.
I chose this house because of this room. I love this room, it has the best
light, year round that’s why I made into my workshop. From the moment I step
inside and inhale the wood scent I feel at peace. This is a room for creation.
In the twenty five or so years I’ve spent in here I’ve adapted to its smallness. After
all, it doesn’t take much space to work on the fine carving of chess pieces. It’s a
warm room and it smells of rosewood, even when my wife gets impatient with my
mess and sweeps the floor clean of all my shavings. Myself, I’d leave them – I think
I would feel part of the rosewood itself if I was ankle deep in shavings.
My wife doesn’t understand how I feel about this wood but she understands
people better than I do. She’s practical – well, I suppose one of us has to be. She
can tell right away if someone is no good or if there’s something about them that
makes her feel uncomfortable. She always knows who will pay and who won’t.
She doesn’t like Dr Wilson, for instance. She says there’s something odd
about him. I don’t understand why she thinks that. I know he’s not a real doctor,
just a professor over at the university, but for more than a year now he has often
come in to look at my chess pieces. I’ve even allowed him to follow me into my
workshop so he can watch me carving. He sits out of my way, quiet and still. I’m so
used to him that I hardly notice him anymore.
A few months ago he asked me to carve a special chess set for him. He
wanted a chess set that represented King Arthur’s court, He even had a name for it,
he called it his Camelot Scene.
I knew it would take a long time because first I had to research it carefully.
He brought me books from his library with pictures, pointed out the details of each
knight and told me stories about their character so my carvings could bring them to
life.
He didn’t quibble about the price. My wife quoted him a price that took my
breath away, saying it was because of all the extra work. He even paid me half up
front for it and he has paid a bit more each month. By the time I’m finished he’ll
have paid full price so my wife will be happy and I’ll have been proved right. What
can be wrong with him? He’s old, he’s a professor and he is paying up front. He
even stays silent while he watches me so he doesn’t distract me. It’s all good.
In truth I’d have charged him much less because this work is what I’ve
honed my skills towards for years. This is the first time I’ve been able to allow the
characters to enter my imagination fully and express themselves totally through my
hands. I know I will never have this opportunity again so I carve each figure slowly,
almost holding my breath. With this Camelot Scene I can achieve perfection. If my
tiny chisel slips or a detail displeases me I can discard that piece and create a finer
one that reflects the soul of the knight or the lady.
The golden rosewood I’m using yields to my detail chisel and starts to look
as if the queen is actually walking, strolling to meet a lover. When I touch the piece
I feel as if I am caressing it, caressing her. I hear a rustle and look up to see Dr
Wilson. He doesn’t disturb me, he sits down quietly on the wooden chair still
wearing his coat and hat. All day he watches my hands create the queen of
Camelot. He doesn’t try to hurry me. His shoulders are stooped and he never looks
at my face, he just stares down at the pieces of the chess set as they take form.
“Queen Guinevere.” he whispers one day. “You have her perfectly.”
I smile at her. Indeed even the lift of her eyebrow is perfect. I have carved the
Arthurian court as he has instructed me and I am almost finished. In the centre is
King Arthur, older and bearded. He has become almost like a friend and a couple
of times I’ve been tempted to ask him for advice. Lined up beside him are the
knights, almost identical, but not quite. Look closely enough and you can see Sir
Lancelot, the great swordsman but at heart impure, an adulterer. On the other side
is Sir Gawain, young, but standing straight and loyal. To me they have become like
real people, my companions over the last few months.
I have never been as proud of any chess set I’ve carved as I am of this one. I
know this is my masterpiece. I almost wish Dr. Wilson had not paid up front
because if the set were mine I could keep it forever, maybe in a glass case. Then,
when I grow old and my hands get stiff so I can only carve rough furniture, I could
look at it proudly and say, “Once I carved this!”
I tell Dr. Wilson that the set will be ready in a week and he comes in every
day to watch me. I wonder why he is here and not at the university teaching his
students.
Finally I am done. The set has been sanded and burnished until the
rosewood glows. I can think of nothing further to stretch out the task. Dr Wilson
pays me the last of the money he owes and I take down the box lined with silk that
I have prepared for the set. To stretch out the last moments before it will leave my
workshop I ask where he will display my chess pieces – somewhere just for himself
or where everyone can admire it?
