Audible Indigenous Writers' Circle
The 2024 program will launch in June. The application period for this year's program has ended. Stay tuned for updates on future programming!
Learn More About
Meet the Mentors
January Rogers
Richard Van Camp
A recipient of the Order of the Northwest Territories, Richard Van Camp is a proud Tłı̨chǫ Dene from Fort Smith, NWT. He is the author of 28 books in 28 years. You are welcome to visit Richard on Facebook, X, Instagram, Soundcloud, and Youtube.
Tanya Talaga
Tanya Talaga is an acclaimed and award-winning Anishinaabe journalist and author of national bestsellers Seven Fallen Feathers and All Our Relations: Finding The Path Forward. Her Audible Original series, Seven Truths, features her personal story of fighting for Indigenous rights. Tanya heads up Makwa Creative Inc., a production company focused on amplifying Indigenous voices through documentary films, TV and podcasts. Tanya is a member of Fort William First Nation. She has five honorary doctorates.
Josh Whitehead
Josh Whitehead (he / him) (he / him) is an Oji-Cree, Two-Spirit writer and academic from Peguis First Nation (Treaty 1). He is the author of full-metal indigiqueer (Talonbooks 2017), Jonny Appleseed (Arsenal Pulp 2018), Making Love with the Land (Knopf 2022), and Indigiqueerness: a Conversation about Storytelling (Athabasca UP 2023) as well as the editor of Love after the End: an Anthology of Two-Spirit and Indigiqueer Speculative Fiction (Arsenal 2020). Currently, Whitehead is an Assistant Professor at the University of Calgary (Treaty 7) where he is housed in the departments of English and International Indigenous Studies.
Explore Joshua’s works
Reneltta Arluk
Warren Cariou
Warren Cariou was born in Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan into a family of Métis and European heritage. Though he has lived away from Meadow Lake for many years, his art and academic work maintains a focus on the cultural and environmental questions that have preoccupied the people of his homeland. His books, films, photography and scholarly research explore community, environment, orality and belonging themes in the Canadian West, particularly focusing on the relationships between Indigenous stories and the land.
Waubgeshig Rice
Waubgeshig Rice is an author and journalist from Wasauksing First Nation. He has written four fiction titles, and his short stories and essays have been published in numerous anthologies. His breakthrough novel, Moon of the Crusted Snow, was published in 2018 and became a national bestseller. The sequel, Moon of the Turning Leaves, was published in October 2023. He graduated from the journalism program at Toronto Metropolitan University in 2002 and spent most of his journalism career with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as a video journalist and radio host. He lives in Sudbury, Ontario, with his wife and three sons.
About the Indigenous Writers' Circle
The Writers’ Circle will support the next wave of emerging Indigenous writers, by leveraging Audible’s resources and creative community connections to provide mentorship and learning opportunities to help program participants tell their stories.
Emerging writers in the program will be paired with Indigenous mentors who will coach and guide participants through the creative process. They will help them identify and pursue opportunities aligning with their goals as writers.
Participants will also benefit from immersive workshops where they will learn from some of the industry’s leading creators, publishers, content managers, writers and marketers.
Audible will provide additional support to the participants throughout the program, including guidance on how participants can promote their work. At the end of the program, participants may explore opportunities with Audible depending on what stage each writer has progressed in their creative work and how they choose to share their writing.
Each selected emerging writer is eligible for a $1,500 CAD bursary to support their participation in the program, and there is no cost to participate in the Writers’ Circle.
Statement of Non Discrimination
The Audible Indigenous Writers’ Circle supports equal opportunity for all persons regardless of race, sex, color, religion, creed, national origin or ancestry, age, marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, physical ability or disability
The program year 2024 will begin on June 1st and end on December 20th, with a six-week summer break from July 20th to August 31st.
Program Eligibility
- Have background knowledge, interest or training in writing. This could include self-study, mentorships, academic study or combinations of these types of training
- Are pursuing or considering pursuing a career in literary arts
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Can provide an example of your literary work
- Examples of your work can include: works of fiction, non-fiction, biographies/autobiographies, memoirs, graphic novels, illustrated books, blogs, poetry, children’s literature, audiobooks and narrative podcasts.
