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Showing posts with label Tribute to Tracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tribute to Tracy. Show all posts

Friday, September 23, 2011

Tracy's contest


Attention middle and high school students in Mobile and Baldwin County Alabama: Our writing partner Tracy Hurley was a wonderful creator of young adult stories, and the Mobile Writers Guild is honoring her with a contest for Mobile/Baldwin County middle and high school students.

Requirements are: Open to students in grades 6 to 8 or grades 9 to 12 -- Fiction only -- stories between 500 and 2,500 words -- E-mail entries only -- send entries "in the body of an E-mail" to mobilewritersguild@gmail.com

Deadline for entry is November 18, 2011.

No entry fee, but there are lots of prizes.

Check out the Guild's site for more information: http://mobilewritersguild.com.wordpress.com/

Or go directly to the contest site at http://mobilewritersguild.com/writing-contests

And Good Luck!

Mahala and cj

P.S. Click on the picture to see a larger version of the flyer.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

A Tribute

Tracy had a profound influence on my life. She was a loyal friend and an excellent writer and editor. I once told her I would never submit anything for publication without her critique. A Few Degrees Off Center started as a series of unnamed short stories, but as she read and critiqued them, then encouraged me to consider writing a novel. Without her inspiration and encouragement, the stories would probably still be under construction.

Founding Mobile Writers Guild was an adventure that often brought us to laughter and frustration—it was always a joint effort without rancor, unusual in today’s world. I will always be amazed and grateful for that wonderful working relationship.
Raising children almost the same age, we made the rounds of museums, movies, plays, McDonald’s, and oh so many others. My life has been greatly enriched for having known and worked and played together.

My strongest wish is that the young adult book she almost finished, her new mystery novel, and so many short stories that she had crafted and never submitted had made it to print. Tracy had a deep desire to touch the lives of young people in a positive way and that is another way she will be remembered.

After Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf, Tracy carried almost one hundred packages from SCBWI to the children—flashlights, stuffed animals, and, of course, books. She donated over a hundred books to the Mobile Public Library in the few years she lived here.

Tracy, you are a part of my life forever. Save me a seat in the Great Library. Mahala