He lifts his eyes from the pieces and looks at me for the first time. Now
even I can see that he is not quite sane.
“I am Merlin!” he says. “I created Camelot. It was my masterpiece. I made it
a place of beauty and goodness but they corrupted it and made it evil. Now I must
destroy it.”
He picks up the chessboard with all the pieces and very carefully lowers it to
the floor. Then he stamps on it. Stamps and stamps again, shattering every single
piece, grinding each one angrily into the floor with his heels. Then he turns and
stumbles out.
I kneel on the floor running shreds of golden rosewood through my fingers.
By some miracle I find the cheek and beard of King Arthur and I cling to the tiny
fragment with my finger-tips. I don’t even realize that tears are running down my
face until my wife comes in with a dustpan and brush.
“Why are you crying?” she asks. “He paid you for it, didn’t he?”
4rd Annual RCLAS Write On! Contest 2016
Honourable Mention
Fiction
HALLOWEEN 1965
© Brie Wells
In a fit of childish cruelty, my older brother informed me there was no such
thing as Santa Claus. “Santa, elves and guardian angels are made up stories to make
little girls behave.” Gleefully he added, “Everybody knows but you.”
I shot back, “If there aren’t any angels then there can’t be a devil, you can’t
have one without the other because the devil’s a fallen angel.” I had remembered
that from church. He told me there was a real devil and one day I’d be sorry.
But by 1965 I was ten and well over the loss of a flesh and blood Santa.
Halloween was my new favorite day because all you had to do to get candy was
wear a costume. That year I dressed up as a gypsy fortune-teller. I wore a paisley
scarf on my head and an old skirt with playing cards stapled to the hem. My next-
door neighbor and best friend Peggy, was a cat. She wore a black turtle-necked
sweater and matching ski pants. Her mother made ears and whiskers out of pipe
cleaners. We were so excited this was the first year of trick-or-treating without
having to babysit any of the younger kids.
We met up with Barb Medinger and the McKay twins, Mary and Joan, at the
McKay house. Barb dressed as an artist and wore a beret her father bought in
France during the war and a white shirt with big sleeves. Mary and Joan dressed as
ghosts and pulled old bed sheets over their heads with holes cut out for their eyes.
It was windy when we set out, our excitement heightened by the dark houses and
rustling bushes. Our adventure started at the Drakes who gave caramel apples.
Next the Archer’s gave packets of M & M’s. There was homemade salt-water taffy
at the Lee’s. Mrs. Lee, dressed as one of the munchkin ballerinas from The Wizard
of Oz and sang for us. By the end of the block our bags were filed with licorice
whips, chocolate nut bars, popcorn balls, malted milk balls, jelly beans, squares of
fudge and ribbon taffy.
We were feeling pretty lucky and wanted to increase our loot, so we debated
on whether we should risk it and cross the big street: Ashland Avenue.
Ashland was the busy street that separated the rich houses on the hill from our side
by the railroad tracks. We were told never to cross that street because it was too
dangerous.
But, we were big girls now, we were in the fifth grade and we wanted more
candy. Mary and Joan McKay backed out because they promised their Mom they
would not go beyond our block.
Peggy, Barb and I crossed into the unknown while Mary and Joan walked
towards Mr. Armstrong’s house. We waved and watched the twins pass under the
amber streetlight as the wind ballooned their ghost costumes.
We didn’t know the neighbors on that side of the street so we decided to go
to only two houses. At the first house a young couple gave us little bags filled with
candy corn, bubble gum and jawbreakers. Next, an older woman gave us
homemade sugar cookies wrapped with wax paper.
Encouraged by the friendly faces, we walked along the shadowy sidewalk
and searched for the next porch light when a car with two older boys pulled up to
the curb.
One boy leaned out of the window, “Hey little girl want some candy?”
“Candy? Sure!” I started to move forward.
Peggy grabbed my arm and whispered, “No don’t. Kidnappers.”
I stepped back and muttered no thanks.
The driver said something to the boy at the passenger window and they
laughed. The tires spat dirt as the car sped forward. We held each other and
watched them turn left by the Armstrong house.
Peggy grabbed my arm and pulled me across Ashland in the middle of the
block; back to our side of the street and safety.
