Volunteer Profile: Esha Whitlam

Volunteer role: Event volunteer

What’s the most important lesson you ever learned?
All skills are always transferable.

What or who makes you laugh out loud?
Anything written by Terry Pratchett and Eliezer Yudkowsky’s Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality.

What is the best book you read in the last year?
Uprooted, by Naomi Novik.

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Fiction.

What is your guilty pleasure?
Consuming dehydrating alcohol while baking in skin-cancer-causing sunshine!

What is your favourite proofreading mark?
Transpose.

What is your favourite punctuation mark?
The comma.

What is your dream vacation destination?
Anywhere warm(er)!

If you were presented with a book that told the story of your entire life from start to finish, what would you do with it?
I’d read at least some of it, to see how much was accurate. Probably try to find out who wrote it! If it magically dropped into my lap with no author and was 100% accurate… I’d have fun chopping out boring bits, adding commentary, and maybe publishing it (anonymously?). I would love to live in a world that automatically generated biographies for every living person!

What is your favourite word? Why?
I have too many favourite words to pick one, but anyone who knows me would recognize sensible as my favourite adjective to describe personal approval. When I use it, I mean sensible as a high compliment!

What is your favourite place in Canada?
Nanaimo’s Waterfront Walkway, but only in the summer.

What is the last book you read?
Revenge of the Spellmans, by Lisa Lutz.

What are your favourite book genres?
Fantasy and science fiction.

Volunteer Profile: Erin Parker

Volunteer role: Professional development co-chair and event volunteer

Website: erintheeditor.com

What is the best book you read in the last year?
Helen Ellis’s short story collection American Housewife.

What is your guilty pleasure?
Binge-watching Sing It On and MasterChef. A cappella competitions with a side of risotto!

What is your favourite proofreading mark?
First place definitely goes to the deletion mark with that satisfying swoop.

What is your dream vacation destination?
London, England.

What is your favourite word? Why?
I have a soft spot for silly words like curmudgeon, hullabaloo, and persnickety.

What is the last book you read?
History of Wolves, by Emily Fridlund.

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
Our Lady Peace all the way.

Volunteer Profile: Emma Caplan

Volunteer role: Programs committee member, West Coast Editor copy editor, and event volunteer

Company name: Rueterra Designs

Website: etsy.com/ca/shop/RueterraDesigns

What or who makes you laugh out loud?
Trevor Noah and Modern Family.

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Fiction.

What is your guilty pleasure?
Chocolate.

What is your favourite punctuation mark?
I often use the semicolon; it is quite useful.

What is your dream vacation destination?
Italy and Spain.

What is your favourite place in Canada?
Okanagan Valley, BC.

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
Collective Soul.

Volunteer Profile: Ellen Michelle

Volunteer role: Professional development committee member, West Coast Editor contributor, and event volunteer

Company name: Ellen Michelle Editorial Services

Website: ellenmichelle.com

Blog: sqsreviews.com

Which famous person (living or dead) do you think (or have you been told) you most resemble?
When I was younger, Avril Lavigne. More recently I’ve been told I look like Felicity Jones, who played Jyn Erso in Rogue One, one of the new Star Wars movies.

What’s the most important lesson you ever learned?
I have two, but they’re connected: Learn and move on from your mistakes, and do what will make you happy. If you’re in a situation that isn’t right for you and isn’t making you the happiest you could be, get out of it. Make a change, and don’t be afraid to do what’s right for you. I’ve learned this lesson the hard way a couple times, and I’m always grateful when I’m reminded of its importance.

What or who makes you laugh out loud?
Pictures of dogs. Seriously. I’m a sucker for dog pictures. I have often been caught cry-laughing at pictures and videos of puppies.

What is the best book you read in the last year?
Honestly, the bits and pieces of an unfinished manuscript written by someone close to me. I’ve read many books in the past year, but I’m holding my breath for this one to be completed.

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Fiction.

What are your guilty pleasures?
Chocolate, Netflix, and pineapple wine. Seriously, try pineapple wine. It’s incredible.

What is your favourite proofreading mark?
The pilcrow is my favourite proofreading mark. This goes back to the important life lessons. I like to think the pilcrow symbolizes the ability to start a new paragraph, or a new chapter or section if we’re thinking metaphorically. It offers the chance to move on and away from the past but also to connect back to it (paragraphs always have to be connected, right?) so you learn and don’t forget.

