Latest State Writing Award Keeps The Ink Flowing
Latest State Writing Award Keeps The Ink Flowing
By Shannon Hicks
Joan Bergquist still remembers the first time something of hers was published. It was in the 1978 edition of Conatus, the literary magazine of Western Connecticut State University. Her short story called âThe Interviewâ takes up four pages of the small magazine and just a few minutes of time to read, but itâs a scream. Its humor is both a jab at feminism and at the media.
âI was thrilled,â Joan said recently. âI didnât think anything would ever live up to that.â
Her satire writing has since then been compared favorably to the work of Erma Bombeck, she has led two writing workshops for Womanâs Club of Newtown, and she has flourished in a number of additional artistic branches. But it took a recent nod from an annual womanâs club contest in the short story writing category to remind her of how good it feels to be called a writer.
Winners of the annual statewide contest were announced in May during a convention and awards ceremony in Hartford. The writing had all been judged by professional writers.
âWe found out on a Saturday morning,â Joan recalled recently. âMy husband was standing at the door with this big, silly grin on his face. He just kept looking at me, and then finally said âDid you get all your messages?â and then he told me I had won the contest.â
Joan placed first in the statewide short story competition. Marcia Cavanaugh, the current president of The Womanâs Club of Newtown, had left the message on the Bergquistsâ answering machine.
âThe funny thing was, I had been thinking about the competition, fleetingly, just a few days earlier,â Joan admitted. âThis one really got to me. I still donât believe it yet.â
Mrs Bergquist, a longtime Newtown resident, repeated her win in the Photography Feature category of the Womanâs Club arts and crafts show this year, and also won an award for her writing. For this yearâs contest, she had entered a poem and a short story. She has won in the past for her poetry, but it was the short story award this year that put the shiny new feather in Joanâs hat.
âI donât want to be known as a poet,â Joan said. âThereâs nothing wrong with poets, and itâs a lovely medium, donât get me wrong. But Iâm more than a poet.
âI am a writer,â she said.Last year the Newtown writer won first place in both the poetry and one-act play divisions of the state competition.
Joan Bergquist says the new award âshould either energize me or paralyze me.
âItâs going to give me inspiration, or stop me in my tracks.â She thought for a moment. âOh, Iâm ready to go. When Iâm getting ready to write Iâm hyper. Itâs all gotta come out. I feel that coming.â
Joanâs talent, she says, comes from a few familial sources. Her father âwrote all these little things,â she recalled. âI can just see him as a newspaper editor, with his fedora hatâ¦â
Her aunt offered musical inspiration, which was picked up by Joanâs son John.
âHe began playing the violin when he was much younger,â Joan said. âHe was very good, too, but he got flack from the other kids when they got into junior high, so he gave it up.â
Joanâs daughter, Pam, also picked up some of the familyâs artistic talent, becoming a player of both the flute and oboe while growing up. Now a chemist, Pam still does macramé.
âOh, sheâs very, very bright. She gets it from me,â Joan quipped.
Joan has taken photography as an elective course at WestConn, and it was an instant match. In March she won first place in the Womanâs Club Photography Feature category for the second year running. She also enjoys sculpture, pottery, painting, gardening, and gourmet cooking.
She has written and published poems, short stories, a one-act play, and essays. âI love that form,â she said, referring to essays. âTheyâre beautiful.â
She also had a column, called âDinner Is on a New Wave,â about her first microwave oven, published in The New York Times. One part autobiography and of course one part humor, the piece is vintage Bergquist.
âIâve always known in my gut what I wanted to do,â she said. âI want to write, so I just keep dabbling. Itâs like The Tortoise and the Hare: I just do a little, and a little, and a little at a time.â
She is working steadily on a collection of short stories that she hopes will eventually be published as a book. She doesnât like to call the book a memoir because, she says, âthey make you sound like youâre ancient,â but admits the market currently seems hot for life stories. The bookâs tentative title is Anatomy of a Writer.
âEditors and readers right now, thatâs what theyâre looking for. I want to finish this before tastes change,â she said. âBut whatever happens, itâs me and my art. Thatâs all I want to worry about now. I want to eventually reach my full potential, of course, and I think Iâve only just tapped it.â