Finally safe inside Peggy’s house, we sipped hot chocolate and dipped vanilla
wafers into the steamy cups. Barb and I swapped a chocolate nut bar and a bag of
M & M’s because Barb can’t eat nuts. I put my hands on my knees and told Peggy
this was the best holiday ever.
Once home I went into my room and hid my candy from my brother under
my pillow because last year he stole it all. My Mom entered my room without
knocking and I jumped, I thought it was my brother.
She smoked a Benson and Hedges cigarette and asked me about my night.
I made her laugh when I told her Mrs. Lee dressed like a Munchkin and sang to us.
My Mom asked if it was better than last years Betty Boop costume. I told her we
got hot chocolate at Peggy’s house. Then I told her how Peggy saved us from the
kidnappers who asked us if we wanted candy.
“Kidnappers!” Mom said. “Oh my. Well we have no money for ransom.
That would be pretty sad, huh? We have your daughter you better give us $200.00.
Well, you can keep her because we don’t have any money.” Mom laughed at her
joke.
“Come on. Time for bed.” She said and left.
It was at breakfast the next morning when Mr. McKay and two police
officers knocked on the back door. My brother whispered I was in big trouble and
pinched my arm.
Mr. McKay looked as tired and wrinkled as his raincoat. My mother asked if
he wanted coffee as she lit up a cigarette.
The older officer held his hat under his arm and said they were here because
Mary and Joan didn’t come home last night. He asked if he could speak with me
privately. My mother agreed and offered Mr. McKay a seat at the table. She
handed him a cigarette from her pack and poured a cup of coffee from the
percolator.
The officer sat with me in the living room and asked all about last night.
What costumes we wore and how much candy we got. I brought out my pillowcase
and pulled out a few treasures and told him where we got them. He saw the
cookies and asked where I got those and I told him it was from the nice lady across
the street.
That’s when I remembered the boys in the car.
He asked me all sorts of questions about the car and the boys. I got scared
and couldn’t remember what color the car was or what the boys looked like. I told
him it was dark. I did remember the sound of the tires spinning in the dirt.
After that the officers thanked my Mom and guided Mr. McKay out.
No ransom note came that day or that week or that month. On
Thanksgiving it snowed and covered the city in five inches of soft cold down. I
wondered if Mary and Joan were warm enough, if the kidnappers were taking care
of them.
Christmas passed and so did New Year’s. The McKay house, once full of
light and laughter, now grew dark and quiet. Mr. McKay stopped working and
spent more and more time at the taverns occasionally asking if anyone had seen his
girls. Mrs. McKay took in laundry to pay the bills. They both had empty eyes and
moved like marionettes.
In spring the air turned and snow began to melt. A man, walking along the
railroad tracks down the hill from my house, spotted bloodstained sheets. Hidden
underneath were the twins broken bodies.
About a month after Mary and Joan’s funeral I saw the older policeman at
the corner store. He recognized me and asked me how I was doing.
I don’t know why but my stomach started shaking and I began to cry. He
knelt down and held my hand. Through my sobs I said, “Mary and Joan died
because there’s no such thing as Santa, or guardian angels. They’re just stories to
make bad girls behave.”
He made soft sounds and told me these things don’t live on the outside, they
live on the inside and he pointed to my chest. “In some people Santa takes root
and generosity blossoms.” He said. “Some people become guardian angels and
help in countless unseen ways.” Then he told me he would always be there to help
me.
Soon after that I began to see Mary and Joan in crowds across the street or
running down the school hallway. I would run to try to catch up to them but they
disappeared long before I got there.
By the time I was in eighth grade I stopped chasing them.
When I see them now I just smile.
2016 RCLAS Write On! Contest
BIOS: Fiction Winners & Honourable Mentions
Alvin Ens is a retired high school English teacher. He
writes poetry and prose for both the secular and Christian media. He is a farm boy from a large family. He learned to play games with his siblings and with community kids. He remembers with fondness playing table games with an aging father.
Born in Saskatchewan, he and his wife now reside in Abbotsford where he is active in several writing groups.
Métis multimedia artist Susan Cormier has won or been
shortlisted for such awards as CBC's National Literary Award, Arc Magazine's Poem of the Year, Anvil Press’ Lush Triumphant, and the Federation of B.C. Writers’ Literary Writes. Her short films have screened around the world at festivals including the Montreal World Film Festival, the herland Feminist Film Festival, and the Berlin Zebra Poetry Film Festival. Susan’s current projects include “Back Down the Rabbit Hole” - a Canada Council-funded
research video essay about youth bullying - and organizing Vancouver Story Slam with her fiance, Bryant Ross.