What is your favourite punctuation mark?
I may be over-obsessed with the semicolon. In high school English, one of my teachers told me I had used the mark wrong, so I went home and studied its proper usage. Once I learned how to use it properly, I felt the need to show it off. I didn’t master the comma until university, but I could rock a semicolon.

What is your dream vacation destination?
I’m partial to the staycation, but I’d love to do a cross-Canada road trip.

If you were presented with a book that told the story of your entire life from start to finish, what would you do with it?
This is a fascinating question. I’d like to think that I would read it up until the present then put it down until life has caught up to the book a bit more. However, if I’m being honest, my curiosity would likely get the better of me, and I would be tempted to read the ending. As much as I love the surprises that come along in life, I am also a planner, and I like to have control in situations—knowing what’s coming would be tempting.

What is your favourite word? Why?
My favourite word is definitely vehement. In elementary school (I was in grade 3, and my brother was in grade 6), the students in my brother’s class had to take turns—one every day—telling the class about a new word they had learned. The day before my brother’s turn, he had forgotten about the assignment completely, which was characteristic of him, so I decided to help him out. I opened a dictionary at random and pointed at a word—vehement. I made up a story that he would use to say how he discovered the word, and I remember him saying his teacher was really impressed. I don’t remember the story now, but I’ll always remember the word and the first of many times I helped my older brother with his English homework.

Who is your favourite poet?
Dante Alighieri. I have read The Divine Comedy more times than anything else, and I have read Inferno in one sitting more than once. It was originally introduced to me in my first year of university by an instructor that focused his English literature courses on magic and the occult. I was fascinated, and now my prized possession is a first-edition 1889 leather-bound copy of Inferno (with illustrations by Gustave Doré).

What is your favourite place in Canada?
Canoe, BC. I have family that lives there, and I visit as often as I can. I love how quiet and peaceful the small town is. I love Vancouver as well, and I’m eternally grateful to live near and go to school in the city, but sometimes the peace and quiet of a small town are a nice escape.

What is the last book you read?
MOM, by Collin Piprell.

What are your favourite book genres?
Science fiction, fantasy, crime, mystery, and horror.

Which actor would play you in a biopic of your life?
Emma Stone. She’s goofy and charismatic, and she clearly loves what she does, so I believe she’d be able to relate to my workaholic ways.

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
Mayday Parade. Yes, I know; you’ve probably never heard of them. They were definitely the constant obsession through high school, but there were a number of others that came in and out of my music library as well: Sum 41, Blink 182, Rise Against, and Linkin Park, to name a few.

Volunteer Profile: Donna Kaye

Volunteer role: Event volunteer

Which famous person (living or dead) do you think (or have you been told) you most resemble?
I just look like me.

What’s the most important lesson you ever learned?
Good things come to those who wait.

What or who makes you laugh out loud?
Melissa McCarthy.

What is the best book you read in the last year?
The Tourist, by Olen Steinhauer.

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Fiction.

What is your guilty pleasure?
Buying Funko Pop figures.

What is your favourite proofreading mark?
Caret.

What is your favourite punctuation mark?
Semicolon.

What is your dream vacation destination?
London.

If you were presented with a book that told the story of your entire life from start to finish, what would you do with it?
Lock it away, to be opened after I die.

What is your favourite word? Why?
<Censored.>

Who is your favourite poet?
My wife, Judy.

What is your favourite place in Canada?
Tofino.

What is the last book you read?
Mary Walsh’s Crying for the Moon.

What is your favourite book genre?
Mystery.

Which actor would play you in a biopic of your life?
Kathy Griffin.

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
Anne Murray.

Volunteer Profile: David Dressler

Volunteer role: Event volunteer

What’s the most important lesson you ever learned?
That life energy is the source of thinking–feeling–action and the mind is already integrated with the body by this energy.

What or who makes you laugh out loud?
My best friend.

What is the best book you read in the last year?
I haven’t finished any books.

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Fiction.

What is your guilty pleasure?
None. I don’t feel guilty.

What is your favourite proofreading mark?
X.

What is your dream vacation destination?
Nowhere. I don’t want to go on vacations.

What is your favourite word? Why?
Comma-toes. Because the phrase is funny.