- Are at least 18 years old as of January 1, 2024
- Reside in Canada (At this time, residents of Quebec are not eligible for the program due to provincial contest regulations).
- The strength of the artistic intention for the sample of work
- Potential benefits of the Writers’ Circle to the development of the applicant’s practice
How You Can Apply
In your application you’ll be asked to share the following:
- Your name, contact information and the form(s) of literary art you practice
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A personal reflection (maximum 500 words), indicating:
- Why you wish to participate in this program, what you hope to contribute and learn and what impact it could have on your future practice
- A description of your writing practice
- A brief overview of your body of work to date, this could include short descriptions of any talks or workshops you’ve given, readings you’ve done, work you've published (online, audio, print, etc.) or community engagement experience you have that is related to the literary arts
- If you could choose any writer, living or deceased, to work with as your mentor, who would you select and why?
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Please provide a single sample of your work in written or audio format. The accepted file types are Word, Google Doc, MP3 or M4A. If you submit a poem under 500 words, you may include a secondary and third piece of poetry, so long as you do not exceed the 2,500-word limit.
- Submissions should not exceed 2,500 words or 15 minutes in length. The file size limit is 10MB. If your sample of work exceeds the maximum word count, it will be trimmed to 2,500 words.
- Submissions can be works of fiction, non-fiction, biographies / autobiographies, children's literature, poetry, memoirs, graphic novels, illustrated books, blogs, audiobooks and narrative podcasts
- If you would like to submit a piece of work that falls outside this list, please contact us with your request at audiblewriterscircle@yulupr.com
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Your answers to three voluntary Indigenous self-identification questions
- Proof of Indigenous ancestry is not required. The information collected will be confidential. In the context of these voluntary self-identification questions, an Indigenous person in Canada, as recognized in the Constitution Act, 1982, is a person who identifies with First Nations (Status / Non-Status), Inuit or Métis cultural and / or ancestral background
- Based on this definition, do you attest and self-identify as an Indigenous person? Please indicate: yes or no
- Do you identify with any of these specific identities? Please indicate all that apply to you: First Nations (Status/Non-Status), Inuit, Métis, Alternate identity term (e.g. Kanien’kehá:ka, Anishinaabe, Treaty #3, etc.)
- What community/nation/group are you affiliated with? Please specify, or indicate unknown or unsure
Frequently Asked Questions
Program Alumni
Alicia Elliott - 2023 mentor
Explore Alicia’s works
Jessica Johns - 2023 mentor
Jessica Johns is a nehiyaw aunty with English-Irish ancestry and a member of Sucker Creek First Nation in Treaty 8 territory in Northern Alberta. She is an interdisciplinary artist and award-winning writer whose debut novel, Bad Cree, was released in January 2023. She serves on the editorial board for GUTS – an anti-colonial feminist magazine and the advisory board for the Indigenous Brilliance reading series.
Brandi Morin - 2023 mentor
Castor Angus - 2023 participant
Jamesie Fournier - 2023 participant
Gin Sexsmith - 2023 participant
A.W. Hopkins - 2023 participant
Angela Sterritt - 2022 Mentor
Angela Sterritt is a Vancouver-based, multi award-winning journalist, author and artist from the Gitanmaax community of the Gitxsan Nation on her dad’s side and from Bell Island Newfoundland on her maternal side. She has climbed from being a vulnerable Indigenous youth living in poverty to becoming one of Canada's top multi-platform journalists. Angela is currently an investigative reporter at CBC Vancouver and in production for a CBC original podcast called Land Back. Her forthcoming book Unbroken, is part memoir and part investigation into the murders and disappearances of Indigenous women. You can follow Angela on Twitter @AngelaSterritt.
Clayton Thomas-Muller - 2022 Mentor
Jas M. Morgan - 2022 Mentor