Marion Iberg was born in New Westminster, B.C. She is
a retired teacher with ten years’ experience teaching elementary school students. In previous years, she was a partner in a dairy farm business where she was involved in all aspects of running the farm. Farm life, and personal and childhood experiences have created ideas for her writing. Several of Marion’s stories and a poem have been published in anthologies and magazines.
2016 RCLAS Write On! Contest
BIOS: Fiction Winners & Honourable Mentions
Valerie Fletcher Adolph is an award-winning author published in
magazines, newspapers and journals in Canada, the US and England. She
is the author of half a dozen books and editor/author of half a dozen more.
Newly published is her novel historical novel Bride Ship Three. Written to
explore the lives of three women in the time of the British Columbia gold
rush; it weaves history into a good story. Her ebooks, Graved in Gold and
Veiled in Gold, continue the theme.
Val is an experienced interviewer and public speaker who has addressed
large and small audiences live and on television and radio. She writes an
occasional blog thestorysolver.com about story telling. She enjoys social
history, natural history and storytelling as well as time spent with family
and friends.
Brie Wells transplanted to Vancouver in 2014 through her
husband’s career in the Film Industry. They are the proud adopted parents of three boxer dogs. She writes Magical Realism fiction and has a YA series in the works.
2016 Write On! event videos here.
Look for more Write On! award-winning poetry and prose to
be published in our September and October fall issues!
AA
A fabulous night of celebration, poetry and prose! Thank you to everyone who
came out to our 2016 Write On! Contest Awards Night, a LitFest New West
event. Thank you to venue provider, Stephanie for hosting us at her cool
establishment, The Old Crow Coffee Co. located on Front St. in New
Westminster. Congratulations to all our winners and honourable mentions.
Thank you to my co-host/co-organizer, James Felton. Cheers!
– Janet Kvammen
RCLAS WRITER OF THE MONTH
Una Bruhns
Una Bruhns immigrated to Canada in 1969; she now resides in North
Vancouver.
Una is a published poet, an avid photographer, and videographer. Some
of her work can be viewed on Youtube, at the North Vancouver Public
Library and Lynn Valley Archives. Both Una and her husband Juergen’s,
photography were displayed in a recent exhibition at the Chinese Cultural
Centre Vancouver celebrating the Silk Road Routes and Beyond during
the Asian Heritage month in May 2016.
Una’s lists of accomplishments include:
North Vancouver’s 2015 Culture Days Community Ambassador.
A Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival Sakura award for her winning
Haiku
An award winner for her “Tanka” in the North Shore Writers annual
competition.
A Community Ambassadors Award from Writers International
Network
A World Poetry Empowered Poet Award
An active member of many groups including the North Shore Writers’
Association, West Van Photography Club, Pandora’s Collective, and Royal
City Literary Arts Society, she attends many literary and art events around
the Lower Mainland.
“Indeed you may. I have a copy here on this card prepared specially for you!”
I handed it over to him. He read it whispering to himself. He looked up and smiled. We
shook hands. As I was turning to leave, he said his final words on the subject.
“I’ll keep it under my blotter!”
Spontaneous Human Combustion
by Una Bruhns
Phenomenon? Fact? Fiction? Or Paranormal?
Reading the novel Bleak House by Charles Dickens some years ago on
“spontaneous human combustion”, left me fascinated.
Since then there have been 85 cases reported. The last known case reported on July
1951 in Petersburg, Florida. Excessive alcohol consumption has been associated
with this phenomenon, whereby it is assumed the human body sometimes burns
from within without an external source of ignition.
Some have tied it to magnetic irregularities in the Earth. Vincent Gaddis, known
for his broad studies in phenomena, suggested a tie to depression and even suicide.
Possibly the forces which, when directed outwardly, produce suicide might, when
projected inwardly, lead to the burning of the body?
Then there is the static flash fire hypothesis:
This is a condition in which static electricity apparently builds up to such a degree
in the human body, that a sparking discharge can ignite clothing.