What is your favourite place in Canada?
Gibsons, BC.

What is the last book you read?
Star Trek.

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
None. I had no interest in popular music. I spent my time studying.

Volunteer Profile: Carl Rosenberg

Volunteer role: Communications and social media committee member

What’s the most important lesson you ever learned?
To consider a proposal on its own merit, regardless of whether or not one is getting along well with the person who has made it.

What or who makes you laugh out loud?
Some comedians and satirists (Monty Python, The Onion, etc.).

What is the best book you read in the last year?
Hard to say, because a lot of my reading consists of dipping into books, rather than reading entire books from start to finish. I love reading short stories, and for some reason I love anthologies, especially (but not exclusively) science fiction and fantasy.

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Fiction.

What is your guilty pleasure?
Cheese and crackers.

What is your dream vacation destination?
Argentina.

If you were presented with a book that told the story of your entire life from start to finish, what would you do with it?
Read it and then lend it to my family and friends.

Who is your favourite poet?
Jorge Luis Borges.

What is your favourite place in Canada?
Vancouver.

What is the last book you read?
Forward the Foundation, by Isaac Asimov.

What are your favourite book genres?
Science fiction and fantasy (including surrealism, magic realism, etc.).

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
The Beatles and Cat Stevens.

Volunteer Profile: Amy Haagsma

Volunteer role: Professional development co-chair

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Non-fiction.

What is your guilty pleasure?
Endless reruns of Say Yes to the Dress.

What is your favourite proofreading mark?
Caret.

What is your dream vacation destination?
Iceland, to see the northern lights.

If you were presented with a book that told the story of your entire life from start to finish, what would you do with it?
Flip to the last page and then read the rest!

Who is your favourite poet?
E.E. Cummings.

What is your favourite place in Canada?
The Okanagan.

What is the last book you read?
Probably something to do with editing!

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
’90s grunge: Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Alice in Chains, Temple of the Dog, Stone Temple Pilots…

Volunteer Profile: Anne Brennan

Volunteer role: Website coordinator

Company name: Allegro Communications

Website: If I tell you, I’ll have to finish building it.

Which famous person (living or dead) do you think (or have you been told) you most resemble?
No idea.

What’s the most important lesson you ever learned?
“Always take the time to say all that is in your heart.” I read that on a Holly Hobbie poster in 1973, and I think it’s still the most important advice I’ve ever heard.

What or who makes you laugh out loud?
Just about anything! Everything strikes me as funny.

What is the best book you read in the last year?
I can’t narrow it down to just one. Nonfiction: Writing for Dollars, Writing to Please: The Case for Plain Language in Business, Government, and Law, by Joseph Kimble. Fiction: A Discovery of Witches, Shadow of Night, and The Book of Life, all by Deborah Harkness.

What is your favourite reading: fiction, non-fiction, or poetry?
Non-fiction.

What is your guilty pleasure?
Quilting. It’s not all that guilty all the time, but sometimes it is!

What is your favourite proofreading mark?
Transpose.

What is your favourite punctuation mark?
The interrobang.

What is your dream vacation destination?
Antarctica. Or skiing in the Alps.

If you were presented with a book that told the story of your entire life from start to finish, what would you do with it?
Burn it without reading it. I don’t want to know what’s coming until it gets here.

What is your favourite word? Why?
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. Because, as Mary Poppins says, it’s the perfect word when no other word will do.

Who are your favourite poets?
Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost.

What is your favourite place in Canada?
West Coast forests and beaches.

What is the last book you read?
The Rainbow Comes and Goes, by Anderson Cooper and Gloria Vanderbilt.

What are your favourite book genres?
Pop science, medieval novels, fantasy novels, and biographies.

Which actor would play you in a biopic of your life?
I hope to god there’d never be a biopic of my life.

Which band or singer provided the soundtrack to your teen years?
Barry Manilow.

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Event Review: The Secrets of Syntax by Frances Peck

Written by Eva van Emden; copy edited by Rebecca A. Coates

On April 22, a roomful of editors got together to talk about syntax—the order of words in a sentence. This may seem like an obscure topic to spend a day thinking about, but consider how many memorable sayings stick in your mind because of a magic combination of word order, rhythm, and repetition. Would we be able to quote the sentence “Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country” if it didn’t use rhythm and repetition—syntactic elements—so effectively?

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