One famous case occurred in 2005, in which an office worker reportedly managed
to light up his office after building up a huge charge by walking across a carpet.
During dry winter weather almost anyone can build up an electrostatic charge as
much as 20,000 volts.
In my unscientific mind my understanding is the human body consists of 60 – 70%
water and lacks highly flammable compounds.
I cannot believe that a human body could be that cruel and attack itself by causing
such intense heat from within capable of destroying its bones.
Fiction of the imagination perhaps, I leave that for you to ponder…
VIOLIN © Margo Prentice
“If I could be a musical instrument I want to be a violin.”
Sparks crackle inside ribbons of grey smoke and shoot high up into a blackened
sky. I am held in the strong arms of Andre, tall and handsome with black curly
hair. His dark eyes shine as he holds me firmly under his chin and in his arms. He
moves the bow touching my strings with at the speed of light making me sing like
no other gypsy in all of Europe. Andre plays me with gusto, tenderness and
passion. Roma gather around the fire as they have done for hundreds of years, I the
expression of their soul.
My neck is made of maple wood, my fingerboard is ebony. The hair on my bow is
horse hair. My strings are made of gut. I come from the earth. Everyone who
hears me is filled with joy, sadness and passion.
For the people of the countryside I am a “fiddle.” As the fiddler passes the bow
over the strings those who listen are stirred. My music fills them with the desire to
dance. I am played merrily at harvest parties and weekly dances, and at weddings
and funerals. Dances and my music pieces are passed down through the
generations. The Cajuns and French Canadians and many cultures dance to my
music
“Bluegrass Music,” a mix of fiddling and blues. I love it when the old-time fiddlers
play my music. The greatest jazz violist of all was Stephan Grapelli. When he
played me it was a work of art.
I sit in the front row of symphony orchestras poised, to start in the hands of the
first violinist. From the master virtuosos Paganini to modern violinists Jimena
Lovan the grand master compositions slide off my strings in powerful cascading
crescendos. Vivaldi composed his music with me. His school was filled with
orphans’ girls whom he taught to play in fifteenth century Venice. My sounds
filled the salons of the elegant homes in the major cities in Europe.
Great masters, like Heifetz could make an audience so moved, that to hear me
played by him was blissful. Heifetz even gave me a name, “David” and when he
died he left me to the San Francisco orchestra. The great masters die but I live on
in the souls of people who hear me.
Yes, I am the violin; I have been with humankind for hundreds of years. I am
everywhere! My soulful music is played in concert halls, around gypsy fires, at
weddings and dances. I am the sad melody in the solo ballet performance of the
dying swan in Tchaikovsky’s, ballet, “Swan Lake.”
I have so many favourite pieces; Tchaikovsky’s violin concerto in D minor is one
of my most moving. Tears flow easily when I play in the background music in
movie, particularly when lovers part or are reunited
The greatest composers of all time wrote for me. All for me. I am a violin.
------------------------------------------------------------------- copyright Margo Prentice
The City of New Westminster will host a celebration of its waterfront
June 19, 2016
11:00am to 2:00pm
Pier 2 Landing which will take place on Father’s Day, includes
activities and performances along Westminster Pier Park, Front
Street, and Sapperton Landing Park.
City of New Westminster staff will be on hand at the event to engage
residents about the Waterfront Vision that will celebrate New
Westminster’s strengths - its natural setting, vibrant downtown and
year-round activities.
Other family-friendly activities include: Live entertainment, barbecue,
bike decorating, sandcastle building, community art projects,
Live5210 Playbox, a pop-up museum, historical and environmental
walking tours, Paper Girl art program, cycling tours, and a bike rodeo.
Come by our Royal City Literary Arts Society table to say Hello!
LITFEST NEW WEST
Saturday, May 14 – Douglas College
Social Media for Writers and Authors
presented by Lori Henry
Key Highlights Compiled by Lisa Strong
Lori introduced the topic of Social
Networking by asking us to think about
why we would like to pursue social
media in the first place. She directed
our decision with these questions.
She mentioned the commitment
involved to keep the content fresh and
timely, and suggested following the
80/20 rule – where only 20% of your
posts are self-promotional – and the
remaining 80% could include such
ideas as quotations from your
favourite authors and links relevant
to your genre.
Lori believed we should consider creating profiles in all three of the
most popular social media sites.
She left us with the thought of scheduling our posts to be released at
pre-determined times. For example, Facebook allows you to schedule
your post for a future time and date, while Twitter needs a third party
platform such as Tweetdeck ( https://tweetdeck.twitter.com/ ) to do the
same. If you’re using multiple social media platforms, you can login to
one third party service such as Hoot Suite (www.HootSuite.com) and
manage all platforms at once.
Lori’s presentation was extremely well organized with many examples for both beginner and intermediate users
of social media. You can contact Lori Henry via her website for more information about connecting to the cyber
world.
Lori Henry is a travel writer and podcast host based in North Vancouver, Canada. She is the author of Dancing
Through History: In Search of the Stories That Define Canada, and her work has been published in travel and
lifestyle publications all over the world. Stay tuned for her new podcast, launching this summer. To keep up to
date with her, visit her website: www.LoriHenry.ca.
The art of observing: the act of being present, paying attention to what is seen, heard,
touched, smelled, tasted or otherwise perceived within the body is one of the nine
primary tools utilized in any creative thinking. It is probably the core basic tool that any
artist starts with in any of their creative pursuits. Why?
All worldly knowledge begins with observation. In order to convey the world to your
audience, you need to perceive it accurately and see it in its reality. You are probably
thinking that observing seems fairly basic. You’d be wrong. Recognizing is easy. It's a
bit of survival wiring in our brains. For example, you recognize a stop sign from learned
habit. You don't really see it once you learn the habit. It registers in your brain and
nothing more. Observing is much more. It takes time to observe. According to Georgia
O'Keefe, “to see takes time, like to have a friend takes time.”
Picasso learned to observe and draw one thing (a pigeon's foot) before his art teaching
father would allow him to pursue his passion of painting. The process took months and
months before his father would allow him to paint. By focusing on that one thing, he
learned the keys to observing and describing everything.
Observation isn't simply about the visual. It is about all your senses: sight, taste, touch,
smell, and aural. As an exercise, I sit on my porch and listen to the sounds of my
neighbourhood. I try to access has the sound feels on and in my body. I try to feel the
wind, rain, cold or heat on my skin. It's all part of the experience.
Try this exercise in observation. Select a category of a “thing” you'd like to observe.
Examples of two of the participants from one of my creativity workshops were
mushrooms and fences. Choose something that seems variable and interesting to you.
Notice its form, lines, colours, sounds, tactile characteristics, smells, and tastes where
appropriate. What are the differences within your items you've chosen to observe. Write
a short descriptive paragraph for each subject. Do one category one month and change it
up to something new the next month. But remember to have fun with this exercise. It's
play and not meant for anything other than improving your observation skills. Jump
outside the box. Try to create sounds for items that don't have sounds naturally. Squeeze
that mushroom. Bang that fence post.
Writing what you know is really about writing about your emotional experiences.
Observing: A Tool For Creative Thinking
by David Blinkhorn
Observe as you live your life. Observe passionately and with intention. Go out for
regular walks. Observe the world around you. Fill your artistic well (Julia Cameron)
with images and experiences for later use. Make notes and sketches of your
observations.
Remember that your mind senses control the senses of your body and, as such, the mind
skews and filters what you experience. As a result objective observation is not truly
possible. It's your reality that you observe. The writer lives the experiences but he or she
observes and analyzes them too.
How can you improve your observation skills? Training in the visual arts is a start. Even
if you don't want to practice the art, take the time to observe form and style. Go to the art
gallery. Take it in on an emotional level. It is well established that practising art leads to
improved scientific observation. This equation works in reverse equally well. Study
science, natural history, medicine and anatomy. Some of my most enjoyable poetry to
create involved a blend of science with the music of words. Somerset Maugham and
William Carlos Williams were doctors. The poet, Marianne Moore studied biology.
Collect things with passion.
Learn to be a better observer. Observation lies at the heart of all creative pursuits.
David Blinkhorn is the founder and director of the Fraser Valley Writers' School (fvwschool.blogspot.com) and an accomplished instructor in the areas of
creativity, avoiding writer's block and fiction writing. An award-winning poet and writer who is a graduate of SFU's Writers' Studio (Fiction) in 2011,
David finds his passion in creating unique, varied stories and helping other writers to find their voice in their chosen genre. In 2014, David organized a
successful writers retreat in the Mediterranean and is currently organizing the plans for Euro2017. He has been a member of the RCLAS for three years and
is a corporate member of the New Westminster Arts Council. Follow his creativity blog at fvwschool.blogspot.com for regular posts and ideas on ways to
improve your own creative pursuits and your creative life.
RCLAS on the Road
with Lisa Strong
During May, four long term members of RCLAS (Royal City Literary Arts
Society) had the opportunity to work with intermediate students at an
elementary school in Burnaby. Our Poetry Month opened with a visit from
Enrico Renz, a teacher from Cameron Elementary who shared song writing
tips with our students. Mr. TDS, our music teacher joined him for an
impromptu jam session on guitars.
The following week Candice James, Poet Laureate of The City of New
Westminster shared some of her original works including Ghosts of the BC
Penitentiary, Tumbling Down, The Afterglow, Java Jazz, Ballad of Billy
Miner, and Justin Bieber and the Blue Petal Dream (written especially for
this visit).
She introduced students to the concept of ‘open mic.’ Two students bravely
came up to the mic and shared their talents. Candice generously donated
copies of her books to the school library.
Deborah L. Kelly, winner of the 2016 (WIN) Writers International Network
Distinguished Poet Award was next up. She shared her poetry and
samples of her art work including the mandala collage pictured below.
Our series continued with Lilija Valis accompanied by Enrico Renz. Lilija,
an accomplished spoken word artist, shared upon others, her poem, The
Blues. Some students shared their own poems in an ‘open mic’ session
with musical accompaniment.
A big thank you goes out to our guests for the time and talent they shared
with our students!
Benefits of Membership All non-profit Societies, no matter their size, rely on funding and membership dues to sustain them. RCLAS is no exception, and we are by no means big. At present, funding comes from two sources. First, we benefit from a very modest grant from the City of New Westminster (for which we’re exceedingly grateful). And second, we depend heavily on dues from members like you. Without a growing membership base, RCLAS cannot sustain the activities that we initiate and run. We really need your help to keep the literary arts alive in our community. When you become a member, you not only help us keep the torch lit for writers. You also help yourself. Here are some of the benefits of your RCLAS membership:
Your personal profile on our website with links to your endeavours
Significant discounts (or sometimes free!) for any RCLAS Workshop
50% discount on submission fees for any RCLAS-sponsored writing contest
Varying discounts (or sometimes free admission!) for any RCLAS Programme or Event
Our electronic newsletter, free! (10 issues a year)
Email notifications of upcoming RCLAS activities, automatically sent to you
‘Schmooze nights’ and networking opportunities with other members Please join us today. Tell others about us, too. Enjoy these benefits and in the process, help keep the literary arts alive both here in the Royal City and in the Lower Mainland. For more information, visit our website at: http://rclas.com/membership/become-a-member/ Thank you.
Janet Kvammen, RCLAS Vice-President/E-zine [email protected]
Antonia Levi [email protected]
Open Call for Submissions - RCLAS Members Only
Poetry, Short Stories, Book excerpts & lyrics are all welcome for
submission to future issues of Wordplay at work.
Sept 2016 - Poetry & Prose Theme: New Westminster Deadline Aug 1
October 2016 – Dead Poets & Halloween Deadline Sept 15, 2016
No E-zine in July and August.
Submit Word documents (include your name on document) to
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED!
If you would like to participate in a single event, or make an even
bigger contribution, please contact our event coordinator.
Director/Event Coordinator: Sonya Furst-Yuen
WORDPLAY AT WORK FEEDBACK & E-ZINE SUBMISSIONS
https://rclas.com/awards-contests/fred-cogswell-award/
Thank you to our Sponsors
City of New Westminster
Arts Council of New Westminster
New Westminster Public Library
Judy Darcy, MLA
Renaissance Books
100 Braid Street Studios
The Network Hub - New Westminster
Boston Pizza
The Heritage Grill
See upcoming events at www.rclas.com
www.poeticjusticenewwest.org
June 2016 Wordplay at work ISSN 2291- 4269
Contact:
[email protected] RCLAS Vice-President/
E-zine Design
“And by the way, everything in life is writable about if
you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the
imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to
creativity is self-doubt.”
― Sylvia Plath